A
KU today
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
02
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
P 0 BOX 3585
TOPEKA KS 66601
Hemenway no longer a rookie at KU
- Chancellor Robert Hernenway is advancing a plan to put a new face on Kansas University.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
The inaugural year of Robert Hemewan's chancellorship at Kansas University offered Jayhawk faithful plenty to squawk about.
dawk about.
"We've had a pretty busy year," said Hemenway, a University of Kentucky transplant prone to understatement.
In only his sophomore season as top gun, Hemenway changed so much about KU that folks needed name tags to keep track of who held which job.
That resulted from the first administrative reorganization of KU in more than two decades. Work on a new personnel chart — attaching people to jobs
— took months. Waiting generated anxiety among faculty and staff. The rumor mill burned white hot.
Hemenway did the same at KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
In the end, there were winners — David Shulenburger's promotion to provost, for example — and there were losers. A number of well-known administrators were demoted.
The reorganization typified 1995-96 at KU. There was plenty of good news in the land of crimson and blue, but not all went well.
The highs:
The 1996 Legislature passed the $163 million "Crumbling Classrooms" initiative. It allows renovation and construction of academic space at KU and other state universities. KU gets about one-fourth of the money.
RUNÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
- KU Endowment Association generated a record $52 million in donations. That's 38 percent better than last year.
- In athletics, the football team went 10-2. The men's and women's basketball teams made the NCAA Tournament, Roy's boys finished at 29-5.
- Budget problems prompted a yearlong hiring freeze. The freeze thawed July 1, allowing KU to fill three of every four openings.
- And the lows:
- Lawmakers granted faculty a 2.5 percent wage hike, which doesn't kick in until Jan. 1. No increase in KU's general operating budget was passed.
Hemenway, considered a tough grader by his English students, declined to fill out a report card on his performance as chancellor.
"I'm not in the business of rating myself," he said. "I come to work every day and try to do the best I possibly can. I go home at night and try to sleep with the feeling that I've contributed towards that end."
The administrative reorganization was Hemenway's largest undertaking. His objective was to realign KU programs or services so that all effort was directed at improving the educational experience of students.
captured On the Lawrence campus, Hemenway appointed Shulenburger as provost and handed him unprecedented
See Hemenway, page 6A
1986
Robert Hemenway is starting his second year as chancellor at Kansas University.
Up-and-coming Regents Center takes KC by storm
Dalton High School
- The Kansas University
- The Kansas University Regents Center has all the looks of a newcomer, until you see its roots.
JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
BY RIC ANDERSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
The Kansas University Regents Center in Overland Park has logged remarkable increases in enrollment in the past four years.
OVERLAND PARK — It's easy to see the Kansas University Regents Center as a campus in its infancy.
The satellite campus is housed in a gleaming, 4-year-old building packed with up-to-date computer labs and video technology allowing students to learn from instructors on the Lawrence campus and vice-versa. The trees haven't even had a chance to grow much taller than the average student.
But what meets the eye isn't the entire story of the Regents Center.
"A lot of people think, because of the new building, we've only been here as long as the new building," said Loralee Baker-Rapue, public relations specialist at the Overland Park education
facility. "But we've been around since 1975."
In January 1993, the Regents Center took a big leap forward, opening a $6 million, 55,000-square-foot building at Quivira
That was the year the program opened in an elementary school providing graduate courses a convenient hours and nearby
classrooms for students in the Kansas City metro area.
Road and 127th Street.
And the students came. Summer enrollment has grown from 2,076 in 1993 to 4,463 in '96 — a 115 percent jump. Fall enrollment went from 8,729 in '93 to 11,983 last fall, while spring enrollment increased from 9,086 in 1994 to 12,257 this year.
Total enrollment in 1994:
19,891. In '96:28,139. That a 41 percent increase, and now a building that seemed mammoth in 1993 is beginning to feel smaller.
"This year, for the first time, our parking lot is full," Baker-Rapue said. "We're not out of space yet. But if we keep growing like this, the future is that we'll need another building and faculty offices."
In April, the Kansas Board of Regents granted KU permission to raise private funds to add a 66,000-square-foot building to the Regents Center campus.
ic fields to the metro area. The center's programs are tailored to the demands of working adults, and most are held during evenings.
The average student is 33 and married. The majority are parents who are full-time workers who live in Johnson County. They're serious students.
The addition would help the center meet its goal of providing graduate education in 12 academ-
"For faculty members, I'd say universally we've had positive comments about working with our students," Baker-Rapeu said. "They enjoy the give-and-take of the older adults. They bring a lot more to the classroom—they've just got this tremendous perspective."
Among programs in the works include expansion of the MBA, engineering management and health-service agency programs. Also, the center is working with Johnson County Community College to provide courses at the Regents Center that are required for admission to some professional schools on the Lawrence campus but are not offered at the community college.
Chancellor streamlines flagship institution
- KU's chancellor shuffled the administration for the first time in more than 20 years.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Chancellor Robert Hemenway took a chisel to barnacles weighing down the Kansas University administrative structure.
"Academic problems will be the priority."
— Chancellor Robert Hemenway
"The chief effect of the reorganization was that academic problems will be the priority," he said. "Now, the important thing is to make it work as effectively as it has the potential to work."
The new structure was christened July 1'. It had been in the works since Hemenway arrived at KU last year. His newcomer status opened the door for reform.
He settled on a framework known as the "provost model," which was recommended by a KU task force. It concentrates authority in the hands of a provost. In the past, KU's decentralized organization slowed decision making.
"Any organizational structure in place 20 years tends to get communication channels clogged, tends to get barnacles attached to it." Hemenway said.
David Shulenburger, former vice chancellor for academic affairs, beat out four other finalists to become KU's provost. Shulenburger retained his old academic duties and absorbed the management role filled by Ed Meyen as executive vice chancellor. Meyen returned to teaching in the School of Education.
Two associate provosts and two assistant provosts were hired to support Shulenburger.
Hemenway also created the position of vice chancellor for information services and dean of libraries. The current library dean, William Crowe, was appointed to that post.
He left in place David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs. He took research and public service away from Andrew Debicki, who was vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service. Debicki is now dean of graduate studies and international programs.
"I think it's a very exciting time," Debicki said. "I've had very long conversations with the chancellor. The man has a vision. His initial perspective of the university is different from the way
See Shuffle, page 2A
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
The Kansas University Endowment Association is governed by a board of about 60 volunteer trustees, which includes the executive committee: Dolph C. Simons Jr., chairman; John C. Dicus, vice chairman; Chester B. Vanatta, vice chairman; Jim Martin, president; Dale Seuflering, secretary; Jeffrey W. Davis, treasurer; Jordan L. Haines, A. Drue Jennings, Olin K. Petefish, John T. Stewart III and Kurt D. Watson.
Association tops $52 million in gifts in '96
- After a banner fund-raising year, officials with the Kansas University Endowment Association are enjoying the positive pressure created by consistently breaking their own records.
It is a reserved and professional joy. Nonetheless Martin, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, is celebrating a record year of gifts to the university.
BY MATT GOWEN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
James Martin is happy.
Each year since 1990, total giving has increased. From fiscal year 1994 to 1995, giving jumped from $34.5 million to $37.9 million.
Make that a colossal year.
in the fiscal year that ended June 30, a record of more than $52 million was given to the endowment association, besting the previous year's totals by 28 percent.
Campaign Kansas, a fund drive that ran from 1988 to 1992, raised $265 million. The original fundraising goal for the five-year campan was $150 million
"In my experience, we have not had that kind of meteoric increase in 22 years," Martin said. "Not even during Campaign Kansas."
What exactly does $52 million mean?
During fiscal year 1996, total direct support for KU resulting from fund-raising efforts will top $44 million, said John Scarfe, communications director for the association.
"KU, its students and faculty
A decade ago, gift revenue didn't even top $15 million.
"It makes me wonder just what we'll do for an encore," Martin said. "But it's a good problem to have."
As of June 30, the association's assets stood at a book value of $485 million, up from $420.3 million the previous year, Scarfe said.
Martin attributes the increase to several things, among them more aggressive fund-raising and the dedication of Chancellor Robert Hemenway, now entering his second year at the helm of the university.
"He recognizes the importance of private giving," Martin said. "He's committed to playing a
will have more scholarships, fellowships, buildings ... it's a significant figure." Martin said.
Hemenway's commitment to KU was evident through his frequent e-mails from Lexington prior to his arrival in Lawrence, Martin said.
"Even before the chancellor began his tenure, he and I were in close communication," Martin said, "so that when he arrived he could hit the ground running."
That allows the association to "put the frosting on the cake."
Chartered in 1891, the KU Endowment Association is completely Independent from the university, the association was founded with the intent of "giving money to KU without the state being involved," Scarffe said.
central role in soliciting private contributions."
See Endowment, page 19A
A. M. BERGSTEIN
RENÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PRINTS
James Martin is president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, which logged a record amount of donations in 1996.
2A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Shuffle shakes up KU's top brass
Continued from page 1A
we've been looking at it. But I think his vision is rather compelling."
Howard Mossberg, former pharmacy dean, is interim vice chancellor for research and public service. He will investigate the possibility of establishing a universitywide research foundation.
Mossberg and other KU deans were ready for this 10 years ago.
"We'd gather and call for this kind of an administrative alignment. The idea was to have one individual who had the view of the majority of activity on campus that supports our educational mission."
Hemenway's shakeup was
designed to produce a student-centered university in all respects. In practical terms, that means every department, every office, every employee will exist to serve the educational mission.
That objective doesn't conflict with efforts to make KU a stronger research institution, Hempway said.
Pressure on university budgets, calls for academic accountability and demand for advanced technology forced KU to take a look at its management structure.
"We have to identify who has authority to act, who has responsibility to act and who, therefore, is accountable for those actions," Hemenway said. "That is something we have to build into the
culture of the university."
Hemenway vowed to complete reforms without layoffs. During the next year, attrition should result in a smaller staff. As of July 1, the chancellor estimated the personnel shuffle would save $250,000 annually.
Stephen Schroeder, chair of the campus reorganization task force, said theancellor's plan elicited mixed reaction among faculty and staff.
That was accomplished despite an organizational chart that contains 30 administrators who earn more than $3 million annually. Half make more than $100,000.
Here's what you'll find inside
Kansas University is poised to enter a new school year. Many challenges of the past have been overcome, yet new ones await the students, faculty and staff of the state's premier learning and research institution.
In this issue of the Lawrence Journal-World's KU Edition we celebrate and take a closer look at some of the many achievements and milestones of the university. Chancellor Robert Hemenway has finished his first year in the position this past June. And his changes are being felt throughout the university.
This special edition will exam ine some of the triumphs, concerns, people and places that
make KU what it is.
Stories in the KU Edition reflect the vision of the future in each of the university's schools and colleges. We'll give you a look into research happening on campus that affects people's lives and introduce you to some of the people responsible for keeping the university running on a daily basis, and show you how KU's entry into the Big 12 changes the environment.
Jayhawk fans will appreciate a section devoted to in-depth coverage of KU sports. Arts and entertainment lovers will catch a glimpse of major events on campus during the '96-'97 school year, as well as a longer
look at some of the people who make it all happen.
Our Student Life section will take you on campus and show you some of today's college experience. We'll give you a look at programs important to students and give you a taste of the concerns and hopes the students have.
Copies of the 1996 KU edition are being mailed to 10,000 alumni and friends in the greater Kansas City and Shawnee County areas.
An additional 16,000 copies, are provided by the KU Endowment Association for alumni and friends living outside the state of Kansas and the greater Kansas City area.
JOURNAL-WORLD
Dolph C. Simons Jr., Editor and Publisher
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FF-31
AA-27, FF-25
CC-7
EE-3, FF-2
AA-5, AA-8, BB-3, BB-20,
CC-6, CC-7, DD-2, DD-7, EE-
39, EE-13, FF-32, FF-33
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EE-7, EE-23
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AA-23
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CC-7
AA-26
EE-34
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BB-5
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AA-18
AA-3
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FF-29
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EE-53
BB-21
EE-61
FF-23
DD-4, EE-13
FF-27
1
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 3A
[Image of a man in a suit with a bow tie].
Michael Hoefflich is dean of KU's School of Law.
RENÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
KU law school classes move into high-tech
- Computer technology is moving rapidly into law education, says Kansas University's law school dean.
BY DAVE TOPLIKAR
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITEP
It might be a while before notebook computers and CD-ROM disks replace yellow legal pads and hefty law books.
But computer and communications technology has rapidly moved into the field of legal education.
"Our biggest discussion this year is going to be computerization and technology," says Michael Hoefflich, dean of Kansas University's School of Law.
"We're all struggling with not only how we use technology, but how we teach with it," said Hoeflich, who has been the school's dean for three years.
In a recent survey of last year's entry class, 92 percent either had a computer or had access to a computer, he said.
"So basically, we've come to realize that the student body is computerized and we're trying to figure out how to use that and make their education more relevant." Hoefflich said.
Along those lines, the law school is offering a new class using the internet and video-conferencing. Hoelfich said.
"It's something brand new — no law school has ever done before." Hoefflich said.
The class will be taught by Peter Martin, a law professor from Cornell University's law school in Ithaca, N.Y. Students will be from law schools at KU, University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and the University of Iowa in Iowa City.
In other areas, the school will be putting much more material on computer disks, and the school's faculty members will distribute more material to students by e-mail. he said.
Hoeflich said despite drops of 15 to 25 percent nationally in applications to law schools, KU's law school has kept its enrollment at 500 students each year.
"We found ourselves actually up
1 percent in applications," he said.
1 percent in applications, he said. One of the reasons for the national drop in applications has been the increasing costs of a legal education, he said.
"One of the things we hear more and more from students is that KU is a high-quality school at a very low price," he said.
The tuition at most private law schools is four to five times the tuition that KU charges, he said.
"It's a terrific value," he said.
In-state students pay $2,100 per semester, based on $134 per credit hour for 15 hours plus a $211 campus fee. Out-of-state students pay $5,446 per semester, based on $349 per credit hour for 15 hours plus a $211 campus fee, he said.
For in-state students, "three year's tuition at KU is in many cases, less than one semester's tuition at a private law school," he said.
One trend the law school has experienced is getting more nontraditional students — those who are older and have decided to change careers.
"We have an increasing number of students who are coming
back after a number of years in the work force," he said. "We have a lot of students who are older."
The school has tried to reschedule classes to accommodate the schedules of those students, he said.
"Last year I rescheduled my contracts class so students could get their kids to day care," he said.
This fall, there will be a half-day of orientation at the school specifically for students with families, he said.
Some of the students are in their 50s. Two are ministers. Some have had careers in the military, in nursing, as a physician or a pharmacist and even in the FBI
"You name it, we've got just about everybody coming from every profession," he said. "It's a real wide variety of people. Many are married and many have children."
Does our society have too many lawyers?
"We need all the good lawyers we can get," he said.
Last year's highlights for the academic year were visits from Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and from retired Justice Byron White, who came to give lectures on law and government as a part of the Stephenson Lectures in Law and Government.
The visits will include a lecture from Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia on Oct. 3.
Anue K. Bingaman, an assistant U.S. Attorney General in charge of the antitrust division of
une Justice Department, will also visit the school Sept. 19 on antitrust enforcement in the Clinton Administration.
This year's highlights include a symposium Sept. 26-27 on how to define the roles of the national and state governments in the American federal system. Participants from universities around the country will address the question from historical, political and theoretical perspectives.
There are two visiting faculty members at the school this year.
The visiting Rice professor, Boudewijn Sirks, is from the University of Amsterdam in The Netherlands. He will teach comparative law and law in the Pacific Rim.
Olivia Robinson, from the University of Glascoe in Scotland, will return to teach a course on the European legal institutions.
The school is continuing to expand its program in Native American tribal law and sovereignty.
"As part of that program we will continue to have faculty exchange with Haskell (Indian Nations University)." Hoeflich said.
The school has also reorganized its career services offices, under the direction of Crystal Mai.
They have plans for setting up off-campus interview programs in other cities, such as Wichita and Tulsa, Hoeflich said. The school also expects to expand outreach efforts, including off-site interviewing in area cities.
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LAWRENCE TAE·KWON·DO SCHOOL
(Technique for Body Restraint)
HAP-KI-DO • SUN-DO • KUM-DO
(Meditation)
Self-Defense • Self-Confidence • Self-Discipline • Self-Esteem
KUM-DO (Sword Art)
We are small, but Lawrence Tae-Kwon-Do School provides one of the world's most comprehensive martial arts programs. The total programing includes Tae-Kwon-Do, Hap-Ki-Do, Kum-Do and Sun-Do.
With serious martial arts training, good discipline, and excellent workouts, you will experience an increase in your health, strength, discipline, character, and self-value in Lawrence Tae-Kwon-Do School.
[image of a person in a white gi with a black belt performing a high kick]
Tae-Kwon-Do:
Tae means foot, Kwon means fist, and Do means way (of art). Tae-Kwon-Do uniquely originated in Korea several thousand years ago. The combined movements of hands and feet have been used to create thousands of forms and techniques. It provides superior self-defense skills and meets effective exercise routines, helping to burn a maximum of 600 to 1600 calories in a 60 minute work-out.
A
Hap-Ki-Do:
This martial art teaches defensive techniques against aggression. The methods consist of falling, rolling, throwing, bending, twisting hitting, breaking, squeezing, choking opening, joint-locking, pressing, etc. This art teaches how the weak overcome the strong and tenderness controls rigidness. This excellent self-defense art should be everybody's business. A few lessons give comprehensive knowledge of Self-defense. Call for Private Lessons.
KATSURO
Kum-Do:
Kum-Do (pronounced Kuhm-Do) is a martial art of sword techniques. In Kum-Do, when eyes feet, spirit, and sword meet into one through the focused flow of movements, the training meets its perfection. At this focused mental status, the soul and power of sword sublimate into mystic movements of harmonious freedom. The sword player pursues this oneness of spirit and the sword: an experience of excellence in martial art.
SOMA NAGARAJ
Sun-Do:
This is a meditation discipline - no religious aspect whatsoever. The increased Ki (pronounced Ke) energy achieved through the meditation provides mental, spiritual, and physical powers for your life. Sun-Do (pronounced Suhn-Do) is the basic root of martial arts training and the ultimate end as well. This is the supreme level of all martial arts. It does increase health and is known to extend life-span. We have class every Sunday.
Lessons of Healing Arts: Ki Energy, Acupuncture, Acupressure, & Vital Points.
- Seamless Integration of Mind and Body
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In today's environment, are you concerned about the safety and sound character of you and your loved ones? Our school's programs may be helpful.
In martial arts, an untrained mind is dangerous. Therefore, we put our utmost efforts into helping students form a well-disciplined character who cherishs values and pursues goals.
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4A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Library expands information technology
The KU library system is preparing for more technology updates.
BY JL WATSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
The Kansas University library system is undergoing dramatic changes, but library patrons might not notice them the minute they walk through the doors.
The changes have something to do with Information Technology Services, which has a patron-based theme for the coming year.
"It's our working ourselves through the alignment of our services for students, faculty and staff," said William "Bill" Crowe, dean of libraries and newly appointed vice chancellor for information services.
Part of Crowe's responsibilities are to prepare the library for technology upgrades, including the installment of more than 150 Pentium computers in the next year.
"1996-97 is the 40th anniversary of the computer at KU," he said. "Forty years is 'new' in library terms, and we're ready for a new stage of development.
What we want to emphasize is the continuity with our best traditions.
"At each stage of our development we've managed to reach a stage where our students, faculty and staff could get their job done better. We have to be better than adequate because we're a better-than-adequate university."
Commitment to change
Crowe credits Chancellor Robert Hemenway with instituting change throughout the university.
"The chancellor's commitments here are genuine and sustained," he said. "Over the next year, students will see an entirely new library online system.
"We want students to have the same world-class information resources — from traditional library collections to the latest information technology — that their parents and grandparents had."
Changing the database system will help students refine their search for information, Crowe said.
"We'll be able to gateway very
Reference & Information
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Channette Kirby, library assistant, left, gives instructions to Heath Giggs, a student employee at Watson Library.
See Library, page 6A
Pecking order
Who's who (and how much they're paid) at Kansas University.
Board of Regents
Chancellor -
Robert Hemenway -
$164,000
$ $ $ $ $
Salaries as of Jan. 1, 1997
Executive Assistant, Chief of Staff
See Business school, page 26A
"Change is the key word in our agenda," he said. "We're not just
Bruce Bublitz, associate dean of academic affairs for the business school, said the school plans to continue updating current technology for students' use and to step up recruitment of international business students.
Mary Burg - $63,560
Director of Athletics - Bob Fredrick - $134,392
University Counsel - Victoria Thomas - $91,665
University Director of Administration -
Richard Mann - $113,265
University Director of Institutional Research -
Deborah Teeter - $69,200
Director of University Relations -
Tom Hutton - $55,660
University Director of Budget and Government Relations -
Martin Pain - $105,800
$
Exposure to international businesses and modern technology are two of the priorities for the Kansas University School of Business.
**Provost -**
David Shulenburger -
$130,000
Associate Provost -
Assistance Gaudt - $70,000
Associate Provost -
Richard Givens - $89.75
$ $ $ $ $
Director of the Office of Equal Opportunity and Recruitment Maurice Bryan - $66,522
-Associate Provest, Academic Services -
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett - $86,000
Associate Provost, Support Services - Linda Keyn - $80,300
- **Liberal Arts & Sciences** - Sally Frost-Mason - $120,000
- **Engineering** - Carl Locke - $117,575
- **Education** - Karen Gallagher - $93,200
- **Law** - Michael Hoeffinch - $145,000
- **Business** - Tom Sarowski - $142,475
- **Social Welfare** - Ann Weick - $95,600
- **Fine Arts** - Peter Thompson - $96,340
- **Architecture** - John Gaunt - $116,690
- **Pharmacy** - Jack Fincham - $114,500
- **Journalism** - Mike Kautsch - $90,000
- **Graduate and International Studies** - Andy Debicki - $110,96
- **Regents Center** - Bob Stark - $80,350
- **Continuing Education** - Bob Senecal - $99,773
Vice Chancellor,
Student Affairs -
Dave Amber -
$108,909
Vice Chancellor, Research and Public Service - Howard Mossberg -
$104.140
Vice Chancellor,
Information Services
and Dean of Libraries
Bill Crowe -
$110,000
Source: Kansas University
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 5A
Templin Hall, a KU residence hall, is undergoing a major renovation in an effort to stern the flow of students away from campus housing and into private apartments. When it reopens in the fall of 1997, Templin's rooms will feature private baths and bedrooms and living areas that will be more like private apartments than dormitories.
OLIIS TEMPLIUM
JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Construction boom expected on campus
- Construction workers will become ubiquitous on the KU campus in the next several years.
BY ANDREW E. NACHISON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
After years of neglect, Kansas University is about to undergo a major facelift.
About $44.2 million in con-
About $44.2 million construction and renovation projects are planned on the Lawrence campus in the next three to four years, paid for by a $163 million "crumbling classrooms" bond sale approved by the 1996 Kansas Legislature.
Combined with other building projects now under way, and others that have been
in the works, students can expect detours, hardhat areas and occasional interruptions for some time.
"We're always busy, but now we're even busier," said Dave Schaecher, capital improvement manager in KU's design and construction management office.
The bonds, to be repaid with revenue from an existing statewide tax, will be used to bring the campus into compliance with fire codes and to make it more accessible to students and
staff with disabilities - a requirement of the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act.
Mechanical and electrical systems and classrooms and laboratories will also be upgraded.
About half of the $44.2 million will pay for:
Combined with other building projects now under way, and others that have been in the works, students can expect detours, hardhat areas and occasional interruptions for some time.
- $9.7 million in renovations and additions to Murphy Hall, a performing arts building.
- $12 million in renovations and an addition at the Joseph R. Pearson Residence Hall for the School of Education.
- The bonds will also pay for:
- $3.4 million in renovations at Malott Hall, a science building.
- $2.1 million in renovations in Strong Hall, the main administration building.
This summer Schaecher was working on a database to keep track of many smaller renovation projects, some of which will cost as little as $5,000.
- $1 million for a new boiler in the campus power plant.
The first set of bonds won't be sold until December or January, but funds have been borrowed from other project accounts so consultants could get started on designs.
For project managers, one of
"There will be some inconvenience on campus while we're trying to do some of these," Schaecher said.
the biggest challenges will be minimizing disruptions during the school year.
See Construction, page 8A
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6A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
By the hour ...
Starting this summer, Kansas University tuition will be paid on a per-credit hour basis.
KU projects that 74% of undergrads and 85% of graduate students will pay the same or less tuition than under the previous flat-rate plan.
Cost per credit hour:
in-state out-of-state
Under-
graduate $63 $265
Graduate $94 $309
Source: Kansas University
11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
KU changes tuition structure
TERRY STEVENS/J-W GRAPHIC
- Students will pay tuition this fall semester by the credit hour rather than on a lump-sum basis.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
A pamphlet distributed to Kansas University students touts the new tuition payment plan as a "custom fit."
The man on the cover of the flier sports a suit from the 1950s, a toothy smile and confidence that the information inside "affects you."
In this case, custom fit is defined as a system that requires students
to pay a set amount for each credit hour of courses they take.
The effect is undergraduate resident students pay $63 for each credit hour while nonresident undergraduates pay $265 a credit hour.
Resident graduate students pay $94 a pop and nonresident graduate students need $309 per hour.
"Under this policy, some students will pay less," said David Shulenburger, KU vice chancellor for academic affairs. "Some students will pay more."
Historically, KU's part-time students paid a flat rate and full-
timers plunked down a higher lump sum.
T tuition for three-fourths of KU undergraduates will remain the same or decline this fall semester under the new system. The tally for students taking more than 15 hours will rise.
Approximately 85 percent of graduate students will be charged the same or less, while those with more than 12 hours will pay more.
This tuition change was adopted in time for the summer term at KU, Kansas State University and Wichita State University. The three remaining Board of Regents universities retained the old plan.
Ray Hauke, regents budget director, said the full impact of the changes couldn't be predicted. However, the potential exists for fluctuation in enrollment this fall.
Reasons regents adopted the change:
- Discourage students from shopping for courses. Common practice was to enroll in many courses, decide after a few days of classes which ones to keep and drop the rest.
- Create a direct association at the three universities between revenue and student credit hours produced.
- Make tuition equitable to all
students. In the past, students barely over the part-time limit had to pay full rate.
KU honor student David Gibson of Overland Park said the last reason given for the new tuition policy didn't stand up to scrutiny.
He said the policy would discourage stellar students who challenged themselves with an especially heavy course load —21 hours a semester, for example —from taking classes that didn't fill specific graduation requirements.
"You will see crowding of the core curriculum," he said. "The more interesting, obscure courses will drop like flies."
BROADWAY LIBRARY
IOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Watson Library is the main library on the KU campus.
Library system expands information technology
Continued from page 4A
quickly," he said. "Students will be able to get deeper into the information."
"There's no waiting in line and you can do it from your computer. You don't have to wait for the library to open on Monday."
"Right now it's a cumbersome process," Crowe said. "In the future it will be imbedded in the system, so if you want a book that someone else has, you punch that in and a card is sent to that person saying, 'Please return the book to the library in 10 days' or whatever.
Even simple tasks such as checking out library materials will be easier, Crowe said. For example, placing a reserve on a checked out book now requires several steps. In the future it won't.
The human factor
It sounds convenient and
quick, but also a little intimidating.
No need to be shy. Crowe said. That's why the library staff is there.
"We hire people who are able to troubleshoot real problems," he said. "And you want to talk to a human being—that won't go away. The lines will just get shorter so they can spend more time with you and help with research strategies."
One of those directly involved in student services is Cindy Pierard, a reference librarian and coordinator of library instruction.
"Research is changing so much," she said. "So much more information is seemingly 'readily available' and part of that is knowing how to use it. We try to help people discover what's out there and how they can use it."
Pierard works with students for as little as a few minutes or as long
as a semester finding information.
"I'd like to be able to reach more people than we do," she said. "Reference librarians have hit-and-run encounters with students. A lot of times with students we're not sure what happens. If you work with someone over time you can ask, 'How did that turn out?' That's really rewarding.
"Watching people have success is really gratifying."
The KU library system includes nine libraries throughout campus, as well as some departmental libraries, with Watson Library serving as anchor. The KU collections contain approximately 3.3 million volumes, and materials written in more than 36 languages.
Anyone can use the library system and materials can be checked out by KU faculty, staff and students, Kansas residents, KU alumni and faculty and students of other Kansas universities.
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When you need to visit your primary care physician on the plan, you're only responsible for a small co-pay. And should you ever require hospitalization, most procedures are performed at Lawrence Memorial Hospital or other nearby hospitals on the plan.
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Hemenway caps topsy-turvy inaugural year
Continued from page 1A
"In the past ... sometimes it's taken a year or two before they can actually start doing the lab work they were hired to do."
"The idea is to create greater accountability and to quicken responsiveness," Hemenway said. "We want a student-centered university."
authority over academic and managerial areas. In the past, those duties were split among several people.
Another change will benefit new faculty. He will end the practice of sending them to the bottom of the priority list for laboratory renovation.
The advantage of being at a research university is that undergraduates can work with faculty who are on the cutting edge of a discipline." Hemenway said.
Hemenway said freshman and sophomore students would receive special attention. He intends to expand their research opportunities with senior faculty.
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LAWRENCE IOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY. AUGUST 17, 1996 7A
KU ready to compete in Big 12 academics
- The Big 12 offers 11 reasons for KU to expand academic collaboration with conference universities.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
A two-act play ended Kansas University's academic dominance of its old athletic conference and complicated a return to glory in its new conference.
In the opening act, the University of Colorado Buffalo stamped the Kansas Jayhawks in the 1996 Fiske Guide to Colleges.
Historically, the guide awarded KU the Big Eight Conference's only four-star rating (out of five) for academics. In the last edition, CU earned a fourth star.
KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway said he was more interested in what was happening on Mount Oread than the Rocky Mountains. But he vowed to show Fiske guide authors the "outstanding quality of this university."
In the second act, the Big Eight was replaced July 1 by the Big 12 Conference.
Adding four former Southwest Conference schools — University of Texas, Baylor, Texas A&M and Texas Tech — changed the dynamics of academic and athletic competition for Jayhawk fans.
UT, the cream of the newcomers, pulled down a four-star academic ranking in the Fiske Guide.
Hemenway, unwilling to be bullied by the Buffers or Longhorns, anticipates a robust tug-of-war in the classroom and on fields of play.
"I believe in competition," he said. "I believe in competition in athletics and academic programs. It makes us better."
Indeed, the Big 12 may develop into more than a coalition of big-time universities lusting after zillions of dollars in sports revenue.
Academic officials at conference schools have started crafting plans for cooperative educational programs.
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KU Provost David Shulenburger said the university's Office of Study Abroad was selected to recommend by Dec. 1 options for collaborative student exchange programs.
"Among Big 12 schools, we're the recognized leader in study abroad." he said.
In the future, KU students might be able to participate in exchanges offered at other Big 12 universities. Students from those universities could take part in KU programs. Or these universities could form new joint programs.
"I believe in competition in athletics and academic programs. It makes us better."
— KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway
"We want to model this after the Big 10, which has a long history of collaboration," said Mary Debicki, director of KU study abroad.
In 1995-96, KU sent 870 students overseas. Hot spots were Latin America, Spain, England, France and Germany. Some
countries were conspicuous by the small number of Jayhawks studying there.
"India," Debcik said. "We have one student there now, but by adding other schools there may be ways to help more."
Faculty exchanges will be explored. A professor at Texas Tech might switch places with a KU faculty member for a year.
so fast that it makes sense to share as much as possible," Shulenburger said.
She said KU wasn't a novice in the collaborative arena. A summer program in Brazil is managed
by KU, UT and the University of Illinois.
KU graduate students also could spend a semester working under a researcher at Texas A&M or Oklahoma State.
"There's no sense in us doing the same program, in the same place, at the same time," she said.
Shulenburger said cooperation could go beyond students studying in exotic places. He expects universities to increase sharing of library resources. UT has more than 6 million volumes, making it the sixth-largest academic library system in the United States.
"Collections have become so expensive and prices are going up
"It's got great potential," Shulenburger said. "If we can find what things complement each other, each school can be more successful."
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8A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Dean: requirements will strengthen Education
- KU's School of Education rolls with the changes of campus restructuring and continues to be one of the nation's best schools for educators.
BY JOHN WAKE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
As part of Chancellor Robert Hemenway's campus wide reorganization, the Kansas University School of Education has seen some changes.
But all for the better, says School of Education Dean Karen Gallagher.
it's a structural reorganization, and what we think will happen is that we will only become better," Gallagher said. "The structure has to support the program, and that's what we have this year to look at."
Gallagher said that one of the changes education students can look forward to this year are
Gallagher said admitting students after two years of liberal arts and sciences course work gives students the broad education that any professional school student needs.
"You need two years in Liberal Arts and Sciences, you need the broad understanding of culture, history and so on. And that's preparation for any professional program." Gallagher said.
"It does allow us to take a look at students both their interests, but also their abilities as indicated by their grade point average."
"It does allow us to take a look at students both their interests, but also their abilities as indicated by their grade point average."
In addition to admission requirements for the School of Education changing, Gallagher said certification for becoming an educator will change within a year as well.
"This year, the Professional Standards Board, which is a regu-
— Karen Gallagher, dean of the School of Education
The regents have imposed on the regents schools a minimum GPA that students must have to be admitted as well as the state has certain criteria for teachers," Gallagher said.
See Education School, page 10A
Alison
newly imposed grade point average requirements.
"It's going up. It is now 2.75 from 2.5, and we require a 2.5 in Sports Science."
Another change for the School of Education — that continues from last fall — is the admission of students into the school after their sophomore year.
Karen Gallagher is dean of KU's School of Education.
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Construction boom coming to KU campus
Continued from page 5A
When possible, work will be scheduled around classes.
Meanwhile, work continues on the $22 million construction of Budig Hall, a classroom building on the site of the old Hoch Auditorium and now scheduled for completion early next year; on an addition at the Watkins Health Center, due to be completed next spring; and on construction of the Bales Organ Recital Hall next to the Lied Center, scheduled for dedication Oct. 7.
And Templin Hall, a residence hall, is undergoing a major renovation in an effort to stem the flow of students away from campus housing and into private apartments. When it reopens in the fall of 1997, Templin's rooms will feature private baths and bedrooms and living areas that will be more like private apartments than dormitories.
The university is also in the midst of upgrading its storm sewer system, which sometimes causes traffic detours.
And that's not all, folks. Administrators are studying proposals to build a new parking garage, and to renovate another residence hall, and the athletics department is studying its immediate and long-term needs.
"We'd rather be busy not busy," Schaeher said.
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KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 9A
John Gaunt, dean of the School of Architecture, is entering his third year at Kansas University and sees dynamic times ahead for both the university and the architecture program.
1987
MIKE YODER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Architecture dean proud of school's dynamic changes
John Gaunt is pleased he's leading Kansas University's School of Architecture and Urban Design during these times of change.
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The architecture school which trains budding planners, engineers and architects is hoping to better address changes in technology.
"We do the best we can do it," Gaunt said. "That's a positive thing, as far as I'm concerned."
"We clearly have targeted some of our key resources to that area," Gaunt said.
times," said the former CEO of an international architecture firm. "I think they are dramatically dynamic times."
Because resources are limited and technology changes so quickly, it doesn't make sense for the school to be on the leading edge. However, it does make sense for the school to provide its students with an understanding of basic technology used in their fields of study.
In Gaunt's view, educators need to understand professional needs and make changes while holding on to traditions that have worked well.
The architecture school's outreach to the professional world recently increased. That will help the school with fund-raising mentorships and internships, Gaunt said.
The school is establishing professional-educational partnerships that place students in offices and professionals in the classroom.
And Gaunt wants to expand the school's international programs. He would like every student in the school to have the opportunity to study abroad. That will take additional financial support.
Gaunt believes that his students should take advantage of the entire university. That means attending performances at the Lied Center, viewing the artwork at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art and becoming acquainted with the university's libraries.
It's important for architects, he said, to be as broad-based in their view of the world as they can be.
The raw materials are in place for the school to shine. The school has a well-deserved strong reputation. And it has well-developed programs.
"I think we have an opportunity here to make it a real national model for professional design education," Gaunt said.
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10A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE IOURNAL-WORLD
KU enrollment Fall 1985-1986
26,661 25,036
Source:
Kansas
University
Figures for Lawrence campus only
20 25 30
'85 '86 '87 '88 '89 '90 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95
TERRY STEVENS/I-W GRAPHIC
KU officials change focus of enrollment
- KU is striving to increase the quality and quantity of students.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
In the next month or so, Kansas University will be enrolling a new director of admissions in an aggressive student recruiting effort.
Whv?
KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway said so.
Proof of his desire to shake up student recruitment was the dismissal in June of Deborah Boulware, admissions director since 1991.
Enrollment on KU's Lawrence campus had fallen every year she was on the job.
Hemenway said he was interested in more than filling classrooms with warm bodies.
"I believe you ought to be able to say to every assembled freshman class, 'You are the best freshman class, academically speaking, that's ever been at this institution. Don't feel badly about it, but next year there will be a better class.'"
"If the university will recruit in that way, it will become a better university," he said.
The interim admissions director is
Kathryn Tuttle, director of KU's new student orientation program. She has declined to be a candidate for the position, but a permanent successor may be appointed by Sept. 1.
In the late 1980s, KU was swimming in students. The university had more than faculty could handle. Students were packed to the rafters in dormitories. Recruiting back then was more reactionary than proactive.
"I believe you ought to be able to say to every assembled freshman class, 'You are the best freshman class, academically speaking, that's ever been at this institution. Don't feel badly about it, but next year there will be a better class.'"
— KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway
It's a different story now. As KU's tuition has climbed, fewer nonresidents have enrolled. Dorm rooms stand empty.
Kansans have plenty of college options other than KU, and they're taking advantage of them. KU is now forced to engage in serious recruiting.
Hemenway said the state's best and brightest high school graduates will know KU wants to count them among Jayhawk loyalists.
Meanwhile, a new program has been devised to intensify recruitment and retention of second-tier students. The Mt. Oread Program will target students with ACT scores from 27 to 31. An
Telephone calls to potential students are the rule instead of the exception, he said.
existing honors program takes care of students with an ACT above 31.
"We found some of our brightest students didn't feel as challenged as they wanted to be." Provost David Shulenburer said.
These lower-scoring students will be offered scholarships, small classes and faculty mentoring, he said.
Shulenburger said he was disappointed that only two-thirds of KU applicants with 27-31 ACT marks enrolled at KU. In addition, one-third of students in the test-score group who did enroll didn't
"For 32 percent ... not to earn a KU degree borders on the ridiculous." Shulenburger said.
KU enrollment last fall was 27,639,a407-student drop from fall1995.
That reflected a decline of 300 students on the Lawrence campus, which includes the Regents Center in Overland Park, and 107 students at KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Robert Stark, Regents Center dean, said KU's decline would
See KU, page 20A
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Education School stays abreast
Continued from page 8A
latory board directed by the State Board of Education, is taking a very different way of doing licensing." Gallagher said.
"Instead of certification, it is
being called 'licensing. Instead of 209 certificates, there will be approximately 28. The standards board will be taking a document that was given to it by a subcommittee and taking it back out into the state to talk about it and review it. And by July 1 of next year, it will be before the State Board of Ed to approve. That will impact the schools and colleges of ed in this state the most."
Although this is not the first time that there have been changes for the standards of teaching, Gallagher's advice to students is to be aware of how
sorry we've changed, so you'll have to stay another three years."
While a new standard in licensing
would have implications for current teachers renewing their licenses, Gallagher said it wouldn't have a great effect on any current students in the School of Education.
"Last year we were No.1 and this year No.2. Aside from being scientific, it's reputation as well, but No.1 or No.2 out of 220 programs is not bad, and then the whole school is 20th."
"What is in effect when you come in is what your program is," Gallagher said.
Karen Gallagher, dean of the School of Education
such changes could affect them
"We would never say 'Well, I'm
"What you do (as an administrator) is work to make sure your program responds (to such changes) and then you help your students with that transition," Gallagher said. "So, that they will not only have that license but they will have the skills they will need to be successful in the classroom."
Gallagher advises any incoming KU freshmen to
seek the advice of an advisor to get a jump on required courses.
"They need to contact us to sit down and let us explain exactly the kinds of requirements it's going to take to be successful to enter at the end of your sophomore year," Gallagher said.
Gallagher said a great credit to the university is KU's special教
cation department's No. 2 ranking (out of 223 schools of education) received in a spring issue of U.S. News and World Report. The entire School of Education ranked 20th.
*Last year we were No. 1 and this year No. 2. Aside from being
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but No.1 or No.2 out of 220 programs is not bad, and then the whole school is 20th," Gallagher said.
"We're very proud of both the faculty and the students and the graduates."
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KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 11A
JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Ivan G. Kernovich
Carl Locke, dean of the engineering school, is overseeing expansion of the school's facilities and mission.
Engineering school braces for changes
- Changes are in the wind at the Kansas University engineering school.
BY RIC ANDERSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Engineering school administrators at Kansas University are taking a different look these days at the making of a good education.
Locke said that unlike current accreditation criteria, which focus on the educational process, the new standards center on outcomes.
Carl Locke Jr., KU engineering dean, said the school was studying "fairly dramatic changes" being brought about by new criteria for accreditation.
"A friend of mine compared it to sausage-making." Locke said, smiling. "Under the current process, we look at things like, 'How fast does the extruder run, and what type of ingredients did we use?'
"The new criteria's focus is,
'How does the sausage taste?'
During an interview in July,
Locke said he envisioned more student and alumni surveys to determine school performance. Employers of KU engineering graduates also would be surveyed, to give the school an idea of its quality in the business world.
"I think we're going to be doing more and more things ... to see how well our students are doing," Locke said.
Locke said other changes in the wind at Learned Hall, where the engineering school is centered, include expanding students' scope well beyond engineering. He said administrators hope to beef up students' communication and teamwork skills, a move designed to help students determine "how their engineering work affects the social fabric."
The engineering school features about 95 faculty members on the Lawrence campus and satellite programs at the KU Regents Center, Overland Park, and the Capital Center, Topeka. Locke said enrollment projects indicate that 1,400 to 1,500 undergraduate students will take
See Engineering, page 23A
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kitchen, private bath and a bedroom which will have desks and bunk beds. The suites will be the size of two current rooms.
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- The Office of Student Affairs reaches into many aspects of students' lives.
See Student Affairs, page 13A
ter," said Linda Mullen, an assistant in the office.
BY JILL HOGAN SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Workers in the Office of Student Affairs have their hands full this fall dealing with all of the
offices they oversee, as well as the major reconstruction of Watkins Health Center and Templin Hall.
"Our office oversees the department of housing, Student Health Services, Kansas and Burge Unions, department of student life, Student Senate, Student Assistance Center and the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Cen-
This summer and at least during the first semester Templin Hall is undergoing major reconstruction. According to the department of housing, Templin Hall will have new two-person suites as rooms which will include a living room, small
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12A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE IOURNAL-WORLD
Administrative shakeup creates atmosphere of change
Everything old is new again for KU provost
I
David Shulenburger was named provost, the No. 2 spot at KU, this year after a nationwide search. Shulenburger previously was KU's vice chancellor for academic affairs.
A veteran KU professor was named the university's first provost since 1962.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Nearly 35 years after a Kansas University chancellor abandoned the provost model, Chancellor Robert Hemenway threw precedent aside and appointed a veteran professor as provost.
Hemenway's provost, his No. 2 of asylum 1, has been David Shulenburger, formerly KU's vice chancellor for academic affairs.
"He was the best candidate," Hemenway said. "He clearly has the ability to get things done. I think he's highly principled."
"The provost and the chancellor need a produce.
executive vice chancellor, held by Ed Meyen, was eliminated. Shulenburger's old position of vice chancellor also was deep-sized.
Managerial duties held by Meyen and academic responsibilities held by Shulenburger in the old system were handed to the provost. After a national search, Shulenburger was chosen to fill that position.
"The provost and chancellor need a productive partnership. That's the kind of relationship that we'll have."
Shulenburger, paid $130,000 annually, was assigned the task of making the provost model work in the wake of a major administrative shakeup at KU.
"The provost and the chancellor need a productive partnership. That's the kind of relationship that we'll have."
A major plank of the reorganization was Hemenway's decision to merge two high-level campus jobs. The job of KU
— KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway
"It's a real opportunity for me as provost to make a difference in teaching and research at KU," Shulenburger said.
He said the old administrative structure diluted authority to a point that reform was difficult.
"There are many things about which we could only complain," Shulen-burger said. "There is no more room to complain
— responsibility is aligned with authority."
Academic, budget and operational responsibilities on KU's Lawrence campus are now concentrated in his hands.
The last time KU had a provost was 1962. That was the year KU Chancellor Clarke Wescoe hired James Surface for the job. After one year, that was abandoned in favor of the vice chancellor model that remained many years.
Byselecting Shulenburger, Hemenway teamed up with a university insider capable of balancing the administrative ticket. Hemenway has been chancellor only 15 months.
Shulenburger, 50, has been a KU faculty member for 22 years. He's joked about knowing where all the bodies are buried on campus.
"I'm not sure how many new people you want at the head of the institution at one time," he said.
Shulenburger began in 1974 as an assistant professor of business and climbed the ranks to vice chancellor of academic affairs by 1993.
A native of Salisbury, N.C., he earned a bachelor's degree from Lenoir Rhyne College in Hickory, N.C., and master's and doctoral degrees from the University of Illinois.
Aside from administering KU's reorganization, Shulenburger said a primary goal was to improve the academic experience of freshmen and sophomore students.
He said KU officials had a responsibility to nurture these young students. In the past, not enough attention was lavished on them.
"I believe that." Shulenburger said.
"It's a bellwether issue."
He said emphasis should be placed on student advising and on making certain students graduated in a timely manner.
The reform menu includes correcting or eliminating low-quality graduate programs and enhancing academic computing services on campus, Shulenburger said.
Shulenburger said adjusting expectations of faculty — more or less research, more or less teaching — to conform to individual strengths would improve KU's educational enterprise, he said.
He said it was essential to follow through on Hemenway's plan to create an umbrella research foundation at KU. Research funding needs to climb to at least $150 million annually, he said.
"The trick there is not to sell your soul." he said.
Shulenburger said KU would resist political pressure to dismantle faculty tenure.
The list of issues confronting higher education leaders runs longer than Shulenburger's arm, but he's ready for the challenge.
"If we do it well," he said, "the legend of Harvard on the Kaw will be a little closer to reality."
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KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 13A
Social welfare school adds programs for professionals, alumni
- The social welfare program is looking for ways to help alumni update their education.
BY MEGAN POPLINGER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Kansas University's School of Social Welfare is looking for ways to provide professional and community education as well as outside projects.
beginning this school year, the KU Social Welfare School will offer a master's program in social work at the Department of Family Services Offices in Kansas City, Mo.
Associate Dean Charles Wrapp said that by locating the program on site, transportation time is cut for department employees, who also won't have to take as much time off from work.
"It is a blending of all genders where
everybody is kicking in to get the job done — and we are really excited to be a part of that." Wrapp said.
The school is also beginning a Professional and Community Education Program. The program will focus on delivering post-master's degree classes and workshops to alumni and other social workers who need to update their skills and licenses, Wrapp said.
"This is the first concerted effort to
help alumni out," Wrapp said. The program will include evening and weekend classes and all-day workshops.
Social welfare professor Tom McDonald has received funding for several child welfare projects.
McDonald is involved in a Kids Count project, which focuses on the welfare of children in Kansas, and the Kansas Families for Kids Initiative contract. Kansas Families for Kids works to find permanent adoptive homes for children who are in state custody, he said.
The school has two new faculty members for the coming year. Deb Page-Adams just earned her doctoral degree from Washington University, St. Louis, and specializes is in social administration and poverty programs. Margaret Severson, formerly of the faculty at Louisiana State University, has focuses her work on mediation and corrections.
P. A. MORRIS
David Ambler is KU's vice chancellor for student affairs.
IOURNAL-WORLD PHOTC
Student Affairs office eyes life on KU campus
Continued from page 11A
another building that is undergoing reconstruction.
"Watkins will be adding on 20,000 square feet more to the center which will be done just before the fall semester begins. This fall the already existing 60,000 square feet will be remodeled," said Jim Strobl, director of Watkins Health Center.
"Hopefully our number one complaint will be answered. With our new pharmacy and the new computer system, our top 75 medications will be built in the system. This way they can be counted out and
billed immediately. A slow pharmacy was one of the things that needed to be changed." Strobl said.
Other changes will include an increased number of exam rooms, five more observation beds in the urgent care clinic, more confidentiality in the check-in area as well as in the exam rooms, and Braille on all of the signs.
"We want to be able to increase the number of appointments possible as to cut down on patient wait. The new building and systems should make the students escorted through the process fairly rapidly," Strobl said.
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14A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Graduate school dean hopes to expand scope
- Changes have touched a veteran Kansas University professor and administrator.
BY CAROLINE TROWBRIDGE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Andrew Debicki plans to hit the ground running.
Debicki, who's been at Kansas University since 1968, previously was vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service. He reported to the executive vice chancellor.
Now, after KU's reorganization of its top administration, Debicki is the new dean of the KU graduate school and international programs, and he'll report to Provost David Shulenburger.
"I suspect that combination was created because of me as an individual," said Debicki, who also is a distinguished professor of Spanish and Portuguese.
Both the graduate school and international programs cut across the many academic schools and departments at KU. So while the mission of the two fields may be different, the framework they work within are much the same.
The graduate school at KU does not handle student records. Each school
takes care of its own graduate students. The graduate school does, however, concentrate on faculty and programs.
"Basically, we have little to do with individual students and a lot to do with the mission of the university," said Debicki, 62, who earned both a bachelor's and doctoral degree from Yale University.
A recent review of graduate programs at KU addressed individual programs and the quality of the faculty, as well as plans each program has for improvement.
"I think we can do some very significant things to improve graduate education at the university," Debicki said.
The response to the review has been, generally, "very positive." Debicki said, although there has been some criticism that it was too quick, too superficial and that some of the people on the review committees didn't have enough knowledge about the disciplines they were reviewing.
Debicii will continue to work closely with deans of schools to improve graduate studies at KU.
"I enjoy that — working with others," he said.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Andrew Debicki is the new dean of the KU graduate school and international programs.
JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 15A
Women's Resource Center offers variety of programs
ATLAS
- From information about resumes to information on how to avoid sexual assault, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has it all.
Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, talks about programs at the women's resource center at Kansas University. This year the center hopes to begin new programs for men.
BY JILL HOGAN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
RENÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
"Let's discuss that limit before you get to that point," said Barbara Ballard, director of the center.
Communication is the theme for the 1996 fall calendar of events in the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center at Kansas University.
Along with her staff of nine, Ballard has many exciting new programs planned for the fall.
A department that has focused on women's issues since 1977, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center takes an open, honest approach to the problems that many women face.
"Now that we can play in the arena, we need to know what the rules are about," Ballard said. "When you play the game, the other team will always change the rules on you. Challenging the status quo is what we do."
The center focuses on issues important to women, then tries to create its programs.
"We look at the national issues and what people respond to,
then we write the programs," Ballard said. "There is a need for women to have this support."
As always, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has current articles and books that are available for women and men to read for their personal interest as well as for class. The cienis located in 115
in the job market.
"It is important that women know how to handle the situation, and have the self-esteem
Strong Hall open to students 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
"No one deserves to be raped. Period. We are here to help you if you or someone that you know has been sexually assaulted."
Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
It also has extensive financial aid information for women. The center will help students with résumés, cover letters and interviewing skills to better compete
necessary," Ballard said. "Knowledge is power."
The center also focuses on issues such as AIDS.
"AIDS is a disease which effects many women in our society, and on our campus," Ballard said. "We are available for information on women and AIDS."
This fall, the center again will
offer a program on prevention of sexual assault. This includes information on sexual assault and its limits.
"No one deserves to be raped. Period," Ballard said. "We are here to help you if you or someone that you know has been sexually assaulted."
Ballard and her assistants are asked to speak almost every night of the week on this and other topics.
In addition, a four-part series is planned during the noon hour that will focus on "The Total You." Each Monday in October the center will focus on a different topic, such as self-esteem, assertiveness, stress education and violence education.
The second annual Women's Student Leadership Conference, which focuses on how women can get involved on campus and in the community, is planned for Nov. 10. The theme for this conference is "Articulating, Acting, and Advocacy."
The center also plans new programs for men.
"You can't work with one half and not the other half," Ballard said. "Men need to be involved in this changing process because men and women think differently."
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Jon Francis and Rich Revenew purchased Francis Sporting Goods in 1993 from Jon's father, George Francis. George and his father, Gib, opened the business in 1947 as a retail store selling hunting and fishing equipment.
When Rich and Jon purchased the business, they were concerned that they would have to compile a lengthy record to attract a bank that would assist them. They quickly discovered that an independent, hometown bank — Douglas County Bank — was eager to take care of their every need.
"Ninety-five percent of the people who walk in our store want personal service and as business people, we want the same thing," Rich says. "Lois Uihlein, our loan officer at Douglas County Bank, recently
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It's this kind of personal service that Rich and Jon have come to appreciate from Douglas County Bank — hometown service from their hometown bank.
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18A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
C. K. H. J.
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Mike Wellman, facilities manager for the Adams Alumni Center, left, and Bryan Greve, manager of the Learned Club, are helping usher in changes in the membership structure that will enable more people to use the center.
Club chanaes menu to attract more visitors
Alumni Center open to all
- The recent elimination of Learned Club dues at the Adams Alumni Center has the KU facility's social corner buzzing.
BY MATT GOWEN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Come on in, alumni.
As of July 1, any member of the Kansas University Alumni Association could dine, drink and relax at the Learned Club, the elegant restaurant and bar on the second floor of the Adams Alumni Center.
Previously, annual dues in addition to association dues were required for Learned Club membership. No more.
And the change already has the place hopping, club manager Bryan Greve said.
"We're already hearing a buzz about the new dues and the new club membership," Greve said. "Every table in here was full last night."
Menu changes, which emphasize quality over quantity, are also in store for club visitors.
"We're creating menus that
will appear to a broader range of tastes," Greve said. "And we've streamlined it somewhat to hopefully expedite the food preparation."
Greve added that despite the changes, the club will retain in element omnia
"The alumni center serves as the campus gathering place for retired faculty, current faculty and students, friends and all members of the university community."
Mike Wellman
its elegant ambience.
we're maintaining our niche as a special occasion club," Greve said. "It's still a private club, in that (association) membership is still a prerequisite."
Although the venue remains the same, the restructured dues are part of a larger campaign constantly waged by the center's executives and staff - to remind the university community that the alumni facility was built for all lavahaws.
"This was built, in essence, by alumni for alumni," facilities manager Mike Wellman said.
Using alumni contributions, the stately brick building was finished and dedicated in 1983. At times, Wellman said, the center fights an image of stuffy, business-like inaccessibility. But for every board
room and conference room, there is a music room, a recreation room or a library.
"The alumni center serves as the campus gathering place for retired faculty, current faculty and students, friends and all members of the university community," Wellman said.
Visitors to the center can enjoy a walk through the library, or a stroll down the vintage photograph-lined halls, to soak up Jayhawk lore.
Home football games, he added, are the perfect opportunity for the alumni center to show
its true, crimson and blue colors.
is true, crimson and blue color. A tailgate buffet before the Jayhawks Aug. 29 kick-off battle with Ball State heralds the start of the 1996 season. Association members who call for reservations can enjoy the buffet. And as the pep band plays out front, and the Jayhawk mingles in the crowd, the atmosphere will glitter with excitement.
"It's a very festive feeling," Greve said.
Association members in the area, Wellman said, will likely be the first to embrace the new membership structure. The ultimate goal is to keep alumni worldwide in constant contact with the association, so that every visit is a homecoming.
"One of the objectives is to make all association members, regardless of their geographic location, feel as if this is their home when the come back to campus." Wellman said.
The alumni association can be reached via the Internet, at ksalumni@kuaa.wpo.ukans.edu
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 19A
KU MBA students get hands-on experience
- The Kansas University MBA program focuses its new curriculum on teamwork.
BY MEGAN NEHER
JOURNAL-WORLD BUSINESS EDITOR
The Kansas University MBA program received high marks for its new curriculum.
David Collins, assistant director of the master's program for the School of Business, said the newly revised program received complimentary reviews from students and professors this year.
Teamwork is the basis for the new program, beginning with challenge week, a team-building exercise before school starts. The program was instituted in the 1995-96 school year.
"Teamwork is the main way of doing things today in corporate America," Collins said. "So we put the students in a situation that will resemble what they will find in the industry."
Before school started last fall, the
71 first-year MBA students separated into teams of five or six. For the rest of the academic year, the teams stuck together for every project.
The first project was a consulting exercise in which students were assigned to an organization on campus, such as the Watkins Health Center or the campus police department. The groups were asked to interview and study the organizations' operations and make recommendations for improvements.
For the first time in the MBA program, the students were required to spend their summer at a professional internship, many of which are overseas.
Collins said the new program has retained its professional core classes but has added projects that will strengthen the students' writing, presentation, leadership and interpersonal skills.
The second-year MBA students are more independent and have more freedom to work at their own pace. Most work solely on a
selected area of concentration. This year, Collins said, the school of business has added several new areas of concentration, including information technology and management of technology.
Another new aspect of the MBA program is recruiting. Collins said for the first time last year, the college asked alumni of KU's MBA program to assist with recruitment. This year, they will step up the alumni participation.
"We have to compete with so many other MBA programs throughout the country," Collins said. "This year, we've dramatically increased the alumni for what we call the rush process."
Kansas University also offers an MBA program at the Kansas University Regent's Center in Overland Park. This program, which is geared toward working professionals, has a different curriculum and schedules courses in the evenings.
This year for the first time, the Regent's Center is offering more flexible electives for MBA students.
100
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
David Collins is assistant director of the master's program for the School of Business.
Endowment gifts set record
Continued from page 1A
Martin said, augmenting but not supplanting state funding.
Several substantial gifts to the university comprised this year's fund raising.
One, a $10.5 million pledge from the Anderson family of Santa Monica, California, will assist both KU's athletics programs and its school of business.
Ninety percent will support athletics building projects. Ten percent will establish a "business Opportunity Fund" for unrestricted use in the business school.
Another was bequeathed by the late Francis Constant, Lawrence, who died in January 1995 at age 92. Constant gave a $2 million gift, which will be split into parts.
The Francis Constant Library Acquisition fund will be established, providing $1 million for books, electronic media and other materials for the university library system. Using $250,000, the J.L. "Tommy" Constant Fellowship fund for graduate engineering students will be established.
In addition, the J.L. Constant Distinguished Professorship fund and the J.L.
Constant Scholarship fund will receive $100,000 and $650,000, respectively.
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20A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Graduate studies international programs merge
- In the midst of a change of scenery for the office of international programs, the department's new dean is hoping his experience in the graduate department will help him lead a new combined office.
BY MATT GOWEN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
The office of international programs may be moving, but its mission remains the same.
"This office serves to help people with the university's mission of internationalizing," said Andrew Debicki, dean of KU's graduate school and international programs.
Around Aug. 1 the international programs office, currently made up of five people, packed up and moved to 222 Strong Hall, the current graduate programs office.
The change was spurred by the office's similarities: neither technically teaches students, and both deal with every department on campus, taking a university-wide approach.
The international programs office operates in both an import and export fashion. Students and faculty study and teach abroad, and international students and teachers come to KU. The office also helps fund research abroad.
"We're in the middle of restructuring," Debicki said. "We're not sure how it will work."
The office works with the Applied English Center, which ensures English proficiency in students, and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which creates global-emphasizing courses.
International programs and studies also coordinates with the Office of International Student Services, the main entity for international student recruitment.
Currently, 900 students are participating in KU's study abroad programs. A new initiative, orchestrated by Chancellor Robert Hemenway, calls for 2,000 students studying abroad by the year 2000.
That same initiative calls for 2,500 international students to be studying on KU's campus by that year.
Objective: to produce high quality graduates prepared to deal with global issues in the 21st century.
"It's a small world," Debicki said. "We want to bring the insights of all these countries to our campus — not to be provincial."
Terry Weidner, associate director of international programs, said the main thrust during the coming school year would be to work with KU's deans and directors "toward creating an integrated international curriculum."
Essentially that would mean classes taught in a foreign language, and with international
concepts, that aren't necessarily foreign language courses.
"Engineering, for example," Weidner said. "They would not only be strong in engineering but they would have the kind of global awareness that engineering firms look for.
"It's a huge undertaking, but I think it's vital if our students are going to be able to compete in the world as it exists now. It's not something we can accomplish in a year."
KU changes enrollment with focus on quality
Continued from page 10A
have been severe had it not been for an enrollment surge at the center. About 1,800 students are enrolled in graduate and professional degree programs there.
Demand for the center's courses will remain, he said. KU is planning a $13.2 million expansion of the center to meet anticipated increases in enrollment.
"There appears to be significant potential growth," Stark said.
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Hemenway said enrollment this fall on the Lawrence campus should be close to last year's mark of 25,036. The tally has fallen each year since 1991, when the headcount reached 26,436.
Controlled growth is the operative philosophy at KU. A 1 percent increase over the next couple years would bring a smile to
Hemenway's face. A big increase followed by a sharp decline would elicit the opposite reaction.
"A swing of 100 or 200 students doesn't mean much," he said.
"You don't want a rollercoaster with a spike here and a spike there."
Part of KU's enrollment problems can be traced to increases in
TOUCHBAR
tuition for nonresident students. Nearly 400 fewer out-of-state students enrolled at KU last fall than the previous year. Resident student enrollment fell by less than 25.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 21A
3 senior faculty leaving Mt. Oread
- Three distinguished KU faculty accepted jobs at other universities for higher pay and better research opportunities.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Aletha Huston unveiled results of a study on educational children's television programs in the East Room of the White House.
Her work was conducted through the Kansas University Center for Research on
the Influences of Television on Children (CRITC).
It won't be the last time she rubs shoulders with President Bill Clinton, Vice President Al Gore and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton.
But the briefing in July was the last time she'll do so as a member of the KU faculty.
"They ... offered us some wonderful opportunities in the way of facilities and positions," Huston said. "It's a very good university."
Huston and her husband, CRITC co-director John Wright, packed their bags, folded up the research center, joined hands with four KU graduate students and moved to the University of Texas at Austin.
Wright said UT recruited them for 2 1/2 years.
"Sentimentally, I'm here (KU), he said. "Pragmatically, I'm there (UT). A hard-headed analysis is that we had to go where we could get the most work done."
attracted $4 million in research funding to KU.
KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway said their departure during the summer was a huge loss. Huston had been at KU for 20 years; Wright for 28 years. The duo had
"They are very good people." Hemenway said. "It really is regrettable."
Their decision brought to three the number of exceptional KU faculty who turned the channel on their careers.
William Andrews, a distinguished professor and director of the KU Hall Center for the Humanities, took at job at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. He's an expert in African-American literature.
See 3 senior, page 22A
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22A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU publishing has been turning out quality products for 50 years
University Press honors past, looks to future
- University Press of Kansas celebrates 50 years of publishing changes.
BY JL WATSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
The University Press of Kansas is in the midst of celebrating its 50th anniversary of publishing, but the party has been low-key; no cakes, or balloons or big hands
Just more of what the Press has been doing: publishing books.
"With our 50th anniversary, a number of things have happened to emphasize the fact that we're doing a better job of reaching our mission," University Press director Fred Woodward said. "And that is to extend the reach and representation of the six state institutions."
The University Press is publishing 55 books this year, more than it has in the past. It also has merged with the information highway.
"For the first time, our books are now advertised on the World Wide Web," Woodward said. "We have an electronic presence. And we're distributing electronic publishing products on CD-ROM."
The additional publishing and advertising has paid off, Woodward said.
"Our books are attracting more and more major reviews from Los Angeles to London," he said. "It's really exciting. We jump up and down when that happens."
National and international reviews lead to better sales records, and for fiscal year 1996 the University Press had gross sales exceeding $2 million.
The University Press specializes in military and presidential studies, but also publishes books on other topics.
"We specialize because we're not the oldest or largest university press," Woodward said. "We've developed a reputation for publishing well in those areas. But we do look at other things. If you wrote a book and it was really well-written, we still might want to keep our hooks in your book."
3 senior faculty leaving Mt. Oread
"North Carolina presented to me ... a very attractive financial incentive," said Andrews, the Joyce and Elizabeth Hall professor of American literature and director of the Hall Center for the Humanities.
He said UNC—his alma mater —recruited him for an endowed professorship and made a substantial salary offer. KU countered that bid, but it wasn't enough to keep him in Lawrence.
Mike Briggs, editor-in-chief at University Press of Kansas, stands by some of the recently published books.
The University Press has launched its newest series, "Landmark Law Cases and American Society," which discusses legal and social history in the United States.
Huston accepted the Priscilla Pond Flawn professorship in child development. Wright will have a joint appointment in the department of human ecology and the school of communication studies.
In part, each was moved to improve salaries and research support.
"We have to find a way to convince the people of Kansas that top-rate faculty who are successful in the classroom and in the laboratory need their support," he said.
It will be a relief to work in a department capable of supporting more than a dozen graduate students. Huston said.
Hemenway said raids on KU's faculty jeopardized the quality of education here.
That attracts high-caliber students and make it easier to launch research projects, she added.
"I can't tell you how often I laid awake at night worrying about whether we would get grants to keep student support," Huston said.
Continued from page 21A
"We do it only after lots and lots of research," she said. "We want to make sure there's nothing else like it out there."
The Press rarely launches a new series, assistant director and marketing manager Susan Schott said.
Wright said KU's counter offer wasn't enough to sway them. State politicians simply don't properly fund KU, he said.
"People ... expect something for nothing," Wright said. "Sooner or later there's a reckoning."
One of the Press' last series,
"American Political Thought," is still running strong two years after the books in the series hit the shelves. None of the books in the law series is published yet, which is the usual procedure when a new series takes shape.
WESTERN UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA
"Publishers have such long-term planning horizons," Woodward said. "We think in terms of books and series. We're signing contracts for books in the next millennium already."
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Woodward and his staff isn't quite ready to look 50 years into the future at what the centennial anniversary might hold, but they are thinking beyond the turn of the century.
"We want our publishing list to grow to 65 to 70 books a year in the next four years," he said. "And we'll keep improving the quality of our list. We're publishing books that are attractive and appeal to a wider readership both because of quality and subject."
When the story breaks, we'll be there. You can count on it. Every day of the week, every day of the year, the Journal-World is there to keep you informed.
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Journal-World reporters, editors and photographers are your eyes and ears. We're working to tell you the stories that make a difference. How high taxes are going, where growth in the city is occurring and what the candidates are saying.
Our news coverage takes you from the world of sports to the world of business.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 23A
New dean works toward CLAS act
- The dean of KU's largest academic unit wants to personalize the undergraduate experience.
BY GWYN MELLINGER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
In Sally Frost-Mason, Kansas University's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has found not only a dean but an advocate for the value of a liberal arts degree.
In April, Frost-Mason was chosen to lead the College, which is the largest academic unit at KU with 15,000 students. Making sure undergraduates aren't lost in that crowd is Frost-Mason's highest priority.
Frost-Mason recognizes the experience that incoming freshmen have in the College may color their perceptions about being at KU. Undergraduates can expect to receive more personalized attention through the network of faculty advisers and other expanded programs, she said.
"How does a student coming from a small town in western Kansas react to a class with 500 students in it? In some cases that's bigger than their entire home-town," she said.
"Nearly every undergraduate that comes into the university starts out in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences," Frost-Mason said.
Even those who apply for admission to the professional schools must complete course requirements in the College. Frost-Mason says that is where students get the foundation for their college education.
In addition, as the value of a well-rounded liberal arts education is repeatedly demonstrated in the workplace, employers are increasingly seeing the bachelor of arts degree as an asset.
Frost-Mason said her visits with employers at a School of Business job fair last year bore out that point.
"There wasn't one employer out there who didn't have a liberal arts degree at the top of their list," she said. "They're looking for people who have the broad kind of training that you get with a liberal arts degree."
Even though Frost-Mason is a biologist, her own undergraduate degree is a bachelor of arts.
To enrich the undergraduate experience at KU, Frost-Mason hopes to provide research opportunities that will inspire students to pursue post-graduate education. Such an experience at the University of Kentucky convinced Frost-Mason, who was the first member of her family to graduate from college, that she wanted to be a teacher and researcher.
"I'm one of these people who is just passionate about getting undergraduates involved in research projects," she said, noting that those opportunities are a selling point for incoming freshmen choosing between KU and a four-year liberal arts college.
"That's what makes KU different from other smaller schools that don't have a research mission," she said.
During the next year, students and faculty will benefit from
campus infrastructure improvements.
By fall of 1997, the rebuilt Budig Hall-Hoch Auditorium will be available for large lecture courses.
In addition, computers will be more widely available in the College.
"Come this fall I don't believe there will be any unit in the College who isn't networked," she said. "We also will have made significant inroads toward providing computers for students in the form of various computer labs."
One of those will be located in Budig-Hoch.
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Engineering school gears for changes
Continued from page 11A
engineering courses this fall. About 625 graduate students will be enrolled in the KU engineering program.
Thanks to school projects with government programs and businesses, work at the engineering school goes beyond classroom walls.
For instance, Locke said, the civil engineering program recently took part in a Kansas Department of Transportation study of a new type of tractor-trailer tire. The study's findings revealed that the new tire would damage roads, prompting the Legislature to ban the tires from Kansas highways.
Locke said the study helped save the state a projected $20 million in damage over a three- to four-year period.
KU's private-business ventures include development of a new high-speed data transfer system for U.S. Sprint telecommunications.
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That attitude extends to students. Locke said that for the past three years, engineering students have taught science at Lawrence elementary schools.
"There's an impression of faculty that we know the most important problems in the world
"The people who get involved in that — the teachers and the students — really get a lot out of that," Locke said. "We see it as helping them with their education skills."
— just ask us, " Locke said. "I think it's important to recognize that first, the mindset of our faculty is different. They're willing to recognize other ideas. And second, we're doing things to help."
Locke points to participation in contests as another plus for KU. Last year, KU won a national aircraft design contest sponsored by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and were in the top four of a design contest held this year by NASA and the FAA.
Another 1996 highlight: For the second time, NASA has accepted a set of experiments prepared by KU students for launch on the space shuttle.
"We've got several student groups doing work outside the classroom that I think is beneficial to them," Locke said.
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24A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Budig Hall rises from Hoch's ashes
- Hoch Auditorium is coming back with a new name, new interior and technologically advanced features.
BY RIC ANDERSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
A near-fatal accident leaves a patient barely alive. Specialists using modern technology rebuild the patient, who emerges better, bigger and stronger than before.
This isn't a story of a $6 million man. It's about a $22 million building — Budig Hall.
"It's going to be pretty much a state of the art facility," said David Schaecher, program manager at Kansas University's design and construction management office.
Budig Hall was born in 1991, when a fire caused by a lightning strike gutted Hoch Auditorium and left only the facade standing. Renamed for former KU Chancellor Gene Budig, the renovated building will be used as a major undergraduate teaching facility and offers a 1,000-seat lecture hall plus two 500-seat classrooms.
When Budig Hall opens — this spring, if construction proceeds as scheduled — longtime Lawrence residents may have to do a double-take to notice changes. Schaecher said that from Jayhawk Boulevard, the building would look nearly identical to Hoch Auditorium.
"There are new windows, and I think if you look just at a pure elevation from Jayhawk Boulevard, you might be able to see some of the entryways where we've expanded to the east and the west," he said.
Inside, though, the building will be nothing like the cavernous auditorium that opened in 1927.
"The only thing that will really remain is the front entrance lobby." Schaecher said.
What once served as the basketball team's home court has become a world of high-tech equipment. Schaecher said.
Among the gadgets are a 30-foot-wide television screen in the large classroom and 25-foot screens in the 500-seat rooms.
"They're definitely the biggest screens on campus," Schaecher said.
He said huge televisions were necessary because of the classrooms' size.
"Our thousand-seat classroom is probably one of the largest classrooms in any college environment," Schaecher said.
The screens, designed to give all students a good look at instructors' presentations, are part of a million-dollar audio video package that includes state-of-the-art projectors and sound equipment.
Advanced lighting systems also should help students and ifstructors.
"We'll have the ability to dim the lights and block out different portions of the lighting, so you could shut the lights off in the back of the room and leave them on at the podium, for instance," he said. "Most of our older classrooms, you walk in and flip one switch and all the lights are either on or off."
100%
An example of the new system's advantages would be a film presentation. In older classrooms, students would be forced to take notes in the dark while a film was running. In Budig Hall,
JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Budling Hall, built from the shell of what used to be HoCh Auditorium, is scheduled to open this spring. The building will house the biggest classrooms on campus, including a 1,000-seat lecture hall.
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lighting can be tailored so students can have lights for notes and still can see the film.
Other updates include modern heating and air-conditioning systems. Hoch Auditorium had no air-conditioning and offered steam heat, which had a central control for the entire building.
The new system allows temperatures to be adjusted room to room.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 25A
---
26A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Business school invests in students, technology
Continued from page 4A
dealing with immediate change, but we hope to make the future more flexible to changes."
Because the faculty controls the curriculum, changes often are gradual. Bublitz hopes to institute faster changes in curriculum to better satisfy the demands of the business community.
"Many times the business community is critical of higher education," he said. "I want to be more responsive in dealing with the issues in the business community."
The business school plans to invest in more modern equipment for the classrooms. Last year, the school added a 24-workstation computer classroom. By the end of the year, the classroom was in high demand at the college, the associate dean said.
The faculty has added more courses on information systems to give students an understanding of business and technology.
All of the students with successful backgrounds in information systems were quickly snatched up at graduation time by companies seeking qualified workers with technological skills, Bublitz said.
Many of the technological investments require private donations from alumni and the business community. Tom Sarowski, dean of the school of business, has been hard at work meeting with alumni from across the country to form relationships and solicit donations.
Also, international business studies has topped the dean's list as a priority for faculty as well as students.
This summer, a group of faculty members received a grant to study business in Mexico. More than 10 graduate students are studying business in Italy, and School of Business administrators hope to have more students study abroad.
"It has been a struggle to get more international students here. So we've tried to develop a curriculum that allows the domestic students a chance to learn from the international students," Bubitz said.
In addition to international students, high school seniors will benefit from the availability of scholarships this year.
"We'll be working more aggressively to get the best and brightest in Kansas to come to the University of Kansas," he said.
The School of Business faces another challenge next year: reaccreditation.
Business schools undergo a vigorous study and examination every seven years by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). However, because the assembly has fallen behind, it has been 10 years since the Kansas University School of Business has been reaccredited, and this time there are new rules.
"This time it is less like a tax form and more like a development of a mission and a chance to argue our case," Bublit said.
Faculty, administrators, students and the external board of advisers are involved in the lengthy two-year process. The first year, the faculty conducts a self study and writes a strategy for the mission of the college.
The second year, the school receives a visit from an audit committee from the assembly.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 27A
Fine arts dean ready to build on school's reputation
- New construction hits a high note this year for the School of Fine Arts.
BY MARK FAGAN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
For 11 years now, Peter Thompson has worked to build Kansas University's School of Fine Arts into a national leader.
Call this year the ribbon cutting.
"Our facilities are going to be equal to anyone else's in the country at this point," said Thompson, dean of fine arts. "I can't imagine having a better situation for the students."
An expanded computer lab will allow students to better prepare
- for technological advances in
* music theory education.
"Our facilities are going to be equal to anyone else's in the country."
Peter Thompson, fine arts dean
Contracts for building a $9 million expansion to Murphy Hall are expected to be approved next year, clearing a path for building new offices, a library and rehearsal space.
And on Oct. 9, the school will dedicate its new 206-seat Dane and Polly Bales Organ Recital Hall at Lied Center. Thompson describes it as one of the country's premiere organ halls for teaching, practicing and performance.
Its 45-stop mechanical action organ, made by Hellmuth Wolff & Associates Ltee. of Quebec, will keep the school's organ programs
— currently with two dozen students — among the country's largest, Thompson said.
"This is a real crown on the top of that program." he said.
Another project soon to take center stage will be a 45,000-square-foot addition to Murphy Hall. The $9 million project will provide ensemble rehearsal
areas for bands and orchestras, plus offices for faculty and graduate teaching assistants.
A new library will provide more than twice as much space for the school's collections, a third of which currently rests in storage.
Construction is expected to be finished in July 1998.
Send e-mail to:
news@ljworld.com
Let us know what you think . . .
"The recital hall, the Lied Center and this expansion really finish it off for us," Thompson said. "We've really needed this, especially with Hoch Auditorium burning. We've just desperately needed to get this going."
with 1,150 undergraduates and 300 graduate students spanning 34 majors, ranging from art and desiim to voice.
Adding six work stations to the school's eight-unit computer lab for music study also will benefit students, Thompson said. Recent software upgrades within the design lab also were essential for keeping students competitive in the industry.
The school's enrollment remains steady, Thompson said.
The school also conducts about 300 exhibitions, lectures, musical performances and recitals each year. Last year's 300 events many of them free — drew 100,000 people.
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28A SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE IOURNAL-WORLD
Journalism school training students in emerging media
- The high-tech newsroom and the demand for multimedia skills are shaping KU's journalism curriculum.
BY GWYN MELLINGER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Keeping curriculum on the cutting edge of technological advancement is the biggest challenge facing faculty and administrators in Kansas University's School of Journalism.
"The school's roots are in the study of journalism as practiced in newspapers," said Journalism Dean Mike Kautsch. "However, we are taking into account the fact that newspapers are changing, and they need professionals with new kinds of skills."
As technological developments expand the news newspapers and magazines present information to the public,it isn't enough for journalists to be trained only to prepare copy for print.
"Newspapers often see themselves as information companies, which can serve consumers by phone, by fax, by online computer or any other available medium." Kautsch said.
Not even the dean can avoid the demands of high-tech communication. Kautsch made his comments in response to questions e-mailed to him on the Internet this summer, while he was at the University of Costa Rica on a Knight Fellowship that is part of an academic exchange between that institution and KU.
Enrollment in the journalism school is expected to remain steady this fall, with about 700 undergraduates and at least 85 graduate students.
Even as the journalism school follows the high-tech trend, Kautsch and Susanne Shaw, a professor in the news-editorial sequence, said the school's commitment to traditional journalism remains strong.
Demand also remains high for KU graduates who have been schooled in newspapering.
"Interestingly enough, that's where the jobs are," Shaw said. "We have more jobs that editors call us about than we have students to fill them."
Kautsch said news-editorial students are learning to work with the new technologies through the online services operated by the University Daily Kansan and KJHK-FM, the school's laboratory media. In addition, journalism students will have access to the the school's new integrated media laboratory.
"The lab includes a new multimedia engineer," he said, "and I hope that we soon will see students producing printed lab publications — for other students, alumni and many other constituencies — with audio and video complements and in online, interactive, multimedia forms."
"Essentially, the laboratory consists of all the school's computer-equipped classrooms and electronic and photographic production areas," Kautsch said.
The school really began to pursue that multimedia emphasis a few years ago with development of the business communications track, which supplanted the popular public relations emphasis. Kautsch said that change was a recognition that the school's PR graduates increasingly needed not only strong writing and editing skills but also the ability to collaborate on electronic media projects.
"Business communications has evolved into a successful track that prepares students to support corporate and institutional marketing plans," he said.
Although technology is drawing increasing attention in the journalism curriculum, Kautsch said the school is continuing to develop programs that reflect the trend of combining specialties that once were practiced separately. A prime example is the school's new marketing communications program, which will be launched in January at the Regents Center in Overland Park.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD'S KU EDITION KU discovery
B
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
Secret treasures of SPOONER
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EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTOS
A
Albert Johnson, director of Kansas University's Museum of Anthropology, inspects one of the museum's many Native American kachina dolls. The dolls will be part of a spring 1997 exhibit at Spooner Hall.
An early 20th century moccasin is part of the museum's extensive collection of Native American artifacts.
A colorful wooden puppet from the Hazelle Rollins collection, will be on exhibit from Nov. 30 to Jan. 5, 1997.
- Kansas University's Museum of Anthropology offers visitors unique insights into human development.
BY DAVE TOPLIKAR
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
"But there aren't many anthropology museums," said Albert Johnson, director of Kansas University's Museum of Anthropology. "Because of the unique nature of what we're trying to do here, we hope to see the museum grow as a real regional attraction."
You can take your family to area zoos and area art and history museums.
The museum's home is in Spooner Hall, the oldest building on KU's campus. Designed by Henry Van
Brunt in the Romanesque Revival style, the building was erected in 1894 and is on the National Register of Historic Places.
Inside is a public gallery, working laboratories for archeological digs and storage space for thousands of items that teach us who we are today by how we lived in ancient and not-so-ancient times.
"Our primary focus is on multiculturalism," Johnson said. "It's also to learn about and present information on other cultures on a worldwide basis."
KU's anthropology collections are strong in North American and South American Indian cultures and the cultures of Africa, Australia and, to a lesser extent, Oceania, a region of the central and south Pacific.
"We do archeological research to learn about the nature of these cultures before there were written records," Johnson said.
The museum has extensive collections on American Indian societies that predate written records.
Brad Logan, associate cura
Brad Logan, associate curator at the museum, now is conducting a $250,000 excavation project at the Army installation at Fort Leavenworth. He and a team of researchers are painstakingly sifting through an area where a disciplinary barracks will be built.
"The site is important because it looks like there are two, possibly three periods of occupation." Johnson said.
Johnson said that before the end of the summer, the researchers hope to be able to dig down to greater depths to see what else they can find.
"They're finding tools, spear points, arrow points, broken pieces of pottery, skin scraping tools and knives," he said. "If you have the pieces and the contextual information, the relationships between those artifacts, then it's possible to reconstruct a great deal of what happened in the past."
"The most recent, which is close to the surface, would date to about 600 years ago. Then at greater depth, around a foot to 2 feet, they have a second occupation date to about 4,000 years ago. And there are some indications that there are even earlier occupations before that."
A Mexican statue
celebrates the Day of
the Dead.
but took into the far-flung past isn't all the museum does. Its exhibits are balanced between the prehistoric past, the world's colonial past and more modern times.
Researchers can tell what technology the ancient people used and get insights on their social organization and their religious beliefs, he said.
"We do a Day of the Dead Fiesta at Halloween time," he said.
The Day of the Dead is an important holiday that is observed widely in Mexico. The museum's exhibits, featuring exhibits of dolls with skeleton faces, will run from Oct. 26 to Nov. 17.
"The idea is that the souls of people's ancestors come back and visit and commune with them at the time of the festival," Johnson said.
the country. The works
The museum will also take part in the eighth annual Lawrence Indian Arts Show, Sept. 7 through Oct.20, which features work from contemporary American Indian artists from across
he country. The works include stone and bronze sculpture, pottery, paintings, drawings, jewelry, dolls, textiles and baskets.
Another fall semester
"The anthropology museum is unique in this part of the world," he said. "I would hope we could do more advertising to bring in more people from this region."
Another fall semester exhibit will be the Hazelle Rollins Puppets, which will be from Nov. 30 to Jan. 5. The show features hand, rod and stick, shadow and stringed puppets. Hazelle Rollins, a KU alumna who ran a puppet business in the Kansas City area, donated part of her collection from around the world to KU.
"We plan to continue into the future a Christmastime exhibit of those puppets for children," Johnson said.
Johnson said he would also like to expand the museum's exhibits to integrate video presentations, lectures, and musical and dance performances with the exhibits.
"It will make the exhibits more interesting and more broadly visible to the visitors," he said.
Funding for the museum mostly comes from donations. The Lawrence community has been supportive of the museum that way, he said.
Johnson said he hopes the museum can continue to see its collections grow. Major new collections will
Anthropologists worry that many artifacts are disappearing before they can be saved, he said.
be coming in soon, featuring artifacts from the Amazon area in South America and from South Africa, he said.
"Our museum and other anthropological museums have an obligation to collect as much of that material as possible and keep it for the future," he said. "It's not going to be around forever."
487459
Spear points discovered in northwest Missouri fields fill a drawer in the museum's collection.
30
Hard at work in Spooner's basement, Kiersten Fourshe, a graduate student in physical anthropology from Detroit, sifts through material from the construction site for a new disciplinary barracks at Ft. Leavenworth.
2B SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Med center travels road to recovery
- It was a year of rebuilding at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
BY ANDREW E. NACHISON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Rocked by controversy in 1995 executives at the Kansas University Medical Center are still working to shake the painful memories and lousy publicity - of a troubled heart transplant program.
MEDICINE
But in the last year, Executive Vice Chancellor Donald Hagen has performed multiple transplant surgery on the teaching and research hospital, beginning an intensive internal review of operations and removing senior administrators linked to the inactive heart transplant program, which admitted patients but performed no transplants for 10 months in 1994 and 1995.
Glenn Potter, chief executive officer of the KU Hospital, resigned in October 1995, less than a month after state auditors concluded mismanagement caused the collapse of the heart transplant program, which remains inactive and is the subject of at least two pending lawsuits.
Then in November, Dr. Daniel Hollander, dean of the KU Medical School.
School,
resigned from his $253,000-a-year job,
although he retained a faculty appointment in internal medicine.
A permanent replacement for the dean's post hadn't been named by early August.
'Rebuild the Rainbow'
Besides the executive shakeup, Hagen spearheaded an intensive evaluation of staffing and management in an effort to streamline and modernize the medical center's operations, including a review of housekeeping, facilities operations, design and architectural services.
The medical center, at 39th and Rainbow in Kansas City, Kan., includes the university's Medical School, School of Nursing and School of Allied Health, as well as the KU Hospital, with a combined spring enrollment of 2,540 students. There's also a campus in Wichita with about 100 junior and senior medical students and a staff of about 300.
"We're going to rebuild the rainbow," said Dr. Hagen, the former U.S. Navy Surgeon General who started as commander in chief at KUMC in September 1995.
demand. This serves as a solid basis for the future."
One of my primary reasons for coming to Kansas was a national reputation for a strong academic base," Hagen said. "Our educational programs in each of our schools are consistently ranked among the nation's highest, and our students are in high
Like most university medical centers across the country, KUMC faces tough competition from nearby hospitals that don't have to pay for research and teaching.
"One of my primary reasons for coming to Kansas was a national reputation for a strong academic base. Our educational programs in each of our schools are consistently ranked among the nation's highest, and our students are in high demand. This serves as a solid basis for the future."
Competitive world
The situation has been exasperated in recent years by private insurers and government health programs demanding deeper and deeper discounts. Just who will pay for the overhead of teaching and research nationwide still hasn't been determined by government and healthcare leaders.
The university says the remaining 28 workers who lost their jobs were assisted in their other job-
Dr. Donald Hagen, executive vice chancellor of the Kansas University Medical Center
But one thing is clear; Academic medical centers will have to do their work more efficiently, with less overhead, meaning KUMC has to trim costs.
Irene Cumming, the unofficial acting CEO after Potter's resignation, was permanently appointed to that job in April. She joined the medical center in 1994 as chief financial and information officer, and in July 1995 added the title of chief operating officer.
In the past year 160 vacant positions have been left unfilled, mostly in administrative or support service positions. Another 48 yearly contracts weren't renewed, although 20 of those employees were offered positions with a newly created group practice for all of the hospital's physicians, Kansas University Physicians Inc.
Unrelated to the heart transplant troubles, the medical center also saw the arrival of a new dean of the School of Nursing, Karen Miller, who replaced Eleanor Sullivan after she resigned in 1995 to be a visiting professor at the University of Missouri, St. Louis.
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Dr. Donald Hagen is completing his first year as executive vice chancellor at the Kansas University Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Hagen was surgeon general of the U.S. Navy before coming to KUMC.
As of this summer the medical center had 4,725 employees, making it the eighth largest
Susan Fry, the KU Hospital's chief operating officer, is leading
the re-engineering of the hospital. Hagen said the goal is a more cost-efficient, patient-friendly hospital.
Rethinking care
The medical center is now hiring nontenured doctors in addition to tenured faculty members in length in academic tradition.
"This will empower our faculty to focus on their strengths without being unduly pressured with the demands of the research labs," Hagen said. "The traditional tenure track will still be available to those with superior research skills or those who wish to develop these skills."
Hagen said even with the new nontenured positions the medical center will still be able to retain doctors who devote their time to teaching and patient care.
"We're going to aggressively move forward,building our educational and research programs," Hagen said.
To that end, the biggest grant in the medical center's history, announced in 1995, will help.
Dr. David R.Calkins, a Harvard Medical School faculty member, was named in July executive director of a new primary care physician education project. Among other things it will establish a network of primary care education offices throughout the state. Two are now being developed in Hays and Pittsburg.
The Kansas Health Foundation of Wichita awarded KUMC $15 million over five years to promote primary care medicine in the state. Much of the first year was spent organizing new primary care programs.
A $163 million bond package approved by the 1996 Kansas Legislature to pay for construction and repairs at universities across the state will bring $14 million to KUMC, some of which will be used to build a new nursing education building.
KUMC is also expanding efforts, such as outreach clinics, to care for patients in rural parts of the state.
Meanwhile, the hospital's doctors have organized into a single, multispecialty physician group.
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KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 3B
University keeping pace with growing demand for computer services
Students taking advantage of getting online
- The number of students accessing e-mail and the Internet through KU's computer network continues to grow.
BY MICHAEL DEKKER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Kansas University's Computer Center, the hub of its information superhighway, is bringing the electronic world to an increasing number of new students.
"Students really aren't limited to the local campus anymore" for research and information sources, said Wes Hubert, assistant director of academic computing services.
Custom Assistance Connexion
Rick Gostautas. left. of the Kansas University Computer Center, qives Rhonda Stein some answers as she uses one of the computers at the center.
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
The information superhigh-
way "has created new opportunities in accessing information that people would not have otherwise," he said.
The Computer Center, located west of Illinois Street on Sunnyside Avenue, houses computer equipment that
allows students and faculty to use e-mail and the Internet.
Student accounts are free when used at various KU facilities.
A $30 fee is assessed for students who sign up for an account used from their homes.
In the last three years, the number of students using accounts for access to the Internet has risen dramatically — from about 1,000 in 1993 to 14,000 this year, Hubert said.
"Students really aren't limited to the local campus anymore" for research and information sources.
KU bought new equipment for the network in 1990 and again in 1993.
Although exact figures weren't available, he said the KU network probably receives "easily thousands" of hits, or users, per day.
The account gives students full access to e-mail and the Internet.
"Falcon" is the name of the system where the accounts are kept, he said.
"Use of the network has been increasing steadily ever since we first connected," he said.
"We've had a couple of major upgrades since then," Hubert said. "We've had to continually add on access power."
— Wes Hubert, assistant director of academic computing services
This summer, KU added a new system, called Eagle, which will provide similar services.
If you're new to the Internet or email, Hubert recommends that you enroll in one of many classes offered at the center.
"Coming to
some of the workshops we teach at the beginning of the semester would be a good way to come up to speed quickly without having to spend a lot of time," he said.
In the one-time classes, which run from one to three hours depending on subject matter, students "will be able to get the information that they will be able to apply immediately in how to
use the network," he said.
The rooms of Ellsworth and McCollum residence halls also have been wired for access to the network, he said. This summer, rooms in all scholarship halls also should be wired.
The center has about 50 computers that students can use. Other computers are located in Watson Library, Strong Hall and other academic buildings.
KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway has made wiring the campus and providing student access to computers a major
"It's part of an ongoing process," Hubert said.
goal in the next few years.
This spring, the newest major computer lab is scheduled to open in Budig Hall. That facility should have about 150 computers for students, Hubert said.
E-mail use growing on campus
- KU students are discovering the hottest, cheapest way to communicate; e-mail.
BY MAGGIE MOHRFELD SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Amanda Romek talks to her friends in Colorado every day.
The Kansas University freshman doesn't pick up the phone and never writes letters. She uses her computer to send electronic mail, better known as e-mail.
10.5K
Being able on a daily basis without the high cost of long distance is something Romek just loves.
"It's better than waiting days for letters to come by mail, and you don't need as many stamps," said Romek, o. Denver.
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
E-mail is similar to sending regular mail except it is done on a computer. This makes the process quicker, cheaper and easier for students. It's almost considered a necessity for the average college student.
"I never went to all the trouble of getting an account until one of my classes required it.But since then I've become an e-mail junkie."
— Jenny
Wiedeke,
Evergreen, Colo.,
junior
"I never went to all the trouble of getting an account until one of my classes required it," said Jenny Wiedeke, Evergreen, Colo., junior. "But since then I've become an e-mail junkle."
Jerry Niebaum, executive director of Kansas University Information Technology and an advocate of e-mail, thinks students would be quicker to embrace the method of communication if faculty did more to promote it.
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Even though e-mail has been around for more than 15 years, many students have just started to take advantage of it.
gy Services, said that students' response to e-mail has been slower at KU than other universities because it has not been required and promoted enough by faculty.
Jerry Niebaum, executive director of KU Information Technolo-
about e-mail through friends who attend other universities.
Anne Kreimer, Blue Springs,
Mo., freshman, said, "My friend
kept bugging me to get an
account, which is the only reason
I finally did."
E-mail as a way of communication is gaining popularity every day.
Many students at KU heard
"We have doubled the number of accounts since last year," Niebaum said.
E-mail is available for free to KU students, faculty and staff. To get an account, go to the Computer Center anytime from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Follow the instructions you are given to activate an account and direct any questions to the helpers in the center.
"Anything we can do to improve communication relations will improve society as a whole."
E-mail will benefit society because it allows easier ways of communication, he said.
.
If you want to use your account from a home computer, a modern and telephone line will be needed. This is called a terminal server account and will require a cost of $30 per year. This fee can be paid in the business office of the computer center.
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Accounts are free unless used from home. Then there's a $30 fee.
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KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
History museum using new methods to explain past
NAME: BERNARD M. RIVERS
TITLE: PROFESSOR OF HISTORY
BIRTH DATE: 1926-05-13
MARRIED: JANUARY 20, 1948
EIGHTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
HIS PHOTO IS SUPPLIED BY THE U.S. GENERAL POST OFFICE IN NEW YORK CITY.
- Visitors will see a few changes this fall at the Kansas University Natural History Museum.
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
BY DAVE TOPLIKAR
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
The Kansas University Natural History Museum will be a little bit more user-friendier next year.
And it will be a little harder to lose your way, thanks to new signs.
For example, the North American panorama of animals built in 1901 will have new recordings and scripts explaining the animals — in English and Spanish and with natural sounds. Also, a television camera will show what's buzzing in the live bee exhibit, at 50 times the natural size.
"The classic exhibits that are extremely popular are being modified to make them more educational," said Leonard Krishtalka, the museum's director.
During the summer, the museum was putting together recordings for the different stations of the panorama on the museum's fourth floor to explain the plants and animals.
"For example, visitors will be able to press a button and listen to the major features of the Arctic." he said.
Leonard Kristalka, director of the Kansas University Natural History Museum, shows off part of the museum's expansion extra storage for its vast library of specimens.
Krishtalka said visitors should like the new "wayfinding" system.
"They will have a much better idea of what's on every other floor they want to visit," he said. "They'll be able to easily find restrooms, facilities for handicapped visitors and the gift shop.
"One of the complaints we've heard a lot from the public is that the signage is not as good as it can be," he said. "When people are on a certain floor, they don't know what floor they're on, they don't know what's on the floor above or the floor below."
Other areas of the building are buzzing with improvements, too.
The system was designed by Julie Johnson Coats, a KU industrial design student who worked at the museum for four years.
"We are planning to upgrade our live bee exhibit" Kristalka said. "We're going to install a wonderful little camera that will allow visitors to see the bees up to 50 times their natural size. It will be blown up so you will be able to see the hairs of the bees and the bees grooming each other and crawling over each other inside the hive."
That will be fed into the Internet and sent out around the world, he said.
"It will be an educational device for visiting groups and students," Krishtalka said. "The same cameras are being used in research labs to study behavior."
The museum has also begun a five-year project to conduct an architectural survey of Dyche Hall, which will be completed by
its 100th birthday in 2001.
The HABS project, which stands for Historic American Buildings Survey, will be done by the KU School of Architecture, which did a similar project on KU's Spooner Hall.
"It will be a complete architecte-
originals for their lawn and garden," he said.
"It will tural survey of the building that will produce world-class architectural drawings of the building," Kristalka said.
The museum will also have a new reception area in the front to welcome visitors. Visitors will be able to book tours, register for educational classes or contact a research scientist.
"We are planning to upgrade our live bee exhibit. We're going to install a wonderful little camera that will allow visitors to see the bees up to 50 times their natural size. It will be blown up so you will be able to see the hairs of the bees and the bees grooming each other and crawling over each other inside the hive."
The project will cost
— Leonard Kristalka, KU Natural History Museum director
between $50,000 and $80,000.
The building's exterior stonework and one-of-a-kind grotesques on the building's exterior will be repaired. When the 1963 wing was added to the building's north side, four grotesques were removed. Three of those will be added to the latest addition on the west. One of the grotesques has been lost, Kristalka said.
"Anybody who turns in the missing grotesque, the original, will receive a cast of one of the
About 200,000 people visit the museum each year, making it one of the top five most-visited spots in Kansas. The museum also gets a lot of visitors to its four
seasons display of animals along the Kansas River at the Lawrence Riverfront Factory Outlets Sixth and New Hampshire. Efforts will be made for other exhibits in the future. Kristishka said.
For example, while students are
The museum has also applied for a grant to provide information on the Internet for the science curriculums for local fifth-graders that complement trunks now sent to schools that contain hands-on material to look at as they study animals.
studying bats, they can open the trunk and look at the bat material and they can look at the bat information on the Internet and do live two-way teleconferencing so students can ask questions.
The museum will begin setting up an "environmental informatics" laboratory in the fall, which will begin assembling, integrating, displaying and disseminating information about the animals and plants of Kansas. It will be used by land managers, government agencies, corporations and other scientists.
"This involves assembling and integrating information about the five million animals and plants that we house here in the museum, with the information for the more than half a billion animals and plants housed at museums and her宾ariums in the United States," he said.
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Child care center awaits expansion
- Finding private funding for an expansion of Hilltop Child Development Center at Kansas University continues to prolong the project.
BY JOHN WAKE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Hilltop will have to put off ongoing plans for an expansion once again.
"With private funding, you're talking about a donor, and we simply haven't found that donor yet," said David Ambler, vice chancellor of student affairs.
What began as a 1994 plan for an expansion seems indefinitely suspended until private funds are found.
"I think you have to find someone who has a connection with the university. I think you need to find someone who has a connection with the need for child care. And I think you need to find someone who might have also gone to school while raising children and needed child care."
Although KU Student Senate members voted for a $2 annual fee through the year 2000 to support Hilltop's expansion, only about $500,000 will be generated by the fee.
Ambler said that amount is obviously not enough.
ning the project," Ambler said. "It's paid every semester, and that includes the summer semester... The money is accumulating, but it is not sufficient to begin construction."
With a waiting list of more than 230 children, a new building would allow Hilltop to serve more children of students, KU faculty and staff members and the community.
The need for a new facility for the nonprofit facility is apparent.
"We encourage people to get on the (waiting) list when their
"The bottom line is that $2 for six years is inadequate for begin-"
"nning."
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Sandra Wick, assistant director of the honors program, reviews material for a Western Civilization final in Nunemaker with students enrolled in the program.
Honors program offers challenges in small packages
BY MICHELLE LONG
- KU's Honors Program helps humanize the university for some students.
BY MICHELLE LONG
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
For Seneca sophomore Angie Strathman, enrolling in Kansas University's Honors Program was an idea with multiple payoff.
The honors courses not only offered her the extra challenge that she needed, but the smaller classes also helped her adapt to a school that is more than 10 times the size of her hometown.
"But I haven't experienced that because I'm taking small honors courses."
"When you come from a town with 2,000 people and the chemistry classes are half the size of your town, it can be overwhelm-
Strathman is one of more than 250 students who enroll in the honors program each year. Many students like Strathman feel that the basic curriculum is not enough. They want more of a challenge during their
academic career. That's why the Honors Program was created.
In the 1930s, KU introduced honors courses to its curriculum to better serve high achieving, self-motivated undergraduates.
"It's a way of looking at the university with all its advantages, but smaller," said Sandra Wick, assistant director of the Honors Program. "Honors students get the best of both worlds. They have all the opportunities that a large institution has to offer; however, they receive the extra attention that a smaller college environment can offer. This allows the student to fully develop his or her potential."
Honors courses at the freshman and sophomore level are especially unique.
"The honors classes are really different from the others," said Joshua Burdette, Belle Plaine
freshman. "They tend to be taught by respected professors, and they also tend to deal with more discussion-related topics because discussion is possible due to the smaller class sizes."
Freshmen honors students can also take a freshman honors tutorial. a one-credit, 1-hour course.
"They are beneficial in that they allow students to become familiar with a professor that could serve as their honors adviser." Burdette said.
KU honors students can live anywhere, but many chose to live in scholarship halls because of their relatively small size and accessibility to campus. Others choose to live on the eighth floor of McCollum Hall, otherwise
known as the "honors floor."
— Sandra Wick assistant director of the honors program
"The eighth floor does have its advantages," Burdette said. "There is a private study wing, which is great for studying for finals. There is also a computer room. Another bonus is the fact that the people around you are good students, many of whom are in your
classes. This helps you to keep on your schoolwork, and there are plenty of people around to help you if you should have a problem."
Interested students are encouraged to apply for honors courses if they have an ACT composite of 31 or higher or if their SAT score is above 1340. Students with slightly lower scores, but with strong academic backgrounds — including high achievement in college prep courses — may also apply.
The honors program doesn't have a deadline, but it is recommended that students apply as incoming freshmen, to fully benefit from all the program has to offer.
KU history not trivial: true or false?
For more information about the honors program, call (913) 864-4225, or send for information from The Honors Program, Nunemaker Center, KU, Lawrence 66045.
- Here's a chance to test your knowledge of Kansas University trivia.
STEPHANIE FITE
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
1. During the Civil War the Jayhawk was used as a patriotic symbol, synonymous with the impassioned people who made Kansas a free state.
a. True
b. False
2. What year did KU open and how many students were there?
a. 1866 with 55 students
b. 1090 with 192 students
1800 with 35 students
1900 with 400 students
1990 with 45,000 stu-
c. 1990 with 45,000 students
3. When were there more women enrolled at KU than men?
a. Korean War
b. Vietnam war
c. World War II
4. Who is credited for drawing the first balloon?
the first Jayhawk?
a. Stephan "Skippy" Jones
b. Henry Maloy
c. Christopher Babar
5. Harold D. Sandy drew the Jayhawk that survives today.
a. True
b. False
6. When was the term "Jayhawk" first coined?
a. 1900 b. 1800
c. 1848
7. When was the Rock Chalk chant adopted?
a. 1866
b. 1900
c. 1905
8. The original KU fight song was
titled "Rip City."
a. True
b. False
9. The Rock Chalk chant was used by Kansas troops fighting in the Philippines in 1899, in the Boxer Rebellion in China, and in World War II.
World War II
a. True
b. False
10. The Rock Chalk chant was introduced to the King of Belgium at the 1920 Olympic games as the typical American college vell.
a. True
b. False
12. What were the Sour Owl, The Bitter Bird and Squat?
11. U.S. Presidents Grant and Hays visited KU while in office.
a True
b False
c. Popular gin drinks
b. Campus newspapers and literary magazines.
13. What is the oldest fraternity on campus?
Bitter Bird and Squat? University shows
a. Delta Chi
c. Sigma Phi Epsilon
b. Beta Theta Pi
14. Strong Hall was built backward, with the front facing the Campanile.
a. True
b. False
blow to call classes on campus?
a. March 25, 1912
15. When did the first whistle blow to classmates on commus?
a. March 25,1912
b. Jan. 1,1900
c. June 12,1880
16. How many stories was Wescoe Hall originally planned to have?
b. 15
c. 27
17. What is the house that 'Wilt' built?
a. 9
a. Allen Fieldhouse
b. Joe's Bakery
2:30 tern, a tasteful intile brown number at the end of the block.
c. 2230 Tenn., a tasteful lita. Michelangelo
18. Who is the artist of the paintings that hang in Allen Fieldhouse?
b. William J. Bennett c. Ted Wattte
b. William J.
.c. Ted Watts
19. Where can the Wilcox Classi-
sical Collection be found?
a. Dyche Hall
b. The Helan Fors
b. The Heinle-Forsman Spencer Museum of Art c. Lippincott Hall
Spencer Museum of Art c. Lippincott Hall
20. Where can the Museum of
Natural History be found
a. Lippincott Hall
b. Dyche Hall
b. Dyche Hall
c. Strong Hall
b. Dyche Hall
c. Strong Hall
21. Who is the only men's basketball coach in KU history to
have a career losing record?
a. Dr. James Naismith
a. Dr. James Naismith
b. Dick Harp
b. Dick Harp
c. Phog Allen
d. Roy Williams
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a. 1968
b. 1950
23. Wheren were KU basketball games played before Allen Field-
b. 1950
c. 1882
house opened in 1955?
a. Budig Hall
b. Strong Hall
c. Wescoe Hall
24. What KU athlete appeared
in four different Olympic games?
a. Al Oerter
2. Bill Nieder
c. Igor Stravinsky
25. KU information center first started in 1970 as a rumor control center during the turbulent days of Mav and June 1970.
a. True
b. False
Answers:
1. True. During the Civil War, the Jayhawk's ruffian image gave way to patriotism when Gov. Charles Robinson raised a regiment calling the Independent Mounted Kansens Jayhawkers.
2. A. 1866 with 55 students.
3. C. More women were enrolled at KU than men during World War II. In 1944 there were 1,428 women enrolled compared to 997 men. In 1945 there were 1,733 women enrolled and 1,679 men.
4. B. Henry Maloy, a cartoonist for the school newspaper, drew the first version of the Jayhawk in 1912.
5. True. It is student Harold D. Sandy's 1946 design of a smiling Jayhawk that survives.
6. C. The term "jayhawk" combines two birds; the blue jay, a noisy quarrelsome thing known to rob nests, and a sparrow hawk, a stealthy hunter.
7. A. The University Science Club adopted the chant in 1866 when inspired by the click-clack of train wheels passing over rail joints which suggested the
hythm and cadence. Their first version, "Rah Rah Jayhawk KU," was later replaced with "Rock Chalk Jayhawk KU," a transposition of chalk rock, the name for limestone outcropping found at Mount Oread.
8. True. "I'm a Jayhawk" fight song replaced "Rip City" because officials thought the original title was unsuitable.
9. True. The cheer became know worldwide when Teddy Roosevelt pronounced it the greatest college chant he'd ever heard.
10. True. At the Olympic games in 1920, the King of Belgium asked for a typical American yell. The assembled athletics agreed on KU's Rock Chalk chant and rendered it for His Majesty.
11. True.
12. B. The Sour Owl, Bitter Bird and Squat were campus papers and literary magazines.
14. False. It just looks that way.
13. B. Beta Theta Pi, founded in 1873, is the oldest fraternity on campus.
14. False. It just looks that way.
15. A. March 25, 1912, and it has been startling students ever since.
16. C. The first drawing of plans for Wescoe showed the building at 27 stories.
20. B, Dyche Hall
17. A. Allen Fieldhouse was built in 1955 during the tenure of coach Phog Allen, which coincided with Wilt Chamberlain coming to KU in 1956.
19. C. Lippincott Hau
18. C.
21. A. Dr. James Naismith, the inventor of basketball.
22. A. 1968. Coached by Pepper Rogers, KU beat the Huskers 23-13.
23. A. Games were played in Budig Hall, the former Hoch Auditorium, on beautiful hardwood floors.
24. A. Al Oerter, who competed and won the gold medal in discuss in the 1956, 1960, 1964 and 1968 Olympics.
25. True.
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6B SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU herbarium roots out clues to Kansas flora
- The herbarium on KU's West Campus takes the mystery out of Kansas plants.
BY JL WATSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Confronted by a taraxacum officinale, most homeowners are likely to mow it down.
Not Craig Freeman. He's more likely to press it, dry it and catalog it for future study, even if it is a common dandelion.
Freeman, associate curator for the Ronald L. McGregor Herbarium on West Campus, is the keeper of more than 380,000 pressed and dried plant specimens.
"We always know we have an impact on the environment, but tracking plants is one way to know how," Freeman said. "In philosophical terms, it's understanding the human influence on landscapes."
Many of the flora under Freeman's care are not native to this region but have become integrated with the existing species, he said.
"We know that when the Europeans arrived, Kansas was
"Many things from the 1700s and 1800s came over from Europe in the ballast of ships," he said. "They came in the eastern ports and moved across the country on the railroads and highways."
tallgrass prairies. There have been major changes in the landscape of the state that have affected species in subtle ways and in very dramatic ways."
One such example is the Carduus nutans, commonly known as musk thistle. The large thistle with the purple head has become such a serious pest that it is a legally noxious weed in Kansas.
"It wasn't present in Kansas until the 1930s," Freeman said. "Now, it's in virtually every county in Kansas."
Craig Freeman assistant director at the KU Herbarium on West Campus, folds up some Eastern Gamma grass for study
The appearance of new species occurs almost every year, Freeman said. Two new species were documented this year. There is also the task of noting which species disappear from the Great Plains every year.
I will be here every day.
Palm every year. "It's important to stay familiar with plants of this region," Freeman said. "It's part of our history. We have a fairly simple flora. A lot came from adjacent biomes after glacial periods."
"We've gathered 1,500 specimens in a two-year period," he said.
Freeman's research has led him to a site at Fort Leavenworth. The intensive study is helping him document plant life on the military base.
Freeman and his assistants spend much of their time doing field work from late spring through mid-fall, before moving
RICHARD GWIN/IOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
inside to the dried and cataloged collections.
They have begun converting new and existing specimens to a database checkout system.
"We put them in the computer to make them more accessible to the scientific community and to the general public," Freeman said.
"It's going to be like a grocery store," Freeman said. "We'll be using bar codes."
The change will take some time, but has already begun. It's just one of the changes the herbarium has experienced in the past year.
Another is the merger of infor
mation shared by the herbarium and KU5 Natural History Museum.
"We're under a larger administrative umbrella," Freeman said. "We have a similar mission because what we are doing is documenting life on the planet. It's neat to be part of a larger community."
The affiliation has led to a greater understanding for both departments, Freeman said.
"We all have a common vision for the future," he said. "It's made the Natural History Museum collections much better than before with the synergy that's developing. It's all coming together in new ways."
The Ronald L. McGregor Herbarium is available for use by students, faculty, staff and members of the community. For more information, call 864-4493.
KU's Will Body Program brings bodies to science
- Donors can help give life to others after their own death by donating their bodies to the program at the Kansas University Medical Center.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
KANSAS CITY, KAN. — When the Rev. Jennifer Malewski dies, she won't stav far from the office.
Malewski, staff chaplain at Kansas University Medical Center, and her husband, Charlie, plan to donate their bodies to science through a program at KUMC.
"we've talked with all three of our children. They know what we want," she said. "To me, dying is a part of life. It's a way of living on and helping others."
The state's only program for donating bodies to science —
called the Will Body Program — is at the medical center. The objective is to meet teaching and research needs at KUMC, KU's main campus in Lawrence and other state universities.
"Any medical school is going to be very dependent on this type of program," said Dr. Joseph Besharse, KUMC's chairman of anatomy and cell biology.
Demand for cadavers is rising in the
United States. About 120 medical schools nationwide utilize donated bodies. Other academic programs — physical therapy, nursing, dentistry — rely on cadavers.
donor program.
Thomas said more than 500 people had agreed to give their body to the medical center. There are many reasons for giving, but most donors are motivated by altruism.
"We are fortunate to have an adequate supply," said Randy Thomas, director of the KUMC donor program.
Only a steady increase in bequeathal of bodies has averted a crisis.
"They believe very deeply in helping the next generation by helping to produce the doctors that are going to treat their kids," Thomas said.
He's received letters from donors explaining their decision was precipitated by the death of a young family member.
"My body is a temporal thing," said Alan Mermann, a Yale University chaplain who agreed to bequeath his body. "I need to recycle it like the leaves in my garden."
"As far as I know, all cadavers we've used have voluntarily donated their body."
Some donors view participation as a stage in the life cycle — ashes to ashes, dust to dust.
Some people sign up for the program to protest against cemeteries. They view a hillside covered with headstones as a waste of land.
No substitutes
Others participate for financial reasons. At KUMC, donor estates pay for transporting a body to the medical center. Deceased are embalmed and cremated at no expense to the estates.
Chris Bennett, who coordinates anatomy courses on KU's Lawrence campus
Direct beneficiaries of the ultimate gift are students and faculty involved in health education, surgical practice and medical research.
"There is no substitute," said
is no substitute Pam Lawson, director of the University of Oklahoma's anatomical donation program in Oklahoma City. "Everyone who learns from a cadaver puts that to practical use."
Researchers study disease with brain tissue from donated bodies. Physicians employ cadavers to test surgical procedures before operating on patients.
said.
Computer models, colorful mannequins and textbook graphics have limits, Thomas
Thomas, who works with 180 first-year KU medical students, said universities that don't use the real thing shortchanged students.
"I don't want to see a trend established where the physicians trained in this country stand off ... aloof of the patient as an individual," he said.
He said students who dissect cacavers develop greater understanding of the interaction of the body's 200 bones and 600 muscles.
"Doctoring is hands-on. You're not going to doctor a piece of plastic."
"The patient can't talk to you in words, but they can talk to you in structure," Thomas said.
Chris Bennett, who coordinates anatomy courses on KU's Lawrence campus, said it wasn't uncommon for students to initially feel uneasy about working with a corpse.
Eventually, nearly every student comes to terms with the notion of studying human
remains. They understand it's a privilege to learn anatomy by removing the skin and separating organs from muscle, tendon, artery and vein.
"We use cats, but they're much smaller than humans," Bennett said. "It's a lot of work to find structures on cats that are relatively easy to find on cadavers."
Enrollment in his labs is restricted to 180 undergraduate students. Usually six cadavers are dissected each semester.
Bennett doesn't recall anyone protesting the university's use of human remains.
"As tar as I know," he said, "all cadavers we've used have voluntarily donated their body."
In September 1981, a male wearing only sunglasses was found by people walking next to Potter Lake on the Lawrence campus. The body was left on a beach towel.
They all come from KUMC,
costing the university about $500
each. Cadavers look like someone
at an open-casket funeral.
Wichita State University graduate Charisse Sparks, a second-year medical student at KUMC, spent part of her first semester probing a female cadaver. Inside and out, she will never know any patient better.
.
Thomas, who wasn't managing the Will Body Program at the time of either incident, said misuse of cadavers was unacceptable.
An elaborate operation in the mid 1970s resulted in the placement of a corpse, fishing rod in hand, at the lake's edge in a lawn chair.
Respect is norm
"That's an outrage," he said. Those responsible "should have been put in jail."
During the years, there have been at least two cases in which cadavers were stolen from KU labs.
"It was a senseless prank," said KU Police Director Jim Denney.
There were rules of etiquette in the lab," Sparks said. "Respect was driven home."
Thomas said a student capable of caring for an anonymous cadaver was more likely to become a caring physician.
This individual is that medical student's first patient," he said. "It establishes a very core of medical education. Not just knowledge, but how you approach and treat other people."
He said one donor's body was
See KUMC, page 13B
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KU EDITION
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Dick Swindler, of Lawrence, is undergoing treatment for Parkinson's disease at Kansas University Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Researchers seek Parkinson's cure
KU researchers offer relief to a Lawrence High School math teacher now battling Parkinson's disease.
A year ago, Dick Swindler's hands shook and there was nothing, including the latest Parkinson's disease medications, that could stop them.
BY ANDREW E. NACHISON JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Now, following two operations at the Kansas University Medical Center, his hands are mostly still, offering hope not only for himself but for others with the debilitating neurological disorder.
In the past year Swindler became the third person in the United States to have an experimental device implanted in his brain to reduce some of the symptoms of Parkinson's disease
Results so far are promising.
"I responded to it quite well," said Swindler, 51, a former math teacher at Lawrence High School.
Parkinson's is still a mystery to doctors, and Swindler's two
operations at the medical center were by no means a cure. But the procedure, called pallidal stimulation, has offered immense relief.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted KUMC researchers permission to treat five patients using the new technique, which had previously been used in Europe.
In 1995, the medical center received $41.1 million in research grants, including about $28 million from the federal government through agencies such as the National Institutes of Health.
It was one of numerous research programs conducted at the KU Medical Center in the last year.
That included $1.5 million to the Cancer Information Service, which provides educational material about cancer and operates a cancer information hot line. (1-800-4-CANCER).
A program that coordinates social and medical services for needy families in Wyandotte
The experimental Parkinson's surgery was among the more dramatic programs because it provided immediate, obvious relief from a debilitating condition. ABC's "20-20" featured a segment on the surgery.
County, called Project Eagle brought in $1.1 million in grants.
Other major research programs focused on reproductive biology, cancer, neuroscience, kidney diseases, AIDS and molecular genetics.
The experimental Parkinson's surgery was among the more dramatic programs because it provided immediate, obvious relief from a debilitating condition. ABC's "20-20" featured a segment on the surgery.
"Our research program is growing at an outstanding rate," said Dr. Donald Hagen, the medical center's executive vice chancellor.
In the new experimental Parkinson's surgery, an electrode is implanted into the globus pal-
lidus region of the brain. A battery-operated device that controls the electrode is implanted under the skin just below the collar bone. When activated, the electrode stimulates the brain tissue, in effect resetting circuitry damaged by Parkinson's so that the correct movement messages get through.
Initially an electrode was implanted in the left side of Swindler's brain, relieving tremors and facial stiffness on his right side. A second operation in February reduced the symptoms on his left side.
"It allows me to control the tremor," Swindler said. "I had a pretty bad tremor in my left side. The second operation essentially eliminated the tremor."
Hilltop awaits expansion
Continued from page 4B
Pisani said the widespread reputation of Hilltop's child care program comes from the center's basic philosophy.
child is three months old," said Hilltop director Pat Pisani. "I do have people who want to apply even before their children are born. People really want their child to be at Hilltop."
"We emphasize what we call developmentally appropriate education," Pisani said. "It's not day care and in fact, if you say day care around here, you'll see shoulders go up. They're learning from the moment they come in here every day."
In addition to providing an educational-based child care program for children, Hilltop is also a child development research and training center.
Hilltop employs 20 full-time staff members and 30 to 35 KU students employed part time.
Although Hilltop has a rather long waiting list for all-day child programs, Pisani said there are currently some half-day program openings in community schools.
Hilltop also will be providing before- and after-school programs this year at Sunflower and Centennial schools.
Pisani said she hopes that members of the Board of Regents would continue to keep a Hilltop expansion in mind and that a new building could be built soon.
"We started a program at Sunflower in January 1995, and we will do one at Centennial in August," Pisani said. "We're hoping for 20 to 25 children at each of the programs."
"We're sort of leaving it in their hands," Pisani said. "We're more hopeful, but it won't be a new building for a while."
Ambler said the Hilltop expansion project was a top priority for Edward Meyen, former executive vice chancellor.
Meyen was relieved of his position on July 1, but Ambler said he would continue to work for a resolution of the project.
"I can tell you that it was a priority with Dr. Meyen and that it is something that he worked hard for," Ambler said. "So I'm going to be continuously working to bring this project to a resolution as quickly as I can."
Ambler said that a specific site for the new facility has not yet been determined, but the Stouffer Place area of campus is a possibility.
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Wichita campus turns its focus to primary care
- The Kansas University Medical Center campus in Wichita will concentrate on educating primary care professionals.
BY ANDREW E. NACHISON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Along with its main campus and facilities in Kansas City, Kan., the Kansas University Medical Center has a growing campus in Wichita.
About 100 third- and fourthyear medical students complete their studies in Wichita after two years of basic medicine courses in Kansas City, Kan.
The Wichita campus also has about 300 employees.
Promoted as a "medical school without walls," the program relies on about 540 volunteer doctors who act as instructors and preceptors at local hospitals, including Via Christi Medical Center, Columbia Wesley Medical Center and the Wichita Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
Programs there began in 1974 with five students. Since then, 942 students have graduated with 58 percent choosing primary care specialties. Nearly half of those who have completed residency training have set up practices in Kansas.
The Wichita campus' focus on primary care medicine — as opposed to specialties and basic research — got a big boost in 1995 when the Kansas Health Foundation awarded KUMC a $15 million, five-year grant, which will be used for programs in Wichita, Kansas City and satellite centers throughout the state.
"As with most projects of this size, the first year focused on hiring staff in Kansas City and Wichita and start-up issues," said Dr. Donald Hagen, the executive vice chancellor and top administrator for both campuses.
"The faculty on both campuses adopted a new curriculum, and a residency education council is coordinating collaborative education programs," Hagen said. "Our staff are visiting state high school students and encouraging them to consider health careers. The second year will see even more accomplishments as we build a university without walls."
On July 10, the Wichita medical center dedicated its first campus expansion: 30,000 square feet of offices and classrooms in the Kansas Health Foundation Center for Primary Care and laboratories for the Women's Research Institute.
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Discoveries highlight year in
Larry Dean Martin, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the KU Museum of Natural History, left, and Zhonghe Zhou, a KU doctoral student from China, hold a cast of the world's earliest bird bird
— named Confuciusomis. The two were part of a team that discovered the fossil in China.
Confuciusornis reveals wisdom about bird evolution
Two Kansas University researchers are pushing back the beginning of time for birds.
Larry Dean Martin, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the KU Museum of Natural History, said discovery of the world's earliest beaked bird named Confuciusornis would revolutionize thinking about bird evolution.
He said a farmer in a Chinese province northeast of Beijing last year unearthed evidence that birds had diversified into at least two major groups late in the Jurassic Period, which was 195 million to 140 million years ago.
The only other bird species known to exist in the Jurassic — the beakless Archaeoptery — is roughly 5 million years older than Confuciusornis
"Until now, if you were a bird-watcher in the Jurassic, you would have only one bird on your watch list." Martin said. "Now, you have more than one."
Given this discovery, Martin predicted researchers would likely find evidence these
birds lived millions of years earlier than previously thought. After all, many generations were needed to evolve a bird species without teeth.
In addition, the region where Confuciusornis was found is loaded with bird fossils.
"This area of China is a gold mine for early bird evolution," Martin said.
Martin shares credit with Zhonghe Zhou, a KU doctoral student from China with an international reputation as a fossil hunter. Chinese paleontologist Lianhai Hou and University of North Carolina biologist Allen Feduccia also worked on the project.
Martin said their findings forced revision of 150 years of paleontology analysis of nature's work with birds.
"Previously, one could make the argument that all birds derived from Archaeopteryx. It stood on a perch alone. That was the framework people used to look at evolution," he said.
However, the latest discovery shows bird development to be more complex and
On one evolutionary highway was Archaeopteryx, a beakless bird with about 80 sharp teeth. The only fossil evidence of feathers was on its wings.
diverse.
Elsewhere on the evolutionary map was Confuciusornis, a beaked and toothless bird that had body and wing feathers.
There was common ground: both birds had claws on their wings for climbing trees. Neither was skilled at taking off from the ground. They needed to jump off something to take flight.
Although Confuciusornis had similarities with modern birds, it went extinct. About 70 million years later, nature produced a similar beaked bird and let the toothy model die out.
This time, the beaked version thrived.
"Evolution teaches us that there are lots of false starts," Martin said. "The experiment was run at least twice. The first time it was rejected. The second time it was a great success, and they franchised it."
(1)
Tom Cravens of Kansas University, above, collaborate dusty ring was discovered 16 years ago by two NASA space
Psychology prof studies young to ease Alzheimer's tragic grip
usan Kemper put her mind to a study that offers insight into a degenerative brain disease.
Genous Factors
Social Withdrawal
Aging Declines
Exdc
Kemper, a Kansas University professor of psychology and KU Gerontology Center research associate, contributed to a major investigation of Alzheimer's and aging.
The so-called Nun Study indicates young people with low language skills are at greater risk of being attacked by Alzheimer's later in life, she said.
Susan Kemper, KU professor of psychology and research associate at the KU Gerontology Center, has found young people with low language skills are at greater risk of being attacked by Alzheimer's disease later in life.
A Journal of the American Medical Assn. report based on the study identified linguistic skill as a potent marker for predicting who'll get the progressive brain disease.
In addition, the article says Alzheimer's may be like hardening of the arteries. It could be a life-long biological deterioration that becomes evident only when people age.
The report was drawn from a federally funded study focusing on 700 members in the School Sisters of Notre Dame religious congregation.
Kemper analyzed one-page autobiographies written by 104 nuns in terms of grammatical complexity and idea density.
Meanwhile, University of Kentucky colleagues tested the nuns' cognitive skills in old age. Brains of nuns who died were studied at UK's medical college to establish presence or absence of Alzheimer's.
The personal accounts of their lives had been placed in the order's archives just before taking vows, at an average age of 22.
Kemper said analysis of nuns' youthful writings indicated women with low linguistic ability in their 20s had a much higher risk of Alzheimer's when elderly.
"Our prediction isn't perfect," she said. "But, by and large, those with low grammatical density or low idea density developed Alzheimer's disease 60 years later."
Alzheimer's disease afflicts 4 million Americans. About 100,000 die of it annually. There are 35,000 victims in Kansas. The disease has no known cause, cure or reliable treatment
As part of the study, scientists performed autopsies on brains of 25 nuns who died, 10 of whom
Ninety percent of nuns who developed Alzheimer's brain lesions exhibited a low linguistic ability in their autobiographies when young, compared with 13 percent among those who did not have Alzheimer's.
had Alzheimer's.
George Wilson, Kansas University professor of chemistry and pharmaceutical chemistry, right Hu, M.D., a research associate, scrutinize a flexible sensor used to monitor blood-sugar levels.
A. S. K.
Sweet improvements in blood-sugar monitori
The country's 1.3 million insulin-dependent diabetics are sick of poking their fingers for blood tests every day.
George Wilson, Kansas University professor of chemistry and pharmaceutical chemistry, is working with French researchers to ease their pain.
They came up with a device that offers continuous monitoring of blood glucose for diabetics.
8B SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
The system, once fully developed, may offer intensive enough management of diabetes to cut long-term health complications — blindness, amputation of limbs, organ failure — by 30 percent to 70 percent.
Studies show most diabetics don't test glucose the minimum four to seven times a day.
"The first reason is that it is painful," Wilson said. "The second is that it's boring. The third is that it's expensive."
That led the team to develop a flexible sensor three times the size of a human hair that checks blood sugar levels nearly 1,500 times a day.
Diabetics painlessly implant a monitor under their skin with a needle. The sensor can remain four days. It can be connected to a pocket-size monitor that calculates blood sugar levels.
An alarm beeps to warn use glycemia, or low blood sugar. Hypo lead to unconsciousness, coma or e
Many researchers said it was make a convenient monitor and for diabetics.
"That's very important because if diabetes don't consider it useful a they won't use it," Wilson said.
"We're saying, 'We're sorry wrong,' Wilson said.
The system has proven effective KU. It's worked in animal and in trials in France.
Wilson works with Dr. Gérard R engineer Jean-Claude Klein, both of
The device may reach the publ four years. Still to come are of approval by U.S. and French govem development of mass production sors and monitors.
Marketing rights are held by Nat Science, Portland, Ore. Annual rev device may top $300 million. KU royalties based on a formula.
Stories by Tim Carpenter
---
science at Kansas University
led with Mihaly Horanyi of the University of Colorado on a project to answer questions that puzzled scientists since Jupiter's probe.
Researcher helping unlock inner halo mysteries of Jupiter
Go no farther than the kitchen sink to get a sense of a new theory about the workings of lunar's peculiar envi-
workings of Jupiter's peculiar environment.
Researchers Tom Cravens of Kansas University and Mihaly Horanyi of the University of Colorado collaborated on a project to answer questions that puzzled scientists since the planet's dusty ring was discovered 16 years ago by two NASA space probes.
The duo focused on Jupiter's ring structure — especially a faint doughnut-shaped halo extending from the ring toward the planet.
"That halo continually drains out and fills as if a faucet came from the big ring," said Cravens, professor of physics and astronomy.
Cravens and Horanyi belie cles linger in the ring only before drifting toward the planet. Older estimates had yielded dust lifetimes of 100 years or more.
Draining Jupiter's 200 mile-thick ring creates a halo, or torus, 3,000 miles thick, the researchers said. This process is thought to be unique in the solar system.
A paper on their work was published in an issue of Nature, one of the world's leading science journals.
Thomas Armstrong, KU professor of physics and astronomy, said the new
"It's important to understand Jupiter. It's the largest planet in the solar system. In many ways, its presence probably has determined much of Earth's early evolution."
study would generate more than academic intrigue.
Thomas Armstrong, KU professor of physics and astronomy
"It's important to understand Jupiter. It's the largest planet in the solar system," said Armstrong, who had no part in the Nature article. "In many ways, its presence probably has determined much of Earth's early evolution."
comets, for example
He said some scientists believe Jupiter acts as a cleaning agent in the solar system. It influences whether Earth is struck by
The NASA-sponsored study incorporating sophisticated mathematical models and Voyager data indicated to Horanyi and Cravens the source of dust wasn't Jupiter's volcanically active moon, lo.
Instead, they said, dust grains come from the bombardment of tiny rock moonlets within the ring. The largest moonlets are Metis and Adrastea, each about 10 miles across. The smallest dust grains have diameters smaller than the thickness of a human hair.
"Just as a truck would generate a continual cloud of dust as it sped over bumps, dust is generated continually from the main ring of Jupiter by constant collisions with micrometeors," Horanvi said.
The researchers concluded the halo forms when solar radiation gives these dust grains a positive electrical charge. That charge
causes grains to oscillate inside the ring before losing momentum and spiraling rapidly toward Jupiter's surface, flaring the ring's inner edge.
Scientists had thought the planet's hot, gaseous environment was dominated by negatively charged lo dust.
Jupiter's ring is 150,000 miles in circumference and 3,500 miles from the outer to inner edge. The ring is invisible from Earth. The planet's diameter is 89,000 miles or it has a radius of 237
times that of Earth.
While Saturn's prominent rings were observed more than 300 years ago, rings around Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune were confirmed following the Voyager tour of the solar system beginning in 1977.
Cravens hopes NASA's Galileo spacecraft can relay more information about Jupiter's environment to Earth to enhance study of the halo. The 2 1/2-ton Galileo reached Jupiter Dec. 7 after a six-year journey.
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KUMC research team seeking missing link in battle against AIDS
KANSAS CITY, KAN. — Research at the Kansas University Medical Center on a virus that causes AIDS is more than monkey business.
Virologist Bill Narayan's 20-person research team figured out a way to infect rhesus macaque monkeys with the human form of the deadly virus.
It's a significant scientific accomplishment because testing of drugs and vaccines had been hindered since the virus that made humans ill didn't make animals sick. Scientists now can use a monkey to study the AIDS virus in a way more beneficial to humans.
"For the neighbor next door, it will allow me to screen vaccines and drugs against HIV much faster," "5 Naravan said.
HIV research has progressed slowly because it took 10 years for some humans to develop symptoms related to AIDS. That lag time made it impractical to study the effectiveness of anti-AIDS vaccines in men and women.
Narayan's team used special techniques to make a virulent form of the virus that attacked the monkeys.
Within six months of being infected with the new virus.
"With human research, you are at the mercy of the whims of the patient." Narayan said. "You have to deal with huge cohorts of people. It's very expensive, very time-consuming, very inconvenient."
Researchers will now be able to give experimental vaccines to monkeys and expose each to KU SHIV, Narayan said. Research findings will be generated faster, more cheaply and more accurately.
called KU SHIV, about 20 monkeys developed symptoms observed in humans.
"For the neighbor next door, it would allow me to screen vaccines and drugs against HIV much faster."
Between 1990 and 1995, 335,000 Americans developed symptoms of AIDS.
— Virologist Bill Narayan
The total does not include those who technically have AIDS because of low blood counts but are not actually sick.
Heterosexual transmission, the fastestgrowing category of HIV risk, largely explains the relatively high numbers among black women.
Black and Hispanic men were at sharply higher risk than others. One of every 350 black men and one every 650 Hispanic men developed AIDS symptoms during the first half of this decade. So did one of every 1,100 black women, one of every 1,800 white men, one of every 2,500 Hispanic women and one of every 15,000 white women.
African-American women are 17 times more likely than white women to get symptoms of AIDS after catching the virus through heterosexual contact.
The main reason AIDS cases have leveled off is the stabilization of the disease among gay white men. Since 1990, the number of homosexually transmitted AIDS cases rose 47 percent among black men while actually declining 1 percent among white men.
through heterosexual contact.
Narayan, Marion Merrell Dow distinguished professor at the medical center, said the research breakthrough wouldn't help people who already have AIDS.
However, he said, additional testing of monkeys might identify a vaccine that protects women from the virus during intercourse.
Interest from the scientific community in KUMC's findings has been overwhelming. Naravan said.
Or scientists might discover how to prevent a fetus from becoming infected, he said.
B
"Every researcher we've talked to has been interested," he said. "We've got tongues hanging out."
The National Institutes of Health was impressed enough to issue a four-year $1.6 million grant to continue the HIV research program. Seed money for 18 months of research came from Hoechst Marion Roussel, formerly Marion Merrell Dow.
Virologist Bill Narayan's 20-person research team figured out a way to infect rhesus macaque monkeys with the human form of the deadly AIDS virus.
The image shows a person wearing a white lab coat and glasses, sitting in front of a microscope. The individual appears to be focused on the microscope, possibly examining or preparing samples for analysis.
Photos by Earl Richardson
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 9B
10B SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
.
PAYRA ROBIN
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Kathleen Hall, director of the College Advising Support Center, has recently moved the center's office to 109 Strong Hall.
Student advising center processes evolve at KU
- Attempts to improve advising at KU are being made, step by step
BY MICHAEL DEKKER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Former Student Body President Kim Cocks worked on it all last year.
Several student and faculty committees spent hours talking about it.
It even has Chancellor Robert Hemenway's attention.
But some elementary problems about advising are still being hammered out at Kansas University.
"We have to ask, 'What is advising itself?'" Cocks said. "Is it advice for what classes to take? Is it mentoring? Is it career advising?"
But some steps taken last year may make advising a little easier this year.
The College of Arts and Sciences, which advises 13,000 undergraduate students, recently combined its Advising Support Center, formally in Wescoe Hall, with the College's Undergraduate Services offices in 109 Strong Hall.
"This probably could be very much of a transitional year," said Kathleen Hall, director of advising in the newly merged office.
"We have to ask, 'What is advising itself? Is it advice for what classes to take? Is it mentoring? Is it career advising?'"
— Kim Cocks, former KU student body president
"I hope people will bear with us while we try to provide the same services while in a different format," she said.
The merger was part of a move by the College to combine offices that were offering similar services.
"Basically we serve as a backup safety net for students in the College who, for whatever reason, aren't able to get advising from a faculty adviser." Hall said.
we also have some sort of specialized populations that we work with, such as academically at-risk students, students who are on probation or those having academic difficulties."
The office also advises students who want to go into law or prehealth fields.
Cocks said one problem discussed by a Student Senate task force last year was that students who are in the College often have difficulty knowing which courses can be prerequisites for the various professional fields, in case students want to transfer there.
"There's not a lot of communication among the schools for this process." Cocks said.
Hall said a College faculty advising committee also has been studying those problems.
Arestructuringeffort by Hemenway also could go a long way toward centralizing all advising.
"I think we're moving forward on this because we now have someone (Hemenway) who cares about this," Cocks said.
"Along with the move this year, we may end up sliding right into another transition if the chancellor's plan to centralize advising goes into effect," Hall said.
Meanwhile, Hall recommends that new students who have questions contact the new College office. The timing depends on the problem, she said.
"If there's an immediate problem, like they're not enrolled in the right courses, they would want to try to see us right away," she said.
but if there are just some general questions that arise as they go along in the semester, that's something we'd rather work with them later in the semester, rather than during the rush at the beginning of the year."
Scholarship center aids university's top students
- The University Scholarship Center, located in Strong Hall, assists about 25 percent of all KU freshmen.
BY MICHAEL DEKKER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITTER
The director of Kansas University's Scholarship Center is excited about the future of the office under KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway's reorganization plan.
"I expect that we're on the brink of an exiting future," said Marti Ruel, director of the center.
RICHARD GWTN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
The University Scholarship Center, located in 33 Strong Hall, provides scholarships for about 1.300 freshmen each year.
Susan M. Kushner
Making sure the latest scholarships notifications are mailed to the right people early, Karlyn Greve, of the Kansas University Scholarship Center, checks through the list for the coming fall semester.
The center awards scholarships, provides support so that students don't fall below academic requirements for retaining scholarships and offers special programs for students on scholarships.
"It surprises a lot of people, but we really do help a lot of students." Ruel said.
That's about 25 percent of all freshmen.
Under a universitywide reorganization spearheaded by Hemenway, the USC was moved from the umbrella of Student Affairs to being under the authority of the new provost's office.
"Our goal is to retain everyone on scholarship and not lose anyone because of grade problems," Ruel said.
Ruel said that because Hemenway is interested in the National
The USC targets incoming freshmen who receive a 31 or higher out of a maximum score of 36 on the ACT college entrance exam, or those who receive a 1340 out of maximum score of 1600 on the SAT entrance exam.
The USC works with the office of admissions and the KU Endowment Association to help recruit, retain and fund students on scholarships.
"I really do think we'll be expanding, but I just don't know in what direction," she said.
"We try to provide referrals if students are having difficulties meeting the GPA requirements," she said.
Merit Scholar program, she expects the center to expand.
For example, if students are having trouble keeping up with
their studies, the USC may recommend that they go to the Student Assistance Center for a few tips on study skills.
Or if a student is experiencing personal problems, the center may recommend that he or she schedule a visit at Counseling and Psychological Services.
- The Rock Chalk chant is only one of many ties that bind Jayhawk fans.
--and "Crimson and the Blue" became the school song.
Traditions unite student body
The USC also offers special programs for scholarship students, such as special meetings with famous speakers who visit KU.
BY ROY LOPEZ
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
"Last year when (documentary director) Ken Burns came, we had about 50 people who were able to meet with him," Ruel said. "We think the center provides a special opportunity for our scholars."
C. J. Werner was a little shocked the first time he attended a Kansas University basketball game in Allen Fieldhouse. As he waited for the game to begin, the two guys next to him put their arms around him and began to sing.
Werner, Hutchinson sophomore, is one of many students to experience one of KU's greatest traditions: the singing of the alma mater followed by the famous KU Rock Chalk Jayhawk chant.
"At first I didn't know what was going on," Werner said. "Then I looked around and saw that everyone was putting their arms around each other and singing, so I tried to follow along. When they started the Rock Chalk Jayhawk chant, I picked it up pretty quickly because it was easy to follow."
For more information about the USC, call 864-5439.
The tradition of the Rock Chalk Chant dates to 1866. The chant first began as "rah rah rah Jay-hawk" repeated three times. Several years later, an English professor suggested Rock Chalk so that it would rhyme with Jay-hawk. It was also suggested because of all the chalk rock — or limestone — found throughout the region.
In 1897 it became the official cheer for Kansas University. The Rock Chalk chant is a tradition that must be heard to be appreciated.
Information about the center also is available on the Internet.
The chant begins low and gradually builds in volume. There are pauses between each word to allow the students a few seconds to yell and scream. By the end of the chant, the gym erupts as students vell as loud as they can.
"I had heard the chant before when I would watch the games on TV," said Grant Gibson, Lyons sophomore. "But when I actually heard the chant in person, I couldn't believe it. It was awesome."
The alma mater came to be in 1891 when George Barlow Penny decided to look for a school song for the Glee and Mandolin Club to sing. Barlow decided to change a few words to Cornell University's "Far Above Cayuga's Water."
THE CHANT
Kansas University's Rock Chalk Chant has evolved during its 130-year existence.
The cheer originated as
'rah rah rah jayhawk.'
The syncopated yet
deafening chant now goes
"Rock Chalk, jayhawk, KU."
New students will soon realize that they also need to save their newspapers before each home game. Another tradition is to hold newspapers as if they were being read while the starting lineup for the opposing team is introduced.
"It is my favorite tradition. It shows the other team that we don't really care who is starting for them because we are going to win anyway," said Kelsi Klein, Russell sophomore.
Even the university mascot, the Jayhawk, joins in and reads a paper. The Jayhawk has come to be one of the more unusual of all university mascots.
"I think that the Jayhawk is one of the coolest birds," said Stephen Warneke, Aurora, Colo., sophomore. "But I'm not sure where it came from or if it is a real bird. The truth is, I really don't know a lot about the Jayhawk."
Students walk throughout the
campus wearing shirts and hats emblazoned with Jayhawks. Students even have Jayhawk tattoos.
The term Jayhawk was first used around 1848. The name is a combination of two birds, the blue jay and the sparrow hawk. Blue jays were known for being quarrelsome and robbing other nests. The sparrow hawk was a stealthy hunter. The message: Do not turn your back on this bird.
During the 1850s the term Jayhawkers referred to abolitionists. Lawrence was a Free State stronghold. Then in 1886 the bird appeared in the Rock Chalk chant, and when the KU football players took the field it was natural to call them Jayhawkers.
"I just got my tattoo because several of my friends got one also," said Jeremy Clark, Hiawatha sophomore. "I thought it looked cool, but I can't honestly say that I know what it is."
The image of the jayhawk has changed throughout the years but the basic form has stayed the same: a bird with a beak and shoes. The shoes were drawn for kicking opponents. Talons protruding from the shoes were added later so that the jayhawk could now main its opponents.
"Once I found out what a Jayhawk was and how it came to be, the bird took on a different look," said Jason Brunk, Manhattan junior. "I used to think that it was neat, and I liked it, but I never looked at it as a rowdy bird that could kill its opponents with its talons. That image fits it better."
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AWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AVGUST 1996111B
12B SATURDAY. AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Wilcox Museum gives good view into ancient life
- The Wilcox Classical Museum at Kansas University has pieces that have traveled across campus from site to site in its 100-year history.
BY GWEN OLSON
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Students and visitors at Kansas University can explore the beauty of ancient Greek and Roman sculpture in a small museum in a corner of Lipincott Hall.
The Wilcox Classical Museum provides an academic and cultural resource with its examples of the art and times of the classics. The collection includes sculptures, busts and reliefs of
mythological and historical characters ranging from Venus de Milo to Sophocles. Most of the collection was acquired by KU in 1888.
"The museum provides a general appreciation of being able to see some real pieces of the ancient
other classes such as Western Civilization and many classes from the School of Fine Arts."
world," said Betty Banks, professor of classics and curator of the museum. "Students can get a sense of scale and the three-dimensional aspects of the pieces."
In 1965, the collection was
The second room of the museum features display cases containing many ancient artifacts, including ancient coins, lamps and painted vases. Some of these pieces date back to second to first century B.C.
Although the collection of the main room is in good condition now, it went through its share of problems. When the collection came to KU, it was housed on the second floor of Old Fraser Hall.
One of the cases holds some of the oldest artifacts in the collection: ancient lamps.
"We have had a lot more students than we ever expected when we first opened. We're a small department, and it's a great plus to have these two rooms for students to learn more about the ancient times."
in the main room, the museum displays numerous plaster casts of real Greek and Roman sculpture. This portion of the museum is used widely by many departments at KU for research and art appreciation.
"The museum is used mostly by classes in our department," Banks said, "but we do often see
- Elizabeth Banks, curator of KU's Wilcox Museum
Elizabeth Banks is the curator for the Wilcox Classical Museum.The museum was dedicated in 1888 and features items from the Greek and Roman culture. The museum is located in Lippincott Hall on the KU campus.
moved and stored in various places off campus so that Old Fraser Hall could be torn down. The casts sustained a great amount of damage while being stored for 20 years.
"In the case of one cast, an entire arm had to be com-
ANCIENT WEEKLY
plettely remade, and many of the casts had large cracks and discoloration." Banks said.
After 20 years of storage, the collection was not fit to be displayed at KU without restoration. Ahmad-Raee, a recent KU graduate of the master's program in sculpture, restored the casts so they could move to their permanent home in the Mary Amelia Grant Gallery.
Joseph Hawkins, museum guard, said the museum was used frequently by students.
"It's used for classes almost
RENÉE KNOEBER/IOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
every day," he said. "I think it's an important learning tool."
The museum has been successful since it opened in 1988, Banks said.
"We have had a lot more students than we ever expected when we first opened," Banks said. "We're a small department, and it's a great plus to have these two rooms for students to learn more about the ancient times."
Students and visitors are welcome to view the collection from 8:15 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
KU recruiting goes online
- Kansas University's admissions office is using Internet technology to attract students.
BY DAVE TOPLIKAR
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Interested in attending Kansas University?
Thanks to the Internet's World Wide Web, potential students have an electronic way to check out the school through a computer.
The traditional way to check out KU is to get some brochures, talk with alumni or make a personal trip to Mt. Oread to meet the folks in the admissions office.
And it has the potential to bring KU more students from far flung areas, says Scott Dold, an assistant director of admissions who is in charge of his office's home page.
But not quite yet.
"The vast majority of students you still do the old fashioned way," Dold said. "Mail, visits to campus and college fairs are still the nuts and bolts of recruiting."
But more and more students are checking out KU through the use of its home page.
You can check out the admissions office's home page on the Web by first calling up the main KU home page at http://www.cc.ukans.edu, then finding the admission office "link." The admission's office was to get a new mailing address on the Web this summer, so it could be more easily accessed. Dold said.
"It's something you don't want to be left behind," he said. "No, it's not a primary source for our students at this point. You have to develop it and it has to evolve over time."
being on the World Wide Web is important to KU, he said.
However, it already contains much information for the potential Jayhawk.
Dold gave praise to University Relations and KU's Systems Development office for organizing the admissions office material
"It's a small piece of a very very huge KU Internet pie," he said.
Dold said visitors to the admissions home page will be asked if they are interested in graduate school or if they are an international students. Links will take them to the appropriate page to get information.
The admissions site on the Web also has an academic calendar, links to the admissions recruiting staff, links to University Relations about a variety of KU facts, a link to KU's freshman summer institute, a link to student employment opportunities on campus, and a link to the student handbook.
"Assuming you haven't been directed as a grad or an international student, you're on the meat of the admission home page," he said.
Visitors can get general information about undergraduate admissions.
"If you're a high school senior and want specific information on electrical engineers, you will skip past the others and go directly to that. They would tell you all about electrical engineering," he said.
Or they can go to links that will give them information on specific schools and departments.
"When you get onto that page, there is a photo gallery to look at pictures of KU," he said. "There is a speech from Chancellor Hemenway that you can listen to, a welcome."
And there are video clips that you can download to watch on your computer at home about kU.
The main admissions recruiting publication, the Viewbook, is on the home page, he said.
You can also download, with the proper software, an application form for KU admissions and scholarships. Or you can download a budget worksheet and campus map.
Other links take you to such topics as "Why KU?" "Studying at KU," "Applying to KU," "Affording KU," "Living at KU," "Getting Around" and a feedback page to ask questions through electronic mail.
Questions come in regularly from students and from counselors at high schools and other colleges.
Students can also find links that give them access to more than 100 undergraduate brochures, from aerospace engineering to women's studies, he said.
"The Net is another way for students to access us," he said. "It's not done at the exclusion of brochures or face-to-face contacts. It's just another tool."
"It's a link to all of the majors that are offered here," he said.
If students don't want to download an application form, there is a spot for them to go to request an application form be sent to them through regular mail.
He's noticed that international students or students from other states will correspond electronically to learn more about KU.
Another link from the admissions page is for transfer students from other four-year college and from community colleges. Potential students will be able to find out, unofficially, which of the courses will transfer to KU.
The admissions site on the Web also has an academic calendar, links to the admissions recruiting staff, links to University Relations about a variety of KU facts, a link to KU's freshman summer institute, a link to student employment opportunities on campus, and a link to the student hand-book.
Dold said he enjoys having the new tool to help him in his recruiting efforts.
"I love it," he said.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
DV
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 13B
KU TV station seeks quality, not quantity
A
RENÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Kim Jackson, administrative coordinator for KUJH TV at Kansas University, says the new student-run station will be on the air Monday through Friday at 5:30 p.m. during the class session on UHF Channel 14.
- A new TV station at KU hopes to provide a mix of programming produced on and off the university campus.
Have one of those circular UHF antennas on the back of your TV?
BY DAVE TOPLIKAR
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Then you might be able to tune into Kansas University's new low-power television station on Channel 14.
Gary Hawke, station manager,
says the 1,000-watt, low-power
station probably can broadcast 30
miles.
But this fall, Hawke hopes to bring about 10 to 18 hours of feature programming a day to the station. And he hopes to air locally produced programs as well.
"We haven't had much audience because we have been doing testing." he said.
"We may have less quantity of locally produced material in the first few years, but hopefully it will be of high quality."
— Gary Hawke, station manager
"We're trying to do it on a quality basis," he said. "We may have less quantity of locally produced material in the first few years, but hopefully it will be of high quality."
The station, which went on the air last spring, is designed to provide programming for KU and Lawrence.
Another goal is to provide a lab experience for the radio-television sequence in KU's School of Journalism.
"And to hopefully answer some of the needs of the university at large." Hawke said.
The studios are in the Dole building on campus, and the antenna is atop the KANU-FM tower on West Campus.
The call letters right now are K14H9, which doesn't exactly roll off the tongue, Hawke said. The station has applied to the Federal Communications Commission to change them to KUIH.
This fall, the station will be on the air with a "base programming source," he said.
Most of the programs will be produced outside KU,but they will fall within the university's mission and have viewer appeal.
"Mud wrestling may have viewer appeal, but it wouldn't be something that follows the university's mission." he said.
Hawke said the school plans to expand its news and public affairs programming.
The station could be used as a vehicle to air programs that other KU departments, such as continuing education, special education and university relations, already may have produced.
"I'm looking within the foreseeable future in doing almost a C-SPAN approach for us to be able to cover lectures, sporting events,
presentation and seminars," he said.
However, the station will be limited by funding and personnel.
He said because of the limited broadcast range, the station
"We want students to go out and work in the real world, so they need to chase an ambulance now and then and go to a news conference."
hopes to be able to negotiate putting it on Sunflower Cablevision.
Although the station has been off the air during the summer, Hawke hopes it can be on the air continuously starting in the fall.
— Gary Hawke, station manager
"Each semester we'll probably be adding things to it," Hawke said. "We'll like to be able to do
p.m. each day.
The news coverage will be of KU and the Lawrence community, he said.
"We want students to go out and work in the real world, so they need to chase an ambulance now and
KU students already produce a five- to 10-minute broadcast each day. That will be expanded as time goes on, he said.
lot of news, documentaries, talk shows and special features."
About 30 to 35 students will work at the station in the fall, he said.
Most of what can be done depends on funding and availability of students and professionals, including faculty and adjunct faculty, he said.
They will do the commercial and technical work as well as write, produce and deliver the news on air.
Hawke said most students who have been involved in various aspects at the station have not had trouble getting jobs in the TV industry.
"The market is out there," he said, "and it seems to be expanding."
KUMC brings bodies to science
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Continued from page 6B
Thomas said most donations to KUMC came from Kansas and Missouri. The majority are elderly. Very few are younger than 60 years of age. The gender mix is about 50-50.
"The students understand, 'If I don't learn this ... I'm letting this man down, his family down."
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accompanied by a lengthy autobiography. The text outlined the man's health history and urged medical students to look for evidence of maladies.
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Malewski, the medical center chaplain, has attended the ecumenical services for years. Markers are engraved with the KUMC name and the date.
prefer remains be placed in a common grave in Oak Hill Cemetery in Lawrence.
Last fall, remains of 60 program participants were buried together. Their names were read aloud. The liturgy drew 100 family members.
Typically, people learn about the Will Body Program by word-of-mouth. Funeral home directors and clergy help disseminate information.
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FROM J-W STAFF REPORTS
"Students pay $14 each semester to have these services," Kaiser said. "I see KU on Wheels always remaining in some fashion."
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KU EDITION
stim
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
SUA has daunting task of planning KU events
DUN
RENEE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
- The Idea's the thing for students working in SUA.
Board members for Student Union Activities meet during the summer to plan the coming year's events.
BY JOHN WAKE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
What started with a $200 budget in 1938 has become the biggest student activities organization at Kansas University.
"The hardest thing is trying to make
This year, with a budget of $97,000,
Student Union Activities, or SUA, continues to plan the best in concerts, lectures, films, travel and other activities for KU students.
"The hardest thing is trying to make sure that everything works out. I think the other hard part is figuring out what KU students want."
— SUA president Rieley Scott
sure that everything works out," said SUA president Rieley Scott. "I think the other hard part is figuring out what KU students want."
Scott began working for SUA as a freshman, serving on the Promotions Committee and the Live Music Committee.
Now,as a KU senior,she is working hard to bring the best events to KU for students.
"We started a survey for freshmen students coming in," Scott said. "We have two girls tallying the results, but we won't know what the results are until the end of the semester, because we want to do both orientation groups."
Scott said there are about 300 students who work in SUA.
Each coordinator of the eight committees of forums; fine arts; feature films; spectrum films; special events; live music; promotions; and recreation and travel are responsible for bringing ideas before all of the board members.
If the board members unanimously vote in favor of having the event, scheduling the proposed event begins.
Scott said there's no worse feeling when an event doesn't go over well and nothing better than when an event goes over big.
"Last year, my committee worked very hard to get Denny Dent to come," Scott said. "It was the best thing to see the audience members and my committee members give him a standing ovation. 1
To become a board member, Scott said "it's not a big process. There's a form to fill out and to be a coordinator, you have to interview before the old board."
picked the event and brought it to the board "
Students working with SUA receive an academic support scholarship that is used for tuition costs.
To continue receiving the scholarship and to stay on with SUA, students have to keep a minimum 2.3 grade point average.
Sometimes the exhibits are the hardest to please all students with.
Scott said one of the hardest tasks of being an SUA member is trying to find events and activities that will appeal to everyone on KU's diverse campus.
"We try to get exhibits that will appeal to everyone," Scott said. "We've had some controversial ones this past year. We had to look at the laws of Kansas to know what indecency and pornography is and we did get some flak over some exhibits."
Regardless of what exhibits, events or activities go over well with the campus, Scott said she hopes SUA can continue to provide
"We try to get exhibits that will appeal to everyone. We've had some controversial ones this past year. We had to look at the laws of Kansas to know what indecency and pornography is and we did get some flak over some exhibits."
— SUA president Rieley Scott
Adviser helping students develop their own talents
vide quality events this fall
"I don't feel it is a selfish organization at all, like some organizations on campus that work for their own good," Scott said.
- Student Union Activities
adviser Sue Morrell teaches students
leadership skills to last them a lifetime.
"I think everyone just finds their own niche to fit into and we try to be conscious of everybody's needs."
BY JOHN WAKE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Sue Morrell may keep a messy desk, but her work is focused on college students and not a computer screen.
For the past eight years, Morrell, 38, has been the Student Union Activities adviser for Kansas University.
"Oh, God. It's always a pit," said Morrell, leaning back in her chair. "I keep an untidy desk, because it's more important for me to be talking to a person than sitting here filing things away."
But Morrell doesn't see herself as an adviser, she sees herself as a teacher.
"I always wanted to be a teacher because I had a math teacher when I was growing up that I just really adored," Morrell said. "I'm kind of a teacher now. My students can go into any field and be successful from what they learn from SUA."
SUA officers say Morrell has become more than just an advisor or teacher — she's a friend.
SUA is an on-campus organization with a membership of 12 students. They are selected by a committee to bring the best variety of activities to KU.
dent of alumni relations. "We respect her so much that if we screw up, we can't face her."
"She gets involved. She doesn't just tell people what to do," said Holly Shehorn, SUA vice presi-
SUA is an organization with a $500,000 budget, all of which, Morrell said, is for the officer and committee members to spend.
"I teach them how to schedule events, deal with agents and how to work with a
Negotiating with the entertainment industry is all part of what students learn as an SUA member.
"I have a lot of students who work in the entertainment
"I have a lot of students who work in the entertainment industry, and they are alumni who have worked in SUA. What's nice about my job is that you see these students grow and become good leaders, and they go on to be successful in whatever they decide to do."
Sue Morrell, SUA adviser
"The students will call the agency and see if they are touring," she said. "If they are, we see if we can have them stop in Lawrence."
Under her advising, Morrell said students learn how to negotiate deals with artists directly or with their agents to bring them to KU.
budget," Morrell said. "Right now, we are negotiating Bill Mahr for homecoming weekend."
SUA
industry, and they are alumni who have worked in SUA." Morrell said. "What's nice about my job is that you see these students grow and become good leaders, and they go on to be successful in whatever they decide to do."
Morrell was awarded the 1991 Citation for Leaders and
The award is just one symbol of her desire to work with student and how KU students have appreciated working with her.
Achievement in Student Services Award, which she proudly displays on her office wall.
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Although Morrell said she has had more financially attractive offers for employment, no amount of money would keep
Sue Morrell, adviser for Kansas University's Student Union Activities, helps students learn how to negotiate deals with artists directly or with their agents to bring them to KU.
her from working with college students.
"I just feel like my life is more useful working with young people," Morrell said. "If that makes
the world a better place, then it has been worth it for me. Plus, I love what I do. I get to do something different every day. I don't have an average, typical day — ever."
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Due to crowded parking lots and campus expansion, Campus Planning Coordinator Tom Waechter is focusing on a detailed review of transportation issues on campus. He said that dealing with parking and transportation is the most important part of the campus plan.
The biggest problem is the connection between West Campus and Main Campus. Waechter said that leaving West Campus to use the Main Campus is simple, but when people return, there is no place to park their cars. A shuttle or transit that runs five or six times an hour taking people between the two campuses would help to diminish this problem, Waechter said.
"Parking is an issue that just doesn't go away." Waechter said.
Other issues include overcrowded parking and transportation from parking lots to campus. Waecher said that in the next five to10 years campus planning will include assessing existing parking lots and examining options for higher density parking.
Waechter said that the main
focus is on intra-campus transportation, but the university is also willing to explore other possibilities such as working with the city and community based transportation.
Although the transportation dilemma is taking most of the planning energy, Waechter said they are considering redoing the campus landscape. An open space assessment was done and they should know more concerning the plans at a later date.
At this point, there are not concrete ideas.
"The challenge is to build models that are practical and viewed as viable." Waechter said.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 15B
KU EDITION
Minority Affairs building bridges to KU
- The Office of Minority Affairs helps minority students succeed once they arrive at Kansas University.
BY MARK FAGAN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
An upgraded computer system at Kansas University gives minority students access to one of the most essential tools for succeeding in college: money.
Hundreds of scholarships for minority students are accessible through the Office of Minority Affairs' expanded External Financial Aid and Scholarship Search Program, said Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs.
He encourages the more than
He encourages 2,000 minority students on the Lawrence campus to take advantage of scholarships in disciplines ranging from astrophysics to music therapy.
"There's a lot of scholarships out there, but they are highly specialized," said Thompson, in his sixth year as director. "Students can bring in a diskette, and we can download all the information for them. ...
"We want students to become more independent and to be able to handle their financial situations themselves."
One of the office's most successful programs is Students Together Excelling as Peers (STEP). The program gives freshmen and first-year transfer students a chance to meet, interact and gain experience from other minority students.
The computer — linked to several scholarship databases and the Internet — is available during office hours in Room 145 of Strong Hall, where officials have worked for 25 years to retain and support students from four identified ethnic groups: African American, Asian American, Hispanic and American Indian.
The work is widespread. The office provides peer counseling, conducts educational programs, organizes events and operates
KU's Multicultural Resource Center.
The intent is clear: Help minority students feel comfortable on a campus that is 76 percent white.
"KU is a predominantly white campus, so when a lot of minority students come ... they have to find new friends that transcend their own racial background," Thompson said. "KU has an excellent climate. It supports diversity. We work very hard to include all students in all aspects of campus life."
One of the office's most successful programs, he said, is Students Together Excelling as Peers (STEP). The program gives freshmen and first-year transfer students a chance to meet, interact and gain experience from other minority students.
The STEP program includes weekly seminars, field trips, assertiveness training, business tours and even a run through the Adams Challenge Course at Clinton Lake to encourage teamwork. Juniors and seniors offer peer counseling.
The work pays off, Thompson said, as 78 percent of the program's participants graduate from KU in four or five years well above the national average for minority students at public four-year schools.
"We help them develop strategies for success," he said.
Even so, there's still plenty of work to do, Thompson said. He wants to improve on minority graduation rates and work with even more students this year.
He's also hopeful that KU will hire more minority faculty and staff to provide professional role models for students working toward academic degrees.
"It gives them someone they can look up to," Thompson said.
I'll try to make the best possible representation of what I see. The image shows two women working at a desk, with one woman seated in front and the other standing behind her. They appear to be engaged in an activity that involves computer use, possibly related to data analysis or project management. The background is filled with office supplies and documents, suggesting a professional setting.
MIKE YODER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Connie Convoy, office manager at KU's Office of Minority Affairs, shows Amanda Martinez, senior, and Leonard Huerta, graduate student, how to locate a web page on minority scholarship and fellowship programs available to students.
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- **The Institute for Public Policy and Business Research provides up-to-date economic data to businesses through Kansas.**
BY MEGAN NEHER
JOURNAL-WORLD BUSINESS EDITOR
The Institute for Public Policy and Business Research is a Kansas University agency that studies the economy and businesses throughout the state and the nation.
A team of professors along
with about 12 students research the economy, doing specific economic and business-related studies, some of which are commissioned by the governor, the Legislature or other state agencies.
For example, the IPPBR was asked to study the possible closure of the state's mental health hospitals last year. The institute reported on the economic impact of each hospital closure on its community.
"We provide state agencies policy options based upon good research — solid and impartial research," said Charles Krider, director of the institute and business professor.
The institute was developed informally more than 20 years ago, as the university was asked to participate in various studies with the state. Then in the 1985, the group was given the name Institute for Public Policy and Business Research.
"We don't set policy,we offer input to public policy."
Last year the institute was restructured to focus solely on business and economy. Before, IPPBR included public administration issues.
The institute has completed research for Kansas Department of Transportation on the cost benefits of bypasses in Kansas highways; studied the juvenile justice system for Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services and will embark on a nationwide survey for IBM next year.
"We provide state agencies policy options based upon good research solid and impartial research.We don't set policy, we offer input to public policy."
university to respond in a cohesive manner to the state's interests." Krider said.
Leaders of the institute have been asked on several occasions
— Charles Krider, director of the Institute for Public Policy and Business Research and KU business professor
"It's been a useful way for the
In addition to its research activities, the institute provides regular economic forecasts for state and local government and Kansas businesses. The institute uses a model to determine what the Kansas economy will be for the next
to testify about the research findings to the Legislature and other state agencies.
As a main component of the Kansas state data center, IPPBR has access to the Census publications and computer tapes for Kansas and neighboring states.
six to 12 months.
The institute also sponsors an annual Economic Outlook Conference and other seminars, and publishes the Kansas Statistical Abstracts and the Kansas Business Review. Both publications offer statistics relating to current economic and business issues in Kansas and the Midwest.
Most recently, the institute developed a World Wide Web page to provide businesses and city leaders across the state access to the data. The address is: http://www.ukans.edu/cwis/unit/s/ippbr. Communities can use the page to retrieve information about their region's economy.
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KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Study Abroad opens worlds
- The Office of Study Abroad continues to send hundreds of KU students around the world each year .
The attitude for the fall semester in the office of study abroad at Kansas University is "It's a small world and it's wonderful!" according to Mary Elizabeth Debicki, director of the office for 10 years.
The Office of Study Abroad listens to what the students are requesting and then responds with the programs that they want. The number of students who study abroad is increasing every year.
"Our top three programs are to Costa Rica, France and Great Britain. We have had a program to Costa Rica for 38 years, that is probably why it is the most popular. Students return with a good experience and tell others. We are very tied to Costa Rica," Debicki said.
With more than 65 different countries possible to study in, the KU programs are extensive with lots of different options.
"Academic year, summer and semester programs are possible. Financial aid is available to students who qualify, so there are ways for almost anyone to go. I would say to plan early to be sure that you can fit this into your scheduling. Come and talk with us about what you need to do to be able to study abroad," Debicki said.
A new focus for fall is to try to involve different departments with the study abroad office in effort to promote study of the subject in the country it originated in.
"We thought, wouldn't it be great to teach Western Civilization where it all began? So we did with our Western Civilization program in France and Italy. This way the students can fulfill their Western Civilization requirements while studying in another country," Debicki said.
Becky Stank, KU senior said, "I went on the Western Civilization program to France and Italy and it was the most unbelievable experience of my life. Being in other countries made me realize how much else there is in the world, and how lucky I was to live in the United States."
Located in 203 Lippincott, the office will have a new reference library for students researching study abroad options. This will be open to anyone interested in study abroad.
"The advice that I would give to a junior thinking about going abroad is why weren't you thinking about this when you were a freshman! These programs make better Americans out of already good Americans, and will change you life forever," Debicki said.
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It is 7 a.m., just the beginning of Becky Kucera's long day. Like many students at Kansas University, Kucera struggles to organize her many activities.
Juggling school, work can be tricky
Office teaches students to better manage time
- Students can have it all, but discipline and moderation are the key.
BY LINDSAY WILLIS
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
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Kucera, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, maintains a 4.0 grade-point average, works a part-time job, holds an executive position in her sorority, exercises six days a week and still manages to go out with friends two to three times per week. How does she do it? Time management.
Kucera said she keeps a very tight schedule. She knows her activities are overwhelming, but somehow she manages to balance it all.
"Sometimes I just want to run away from everything, but I know if I do not budget my time, I can't get everything accomplished." Kucera said.
Creating a daily schedule allows Kucera to finish everything, yet still find time to relax.
Unlike Kucera, many students at KU find time management a difficult concept. Students find it
"For some students, managing time is not something that comes easily. Many students spread themselves too thin, and only realize it when it is too late."
hard to adapt to balancing academic, social and professional time. But not learning to adjust to the many obligations of college can cause failure.
Jim Henry, associate director of the University Placement Center
Jim Henry, associate director of the University Placement Center, said that if the average time each student allotted to studying, sleeping, socializing and attending class were compiled, most students would exceed the number of hours that exist.
"For some students, managing time is not something that comes easily." Henry said. "Many students spread themselves too thin, and only realize it when it is too late."
Henry said for many students, time management is a concept that is introduced only after failure at school or work.
"Time management takes discipline, but can be accomplished," Henry said.
Dave Burge, Wichita junior, works 20 hours a week, takes 18 hours in classes and has even appeared in a local drama production. Like Kucera, Burge monitors his time very strictly.
"My day doesn't always go the way I planned, but by following a tentative plan I am capable of accomplishing a variety of tasks," Burge said.
"I was overwhelmed with all this work, and had no idea how to get it all done." Burge said.
For Burge, the past three years have been a lot of trial and error, learning what methods will work in order to keep up with his busy lifestyle.
As a freshman, Burge quickly learned the importance of time management.
There is still help for students who don't find time management as easy by Burge and Kucera. The Student Assistance Center, in Room 133 Strong Hall, focuses on this area.
Pamphlets on time management techniques as well as a schedule of upcoming time management workshops can be obtained at the center. For more information, contact the Student Assistance Center at 864-4064.
Jim Henry, left, associate director of the University Placement Center, specializes in finding jobs. Kim Scarbrough, right, graduate assistant and internship coordinator from Kansas City, Kan., and Henry look through some possible ideas for placements. Success in school, as well as in work, depends largely on time management and self discipline, Henry says.
Summer Jobs
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Here's the section that brings the Journal-World home.
Whether the subject is leisure time, fine foods or keeping fit, you'll get the story in the Journal-World Living section.
Monday: There's a special focus on area people and computer news.
Tuesday: Health is in the spotlight with the focus on medical news, health advice and topical commentary from columnists. You'll find the special Health Line that answers questions about better ways to treat your body.
Wednesday: Here's a day that's a treat. The Living section is keyed to good eating. Watch for Gwyn Mellinger's column.
Thursday: Focuses on the 18 and under set plus what's hip and what's not. Area youths share their thoughts on issues of the day.
Friday: Our Church page brings you local and national religious news. Don't miss it.
Saturday: Focuses on the family. Stories and columns look at practical ways to deal with family problems and current issues. Our society pages will keep you up on the latest in weddings & engagements in the area.
Sunday: Fun features and focus pages on life experiences. A special books page will give you insight to the day's hot literary offerings. Our Art Notes will keep you abreast of Lawrence's arts community.
LAWRENCE IOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 17B
Continuing Ed shows learning never has to end
- Continuing Education keeps up with technology.
BY JL WATSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
On a summer afternoon when many Kansas University faculty members are on vacation, Continuing Education dean Robert Senecal is reading "How to Make Your Employees Fall in Love with Your Company."
His "company" is the Continuing Education program, and his employees have to be devoted to the concept of lifetime learning if they are to succeed under Senecal's direction.
"Lifetime learning is where it's at," Senecal said. "Things are changing so fast. We have to take learning and society ideas more seriously, and I think we are."
Senecal is serious about the latest developments taking place through the office of Continuing Education. Many former students and members of the business community are familiar with traditional programs, including relicensing for teachers, lawyers and engineers, but there is more to the outreach program, Senecal said.
"We take graduates and give them a continuing education applicable to their lives and their jobs," he said.
In the past, correspondence courses set the mainstream standard for off-campus programs. Continuing Education has changed to accommodate newer methods of communication and technology.
"We have instructional television and compressed video that allows two-way video and audio across the state." Senecal said, adding that video access is especially important in remote areas of the state, where medical care is less available.
See Continuing, page 20B
MICHAEL S. HARRIS
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway talks to faculty and staff at the Regents Center in Overland Park with the help of interactive television from the Lawrence campus under the supervision of Continuing Education.
Services help students sort out legal woes
- Untangling Kansas University student's legal knots is the specialty of the Legal Services for Students office on campus.
BY CAROLINE TROWBRIDGE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
For Kansas University students who find themselves in legal quagmires, a group of attorneys who work in Burge Union can provide help.
The Legal Services for Students office, which was formed in 1979 with student fees, provides free legal counsel to KU students. The office is on the lower level of the Burge Union.
Staffed by three full-time attorneys, the office's lawyers spend a great deal of time on three main legal tangles: landlord-tenant dis
putes, consumer cases and traffic cases. The annual caseload numbers about 3,000.
Jo Hardesty, director of the office since 1987, said landlord-
office since 1987,
tenant cases
make up a large
amount of the
caseload.
"For a lot of students, that's really the first contract they've dealt with," said Hardesty, who earned a bache.
home didn't exist." she said.
Misdemeanor traffic cases also involve a large number of students each year. Students also get involved in a large number alco-
"Just because they're students, they're not shielded from the real world."
—Jo Hardesty, Legal Services for Students director
lor's degree from KU in 1982 and her law degree from KU in 1986.
Consumer problems also face students, she said. In a recent case, students had trouble on a spring break trip to Mexico.
"The trip existed, but the trip
hol-related
offenses, such as minor in possession of alcohol, fake identification or operating a vehicle under the influence. The office is restricted in how far it can go to
represent students, Hardesty said. Except for landlord-tenant disputes or consumer cases, the office's attorneys cannot represent students in court.
A student who is charged with a felony, for example, would be
referred to other legal counsel.
"We try to get the word out to students about our program," Hardesty said.
The Legal Service for Students office also handles educational programs, on a request basis, for organizations, living groups and classes.
In addition to full-time lawyers, the office also employs five KU students in their second or third year of law school. The law students must be overseen by a full-fledged attorney.
"We keep pretty busy," Hardesty said.
The number and type of cases affecting students continues to grow, she said.
"It's justlike anybody else," she said. "Just because they're students, they're not shielded from the real world."
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}
Lawrence journey, World August 1996 198
4
20B SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
MERCY E. FLOVER
SENIOR EDITOR
RICHARD GWIN/IOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Looking over some Kansas University props for an upcoming event are, from left, Jodi Breckenridge Petit, B.J. Pattee and Janice Cordry.
Association building on alums' ties to university
- Officials at the Kansas University Alumni Association hope to increase programs and services in upcoming years.
BY MICHAEL DEKKER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Do you know the difference between Kansas University's Alumni Association and its Endowment Association?
The alumni association, founded in 1883, now boasts 45,000 members in all 50 states and in countries throughout the world.
Donna Neuner, director of membership services for the alumni association, described it this way:
this way.
"We call ourselves the friend-raisers and they are the fund-raisers," she said.
Its current leadership includes Gil Reich, who took over as president of the association's board of directors on July 1.
A 1954 graduate of KU, Reich earned All-America football honors as a quarterback and defensive halfback in 1952 and was a starting guard on the 1953 KU basketball team. He is one of 11 KU football All-Americans.
As chairman, Reich said, "I want to continue to improve our alumni programs. I'd like to see more alums participate in the activities that we have."
Before retiring in 1988, the Savannah, Ga., resident rose to an executive position with Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, where he worked for 35 years.
Neuer said the KUAA staff in
Lawrence shares the same goals as Reich.
"While we are going online eventually, there are probably other opportunities for communicating with computers that we would like to have," she said.
"Staffing in general would be a big plus." she said.
"We'd like to have more class reunions and we could do more with sending stuff to various communities across the United States.
"We call ourselves the friend-raisers and they (KU Endowment Association) are the fund-raisers."
— Donna Neuner, director of membership services for the Kansas University Alumni Association
"We do quite a bit of that as it is, but there's always more that you can do," she said.
KUAA strives to keep graduates in contact with their alma mater through its magazine that is sent to all members, and through several activities that bring alumni together.
Those activities include alumni reunions, homecoming events, pep rallies before football and basketball games and travel activities.
"Our mission is to be the main link between alumni and their alma mater," Neuner said. "We do that in various ways through programming. Our programs, of course, are quite varied."
Graduates, she said, join the association for various reasons.
Some who now live far away like to keep in touch with what's going on at KU while others like the association's Adams Alumni Center at 13th and Oread.
and Great. The center, built in 1983, has about 3,800 people that are members of the Learned Club.
One major change at the center that went into effect last month is that KUAA members no longer have to pay an additional fee to dine at the Learned Club.
There will, of course, still be a charge for drinks and meals at the center.
The center also serves as a storehouse for alumni records.
"As members lose track of their KU friends, they can call and get their addresses through us," Neuer said. The information also includes electronic mail addresses of some people, she said.
The association also offers Jayhawk credit cards, long distance calling cards, an insurance program, a Kansas Union Bookstore catalog and an annual calender.
The organization also helps coordinate alumni groups in major cities throughout the country.
Neuner said that if organizers "had a magic wand that could do anything, we would build additional parking for the center."
For more information about the association and its programs, call (913) 864-4760.
Flying Jayhawks take flight to worldwide destinations
- KU alumni and friends have been hitting the skies and traveling to foreign and domestic vacation spots for more than two decades as the Flying Jayhawks.
BY MATT GOWEN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Since 1970, the Flying Jayhawks, a vacation travel program sponsored by the Kansas University Alumni Association for KU alumni and friends of the university, has been covering the globe with group travel excursions. The trips are designed to bring KU alumni or KU supporters, and their family and friends, together for journeys through interesting and even exotic locales.
When a certain group of Jayhawks take wing, no country is safe from their migration.
"It's just one of many opportunities people have to travel with a group," said Donna Neuner, director of membership services for the alumni association. "In this case, they're KU alumni."
Neuner, who handles in-house administration for the Flying Jayhawks program, said the bond created by the trips is usually automatic.
"The camaraderie is just terrific," Neuner said. "They-always
Here are the trips planned for the Kansas University Alumni Association's Flying Jayhawks program for 1997. Dates are subject to change.
JAYHAWKS CAN FLY
Pacific South by first-class private jet, May 5-29
Cruise Europe (Amsterdam to Budapest), Erasmus, May 7-23
Austrian winter escapade Feb. 8-15
Trans-Panama Cana cruise with the big 12, Jan. 22-Feb. 1
Inland waterways of Northern California (optional train extension) May 4-9
Phone and Saone rivers cruise, May 28-June 9
Macnu Picend affichu
Galapagos Islands, Feb 17-28
seem to have a love of Kansas and the University of Kansas."
Rome Escapade, to be announced
Continuing Ed putting newest technology to use in teaching
Continued from page 17B
Gwen Mitchell, who has taken several Flying Jayhawks journeys with her husband, Wiley, agreed that the atmosphere is often relaxed and familiar.
Doctors from the KU Medical Center can talk to patients standing in front of a video screen and visually assess specific patient needs, Senecal said.
"The video is just as effective as being on-site in some diagnoses," he said.
Scandinavia and Russia June 27-July 10
Beijing to Moscow/Istanbul Orient Express, June 19-July 5
Although the medical center is a large part of Senecal's program, so is a police academy outside Hutchinson, a fire service training program in Lawrence and the Center for Environmental Training and Education at the Regents Center in Kansas City.
Alumni College of Tuscany
Cortona, Italy, June 4-12
Alaska Rush/Veendam or Statendam, July 12-23
Rhine and Mosel rivers/MS Swiss Crystal, July 30-Aug. 11
"Part of the Regents Center program is about letting school children take different information about temperature and environment, put it into the computer and we put the data back in their hands," Senecal said. "They get to see how important research is."
Orient Express Train, Aug. 11-19
Great Britain alumni
Getting children involved from an early age is the key to Senecal's idea of lifelong education. Another is to keep up with the demand of an ever-changing society.
Danube River Cruise, Sept.
7-20
Trans-Panama Canal Cruise/Crystal Symphony, Oct.
30-Nov. 10
Great Britain alumni college, Aug. 26-Sept. 3
Iss Crystal, July 30-Aug.
Trans-Canada/American
Around the world aboard the Concorde, to be announced
"They're usually a grand group of people," Mitchell said. "If you haven't met them already, you can make lifelong friends."
The couple first traveled with
"The university is putting about $300,000 into this effort. We're getting these classrooms wired so that instructors can draw down to the Internet and hook up their power books."
As part of the university's Media Services, the Continuing Education program will install technology upgrades in 18 classrooms across campus. Plans call for a total of 50 upgrades over the next three years.
It's just a taste of things to come with the Continuing Education program. That's why Senecal thinks it's vital to read up on new publications that connect people with each other and with the fast-paced world of technology.
— Robert Senecal, KU dean of Continuing Education
"The university is putting about $300,000 into this effort." Senecal said. "We're getting these classrooms wired so that instructors can draw down to the Internet and hook up their power books."
The first phase of installation is set to begin late this summer and should be completed during the fall.
"People are our best asset," he said. "If we don't keep them tuned up, we're losing out."
you don't see the technology," he said. "And that's the idea. It's there to be used, but not to get in the way."
The classrooms chosen for the first phase of upgrades won't appear different at first glance, said Breck Marion, director of Media Services.
See Program, page 21B
Wired classrooms vary in size, Marion said.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 21B
ROTC branches weather change
BY MEGAN POPLINGER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
The Kansas University Reserve Officer Training Corps is running smoothly from all branches the Army, Air Force and Navy but times are changing and each branch is being affected.
Army Maj. Jane I. Harris, assistant professor of military science, said Army ROTC enrollment for the 1996-97 school year is higher than last year.
High numbers may not be so good for students, however, because it is becoming more difficult to get requested positions.
"It used to be whatever you asked for, you got, because the Army needed second lieutenants," Harris said, "but as the Army gets smaller, need decreases."
Harris said the military's downsizing recently hit ROTC and she predicts it will result in a more competitive program.
The downsizing is no longer causing problems for the Navy ROTC, according to Maj. Eric C. Holt, Marine officer instructor. Holt envisions a military focusing more on joint efforts instead of each branch remaining separate.
Currently, there are not joint ROTC classes, but Holt sees that in the future. He used the Persian Gulf War as an example of how the military works as a whole now more than it ever did before. He said that if they have to fight together, that they should start becoming knowledgeable on details of other military branches.
As for the enrollment of Navy ROTC students, Holt said that it is down by about 15 to 20 but he said this is to be expected because the economy is booming and there is not a clear and present danger to the country at this time. Recruiting is better when people think they are needed.
"There are no good bad guys," Holt said.
Air Force Capt. Daniel Staggernborg, who is responsible for Air Force cadet training, said the Air Force expects fewer cadets this year, partially because of fewer walk-ons due to a new fee schedule.
In the past, the Air Force ROTC would have students who try the program because it didn't cost students to carry extra hours once they'd pay for a full-time fees. Now, because students must pay for classes by the hour, there may be fewer who test the program.
Program allows alumni friends to travel globe
Continued from page 20B
the group to return to Europe after living in Norway for two years. Their next trip will take them through the rivers of the Carolinas.
Wiley Mitchell, a former professor in the business school, graduated from KU in 1943. He said the precision of planning distinguishes the program.
"They're very well organized and exceedingly well run," he said.
"They're great trips," she said.
"I have always entoyed them."
Gwen Mitchell went to Ohio State, but has since become a KU convert, at least when it comes to the Flying jawhaws.
The first-ever trip came in 1969, when the alumni association organized a charter-plane trip to watch the Jayhawks play in the Orange Bowl in Miami. The excursion required three planes, prompting the association to begin organizing trips every year.
Hawaii served as the Flying Jayhawks' first destination in 1970. In recent years, between 18 and 20 trips have been offered to members of the alumni association. And 1997 is no exception.
The preliminary schedule for next year includes journey to Russia, Italv, Alaska and Austria
In general, the trips vary in cost and length, the longest filling more than three weeks. Many of those with the time for the journeys are retired. Neuner said.
And next year's schedule also includes the second Big 12 conference cruise through the Panama Canal.
Dorothy McGregor, who will go on the Alaska cruise with her husband, Ron, said the vacations are "one of the perks of being retired."
She also said the connections among the guests are immediate.
"It seems like there's a great rapport that develops," she said. "Everybody's immediate friends."
Which is not an accident. Neuer said that, at least once a trip the travelers gather, reminisce and sing the alma mater. The alumni association helps by handing out prizes, KU stickers and other knickknacks.
"Anything anyone can do to spread the word of the bird," Neuner said.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST 1996 228
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24B SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Range of programs adapts to changes in health care
Dr. Robert A. Williams
Physiology Department
University of Chicago
- KU's School of Allied Health offers courses across a wide health care spectrum.
ELISSA MONROE/KU MEDICAL CENTER PHOTO
BY MARK FAGAN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Students listen to professor Chukuka Enwemeka, far right, lecture on the musculoskeletal system. Enwemeka is chair of the physical therapy education department in Kansas University's School of Allied Health at the KU Medical Center.
While training professionals to shape an ever-changing and complex health care industry, the School of Allied Health at Kansas University wants to make sure its offerings remain broad and diverse enough to keep up.
There's plenty of work to be had, said Lydia Wingate, dean of allied health.
"Many of our students have job offers before they have graduated," she said. "I believe that with capitated managed care — and the need to maintain quality care — allied health professionals will be in great demand, since they are the ones who will assist the physicians and nurse practitioners by providing a range of services for less cost."
A 1993 report from the PEW Health Professions Commission reported that allied health professions account for more than 60 percent of the health care work force, spanning more than 200 disciplines.
Defined broadly, allied health professions include all health-related disciplines except nursing, medicine, osteopathy, dentistry, veterinary medicine, optometry, pharmacy and pediatry.
That leaves plenty of room to learn, train and conduct research at the school, which was established in 1974 at the Kansas University Medical Center and remains one of three academic units at the med center.
Of last year's 248 graduates, nearly 98 percent obtained professional licenses on their first try.
"I believe that we are doing some wonderful, innovative things at KU Medical Center," said Wingate, who has been dean since February 1992. "Allied health professionals are in critically short supply nationwide, and therefore these professions are an excellent career choice."
The school includes 10 departments: biometry; cytotechnology; dietetics and nutrition; health information management; hearing and speech; medical technology; nurse anesthesia; occupational therapy; physical therapy; and respiratory care.
The school is competitive, accepting 221 of 680 applicants (32.5 percent) this fall. The school's total fall enrollment is 541.
This year, Wingate said, the school is preparing to bring a new distance education program in
physical therapy to southeast Kansas. In partnership with Pittsburgh State University and the med center's Southeast Area Education Center — plus support from a southeast hospital consortium — the program will give southeast Kansas residents a chance to receive a physical therapy education without having to leave home.
A similar program, in nurse anesthesia, already is operating in southeast Kansas.
"In addition to our second distance education program, I am also confident that we will continue the cultural change which began nearly two years ago to a Total Quality Management environment, and increase the multicultural competence of our faculty and staff in order to increase the cultural diversity of our school," Wingate said.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 25B
CAROLA SAYER
RENÉE KNOELBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Gloria Flores, the associate director of minority affairs, handles the programming and staffing of the Multicultural Resource Center on campus.
Center offers students a view of world culture
- Officials at KU's Multicultural Resource Center hope to offer something to all students.
BY GWEN OLSON SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Inside the small white building known as the Military Science Annex, students are offered a chance to see the world and its many cultures. The building houses the Kansas University Multicultural Resource Center.
The center had its share of difficulties getting started. The idea came from a group of students who petitioned the Student Senate in 1991 to consider creating the center. The center was approved in 1994, and after funding problems were resolved, the center had its grand opening in September 1995.
"The center is open for a variety of usages," said Gloria Flores, associate director of minority affairs and coordinator of the center. "It is used for studying, meeting space and some classes."
The center is also available for students to use as a resource. The center has its own reading room, computer room, two study rooms, a conference room and a small auditorium. It is visited by about 30 to 40 students each day.
The reading room contains a small collection of books ranging from cultural stories and folk tales to a collection of Shakespeare's plays. The center hopes to acquire more books soon.
"We have had several contributions this year. Now that the center is going, we will try to set up a fund to get more resource materials." Flores said.
Students can use the computers for homework, projects, or just to surf the Internet. There is also no charge for printing on the laser printer.
Study rooms, or dialogue rooms, are available to students anytime. They can be used for study groups or just for hanging out.
Although the center is affiliated with the Office of Minority Affairs, the two are not the same. The center is for all students so that they can learn from other students about diversity.
"We try to do things to help the students who come in," said Niraj Kapur, an Overland Park senior and undergraduate student assistant at the center. "We aren't strict here because the center is run by students. We sometimes accommodate meetings, and people often have us come to events to tell what the center offers."
According to its mission statement, the center was established "to promote an educational environment that recognizes and celebrates the diverse composition of the Lawrence Campus population."
Within the last year, the center has co-sponsored several events for students. The center works
The computer room holds four Macintosh computers that are equipped with Netscape for surfing the Internet, as well as a black and white laser printer and a color scanner. The center hopes to get a couple of IBM computers when funding is available.
mostly with other organizations on campus.
"The hardest thing is getting people to realize this is not just a place for minorities," said Nicolas Shump, Lawrence graduate student and graduate assistant for the center. "With many groups there isn't a lot of mixing of cultures. We try to be open for all students. We feel that everybody has a cultural history and that everyone can learn from each other."
One event co-sponsored by the center and Student Union Activities was Denny Dent and his Two-Fisted Art Attack in October,
1995.
During this show, Dent painted a spectacular portrait of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., which was donated to the center. The portrait is now in the process of being framed by the art department and will soon be hung at the center.
The center is open Monday and Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Tuesday through Thursday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
"We hope to be an added resource to the student body." Flores said. "Our goal is to reach everyone."
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KU EDITION
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU upkeep a never-ending job
K
- KU's kitchen crew helps others eat, drink and be merry.
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Bob Deay, a maintenance worker at Kansas University, checks a boiler at Lewis Hall as part of his daily duties.
The Journal-World Classified works 832-2222
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BY MARK FAGAN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
PETER HOWELL
SHOPPING ANYWHERE ELSE GIVES ME A HEADACHE PRISCILLA'S Where Fun & Fantasy Meet
Although you may never see them, Bob Deay and Art Barton are keeping a close eye on the systems that keep Kansas University students' housing stocked with edible food, clean dishes and comfortable rooms.
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Between them, Deay and Barton have a combined 35 years of experience working on maintenance crews for the KU department of student housing. Deay is a plumber II, and Barton is a refrigeration technician.
Together, they keep the residence halls' heating systems, plumbing, refrigerators, ice machines, air-conditioning systems and dozens of other apparatus running efficiently.
PRISCILLA'S
"One hour you're auguring a drain and the next you're sharpening blades on a meat slicer," Barton said.
Deay agrees.
Where Fun & Fantasy Meet
"About anything that needs fixine, we do it." he said.
Earlier this summer, the maintenance team spent time inspecting the boiler room in Lewis Hall, home to the Ekdahl Dining Commons.
Inside the lower-level room, five pipes flow from a boiler capable of producing 2,587 square feet of steam each hour. The steel boil
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When you're all sweaty, and it's pretty shocking," Barton said, wiping his brow with a forearm. "But I think we've been here too long to worry about it. It happens. We all do our jobs."
Maintenance work in KU's housing system is no small chore, said Phil Garito, associate director of student housing for maintenance.
Deay and Barton take it all in stride, even when the work
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"You can't let those break down," Garito said. "You've got to be able to serve a meal at meal time."
The department has 55 fulltime workers, plus a handful of part-timers, to take care of the major work in KU's seven residence halls, nine scholarship halls and three apartment complexes. The crews' responsibilities include grass mowing, carpentry, plumbing, electrical, refrigeration and heating systems.
Some workers are permanently assigned to particular buildings, to handle day-to-day minor repairs such as changing light bulbs, replacing light fixtures and repairing broken windows. Another 50 on-site custodial employees ensure that areas remain clean and comfortable for students and staffers alike.
But when it comes to major work on units at the dining commons — a complex designed to seat 700 people at a time and serve food to 2,200 people in two hours — officials call in Deay and Barton.
throws them off a normal routine
Last year, Deay was called into the dining commons after midnight. The dishwasher's conveyor belt wasn't working, and nobody wanted to see hundreds of dishes start piling up the next day.
"Some things they can't do without,"
Deay said. "It's kinda hectic at times, but we have to work around meal times."
Barton's work also touches another close-to-home essential: air conditioning. Working on the dining commons' walk-in refrigerators may be important, but climate control is boss.
"They'll call about air conditioning faster than the food, sometimes," Barton said. "They definitely want to be comfortable."
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION
AUGUST 17, 1996 27 B
Program allows graduates to 'hit the ground running'
Pharmacy school raises requirements for degree
For Incoming
& for incoming undergraduates in pharmacy, a bachelor's degree no longer is an option.
BY MARK FAGAN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Another year, a newly mandatory doctoral degree.
Undergraduates new to Kansas
Undergraduates University's School of Pharmacy this fall will have no choice but to earn entry-level doctoral practice degrees.
Previously, the school's 400 undergraduates had the option of earning five-year bachelor's degrees. The doctoral degrees — also known as PharmD degrees — require six years of classroom and professional training.
As the PharmD program places an added emphasis on issues facing today's pharmaceutical professionals — health care reform
"What we're trying to do is make sure our graduates are competitive and fill positions, regardless of where those positions are. This allows our graduates to come out with some new skills to hit the ground running."
"From now on, it will not be an option — it will be the only program," said Jack Fincham, dean of pharmacy. "We're really excited about it. It's really going to help the health care of Kansans." With 95 percent of the school's 600 students coming from
Kansas, many KU pharmacy graduates go on to work in community pharmacies, chain stores, hospitals, nursing homes, drug manufacturers, governmental agencies and health maintenance organizations in and around Kansas, Fincham said.
— Jack Fincham, dean of pharmacy
enhanced and improved drug-use processes and comprehensive drug therapies for patients — more Kansans will receive even better advice and treatments for their needs.
"I'm very proud of our graduates, and they're among the very best in the country," Fincham said. "What we're trying to do is make sure our
graduates are competitive and fill positions, regardless of where those positions are. This allows our graduates to come out with some new skills to hit the ground running."
The degree program will accept 95 new students this fall - selected from among nearly 400 applicants — to bring the school's undergraduate enrollment to 400.
Another 200 students will pursue even higher levels of professional training and academic knowledge through master's and doctorate degree programs.
The school has 60 full-time equivalent faculty members, plus up to 10 graduate teaching assistants. Together, they teach classes and conduct research in Malott Hall on the Lawrence campus, at the Regents Center in Overland Park and at the Kansas University Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Fincham said the school was looking to hire another three faculty members — both clinical and tenure-track — to "gear up" for the PharmD program's new responsibilities.
Other degrees also will remain available from the school: master of health services administration, master of pharmacy practice and both master's and doctoral degrees in medicinal pharmacy, pharmaceutical chemistry and pharmacology and toxicology.
"It's a real positive time," Fincham said. "Regardless of how the health care system evolves, people are always going to need help with their drug therapies."
Let us know what you think
Send e-mail to:
news@ljworld.com
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 288
Caring That Counts 1996-97 Campaign
U
2 6
nited Way of Douglas County makes sure the money you give is well spent by reviewing the agencies each and every year.
F
und raising costs are kept low, so almost all your gift goes right to community services.
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our gift stays right here in Douglas County, where you can see the good it does, with people down the street and across town.
ervices are funded that help those who really need it.
United Way of Douglas County Member Agencies
Agency Telephone Advocacy Child and/or Dependent Care Clothing, Food, Shelter Counseling Crisis Response Disaster Assistance Health & Safety Job Training Legal Assistance Support Groups Youth Development American Red Cross, Douglas County Chapter 843-3550 X X X X X
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puts a pair of shoes on the feet of a low income student or sends homemaker services to a frail individual.
buys two prescriptions of antibiotics.
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provides a scholarship for one month of day care for a low income family.
$360
can subsidize rent and utilities to keep a family from becoming homeless.
purchases three months of daily physical therapy for a stroke victim.
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n 1996, your caring looks like this;
Health Services 21%
Character Building 14%
Admin. & Fund Raising 14%
Agency Telephone Advocacy Child and/or Dependent Care Clothing, Food, Shelter Counseling Crisis Response Disaster Assistance Health & Safety Job Training Legal Assistance Support Groups Youth Development Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, Inc. 843-3738
Emergency Service Council 841-8614
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Headquarters Counseling Center (From Baldwin City) 841-2345 594-8490
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NEARLY ALL THE AGENCIES LISTED OFFER OPPORTUNITIES FOR VOLUNTEER SERVICE. FOR INFORMATION, EITHER CONTACT THE PARTICULAR AGENCY OR THE ROGER HILL VOLUNTEER CENTER (865-5030), FOR REFERRALS TO THESE AGENCIES AND MANY OTHERS IN DOUGLAS COUNTY.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD'S KU EDITION
KU profiles
C
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 199
Student body leader: Political career not out of the question
WEEKLY
Grey Montgomery, student body president, places parking, transportation and on-campus child care among his top issues for this school year.
- Grey Montgomery is planning for the future — sort of.
BY ANDREW E. NACHISON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Grey Montgomery spent each of the past five summers working for his family's newspaper and television businesses in Junction City.
But this summer the 21-year-old Kansas University senior was in Lawrence, working out of an office at the Kansas Union as the university's newly elected student body president.
"I figured it would be a great chance for me to see a lot of things through that I consider to be important issues."
— Grey Montgomery, KU student body president
A double major in journalism and political science, Montgomery plans to push for improvements in the campus parking and transportation systems.
service."
"The summer is the best time to get things done," he said recently. "It's a good time because it's planning time."
"I got involved with Student Senate when I was a freshman," he said. "I was at that age where I was looking for something to do. I wanted to do something with significant
His involvement with the student government appeared to end abruptly in the spring of 1995, when he lost his re-election bid to the senate.
A year later, however, friends convinced him to run for student body president. He defeated Cesar Millan, a senior from Kansas City, Mo., who promised during his campaign to fight student fee increases.
The election was open to about 24,000 graduate students and undergraduates, but only 3,575 of them voted. Montgomery won by 261 votes.
"I figured it would be a great chance for me to see a lot of things through that I consider to be important issues," he said.
Besides parking and transportation, Montgomery wants to renew interest in building a child care center on campus, and he's keeping an eye on talk of increased fees for dial-in access to the university's computer network.
Montgomery's family owns the daily newspaper in Junction City and a FOX network affiliate television station there.
"1 experienced a certain amount of
homesickness my first year at KU, and it's only 100 miles away," he said. "My thinking was go to KU for four years or five years as it will now work out and go out of state for graduate school."
He's considering law school or a joint law-MBA program after he graduates in 1998.
Montgomery, who calls himself a "slightly" liberal Democrat, might wind
up in politics — or he might not.
"I think right now I'm feeling pretty burnt out after the campaign," he said. "Right now I'm leaning toward grad school, maybe working in a business department of a large media company, and then coming back home and working for the family.
"But politics is of course a very inexact art, and you can never plan very well for the future."
The 'Baby book' KU's littlest mascot turns 25 this year
- For the past 25 years, Baby Jay has been a part of KU style.
BY ERIN ROONEY
BY ERIN ROONEY SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
A Kansas University tradition that's had many faces and touched many lives turns 25 this year.
Baby Jay made its first appearance at halftime during the 1971 homecoming game. A giant egg was wheeled out to the 50-yard line. The capacity crowd looked onto the field in confusion as "2001:A Space Odyssey" played over the sound system.
Amy Hurst, then a sophomore from Cincinnati, huddled inside of the egg, anxiously awaiting her moment. Hurst was dressed in a costume made out of chicken wire, fiberglass and crimson and blue material. Her headdress had a set of wide eyes and on her feet she wore bright yellow shoes.
But the weight of the costume did not matter to Hurst, because in just a few seconds she was to become the first Baby Jay. Hurst broke through the shell of the egg, made from wire and tissue paper, and was greeted on the field by Chancellor Archie Dykes.
"I'll never forget that moment," Hurst said. "The sound of the stadium! It was like all 50,000 people inhaled at the exact same time and then said 'Wow!' I was so astonished. It was the coolest thing! The crowd went nuts! It was all worth it. The kids loved it; everyone loved it!"
Hurst was only 4-foot 11-inches tall, but her costume stood another 5 inches above her head. Her costume weighed 25 pounds and was uncomfortable.
Although Hurst graduated in 1974 with a degree in physical therapy, she talks about the event as if it were yesterday.
Hatching the idea
Now a resident of Fort Myers, Fla., Hurst first
became interested in attending KU when she came to Lawrence for a family reunion while she was still in high school. She had a positive feeling about the campus and decided it was where she wanted to go to college.
She became enamored with the idea of being a mascot after seeing the Jayhawk at sports events and talking with her manager at work. Her height was a disadvantage to becoming a mascot, so she came up with the idea of creating a Baby jay.
When she was a freshman at KU, she worked as a waitress in a local restaurant. Her manager was one of the Jayhawk mascots.
All summer long Hurst, her parents and one of their neighbors worked on making Baby Jay. The entire Baby Jay costume cost $52 to build and was conceived in the Hurst family garage. From Hurst's home in Ohio, Baby Jay rode onto the KU campus tied to the trunk of a car.
"I was sure that the costume wasn't good enough," Hurst said. "I was terrified. The first thing my family and I did when we got to campus was go to the alumni association. I was positive everyone wouldn't like it."
Before school ended in the spring, Hurst took her idea to the KU Alumni Association. The association humored Hurst by telling her that if she made the costume, she could be the Baby lay.
KANSAS UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES
In addition to football, basketball and alumni event appearances, Hurst used to take the costume to parties and let other students try it on. Many larger male students who tried on the Baby Jay costume got it stuck on their heads.
But the alumni officials loved the costume, and so Baby Jay hatched with Hurst during the home-coming game that year.
The Baby Jay costume was not very user-friendly even to Hurst, who was the intended wearer. It was virtually impossible to see out of the eyes, and the
Fly or fall
COLLEGE OF THE ARTS
PENNSYLVANIA
WATERBURTON
JUNE 1974
Baby Jay makes her debut in the fall of 1971. Twenty-five years later the mascot is still adored by students who identify with the endless spirit it embodies.
fiberglass frame would leave bruises on Hurst's thighs when she moved.
"Subconsciously, I was always afraid of falling over," Hurst said. "Odds of getting up on my own were zero. When I would run out ahead of the team, I was horrified that I would fall down and all that would be left on the field was a flattened Baby lay."
Despite the discomfort, the style of the original
See Baby Jay, page 12C
Alumnus takes up Kunstler's legal reins
- Ron Kuby has gone from student radical at Kansas University to the defense counsel's table in some of the nation's most publicized court cases.
BY RIC ANDERSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
In the summer of 1975, Ron Kuby put his belongings in a backpack, stuck out his thumb and hitched a ride that ended with a place in Lawrence lore.
Mike Malone, Douglas County district judge: "The law enforcement (officers) thought he was going to be the next terrorist in Lawrence. I'm serious. But I never saw him that way. I saw him as a man who knew exactly what he was doing, knew exactly the line between what was legal and illegal and stayed on the legal side."
Jim Denney, Kansas University police director: "I have no ill feelings toward Ron Kuby at all. I had respect for him then, I have respect for him now. And obviously, what he's done with his life says it all."
Archie Dykes, former KU chancellor: "I don't remember who made the decision to arrest Kuby. I don't remember making the decision."
Kuby's name may sound familiar, and it should. After making local headlines as a student radical at Kansas University in the late '70s and 1980, Kuby has argued some of the nation's most publicized court cases as a member of trial attorney William Kunstler's law firm.
It was Kuby who sat across the courtroom from Bernhard Goetz, representing one of the men Goetz shot Dec. 22, 1984, in a New York subway tunnel. Colin Ferguson, the man accused of killing six people and wounding 19 in December 1993, was a client, as were a defendant in the World Trade Center bombing in 1993, flag burners and cop killers.
"Today, I'm in court trying to get charges dismissed against a member of the Latin Kings," he said during a recent interview, referring to a New York gang. "This fella had a gun planted on him. The cop who frisked him ... we call him Magic Fingers Murphy because the first time he searched him, he could feel through this heavy cloth jacket a plastic bag containing about a half of a joint. Then the second time he searches him, he comes up with this big, heavy .38 handgun. Huh! Imagine that!"
School days
In the summer of 1975, Kuby was living in Maine and caught in a stormy relationship with a woman he'd met in the Virgin Islands. A friend suggested he move to Lawrence. With no money, no car, no job and no friends waiting for him, he packed up and started hitching.
"It seemed like a splendid idea," he said.
"We arrived in July 1975. It was 100 degrees; dust in the air. We'd gone from South Portland, Maine, on the ocean, to a place where you can feel the weight of the land all around you."
He had long hair then, and ran around much of the time in cutoffs, sandals and T-shirts. In the spring of 1976, after spending a semester on welfare, he enrolled at KU. His majors: anthropology and West Indian history.
"I moved into a big house filled with hippies at 345 Mich. And I met up with a real nice dog in March of '76 who was drinking from a paddle in front of my house." he said.
He also met some friends, like Tim Miller and Norm Forer. Today Kuby reverentially refers to Miller, an associate professor of religious studies at KU, and Forer, emeritus professor of social welfare, as "chronic malcontents" who helped him learn to "agitate."
"Given the brilliant minds that we had, I'm surprise we didn't seize state power," he said, laughing.
"He was always absolutely lively, vigorous. Always doing something, always had a project going. Just a firebrand," Miller said.
There were hours of discussions about politics, Kansas history, KU administration. At night, Kuby flipped burgers and poured beer at the Cafifi Bar and Grill.
"From my part, it was sex, drugs and rock
电
See Former KU student, page 13C
14
海
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2C SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
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KU student athlete juggles demanding workouts, classes
- Student athletes have to be dedicated on and off the field.
BY MIKE GIROUX
BY MIKE GIROUX
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
When his alarm clock rang at 5:30 a.m., Kansas University senior defensive tackle Kevin Kopp knew he was in for a rough day. But then, that's true of most of his days.
Even when the football team is in the off-season, it has to juggle a demanding schedule.
"When I get up that early, I wonder if I ever went to sleep at all." Kodd said.
But whether or not he slept, he knew that he had to be down at Anschutz Sports Pavilion at 6 a.m. for the morning workout with the rest of Kansas
Jayhawk football team.
The life of a student athlete is not all glamour and rewards. A typical day in the life of Kevin Kopp proves that.
At Anschutz, Kopp and the team started off with some exercises and then headed to the weight room.
Kopp, looking a little more awake, started his workout with three sets of power cleans — weight repetitions that work the shoulders, back and legs — handling
immense amounts of weight
"Kevin does a great job in the weight room and has a very good work ethic," strength coach Fred Roll said. "He has a good influence on the other guys and really leads by example."
Some might think that lifting weights that early would make guys have a bad attitude, but Roll said that's not the case with Kopp.
"If he's in there (the weight room),he's always working hard." Roll said.
Workina it all out
"It's mornings like these that really make me feel good about myself, because I know that by eight in the morning, I've done more than some people do in an entire day."
While most of the student body still was in bed, Kopp, a business major, was ready to start his academic day. Knowing that he had to be at Summerfield Hall by 8 a.m. for his Quantitative Methods in Business course, Kopp got a quick shower and headed to the Burge Union for breakfast.
— KU senior
defensive tackle
Kevin Kopp
"It's mornings like these that really make me feel good about myself, because I know that by eight in the morning, I've done more than some people do in an entire day," Kopp said.
At 10:50 a.m., Kopp had to hike up the hill to Lindley Hall, where he had his Latin American History class at 11 a.m. After an hour and a half of notetaking, Kopp had to make the trip back down to Summerfield for his 12:30 p.m. Business Law class.
At 1.50 p.m., Kopp ended his academic day and went back to the Burge Union to eat two grilled chicken sandwiches, large fries
At 9:50 a.m, Kopp finally had an hour to himself. He went up to Howey Reading Room in Summerfield Hall, and while catching up on some of his notes, snacked on a bagel and a banana.
"Sometimes I wish there were one of those escalators like they have in the malls," Kopp said. "That hill can really wear you out!"
Kopp then headed back to his apartment to play pingpong with his buddies and catch a little shut-eve.
and a bowl of rice, washing it all down with a large Coke.
Junior quarterback Matt Johner said athletes don't have an easy life.
"I don't think the student body understands what we go through," Johner said. "They think everything is just handed to us."
The team ran an array of running drills that lasted about an hour and 15 minutes. They than completed a strenuous 10-minute abdominal session that led into a cool-down stretching period to finish.
"The grueling off-season schedule makes you stronger and helps you increase your speed," Kopp said. "It makes you work on the things you were having problems with in the past season."
"I'm anticipating that Kevin will be stronger and faster for next season because he really works hard this time of year," Gillespie said.
No easv task
Defensive line coach Dave Gillespie said he believed Kopp made the best of the off-season schedule.
Kopp awoke from his slumber at 4:10 p.m. because he and the rest of the team had to be back down at Anschutz for running exercises at 4:30 p.m.
Center comes to aid of troubled students
At 6 p.m. Kopp and the team showered in the Anschutz locker room. Then it was off to the Burge Union for a hearty dinner.
- From directions to one-to-one counseling, the Student Assistance Center is here to help Kansas University students.
BY TYLER JOHNSON
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
On his first day at Kansas University, Mike Giroux learned he wasn't enrolled in any classes.
A wave of panic went through Giroux's mind: "Where do I go? Who is going to help me?"
The Student Assistance Center was his savior.
The center helps students in a variety of ways, including one-to-one problem-solving like a guidance counselor.
"After going to the SAC, I was able to get re-enrolled in all of my original classes," said Giroux, Leawood junior. "They immediately helped me out, and without them I would have been lost."
In one-to-one consulting, the Student Assistance Center will help students in emergency situations as well as notify faculty about extended absences because of sickness or family problems.
"We will help with any type of problem at any time and if we do not have the answer, we will find it for you," said Marshall Jackson, administrative associate for the SAC.
"If a student is going to be away from classes for several days, we will send a letter to the teachers to help the students get exter
The center also offers workshops to help students toward academic success. The workshops range from time management to preparing for final exams.
The SAC has many other services for individuals. They include: a list of tutors for students; a liaison for gay, lesbian and bisexual students; and services for students with disabilities.
sions on his or her classwork and missed exams," Jackson said.
"I needed to find the scholarship office and they showed me the way," said Kel Corcoran, Toneka junior.
The center's primary mission is to provide services to students so they may benefit from the opportunities KU has to offer.
The SAC also does things as simple as pointing students in the right direction.
"When the students take advantage of our services, they are generally pleased with the results," Jackson said.
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EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Kansas University's Kevin Kodp works hard both on and off the football field
At 7 p.m., Kopp and some teammates went to the Hadl Achievement Center for a couple hours of study time.
"I'd like to see how it would be like to be a regular student," senior defensive tackle John Bukaty said. "What a dream to wake up at a decent hour and just go to a couple classes and then hang out."
Kopp was ready to go back to his apartment for the night. He ate a plain can of tuna and a bag of chips and then went back to his bedroom to read for his History 121 class.
Later, Kopp caught up on the day's sporting events with a little ESPN
"Is it 11:10?" Kopp asked. "I'm ate for my bedtime."
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Balancing school,family,jobs,keeps scholars in overdrive
OAKS helps students juggle multiple commitments
WITH THE
- Nontraditional students find help for their nontraditional challenges.
Darin and Shannon White, KU seniors from Lawrence, are considered nontraditional students because they are married. The fine arts majors' income doesn't exceed $15,000, so financial aid is a concern for them.
MIKE YODER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
BY KATHLEEN McGEE SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Gay Kemmis was afraid that her academic skills were too rusty. But she returned to school after six years in the work force because she realized that if she wanted to advance, she would need a degree
Kemmis also worried about how she would compare with students who had not spent time away from school. But, she said, "My fears were not realistic."
"Certainly I had fears, and most of them had to do with performance," she said. "How was I going to do in math? What about my writing ability?"
Kemmis is one of more than 4,000 full and part-time nontraditional undergraduates at Kansas University.
The university defines a "nontraditional" student as one who is married, a parent, a veteran, a student who is three years or more older than a "typical" student of the same year or one who commutes more than 10 miles, said Laura Morgan, academic adviser for OAKS, an organization for nontraditional students. About 25 percent of the undergraduate student body falls in at least one of those categories.
"Nontraditional students don't hang out on campus as much, so you don't get a sense of the numbers of nontrads by just walking across campus," Morgan said.
some nontraditional students with children.
Morgan, who also is assistant director of the Student Assistance Center, said that the questions
most frequently asked by people who are considering college as nontraditional students are how to manage financing, how to balance multiple commitments and how to deal with conflicts between family and academic expectations.
The best advice she could give any student, but especially nontraditional students, was, "Ask questions."
Special circumstances
The Student Assis-
"Nontraditional students don't hang out on campus as much, so you don't get a sense of the numbers of nontrads by just walking across campus."
The Student Assistance Center provides a number of brochures and other materials written for nontrads, such as "Dependent Care Referral Service" for child and elder care.
— Laura Morgan, OAKS academic adviser
What should a parent do if he or she can't go to class because of a sick child?
Morgan said that most of the university's nontraditional students are single and want to make connections on campus and in the city not necessarily dates. But about 950, or 25 percent, of nontraditional students are parents, and they worry more about issues dealing with child care.
"It's important that students understand the faculty outlook on that," Morgan said. "The university policy — if there is one — is that students are expected to attend the class."
Brenda Maigard, assistant director of financial aid, said that there is extra help available for
Morgan said that it was important for students with children to plan "back-up" baby-sitting in the event of illness and to ask individual professors ahead of time what their own policies were regarding absences.
"A child care grant is available for any student with a child who was born on or after Sept. 2, 1991," she said.
The form, "Application for Child Care Grant," usually is available on Sept. 1.
In addition, the financial aid office has a "Special Circumstances" form for students, with or without children, whose income is reduced because of quitting work or reducing work hours to come to school. That form also applies to increases in
"non-discretionary" expenses, such as extraordinary medical expenses.
Financial aid is figured from tax returns for the previous year, so students whose income (including spouse's income) will be significantly reduced should ask for the "Special Circumstances" form when they pick up the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). Maigaard said that completing the FAFSA was the required first step in applying for and receiving any financial aid, including the Child Care Grant and the Special Circumstances form.
Jugglimg act
"We were concerned because, being married, we were considered independent," Shannon White said. "We knew we'd have to work quite a bit and go to school."
Financial aid was just one of several concerns for nontraditional students Darin and Shannon White. Both Lawrence seniors majoring in fine arts, the Whites have been married for almost two years.
Darin White said that juggling schedules was difficult. It was
hard to balance all the school activities with job schedules and housework — and still have time for each other.
Shannon White works as a studio assistant to a local artist. Darin White works for E&E Display Group and for an associate professor in the School of Fine Arts. Each works from 15 to 18 hours a week, and their combined income doesn't exceed $15,000. They are ineligible for a Pell Grant.
To help them stretch out their income, their parents help out occasionally with the rent. Also, the Whites take classes together whenever possible and buy only one set of textbooks to share for those classes.
The Whites worried about the effect student life would have on their marriage. But they have learned one of the prime tools of time management: prioritizing.
"We literally make lists and schedules," Shannon White said. "We do as much together as we possibly can."
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Gay Kemmis said that her husband, who also is considering enrolling at KU to complete his degree, has been supportive. She said that students, especially married students, need that support.
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TOM: And too much oil can be bad, too. If the oil level gets high enough 90 that it touch crankshaft, the oil will get whipped into a foam, kind of like the filling in
**RAY:** Yes, you're right to worry about them. Skip. Of course, it would be much more productive to actually do something about them. But worrying's a good start.
"The people around you need to understand that you are committed to that goal." Kemmis said.
Tom & Ray Magliozzi settle an argument two friends are baving over proper engine oil levels...
Her professors have been understanding, Kemmis said. They, too, have been supportive, encouraging and flexible when Kemmis has been unable to complete an assignment on time or has had to miss class because of work.
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Kemmis advised people to think carefully about returning to school when they had other responsibilities.
"Don't do it unless you really want it," she said. "It's going to be difficult."
must sometimes do without and hope they can get through college without a serious illness.
Nontraditional students worry about the difficulties they might encounter. Such concerns don't surprise OAKS adviser Laura Morgan.
LAWRENCE
JOURNAL-WORLD
"Getting an education is a complex thing," Morgan said. "KU is a complex institution."
Kemmis said that most nontraditional students will encounter additional financial stresses that high school students don't face having to find health insurance, for example.
But nontraditional students
"Many high school students are covered under their parents' policies, or their parents pay for student insurance," she said.
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Center helps newcomers learn lingo
- The Applied English Center goes beyond helping international students learn English.
BY WU PEIH-SHYUN
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
When his telephone rang during his first semester at Kansas University, Lih-Long Woan often hesitated to answer it. Woan, a Taiwanese graduate student in economics, couldn't speak English very well.
Woan is not alone. More than 300 international students are trying to master the English language at the center.
"But now it's getting better after taking English courses at Applied English Center," he said of his English skills. "I have a lot of assignments to do every day. So I can improve my English intensively."
The Applied English Center, or AEC, was founded in 1964 to help international students adapt to a new environment and develop sufficient English proficiency to participate thoroughly in university life.
"For the university, the function of AEC is to make sure all international students
don't enter university classes without sufficient English," said Elizabeth Soppela, director of AEC since 1980.
"For the university,the function of AEC is to make sure all international students don't enter university classes without sufficient English."
She said that keeping strict English standards for foreign students enable instructors to maintain appropriate speed and content of instruction for academic programs.
— Applied English Center director Elizabeth Soppelsa
If international students do not have a recent Test of English as a Foreign Language score of 570 or higher, with each part score 57 or higher and a score of 5 or higher on the Test of Written English, they must take a four-hour English test.
If students pass the test, they may enroll full time in university academic courses. If students don't pass the test, they will be required to enroll in one or more noncredit English language courses at AEC. If some parts of students' scores on the test are high, they will be permitted to take one or more university academic course.
At the end of every semester, AEC students must take a final proficiency test to determine their level in English.
All-inclusive learning
Soppelsa said AEC offers many other services besides English classes. Several counselors at AEC answer personal questions, such as how married students can find a baby sitter or where students can buy food from their native countries. The counselors spend a lot of
time helping students understand the university system,such as how to enroll in classes and how to find advisers, she said.
AEC's services also include individual writing tutorials to help international students who need extra coaching in writing, field trips to assist them with American culture, conversation groups to enhance their speaking and listening of English and a Learning English On-line computer lab.
Kuok-Wai Hong, a Macao freshman who is taking three AEC classes, said that he benefits not only from daily AEC classes but also from its English-learning environments.
"But I still have problems in
still have problems in speaking and listening," he said. "I have a hard time to communicate with American students who live next to me."
He said that his difficulty in conversation is due to a lack of practice even though he has already lived in America for more than six months.
"Sometimes
Jenny Wu, a Taiwanese full-time student at AEC, also gets into trouble when she carries on a conversation with American students.
American students ask me the time on campus with different ways, and they spoke very fast, so I just stood there like a log," she said. "I feel that it's hard to make close friends with Americans because we are not able to talk something deep."
Major adjustments
Margaret Coffey, language specialist and coordinator of the cross-culture counseling program at AEC, said that most AEC students in their first year usually have difficulties making an adjustment to the new environment, including the language, the culture and the education system.
"For some students it's very easy; for some people it's kind of average; but for some students it's very difficult," she said.
She said she was impressed by her students.
"They have to make so many changes to be able to adjust to this new education system and to be successful," she said. "My students do it with such grace and such ease."
Susan Grace, a language specialist and writing teacher at AEC, suggested that students who want to master their English should use English not only in classes but also outside their classrooms.
To make fast progress, she said, students should attend classes every day, do all homework and
The Applied English Center, in Room 204 of Lippincott Hall, may be reached by phone at (913) 864-4606.
APPLIED ENGLISH CENTER
The fax number is (913) 864-5050.
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
The e-mail address is aec@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu.
participate in any activities. Watching TV,attending conversation groups and reading magazines are all excellent ways to improve English by leaps and bounds, she added.
LRM INDUSTRIES
Tomoyuki Aoyama, left, of Kawasaki, Japan, receives instruction from Anne Burgesson in the Applied English Center in KU's Lippincott Hall.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Rec facility offers fun fitness for KU students
- Robinson Center provides a number of ways to stay fit.
BY CARRIE MULLIGAN
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
If you're interested in staying in shape or just looking for something fun to do, then Robinson Center is the place to be.
Kansas University's recreation center offers indoor and outdoor facilities and programs, including aerobics and clinics.
Recreation Services also offers a number of jobs for student seeking flexible work schedules on campus.
Robinson Center is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and it is available for recreation after 5 p.m. and on weekends. Students, faculty and staff may use racquetball courts and gymnasiums when programs and classes are not taking place for free with a valid KU identification. Locker rental is also available.
"The center is a great place for students to work because they can work on their homework and earn extra spending money at the same time," said Louis Woods, safety security supervisor.
The weight training area has a variety of free weights and weight machines, plus stair
climbers, treadmills, rowing machines, stationary bikes, Nordic Tracks, Universal brand equipment and free weights.
Supervisors, who are present during all open hours, are available for information and assistance with weight training. Students may also choose to enroll in a class, such as physical conditioning, to earn one credit hour.
"I like taking physical conditioning because it forced me to set aside a specific time to work out. It's also nice to receive credit while I'm staying in shape," said Stacv Laird, Topeka junior.
Another indoor activity includes the aerobic program. Various classes are offered, including high or low intensity, slide, funk, step and circuit training. Also, for students who like water, there is an aqua-aerobics class. A fee is charged for aerobics classes.
"I think the programs are wonderful, and I wish that more people will take advantage of the facilities," said Leigh Ann McCaskill, member of KU fit team. "The aerobics program is great because for one price, you can go to as many classes as you want."
Other activities provided through Robinson include basketball, volleyball, table tennis, wallyball, rock climbing and clinics for mountain biking and backpacking.
For more information, call Robinson Center at 864-3385 or the Service Center at 864-3491.
AVAI
AMERICAN
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Tim Bernier, an instructor in tumbling, gives Geremy Bloom, 6, some help in going over the vault during practice at Robinson Center, which offers indoor and outdoor recreation facilities at Kansas University.
Grad students struggle with extra effort
MALLORRE DILL
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Jay Schaefer jokingly describes starting graduate school as a "threat to your sanity."
"It's intimidating," says Schaefer, an Adams, Minn., graduate student. "That was something it took me a long time to get used to."
In the smaller classes of a graduate program Schaefer would look around and think, "These are some great minds!"
Now a third-year graduate student in sociology, Schaefer remembers his first semester in the program.
"The first couple papers you write, you're sweating and you hand it in and you know the faculty member is going to read it and expose you as a fraud," he
Support services
Coping with an intense course load is just one of the many challenges students face as they start out in their postgraduate studies. But don't write off your sanity just yet. There are
Tapping experience
many sources to turn to for information and support.
The Graduate School office, 222 Strong Hall, provides a source of information for funding opportunities for study or research. The Graduate Funding Opportunity Group, a self-directed computer program, provides names and addresses of agencies offering financial aid.
For another source of practical guidance and encouragement, you can turn to experienced graduate students.
Your department is another place to get information about financial aid available. Check bulletin boards or ask in the administrative offices.
Jay Schaefer, KU graduate student
"They were just invaluable because they had very recently been in the same boat as I had," said Andy Theroff, a McLouth graduate student.
If you're going to successfully shift your studies into overdrive, time management becomes essential in graduate school. For some it's strict adherence to a daily calendar, but not everyone can live by the timetables. Have a personal list if priorities and plan to accomplish them.
The "Graduate Student Handbook" is also a great reference. The handbook provides comprehensive information about a variety of graduate students' concerns, from how to get involved on campus to where to get your bicycle license. Handbooks are available at graduate student orientation, or in 400 Kansas Union at the student work stations.
One of the first places to go is the graduate student orientation, sponsored jointly by the Graduate School and the Graduate and Professional Assn. The orientation provides information about financial aid, health care, library and computer center hours, buying books and the like.
"The first couple papers you write, you're sweating and you hand it in and you know the faculty member is going to read it and expose you as a fraud. To me, the most comforting thing is to know other people are going through the same thing. It's OK. Expect it."
Schaefer said you can't rely on your old estimates of how long it will take to complete a project. He recommends taking any estimates leftover from undergraduate school and multiplying that time by 10.
In addition, your department can provide ways to get involved in your new program. Almost all the departments have a graduate student organization. These organizations are a good way to meet other students and professors. Many of these organizations bring in guest speakers, host symposiums, or just provide a place for students to voice concerns about their program.
Julie Mach, a graduate student in pharmacology and toxicology
from Minot, N.D. has frequently gone into the molecular biology lab at 5:30 in the morning to have bacteria samples ready for the afternoon.
"You do what you need to do like a real job," she said
But you can't live by work alone. YoI Fintshenko, Dallas, said, "Have some kind of schedule in mind. You start out thinking dedication is working 24 hours a day. If you could do that, your professors would be ecstatic. But you can work all the time for only a short period of time. It's important to remember to plan time to eat, sleep and relax. I really try to take care of myself first."
Balancing studies with a social life is one way to keep from working yourself into a zombie. But as you get settled in a new place, just meeting people can be the first challenge. Graduates may find the process quite different from that of undergraduate school.
"The person who sold me the furniture was so friendly." Fintschenko said. "She gave me her name and phone number and said to call. I was really suspicious. I've always lived in big cities. I've thought, 'No one is that friendly without an ulterior motive.' But then I thought, 'Well, what's the worst that could happen?' So I called her. She's still one of my good friends."
Fintschenko went shopping for furniture on her second day in town. She not only found a new sofa and chair, she found a friend.
Banding together
While some people meet people by what Fintschenko calls "random acts of friendship," most of the first social contacts students make are in their department. Fintschenko had a party after the four placement exams given in the chemistry department. She included every single student there, and others students followed suit by including everyone in other social events.
Some students are surprised by the extent to which their lives begin to revolve around the department. It is, however one of the fastest ways to find your niche.
A job in your department can help you establish yourself in a new school and pay the bills at the same time. There are opportunities as teaching assistants, research assistants, or as a graduate assistants. A graduate assistant job can consist of answering the phone or putting out newsletters. Check in your department for openings.
"Although the department is the quickest way to get involved, don't limit yourself." warns Sara Martin, assistant dean of the graduate school. "A program for a master's degree, and especially a Ph.D., is about specialization. But if you do that all the time, all your friends are there, and all your waking hours are spent there, you really feel your world shrink."
Working in a different department of the university is a good way to get involved and provide variety in a life that can become departmentalized. Check the job board at the University Placement Center in the Burge Union or the classifieds in the University Daily Kansan or Lawrence Journal-World.
"Students need to be proactive," Martin said. "Natural forces at work in graduate school will act to keep you focused in your department. So students should create opportunities to meet people beyond their department, to go to lectures, whatever. Join student organizations or community organizations. Get to know your neighbors."
Amy Lerman, a graduate student from Miami Beach, Fla., knows the benefits of being involved on campus. She and her husband, Mike Mader, received a fellowship through the chancellor's office that allows them to live in and maintain the chancellor's guest house.
The house is a free service for guests that different departments bring to the university. Lerman
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Lerman said diverse involvement on campus contributed to receiving the fellowship. She encourages students to look for things to do around campus.
"They pay off in the end," she said.
Despite all the hard work, full schedules and occasional loose grip on their sanity, graduate students save the effort is worth it.
"I love what I'm doing," said Susan Klarlund, a Liberty, Mo., graduate student. "That's what's great about a graduate program. That's 'my hook.' When you feel passionate about something, you're willing to put in extra effort. It's worth it."
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
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KU safety squad tips students to crime
- New students should be aware of the potential for crime and what they can do to help prevent it.
PASS THE KEYS TO A
DRIVEER
HISTORY OF
THE NEW MENINGHAM
STREETS
SHADOWS
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IMMUNITY
BY KELLY GAST SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Gayle T. Reece, a Kansas University police officer, gives seminars to students on preventing theft.
Kelly Entreken brought her brand-new Toyota pickup to Kansas University last semester.
She left the alarm disarming device in the open ashtray, visible from the outside, so it took only seconds for someone to break into her car and turn off the alarm.
Entreken, Mission Viejo, Calif., sophomore, was unaware that theft was a problem around campus as well as in the Lawrence area.
"I really learned a lot from this experience." Entrenked. "It has
"Students have a bad habit of leaving things unattended, such as backpacks and coats in the libraries and cafeterias."
— Gayle T.
Reece, KU
police
department
made me realize that I need to be more careful of how and where I leave my car."
Although Kansas University is thought of as a relatively safe place, it's not without crime. The No. 1 reported crime on campus is theft. In 1995, there were 632 reports of stolen property on campus.
such as backpacks and coats in the libraries and cafeterias," said Sgt. Gayle T. Reece of the KU Police Department. "I like the old saying, 'Out of sight, out of mind.' If you leave something visible, such as in a car window, it is like window shopping for theft."
"Students have a bad habit of leaving things unattended, such as backpacks and coats in the libraries and cafeterias," said Sgt. Gayle T. Reece of the KU Police Department. "I like the old saying, 'Out of sight, out of mind.' If you leave something visible, such as in a car window, it is like window shopping for theft."
Reece, an officer since 1979, began giving awareness seminars at the university in October 1995. She offers these tips for making your possessions safer from theft:
- Lock all residence hall rooms, apartments and vehicles whenever you leave, even if you're only going to be gone a few minutes.
- Record serial and model numbers of all valuables. Should something be taken, you'll be able to prove it's yours.
- Engrave all valuables.
"Things are not as likely to be stolen if there is large engraving on the item. It is too easily identified," Reece said. Engraving tools are kept and loaned at the residence
WHOM TO CALL
CrimeStoppers: 864- 8888. This program takes anonymous tips on crime.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center: 864-3552. The center provides workshops on sexual harassment and other women's issues.
KU Police Department: 864-5572. In an emergency, call 911.
SafeRide: 864-SAFE. A free taxi service for students from 11 p.m. to 3 a.m. seven days a week.
halls as well as the KU Police Deptment.
Even though theft is the most prevalent crime, there are also other threats new students need to be aware of.
"Kansas University has a population of a city, and in that respect I think it is a very safe place," Reece said. "Night still is the time of day that students need to take the most precautions."
Lawrence buses travel many places on and off campus for a single-ride charge or semester fee. Several routes are offered throughout campus and Lawrence.
A taxicab service for students, called SafeRide, is funded by the
KU Student Senate. You can call from anywhere in the Lawrence area and a volunteer driver will pick you up and make sure that you get home safely.
Because SafeRide is a student-sponsored service through the university, it is free for all students.
Students also should know about the golden rule of safety awareness.
"Notice the things that are around you," Reece said. "Look for blue phones located throughout campus. These phones are enhanced 911 systems."
The phones are recognizable by the bright blue lights on top. By pushing a button, a signal is sent directly to the KU Police Department and lets the officers know which phone was activated. An officer will be sent to the scene immediately.
Here are some other tips Recee offers for personal safety;
on offers for personal safety.
• Don't walk alone unless you
- Walk along established areas such as streets.
- Use notification. Let someone know when you are leaving, what your plans are and what time you think you will return. Also, it's wise to let someone know what route you will be taking.
"We are concerned for students safety and comfort," Reece said. "We want to help provide an environment where they can learn. We can only help when we know where help is needed. We want students to contact us if they feel that we can help them in any way."
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A wide variety of student, campus and community organizations are available for incoming and returning students on the Kansas University campus.
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The Organizations and Activities Center publishes a directory of all organizations that involve KU students. From Students for WildCare to Douglas County AIDS Project, there are more than 300 organizations. The directory contains a listing of all the different organizations, along with the names, addresses and phone numbers of group presidents or organizers.
There are many different ways to become involved in the clubs and organizations on campus.
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Center helps students find niche at university
At the beginning of each semester, there is an information fair in the Kansas Union. Here, many of the clubs and organizations set up tables where interested students can sign up and talk with the various members of the organizations. Many of the organizations also post filers that advertise their organizations and give the dates of their first meeting.
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Amiee Hoffhines, Arkansas City junior, is a member of Acad-
ity, women must go through rush, which begins the week before school begins. Applications are available during Summer Orientation.
Other organizations will also have information for students at Summer Orientation.
Many residence halls also post information on how and where to go to become involved in the various organizations. Each organization takes different amounts of time. Some require weekly meetings; others meet only once a month.
If you want a list of all the student, campus and community organizations, contact the Organizations and Activities Center in Room 400 of the Kansas Union or call (913)864-4861.
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emy of Students of Pharmacy, Golden Key National Honor Society and is president of her sorority. Hoffmann said the best place to look for an organization is the information tables at the beginning of the semester in the Union or in the University Daily Kansan, the student newspaper. But she believes that the most popular organization for incoming freshmen is the Greek system.
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The image contains a document with multiple lines of text. It appears to be a formal report or an article discussing topics related to the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in decision-making processes. The content is dense, with no images or tables visible.
Here is a transcription of the text from the image:
**REPORT**
AI technologies are transforming industries and changing the way we make decisions. AI has been used in various sectors such as healthcare, finance, and transportation to improve efficiency and accuracy in tasks like data analysis, natural language processing, and robotics.
**AI is transforming industries**
AI is transforming industries by increasing productivity and reducing costs. In healthcare, AI is being used to analyze patient data and predict potential health issues. In finance, AI is helping banks to detect fraud and improve risk management. In transportation, AI is assisting drivers to navigate more efficiently and reduce travel time.
**AI is driving innovation**
AI is driving innovation across industries by enabling new products and services. For example, AI is being used to develop new medical devices that can diagnose diseases more accurately. AI is also being used to create new fashion designs that incorporate AI features.
**AI is enhancing human skills**
AI is enhancing human skills by providing people with tools and techniques to perform tasks more effectively. For instance, AI can help people to understand complex concepts better, improve their writing skills, and enhance their problem-solving abilities.
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AI is improving safety by helping to prevent accidents and injuries. For example, AI is being used to monitor traffic and identify potential hazards. AI is also being used to improve the safety of construction sites and other environments.
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AI is promoting sustainability by reducing carbon emissions and promoting eco-friendly practices. For example, AI is being used to predict the impact of climate change on different areas and to develop sustainable solutions.
**AI is improving quality of life**
AI is improving quality of life by making people healthier and happier. For example, AI is being used to improve the quality of food and drink, to provide personalized healthcare, and to improve the quality of education.
**AI is changing the way we interact with technology**
AI is changing the way we interact with technology by making it easier to connect with others. For example, AI is being used to connect people with each other through social media, to share information about new technologies, and to collaborate on projects.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
V
KU's top teachers receive honors
- An assistant professor of journalism and an assistant professor of communication studies were this year's recipients of the Ned N. Fleming award.
1980
F
RENÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
BY MATT GOWEN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Chris Segrin, an assistant professor of communicati on studies, left, is one of two recipients of the Ned Fleming Teaching Award. Oviatt was nominated by students and the dean and chosen by the chancellor at Kansas University. Arlo Oviatt, assistant professor of journalism, was also given the Fleming Award.
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JOURNAL-WORLD
Neither Chris Segrin nor Arlo Oviatt was quite sure who Ned N. Fleming was when told they had received teaching honors in his name.
"I didn't even realize I was nominated." Segrin said. "It was nice."
Keep on your toes
Segrin, 31, an assistant professor of communication studies, originally taught at the University of Wisconsin, where he completed his undergraduate work and received his master's degree. He has taught at KU for four years.
Nonetheless, Segrin and Oviatt said they were quite honored to receive the Kansas University Ned N. Fleming Trust Award, which annually recognizes outstanding professors at the university. Coupled with the distinction are a monetary award and a seat on stage during the spring commencement ceremony.
A mix of faculty, administration and student recommendations form the nomination process.
According to the office of University Relations, the award was established in 1990 by funds from the estate of the late Ned N. Fleming, chief executive officer and honorary chairman of the board of Fleming Companies of Topeka. Fleming served as an advisory trustee for the KU Endowment Association and was an honorary life member of the KU Alumni Association.
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Segrin specializes in nonverbal communication, research methods, interpersonal communication and persuasion.
in the 'real world'
TOM JONES GOOD THROUGH 05-19-98
"You have to keep on your toes," Segrin said.
"You can't just sit up there and read recipes for banana bread."
Combing current research journals, he said, is both an interest and a necessity
The award was established in 1990 by funds from the estate of the late Ned N. Fleming chief executive officer and honorary chairman of the board of Fleming Companies of Topeka. Fleming served as an advisory trustee for the KU Endowment Association and was an honorary life member of the KU Alumni Association.
Oviatt, 30, an assistant professor of journalism, completed his
"Things keep changing in interpersonal communication," Segin said. "There aren't a lot of formulas from the 1800s."
"Good research and good teaching go hand-in-hand," he said.
"That made it all worth it," he said.
Before coming to KU in 1994, Ovati spent several years working in the advertising field, including a stint at the Leo Bur-
undegraded work at the University of Missouri. He specializes in advertising copy, layout and portfolio development.
"Part of what I try to teach my students is what it's like in the real world," Oviatt said.
Oviatt said his first two years at KU have shown him two things: His best motivation is a lack of realistic teaching in his own education, and that the best way for students to learn is to vicariously experience the trials and tribulations of his post-college life.
In his first full year, Oviatt class portfolio development class helped all seven of his graduating seniors find jobs.
nett Co. in Chicago. At Leo Burnett, he worked on campaigns for McDonald's, Tropicana Twisters and Hallmark.
"I don't want to be someone who walks in the classroom and doesn't know what he's talking about." Oviatt said.
Finding an opportunity at a respected agency, he discovered, required much more than he expected. When he graduated, he "wasn't really prepared to get a job."
Oviatt went to the Portfolio Center school in Atlanta for six months to fine-tune his display work. That landed him the job in Chicago.
He also worked at an agency in St. Louis, and earned his master's degree from St. Louis University.
Now at KU, he mixes time teaching with time occasionally free-lancing for a firm in the Kansas City area. Oviatt said it is important to keep students abreast of changes in the field.
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Renovation helps Campanile ring true again
- The merry sounds of bells are once again wafting from the top of Mount Oread after completion of a renovation project.
BY MARK FAGAN
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
The carillon inside Kansas University's World War II Memorial Camillare is ringing true again, thanks to a five-year renovation project to realign the bells atop Mount Oread.
While officials are still working to fine-tune the instrument's finishing touches, University Carillonneur Albert Gerken is sitting pretty once again.
"The response is more direct. The instrument doesn't fight you as it did before."
said Gerken, who's been clanging KU's bells since 1963.
"Many people have noticed the difference in sound — it has a much greater dynamic range, and you can just do more with the
"You can just do more with the instrument musically. It just makes it easier. It's a much better range of dynamics and articulation."
instrument musically. It just makes it easier. It's a much better range of dynamics and articulation."
Albert Gerken
In short, he said, the 53-bell carillon is more efficient than ever, thanks to five years of planning and 21/2 years of renovations that wrapped up in April, when the 45-year-old instrument was rededicated.
Realigning the bells — from their origi-
more cohesive sound, with better sound egress. It's no longer caught in the corners."
nal box style to a radial configuration — now allows music to travel unencumbered from the walls of the campanile.
The instrument's original bells once again chime each day, marking each quarter hour and hour. Gerken also plays concert recitals Wednesday evenings and Sunday afternoons.
"It's superior to what we had before," Gerken said. "It's a
"It sounds great," he said. "I'm really very pleased."
The renovation was made possible by a $425,000 gift from Keith and Joan Bunnel, of Pittsburgh, Pa. Keith Bunnel was president of KU's class of 1946.
The project was born in 1991, when planning and fund-raising started. The actual work lasted 21/2 years, Gerken said, and included highly specialized work.
After overseeing the renovation, Gerken now has set his sights on keeping the bells in tune. Clapboards, electronics and the keyboard all need regular maintenance, and the Kansas University Endowment Association has set up a fund for that purpose.
"It's for when we have to go in and make repairs," Gerken said. "But this won't ever have to be done again, to this extent."
BELL RINGER
Albert Gerken plays concerts twice a week at Kansas University's Memorial Campanile. Here's the schedule:
Wednesdays: 8 p.m.
during the summer; 7 p.m.
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Sundays: 3 p.m.
Each concert lasts about 45 minutes.
Year as chairman filled with challenges, accomplishments
Regent reflects on complex system
- The first Lawrence resident to pilot the state's university system reflects on challenges facing the Kansas Board of Regents.
BY GWYN MELLINGER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Lawrence cardiologist John Hiebert had been chair of the Kansas Board of Regents just a few days when scandal at the state's teaching hospital threatened the credibility of the entire state university system.
More than a year later, having taken steps to prevent a recurrence of the mismanagement that shut down the heart transplant program at the Kansas University Medical Center, Hiebert can be a bit stoic. Still, he doesn't minimize the seriousness of the challenge he faced.
"Don Slawson, a former regent, said this was the greatest threat to the regents ever." Hiebert said.
In addition to the public relations nightmare that followed, Hiebert and his fellow regents grappled with issues such as how to ensure the medical center's survival in the face of heightened
competition. Because teaching is one of their primary functions, academic health centers tend to have overhead 30 percent to 40 percent higher than private hospitals.
"Now we have this environment of managed care where everybody is sharpening their
pencil and discounts are getting deeper." he said.
That's just one of the fiscal challenges the Board of Regents is planning for. Hiebert, whose term as chair ended in
"We are a state which has invested in higher education."
The bottom line, Hiebert said, is that "Kansas will have to apply some strategies to make delivery of education more efficient."
June, said the board has taken steps to prepare the state's universities for enrollments that could be nearly 20 percent higher by the end of the decade.
Two major initiatives approved by the 1996 Kansas Legislature will advance that objective. First was the adoption of qualified admissions standards that will
Dr. John Hiebert
"We have in the pipeline an increased number of students already in the middle schools and in the high schools," Hiebert said. "At the same time, we are a state which has invested in higher education but we have a relatively fixed source of revenue. We are not flush with money."
require incoming freshmen to meet basic academic requirements, rather than simply holding a diploma from a Kansas high school.
The Legislature
also authorized the regents to issue bonds to finance a $163 million capital improvement plan, which will begin the process of repairing the universities' so-called "crumbling classrooms."
In addition, the state universities will explore sharing resources and expanding use of remote classrooms connected to universities by television and computer, but they also are seeking ways to make faculty more productive.
the state university system into the new millennium, carries a component for faculty evaluations, support, development and rewards.
Vision 2020, a plan for taking
The plan, which KU and five other regents universities are considering, re-examines the way faculty allocate their time among teaching, research and service and provides incentives and support for post-tenure faculty to remain productive.
"It's the lincin pin for our credibility with the Legislature," Hiebert said. "It's my opinion that if we are going to maintain fiscal support, we will have to work very diligently to maintain accountability."
If fiscal support from the Legislature can't be maintained, faculty will continue to leave the regents system for more lucrative jobs.
"Unquestionably, faculty salaries are ahead of other things that we need," he said, but added that technological innovations, such as the rapid turnover in computer software and hardware, deserve attention in the budget.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Baby Jay can still wow 'em at ripe age of 25
Continued from page 1C
Baby Jay costume was used for 13 years. In 1984, Hurst returned to retire her Baby Jay costume. Tufts of white feathers were attached to the eyebrows and head and she was given a cane to carry out onto the football field. There she was greeted by a new Baby Jay. Hurst's original costume has been housed in the university archives since.
The current Baby Jay costume is made by the same company that creates the characters for Walt Disney World. This Baby Jay had a lot of flaws in it when it first arrived. After getting a beak job and a hair cut, Baby Jay is finally appearing
"A lot of times you want to tell little kids that as they're punching your head, they're hurting you."
a little more trai-
— Sara Jarrell, Baby Jay
a little more ditional.
The latest Baby Jay costume was introduced before the 1995 KU-UCLA basketball game. All of the old Baby Jay costumes were brought onto the court, so the costume history could be seen by all.
"I think that the outfit moves itself sometimes," said Sara Jarrell, a current Baby Jay. "It's impossible to simply walk in the outfit, you have to do the Jayhawk strut. And you think, 'I feel gross, I smell gross,' all the same. You forget that you're hot, you're just wet. And when you get an itch, there is nothing you can do about it."
Standing out
Atormer KU cheerleader,Jarrell wanted to have more than KU school spirit. She wanted to be the Jayhawk, the symbol of the university.
Jarrell, a junior from Albuquerque, N.M., is 5-foot-2-inches tall and is one of the three women to wear the current Baby Jay featherweight costume.
Last spring, Jarrell attended Baby Jay tryouts along with seven or eight other women. She and the others ran for 12 minutes to see if they had enough stamina to make it through an average game. Jarrell also had an interview in which she let her personality shine.
In addition, the auditions required the prospective Baby Jays to wear the costume while performing a one-minute skit, the Rock Chalk cheer, the alma mater and expressing a series of Baby lay emotions.
"The judges yell out situations, three of them, like, 'Baby Jay's tail is on fire' or, 'The Jayhawks just scored,' and you have to react to what they have just said," recalled jarrell.
The mascots traditionally go to camp with the KU cheerleaders. At camp they attend special mascot training sessions and even get a chance to wear their costumes out into the community for a service project.
Not all experiences are good for the mascots. Willie the Wildcat humiliated Jarrell while parading her in front of the crowd this past year at the KU-K-State football game in Manhattan. And she admits that seeing smaller children and dealing with their abuse is sometimes hard.
"A lot of times you want to tell little kids that as they're punching your head, they're hurting you," larrell said.
Little children try to give Baby Jay potato chips during warm weather picnics. Jarrell says that she simply throws the chips over her shoulder and hopes that the kids do not notice.
For the most part, however being the Baby Jay has been positive for Jarrell.
Jarrell's favorite experience so far has been attending a man's birthday party in Topeka. He was a lawyer and had been a longtime fan of the Jayhawks. Recently, it was discovered that he had a brain tumor, and his family wanted to make his birthday extra special.
"It was the greatest day of this man's life," Jarrell said. "He could not get over it. He was so worked up that he could barely talk. His wife wrote me a thank you note, his daughter wrote to me, and his law firm called the Sports Information Office and thanked them. It was really special. I even want to go back and visit him again. I like knowing that I made someone's day."
KU hostess has recipe for successful dining
- Keeping food on the plates of thousands of people keeps Dottie Nordlund the hostess with the mostest.
PETER K. BAYSIDE
BY MEGAN POPLINGER
JOURNAL-WORLD
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOT
Dottle Nordlund, assistant manager of catering at the Kansas Union, has her hands full in the summer when she works to feed 600 people three times a week during student orientation.
From preparing entrees for classy parties at the Lied Center to getting 60,000 cookies and 680 gallons of punch for activities on commencement day, Dottie Nordlund keeps people at Kansas University functions fed.
victory. Nordlund's love for cooking and entertaining friends began with dinner parties in her home. Her reputation as a good hostess landed her a job as a cook for the Chi Omega sorority more than 20 years ago and now she organizes banquets for thousands of people as the assistant manager of catering at the Kansas Union.
Nordlund's first food industry experience came from working as a soda jerk at a Walgreens in her home town. While she was in high school, she worked in the kitchen of a hospital.
Seeing many changes that have taken place in the food industry has been an exciting part of her job.
"When I worked at the hospital, we squeezed every orange," Nordlund said with a smile.
She took time off from cooking professionally while her children were young. The Chi Omega sorority lured her back into the kitchen, a job she held for three years.
From there she moved to cooking for the chancellor and baking for students in Hashinger Hall. In 1978 she began at the Union.
While at Hashinger, she did all of the
baking from scratch. That job is not as time consuming now that so many baked goods some frozen, Nordlund said. Seeingly minor things, such as ready made orange juice, make food preparation easier.
Union has proved successful because students know the names.
One of Nordlund's disappointments comes from the change to faster, easier foods. She has noticed that family dining is no longer the norm and she thinks it is partially because people are getting used to eating food on the run.
Food interest have also changed according to Nordlund. She said that students are now more interested in food they can take with them on the way to class. Because of this, bagels are a very popular item. Students are also interested in low-fat foods and brand names. Bringing Pizza Hut and TCBY into the
"I'm just amazed that no one knows how to set a table anymore," Nordlund said. Many of the students who come to work for her must be taught how to set a table.
Because of this observation, one of
Nordlund's goals is to start offering an eating etiquette class to teach students how to properly eat a six-course meal. This may seem outdated, but, she pointed out that many interviews include a lunch or dinner and the interviewee should know proper dining manners.
This concern for the students goes along with Nordlund's job, as she hires many students to help with the catering. Carrie Frazier is a student who has worked for Nordlund for the last year as a lead caterer. Nordlund gives her the details, up to how many forks will be needed, and then Frazier instructs other caterers.
"She's got the job down pat," Frazier said.
Frazier noted Nordlund's devotion to her job to ensure everything runs smoothly. "She works an amazing amount of hours; Saturday, Sunday — I don't know how many days straight," Frazier said.
Nordlund doesn't seem to mind.
"I've really enjoyed it," she said. It is especially fulfilling when things turn out perfectly, like the Lied Center opening banquet and the farewell party for Chancellor Gene Budig. The Union catering won special dining awards from the National College Food Service Assn. on both occasions. For Nordlund it is events like these that the hours counting pieces of rented china or the last minute changes pay off.
Even with all the work she puts into her job, Nordlund still enjoys throwing dinner parties at her home. Working in food service for a large university has a lot of hidden responsibilities, but it is a perfect job for Dottie Nordlund.
She is a natural born hostess.
Each week the Journal-World’s Sunday Arts and Living Section takes you into the homes and workplace of artists and everyday folks. It’s the place to find out what’s happening on the local and national art scene, and in the lives of famous, and not-so-famous residents. A lively showcase of information, Sunday Arts and Living will put you in the know about films, books and the arts. You’ll also get a different look at your neighbors and the cultural goings-on that add a special dimension to the character of Lawrence.
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SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 13C
Former KU student radical tackles notorious legal cases
Continued from page 1C
'n' roll. What can I have a very good time. What I say?' he said.
Rage training
The arrest was for interfering with the duties of a KU police officer, a misdemeanor. It happened on May 21, 1979 - graduation day - after Kuby unveiled a banner protesting KU investments in South Africa.
Administrators said Kuby was violating a university policy barring "political advertisements" at KU events. Police were ordered to arrest him.
Kuby argued that the university was abusing its power — that his banner was a political statement, not an ad.
A year later, he was back as a free man. Charges filed after the first arrest had been dropped after prosecutors determined that Kuby simply hadn't committed a crime.
crime.
"I believed at the time there may have been a violation of his constitutional right to free speech," said Mike Malone, then district attorney and now a Douglas County district judge.
In 1980, Kuby and about 30 other people brought signs to commencement in a free speech protest. One banner, unfurled after the protest started, said "Help! We're being arrested." Under orders from administrators, police tore banners from the hands of Kuby and other protesters.
Kuby, who was not arrested in the protest, claimed that an officer deliberately broke his arm. Malone brought in the Kansas Bureau of Investigation to look into Kuby's claim. After the KBI investigation was completed, Malone decided there was insufficient evidence to show that officers injured Kuby on purpose.
Today, Kuby points out that he never hurt anyone, never blocked a doorway — never broke a law of any kind — in the protests.
"It was not particularly radical stuff," he said. "It was the kind of thing you'd expect from good Jeffersonian Democrats — the idea that people ought to be able to say what they want to say and write what they want to write."
Malone agreed with the analysis.
"I think the university, and rightfully so, was a bit red-faced about this thing." he said.
In late 1980, he left Lawrence to attend law school at Cornell.
"There were some who said, 'When he goes to law school, he'll be like everybody else. Three years from now, he'll be driving a Porsche or something.'" said Miller, who joined Kuby in the 1980 protest and was arrested. "I thought, 'With Ron, I doubt it.'"
Two years later, he joined Kunster's staff as a clerk.
"If anything, I'm clearer now than I ever was in that we were right," he said. "Our vision of the university was the one that remained true to what a university should be. We disrupted no classes, barred no one in any doorway ... it was a simple exercise of free speech."
16 years after
He has long hair now, plus a beard and a moustache.
KU police no longer arrest people for violating university policy — only for breaking laws. Denney, who said he supported students' right to protest then and now, credits Kuby for spurring that change.
"People recognized quite clearly that the university police should not be used for anything but maintaining law and order, and that drove it home that the use of the police as 'the army of the administration' was not the thing to do. If I ever saw him in person or talked to him on the phone, I would thank him for doing that." Denney said.
Dykes said he could vaguely remember Kuby's name and could not recall the protests.
whether those policies were correct or incorrect, it's difficult to say now," he said. "I'm sure Mr. Kuby feels correct in his course of action, and I wouldn't expect him to feel any other way."
Denney, whose department Kuby accused of police brutality, catches Kuby on TV now and again, discussing one of his cases. It's like seeing an old, fond acquaintance, he said, adding that someday he'd like to talk to him about his days at KU.
"Between he and I, there was never a raised voice," Denney said. "I can remember many of
our conversations today, because of the uniqueness of them. They were totally civil."
In his desk, Malone keeps a letter from Kuby praising him for his "honesty and integrity" and offering him an endorsement.
"I realize that a public endorsement from me is as helpful as an endorsement from Castro, so I will keep my support silent unless otherwise instructed by your campaign manager," Malone read, laughing.
Back to the books
Kuby is overseeing 10 police brutality cases, five murder trials, 80 to 90 total cases. Miller, who visits Kuby periodically, said Kuby lives in a modest Manhattan apartment with his wife and daughter.
"He does make money at his practice, but he's not fabulously wealthy," he said.
On Kuby's office wall, there's a picture of him and Kunstler posing with the Ohio chapter of the Hell's Angels. Kunstler died last year.
"Yesterday, I was out in Queens with the Rev. Al Sharpton, meeting with the DA and trying to get a police officer indicted for shooting a shirtless, barefoot man from behind," Kuby said during a recent interview. "He was shot in the head, the bullet entering his skull in the back and traveling downward toward his spine."
He said the bullet path proves that the man was leaning down, or kneeling. He point-blank accuses the officer of having committed an execution.
There's a picture of reggae musician Bob Marley, his image captured during a performance at KU, hanging on his wall.
It's one of many things — trinkets, memories and friendships that tie him to Lawrence.
"Even the bad times at KU were times that nonetheless were rich in experience and learning," he said. "And actually, maybe it's through the sort of distorting prism of history, but I can think of no bad times in Lawrence."
He comes back to Lawrence periodically. After apartheid fell in South Africa, he wrote a letter to the KU Endowment Association and sent his membership dues.
"Maybe we can be friends," he wrote.
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Ervin Huslig is the man behind the master key at Kansas University Facilities Operations. The lock shop handles locks on all academic buildings on campus.
University locksmith holds key to academia
BY JILL HOGAN
As head locksmith of the Kansas University Facilities Operations lock shop for 10 years, that talent has served him well. Husling oversees the maintenance of all the locks on academic buildings on campus.
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
The work of the locksmith is intricate but can call for a degree of roughness.
Huslig recalled a time when he was gentle with a lock and finally, when he became forceful out of frustration, it opened.
Ervin Huslig has a way with locks.
"You pick and pick and just when you've called for assistance, it opens for you," he said. "It's like you have a relationship with the lock."
Through some students and faculty might think it convenient to have a locksmith on campus in the event they lock themselves out of their car, they'll be in for a
The responsibilities of the locksmith are to duplicate keys, monitor who has the keys and order parts so all locks are functioning properly.
About 12 lockouts occur daily, Huslig said. With a staff of two working under him, they have their hands full replying to all the requests for help.
long wait. This department responds only for academic buildings.
The lock shop deals primarily with heavy duty industrial locks, many of which cannot be duplicated.
"The housing (department) has their own separate locksmith department." Huslig said.
"The strangest lockout call I ever received was from the Lawrence Police Department at 3 a.m.," Huslig said. "Teller's restaurant was then owned by the KU Endowment Association, and someone had not locked it. I had to find the key at that time and go downtown and lock it."
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD'S KU EDITION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
KU students flock to Allen Fieldhouse for their own set of ...
KANSAS
KU
Hoop dreams
MIKE YODER/IOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Deborah VanWinkle, a Kansas University sophomore from Springfield, Mo., joins other basketball fans in a campout for good seats before last season's KU-UCLA game at Allen Fieldhouse.
- Campers' enthusiasim for basketball keeps Jayhawks' spirits at a fever pitch.
BY TOMMY GALLAGHER SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
In the midst of winter's deep freeze, hundreds of students find time to go camping — in the northwest corner of Allen Fieldhouse.
These campers are part of a Kansas University basketball tradition.
Student seating is on a first-come, first-served at home basketball games, and several hundred Jayhawk fans are willing to sacrifice comforts of home for a dark, breezy lobby to get quality courtside
Hoops rules
"The only way to get decent seats is to come out and camp out for it."
son, a lot of campers can be found sleeping white wrapped in the warmth of a sleeping bag or cuddled underneath a blanket with their head on a pillow to ensure at least some comfort. Because the lobby can rival the silent atmosphere of a library at times, some campers choose to read a novel or do homework.
While the camping system has 1634 troops
seats. Fan groups camp out for as many as 16 hours a day, from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m., in the fieldhouse lobby as early as a week before a game.
"The only way to get decent seats is to come out and camp out for it," said Scott Rezne, a Wichita sophomore. "It's a lot easier when you have a large number of people to camp out for your group."
— Scott Rezne, Wichita sophomore
During every basketball sea-
worked for RC throughout the years, only a limited number of people, outside the campers themselves, know how the system works.
At the beginning of each new camping period
— which usually starts the morning after a home game at the fieldhouse — a lottery is held to determine the order of student groups. Each group receives one number in the lottery for every five people in the group. Any groups that set up camp after the lottery are placed at the bottom of a list posted on the fieldhouse wall.
The list is used to call the roll. If a representative group member is absent when roll is taken, the
group's spot is forfeited. All subsequent groups present move up one spot in the order of entrance to the upcoming game.
Fan groups are allowed to enter the fieldhouse two hours before tipoff. Everybody else may enter 30 minutes later.
Groups may have a maximum of 30 people, although there are several groups that have 10 or fewer members. Many of the bigger groups, containing 15 or more people, can set up three-or
four-hour camping shifts. Smaller groups cannot afford that kind of luxury.
"We're here all day, except for when we have class," said Kelly Hale, an Edwardsville sophomore. "Our group, the Fun Bunch, has only six people, so it's important for us to be here from beginning to end."
Preserving the tradition
of the Fun Bunch, along with two of her friends from Jayhawker Towers. Most of the fan groups camping at fieldhouse originally started in a fraternity, sorority or scholarship or residence hall.
Hale was an original member
"The Hawkettes originated on the fourth floor of Ellsworth Hall last year," said Matt Berry, Hutchinson sophomore and Hawkette member. "When I moved into Ellsworth, I decided to join because I'm a pretty big
Jayhawk fan. Besides, camping out isn't all that bad."
The camping tradition isn't all that bad either, as long as you welcome some peace and quiet while doing homework, playing cards or sleeping for several hours in a drafty lobby. Although the campus newspaper questioned the effectiveness of the camping tradition one recent season, Darren Cook, director of facilities,
See Hoop dreams, page 2D
Secrets of the Pyramid
BEN BIGLER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Dietitian Ann Chapman works with students at Watkins Student Health Center to develop better eating habits.
'Freshman 15' weighs heavily on newcomers
- Lifestyle changes for those new to college might include a few extra — but unnecessary — pounds.
BY SARA SHAY
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
BY SARA SHAY
When Kristen Merchant entered Kansas University, she expected to gain weight.
Many freshmen who enter Kansas University gain weight in their first year away from home. Both men and women are susceptible to weight gain. Freshmen year is filled with change, so it comes as no surprise when the pounds start adding on.
"College is a very time in your life, and eating is a social thing," said Merchant, an Overland Park freshman. "I just know I'm going to come home gaining that 'freshmen 15.'"
Ann Chapman, dietitian at Watkins Student Health Center.
blames fast food, late-night eating, skipping meals, beer drinking and less physical activity as factors in freshmen weight gain.
"The cafeteria has fruit and salad, but most of us go for the good, hot food," said Overland Park freshman Meredith Tedinger. "After we stuff ourselves, we always head straight for the ice-cream machine."
Beer and binge drinking also play a role in freshmen weight gain. According to a brochure at Watkins Health Center, alcohol has seven calories per gram, almost twice the calories of carbohydrate or protein. Beer
Most new students live in KU residence halls, where there is great variety to the food. Because freshmen live on their own, they may lack the self control it takes to eat the right foods.
See Healthy habits, page 7D
Pizza rules campus as king of foods
- Plizza is quick, cheap and everywhere in Lawrence.
MIKE YODER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
For Kansas University freshman Jean-Frederic Despres, ordering pizza is an addictive habit. Ordering at least five pizzas a week, Despres has discovered the wonder of Lawrence pizza delivery.
— Jean-Frederic Despres, Leawood freshman
Despres, Leawood, admits his pizza intake
Kyle Long, manager of Gumby's Pizza, 1445 W. 23rd, said 50 percent of the restaurant's delivery business is to students and of that about 25 percent is residence hall business.
LINDSEY HENRY
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
"Of course quality is important. But I'll usually buy from where there is a good balance between cheap prices and quality."
is extreme, but he stands by his passion.
GUMBY'S
PIZZA
"Maybe it is a bit too much," Despres said, reaching for another slice out of a Gumby's pizza box, dotted with cheese and grease stains. "But when it's late at night and I don't want to leave the dorm, it is convenient. Plus, you don't need to use any utensils, just your hands."
Justin Loburglio, Littenloon, Colleen, freshman, also discovered the convenience of
pizza delivery in the dorms. He orders an average of three to four pizzas a week. Before coming to Lawrence, Loburgio rarely ate pizza.
"At home, we never had pizza," Loburgio said. "I have definitely turned into a pizza connoisseur at the University of Kansas."
Pizza fans such as Despres and Loburg keep individuals like John Botyl in business. As the owner of Pizza Shuttle, 1601 W.23rd, Botyl appreciates the benefits of running a pizza shop in a college town.
"The big student population is very attractive," Botyl said. "It is a trapped population, especially in the dorms."
Kyle Long, manager of Gumby's Pizza,
1445 W. 23rd. agrees.
"About 50 percent of our delivery business is students, and of that about 25 percent goes to dorm business." Long said.
Delivery business picks up during sporting events, cold weather and especially late on Friday and Saturday nights. Long said.
"We're open 'til 2:30 a.m., a definite bonus because there are more parties here than in a
After six months delivering for Gumby's, Jason Lutes, a self-proclaimed veteran of the business, said that he has seen it all when it comes to students getting anxious for pizza. Lutes said that when he delivers to the dorms he usually receives about 19 offers from other students who want to buy the pizza from him.
"I had to run her down. I finally caught her when she stopped to pass them out to her friends." Lutes said.
Lutes said he once delivered 15 pizzas to Naismith Hall, only to have a girl grab a bag of three pizzas from him and run off down the hall.
purely residential town," Long said. "We get a lot of people calling late and ordering pizza when they are drunk, and the calls take a lot longer because it is hard to figure out what they are saying. There is usually a lot of people yelling their orders in the background."
A backpack for delivery drivers is the unpredictability of receiving tips from students in the dorms. Lutes said that he sometimes tries to talk students into giving him more money but that it does not usually
Yet with this obvious demand for pizza, Long said that Lawrence area pizza establishments are beginning to be more competitive with prices running from $5 to $15, depending on size. Pizza shops commonly run specials offering pizzas at a reduced price with a coupon, something college students can appreciate.
"Of course quality is important," Despres said. "But I'll usually buy from where there is a good balance between cheap prices and quality."
work. Most students, he said, decide whether to tip or not before they meet him in the dorm lobby to pay for their pizza.
Hanging his head with shame, Loburig said that he "hits meager at the very best."
However, Rich McVeigh, Blue Anchor, N.J. freshman, bases his pizza decisions on price only.
"Seeing as how I have no money as a college student, the cost of pizza is very important," he said. "Spending $80 on a 100-page geography book does not allow me to shop around for the expensive pizza."
---
2D SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
STUDENT LIFE
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Celebrations
son events
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
KU junior Dave Carey answers a caller's question at the University Information Center.
KU Info sits poised to answer the call
- KU Info prides itself on having the answer to almost any question.
BY MISTI WESTFALL SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
It is 4:30 p.m. and the phone rings: "Hello, KU Info," Dave Carey says.
"What's your phone number?" says the voice on the other line.
"864-3506," replies Carey, a junior from Kansas City, Mo.
As Carey hangs up the receiver, he swivels around in his chair to face the rest of the group and says, "That was definitely one of the weird ones. You never know what you're going to get."
As a staff member of the University Information Center, better known as KU Info, Carey has fielded his share of calls during the past few months he has worked there.
"A lot of the time we get calls for phone numbers, which we don't give out, so we refer them to the switchboard," Carey says.
Although the center is in its 26th year of existence, the operation hasn't always been as easy as it is today.
KU Info is a plethora of knowledge at your fingertips. Although the staff will not answer questions relating to homework or phone numbers, they can answer just about anything else. The small office where the 15-member staff works is filled with file cabinets, books and a couple of Rolodexes that contain enough information to make even Einstein jealous.
The program began on May 7, 1970, as a rumor hot line to ease fears that were brewing about the Vietnam War protests. Its first residence was in Strong Hall, and it was later moved to the Burge Union before finding its current
KU INFO
To get through to KU Info call 864-3506 from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. seven days a week.
Its Internet address is http://cc.ukans.edu/~k uinfo/home.html.
home in the Kansas Union.
Many people only call once or occasionally to quench their thirst for knowledge, but the service also has its share of frequent callers.
Among the regular callers is the 'crossword puzzle guy' as the staff calls him. He is a man who usually calls on Sundays and always has a question like, "Do you know a word that means ..." Acting Coordinator Scott Trimble says.
"We've had some other callers that aren't as benign, but he's pretty fun." Trimble says.
The Information Center is also trying to reach out more into the community. By providing pamphlets and brochures, the administrators want the community to realize that KU Info exists for them as well.
"We wear two hats," Trimble says. "The first one, of course, is for the university, and the second is for the community. We're trying to repay the community for having us here, and we hope that they take advantage of us."
During a typical day, the noon hour is usually the busiest. Four staffers are there to answer the phones. Since staff members only work in three-hour shifts, they usually don't get burned out.
"It's really not too bad," Carey says.
Intramural games offer students sporting chance
- Intramurals help students get into the swing of things.
BY JILL HOGAN SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Orchestrating the Kansas University intramural program can be a workout itself.
Mary Chappell and her staff of 17 work hard to keep the program running smoothly.
Chappell is sure that the turnout for this 1996 intramural season will be just as strong.
"Sportsmanship is high. Very rarely do we have a discipline problem," Chappell said. "The students realize that it is just a game and have a good time competing."
At KU, students can choose from six team sports, 32 sport clubs and take part in 10 tournaments in the fall and spring. Strong participation in the intramural program reflects the university's high regard for athletics.
"The hardest part about intramurals is not being able to provide everything that the students want," Chappell said. "No program pays for itself. The student recreation fee is never enough, therefore we have to come up with the rest of the funding."
"The students are lined up at 6 a.m. just to sign up their teams on registration day," said Chappell, director of KU's Recreation Services. "There is a limit to how many teams can be entered, therefore students want to be sure to get entered."
And that's a big part of intramurals.
Last spring, students rejected a proposed $21.5 million recreation center to be built on West Campus. The plan, defeated 983-2,307, was backed by Recreational Services.
In addition to providing some relief from studying, intramural programs "provide visible rewards," Chappell said. "These students are proud of their accomplishments in their intramural activities and it shows."
but for now, Recreation Services will work to continue the success of intramurals.
Students are "learning about themselves, disciplining themselves and learning how to interact socially with their peers," she said.
Chappell said the vote was a disappointment.
"The students did call for a revote in the fall, so we will see," Chappell said.
Recently KU Info went online on the Internet. With the addition of the home page and the extra information on the Internet, Trimble hopes to expand even more in the future.
"Most of the calls throughout the day are academic related," Trimble says. "Toward the evening we start to get calls about TV shows. On Thursdays, we get a lot of calls about 'Friends.'"
"Alot happens in intramurals," Chappell said. "They provide lasting friendships along with a high degree of fun competition."
"Eventually that would be our goal, but that would definitely require more funding," Trimble says. "What we have right now is a user-friendly guide to what
Due to budget cutbacks, KU Info is now only open from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. It used to be open 24 hours a day. The bed that still sits in the cramped office surrounded by bulletin boards filled with little pieces of information is a vivid reminder.
people can find on the Internet."
"In Roy (Williams)' first year, he was so happy to see such tremendous support for the team that he said he would bring us something when he returned," Huerter said. "Roy returned about two hours later with 20 or 30 pizzas, in appreciation for the support we gave to Roy and the team, even when they were on probation."
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Continued from page 1D
Hoop dreams drive students to extremes
has made it clear that the tradition is here to stay.
Nowadays, Williams continues his own tradition by giving the campers a fresh supply of doughnuts on a fairly regular basis.
"There is no way the tradition will be lost," Cook said. "Abolishing the system is not a consideration of the university or of the students themselves."
"The best part about the tradition is the frustration and solidarity." Huerter said. "All those emotions build toward an incredible enthusiasm for the game inside. If we were to lose the camping tradition, we would lose a tremendous home-court advantage."
To Scott Hueter, a former student and camper from 1986 to 1994, the thought of abolishing the system is unheard of.
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In 1986, he started what is believed to be the first fan group in the Jayhawk camping tradition, Scooter & Co. Members were scarce, and the group consisted of residents from Oliver Hall.
"We started with a cult following," said Huerter, who now lives in Ohio. "We would camp outside maybe a day or two before each game, and people became more interested as the Jayhawks got better and better
---
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
STUDENT LIFE
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17. 1996 3D
Communication key to sharing close quarters
- Roommates are often a big gamble, but ground rules can help ease potential conflicts.
BY CARRIE A. PATTON
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Before Paul Blatnak met his roommate, he didn't know what to expect.
"I didn't know what type of person he was, or if we'd get along or have anything in common," Blatnak said. "I wondered if we'd have conflicting personalities."
Blatnak, Mequon, Wis., freshman, is one of many Kansas University students who chose to live with complete strangers. Blatnak was randomly assigned a roommate for his double-occupancy room in Ellsworth Hall.
.
FOR BETTER OR WORSE
Christopher Keuss, a St. Louis freshman, said that having different schedules was sometimes a problem for him and his roommate.
"I tried to show him respect by dressing in the dark every morning," Keuss said. "I had to get up at 5 a.m. for ROTC, and I didn't want to wake him up."
- Study patterns — music off during study time?
The Student Housing Handbook recommends students discuss these issues with their roommates during the first few days of school:
- Anticipated bedtime
Sharing a room with an unfamiliar person can aggravate the stresses of leaving home and starting college, making conflict between roommates almost inevitable, according to Brian Green, Omaha, Neb., junior and Oliver Hall resident assistant.
Resident assistants are trained to advise residents on dealing with academic, social and personal concerns while enforcing residence hall policies.
ALEXANDER BROOKS
on or off during study time?
• Smoking in the room
Green said that when strangers live together, they frequently have different values, beliefs and ways of living that are sometimes hard to reconcile. He cited personality conflicts as the most common source of roommate tension.
"One roommate might be a partner, when the other is a studier," Green said. "Usually the quieter one will want to sit down and discuss the problem with his roommate or will want to move out."
Residents may switch roommates or move into a new room at any time after the first two weeks of classes. Resident assistants and other staff members know the procedure for room changes, according to the Department of Student Housing handbook.
- Smoking in the room
- Cleaning responsibilities
Brian Green, Omaha, Neb., junior at KU and Oliver Hall resident assistant, is trained to advise residents on dealing with academic social, an personal concerns while enforcing residence hall policies.
MIKE YODER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
- Setting and turning off the alarm
Roommates may also have different standards of cleanliness in
- Late-night visitors and overnight quests
- How your roommate feels about lending things to others.
their housekeeping and personal hygiene habits.
"In one situation, both roommates didn't have very strong personal hygiene habits," Green said. "One told the other right off the bat, 'if I start to smell, just tell me to take a shower because I really don't shower very much at all.' But the roommate didn't shower much either and they got along great."
Keuss said that his whole room smells like fish because his roommate works in a seafood market.
"Toward the end of the fall semester, people wouldn't even come in the room, it smelled so bad," he said.
Keuss confronted his roommate, who agreed to store his work clothes in a plastic container to control the odor.
Green stressed the importance of communication in resolving roommate conflicts.
"Each resident needs to come to a conscious realization of he roommate's concerns." he said.
Another common conflict, Green said, is when one roommate will bring a date over to spend the night.
"It shows a real lack of respect for a roommate's privacy to have sex in his presence. It is a delicate situation to address," Green said.
Blatnak once confronted a roommate about that issue.
"The next day I told him that it was kind of a hard situation for me to deal with and asked him
how I should handle it next time. He said that he wouldn't do it again with me in the room."
Blatnak said his roommate kept their agreement.
Green said that resident assistants are trained in conflict mediation. He asks arguing roommates to sit down and confront each other in his presence. In some cases, a roommate agreement will be created, listing rules that both roommates agree to abide by. If these methods fail, the roommates will be separated as a last resort.
Working through roommate problems is an important part of college, Green said, because people grow through learning conflict resolution skills. He says living with a stranger is a good experience for most freshmen.
"It forces them to deal with people they otherwise wouldn't come into conflict with" Green said. "Most roommates can resolve conflicts and make it through the year. Frequently, roommates who didn't get along at first end up being really good friends."
Green advises incoming freshmen who are wary of potential roommate problems to "be open-minded, communicate your expectations and be flexible."
Involvement often cures big-city blues
- The faster pace of Lawrence and Kansas University may leave students from smaller towns bewildered.
BY RYAN LARUE
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Every incoming student feels some pressure when making the transition from high school to Kansas University. That period can be especially hard for students who grew up enjoying the solitude and security of a small town.
Handlin is involved with the KU Ambassadors, a group that gives campus tours and information to students interested in becoming KU students.
"There are so many opportunities at KU compared to a small town," said Jeff Handlin, a sophomore from Quinter. "Just get involved in one or two things and you'll start to meet people."
The key to surviving the culture shock, many say, is getting involved.
Students who have been through the transition said being part of a group—a dormitory, fraternity or sorority—was most helpful.
The quickpace of life combined with the sheer size of KU and Lawrence often leaves small-town students frustrated.
Trent Krug, a senior from Russell and a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity said, "In Russell, everyone knew who I was. Then I came here and no one knew who I was. The fraternity helped me with that, giving me a support group of friends."
see Activities, page 5D
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4D SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
STUDENT LIFE
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Career counseling center directs uncertain students
- Those who are unsure of their career choice can find help on campus.
BY BRITTON HUNTER
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Like many college students,
Laura Durbin does not know
what she wants to do when she
grows up.
MAJOR DECISION
"People think that they know
"You realize there are so many majors and careers that you didn't know about. That makes it difficult to choose a specific path."
what they want to be before they come to college," says Durbin, a Norman, Okla., sophomore. "I thought I'd like to major in education. But when you get here, you realize there are so many majors and careers that you didn't know about. That makes it difficult to choose a specific path."
For those students who are experiencing the trauma of deciding what to major in, various counselors and students have offered some tips:
- Shop around. Try to take classes that interest you and cover a wide range of studies. By doing this, many students usually encounter a class that triggers their interest and enthusiasm.
— Laura
Durbin,
Norman, Okla.,
sophomore
- Talk to professors and other students about what they studied or study.
- The Career Counseling and Planning Service is on the second floor of Watkins Health Center, 864-2767.
- Visit schools that draw your attention and ask questions about majors, requirements and the potential to find a job in that field.
Career Counseling and Planning Service
The Career Counseling and Planning Service helps students decide which college major they should pursue. The center offers personality assessments and interest inventories to help students identify fulfilling career paths
It is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday and until 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays.
RENÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
keep in mind,however,is to look for an area that interests you.
Kansas University's Career Counseling and Planning Service offers various career interest inventories and personality assessments, which can help students realize which careers would most likely fit their personalities and needs. In addition, the service holds college major files, which can be helpful in explaining requirements for each undergraduate major at KU.
"Because I'm not quite sure what I want to specialize in, I decided to try out the Career Counseling and Planning Service at Watkins Health Center and see what they had to say," said Carrie Hinton, an Olathe sophomore. "What the service did for me was confirm my interest in various fields."
Students are welcome to come in and speak with a counselor at no cost.
"People would rather have direction and a goal," said Mark
Presnell, a career counselor with the center.
Students can also take person ality assessments for a small fee If a student would like to come in he or she should call and make an appointment. The center is open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Ryan Lee, a Denver freshman, said that although this is his first year of college and he doesn't
know what career he will choose, he is confident he will find one eventually.
I don't like not knowing what I want to do with my life," Lee said. "I've heard about the service and think it would be interesting to see what the tests would tell me about myself. Even if it doesn't predict what career I'll end up with, it could be a step in the right direction."
The assistance does not stop there, however.
In the College of Liberal Arts and Science office in Strong Hall, students may take free pamphlets that help them determine whether certain areas of study would be appealing. Pamphlets cover many areas, from Women's Studies and Western Civilization to theater and Spanish and Portuguese.
Office helps students make the grade
- Talking to teachers and taking advantage of tutors can turn a failing student around.
BY JEFF ZOSS
Kim Grassmeyer, associate director of the Kansas University Student Assistance Center, said the office offers support to students on such topics as note taking, reading workshops and time management.
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
The teacher quickly calls off the names as your first English paper is handed back.
THE ART ASSOCIATE
You spent two weeks on this paper and are convinced that nothing you have ever written has been this good. The teacher returns the paper upside down. As you turn it over, you look and see a big red F.
Dealing with a failing grade in college is a hard thing to do, but knowing how and where to get help can ease your struggles.
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Kansas University is a big place, but it's not difficult to get help with your work if you know where and whom to talk to.
help can ease your struggle.
"I felt as though I was on my own to struggle with my grades, but when you know were the help is, it makes your world so much easier," said Jason Pomorantz, Chicago junior.
Even though you cannot solve all your problems in one office, the Student Assistance Center can help lead you in the right direction.
"There is no single place for one-on-one support," said Kim Grassmeyer, associate director of the Student Assistance Center.
The center offers tutor lists, handouts and information on varied topics, and workshops, which include such topics as time management and reading, memory and notetaking and preparing for exams.
Tutors can be the key to better grades. Having someone else explain the material could be the difference between confusion and having a grasp on the information.
Many departments at KU have tutoring rooms set up to help students and answer their questions.
Another way to improve your grades is to talk to your teachers
and find out why you received a poor grade. Ask to go over the paper or test and discuss what you can do to avoid the same grade.
"Talking to my teacher was the best thing I could have done for my grades," said Jess Taran, Minneapolis, Minn., sophomore. "I would find out what I did wrong and correct it for the next time."
Teachers have varying policies
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LAWRENCE IOURNAL-WORLD
STUDENT LIFE
17
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 5D
Fraternity life focuses on academics, brotherhood
- College men find opportunities for personal growth in the KU fraternity system.
BY AARON BRINKMAN SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Just three months removed from his comfortable high school days, KU freshman Jeff Phelps entered his new life as a fraternity man with a great deal of apprehension.
"I heard all the horror stories about hazing and drinking that go around, so I really didn't know what to expect," said Phelps, a Mission native.
Those stereotypes have been associated with the Greek system at every school, but according to Kansas University Interfraternity
Council President Matt Leonard, the KU fraternity system is different.
"The majority of the fraternities here strongly stress academics, community service and brotherhood." Leonard said.
With the focus on academics, the 27 fraternities on campus consistently have grade-point averages that exceed the averages of the non-Greek community. Each fraternity maintains GPA requirements for joining the organization and offers assistance through tutors and academic advising.
"I came out of high school and was really apprehensive about college classes," said Phelps, now a sophomore member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. "The older
Scholastic achievement is not only individual, but also a part of the chapter's structure.
"Most fraternities put a heavy stress on academic structure with required study hours. In addition to academics, they also require their members to get involved in campus activities," Leonard said.
guys in the house would recommend some classes to take and then help me whenever I had any problems in a class."
Campus involvement is a big part of college life for many men. Members of the Greek community obtain leadership positions in Student Senate, departmental honor societies and Greek developmental organizations.
"I was surprised to find out how many Greek members were
Rush pairs men with right house
BY AARON BRINKMAN
If you are interested in joining the fraternity system, then Jim Sampson plans on seeing you in August for formal rush.
Sampson, Interfraternity Council vice president for membership, said "rush" is a term used in the Greek system to refer to the recruitment of prospective fraternity members. The Kansas University fraternity system has both an informal and formal rush.
The informal rush occurs throughout the year when the fraternities host rush events. In a more relaxed atmosphere, prospective members are provided the opportunity to visit houses and meet members of the 27 houses.
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
"The informal process starts very early in the fall semester and its biggest advantage is the man knows a lot more about the chapter he is joining before he first arrives." Sampson said.
"You're automatically thrown in with a pledge class of guys that will be your friends for life. And with the upperclassman for guidance, as far as getting involved with the house and campus, it's something that a dorm life might not provide," he said.
Formal rush is an opportunity for interested students to meet fraternity members, ask questions and tour the houses in a smaller, more intimate setting.
But it is often hard for new students to know if the Greek system is for them.
Leonard agrees with Sampson.
"The overall message is that there's a place for everybody."
Leonard said. "I believe that if a guy is really interested in being involved in a fraternity, he's going to find a house that he will fit into to."
Interfraternity Council vice-president for membership. "In fact, we strive to achieve diversity in the Greek community. I think if you look at the community as a whole, there is a great variety of different ethnic groups and different culture backgrounds."
Leonard sees only positive results from the immediate fraternity life.
(Thursday to Monday), and is run similar to female rush," Sampson said.
The advantages for the individual man are also substantial. At KU, freshmen live in the fraternity houses as opposed to residence halls.
"There's no stereotypical guat at all," said senior Jim Sampson,
Rush is controlled and regulated by the Interfraternity Council.
Leonard agrees with Sampson.
Fraternity men are also actively involved with philanthropic activities. Whether it be helping single-parent families in the Lawrence area or raising money for a national charity, each fraternity donates its time and money to help those less fortunate.
"We set the rushes up in a hotel, and we go over guidelines to what they can and can't do during the week," said Interfraternity Council President Matt Leonard.
actually involved with organizations on campus. Involvement is really stressed." Phelps said.
Sampson and Leonard said there were certain factors students should look for during rush, such as the physical structure of the house, sleeping arrangements, number of people in the pledge class and house fees.
"The formal process lasts from
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"I miss being able to drive down the street and wave to people." Handlin said. "Some of the friendliness is gone."
Student Union Activities offers many programs, with the primary objective of helping new students adjust to the unfamiliar surroundings. One of these is Hawk Week, a weeklong event designed to familiarize students with the KU campus.
In addition to getting involved in campus activities, older students had some other suggestions for incoming freshmen from small towns.
Jordan Crane, a junior from Parsons, arrived in Lawrence about a month early to familiarize herself with the city and the KU campus. She found this eased her nervous tension as the school year began.
"The number of students can be overwhelming," Friedrichs said. "The trick is to develop small groups to depend on, whether it be through a Greek organization or a dormitory or something else."
Eventually students acclimate to the KU atmosphere but they often miss the easy-going lifestyle of back home.
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Matt Friedrichs, admissions representative for KU, said it's important that new students can get involved and meet people. Friedrichs, a KU graduate from Marysville, can relate to the fears associated with being from a small town.
"I knew people who showed up the week of classes and they felt totally lost." Parsons said.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Students can start each day on Mount Oread by reading in the Journal-World all the news fit to print about Kansas University.
Count on detailed coverage of enrollment, tuition and parking woes as well as computer, music, library, fraternity and sorority news.
There will be stories about KU research and teaching. The J-W will keep an eye on officials who set policies affecting the daily life of every student.
Read our reports from Topeka about higher education decisions by the Kansas Board of Regents - which has jurisdiction over KU - and the Kansas Legislature.
LAWRENCE
JOURNAL-WORLD
It’s as good as being there!
6D SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
STUDENT LIFE
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Halls provide savings for work
---
B. R. H. M.
Jody Linn, a Kansas University freshman from Abilene, studies in the hopper atmosphere of Watkins Scholarship Hall.
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
- For those who aren't daunted by a little work, KU has a housing alternative.
BY KARA MONSON
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Kansas University's nine scholarship halls shatter the typical residence hall mold.
The scholarship halls create a home-like environment in the same way a family does: by putting its members to work.
All 50 residents of each single-sex hall carry their own weight. Each is expected to spend between three and six hours a week cooking meals, cleaning the hall and doing dishes. The reward for their hard work is a substantial savings on room and board.
As its namesake implies, residents are admitted to scholarship halls on the basis of their academic achievement. Acceptance into the scholarship halls is selective and highly competitive. To apply, any prospective or current student must submit a scholarship hall application, two references, three essays, ACT or SAT scores, grade point average and class rank (if freshman) or GPA (if upperclassmen).
For the 1995-96 academic year there were approximately 450 applicants for the 200 available spaces. Each year there are typically between 400 and 500 applicants.
"Not all 450 of the applicants will go to KU, but there is a long waiting list," said Kami Thomas, assistant director of the KU's Department of Student Housing.
The scholarship halls have no set qualifications or required GPA. Students are basically graded against each other. A scholarship hall committee, made up of 10 to 12 current scholarship hall residents, reviews the essays
What's the allure?
"It's all done anonymously. They do not know who wrote which essay. It's very confidential." Thomas said.
"The main difference (between scholarship halls and other residence halls) is the cost. It is much lower, about $1,000 less," Thomas said.
The price for a student to live in any of the halls except for Watkins Hall and Miller Hall for one school year is $2,448. The price for Watkins Hall and Miller Hall is $816.
Unlike the other scholarship halls, meals are not included in the price of Watkins and Miller halls. Both of these halls have seven separate kitchens, with seven residents assigned to each. Each group decides on a theme (vegetarian, semi-vegetarian, health food, "I don't care," budget or independent) and budget.
"Each group sits down and decides the days and times it wants to eat together, so it's like a little family," Larissa Lee, a freshman from Derby, said. "We also
decide on a budget. In general, we spend $45 per week. That about $10-12 for a meal that feeds seven. We all take turns grocery shopping, cooking and cleaning. I like it because you really get to know the people you eat with."
Another major difference between scholarship halls and residence halls is the way they are governed.
"The residents run the hall," said Paul Hubbman, director of Battenfeld, an all-male hall. "I help with organizing the kitchen and maintenance. I also advise, but that's it. They are in charge of their own discipline, and they plan their own activities."
Scholarship hall's plan a lot of social activities for their residents throughout the year. Many of the events take place annually. For example, each year Amini Hall has a Weenie Roast, Douthart Hall has a Halloween "Blood Bash". Grace Pearson Hall has Karaoke Night, Sellards Hall has an IRS Party and Watkins Hall has a Winter Informal.
There is a lot of mixing among the scholarship halls.
"Usually when we plan an activity, it's generally with a women's hall," Hubbman said. "ASHC (All Scholarship Hall Council) plans all of our activities. Last semester, I couldn't believe how many activities we had. There was one or two a week, but that's abnormally high because our socials were very motivated.
"We also have study breaks with other halls," Hubbman explained. "Sometimes it will be to watch "Seinfeld," or go to Joe's for doughnuts. In the past, we've done everything from playing Twister to massage therapy."
But scholarship halls are not for all students.
"I'd like to say that scholarship halls are for everyone, but there are people who haven't meshed here basically because they haven't worked," Hubbman said. "They were not interested in vacuuming and cleaning, and that's fine because the other residence halls are ideal for that situation."
toward KU's scholarship halls is positive.
"If you don't mind the chores, the greatest advantage is the quiet atmosphere, which is really geared toward scholarship and studying," Lee said. "But you can't stereotype it because it's not a bunch of people studying all of the time."
in general, the attitude
- KU's top administrator expects new students to work and play hard in and out of the classroom.
BY TIM CARPENTER
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Hemenway: Learning lasts beyond class
Chancellor Robert Hemenway doesn't expect freshmen at Kansas University to wear beanies on campus.
Thankfully, some traditions die. The paddle-wielding K Club members who enforced the beanie rule went the way of the Model T.
"But I do have great expectations for students," Hemenway said. "I anticipate they will have a special experience at the University of Kansas."
"We are deadly serious about the classroom," KU's top administrator said. "But there is also an informal part of learning at KU. It's in your residence hall at 1 a.m. during a discussion about AIDS, it's when you're having a discussion about the ethics of euthanasia at one of the campus ministries, it's the rush of fraternity and sorority rush."
That adventure begins, but doesn't end, in the classroom.
Hemenway will implement a new administrative structure July 1. It's designed to make university officials more accountable.
It's important for today's college students to realize their education doesn't stop at commencement, he said. There's no reason to put limits on a person's potential as an educated human being, he added.
"Any organizational structure in place 20 years tends to get communication channels clogged, tends to barnacles attached to it," he said.
Streamlining the administration should make KU more responsive to student needs, he said.
Hemenway has encouraged university faculty to seek opportunities to improve the KU learning experience. That might be accomplished by greater integration of computers in the classroom.
It all boils down to making certain KU offers a first-rate undergraduate education, he said.
"I believe we must have a student-centered university," Hemenway said.
He said KU students shouldn't permit themselves to be harassed or abused in any way.
"If anyone tells you that you
must be abused or degraded,
hazed or harassed so that you can
be a member of a group — Greek
or non-Greek — you let us know."
In the same vein, students shouldn't engage in dangerous behavior.
"Don't abuse yourself, either," he said. "You're not safe when you're sloppy drunk. You're not safe when you hive."
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The chancellor urged students to resist efforts by anyone to restrain them intellectually.
"If Einstein had been intellectually careful, he would have spent his life in a Swiss patent office." Hemenway said.
The chancellor told students not to fail because they "lacked courage or self-confidence or integrity."
"And above all, have fun these next four years."
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STUDENT LIFE
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V
Collegians go crazy over coffee
- Coffee is essential for those all night study sessions, students say.
BY STACI MILLER
BY STACI MILLER
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
THE JAVA BREAK
PRESSO
RICHARD GWTN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Kansas University students and Lawrence residents Katie Angermeir, left, and Charity Curti sit back and enjoy an afternoon cup of coffee at the Java Break, 17 E. Seventh. The coffee shop is one of several in Lawrence that are gaining popularity among students.
To Andrea Gisi, coffee is just as important for college as paper and books. She finds studying much easier if she has a cup of coffee on her desk.
Gisi is not alone. Many students on college campuses have joined the coffee-drinking population.
"I drink it for the caffeine to keep me awake to study," the Topeka sophomore said. "It also makes a good study break."
Coffee shops have recently become very popular, and more have popped up in Lawrence. Coffee is no longer simply a breakfast drink. Some of the coffee shops in Lawrence have steady streams of customers from morning until night.
"The only time it is slow is from 3 to 7 a.m." Murphy said.
Molly Murphy, who works at The Java Break, 17 E. Seventh, said that the shop — open 24 hours a day — is busy most of the time.
Murphy said that many college students study at the tables in the coffee shop and bookstore, which usually turns into a study room.
Because of the growing number of coffee shops in Lawrence competition is great.
The Terra Nova Bookstore and Cafe, 920 Mass., has a coffee shop in the store and offers tables for studying and reading newspapers. Customers are free to browse while drinking their coffee.
"We compete as best as we can with the other stores in Lawrence," said Brad Hebel, part owner.
Some students who don't even like the taste of coffee go to the coffee shops. To them it is a place to socialize.
"Drinking coffee is a social
thing," said Lisa Van Campen, Turon sophomore. "You have to learn to like it to survive in the social world, because someone is always asking if you would like some coffee."
One of Van Campen's favorite coffee shops in Lawrence is La Prima Tazza, 638 Mass.
"I don't like coffee because it is bitter, but I like cappuccino because it is sweet and creamy. It also a necessity for finals."
Carrie Henderson, Shawnee sophomore, makes regular trips to Kwik Shop for her cappuccino.
Coffee comes in a variety of flavors. The menus in coffee shops are lengthy to give customers a good selection.
"Our most popular coffee right now is the cafe miel and the double cappuccino," said Hebel of Terra Nova.
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• Hair
• Nails
• Products
COME IN FOR A NEW LOOK!
910 Kentucky • 749-4499
THE MERC!
Cooperatively owned,
serving Lawrence
for over 20 years.
Lawrence’s Friendly, Full-Service Natural Foods Grocery
5% Student Discount Everyday!
Enjoy our Deli
• freshly squeezed juices and smoothies
• daily specials
• fabulous baked goods
• salad bar
• for here or to-go
Offering a large selection of locally
and organically grown produce
Extensive bulk department
Samplings, classes, community events
— pick up a copy of our free Newsletter at the store—
Watkins Health Center employees recommend dealing with problems head-on. Reward or console yourself with something besides food.
"I love to go to the bars and drink with my friends," Carrie Shaw, Wichita freshman. "We're always hungry afterwards, so we might swing by Pyramid (Pizza) or Taco Bell and get something to eat."
FULL SERVICE SALON
• Hair
• Nails
• Products
COME IN FOR A NEW LOOK!
910 Kentucky • 749-4499
enhances your appetite in moderate amounts. Freshmen may eat a regular dinner, go to a bar and drink, and then order a pizza when they get home. In one night, they have consumed the calories from two meals and the beers they drank.
But there is something freshmen can do to avoid weight gain — stay active. Start a workout program and increase exercise. Activities such as intramural sports, aerobics, jogging or walking can increase health and decrease weight.
THE MERC! Cooperatively owned, serving Lawrence for over 20 years.
Many students handle the stress they feel from college in different ways. Some students underdress, yet many overeat to
A stressful environment may induce binge eating. Students may snack consistently while studying, or indulge in late-night munching. Late-night snacking is the worst for you. High caloric food should be avoided at night. Instead nutritionists suggest fruit, pretzels or low-fat yogurt.
Students should always eat three meals a day. Skipping meals may seem beneficial, but it lowers the body's metabolism, and binging may occur.
Many students handle the stress they feel from college in different ways. Some students undereat, yet many overeat to soothe their emotions.
COMMUNITY
MERCANTILE
you cut your consumption of alcohol in balf."
At the corner of 9th & Mississippi in the big yellow building
LA LA LA
Cash in on the Savings...
Let Jayhawk Pawn be your Shopping Headquarters
• Car Stereos • Tools • Bicycles • Microwaves
• Musical Instruments • Televisions • VCR'S • Vacuums
• Dorm Refrigerators • Scanners • Shotguns • Typewriters
• Cameras • Home Stereos • Rifles • Compact Discs • Gun Cases
• Camcorders • Pistols • CB's • Gun Cleaning Supplies
• Leather Jackets • Guitars • New & Previously Owned Jewelry
• Watches And Much More!
Purchase New & Used Items!
Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry
LAWRENCE'S MOST LIBERAL LOAN CO.
Buy, Sell, & Trade • 1804 W. 6th
749-1919
Hours: 9-6 M-F 9-5 Sat
to the largest Thrift Store in this area!
Welcome
We Have;
- A full line of clothing
- Household items
- Appliances
- Furniture
is area!
- Bedding
- Odds & Ends
- Collectibles
MANY NEW ITEMS DAILY!
Salvation Army Thrift Store
1818 Mass.
Open 9-6, Mon.-Fri.; 9-5, Sat.
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST 1996 9D
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Lawrence Area R
CLINTON PARKWAY ASSEMBLY OF GOD 3200 Clinton Parkway·843-7189
Rev. Ronald D. Mickly, Pastor. Sunday: 9:00 a.m. Sunday School Classes begin with classes for all ages. 10:00 a.m.Worship Service.6:30 p.m. Evening service. Mid-week service is on Wednesday nights. We have Royal Ranger Missionette's, and Youth. All midweek services begin at 7:00 p.m. You can call the church office for more information. Nursery service provided.
THE LAWRENCE FREE METHODIST CHURCH 3001 Lawrence Avenue, Lawrence, KS 66047 842-2343
Attention Collegians: Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship meets weekly for KU Students. For more information, please call Steve Swanson, 542-1101 or the church office. Everyone is welcome. We are a fellowship of caring believers. Come and grow with us.
Marselle Moore, Senior Pastor. Sunday Worship 8:30 a.m.,10:45 am and 6:30 p.m.; Bible training classes at 9:30 a.m.for all ages, including a vital and active college age class.Wednesday evening ministries include Christian Life Club for grades preschool-grade 6, Youth group meetings for Junior and Senior High,and adult Choir rehearsal, all at 6:45 p.m.Nursery care available for all worship services and on Wednesday evenings. Adult small group Bible studies meet on several nights of the week in the church and in people's homes. Our mission: To equip every believer as a servant, who knows Christ, radiates His image, and makes Him known. Lawrence Chinese worship each Sunday at 4:00 p.m.; Bible study Fridays Evangelical Church at 7:30 p.m.; choir rehearsal Fridays at 9:30 p.m.; prayer meetings Tuesdays, at 7:30p.m.
FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1942 Massachusetts St. • 843-3940
Senior Pastor - Donald D. Dunn, Youth Pastor - Doug Smith, Music Director Randy Bond. Sunday Worship Opportunities: Sunday School-9:45 a.m.; Worship Celebration-8:30 and 10:50 a.m.; Children's Worship-10:50 a.m.; Evening of Hope - 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday Oasis:Dinner Fellowship-6:00 p.m., Kidz Klub (1 and 2)-7:00 p.m., Stepping Out for Teens - 7:00 p.m., Adult Bible Studies-7:00 p.m., Discipleship classes-7:00 p.m.
ST. MARGARET'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH P.O.Box 1207-66044·Office & Chapel:4343 W. 6th 865-5777·Fax 865-5777
The Reverend Mark R. Clevenger- Vicar. Beginning in September, our Sunday services will be: 8:00 a.m.- Traditional Mass; 9:00 a.m. - Seeker Service (Nursery provided); 10:30 a.m. Family Worship (Nursery provided) Adult Christian Study - 9:00 a.m. Children's Christian Education - 10:30 a.m. All Sunday services held at Quail Run School - 1130 Inverness Drive. St. Margaret's Chapel Services: Holy Eucharist - Wednesday at 7:30 a.m.; Morning Prayer at 7:30 a.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Evening
Prayer - Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at 5:15 p.m.; Compline and Communion - Saturday at 5:15 p.m. Our chapel is open daily for prayer and meditation.
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HERITAGE BAPTIST CHURCH 1604 E. 1100 Road, (Corner of 6th & 1100 Road) Lawrence, KS 66049 • 749-7286
Pastor Scott Hanks. Sunday School at 9:30 a.m.; Morning Service at 10:30 a.m; Sunday Evening Service at 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday Evening Service at 7:00 p.m.
LAWRENCE BIBLE CHAPEL
505 Monterey Way • 841-2607
Sunday: Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.; Family Bible Hour - 11:00 a.m.; Prayer - 6:00 p.m.; Lord's Supper - 6:30 p.m. Every Wednesday: Potluck Supper - 6:00 p.m. Various small group Bible studies and other activities meet during the week. Please call John Scollon at 841-5271 for more information.
BAHA'I COMMUNITY OF LAWRENCE P.O. Box 3518 • Lawrence, KS 66044
Dedication to achieving world harmony through: racial unity, equality of women and men, oneness of religions, universal education and harmony of religion and science. All are welcome to discussions on social issues, study of Baha'i writings and various other activities. Join us in creating an environment for universal peace.
Activities: KU Baha'i Club, Mondays - Student Union, 865-3923; Wednesday firesides, 7-9 p.m., 865-5472; Saturday night meetings, 842- 2761; general information, 843-2703.
LAWRENCE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER 917 Highland Drive·841-7636
Friday night services - 7:45 p.m. Saturday Morning services to be announced. Sunday Religious School.
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-World August, 1996 9D
CHRIST COVENANT CHURCH 2312 Harvard Road Lawrence, KS 66049 842-5797 or 832-2896
946 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS • 843-4188
Rev. D. Mark England.WORSHIP: 9:45a.m.,6:30p.m.
EDUCATION CLASSES 11:30 a.m.An Evangelical church in the historic Reformed and Presbyterian tradition.
HEARTLAND COMMUNITY CHURCH A CONTEMPORARY CHURCH 1031 New Hampshire • 832-1845
Commanding Officers Majors Daniel & Charlene Uptegrove Sunday Services: Breakfast with the Major - 9:00 a.m.; Sunday School 10:00 a.m.; Worship Service - 11:00 a.m.; Evening Activity-5:00p.m. Tuesday: Ladies Home League - 5:00 p.m.; Bible Study - 6:30 p.m.
THE SALVATION ARMY
Senior Pastor: Paul Gray. Sunday 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. - 12:00. Sunday Jr. & Sr. High Programs run concurrently with the Church service.
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
1011 Vermont Office at 1027 Vermont • 843-6166
The Rev. Thomas Momberg - Rector. Sundays: Eucharist at 8:00 and 10:30 am; Christian Education - 9:15 am for all ages. Wednesdays at Trinity: 6 pm service in Parish Hall (1011 Vermont) followed by supper. Thursdays: Holy Eucharist - 6:00 pm in Trinity Chapel (1027 Vermont).
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
1245 New Hampshire Street (facing South Park) • 843-4150 Pastor Dr. Charles E. Gilmore & Pastor Jeff Martin. Sunday at 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. andthe third Saturday of the month at 5:00 p.m. Holy Communion is served 1st, 3rd, and 5th Sundays of the month at the Saturday services.
1245 New Hampshire Street (facing South Park) • 843-4150
Sunday School for all ages is held at 9:45 am every Sunday. Fellowship Time is 9:30 a.m. on the 2nd and 4th Sundays. Child care from 8:30 - noon on Sundays. The church is handicap accessible.
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Religious Directory
PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH 925 Vermont Street Lawrence,KS 66044 843-3220/FAX 843-4613
ry
PISCINA DE SAN JOSÉ DEL RIO
Rev. Peter A. Luckey and Christopher Grundy. Welcome KU Students! Need some spiritual nourishment to get you through another week? Come Worship in our historic sanctuary! Worship 10:00 a.m.
IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH AND UNIVERSITY STUDENT CENTER Childhood Center: Day Care/Preschool 15th and Iowa •843-0620
Ken Kueker, Campus Pastor, Don Miller, Parish Pastor. Ministering to Campus and Community. Sunday Worship - 8:30 a.m. Traditional Liturgical Service 11:00 a.m., Contemporary Service, both with Holy Communion 6:30 p.m. Informal Service. Sunday School & Bible Classes - 9:45 a.m.; Child Care is available from 8:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.; Lutheran Student Fellowship Free Suppers: Sunday and Thursdays, 5:30 p.m.; Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center: Day Care/Preschool 842-8131. Handicapped accessible.
LAWRENCE CHRISTIAN CENTER
1846 Vermont, P.O. Box 1997 $\cdot$ 842-4926
Pastor Dan & Betsy Nicholson Sunday: 10:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service: 7:00 p.m. A family church, a charismatic Bible training center, a world outreach. Student Bible study group available.
ST. LAWRENCE CATHOLIC CAMPUS CENTER 1631 Crescent Road, Lawrence KS • 843-0357
Corner of 15th and Engel Road near the Daisy Hill Residence Halls Ministers: Fr. Vince Krische - Director, Fr. Ray May - welcome you to your Catholic Church at KU. An extensive student center is available for all of your academic, social and spiritual needs. Daily Mass: M-F at 4:30 p.m. in the St. Lawrence Chapel; M, W, F, 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel on Campus; Weekend Mass: Saturday 4:45 p.m.; Sunday 9:00 & 11:00 a.m., 5:00 & 10 p.m. Please call our Outreach Staff, Jenny Bagby or Mithecel Zimmerman for more information or just stop by for a tour of your facilities.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH At the corner of 19th and Naismith, Lawrence KS
First Southern is a church committed to Christ, open to meeting the needs of people, but not locked in to shaping people with a cookie cutter mold. We offer two distinctly different services: the morning worship is traditional in nature and the evening service is contemporary. We try to de-emphasize the fashion show, there is no stuffy dress code—no suit, no tie, no problem. The services feature good music & drama, sincere prayer & reflection, and practical messages, which apply Biblical truths to today's life issues. Our college and career class offers a wide range of activities for having fun and building relationships. College & Career Class 9:15 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.; Celebration Worship 6:30 p.m.
GRACE EVANGELICAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
3312 Calvin Drive (Kasold North at Peterson Road) • 843-2005 Reverend William D. Vogler. SUNDAY SCHOOL: 9:00a.m. SUNDAY WORSHIP: 10:15a.m. Children's Ministry Director: Katy Grether; Youth Ministry Director: Rick Momford. Nursery at all services, children's church during worship, large college ministry, international students welcome, small groups.
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION 1629 West 19th Street
(across the street from the soccer fields on 19th Street) We invite all students who are interested in a friendly informal and active Christian student ministry to the Baptist Student Union (BSU).
(across the street from the soccer fields on 19th Street)
Music, drama, bible studies, small groups, conferences and service projects are available through the BSU. Develop your faith and lasting friendships.We are in easy walking distance from the residence halls
and Jayhawk Towers. Call if you need a ride.
THURSDAYS-6:30 p.m. First meeting August 22, Dinner at 5:30 p.m.
Rick Clock - Campus minister, 841-3148.
E-mail - rebsu@falcon.cc.ukans.edu
Web Site - http://falcon.cc.ukans.edu/~bsu/
THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH FAMILY IN LAWRENCE INVITES YOU TO JOIN US IN FAITH AND FELLOWSHIP.
CENTENARY CHURCH
4th & Elm • 843-1756
Kristen Stoneking, Pastor. Sunday Worship at 10:50 a.m.A place in North Lawrence of commitment and community.
15th & Massachusetts • 843-7066
CENTRAL CHURCH
Noel Stephens, Pastor. Sunday Worship at 10:45 a.m.Fellowship Noon Dinners, 3rd Sunday, Students welcome!
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1998 9D
FIRST CHURCH
10th & Vermont • 841-7500
Virgil Brady, Pastor. Sunday Worship at 8:30, 9:45 & 11:00 a.m. Try our mid-morning informal & contemporary 45 minute service!
LAWRENCE INDIAN CHURCH
950 E. 21st * 841-2448
Brad Drowning Bear, Pastor. Sunday Worship at 11:00 am. Bible Study, Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m. at the Church.
UNITED METHODIST CAMPUS MINISTRY AT KU 946 Vermont • 841-8661 Jay Henderson. Campus Minister
Serving the KU community with and through the United Methodist Churches in Lawrence. Wesley Fellowship (Student Gathering) Wednesdays 7:00 p.m.- Daisy Hill Room at Burge Union.
10D SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996
STUDENT LIFE
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Parking challenges mount as hunting season begins
- It doesn't take long for KU students to learn that parking near campus can be a challenge.
❌
BY DANA LAUVETZ
BY DANA LAUVETZ
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
PERMIT IT
On the third day of school,
Nathan Bieck watched his brand-new Saturn get towed down Jayhawk Bouleyard.
Bueck, Lincoln, Neb., junior, had parked illegally in an apartment complex next to campus.
Here's how to get a parking permit at Kansas University: Go to the Parking Department, 1501 Irving Hill Rd. Bring your student identification and your license plate number.
"I drove around for over 50 minutes trying to find a place I could squeeze into," he said. "There was no way I could miss my first chemistry test, so I was forced to surrender my words and ill willfully."
campus permits are $50 for residence hall parking and $53 for yellow zone permits.
Bring cash, check, Visa or Mastercard
Kristin Pedroja, Wichita senior, said lyrics from the alternative rock band Phish summed up her parking experience.
"Bummed is what you are when you go out to your car and it's been towed," she said.
Pedroja, like many KU students, has strolled out from class to find her automobile nowhere in sight. It doesn't take long for students to learn that parkin
"Little pink and yellow envelopes began to fill the back seat of my car..."
dents to learn that parking near campus can be a challenge.
The campus is divided into three color-coded paring zones.
The red and blue zones are designated for faculty and staff. The yellow zone is for students who buy
— Mike Cain,
Omaha,
Neb., junior
parking permits and staff members who are not eligible for other parking.
Students say it's helpful to locate the buildings most of your classes are in and the most convenient parking lot. Make sure you leave enough time to get to campus, find a parking spot and walk to class. Be late to English or Math 101 is no picnic, and neither are parking tickets.
Little pink and yellow envelopes began to fill the back seat of my car because I was always running late," said Mike Cain, Omaha, Neb., junior.
Parking violations can add up quickly. Vehicles with three or more unpaid parking violations are subject to be towed at the owner's expense.
But help — or at least a few more spaces — may be on the way.
KU's Parking Board is examining several options to improve parking on campus, including the use of a park-and-ride system and a new garage north of the Kansas Union.
The park-and-ride system would allow students to park on West Campus Road and ride buses to the main campus. Other plans call for the construction of a new 1,000-space parking garage north of the Kansas Union.
Donald Kearns, KU's parking director, said the board is expected to reach a decision this summer.
Planning for rush requires months
- Rush gives freshmen women an opportunity to check out sorority life at Kansas University.
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
THE FAMILY THAT WOULD BE A HISTORY
Kansas University's academic year starts in August, but that didn't keep Lynn LoPresti from preparing her application for a sorority in June.
"Going through rush is very exciting," said LoPresti, a Prospect Heights, ill., junior. "You meet a lot of new people and make a lot of new friends."
Women at the Delta Delta Delta sorority house,1630 Oxford,one of 16 sororities at KU,study for finals in the living room of their house. Women go through rush to find out about the different sororities and apply for the sorority of their choice.
MIKE YODER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Like LoPresti, many women come to KU in the fall to participate in rush in their bid to become a sorority member. And although rush begins in August, preparation for becoming a sorority member for the fall term starts as early as June or July. Sorority prospects must attend a new student orientation session in June or July to be eligible to participate in rush.
Also, if the confirmation shows that any part of the registration form is incomplete, that information needs to be sent immediately to the organization.
Once the formalities are taken care of, the fun and exciting part begins.
Women interested in joining a sorority must fill out a rush registration form, pay a fee and send an official transcript to the KU Panhellenic Assn. Once the registration form is sent in, Panhellenic should confirm the registration within two weeks. A woman who doesn't receive a confirmation should contact the office at (913) 864-4643.
Rush starts Aug. 17. During this time, women visit the houses they are interested in joining and decide whether to join a sorority or not join at all.
Forty-five Rho Chi's will help with rush. Each Rho Chi is a member of a sorority but can't reveal which one until rush is over. The Rho Chi's job is to help rushees make a decision about which sorority to choose.
Women are assigned a sorority member called a Rho Chi, or rush counselor. A Rho Chi is a woman who has been chosen by her sorority and the rush staff because of her positive attitude and ability to work with people.
Each rushee will visit every chapter with groups of about 20rushees. After that, she will meet with each woman in her group daily before and after that day's parties to answer questions and address concerns. She will also provide the next day's schedule of parties.
On the first day of rush, women are assigned to groups. They meet their Rho Chis for an orientation meeting, where any questions about rush are
Open house parties begin on Day 2. Women meet sorority members of different houses in which they are interested. Women go to every house and meet many different people.
During the following two days, women are invited to attend First Invitational Parties. Women may choose to attend no more than 10 chapter parties in a two-day period. Rushees are invited to talk with the members individually. They also will be deciding whether to choose the women.
On the last day of rush, all the rushees meet on the lawn of Allen Fieldhouse to receive bids and then proceed to their new sorority. Most chapters have activities planned for the day.
answered. Orientation also serves as an opportunity for the women to get acquainted with each other.
On days five and six of rush, second invitational parties begin. Women may visit up to five chapter parties the first day and no more than three the second day.
- Rush is a time for women to decide what sorority is best for them. While going through rush, keep in mind which sororities are interesting.
Some tips if your contemplating going through rush:
LoPresti says, "It's important to keep an open mind and not to go into one particular house as a favorite." The sorority that you choose may not be interested in you, and you could end up with no sorority at all. So
- Remember that the sorority members are choosing you, too so just be yourself and have a good time. Many of the members are just as excited and nervous to meet you.
- "Don't just make a decision on a house after walking out the door. Take notes on the pros and cons of each house and make your decision wisely after visiting each house," offers Julianne Wilson, a graduate student from Carmel, Ind.
- choose several sororities, because more than one sorority can meet your needs.
- The first couple of days you will want to wear comfortable clothes and shoes. As the week progresses, your attire will get progressively nicer. Preference night is when you will want to look your best. This is when you will be invited to three houses at maximum and will be making your final decision on choosing a sorority.
- Be on time. Rush takes time, and sorority members have a lot of other girls to meet besides you. If you're late, you could be left out.
- Each sorority has its good and bad parts.
"Don't go by what other people say," LoPresti said. "You have to make your own educated decision."
For more information about joining a sorority, call (913) 864-4643. Mail the rush registration form to Rush, KU Panhellenic Assn., 422 Kansas Union, Kansas University, Lawrence 60045.
10F No. 51
Restricted Parking
7AM To 5PM M-F
Red Permit Required
A sign in a parking lot north of the Spencer Museum of Art wams of parking restrictions amid a sea of cars.
BEN BIGLER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
GCO CARPET OUTLET ENDORSED BY K.U. RESIDENCE HALL ASSOC. DORM RUGS FREE DELIVERY TO CAMPUS
FREE DELIVERY TO CAMPUS ★AUGUST ONLY★
ROOM SIZE CARPETS STARTING AT $48 EACH.
GCO CARPET OUTLET
We're in LAWRENCE
3000 Iowa Street
One Block North of K-Mart
Call 841-3838
OR TOLL-FREE 800-608-3838
.
LAWRENCE AVE 27TH
ONA GCO
314 STREET
K-Mart
Shop Monday-Thursday 9am-8pm, Friday & Saturday 9am-6pm, Sunday 1-5pm
U.S. MARINE CORPS
YOUR PLANE IS WAITING
Fueled, armed, and ready to go from 0 to 200 in 3 seconds. This cockpit could be your own soon after graduating from KU. You don't need a specific major or a spectacular GPA. What do you need?
The basic physical qualifications and the training, education, and confidence gained through successful completion of the NROTC program at KU. If you are a freshman or sophomore, you're eligible and there is no military obligation in the first year. You can also apply for a scholarship that could pay for all of your tuition, books, and provide an additional $150 per month. Upon graduation and completion of the ROTC program, you'll have the training and education you need to assume the responsibility of a Navy or Marine Corps officer. Then it could be off to flight school, or maybe you're more interested in becoming an officer in a nuclear submarine, new Aegis destroyer or cruiser, or becoming a Navy Seal.
If you want to be in the cockpit, and if you think you have the right stuff, call Lieutenant Jim Langham at The University of Kansas Naval ROTC Unit, 864-3161. Visit our website at http://raven.cc.ukans.edu/~kunrotc/welcome.html.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS NAVAL ROTC
864-3161
1-800-JHK-NAVY
NAVY/MARINE CORPS... JOIN THE TEAM
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
STUDENT LIFE
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 11D
Residence halls offer fit for most students
Residence halls help shape students socially and academically
BY KERRY HILLARD
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Flipping through the Kansas University student housing guide, freshman Dora Naughton was attracted to the description of Hashinger Residence Hall as a center for the creative arts. When Naughton visited Hashinger Hall on a university tour, she felt as though she had found
Naughton is one of many students searching for their niche in the residence halls. Finding the right residence hall is an issue many new KU students seek to resolve.
"I really fell in love with this dorm," said Naughton, of Columbia, Mo. "I thought, 'This is where I'm going to live.' People were really friendly, and I was impressed."
"Students aren't looking at the weight room or the computer
lab; they're looking for, 'Where do I fit?' said Director of Student Housing Kenneth Stoner. "They want to live where they can say. That's like me. I have a place.' That's what it's all about."
That special something
Each residence hall features programs and facilities designed to help students find their niche.
Known as a center for the creative arts, Hashinger Hall features a small theater, dance studio, darkroom, various practice rooms and other music and art facilities. Hashinger Hall is open to students of all majors.
"Students aren't looking at the weight room or the computer lab; they're looking for, 'Where do I fit?'?"
— Kenneth Stoner, director of Student Housing
According to "Living at KU," the department of Student Housing residence hall guide, McColum Hall is the largest and most diverse residence hall. McColum offers an international cultural festival and features special study rooms. Residents can also access the Internet directly from their rooms without pre-empting the telephone line.
Next to McColllum Hall on Daisy Hill is Ellsworth Hall. As stated in "Living at KU." Ellsworth is known for residents who get involved. Large lobbies and study rooms encourage resident interaction. A Macintosh computer lab, with direct access to the World Wide Web, and free e-mail encourage residents to use technology.
All-female Lewis Hall and allmale Templin Hall share many activities. The two residence halls annually sponsor BLT (Both Lewis and Templin) events like "My-Tie" dance and the Templin casino party. According to "Living at KU," Both Lewis and Templin tend to have culturally and internationally diverse populations.
Nestled in the heart of sports territory on Naismith Drive, Oliver Hall attracts the athletically inclined. Residents of Oliver Hall enjoy a strong sense of belonging that often draws them back even after graduation, KU brochures say. Also, residents' meals are served at a dining center within the hall.
All-female Gertrude Sellars Pearson (GSP) and Corbin are considered a single residential unit. Catering to women, the halls sponsor Women's Week, aerobics
groups, self-defense seminars and a more specific guest policy.
Making connections
Not only do residence halls create a niche through facilities and programs, but also through special communities within the halls. The communities help define small groups of residents that create a feeling of belonging. Programs range from the Spanish floor in McCollum Hall to "quiet" floors in Lewis and Templin.
The Ellsworth 3E program, "Experience Excellence in Ellsworth," convinced John Schneiderwind, an Omaha, Neb., freshman, that Ellsworth was the residence hall for him.
"I'm from out of state and I thought the 3E program was great, 'Schneiderwind said. "I feel like I've made better friends than I would have on a regular floor."
Stoner said that meeting people and making friends are the main attractions to residence hall living.
"I think everyone should stay in a dorm for a semester or two," said Tim Hansen, Lenexa freshman and Ellsworth Hall resident. "You meet so many people. I want to stay here next year."
Part of choosing a residence hall is choosing one that is allmale, all-female or mixed. In McCollum, Ellsworth and Hasinger halls, women occupy one wing of a floor and men the other. Oliver Hall separates men and women by floors.
Adam King, a Manhattan freshman who lives in McCollum Hall, said that he has met a wider variety of people by living in a mixed residence hall.
"Coed dorms are right on," King said. "Every male needs interaction with females. I've met quite a few girls."
Jean Katt, an Alma freshman who lives in the all-female Lewis Hall, said that her residence hall was cleaner and quieter without male residents.
"I don't know if I really miss meeting guys," Katt said. "You just have to choose between quiet and cleanliness or guys."
ages, according to "Living at KU." Housing director Stoner said it is necessary for students to live in a residence hall the first year of college to promote better academic habits.
"If you don't live in a residence hall your first year, you could isolate yourself, and it's easier to cut class than go," Stoner said. "Then all of a sudden, you've missed your freshman year."
Learning to share
Residence hall freshmen not only must deal with academic stress, but with the stress of adjusting to a new roommate. Stoner said that the American family unit has changed since the 1950s and 1960s. Today, many families have children with their own bedrooms and bathrooms.
Stoner said the best way to adjust to sharing a room is to have confidence in yourself and to just be friendly. However, as the family has changed, so have
the residence halls, More students have begun requesting single rooms.
"It's a necessity to have a single room," said Catherine Hodges, Mulvane freshman and Lewis Hall resident. "You have more space, you can put things where you want and you can decorate how you want."
Eating cafeteria food was another necessity for hall residents, Tim Davidson, an Emporia junior and Hashinger Hall resident, liked eating the variety of foods at Ekdahl Dining Commons, better known as Mrs. E's.
Although a balanced meal is essential to residence hall survival, it is not the most important thing.
"I love it," Davidson said. "Wow! I don't have to cook and clean, and I can get a balanced meal."
"Fit is the most important thing," Stoner said. "Once you find your fit, you can go anywhere."
WHERE TO LIVE
McCollum Hall, 1800 Engel Rd., 950 residents, male or female by wing; Special Communities: Honors Program (HRP), Hispanic Cultural Interest Floor and Graduate Floor
Hashinger Hall, 1632 Engel Rd., 320 residents, male or female by wing; Center for the Creative Arts
Ellsworth Hall. 1734 Engel Rd., 650 residents, male or female by wing; Special Communities: 3E (Experience Excellence in Ellsworth).
Lewis Hall, 1530 Engel Rd., 420 residents; women; Special Communities: graduate or quiet floors
Templin Hall, 1515 Engel Rd., 420 residents, men; Special Communities: graduate or quiet floors
Oliver Hall, 1815 Naismith Dr., 650 residents, male or female by floor
Gertrude Sellards Pearson (GSP), 500 W. 11th, 430 residents, women
Corbin Hall, 420 W. 11th, 320 residents, women.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 12D
BIG 12 CONFERENCE XII THE BIGGER THE BETTER
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Take 8 schools from a highly competitive midwestern conference, add 4 schools rich with tradition and southern pride and you are looking at the new Big 12 Conference. The Big 12 Conference officially began on July 1, 1996. There is sure to be much success for the Big 12 Conference. Come watch KU's first Big 12 home football game on October 12 against the Texas Tech Red Raiders at 1 pm at Memorial Stadium!!!!
QJ
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LAWRENCE IOURNAL-WORLD
STUDENT LIFE
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1996 13D
Organizations, students benefit from relationship
- Several campus and community organizations help Kansas University students help others.
BY ANN MARCHAND SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL-WORLD
Lorraine Claassen grew up in a family where community service was heavily emphasized. The daughter of agricultural missionaries, Claassen now helps students find their niche in the volunteer community.
The Hestston senior is co-director of the Center for Community Outreach, an organization that promotes student involvement throughout the Lawrence community. Although she prefers working with low-income groups, Claassen supports any endeavors in which students "help others help themselves."
Many organizations in Lawrence aim to place students in environments where they can make a difference. Several organizations request only a few hours or an afternoon per week.
The main resource for students is the Center for Community Outreach, which is funded by Student Senate. The center, which is in the Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union, is an umbrella organization out of which several community service programs are run.
The center, funded in part by student fees, sponsors several events throughout the school year. One is the "Into the Streets" information session, a weeklong event that presents many different volunteer opportunities to students. Claassen says that on a campus the size of KU's, "the question is whether you can find them!"
Life lessons
The center also offers two organizations that place students
directly in touch with the community around them: Students Tutoring for Literacy and Teach For America.
Students Tutoring for Literacy is a campus-based organization that sends students to various sites in Lawrence, said Emily Heath, an Oskaloosa sophomore and president of the organization. About 80 tutors are spread among 13 sites around the city to help people of all ages become functionally literate. The organization works with elementary school children, international students and low-income families.
Teach For America is an organization that places students ir classrooms where a teacher requests an extra hand. Jennifer Kimball, a Ulysses sophomore and organization president, said volunteers help teachers in overcrowded classrooms. Teach For America is a
national organization with chapters on several college campuses throughout the country.
Kimball described the organization as "a mutually rewarding experience" because children gain extra attention, teachers have their burdens reduced and students gain the satisfaction of helping others.
Kimball's favorite aspect about helping schoolchildren is seeing "cute little kids smiling when they catch on to something."
Another program that will be incorporated into the Center for Community Outreach in the 1996-97 school year is the Jubilee Cafe. It runs from 7 a.m.to 9 a.m. every Tuesday morning.
Amy Turnbull, Lawrence junior and a frequent jubilee Cafe volunteer, describes it as "a student-initiated and student-run restaurant-style, free-meal program for homeless and low-income people."
Watkins addition makes center country's largest
Volunteer work sometimes benefits the volunteer the most.
Got a cold? Think you're coming down with something? Break a finger in a basketball game?
Then you might want to head over to Watkins Student Health Center, the student-funded health care facility on Kansas University's campus.
The center accepts the students' medical insurance. And students can purchase an optional health insurance policy through the Student Senate, he said.
- Watkins Student Health Center offers students a chance to visit a physician on campus.
About 81 percent of KU's students use the center at least once a year, said James Strobl, director of health care services.
"I think the students know that we're accessible right here on campus and they can come here between classes," he said. "We're inexpensive compared to most places, in terms of our pharmacy because we buy on the state contract."
The center, which is getting a new addition this summer, was first started by students in 1906, Strobl said.
Students are not charged for routine visits, but they are charged for minor surgery, such as stitches, X-rays or for medication, he said.
From 1912 to 1917, Dr. James Nalsmith, the father of the game of basketball, was the university physician at the health center, Strobl said.
Jubilee Cafe feeds breakfast to about 40 to 50 people each week in a community where soup kitchens don't start serving until noon.
Students can get X-rays, prescriptions, laboratory tests, physical therapy and educational and counseling services at the center, he said. The center employs 10 physicians and 11 nurses.
The center, just east of KU's Robinson Center tennis courts, is open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekdays, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Saturdays and from 12:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sundays.
After 4:30 p.m. on weekdays, there is a an after-hours charge of $30.
in 1931, Elizabeth Watkins
BY DAVE TOPLIKAR
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
For students who don't have time during the week but would like to help others in different parts of the country, the Alternative Spring Break program offers a chance to help others in needy areas of the United States.
Hands across the water
provided the money to build the university's first hospital in the 20,000-square-foot building that is now Twente Hall.
The current health center building, constructed in 1970, has 62,000 square feet.
Claassen's group helped in the nation's largest homeless shelter in Washington, D.C., while Heath participated in a group that aided low-
Strobl said the addition will bring the total number of patient examination rooms from 17 to 41. The number of treatment rooms for specialized procedures will increase from three to nine, he said. Those are rooms where patients might need to lay down for treatment, such as receiving intravenous medication.
"That makes it the largest student health care center in the country." Strobl said. "Now in 1996, we're adding 20,000 square feet more. That was voted through by the KU students."
Students approved a $15 fee per student per year for 12 years to cover the costs of the $4.5 million addition and renovation, expected to be completed in August.
"We're not a hospital," he said. "We're an early care facility. A hospital or an emergency room is a legal connotation and requires very specialized medical equipment that we don't have because we don't have enough demand for the use of it."
"The big, big change that students will notice the most is the appointments," he said. "Currently we see about 25 percent of our students by appointment, and we hope to do minimum 80 percent. That should cut the wait for our students."
semester class based on their chosen spring break site. They learn to function as a group and develop a plan of action for their trip.
income minority families in El Paso, Tex.
One of the other major changes is the center will go from four wheelchair-accessible restrooms to 23 to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act, he said.
He said when he first became director in 1983, the center had 15,000 visits to doctors from students a year. That's grown to about 45,000 in 1995, he said.
"This is totally funded by students," Strobl said. "We don't get one dime of state money."
KU's Alternative Spring Break program is curriculum-based. Participants enroll in a spring
In Lawrence, the Roger Hill Volunteer Center is an off-campus clearinghouse for volunteer opportunities. Located at 211 East Eighth, the Roger Hill Center tailors one's interests to a volunteering.
"We've tripled the number of patients," he said. "I think we've gotten greater dependence on our physicians by our students."
Heath said more students could make a difference in their surroundings.
many of them probably would not have."
It works with any nonprofit organization in Douglas County and has handled as many as
"There are tons of various agencies in Lawrence ... many areas where there is no intervention from KU, but there could easily be," she said.
Lanaea Heine, formerly coordinator of the Roger Hill center, said she became involved in community service for selfish reasons.
"When I was a student at KU, I realized I needed community involvement to list on my résumé," she said.
1. 000 volunteers at one time.
That work paid off. Heine has been coordinator of the Roger Hill Center since its establishment in April 1990.
Heine is always grateful to gain
"There are agencies that wouldn't exist without student help," Heine said.
Volunteer work sometimes benefits the volunteer the most. Heath said volunteerism "broadens KU students' perspectives on life and forces them to see things
new volunteers. She estimates that a large percentage of the people who come through the Roger Hill Center are KU students, although the center is an important community resource as well.
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Kansas University running back June Henley KU point guard Jacque Vaughn and the rest of the
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU EDITION·SPORTS·AUGUST,1996·64 PAGES
PAGE 2E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
INSIDE THIS SECTION ...
Football
KU will attempt to match the success of last year's 10-2 season. Can the Jayhawks string together consecutive 10-win seasons? Pages 3-15.
Men's Basketball
As usual, the KU men's basketball team will enter the season with high expectations. This year's expectations are even higher than usual. Pages 16-20.
Women's Basketball
Fresh off the first trip to the Sweet 16 in program history, the Jayhawks hope to break new ground again this year. Pages 22-24.
JMBA
Baseball
KU scored runs at "an alarming pace" last season and could do the same again this season. The Jayhawks might even improve their pitching. Pages 26-28.
Softball
First-year coach Tracy Bunge hopes to instill a new air of confidence in her new charges. Page 37.
JAMES C. BROADWAY
Volleyball
Third-year coach Karen Schonewise is hoping a successful spring season will translate to success on the court this semester. Pages 38-39.
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
Men's Track
Pierre Lisk, a senior sprinter from Sierre Leone, Africa, competed at the Olympic Games and is back for his senior season. Pages 40-41
Women's Track
It won't be easy after losing Kristi Kloster and others to
graduation. Nonetheless coach Gary Schwartz is geared for KU's first Big 12 season. Pages 42-43
The jahawks lost their coach over the summer, but junior Enrique Abaroa returns. Page 44.
Men's Tennis
Kylie Hunt, the nation's No. 1-ranked player much of last season, is back for her senior year. Pages 45.
Women's Tennis
Men's Swimming
KU's men were runners-up in the final year of the Big Eight, and the
Big 12 brings a whole new challenge. Pages 46-47.
Women's Swimming
KU's women lost several key components but return a "very solid core." Pages 48-49.
75
Rowing
Numbers are up for the KU rowing team, even though coach Rob Catloth recruits relative novices to the sport. Page 50.
Soccer
KU went 6-12 in its inaugural season, and coach Lori Walker thinks the team is on the rise. Page 51.
Men's Golf
New faces abound for the Jayhawks, the nation's 15th-ranked team last season. Page 52.
Women's Golf
An experienced group returns to coach Jerry Waugh's team. Page 53.
Football Opponents
Oklahoma . Page 54
Texas Tech . Page 55
Colorado . Page 57
Nebraska . Page 58
Iowa State . Page 59
Kansas State . Page 60
Texas . Page 61
Missouri . Page 62
Nonconference . Page 63
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED • SPORTS
AUGUST,1996 PAGE 3E
Bulk of KU's 1995 team returns minus a few key parts
Can Kansas win 10 again?
9 61
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Senior Ben Rutz (8) will be KU's starting quarterback一if he heals from his spring knee surgery.
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Last fall, Glen Mason was more alchemist than coach, turning base materials that were unproven and inexperienced football players into a 10-win team.
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
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Now entering his ninth season as Kansas University's football coach, Mason is being asked a question unheard in these parts for 90 years: Can the Jayhawks win 10 again?
"I'll never open up an address to the team by saying we were 10-2 last year," Mason said. "But I will tell them, 'You got where you were because you came together as a队. If you want to get back there, you'd better do it again.' There are higher expectations on this year's group than last year's. But it's no different. We don't have enough talent to play well and win. Not with this schedule.
"Can we do it again? Only if we do the things we did last year to come together as a team. That's the only way."
Nobody saw the 10-2 season of a year ago coming, Mason included. No one thought KU would go to its second bowl game under Mason and dismantle UCLA, 51-30, as KU did in the Aloha Bowl. Not a soul predicted KU would beat Colorado at Colorado and Oklahoma at Oklahoma and tie for second with CU and Kansas State in the final season of the Big Eight. And nobody thought KU would end up in the top 10 in both national polls: No.9 in the Associated Press. No.10 in the USA Today/CNN coaches poll.
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and very surprising," Mason said. "Most people thought it would be a tough year last year because of the lack of experience. We got off to a less-thanbanner start, but we were able to win, and winning builds momentum. The end result was 10-2, a success by anybody's standards."
Can KU repeat the feat? Not without replacing several key components.
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PAGE 4E AUGUST,1996
1. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU's biggest question mark at QB
Continued from page 3
R
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Coach Glen Mason and the Jayhawks caught the nation's attention with a 40-24 victory over Colorado in Boulder last fall. At right are aides Dave Gillespie and Vic Adamle.
n't need replacing. The week before KU was to leave for Hawaii to meet UCLA, Mason was introduced as Georgia's new head coach.
On Christmas morning, after convincing KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway to take him back, Mason announced he was not Athens-bound after all and would return for his ninth season at Mt. Oread.
Returning along with him are 41 letter-winners and 14 starters, seven on each side.
But the Jayhawks also lost several player players: team MVP Mark Williams at quarterback, offensive linemen Chris Banks and Rod Jones, running back L.T. Levine, wideout Ashaundai Smith, outside linebacker Keith Rodgers and cornerback Dorian Erew.
The cupboard's not bare, but Mason has some holes to fill.
Offense
Ouarterback
KU's biggest void. Williams last fall set the school singleseason completion record (61.7 percent) and was instrumental in helping the Jayhawks' pro-style offense take flight.
He'll be replaced by Ben Rutz, Matt Johner, Zac Wegner or Akili Roberson. Rutz, the heir apparent, suffered a knee injury in spring drills but was expected to be healthy in time for the opener. Johner, a junior, is inexperience and Wegner, a red-shirt freshman who ran KU's No.1 offense in the spring scrimmage, hasn't played a down of Division One football. Roberson, a transfer from Los Angeles Southwest Junior College, hasn't, either.
"The bad news is, Ben got hurt. The good news is, all indications are that he'll be healthy," Mason said. "If not, Matt Johner gets first shot at it. Zac Wegner is a big, strong quarterback. He just needs some time and experience. On paper, it's Ben Rutz if he's healthy."
Wide receiver
Isaac Byrd, KU's top passcatcher last fall, is back on campus after spending his summer playing professional baseball in the St. Louis Cardinals' organization. Byrd (48 catches, 604 yards) is a given starter. The other wideout will probably be senior Andre Carter.
"That's one position we're really short on," Mason said.
See Receiver Byrd, page 6
KU FOOTBALL AT A GLANCE
.
Stadium: Memorial Stadium (50,250)
Surface: Artificial turf.
Colors: Crimson and Blue.
Head coach: Glen Mason (Ohio State,1971).
Assistant coaches: Vic Adamle (Eastern Michigan 1983) wide receivers.
Mitch Browning (Capital University 1979), tight ends-recruiting coordinator.
David Gibbs (Colorado 1990), defensive secondary.
Dave Gillespie (Nebraska 1977), defensive line.
Mike Hankwitz (Michigan 1970), defensive coordinator.
Reggie Mitchell (Central Michigan 1981), running backs.
Tim Phillips (Kent State 1988), outside linebackers.
Golden Pat Ruel (Miami 1973), assistant head coach, offensive coordinator, offensive line.
David Warner (Syracuse 1984), quarterbacks.
Graduate assistants: Robert Kirsey, Terry Mohajir, Jason Amborson, Matt Nolen.
Director of football operations:
Tim Allen.
Head strength coach: Fred Roll.
Assistant strength coach: Bill Maxwell.
Administrative assistant-equipment: jeff Himes.
Head football trainer: Lynn Bott.
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PAGE 6E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Receiver Byrd 'a class player' in thin position
Continued from page 4
"Byrd's a class player with good ability. Next to him, we need a senior, Andre Carter, to come through. He has good speed and good ability. After that, we're up for grabs."
Behind Byrd and Carter are
a couple of young hopefuls, namely Reggie Moorer, the ballyhooed prep who redshirted last fall, and John Gordon, a Florida prep who originally signed with Oklahoma, didn't make grades and enrolled at KU last spring. He'll be a true freshman this fall.
"I don't know if there are any leading candidates," Mason said. "Gordon broke his foot in the spring. Moorer has shown some ability. But the jury's still out on those guys."
Running back
A stable of running backs
has become a tradition under Mason, and '96 should be no exception.
Leading the way is senior June Henley, who rushed for 766 yards last fall and was KU's third-leading receiver with 312 yards.
"June Henley's a guy who, in
a lot of ways, is underrated," Mason said. "He had a tremendous freshman year, and his numbers haven't matched up since, but some of that is a case of, like last year, throwing the ball to him more. More than
See Henley, page 7
E. DAVIS
4
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Isaac Byrd, KU's leading pass-catcher last fall, will be back for his senior season.
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KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 7F
Henley stands out among many backs
Continued from page 6
anything, if you get the ball in his hands, he makes big plays, and we were committed to getting the ball in his hands last season. We'll move him around some, but we want to make sure he gets his carries this year."
Levine, KU's leading rusher last fall, is gone to the pros, but
Henley has a solid supporting cast in Mark Sanders (105 yards in just five games before a knee injury), Eric Vann (235 yards) and Julius Bruce, who impressed in the spring.
"Eric Vann's gotten better and better, and he's coming in in better shape," Mason said. "Mark Sanders was really having a good year until he got
injured. And Julius Bruce has a lot of talent. Last year it was L.T. and Henley and Vann and Sanders. One year later, it's Henley and Vann and Sanders and Bruce. We'll miss L.T., but we still think we've got a pretty good group."
Both of KU's top tight ends
Tight end
return in seniors Jim Moore and Hosea Friday.
"Jim Moore is a strapping guy," Mason said. "He has the potential to be a very dominant blocker. He came in here at 210 pounds, and now he's 255. Is he a blazing threat? No, but he's got good hands. He's a good player. And Friday is a wide receiver playing tight
end. He gives us an added dimension."
Offensive line
A thin pool of offensive line talent has become a KU trademark as much as wealth of running backs ... and '96 is no different.
See Defensive line, page 8
22
HARDING
June Henley was KU's second-leading rusher last fall. He'll return for his senior season.
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
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PAGE 8E AUGUST,1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
RT
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Junior linebacker Jason Thoren, right, was KU's leading tackler last fall.
Defensive line returns intact
Continued from page 7
The Jayhawks return two starting centers in Jared Smith and Jim Stiebel, though Smith has an arthritic shoulder and his availability this fall is still unknown. Back, too, are starting senior tackle Scott Whitaker and starting sophomore guard Cleve Roberts.
Whittaker and Roberts are penciled in on the right side.
The left will be manned by a combination of sophomore Justin Glasgow, a former walkon; red-shirt freshman Dameon Hunt; juco transfer Rob Wise; and junior Derrick Chandler.
"I think we have a chance to be good on the offensive line again," Mason said. "We don't have a lot of depth there, but we have some good size. We
have to find the right five offensive linemen."
Defense
Line
Every defensive lineman who played last fall returns.
"Obviously, the defensive line looks a lot better this year than last year." Mason said. "We've got more of 'em, they're bigger and they're better."
Junior Brett McGraw at nose and tackles Dewey Houston, a junior, and senior Kevin Kopp combined for 30 of 33 regularseason starts last fall.
"Brett McGraw is back for his third year," Mason said. "He's just a steady, tough performer. Kevin Kopp was a big question a year ago, but he's
See Ward, page 10
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 9E
You'll never miss a KU game when you have the Journal-World. We've got it all covered: At home and on the road, the Journal-World is your ticket to KU Sports.
We'll be there with the KU football team as it shoots for a second straight bowl under coach Glen Mason in the new and improved Big 12. And we'll follow the march of Roy Williams' Jayhawks as they aim for another NCAA basketball title.
We're also the source for information on the Lawrence Lions, Baker Wildcats and Haskell Indians. And we're on top of Kansas City professional sports with the Chiefs and Royals.
Whether it's the game report, the inside story on recruiting or the feature from the sidelines, the Journal-World's sports staff brings it all home. It's award-winning sports coverage you won't get anywhere else.
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PAGE 10E AUGUST, 1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Ward bolsters 'backers
Continued from page 8
become a workmanlike type of guy. Dewey Houston ... he switched over from tight end. He was injured and never really played, but when he's healthy, he's pretty good. Then you've got Dan Dercher, a good pass-rusher, and Adrian Green, who played as a freshman, and Dion Johnson, a big young defensive lineman, and Pat Bishop, who needs to come through for us as a back-up. We have some options."
Linebacker
The Jayhawks lost key personnel inside and out,but they still appear well-stocked.
Outside, Mason must replace defensive MVP Keith Rodgers, who graduated. Senior Chris Jones returns on the other side, and sophomore Patrick Brown emerged in the spring as Rodgers' replacement.
"Pat Brown is farther along
in his career than Keith Rodgers was at this point," Mason said. "He's not better than Keith Rodgers was when he was done, but at this point he's better than Keith was at this age. And there's Chris Jones, a guy who moved from wide receiver to defensive back to defensive end. Last year, he was really playing well. We've got a lot of ability there."
Inside, KU lost oft-injured starter Dick Holt to graduation but he'll be replaced by Ronnie Ward, KU's leading tackler in '94 and a preseason award candidate last fall before he injured his shoulder and did not play.
Ward will play alongside junior Jason Thoren, KU's leading tackler in '95. They'll be backed by sophomore Steve Bratten, who started early last year before Holt took over.
"We look to be strong at inside linebacker. We're returning almost everybody, plus Ronnie Ward," Mason said. "You can put all-whatever next to his name, and he's probably the forgotten guy. He and Jason Thoren are No. 1. I've said it before, some guys make plays and some guys don't. Those two guys make plays. And, we've got good guys backing them up. We've got good numbers and good players back there."
Defensive back
Brew will be missed, but Tony Blevins, the Big Eight defensive freshman of the year in '93 who sat out last fall with a knee injury, is back.
Back from their own knee injuries are likely starters Maurice Gaddie, Charles Davis and Avery Randle. Back, too, are eight-game starter Jamie Harris and fill-in starter Jason Harris.
"We return just about everybody with the exception of Dorian Brew," Mason said. "We need to find a guy who can play a good cover corner like Dorian Brew. But we get
See Blevins, page 11
45
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Ronnie Ward, KU's leading tackler in 1994, sat out last season with a shoulder injury, but he's back for his senior season.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST,1996 PAGE 11E
Blevins returns
Continued from page 10
Blevins back. He's a good football player. And we get Randle back. He's a good football player. We've got a guy in Mitch Bowles, who, in time, is going to be a good one. We've got Jamie Harris and Jason Harris, Blevins, Gaddie, Michael Allen. We've got good numbers, which is good. Who's better? I don't know. That's what we'll find out, but at least we'll be playing the best player instead of just putting a body out there."
Special Teams
Junior place kicker Jeff McCord returns, but punter Darrin Simmons is gone, to be replaced by juco transfer Dean Royal.
Schedule
Mason calls his schedule a coach-killer, and with good reason. The Jayhawks have just five home games none in September and go a school-record 43 days between home appearances.
"It's a tough schedule," Mason said. "But if the team plays as well as it can play, and we coach as well as we can coach, that's all you can ask. It takes a lot of pressure off you to go 10-2 again."
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Birth of Big 12,KU's '95 success buoys ticket sales KU football a hot ticket
BY EVAN BLACKWELL
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Buoyed by the birth of the Big 12 Conference and the success of a 10-2 record, Kansas University football season ticket sales are higher than they were a year ago.
Lynne Mixson, director of athletic promotions, said there are still hopes of selling around 20,000 season tickets, which cost $111 apiece for five home games.
As of late July, the Kansas Athletic Department ticket office had reported 17,322 season ticket sales, compared to 16,129 at the same time last summer. Last year's season ticket sales topped out at 18,876.
Mixson said the athletic department's radio and television spots are heavier in
Single-game ticket sales didn't begin until Aug. 15, just one of the strategies Mixson said KU had used to increase season ticket sales. In addition, Mixson said there would be ticket sales for students on campus this year.
will be in Lawrence this season on Nov.9.
In an effort to capitalize on the success of last season, KU sent its Big Blue Caravan to more locations this summer than in the past. Head coach Glen Mason, and players Kevin Kopp, Jim Moore and Jason Thoren spent the summer traveling to various towns throughout Kansas to promote the upcoming season.
"Those guys are great ambassadors for the team," Mixson said. "It was a great way for them to be in touch with the fans and the alums from around the state."
The opener will be the only home night game. Mixson said the game was scheduled for a Thursday night, because of the usual late August heat and Labor Day falling on that weekend.
The home slate also includes two of KU's new conference foes Texas Tech on Oct.12 and Texas on Nov. 12. Homecoming will be Oct.19 against Colorado, and the annual Sunflower State showdown with Kansas State
the month of August, and that could help spur sales right before the Aug. 29 season opener against Ball State at Memorial Stadium.
"We've seen a great response from people," Mixson said. "This is typically the time of year when people start thinking about buying football tickets."
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
PAGE 12E AUGUST, 1996
KU FOOTBALL RECRUIT CAPSULES
Stan Brown
DL • 6-2 • 285 • Flint, Mich.
(Central)
A two-year all-state and all-Saganaw Valley Conference selection by the two major newspapers in Detroit. . Selected by The Detroit News as the 16th best player in Michigan. .. An all-region selection by the Bluechip Report. .. Selected to play in the Michigan high school all-star game. .. A two-year starter on offense and defense. .. Led his team in tackles as a senior. .. Averaged 10 tackles a game the past two seasons. .. Lettered four years in football and track.
Arland Bruce
RB • 5-10 • 180 • Olathe (North)
RB • 5-10 • 180 • Olathe (North)
Rushed for 1,690 yards and 29 touchdowns in helping his team to a 10-1 record and the state semifinals as a senior. ... Averaged 5.7 yards a carry and 118 yards per game as a senior.
... Named the Kansas Class 6A offensive player of the year by Kansas Sports Magazine. ... A consensus all-state and all-Class 6A selection.
... Finished his career with 3,200 yards and 50 touchdowns. ... Had 50 straight games of 100 yards or more.
... The only unanimous selection to the all-Sunflower League team... Winner of the Simone Award, given annually to the top high school player in the Kansas City area.
... Rated as the No. 4 running back in the Big Eight region in the Bluechip Report. ... Rated as the No. 16 player overall in the midlands by Superprep Magazine. ... Also a standout in basketball and track. ... Joins Bob Schmidt as one of two recruits this year from Olathe North.
Victor Bullock
DE • 6·3 • 210 Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
(Boyd Anderson)
Selected as one of the top 15 defensive ends in the south by the Atlanta Constitution-Journal his senior year. .. A third-team all-country selection. .. Two-year starter at Boyd Anderson High. ... Lettered in both football and track.
Bilal Cook
DB/QB * 5-10 * 170 * Duquesne, Pa.
A three-year starter. ... Operated as a quarterback and defensive back as a junior and senior. ... A first-team allstate selection. ... Also named alleague and all-district. ... Named to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's Fabulous 22 team. ... Over two seasons he passed for 1,658 yards and rushed for 1,039 yards. ... Named most valuable offensive player in the Eastern Conference as a senior. ... Over three seasons he played quarterback, linebacker, kicker, punter, punt returner, comeback and safety. ... A nominee for the prestigious Big 33 team. ... Started at wide receiver on his high school's 1993 state championship team. ... Also a standout in basketball and baseball. ... Served as team captain in football and basketball. ... A four-year letterman in football and basketball. ... A member of his school's National Honor Society. ... Ranked first academically in his class through his junior year.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 13E
.
Continued from page 12
Greg Davis
FB/LB * 6-0 * 220 * Denver, Colo.
(East)
Earned first-team all-league honors at linebacker as a junior and senior. ... and second-team as a fullback. ... A second-team all-state selection. ... Recorded a single-game high 22 tackles as a senior. ... In limited action at fullback, rushed for 657 yards and six touchdowns. ... Selected his team's most valuable player last year. ... A four-year starter. ... Played on both sides of the ball his first three seasons, but was used primarily on defense as a senior. ... Honored for having the top grade point average on his team as a senior. ... A four-year letterman in football and three-year letter winner in track.
Terrence Floyd
DL/OL * 6·4 • 280 • Akron, Ohio
(Firestone)
Played both offense and defense. ... Earned all-state honors as a defensive lineman. ... Named the defensive coplayer of the year in the Akron area. ... Named to the all-city and all-Summit County teams. ... Was honored as a first-team all-Akron Beacon-Journal all-star and a first-temple pick to the all-Northeast Ohio Inland Region team. ... He was credited with 77 unassisted tackles and 148 total stops his senior. ... Also registered 14 tackles for losses and 10 quarterback sacks, two fumbles caused and two fumble recoveries. ... Earned all-Midwest Region honors in the Bluechip Report. ... Ranked as one of the top players in the midwest by Supeprep Magazine. ... Three year letterman in football and basketball. ... Two-year letterman in track.
David Glover
OL • 6-7 • 290 • Detroit, Mich.
(Pershing)
Highly decorated lineman who earned all-city, all-metro and all-state honors his senior season. ... The top offensive lineman on a team that had over 2,000 rushing yards last season. ... Played on both the offensive and defensive lines. ... A three-year letter winner. ... Ranked as the 15th best offensive lineman in the midwest region by the Bluechip Report. ... A high school teammate of fellow KU recruit Michael Goree at Pershing.
Michael Goree
LB • 6-2 • 225 • Detroit, Mich.
(Pershing)
Member of the all-city, all-metro and all-state teams. ... Considered one of the top prep prospects in the Detroit area. ... Credited with 78 solo tackles and 43 assisted stops as a senior. ... Also had 22 tackles for losses, including six quarterback sacks. ... Had three interceptions from his linebacker spot, one of which he returned 95 yards for a touchdown. ... Ranked as the No. 13 linebacker in the Midwest Region by the Bluechip Report. ... A three-year letterman in football, baseball and track. ... Named to his school's honor roll.
Jason Gulley
TE/DL • 6-5 • 225 • Denton, Texas (Ryan)
A first-team all-district and all-area selection his senior season... Named to the Dallas Morning News' Top 100 Area team ... Named to the North Texas High School All-Star team. ... An honorable mention all-state selection in football and basketball. ... Caught 10 passes for 150 yards as a senior in a
Kevin Harris
wishbone offense. .. Also excelled on defense. .. Lettered three years in football and basketball.
DT • 6-3 • 265 • Titusville, Fl.
(Astronaut)
Selected first team all-district and all-conference as a senior. ... Also honored as a member of the All-Space Coast team as a senior. ... Named defensive player of the year on his team at Astronaut High School. ... A two-year letterman in football. ... Earned four letters in track and two letters in wrestling. ... A two-time district champion and a state qualifier as a wrestler.
Chuck Jarvis
OT • 6-5 • 300 • San Pedro, Calif.
51 • 6-5 • 300 • San Pedro, Calif.
Earned first-team all-city, all-Southern Conference, all-South Bay honors as a senior and named to the Los Angeles Times all-central city team as a senior. ... Selected his team's most valuable offensive lineman as a senior. ... Allowed just one quarterback sack last season and his quarterback threw for 2,000-plus yards. ... A 3.0-plus student, he has won numerous academic awards.
Ishmeal Knight
OL * 6-4 * 330 * Tampa, Fla.
(Hillsborough)
Played on both sides of the ball as a senior. ... A two-time all-conference selection. ... Also named first-team all-district and was a first-team selection on the all-Suncoast team this past season. ... He earned honorable mention on the all-Florida team. ... A three-year starter. ... Served as team captain his senior season. ... Also lettered three years in track and one year in wrestling.
Dariss Lomax
LB * 6-1 * 225 * Kansas City, Kan.
(Washington)
A first-team all-state and all-league selection. ... A Bluechip Report Big 8 Regional All-America selection. ... Ranked as the No. 2 linebacker in the Big 8 region. ... Named to the Kansas City Star all-Metro team. ... Credited with 122 tackles his senior season. Also recorded an interception and five quarterback sacks. ... Finished his career with 20-plus quarterback sacks.
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KU FOOTBALL RECRUIT CAPSULES
Peter Mitoulas
DB·6-1·210·Toronto, Ontario Canada (Northern Secondary)
A three-time Metro Toronto All-Star.
... Selected first-team All-Ontario, first-
team Eastern Canada and first-team all-
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... Lettered in football, rugby and socer
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PAGE 14E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
.
KU FOOTBALL RECRUIT CAPSULES
Continued from page 13
Marc Owen
OL • 6-4 • 280 • St. Louis, Mo.
(Hazelwood Central)
Selected first-team all-league and all-metro and second-team all-state in Missouri as a senior at Hazelwood Central. ... A two-year letter winner in both football and wrestling...Placed third in the state wrestling meet as a junior in the heavyweight class.
Eric Patterson
WR * 6·1 · 200 • Long Beach, Calif.
(Polytechnic)
Versatile performer who operated as a wide receiver, tight end, running back and safety his senior year in high school. ... Credited with 23 pass receptions and three touchdowns last fall. ... Also excels as a hurdler in track.
... Ranks as one of the top hurdlers in California. ... Placed seventh in the hurdles in the state meet as a junior.
... Listed as one of the top players in the farwest region by Superprep Magazine.
Curtese Poole
QB/DB • 6·4 • 200 • Columbus,
Qhio (Mifflin)
A first-team all-metro and all-district selection. ... Earned second-team all-state honors as a quarterback his senior season...Passed for 1,389 yards and 20 touchdowns. ... Completed 54 percent of his passing attempts. ... Also ran for 600 yards and nine touchdowns. ... On defense he had 45 tackles and four interceptions from his free safety position. ... Also lettered in basketball, baseball and track. ... Ranked as one of the top players in the midwest by Superprep Magazine. ... Ranked No. 2 in the midwest region under athletes by the Bluechip Report.
Derek Potter
LB/TE·6-3 • 235 · Franklin, Ky.
(Franklin-Simpson)
Earned first-team all-state honors and was named to the Lexington Herald's Elite 20 team his senior season. ... Led his team with 105 total tackles despite missing two games with a dislocated shoulder. ..
Credited with eight receptions for 169 yards and three touchdowns. .. Helped his team to the championship game of the Class AA state playoffs and a 12-3 record. .. Also a starter on his school's basketball team. ... Played his sophomore year in Rochester, N.Y. and sat out his junior year at Franklin-Simpson under transfer guidelines.
Akili Roberson
QB • 6-2 • 185 • Los Angeles (Southwest Junior College)
City player of the year as a senior at Los Angeles Locke High... Threw for 1,750 yards and rushed for 300 as a sophomore at L.A. Southwest.
Quincy Roe
DB • 5-10 • 175 • St. Louis, Mo.
(Hazelwood East)
A first-team all-league, all-district and all-metro selection as a senior. ... Earned second-team all-state honors. ... Led the St. Louis metro area with 11 interceptions as a junior and five as a senior. ... Earned three letters in football and baseball. ... From the same high school as KU players Ronnie Ward and Michael Allen.
Bob Schmidt
OL • 6-1 • 255 • Olathe, Kan.
(North)
A consensus first-team all-state selection. ... Earned first-team all-metro, all-Sunflower League and all-Sun Country. ... Named Sun Country Defensive Player of the Year. .. Named to the Class 6A all-state team. .. Honorable mention All-America selection in USA Today. .. Ranked as one of the top players in the midlands by Superprep Magazine. .. Helped his team to a 10-1 record and the state semifinals as a senior. .. Named to his school's honor roll. .. Younger brother of former KU starting center Dan Schmidt.
Jason Sykes
DB • 5-11 • 175 • Kansas City, Kan.
(Washington)
Honored as a first-team all-conference selection. ... Also earned all-league honors. ... Was an honorable mention selection on the all-state and
Kansas City all-metro teams. ... A three-year letter winner in football. ... Also lettered three seasons in track. ... A high school teammate of fellow KU recruit Dariss Lomax.
Dan Warner
DE • 6-3 • 210 • Independence, Kan. (Independence Community College)
Played two seasons at Independence Community College. .. A first-team all-Jayhawk Junior College selection at defensive end ... Named second-team NJCAA All-American last season at Independence ... Earned second-team all-conference honors at Independence High School his senior season. .. A first-team all-conference selection in basketball. .. Also a standout in track, qualifying for the state in the 100 and 200.
DL • 6·4 • 270 • Oklahoma City, Okla.
(Putnam City)
John Williams
Earned all-district and all-conference honors as a senior. ... Named to the Daily Oklahomaman's all-state team.
... Recorded 100 total tackles as a senior, including 17 for losses. ... Also forced two fumbles, recovered two fumbles and defected two passes.
... Played defensive tackle, offensive guard, offensive tackle and center during his high school career.
... Lettered three years in football. ...
Also lettered three years in wrestling and track. ... Ranked as one of the top players in the midlands by Superprep Magazine.
Daniel Wilturner
RB * 5-7 * 165 * Houston, Texas
(James Madison)
Earned all-league, all district and all Greater Houston his senior season. ... Rushed for 1,450 and 10 touchdowns as a senior. ... Averaged 10 yards per carry. ... Had 480 yards receiving. ... Had one punt return for a TD and returned two kickoffs for 75-plus yards. ... Lettered three years in football and three years in basketball. ... Named his team's most valuable player. ... Also selected most valuable offensive back in high school. ... A teammate of fellow KJ recruit Torrance Norris.
June Henley qualifies as one of the top returning running backs in the Big 12 Conference and in college football.
Henley one of Big 12's top backs
Henley will enter his senior season with 2,492 career rushing yards, which ranks second among active running backs in the league.
Henley's career rushing mark is the fifth best mark in school history.
His 25 career touchdowns rank second all time in school history, just three behind Tony Sands.
Last season, Henley led the team in all-purpose yards (1,270), ranked second in rushing (766) and third in total offense (766), receiving (26-312) and scoring (48).
L. T. Levine led KU with 841 yards and eight touchdowns a year ago.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 15E
KU FOOTBALL ROSTER
1 — Isaac Byrd, WR, 6-2, 180, Sr., St. Louis, Mo.
2 — Freddie Hammonds, OLB, 6-1, 220, Soph., Paterson, N.J.
3 — Jahmal Wright, DB, 5-1, 79, Soph., Culver City, Calif.
4 — John Gordon, WR, 5-11, 180, Fr., West Palm Beach, Fla.
5 — Thad Rawls, DB, 5-11, 200, Fr., Pompano Beach, Fla.
6 — Bilal Cook, DB, 5-10, 170, Fr., Duquesne, Pa.
7 — Curtese Poole, QB, 6-4, 200, Fr., Columbus, Ohio
8 — Ben Rutz, QB, 6-0, 190, Sr., Oklahoma City, Okla.
9 — Reggie Moorer, WR, 6-0, 175, Fr., South Bay, Fla.
10 — Mitch Bowles, DB, 5-8, 170, Fr., Las Vegas, Nev.
11 — Charles Davis, DB, 6-0, 205, Jr., Tampa, Fla.
12 — Eric Patterson, WR, 6-1, 200, Fr., Long Beach, Calif.
13 — Hosea Friday, TE, 6-2, 245, Sr., Detroit, Mich.
14 — Zac Wegner, QB, 6-2, 200, Fr., Platte City, Mo.
16 — John Ridlon, WR, 5-8, 155, Soph., Lake Arrowhead, Calif.
17 — Hamilton Hill, QB, 6-2, 200, Soph., Wichita
18 — Matt Johner, QB, 6-1, 200, Jr., Costa Mesa, Calif.
19 — Jason Sykes, DB, 5-11, 175, Fr., Kansas City
20 — June Henley, RB, 5-11, 205, Sr., Columbus, Ohio
22 — Jermaine Cromerdie, DB, 5-10, 165, Soph., McKeesport, Pa.
23 — Jason Harris, DB, 5-10, 170, Jr., Fort Worth, Texas
24 — Maurice Gaddie, DB, 5-10, 190, Jr., Detroit, Mich.
25 — Eric Vann, RB, 5-9, 190, Jr., El Dorado
26 — Avery Randle, DB, 6-0, 175, Jr., Dallas, Texas
27 — Michael Allen, SS, 5-10, 190, Soph., St. Louis, Mo.
28 — Tony Blevins, DB, 6-0, 170, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.
29 — Manolito Jones, DB, 5-9, 170, Jr., Hannibal, Mo.
31 — Eric Galbreath, FB, 6-1, 205, Jr., Jefferson City, Mo.
31 — Luke Richesson, WR, 5-9, 195, Sr., Kansas City, Mo.
32 — Greg Davis, RB-LB, 6-0, 200, Fr., Denver, Colo.
33 — Paul Davis, RB, 5-11, 185, Fr., Cahokia, Ill.
34 — Mark Sanders, RB, 6-0, 215, Sr., St. Petersburg, Fla.
35 — Julius Bruce, RB, 5-9, 190, Soph, Olathe
36 — Jeff McCord, PK, 5-9, 220, Jr., Mesquite, Texas
37 — Jamie Harris, DB, 5-10, 175, Soph., Olathe
38 — Jason Thoren, LB, 6-2, 230, Jr., Lawrence
39 — Bonne Willis, TE, 6-2, 280, Soph, Detroit, Mich.
40 — Michael Chandler, WR, 5-11, 190, Fr., Kansas City
41 — Dean Royal, P, 6-2, 180, Jr., McKinney, Texas
43 — Arland Bruce, RB, 5-10, 180, Fr., Olathe
44 — Jonathan Macklin, RB, 5-10, 220, Soph., Kansas City, Mo.
45 — J.J. Johnson, OLB, 6-2, 230, Soph., Los Angeles, Calif.
46 — Ronnie Ward, LB, 6-0, 225, Sr., St. Louis, Mo.
47 — Patrick Brown, OLB, 5-10, 210, Soph., Westerville, Ohio
49 — Chris Jones, OLB, 6-2, 245, Sr., Newton
50 — Michael Lies, OC, 6-3, 265, Soph., Wichita
51 — Adam Marinello, LB, 6-3, 215, Fr., Westerville, Ohio
52 — Tyrus Fontenot, LB, 5-8, 220, Fr., Houston, Texas
53 — Michael Goree, LB, 6-2, 225, Fr., Detroit, Mich.
54 — Steve Bratten, LB, 6-1, 220, Soph., Avada, Colo.
55 — Jim Siebel, C, 6-2, 275, Sr., Belleville, Ill.
56 — Bob Schmidt, OL, 6-1, 255, Fr., Olathe
57 — Kevin Kopp, DT, 6-4, 270, Sr., Kansas City, Mo.
58 — Terrence Floyd, DL, 6-4, 295,Fr., Akron, Ohio
59 — Daniel Wilturner, RB, 5-6, 165, Fr., Houston, Texas
60 — Stan Brown, DL, 6-2, 285, Fr., Flint, Mich.
63 — Dion Johnson, DT, 6-4, 270, Fr., Detroit, Mich.
64 — Ted Sawinko, OG, 5-10, 250, Soph., Clayton, Ohio
65 — Jared Smith, C-OG, 6-1, 270, Sr., Pittsburg
66 — Marc Owen, OL, 6-4, 280, Fr., St. Louis, Mo.
67 — Kevin Harris, DT, 6-3, 265, Fr., Titusville, Fla.
68 — Chris Enneking, C, 6-3, 260, Fr., Lawrence
69 — Jeff Redhage, OLB, 6-5, 240, Fr., Lincoln, Neb.
70 — Brett McGraw, NT, 6-1, 280, Jr., Garden City
71 — Derrick Chandler OT, 6-7, 310, Jr., Lynwood, Calif.
72 — Shawn Vang, OG, 6-2, 275, Soph., Wichita
73 — Dameon Hunt, OG, 6-2, 280, Fr., Gahanna, Ohio
74 — Ishmeal Knight, OT, 6-4, 330, Fr., Tarnpa, Fla.
75 - Rob Wise, OT, 6-4, 300, Jr., St. Louis, Mo.
76 - Justin Glasgow, OG, 6-6, 300, Soph., Topeka
77 - Cleve Roberts, OG, 6-6, 300, Soph., Buhler
79 - Scott Whittaker, OT, 6-6, 285, Sr., Alta Loma, Calif.
80 - Andre Carter, WR, 5-10, 165, Sr., Tampa, Fla.
81 - Shane Rooney, TE, 6-3, 225, Soph., Sioux City, Iowa
82 - Chad Coellner, WR, 6-0, 180, Fr., Salina
83 - Dewey Houston III, DT, 6-4, 270, Jr., Cahokia, Ill.
84 - Brian Gray, TE, 6-3, 225, Soph., Liberty, Mo.
85 - Sean McDermott, TE, 6-3, 230, Soph, Fort Worth, Texas
86 - Torrance Norris, TE, 6-2, 210, Fr., Houston, Texas
87 - Derek Potter, LB, 6-3, 235, Fr., Franklin, Ky.
88 - Pat Johnson, P, 5-9, 165, Soph., Lexington, Ohio
89 - Jim Moore, TE, 6-3, 250, Sr., Garden City
90 - Dan Dercher, DT, 6-6, 265, Soph, Mission
91 - Jason Gulley, TE, 6-5, 255, Fr., Denton, Texas
92 - Mike Rowe, TE, 6-1, 205, Fr., Platte Center, Neb.
93 - Adrian Greene, DT, 6-3, 285, Soph., Rockledge, Fla.
94 - Pat Bishop, NT, 6-3, 285, Jr., Anderson, Calif.
95 - Jeremy Hanak, OLB, 6-6, 245, Fr., Louisville, Colo.
96 - Peter Mitooulas, OLB, 6-1, 215, Fr., Toronto, Canada
97 - Victor Bullock, DE, 6-3, 210, Fr. FT. Lauderdale, Fla.
98 - Lamar Sharpe, OLB, 6-4, 245, Soph., Akron, Ohio
99 - Jerome Parks, C, 6-1, 250, Soph., Detroit, Mich.
NUMBERS UNASSIGNED
Dariss Lomax, LB, 6-2, 225, Fr., Kansas City
Quincy Roe, DB, 5-10, 175, Fr., St. Louis, Mo.
John Williams, DL, 6-4, 270, Fr., Oklahoma City, Okla.
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$\textcircled{1}$ designates registered trademark of Pizza Hut, Inc. ©1996 Pizza Hut, Inc.
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27
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Harry offer every soon. Please mention cogon oxygen when entering, Valid only at participating units covered by subsidiaries of Fizza Hut, Inc. Specialty prices may vary. Not valid on WideDeck Plaza or with any other offer. Delivery charges may apply. Limited delivery area.
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2G 12
PAGE 16E AUGUST, 1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Kansas returns all five starters off its 29-5 club
Jayhawks preseason No.1
BY GARY BEDORE
JOURNAL-WORLD ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
UK won the national basketball title in 1996. Now it's KU's turn in 1997, or so the experts say.
Kentucky's basketball players had barely finished clipping the nets last April when Dick Vitale proclaimed the Javahawks preseason No.1 for 1997.
The Jayhawks are a popular pick for No.1 considering they return all five starters and top seven scorers off last year's 29-5 club.
Expectations may be high entering the 1996-97 season,but that's nothing new for the Jayhawks,who have won
MEN'S BASKETBALL
25 or more games seven straight seasons and claimed five of the final six Big Eight titles.
"There's nothing you can do about it, so why should I mind?" KU coach Roy Williams said of great expectations. "There have always been expectations here and always will be. We'll try the same theme as last year: 'Let's enjoy each win, get mad about the losses and try to do something about it the next time.'"
Expectations rose last spring when point guard Jacque Vaughn announced he would return for his
senior season. Coaches and fans alike praised Vaughn for shunning the NBA to complete his degree in business administration.
"I used to say when talking about Jacque if there was a dictionary that had a picture besides the word 'student-athlete' there would be his picture. I've changed that. Now instead of saying 'student-athlete,' it's 'scholar-athlete,'" Williams said.
Last year's Big Eight player of the year, Vaughn, a 6-foot-1 native of Pasadena, Calif, needs 43 assists to pass Cedric Hunter, as the Big Eight's alltime assist leader. He averaged 10.9 points and 6.6 assists on 48.2 percent
shooting last season. He hit 51.2 percent of his three-pointers in Big Eight contests.
"I've got to make sure outside people don't put thoughts or pressure on him, You've got to score such and such points.' He really doesn't have to do that," Williams said.
"He got to be one of the best point guards in the country by playing the way Jacque Vaughn plays. His leadership, his playmaking, his defensive ability all make Jacque Vaughn the player he is. His shooting, if it improves and it has improved every year, will
See Haase, page 18
KANSAS
11
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Jacque Vaughn, left, decided not to jump to the NBA, so he and coach Roy Williams enter the season as early favorites to win the NCAA title.
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PAGE 18E AUGUST, 1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Haase, Pollard return
N
Scot Pollard returns to man the pivot, where he blocked 84 shots last season.
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Continued from page 16
make him even more difficult to guard."
Senior backcourt partner Jerod Haase, a 6-3 native of South Lake Tahoe, Calif., was outstanding on defense, shaky on offense last year. Haase averaged 10.8 points on 35.6 percent shooting.
"Jerod was really hurt, disgusted about the way he played last year, particularly the way he shot the ball," Williams said. "I hope her relaxes a bit. I think he puts too much pressure on himself.
"He improved his assist/error ratio last year and had two double-figure rebounding games in the last 10 games. I told him I wanted him to really concentrate on his rebounding this year, too."
KU returns pivot Scot Pollard, a 6-10 senior from San Diego, Calif. Pollard averaged 10.1 points on 56.4 percent shooting last year. He owns a career field goal percentage of 55.5.
Last year, Pollard blocked 84 shots, the third highest single-season total in KU history. He ranks fifth on KU's career
charts, needing 56 to move into second place ahead of Danny Manning.
"You look at Scot's stats, they're about what he did the year before when he was splitting time with Greg (Ostertag)," Williams said. "I think he expected to do a little more. I think he got caught up in his foul trouble early in the season. It made him a little bit more hesitant in some things.
"We've got to do a better job of getting him the ball in the post and he's got to do a better job of finishing. He's going to rebound and play defense for us."
The final California starter is Paul Pierce. A 6-6 sophomore from Los Angeles, Pierce averaged 11.7 points on 41.9 per
See LaFrentz, page 19
KANSAS
35
EARL RICHARDSON/IOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Jerod Haase was dandy defensively but erratic on offense last year.
KALIEN 23
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO Paul Pierce started 33 of 34 games as a freshman last year and should start again this season.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED • SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 19E
LaFrentz 'heck of a player'
Continued from page 18
cent shooting last year. He also grabbed 5.3 rebounds and gained some experience in the summer playing for USA Basketball's Under 22 team.
"Your sophomore year, you get better because you are not overwhelmed," Williams said. "The biggest thing is he's got to get in a situation where his intensity level doesn't fluctuate."
Raef LaFrentz, KU's 6-11 junior power forward from Monona, Iowa, is the Jayhawks' fifth returning starter. A first-team all-Big Eight pick, he averaged 13.4 points on 54.3 percent shooting with 8.2 boards.
"He was much more comfortable and aggressive last year," Williams praised. "Your freshman year, you'll find half the time you are tentative. He was not that way last year. He has to realize how good he is and how explosive he is and how big he is. He can really be a heck of a player. The young man can score and the young man can rebound."
Sixth-man deluxe B.J. Williams, a 6-8 senior from Wichita, averaged 4.8 points and 3.9 boards. He came on strong late, scoring 18 points against Arizona.
"The last half of the year, B.J. played probably his best basketball," Williams said."In the past he had not been physically big enough to battle with people, yet he didn't use his quickness. The second half he used it a lot more."
KU
Billy Thomas, a 6-4 junior from Shreveport, La., averaged 4.7 points on 35.8 percent shooting. He hit just 33.6 percent of his threes.
"Billy probably had a disappointing year for him. He expected to do more," Williams said. "But he was hurt, with nagging injuries. If he is stronger, healthier he will
See Robertson, page 20
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Raef LaFrentz showed a more aggressive side as a sophomore last year.
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PAGE 20E AUGUST,1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Robertson 'came on' at end
Continued from page 19
shoot the ball better. If he shoots it better he'll get more playing time. I think he's concentrated on playing better defensively too."
Ryan Robertson, a 6-5 soph from St. Charles, Mo., hit 48.8 percent of his shots and 45.2 percent of his threes. He figures to back Vaughn, along with Topeka junior C.B. McGrath, who played sparingly a year ago. McGrath had wrist surgery early in the summer and could not work out in the offseason.
"Ryan will play both the 1 and 2," Williams said. "He came on at the end of the year and gave me confidence in what he can do. He is a youngster who can pass the ball and think out there."
TJ. Pugh, a 6-9 soph from Omaha, played in 34 games, averaging 3.4 points on 46.1 percent shooting. Pugh bulked in the off season, gaining 25 pounds by late June.
"It is good weight," Williams said. "He's got some big shoulders on him. I've always said he is one of the most unbelievably disciplined, dedicated players I've seen in basketball."
Travis Williams, a 7-0 sophomore from Rozel, is eligible after redshirting last season. He sat out his first season here after failing to qualify under Prop 48 guidelines. He was hampered by knee, hip and back injuries in the summer.
Walk-on Steve Ransom, a 65 senior from Mission Viejo Calif., will again try out for a spot on the team.
The Jayhawks play a rugged schedule, which includes games at UCLA and UConn, a contest against Cincinnati in the Great Eight, plus home games against George Washington and North Carolina State. Not to mention the expanded Big 12 slate and a trip to the Maui Invitational.
The Javhawks signed one player, 6-6 Nicky Bradford, Arkansas' prep player of the year who averaged 21 points, seven rebounds and four assists at Fayetteville High. He's to play on the perimeter.
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EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Sophomore T.J. Pugh, above, and senior B.J. Williams return to the KU frontcourt.
KANSAS
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PAGE 22E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU women want to reach pinnacle
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
As sweet as the Sweet 16 was for Kansas University women's basketball coach Marian Washington, she's convinced the Jayhawks have just begun to break new ground.
"Everybody wants to go all the way," Washington said. "Everybody wants to win it all. But we can't downplay the fact that we continue to make progress. To me, that's the bottom line. To get to the Sweet 16 was really a big step for us. That does nothing but help the program."
Washington has reason for optimism. The Jayhawks, 22-10 overall a year ago, made their first-ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament's Sweet 16, and they lost just two players to graduation.
Back are last year's Big Eight coach of the year (Washington) and Tamecka Dixon, the
O
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Big Eight player of the year. Returning are the top two scorers and eight of the top nine. Back, too, is the team's leading rebounder (Nakia Sanford).
All that returns to the team that won the final Big Eight regular-season championship and ranked No.20 in the final Associated Press poll and No. 15 in the CNN/USA Today coaches' poll.
"We're going to have a great group of freshmen and a lot of returning players who have been to the Sweet 16," Washington said."We have so much to look forward to, but you never know how the ball is going to bounce."
That's not to say the Jayhawks suffered no losses. Gone is Charisse Sampson, a preseason All-America candidate
See Five seniors, page 23
Iowa St
22
JAYHAWKS
35
FILE PHOTO
Tamecka Dixon, right, was the Big Eight player of the year last fall.
51
FILE PHOTO
Lawrence High product Jennifer Trapp returns for her senior year.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED • SPORTS
AUGUST,1996 PAGE 23E
Five seniors return to KU
Continued from page 22
before a knee injury forced her to miss part of the season.
Sampson still earned second-team All-Big Eight honors after averaging 12.8 points per game.
"Somebody asked me last year about losing (Kodak All-American) Angela Aycock last year, playing one of the toughest schedules we've had, losing an assistant coach. A lot of things were going on," Washington said. "But we found a way to enjoy a very,very good year. Now we're not going to Charisse. That's going to impact us. Hopefully, we'll find a way to have another good year."
Even without Sampson and Keshana Ledet, the other departed senior, the Jayhawks of '96-'97 are loaded.
The team will be led by five seniors:Dixon (a team-leading 17.0 ppg), Angie Halbleib (14.3 ppg), Jennifer Trapp (6.9 ppg) Shelly Canada (3.2 ppg) and Patience Grayer (2.2 ppg).
GAMBLES 30
FILE PHOTO
See Dixon, page 24
Angie Halbleib averaged 14.3 points per game as a junior last season.
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PAGE 24E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Dixon headlines KU women's returnees
Continued from page 23
"Tamecka is one of the most gifted athletes in the country," Washington said. "She struggled at first, but she's gotten better every year. She's one of the greatest athletes I've seen. Angie has really demonstrated great improvement. She has shot the ball well and played good defense for us.
"Jennifer's work ethic is unbelievable. She's a hard-nosed competitor. I always put her on the toughest inside opponent. Sometimes she's a little tough on herself. But we're fortunate to have her on the club. Shelly has been a great role player for us. She's started, come off the bench. She's been in position to do the things we've needed her to do, and she's helped us win.
"And Patience has only been with us a year," Washington
continued. "On the blocks, she's very tough to stop. We like to have our players get up and down the floor. She has a little trouble with that, but she knows how to score on the blocks."
Complementing the seniors will be three juniors: Erinn Reed (2.8 ppg), Tamara Gracey (1.5 ppg) and Koya Scott (.9 ppg).
"Erinn came off the bench for us a lot last year. She has a lot of quickness and plays great defense for us," Washington said. "Tamara, we hope, will step up and relax and just play. And Koya is a late bloomer. We expect her to step up. She's got the size."
Rounding out the returning players are two sophomores: Sanford (6.5 ppg) and Suzi Raymant (5.4 ppg).
"Nakia is probably a great future player for us," Washington said. "She had a good
For good measure, Washington went out and signed a prep All-American in Lynn Pride, a 6-foot-2 guard-forward from Dallas. Other signees are Heather Fletcher, of Wichita,
and Casey Pruitt, of Jonesboro, Ark.
freshman year. We feel we can build the program around her. She's has great talent, quickness and size."
VITAVICS 13
"Lynn Pride is going to be a great future talent for us," Washington said. "She has great size at 6-2. She's just a tremendous athlete. We're going to build our future around this group. Casey missed her senior year. We
don't know what's going to happen her first year. We signed her because she has great quickness.She'll fit in our system.
"And Heather is physical. She has the same fierce competitiveness that Jennifer Trapp has. She's going to be a good one."
FILE PHOTO
Nakia Sanford averaged 6.5 points per game as a freshman last season.
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When You want all of the
When You want all of the sports action turn to Sunflower Cablevision Channel 6!
For the finest exclusive sports programming, fans turn to Sunflower Cablevision Channel 6. KU football home games, the KU Football Show with Glen Mason, the Roy Williams Show, and Lawrence High School football or basketball are just part of the great sports programming on Cable Channel 6. Stay tuned to the Lawrence Report weeknights at 6:00 and 10:00 for the latest local sports coverage, too!
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PAGE 26E AUGUST,1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Jayhawks pin hopes on offense
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
If the rest of the Kansas University baseball team follows Josh Kliner's lead, the Jayhawks could be in for a heck of a season.
"Josh Kliner put up great numbers than nobody could ever match. His average went from .298 to .438 in one year," second-year coach Bobby Randall gushed. "All we need is for four guys to do that."
Kliner, KU's second baseman last spring, won't be around to show the way. Kliner, now playing in the Arizona Diamondbacks' system, became KU's sixth All-American after hitting .438 as a senior, a figure that led the Big Eight and ranked No. 8 nationally.
Thanks in part to Kliner, the Jayhawks of '96 hit a school-
- BASEBALL
best .324 as a team en route to a 26-30 record overall. Trouble was, that offense was balanced by an unsightly 7.39 team earned run average.
"We counted them up. We lost 11 games when we scored nine or more runs," Randall said. "That turns your season around. That was always a nemesis for us."
It's bound to be this year, too.
Though KU lost its top two hitters in Kliner and Isaac Byrd now in the St. Louis Cardinals organization and a senior on the KU football team -its next five return. KU's best pitcher, Casey Barrett, is back, but three of its top five, and the bulk of its starters, are gone.
"We may end up being a very effective pitching team," Randall said. "I won't say we
KU
have to outscore people, but we do have a chance to be another good offensive team. I still like our team on the field. Our pitching staff, for two
prep ranks to bolster the pitching staff. He signed a huge class of 15 players. Of those 15, nine
years in a row, will be a big question mark. This year will be ability and youth. We'll still lack experience."
Randall dipped into the
See Randall, page 28
FILE PHOTO
Bobby Randall coached KU to a 26-30 record in his first year.
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PAGE 28E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Randall reloads staff with young guns
Continued from page 26
are pitchers. Eight are freshman pitchers.
"In the 14 years I've coached,I've never put a bigger emphasis on recruiting than I did this year," Randall said.
Randall is happy with his young guns.
Barrett, a stopper last season with eight saves, returns. So do Josh Wingerd (1-1, 5.66 ERA), Chris Williams (2-1, 9.32 ERA), Linus Williams (2-0, 8.18 ERA) and Aric Peters (2-6, 9-26 ERA).
Peters, who never regained form after sitting out a season nursing an arm injury, is penciled in as a starter. So is Vince Peters, a hard-throwing senior who caught Randall's eye when he threw 26 straight strikes during tryouts this fall ... then failed to achieve academic eligibility.
"Aric Peters is throwing great for Hays (Larks) this summer. We hope he regains his starting form," Randall said. "Barrett is pitching well. Then it comes down to throwing a lot of young guys in there big, strong, young guys.
"We got a lot of young guys I like. Last year, we didn't have a lot of guys with good velocity. I think all the guys coming back will be better pitchers,
and I think all the guys coming in are going to have more talent, just inexperienced."
The Jayhawks should have plenty of experience around the infield. KU returns two sophomore third basemen in Nick Frank (who hit .348, No. 3 on the team as a freshman) and Andy Juday (.289), a senior shortstop in Joe DeMarco (.338) and a senior first baseman-outfielder in Justin Headleu (.333).
Catcher will be platooned by junior Josh Dimmick (.322) and Mike Dean (.291) and incoming freshmen Shane Wedd and Logan Overman.
When Headley is in the outfield, Frank, Dimmick, Sparky Wilhelm or senior Aaron Wilmes will man third.
And DeMarco might move to second if freshman Paul Levins lives up to his billing at short.
"Joey's going to play somewhere, maybe second base if Levins handles shortstop like we hope he does," Randall said. "Then again, Andy Juday is playing second for Hays. It should be very competitive."
Byrd's early departure to the professional ranks left a void in center — and Randall hoped he filled it by signing juco center fielder Kevin Nannini from Merced, Calif.
Left and right will be
soon as I take him off first base all the infielders are mad at me
Kansas
joe DeMarco returns for his senior year. A shortstop all of last year, he might move to second this season.
FILE PHOTO
"We expect Kevin to be an excellent center fielder. And Stephen's going to be a factor his senior year."
manned by a combination of Headley, Dean, Eric Vann, Les Walrond and Stephen Matthews.
"I thought if we didn't sign a center fielder, Justin would
have been our center fielder," Randall said. "He's outstanding defensively, wherever you put him. He's the best first baseman I've coach, and he's an outstanding outfielder. As
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 29E
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 36E
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 37E
Coach lands 'dream job'
Bunge eager to start
KANSAS
AP PHOTO
Sara Holland led KU in average, hits, runs and homers last year.
BY EVAN BLACKWELL
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Tracy Bunge, a former All-American pitcher/outfielder during her playing days for Kansas University, was chosen as the Jayhawks new coach over the summer.
She's already anxious to improve upon the 31-26 record of her alma mater a season ago.
"Once I got into coaching people would ask me, 'What's your dream job?' and I would tell people I always wanted to come back here," said Bunge, a native of Bartlesville, Okla., who returns to KU after working as coach at Ohio University.
Now that she is back, Bunge hopes to restore some stability to the pro
to the program. Just before lsat
SOFTBALL
before isa season, Kalum Haack resigned to begin a program at Alabama. His assistant, Gayle Luedke, took over for a year.
"It was a very tough year mentally on everybody," Bunge said.
The Jayhawks went 10-12 in the Big Eight a year ago. That may be deceptive, however, Bunge said.
"They always told me, 'Tracy, you've got talent,' and it's a real relief for me to hear that the talent is here," she said, referring to comments from other coaches.
Depending on how fast the team adapts to her style, Bunge said she's confident Kansas can improve its conference record from a year ago.
"The biggest thing we're going to have to do is get everyone on the same page, and get the kids back believing in themselves," Bunge said.
One player who should have little problem with that is junior outfielder Sara Holland. Holland, a native of Bixby, Okla., led the Jayhawks in batting average, hits, runs and home runs last season.
"Last season was a disappointment," Holland said. "We didn't have the leadership. We were playing hard, but we didn't have the direction."
Holland will be helped on the offensive end by junior shortstop Michelle Hubler of Merriam and junior catcher Kristina Johnson, who hit over .300 last spring. Johnson, a former Lawrence High standout, led the Jayhawks in RBIs with 31.
Heather Richins, a senior second baseman from Chico, Calif., is back to provide
10TH ANNUAL
plenty of experience for the Jayhawks up the middle.
"Those are key positions," Bunge said. "That's a situation where we need to get everybody playing up to
Johnson
Sarah McCann, a junior third baseman from Kansas City, and outfielder Julie True. a junior from Shawnee, both started over 50 games last spring.
their ability."
Bunge believes the coaching staff will be able to right the inconsistency of sophomore pitcher Sarah Workman, who went 14-13 last spring after an impressive fall season. After
working hard over the summer at her home in Orlando, Fla., Bunge said she expects to see the Sarah Workman of last fall.
"I'm looking for good things from Sarah. She'll be the leader of our pitching staff," Bunge said.
"Heather should be the perfect complement to Sarah," Bunge said. "She throws primarily off-speed pitches, down and away. Heather's going to be the junker and Sarah will be the hard thrower."
The Jayhawks pitching will also get a boost from incoming freshman Heather Hibben, who is expected to be the No. 2 starter.
Bunge said she also expects an immediate impact from freshman first baseman Shannon Stanwix, a former Lawrence High player. Stanwix should step in and get plenty of playing time on the infield.
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PAGE 38E AUGUST,1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
'It was frustrating for all of us in the fall'
Volleyball team bloomed in spring
BY GARY BEDORE
JOURNAL-WORLD ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
Kansas' volleyball players hope their 7-3 spring record translates into a successful 1996 fall season.
"We're excited about the strides the team made in the spring," third-year KU coach Karen Schonewise said of the Jayhawks' April exhibition season. "They (players) said they were disappointed when spring practice ended."
The Jayhawks, who went 8-19 during the fall, received a much-needed jolt of confidence last spring. They won six of their last seven matches.
"We had a lot of fun," Schonewise
VOLLEYBALL
said. "It was frustrating for all of us in the fall. We knew we were better than what we were competing like."
Schonewise said the Jayhawks, who return five starters, worked on "defining success" during the spring workouts.
"You can't only focus on winning as the only way to being successful," Schonewise said. "That's the way fans and the media define success. When you concentrate on areas (of the game) that you've worked on, winning takes care of itself."
Schonewise believes it's a matter of time before KU joins the volleyball elite despite the lack of a winning tradition.
"Everything else is in place. The support is fabulous," Schonewise said." We have a great location, fabulous school academically. It's a matter of staying patient."
KU returns five of six starters. None are seniors.
"We're excited about our team. We've got a great group of returnees and newcomers," Schoonewise said.
Returning junior starters are: Leslie Purkeypile, a 6-0 outside hitter from Wamego; Kendra Kahler, a 5-11, right-side hitter from Ottawa; and Maggie Mohrfeld, a 5-13 middle blocker from West Pointe, Iowa.
West Point. Purkepile led KU in kills six times last season. She had 18 kills versus Pacific and 15 digs against Iowa State.
"She's worked hard on her footwork. Her passing has always been good and improved in the spring," Schonewise said. "She definitely can be one of the best players in the conference."
Kahler's .210 hitting percentage led the team. She led KU in kills seven times and had 17 against K-State.
"Kendra has such great athletic ability," Schonewise said. "She has worked a lot on the mental side of the game. Physically she has all the tools."
Mohrfeld set a school record (for a three-game match) with seven service
7
FILE PHOTO
Leslie Purkey pile is one of KU's five returning starters.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST,1996 PAGE 39E
.
3
FILE PHOTO
Kendra Kahler, from Ottawa, was a regular starter last fall.
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Five starters return
defense in the spartan
Sophomores Laura Rohde and Moira Donovan also started a year ago.
Rohde, a 5-9 setter from Galesburg, Mich., was an outside hitter last season.
She had 17 assists against Iowa State and 17 kills against Pacific.
"She learned the position so quickly," Schonewise said, referring to setter. "We played a tournament at K-State in the spring and she was uncomfortable. A month later, she looked like she played it since she was 10."
"She improved a lot on attacking," Schonewise said. "She has more shots now and sees the court better. Blocking has always been Maggie's strength.
aces against Missouri. She had 15 kills against Cornell.
Continued from page 38
"We worked on hitting and defense in the spring."
Donovan tied a school record with a .727 attack percentage against Wichita State. She led the team in kills three times, totaling 15 against Western Michigan.
Mary Beth Albrecht, a 5-11 outside hitter from St. Charles Mo., could push for a starting spot as a freshman, Schonewise noted.
"She has the potential to be
an incredible hitter," Schonewise said. "She has great court personality."
Junior Tiffany Sennett, a 5-9 setter from Clifton, Ill., set a school record for assists in a three-game match against Oklahoma (60).
She had a team-leading 728 assists on the season.
the type of person she is and the worker she is."
"She is a very vocal person, good for the team," Schonewise said."She keeps everyone thinking."
Also back is 6-1 freshman middle blocker Anne Kreimer of Blue Springs, Mo., who redshirted last season after undergoing knee surgery.
Leading the list of newcomers is former Lawrence High standout Stephanie Blackwell, a 5-4 defensive specialist out of Cloud County CC.
"She's an extremely hard worker and gives us the size we've not had a lot of," Schonewise said.
Blackwell is a two-time Academic All-American.
"Her work ethic is so strong. She plays with energy," Schonewise said. "I've known her since she played at Lawrence High.I've known
"She is a great attacker and good ballhandler," Schonewise said. "She's an excellent player."
Kristi LaRosh, a 6-0 middle blocker, joins the program out of Tonganoxie High.
"She's not had a lot of highlevel experience yet but is very committed," Schonewise said.
"She's a great athlete but needs a little time."
Then there's walk-on Amanda Reves, a 6-0 middle blocker from Denver.
Reves was a four-year letterwinner in soccer, basketball track and volleyball and the state's 400 and 800 meter champion.
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PAGE 40E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Sprinter spent summer at Olympics
Lisk track headliner
BY GARY BEDORE
J-W ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
An Olympian returns to lead Kansas University's men's track team this year.
Pierre Lisk, a senior from Pierre Leone, Africa, competed for his country at the Atlanta
Games. He gained invaluable experience just being around
MEN'S TRACK
competitors like Carl Lewis.
"Being at the Games, participating in the Games, can only help him," KU coach Gary Schwartz said of Lisk, who placed first in the 100 and third in the 200 at the Big Eight Outdoor and second in the 55 dash at the Big Eight Indoor.
1574
"Pierre is a bright young man. He'd really have to have his head elsewhere to not bring home valuable lessons from the Olympics."
FILE PHOTO
Schwartz says it has been rewarding to see the improvement in Lisk the past two seasons.
"I think he's grown as an athlete — his competitiveness, composure in big meets and his work ethic have improved," Schwartz said. "It's what you hope kids would all do. He's practicing so much
Lawrence High product Brian Martin returns for his senior year.
harder as he matures. It takes some kids a while to see how the work at practice pays off. I couldn't be more pleased with his progress.
"It will be tougher this year because there will be lots of competition with the Southwest Conference schools coming in. He'll be projected as one of the top runners in the 100, but there will be great competition."
Spinter Brian Martin also returns for his senior year. The former Lawrence High standout is KU's indoor 400 record holder. He placed fourth in the 400 at Outdoor, also sixth in the 600 and seventh in the the 200 at Indoor.
"Put Brian in a competitive situation ... he finds a way when it's showtime," Schwartz said. "He is somebody people on the team look up to because of his competitiveness and his spirit."
spirit. It's also nice to have a local athlete perform well.
"We had another (local) success story with Joe Pickett,"
See Ryun twins, page 41
662
FILE PHOTO
Pierre Lisk competed for Sierra Leone in the Atlanta Olympics.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 41E
Ryun twins to run for Jayhawks
Continued from page 40
Schwartz said of the ex-LHS sprinter who used up his eligibility two years ago. "Brian is definitely not a household word in track and field, but he has talent, heart and the willingness to work, which all can make him a champion."
The Jayhawks also bring in Drew and Ned Ryun, former Lawrence High standouts who have one year of eligibility.
Sprinter Nathen Hill, a senior from Overland Park, who placed eighth in the 400 at league Indoor, is back, along with highly-touted high jumper Jason Archibald, a sophomore from Garden City,
who placed fifth at the league Outdoor and Indoor.
"There is unbelievable talent that kid possesses," Schwartz said. "He had a little problem with his legs in terms of training. I think it was just the transition. He didn't train much in high school. What we had was his legs were beat up a bit."
KU returns several pole vaulters: Chip Malmstrom, a sophomore from Mahtomedi, Minn.; Colby Miller, a soph from Lazbuddie, Texas and Marc Romito, a junior from Leawood. Romito placed fourth at Outdoor and fifth at league Indoor, Miller fifth at Outdoor and sixth at Indoor and Mahlstrom ninth at Indoor.
"It's a strong event for us, one in which we have great tradition," Schwartz said. "But we never bank on one event. We'll stay with the same philosophy that we need good sprinters, hurdlers, jumps, throwers and pole vaulters. But those are some quality kids."
Chris Gaston, a senior from Cotati, Calif., returns in the distance events. He led all Jayhawks with a 23rd place finish at last year's league cross country meet.
Matt Norton, a senior from Wichita, placed second in the 800 at league Outdoor and third at Indoor. Louis Theobald, a steeplechaser from Canada, is back for his junior season. Also figuring in
JOHN WATSON
Cord Criss
the CC and track distance lineup: Kurt Aiken, a junior from Derby; Cord Criss, a junior from Prairie Village; Kevin McGinn, a soph from Emporia; Clifton Rails-
back, a senior from Bartlesville, Okla.; Bryan Schultz, a junior from Topeka; Brian Watts, a junior from Carmel, Ind.; Josh Weber, a junior from Roeland Park; Craig Hettche, a soph from State College, Pa. and Michael Cain, a junior from Omaha.
Watts placed 33rd, Criss 37th and Weber 38th at league CC.
Multi-evens competitors Nathan Prenger, a junior from Jefferson City, Mo., and Travis Perret, a senior from Concordia, also are back.
Prenger placed second in the decathlon at Outdoor and fourth at the heptathlon at league Indoor. He also was fifth in the 55 hurdles.
Triple jumper Paul Tan, a senior from Overland Park placed fourth at Outdoor and seventh at league indoor.
In recruiting, the Jayhawks added Andrew Tate, a distance runner from Lake Elmo, Minn.
SONY
FILE PHOTO
Gary Schwartz likes his sprinters.
Hall of Fame honors KU
Kansas has more inductees in the National Track and Field Hall of Fame than any other school in the country.
They are: Jim Bausch, Brutus Hamilton, Glenn Cunningham, Bill Easton, Al Oerter, Billy Mills and Jim Ryun.
Seven Jayhawks are honored in the Hall of Fame in Charleston, W.V.
In the future, former American record holder Scott Huffman appears to be a lock in the pole vault.
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PAGE 42E AUGUST,1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Jayhawks enter fledgling league without Kloster, Heeb, Swartz
Schwartz eager for start of Big 12
BY GARY BEDORE
JOURNAL-WORLD ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
The Big 12 is going to be a strong conference in cross country and track.
So says Kansas coach Gary Schwartz, who isn't afraid of the new challenge beginning this school year.
"Texas, Texas A&M and Baylor all have strong track and field programs on both the women's and men's sides," Schwartz said."Texas Tech is at the bottom of that list, but they have had some strong teams, too.
"I believe adding them will help us. It'll hold higher marks up there for us to shoot at. It's something that's come at just the right time for our program. We've done a lot with our program, but now we
WOMEN'S TRACK
want to step it up to the next level."
KU enters the new league without four-year standout Kristi Kloster, who won the NCAA Indoor title in the 800 last year. Others lost to graduation include distance standouts Sarah Heeb, Melissa Swartz and Erin Howerton, plus spinner Dawn Steele-Slavens.
"We'll really miss Kristi. She is what college athletics is all about," Schwartz said of Kloster."She did so much for our program even having her a shortened period of time (because of leg injuries).
"That's one of the things about college athletics. You hate to see them go, but they move on and your program moves on, too through recruiting."
Through recruiting, the Jayhawks have added spinter Tamra Montgomery of Kansas City East High; spinter Madineh Hazim of Topeka West and thrower April Kockrow out of Rushville, Neb.
Some talented athletes return. Candy Mason, a junior from Nevada, Mo., notched third in the heptathlon at the Big Eight Outdoor. She was fourth in the pentathlon at Indoor. Also back is Amber Mounday, a senior heptathlete from Valley Center, who notched fifth in the heptathlon at Outdoor and seventh at Indoor.
"Candy was healthy all year long and had a really good spring," Schwartz said. Kim Feldkamp, a senior from Seneca; Marlea Woodman, a sophomore from
Belleville; Lisa Beran, a junior from Hays and Jenny Gordon, a junior from Marysville, return in the weight events. Feldkamp placed fifth in the shot at league Indoor and sixth in the javelin at Outdoor, while Woodman was fourth in the discus at Outdoor and ninth in the shot put at Indoor.
"We've got a strong group of throwers," Schwartz said.
Others who return and could make an impact in cross country and track distance events are: Whitney Ace, a junior from Emporia, who placed eighth in the mile at league Indoor and 59th at league CC; Erin Anderson, a junior from Mt. Prospect, Ill.; Erica
See Schwartz, page 43
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 43E
Schwartz likes balance with women
Continued from page 42
Blackwell, a sophomore from Lawrence; Tiffany Boykin, a sophomore from Laguna Hills, Calif.; Ann Deveaux, a soph from Schaumburg, Ill.; Amy Cook, a senior from new
Braunfels, Texas; Coleen McClimon, a senior from Madison, Wis., who placed 36th at league CC; Lynn LoPresti, a junior from Prospect Heights, Ill.; Emily Miles, a junior from Clinton, Mo.; Diane Heffernan, a sophomore from Kearney, Neb.; also Lawrence natives Katie Schwartzburg, Joanna
Scollon and Tiffany Spratt (50th at league CC).
Latanya Holloway, a 5-6 senior from Aurora, Colo., is back in the sprints along with Carleen Roberts, a senior from Jamaica, who notched fourth in the 400 at league Indoor and sixth in the 200 at Outdoor.
"I think we're better balanced on the girls side than the guys side," he said. "One of the reasons is we have more scholarship aide. We've got to take the girls program to the next level. We need to bring in girls who are in Melissa's and Kristi's range, bring them in as freshmen and get them to develop in our program."
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PAGE 44E AUGUST.1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
'I think they're excited about it'
Can KU continue climb in men's tennis?
BY ROBERT SINCLAIR
JOURNAL WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Losing its coach in midsummer and not having any seniors, Kansas' men's tennis team might be in trouble as it tries to win the first-ever Big 12 Conference championship.
Then again, maybe the Jayhawks won't have anything to worry about during the 1997 season.
"I think we went to a level that we had never been to before — cracking the top 10 in the country last year," former KU coach Michael Center said of last season's success. "Obviously any time you move forward in a program, you want to try and continue to move forward."
Sometimes that's easier said than done.
"It will be a real challenge for the team, but I think they're excited about it," Center said. "They have the talent and they have the desire. I think realistically they should try and shoot for the top five."
The Jayhawks (25-6) achieved a top 10 ranking for the first time in school history last year, making it to the Sweet 16 during the NCAA's postseason tournament before losing to Georgia. The team also won the final Big Eight Conference championship, its third in a row and ninth overall.
---
"You've got five guys returning who had significant playing time last year," Center said. "We really had kind of a sevenman rotation."
Translation: Kansas might have lost its fourth-year head coach and lost Victor Fimbres and Michael Isroff to graduation, but what remains is a battle-tested group.
"Enrique has pro potential," Center said. "He's just going to have to continue to discipline himself to be ready to perform day in and day out. That has got to be his biggest challenge, to stay away from the peaks and valleys, really do the little things mentally and physically that it takes to be a great player."
Abaroa, who was nationally ranked most of the year, finished with a 30-16 record. He was one of four Jayhawks to go undefeated during the Big Eight season, along with Fimbres, sophomore Fernando Sierraand junior Xavier Avila.
KU also has junior Enrique Abaroa.
MEN'S TENNIS
"I would definitely think that Enrique comes back as the No. 1 guy and I think he'll be top 10 in the country," Center said. "He's an All-American singles player and one of the best doubles players in the country. He's the team leader and I would expect him to play No. 1.
As for Abaroa's supporting staff, Avila (24-4) is the most likely candidate to replace Fimbres at the No. 2 position.
"After that, it really will be up to guys to play themselves into positions."
"Xavier had one of the most incredible seasons I've ever
seen for any player, anywhere," Center said. "So he'll be a strong player."
Sophomore Luis Uribe (28-13) and junior Trent Tucker (29-15) return along with junior Scott Marshall (4-5).
"Fernando Sierra is a sleeping giant," Center said. "His talent level was untapped."
(Los Angeles). Ryan Baxter, a recruit from South Africa, will arrive on campus in January.
Behind the returning players are red-shirt freshmen Jeff Erin and Bryan Maier as well as transfer Andrew Lumpkin (Colorado State) and incoming freshman Matthew Snowdon
"Of that group somebody is going to have to step forward and be ready to contribute," Center said. "But the core of the team is intact — there's a lot of experience — and there's no seniors."
THE TEAM
"I think these guys have a lot to build on in the next couple of years."
28 record over two seasons of coaching the women before that, had some advice for his successor.
"The thing about coaching at KU that was always so easy for me is I always believed in this school so much," Center said. "I went to school here and I played here and when you sell something that you believe in, it's a lot easier to sell it."
Center, who compiled an 83-28 record during his four seasons with the men and a 39-
Note: The Jayhawks had not named a new coach at the time of publication.
FILE PHOTO
Enrique Abaroa returns for his junior season.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 45E
KU should be in Hunt for Big 12 title
[Image of a tennis player in action, striking a ball with a racket.]
**Caption:** A tennis player strikes a ball during a match.
1
FILE PHOTO
Kylie Hunt, a senior, reached the NCAA singles final last year.
BY ROBERT SINCLAIR
JOURNAL WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Following the pressure of five consecutive Big Eight Conference championships, Kansas University's women's tennis team is actually looking forward to the relief of the inaugural Big 12 season.
"I'll tell you one thing that's nice — it's not ours to lose for the first time in five years," KU coach Chuck Merzbacher said. "When you're out there and they just keep shooting for you — like that Oklahoma State match (in the NCAA Central Region championship) — sooner or later they just get so fired up for you."
The match against the Cowgirls, a 5-4 Jayhawk loss, marked the disappointing end to a successful season.
After an undefeated run through the conference and an unprecedented fifth consecutive title, Kansas had fire in its eyes.
"Obviously we wanted to make it to the Sweet 16," Merzbacher said. "We made it to the final 22 teams and lost in that last round. Our goal was to get to that final site, but we were a couple of inches short."
Nevertheless, the season wasn't a loss.
WOMEN'S TENNIS
"I feel like we had a great year," Merzbacher said. "We won the last Big Eight which was a goal. We won the last Big Eight Tournament which was a goal, and we wanted to be a top-20 team. We were ranked No. 20."
A lot of KU's success had to do with Kylie Hunt, who made a successful run of her own through the NCAA postseason. In fact, Hunt advanced to the singles championship before being defeated.
"Kylie Hunt had an unbelievable year," Merzbacher said of his No.1 singles player, a senior from Newcastle, Australia.
Hunt posted a 49-4 record, was an AllAmerican and the No.6 player in the country.The "low" ranking came as a surprise to her coach.
"She was the No.1 seed at the NCAAs and lost in the finals," Merzbacher said. "I think she wants to come back and maybe win every Grand Slam event. She's got high goals and I know the rest of the team has high goals."
"I was so close last time and know that I can do it," Hunt said. "I know what it takes and it was just such a good experience."
The Jayhawks should remain strong despite the loss of No.2 player Jenny Atkerson (23-10) and Kim Webster to graduation.
The No. 1 through No. 5 positions could shape up like this: Hunt, junior Christie Sim (25-12), senior Bianca Kirchhof (19-17), junior Maria Abatjoglou (25-13) and sophomore Kris Sell (22-13). The last position could go to either senior Amy Trytek (6-5) or one of the newcomers, Brooke Chiller (Australia) and Julia Sidorova (Riga, Latvia).
"I know we have some good freshmen coming in, but I don't know their capabilities," Hunt said. "I think we'll all be fighting for our spots and I think it will be pretty competitive among a lot of people."
Although Merzbacher said Hunt "has dibs on No.1," he agreed the rest of the positions are up in the air.
"It's just a matter of who's going to be ready to play," Merzbacher said. "Christie Sim had some great wins and is very talented. I think after those two, it's just whoever steps up. Its really wide-open."
Merzbacher is hoping the seniors — Hunt, Kirchhof and Trytek — will elevate their games.
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PAGE 46E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
League loaded in swimming
KU ready for Big 12
BY NEAL SHULENBURGER
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Kansas' men's swimming team last won a Big Eight title in 1979. The Jayhawks have been quite competitive, however, placing second the league's final 10 seasons.
"Basically we swam well overall as a team," coach Gary Kempf said, referring to last year's runnerup finish behind Nebraska.
Second will prove an even greater accomplishment in the
"But we had a couple of weak events that we didn't do well in and that added up to finishing second."
MEN'S SWIMS
Big 12. Kempf said.
"There is a huge difference in doing well in the Big Eight Conference and doing well in the Big 12 Conference," Kempf said."To win the Big 12 Conference, you have to be among the national elite."
In addition to Nebraska, the Jayhawks now must face defending national champion Texas, plus Texas A&M. The Aggies were ranked in the top 20 a year ago.
Kempf is optimistic despite losing seven seniors to graduation.
Top returnees include senior Erik Jorgensen, an All-American in the 500 freestyle who placed finished fifth in the 1,650 at the NCAA meet; junior Kostaki Chiligiris, a major contributor in freestyle, backstroke and the individual medley and senior Brian O'Mara, who will be a utility man for the Jayhawks.
FILE PHOTO
"We have an excellent returning group," Kempf said. "These guys have got as much ability as anyone in the nation. They just have to condition themselves, and commit themselves to doing the little things you need to do. They do have the ability to win the conference. They do have the opportunity. Now it's just a question of doing it."
Eleven swimmers will be joining the Jayhawks.
"We recruited to try and fill the weak spots on the roster," Kempf said. "Now we have probably come back with as balanced a team as I have ever had. Nearly every one of these freshmen has the ability to step up and swim at this level. This may be as talented a
KANSAS
SWIMMING
See Jayhawks', page 47
Gary Kempf coached KU to a runner-up league finish last year.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED • SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 47E
1
Jayhawks' recruiting class 'talented'
Continued from page 46
group of freshmen as I have ever had."
The newcomers include:
- Tyler Painter of Greeley, Colo. who finished third in the U.S.Open in the 1,500 meter freestyle.
- "We think he is one of the premiere high school distance freestylers," Kempf said. "He could step in and help us immediately."
- Backstroker Brandon Chestnut of Derby. "He's really kind of a unknown talent," Kempf said. "But he is a
tremendous talent. He is one of the best kickers I've ever seen in my life."
- Backstroker Scott Barangi, Oak Ridge, Tenn. "He has an explosive dolphin kick," Kempf said. "That is the newest technique in the backstroke. You need it to stay competitive, and it is not very common in a high school swimmer."
- Brian Klapper, Hamilton, Ohio. "He's one of my favorite recruits of all-time," Kempf said. "He has a great attitude. He is motivated, shows a lot of excitement and is also a very good butterflyer and freestyler."
The Jayhawks will look for
help in the shorter freestyle events from Andy Kyser of Davenport, Iowa.
The other six freshmen: Joe Donnally, a diver from Lawrence, plus Greg Bailey, Valley Center; Drew Dischinger, Kansas City; Tyler Cederlind, Kansas City; Skip Reynolds, Aurora, Colo., Sean Jacobs, Wichita and Culley Winter, Elmgrove, Wis.
"Realistically, we are not going to go out and beat the national champion," Kempf said. "I don't think anyone can beat them. You have to walk before you run, so right now we are shooting for a top 20 finish."
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PAGE 48E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
'That means a lot of different people are going to have to step up'
Key players gone from swim team
Kristin Nilsen, a junior, holds the school record in the 400 individual medley.
FILE PHOTO
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JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Kansas University's women's swimming fans may have some trouble identifying team members this year.
Gone from last year's conference second place team are national diving champion Michelle Rojojn and AllAmericans Jennifer Peltier and Donna Christensen.
The roster includes just two seniors Andee Greves, a freestyle, breastroke, and individual medley competitor from Davis, Calif., and Rebecca Andrew, a freestyler and butterflier from Kansas City.
"We lost some key players from last year," KU coach Gary Kempf said."That means a lot of different people are going to have to step up. But we have a very solid core and if they step up we can finish in the top 20 (in the country)."
Andrew has been an All-American in short distance freestyle events her first three years at KU.
Among the returnees are Adrienne Turner, a sophomore from Goshen, Ind., who earned All-America honors in the 200 butterfly; Quincy Adams, a Fort Stockton, Texas, sophomore who qualified for the NCAA championships in
WOMEN'S SWIMMING
the 100 breaststroke and Kristin Nilsen, a junior from Ballwin, Mo., who holds the school record in the 400 individual medley.
Sophomore divers Deanna Beiswanger (Derby), Kay Kelly (Lincoln, Neb.) and Christian Paschall (Overland Park), plus junior Kenzie Zeller of Loves Park. Ill., are back. Freshmen Kelly Norton of Grandview, Mo., and Kerri Pribyl of Shawnee will also try to make an impact in diving.
"Can we replace Michelle Rojohn?," Kempf said. "I really don't think so. No one can replace a national champion, but we have some talented divers and people can step up and surprise you. After all, Rojohn didn't even place the year before."
The biggest hole that must be filled for Kansas is on the diving platform. Rojohn, who was the surprise winner at the national championships, graduated.
Several younger swimmers will be put into leadership roles. Juniors Jama Crady, Lawrence, and Dawn Wolf,
See Kempf, page 49
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 49E
Kempf praises captains
Continued from page 48
Billings, Mont. join Greves as this season's captains.
"They may be young," Kempf said, "but they are excellent captains. They are willing to stand up and say what needs to be said and they will act as leaders for this team."
Kempf believes that the captains will play an even bigger role this season than they have in years past.
"The seniors are the ones we usually look to to lead us," Kempf said. "What separates a good team from a great team is the intangibles, like attitude and team chemistry. Without many seniors it will be up to these captains to set the tone."
The Jayhawks added nine freshmen to this year's squad. The new signees include:
- Jennifer Fox, who hails from Overland Park, will swim primarily in sprint freestyle events. She may also compete in the backstroke.
- "She is an excellent freestyler," Kempf said. "She should be able to step up and help us right away."
- Rebecca Eustice, Loveland, Colo. is expected to swim sprint freestyle and back stroke events.
- "It may take a little bit of time for her to rise to the top of the team in her events, but she will be a big part of our plans down the road," Kempf said.
- Sherry West of Raleigh, N.C., will compete in the individual medley, butterfly, and freestyle events.
- Christine Smith, Clarendon Hills, Ill., Anna Armstrong, Fullerton, Calif., and Erin Staten, West Lafayette, Ind., will compete in distance freestyle.
- Lindsay Merrill, Plano,
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PAGE 50E AUGUST, 1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KU rowing is growing
BY ROBERT SINCLAIR
JOURNAL WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Rowers are made, not born.
"Most of the people we have are going to be changeovers from other sports," KU rowing coach Rob Catloth said. "That's how we're going to build our team almost any year — finding women who were volleyball players or basketball players or swimmers in high school but maybe aren't at the level to come to KU and be a Div.-IA athlete in their sport."
"They come to KU anyway and are good, hard-working athletes. So we're looking for that top 3 to 10 percent."
Catloth, KU's second-year
coach who led the club team for nine years, is doing a good job of recruiting. His second team will be close to 60 athletes strong, up from last year's total of 44 members.
While the newcomers are a question mark — the coach doesn't even know for sure who will be on the team come October — Kansas is returning its fair share of talent.
Ashley Masoni, Emporia sophomore, was on the Varsity Four team which placed fourth last year at the Collegiate National Rowing Championships in Cincinnati, Ohio. Jennifer Miller, Mexico, Mo. senior, is another person Catloth is expecting to do well this year.
ROWING
The Kansas rowing team consists of a Varsity Eight (which is an eight member team plus a coxswain, who steers the boat), Varsity Four, Lightweight Eight and Lightweight Four.
Two of the Jayhawks returning coxswains are Melissa Liem, Lenexa senior, and Amber Rossman Tulsa, Okla., senior.
"I think they're going to give us a lot of good leadership and confidence," Catloth said of the duo.
Top returning lightweights include Julie Kassik, Evergreen, Colo., senior, and Heather Daniels, Leawood senior.
All told, the Jayhawks only lost eight members from last year's squad, the first varsity rowing team in school history.
"I think we learned a lot." Catloth said of last year's experience. "We have some good
Rob Catloth
ideas about what to do from here on out. I think our first recruiting class had a lot of good talent and hopefully we'll be able to build a successful program starting with them."
Notice Catloth didn't say anything about competing for the first-ever Big 12 Conference title. That's because there isn't one.
"There's quite a few schools in the Big 12 that have club teams, but last year we were the first Big Eight — or even Big 12 — school to have varsity women's rowing." Catloth said. "This year Kansas State is adding varsity women's rowing for the first time. Women's rowing is the biggest growing sport, I think, in the United States."
The reason for that, of course, is the highly publicized Title IX which said NCAA institutions had to provide an equal playing field for women.
Some of the schools which recently added women's varsity rowing include Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Ohio State, Tennessee, Tulsa, and Virginia. KU and K-State remain the only two Big 12 schools with varsity teams.
What does Catloth hope to accomplish without a Big 12 championship to shoot for?
"We're just looking to improve on how we did last year," the coach said. "That's our main goal. I think we're also going to try a become more competitive in our region and try to keep working toward the time that when our freshmen and sophomores are juniors and seniors we can be more competitive nationally."
75
Rowing debuted at KU last year as a varsity sport, after several years as a club sport.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED • SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 51E
KU had growing pains in inaugural year
vci
KU soccer on the rise
BY EVAN BLACKWELL
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Kansas women's soccer team learned plenty about itself in its first season as a varsity program a year ago.
Coach Lori Walker plans on the growing to continue this season, her second at KU after working three years as an assistant at Maryland.
Walker and the rest of the Jayhawks enter their second season of competition with one new challenge they didn't face last year —the Big 12 Conference.
Walker said the addition of Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Baylor without question makes the Jayhawks' road much tougher.
"Just by bringing those teams in, we've automatically upgraded our schedule dramatically," said Walker, a former standout goalkeeper at national powerhouse North Carolina.
Kansas went through some growing pains in its inaugural
- SOCCER
season, finishing with a 6-12 overall record. While the record may indicate a disappointing year, Walker was pleased with the progress the team made.
"We were able to concentrate on some technical things that we really needed to work on," Walker said.
After a year of fine tuning the fundamentals, Walker hopes it translates into success on the field this year.
"I generally like to hold off my goal-setting until after we start scrimmaging and I see the players play together,"Walker said. "But going into the Big 12, I want to be in the top five in the conference."
The biggest changes for the Jayhawks this season should be at goalkeeper, where Walker said two freshman should battle for the starting job.
Jen Stuckey and Betsy Pollard are the leading candidates to take over in the nets.
Kansas will be welcoming in several freshman to blend with the returning players.
"I think it's going to make a nice blend of young players and more experienced players," Walker said.
Among the more expereicned players, Walker said the biggest change to the lineup should be moving Millersville, Md., sophomore Erin Hon back to the field, after starting her out of position at goalkeeper for most of last season.
"Being able to move her back to the field should help us. She was one of our best players on the field last year, but we had to use her in the back," Walker said.
The Jayhawks will also welcome back sophomores Denise Cooke, Jackie Dowell and Sarah Korpi to key the offensive attack. Cooke, a native of Tacoma, Wash., led the team in goals last spring with six. Dowell is a native of Germantown, Md., and Korpi a native of Maple Grove, Minn.
ANSA
20
FILE PHOTO
Mary Jones helped KU to a 6-12 record last season.
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PAGE 52E AUGUST, 1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
'It's going to be an entirely different team'
KU men's golf team loses six players
BY NEAL SHULENBURGER
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
1978
"It's going to be an entirely different team," KU coach Ross Randall said. "It's a young team. We lost three of our top seven players to graduation, so it will also be an inexperienced team."
Kansas University's men's golf team will bear little resemblance to the squad that finished 15th in the country last year.
With only two seniors — Kit Grove, and Vance Holtzman — returning, heavy competition is expected for tournament berths. Just about
In all, a whopping six players graduated, including No.1 golfer Slade Adams and three-year letter winners Jason Seeman and Alan Stearns.
MEN'S GOLF
every non-freshman is expected to have a shot at competition.
"Our projected starters include Grove, sophomore Chris Thompson and an incoming freshman (Ryan Vermeer)," Randall said. "The other spots are simply up for grabs. I have no idea who will fill them."
The main source for leadership on the team is likely to
Ross Randall
be Grove, who competed in every event for the Jayhawks last season. He is expected to battle Thompson for the top spot on the team.
"With this much turnover it's going to be very hard to say just what we can do," Randall said. "I think that the remaining guys are good enough that we can be competitive, but with the Big 12 Conference coming in, I can't project just where we might finish."
IRELAND
If the Jayhawks hope to claim the conference title, they will have to knock off perennial conference powers Oklahoma and Oklahoma
Roy Edwards
State. New conference rival Texas also finished in the national top 15 last season, but did not fare as well at the NCAA championships as the Jayhawks.
"I don't know of another conference that is this strong," Randall said. "This season will certainly be a challenge for us."
Randall is impressed with newcomer Vermeer, an Omaha, Neb., native. Vermeer won the Nebraska state high school championship and the junior championship.
Randall said that he is so impressed Vermeer will not be redshirted this season.
"He is playing extremely well this summer," Randall said. "Most freshmen are not mature enough yet to be able to handle college golf. Vermeer is definitely an exception. His game is at the college level."
Competing for Rockhurst High school, freshman Jimmy Gates finished second in the Missouri state championship.
In addition, Gates was second in the Kansas City matchplay championships.
Gates will probably be redshirted.
Last summer's Kansas State junior champion, and runner up in this year's tournament, Jimmy Stewart of Independence heads the list of Kansas's in-state recruits.
Eden Prairie, Minn. native Jason deBuhr will be the Jayhawks' lone walk-on.
Brad Davis of Newton, Jake Istrnick, from Tulsa, Okla., and Roy Edwards of Hutchinson were red-shirted as freshman last season.
"We're extremely pleased to have Jason," Randall said. "He was certainly one of the best high school golfers in Minnesota and I feel extremely lucky to get someone that talented to walk on."
1982
Andy Bengtson
1234567890
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED • SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 53
Women's golf team experienced
40
FILE PHOTO
Mandy Munsch caught fire late last season.
BY NEAL SHULENBURGER
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Kansas' women's golf team will be long on experience this year.
The Jayhawks lost only two players — Lynn Williamson and Jessica Thompson — to
graduation. Williamson was a four-year letter winner, but did not play much a year ago because of illness.
PETER HARRIS
"The team that played for us last year is essentially back
Waugh
this season," KU coach Jerry Waugh said. "We'll have more people who have tournament experience playing for us than we've had in a long time."
The Jayhawks finished seventh in the Big Eight last season. Also, the four new league schools, Texas, Texas Tech, Baylor and Texas A&M, are strong in golf.
WOMEN'S GOLF
Nonetheless, Waugh believes the Jayhawks could finish in the Big 12's upper division.
"We are a much better team than we were last year," Waugh said. "Our goal is to finish in the top six in the conference. If we really come together well and five of our players start playing good golf consistently, we can accomplish our goal. And finishing sixth in this conference might just be enough to qualify us for national play."
Waugh also credits the team's reformed summer work ethics.
"The players are really working very hard this summer," Waugh said. "Possibly harder
than they ever have before. That is extremely encouraging because summertime is the time when you improve the most because you are not traveling or going to class. You have time to practice."
Seniors Missy Russell, from Bartlesville Okla., and Anne Clark from Salem, Ill., are expected to lead the way.
"Missy could be one of the top players in the conference," Waugh said. "Missy has as much talent as anyone else on the team. Her results will act as a goal for most of the other players. And Anne has improved more than any other player on the team. She's a very dedicated worker and will set the tone of for the team attitude wise."
Sophomore Mandy Munsch from Hays is also expected to step up. Munsch is one of the Jayhawks' biggest surprises of last season.
much from her," Waugh said. "But she came on at the end of the year and played as well as anyone else on the team. She will be one of the fixtures in our tournament lineup."
"We weren't expecting
Freshman Carrie Padden of Marysville redshirted last year
"She may begin to come around and give us some help," Waugh said."Her summer results are very encouraging."
Freshmen Susan Tessary from Collinsville, Ill. and Jill Simpson of Columbus are expected to compete for spots on the five-person traveling team.
Simpson won the Kansas Class 4A state championship four consecutive times.
Freshman Lindsay Gentry, who played four years at Lawrence High, could be a redshirt.
Walk-on Andrea Schultz from Englewood, Colo., will also join the team.
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PAGE 54E AUGUST,1996
KUED • SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
'They haven't been put in the fire, put to the test'
Sooners largely 'unproven' group
4
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITED
Howard Schnellenberger is gone ... and most of the Oklahoma football starters went with him.
Schnellenberger, who coached the Sooners to a 5-5-1 record in his only year at OU, simply walked away, and in walked John Blake, a former Sooner who left his position as
an assistant coach with the Dallas Cowboys
FOOTBALL
FOE
to coach his alma mater.
Blake, the third OU head coach in three seasons, walked in on a program in disarray. Infighting broke out under Schnellenberger, and the "Sooner Nation" natives were restless.
Blake inherits a team that returns just three starters on offense and six on defense.
"We've got a lot of unproven guys," Blake said of his Sooners, who were picked No. 9 in the Big 12's preseason media poll. "They haven't been put in the fire, put to the test."
Well, stoke up the grill because the formation of the Big 12 is sure to turn up the heat.
But Blake isn't worried.
"This is truly a building
Q
Schedule
Sept. 7 — Texas Christian
Sept. 21 — at San Diego State
Sept. 28—Tulsa
Oct. 5 - Kansas
Oct. 12 — Texas at Dal-
las
Oct. 19 — at Baylor
Oct. 26 - at Kansas State
State
Nov. 2—Nebraska
Nov. 9 — at Oklahoma State
Nov. 16 - at Texas A&M
Nov. 23 Texas Tech
process," he said. "Deep down inside, I think this football team can win any football game it plays this season."
The Sooners return preseason all-Big 12 tight end Stephen Alexander, erratic QB Eric Moore and tailback James Allen on the offensive side. They'll play behind a brand-new line.
"It was very frustrating at first to have three coaches in three years. But I'm excited now. Coach Blake brings excitement to the program... It has been tough going through three coaches in three seasons. But it's a great situation now."
Stephen Alexander
"The offensive line is a major concern for us," Blake said. "That's a position where they guys have to gel together."
Much of the OU defensive line returns, along with linebackers Tyrell Peters and Broderick Simpson, but the secondary is suspect with only one returning starter in safety Anthony Fogle.
"Our most experienced area is linebacker," Blake said. "But our secondary is a major concern."
The players, though, don't seemed concerned.
Last year, we saw guys who didn't enjoy playing the game. It has been tough going through three coaches in three seasons. But it's a great situation now."
KU has retired just 3 numbers
After more than 100 years of collegiate competition in football, Kansas has retired just three uniform numbers.
Oklahoma will play host to Kansas on Oct. 5 in the Sooners' homecoming game. KU beat the Sooners, 38-17, last fall in Norman.
In 1948, following his senior season, Ray Evans had his No. 42 retired.
John Hadl's No.21 was retired in 1972 in the middle of what was an 18-year pro career.
Evans was KU's first All-American in football and was also a two-time basketball AllAmerican.
Hadl, who suited up for KU from 1959-61, is one of two Jayhawks to earn All-America honors twice.
The other two time All-American is Gale Sayers, who had his jersey No. 48 retired in 1989.
Sayers earned All-America honors in 1963 and '64.
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"I think we're going to surprise some people," said Alexander, who caught 43 passes for 580 yards last fall. "I think we're going to step it up."
"It was very frustrating at first to have three coaches in three years. But I'm excited now. Coach Blake brings excitement to the program.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED • SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 55E
4
Southwest Conference runners-up return 14 starters
Texas Tech returns 'great core'
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Just when Spike Dykes thought he had all the answers, the questions changed.
Dykes, Texas Tech's 10thyear football coach, and the Red Raiders finished no
lower than second in the Southwest Conference the past five seasons.
FOOTBALL FOE
Tech placed seventh in the Big 12 preseason media poll.
"We worked like a dog," Dykes said, "and finally became a contender in that league. And then they disbanded it."
At least Dykes is taking an experienced group into the fledgling Big 12 Conference.
Tech returns 14 starters including eight on offense
from the team that went 9-3 last season, tied for second in the SWC and beat Air Force in the Copper Bowl,the
Raiders' third straight bowl appearance.
"It looks like we've got our tail to the heater," Dykes drawled. "But that doesn't hurt anything. I told our players, they better get excited. ... We've got a great core coming back."
Central to that core are QB Zeb-
bie Lethridge and '95 SWC rushing champion Byron Hanspard. Lethridge, a junior most often compared to Randall Cunningham, threw for 1,885 yards and set the SWC record for completions without an interception. Hanspard, also a junior,
rushed for 1,374 yards and 11TDs last season.
"It looks like we've got our tail to the heater. But that doesn't hurt anything.I told our players, they better get excited... We've got a great core coming back."
"Zebbie ended up as a great quarterback," Dykes said.
Spike Dykes
"He's a catalyst, a great leader for us. Football's important to him, and winning's important to him. ... And Byron was a Parade All-American. I didn't know what that meant until he got here. But I know now."
They'll operate behind a line that returns almost
intact. Tech lost just one starting offensive lineman to graduation.
"Nobody knows who's playing on the offensive line, except their mothers," Dykes said. "They're ugly, they don't smell good and they all look
F
Schedule
Aug. 31 — at Kansas State
Sept. 7 — Oklahoma State at Dallas
Sept. 21 — at Georgia
Sept. 28 — Utah State
Oct. 5 — Baylor
Oct. 12 — at Kansas
Oct. 19 — Nebraska
Oct. 26 — at Texas A&M
Nov. 9 — Texas
Nov. 16 — Southwest Louisiana
Nov. 23 — at Oklahoma
Send us email at:
sports@ljworld.com
Send us email at: sports@ljworld.com
the same. But we've got a good nucleus of 'em coming back."
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The same can be said for the defense. Three seniors graduated from the secondary and two from the linebacking corps, but the line returns.
"On defense, we've got some big shoes to fill," Dykes said. "Our linebackers
are gone, but the good news is I think we've got some pretty good candidates to replace them. We get the bulk of our defensive line back. I don't know if that's good or bad. The guys who made most of the plays are gone, so those guys have to step up."
Tech will meet Kansas in Lawrence on Oct. 12.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 57E
.
'We're closing the gap on them'
Can Colorado catch Nebraska?
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Could this be the year Colorado finally catches Nebraska?
"It has been frustrating," CU offensive coordinator
Karl Dorrell said. "That's been
FOOTBALL FOE
something on our minds the last four or five years. But we're closing the gap on them. If you go by speed and all that, we're closing in on them."
The Buffs, 10-2 and a winner over Oregon in the Cotton Bowl last year, return a ton of talent. Back are nine offensive starters and seven defensive starters.
And still CU finished second to Nebraska, the two-time defending national champions, in the Big 12 preseason media poll.
"Our coaching staff is very excited about the possibilities of our team," Dorrell said. "We have several players back."
Back on offense are three preseason all-Big 12 team members: wideout Rae Carruth, quarterback Koy Detmre and offensive lineman Chris Naeole.
CU
Schedule
Aug. 31 — Washington State
Sept. 7 — at Colorado State
State
State Sept.14 — Michigan Sept.28 — at Texas A&M
Oct. 19 — at Kansas
Oct. 26 — Texas
Nov. 2 — at Missouri
Nov. 9 — Iowa State
Nov. 16 — Kansas State
Nov. 29 — at Nebraska
"Skill positionwise, we have the ingredients to be successful," Dorrell said. "But the offensive line was hit by the loss of two starters. We're a little green behind the ears."
line seems to be CU's only weakness.
Mixed metaphors aside, the
Detmer's return forced John Hessler (2,136 passing yards last year) to return to his backup role. Rushing leader Hershell Troutman (826 yards) and reception leader Carruth (1,008 yards) return.
"Yes, we're optimistic on offense," Dorrell said.
The Buffs have reason for optimism on defense, too. Tackling leader Matt Russell, a linebacker, is back. He also made the preseason all-Big 12 team.
"I think our defense will be drastically improved from a year ago," Dorrell said. "We get three of our four defensive linemen back, and they're bigger and stronger. Matt Russell's back. He's been our anchor the last three years."
The Buffs switched defensive sets last season, and Russell figures their erratic play last season was part of the learning process.
"At Colorado, we don't want to win 45-40," Russell said. "We want shutout. We want to win 45-3. We've got our feet on the ground now. We were still learning the new system last year. Now we're going to go out and just play."
But can the Buffs catch Nebraska? We'll find out on Nov.29 — in Lincoln.
Colorado will travel to
Lawrence to meet Kansas on Oct. 19, KU's homecoming game. KU stunned CU, 40-24 last fall in Boulder.
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PAGE 58E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
NU loaded again in '96
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
The Big Red Machine rolls on.
Nebraska, the two-time defending national college football champion, is so stocked again this year, the normally reserved Cornhuskers are actually — gasp openly talking about a threepeat.
"I think a three-peat is very attainable for this group," NU senior split end Brendan Hol-
bein said.
"The
opportunity
is there
FOOTBALL FOE
for this group. The last two national championships are stepping stones."
The Huskers, 12-0 again last year, lost all-everything QB Tommie Frazier and six other offensive starters. But seven starters return to NU's stifling defense.
Defensively, we have a good chance, if we keep working hard," said NU end Jared Tomich, the Big 12 preseason defensive player of the year. "We have a chance to be the best ever at Nebraska. But we have to keep focused."
Much of the focus from outside the Huskers' camp is on quarterback, where Stanford transfer Scott Frost — a dropback passer — likely will replace Frazier, a Heisman Trophy also-ran who was born to run the Huskers' option offense.
"The big question is quarterback,"NU coach Tom Osborne said. "We lost two great players in Tomnie Frazier and Brook Berringer. But we're in good shape, considering that. Scott Frost has been in our program for a year and a half. He has excellent physical capabilities.
... We hope he'll be a very good player."
Three offensive line starters and I-back Ahman Green return to the offense that rolled up 399.8 yards per game last season.
"I think we'll definitely be good offensively," Osborne said. "The biggest question is
Huskers
Sept. 7 - Michigan State
Schedule
Sept. 21 - at Arizona State
Sept. 28 — Colorado State
Oct. 5 — at Kansas State
Oct. 12 -Baylor
Oct. 19 — at Texas Tech
Oct. 26 - Kansas
Nov. 2—at Oklahoma
SEEKING BARGAINS?
Nov. 9 - Missouri
Nov. 16 — at Iowa State
Nov.29-Colorado
The Journal-World Classified works 832-2222
Aaron Taylor, who we moved from guard to center. If he fits that role, we'll have a solid offensive line but not a lot of depth. . . And Ahman's a little bigger this year, in the 215-218 range. And we hope to get some mileage out of true freshman DeAngelo Evans."
Osborne is confident he'll have the talent. Chemistry is unknown.
"Chemistry was a major strength of this team over the last few years," Osborne said. "If we continue to have that, we'll be a strong football team. If we don't have that, we'll be an average football team.
"It'd be nice to do that (three-peat). No team is going to aim low. Obviously, the odds are against it. There are 106 Division One teams. Ten or 15 are going to have enough athletes to do it. We take the attitude, somebody's got to win it. We've got as good a chance as anybody."
NU will play host to Kansas on Oct.26.The Huskers beat KU, 41-3, last fall in Lawrence.
The 1996 season will mark Glen Mason's ninth as head coach at Kansas, tying Jack Mitchell (1958-66) for longest stint as a Jayhawk head coach.
Mason's record of 43-47-1 includes a mark of 34-22 over the last five years.
This season marks Mason's 25th in coaching. With the Jayhawks' first game (Ball State) in 1996, Mason will have coached more games (92) than any other coach in school history.
GLEN MASON AT A GLANCE
Mason has 43 wins at KU, one short of tying Mitchell for second in KU career victories. A.R. Kennedy ranks first with 53.
Other significant facts about Mason:
- He has guided KU to 28 wins over the past four years, the most in any four-year period in the last 85 years.
- He was named Big Eight Coach of the Year in 1992 and '95.
- Six of the top 10 total offense marks in KU history came during the Mason years.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 59E
九
Cyclones coach 'proud of progress'
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Some considered Iowa State's 3-8 record last football season a minor miracle.
ISU coach Dan McCarney did not.
"I'm never going to be proud of 3-8," second-year coach McCarney said. "But I am real proud of our progress. And
we've got a good nucleus coming back."
FOOTBALL
FOE
That nucleus is bunched around Troy Davis, the nation's leading rusher last season with 2,010 yards. Davis, a junior, placed fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting after becoming the first sophomore to crack the 2,000-yard barrier.
"He is one of the most sensational football players I've ever been around," McCarney said. "He's got a lot of Godgiven talent."
Eight offensive and seven defensive starters return from last year, and freshman Darren Davis — Troy Davis' ballyhooed brother — debuts at running back.
The big questions in McCar-
IowaState
IowaState
Schedule
Sept. 7 — Wyoming
Sept. 14 — at Iowa
Sept. 21 — Northern
Iowa
Sept. 28 — Missouri
Oct. 12 — Texas A&M
Oct. 19 — at Oklahoma
State
Oct. 26 — at Baylor
Nov. 2 — Kansas
Nov. 9 — at Colorado
Nov. 16 — Nebraska
Nov. 23 — at Kansas
State
ney's mind are whether the Cyclones can develop enough of a passing attack to protect their star running back, and whether the ISU defense can actually stop somebody.
"Last year, we had three four games where we scored only 10 points," McCarney said. "That's inexcusable with
the best running back in college football. When you start seeing eight,- nine-man fronts, you gotta protect and pass the ball or people are going to giggle and laugh at you."
Both of ISU's quarterbacks return. A third, Jeff St. Clair, has moved to the defensive secondary.
The ISU defense ranked last in the Big Eight last season in rushing, scoring and total defense. And it ranked 108th nationally in rushing defense.
"There wasn't one phase of defense I was happy with last year," McCarney said. "That's a real helpless feeling."
Season ticket sales are up in Ames, Iowa, and the players, at least, are confident they'll move forward.
"I was here when we were at rock-bottom," said ISU safety Mike Lincavage. "When (McCarney) came in, he got the support of students and people in the state. That gets the team motivated. That's how we make strides."
But the start of the Big 12 didn't do the Cyclones any favors.
"Our whole focus going into the season is to improve as a football team," McCarney
said. "We're playing the toughest schedule in the history of Iowa State.
"Hopefully, when we look back on this season, we'll be able to see tangible improvement. We're ready to be underdogs in 11 games this year. I don't care about that. If we get some amount of respect back, that's our goal."
Iowa State will play host to Kansas on Nov. 2. KU beat the Cyclones, 34-7, last season.
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PAGE 60E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Kansas State must fill holes to climb again
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Kansas State could field a radically different football team this fall than the teams that turned K-State from the laughingstock of the college football world into a perennial bowl队.
The Wildcats' turnaround was built on a pro-style offense and a stingy defense.
This fall, KSU must find a quarterback, replace two of its top three receivers and find fill-ins for three departed defensive line starters.
What. Bill Snyder worry?
"I wouldn't say we'a better football team than we were
4
last year," said eighth- year coach
Snyder. "But I think the people in place make it a possibility."
FOOTBALL
FOE
K-State returns five offensive and six defensive starters from a team that went 10-2 last season and beat Colorado State in the Holiday Bowl.
"Brian played significant time in five ballgames last year, and he played well in each and every ballgame," Snyder said. "He's been in our program 5 1/2 years. Of all the quarterbacks we've had, Brian has as astute a knowledge of the program as any of our quarterbacks."
Senior Brian Kavanagh is heir apparent at quarterback.
V
He might have competition from Cody Lee Smith, a ballyhooed junior college transfer who missed all of last season sidelined by a debilitating intestinal virus.
Top pass-catcher Kevin Lockett returns, but gone are Mitch Running and Tyson Schwieger.
Also gone are the top two tight ends.
"We don't have quite the depth we've had," Snyder said.
5
Schedule
Aug. 31 — Texas Tech
Sept. 7 — Indiana State
Sept. 14 — Cincinnati
Sept. 21 — at Rice
Oct. 5 — Nebraska
Oct. 12 — at Missouri
Oct. 19 — at Texas A&M
Oct. 26 — Oklahoma
Nov. 9 — at Kansas
Nov. 16 — at Colorado
Nov. 23 — Iowa State
LAWRENCE
JOURNAL-WORLD
Both offensive tackles graduated,but both guards and the starting center return, as do the top three running backs.
"We have a chance to be a better rushing team than we were a year ago," Snyder said. "I'm not sure where we'll be in the passing game."
Three starters — Chris Canty, Joe Gordon and Mario Smith — return to KSU's outstanding defensive secondary. Three line starters graduated.
"We retain some, we lose some," said Snyder, who might play some linemen both ways because he's so thin on the defensive front. "The strength of our defense is our secondary. ... Our front seven is where we took most of our hits.
"Can we be as good a defensive team as we were last year? I don't have the answer. But we have that capacity."
KSU will travel to Lawrence to meet Kansas on Nov. 9. K-State beat KU, 41-7, last fall in Manhattan.
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Kansas is enjoying one of its most successful football periods.
All seven of the defeats in that time came against teams that played in postseason games.
In addition, KU has won eight of its last nine nonconference encounters.
The Jayhawks' 10 wins last season were the most by a KU team since 1905 and the five conference wins last fall were the most by a KU team since 1968.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED·SPORTS
AUGUST,1996 PAGE 61E
Longhorns return 14 starters
Texas long on experience
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Texas is loaded for a run at the first Big 12 title.
The Longhorns, 10-2-1 last season, return 14 starters seven on each side — from the team that FOOTBALL won the last SOUTHWEST FOE
Conference championship.
The returning offensive starters are concentrated on the skill positions.
"We have a lot of big playmakers back on offense," fiveyear UT coach John Mackovic said. "With the exception of one player, all the players who touched the football last year for us are back."
Back are quarterback James Brown (2,447 passing yards), receiver Mike Adams (876 yards) and running back Shon Mitchell. (1.099)
yards) and running Mitchell (1,099 yards).
"That's a real benefit for us," Mackovic said. "Will we do a lot more things? Probably not. But we'll probably do them a lot better."
Gone, though are three offensive linemen.
"Dan Neil is the best right guard in the nation," Mackovic said.
three new linemen. We're not as experienced as we'd like."
With the exception of pre-
"We have a lot of big playmakers back on offense. With the exception of one player, all the players who touched the football last year for us are back."
"And our center is returning. After that, we have to put in
e exception of preseason all-Big 12 nose tackle Chris Akins, the Longhorns aren't experienced along the defensive front, either.
"We only had three defensive linemen in spring practice," Mackovic said. "That's three total. But we signed four freshman. We'll have to count on those freshmen to come
in and play right away." The Longhorns do return a
solid secondary in corners Bryant Westbrook and Taje Allen and safeties Chris Carter and Tre Thomas.
"We've got a pretty good secondary," Mackovic said. "We're strong up the middle. But we'll have to have some people step up."
Texas, which just completed a $70 million facilities upgrade that included a new grass field, was ranked No.3 in the Big 12 preseason media poll.
"The excitement for Texas football is at an all-time high," Mackovic said. "I think the time for us is exciting, charting new courses and challenges."
Texas will travel to Lawrence to meet Kansas on Nov. 16.
TEXAS
FOOTBALL
Schedule
Aug. 31 — Missouri
Sept. 7 — New Mexico State
Sept. 21 — Notre
Dame
Sept. 28—at Virginia
Oct. 5 - Oklahoma State
Oct. 12 — Oklahoma at Dallas
Oct. 26 — at Colorado
Nov. 2 — Baylor
Nov. 9 — at Texas Tech
Nov. 16 — at Kansas
Nov. 29 - Texas A&M
Big Eight SWC had good finales
The final season of Big Eight football was certainly memorable.
The Big Eight became the first conference in Div. I-A history to have four teams with at least 10 wins in the same season: Nebraska 12-0; Kansas 10-2; Colorado 10-2 and Kansas State 10-2.
In addition, the Big Eight became only the second conference to finish the year with four teams in the AP's final 10. Nebraska was ranked No.1 Colorado No.5, Kansas State No.7 and Kansas No.9.
The Southwest Conference also had a memorable swan song. Three SWC schools — Texas, Texas A&M and Texas Tech, went to bowl games. Baylor, at 7-4, was eligible but was not invited to a bowl.
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PAGE 62E AUGUST,1996
KUED·SPORTS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Time is now for Mizzou, Smith says
KU tied for oldest stadium
Kansas' Memorial Stadium has been around for awhile — since 1921, in fact.
The Jayhawks moved into Memorial Stadium on Oct. 3, 1921, with a 21-7 victory over intrastate rival
Kansas State in front of 5,160 fans. When the stadium opened,the capacity was 22,000.
KU's stadium ties Stanford Stadium and Tennessee's Neyland Stadium as the oldest in the U.S.
Send us email at: sports@ljworld.com LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
BY ANDREW HARTSOCK
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS WRITER
Missouri has come to a football crossroads.
At least, third-year coach Larry Smith thinks so.
"I look at the season coming up as an important season for us," Smith said. "This is our third year here. We've got our players we brought in in key spots. I think we can look forward to some benefits of the first year or two."
Eleven offensive and seven defensive starters return to a team that
team that went 3-8 last season but was picked 12th media poll.
FOOTBALL
FOE
"I didn't know we were picked last," Smith said. "Who picked us last? We have a lot of pride. That will probably help us."
The Tigers rotated quarterbacks a year ago by necessity Smith said. Their top returning passer, Kent Skornia, threw for just 230 yards. Their top returning receiver, running back Brock Olivo, had just 101 receiving yards.
"Offensively, we struggled a year ago because we were so doggone young," Smith said. "Our talent is geared more toward a running game than a passing game. I don't think we're going to line up with the other 11 teams in the Big 12 and just knock them off the ball. But we're beginning to get more balance in our running game."
Olivo led Mizzou rushers with 985 yards and six TDs last season.
"He's everything you want," Smith said. "He's the person you want when you're trying to climb the ladder."
Mizzou's defensive strength, Smith said, is its secondary with corners Shad Criss and Clayton Baker and safety DeMontie Cross.
"This is the best secondary
MIZZOU
MIZZOU
Schedule
Aug. 31 — at Texas
Sept. 14 — Memphis
Sept. 21 — Clemson
Sept. 28 — at Iowa
State
Oct. 5 — SMU
Oct. 12 — Kansas
State
Oct. 26 — Oklahoma
State
Nov. 2 — Colorado
Nov. 9 — at Nebraska
Nov. 16 — at Baylor
Nov. 23 — Kansas
SELLING TREASURES?
I've coached," Smith said. "And our defense, in general, is solid. Defensive line is a question mark. But this is the third year in a row we've played the same defense at Missouri. The players all know what they're doing."
"This is that kind of a season, that kind of a team, where a play or a game could make the difference," he said. "I don't think we're going to take a step backward. I want us to take a step forward.
Though Smith bristled at the preseason media poll snub, he wouldn't wager a prediction.
"I don't see where it's any tougher than it was in the Big Eight. We're playing Texas and Baylor. Everybody else is the same. We still have to climb out of where we are and get to the middle. Then we go from the middle to the top."
Missouri will play host to Kansas on Nov.23. KU beat the Tigers, 42-23, last fall in Lawrence.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
KUED • SPORTS
AUGUST, 1996 PAGE 63E
.
Kansas to face 2 WAC teams
BY CHUCK WOODLING
JOURNAL-WORLD SPORTS EDITOR
Quick, name the two Kansas non-conference football foes in the Mountain Division of the Western Athletic Conference.
Let's see, Utah is one and ...uh, the other couldn't possibly be Ball State and KU's only other
non-Big
12 Conference
game is
against TCU
FOOTBALL FOES
That's it.
Texas Christian, located in flat Fort Worth, is in the same WAC division as Utah. That's one of the idiosyncrasies caused by the Southwest Conference going defunct with the arrival of the Big 12.
Texas Christian was one of the four SWC schools that wasn't invited to join the Big 12 so the Horned Frogs jumped to the WAC where they aren't expected to make an impressive football debut.
TCU, which will entertain Kansas on Sept. 14, has been downgraded this season because its two primary offensive weapons of 1995 — quarterback Max Knake and tailback Andre Davis — have departed.
Basil Mitchell, a sophomore who sat out last season, looked good in the spring and is the heir apparent to Davis, a multipurpose back who could catch the ball as well as run with it.
Quarterback is another story. None of the four quarterbacks in the running to replace Knake has shown flashes of the TCU record-setter. Juco transfer Fred Taylor may beat them all out.
The good news is the offensive line, anchored by 6-foot-6, 290-pound Ryan Tucker, is solid. Also, speedy wide receiver John Washington returns.
TCU defensive coordinator Pat Henderson, a former KU linebacker, should have a solid platoon if he can shore up a shaky secondary.
Head coach Pat Sullivan's best player, though, is placekicker Michael Reeder, the nation's best in '95 after making 23 of 25 field goal attempts. Reeder is expected to take on additional duties as the Frogs' punter this fall.
Meanwhile, Utah is generally regarded as the favorite in the WAC Mountain Division which also includes perennial power Brigham Young.
When Kansas plays the Utes in Salt Lake City on Sept. 28, the Jayhawks will be facing a veteran team. Coach Ron McBride has eight returning starters on offense and seven on defense.
Some say Utah does not have a weakness of offense. Quarterback Mike Fouts is small at 5-foot-10, 165 pounds, but he can throw and he has two of the WAC's best receivers in Kevin Dyson and Rocky Henry.
Utah's running game is built around alphabet-soup fullback Chris Fuamatu-Ma'afala who is built like a nose tackle at 6-foot-1 and 272 pounds.
In '95, Utah crept up on the rest of the WAC. The Utes were the league's surprise team in finishing with a 7-4 record and a share of its first league title in 31 years.
Ball State is another Kansas non-league foe expected to contend for a league championship. The Cardinals, KU's foe in the home opener on Aug. 27, should battle Miami for the Mid-American Conference crown.
Like Utah, Ball State finished 7-4 last season. However, the Cards settled for third place in the league race.
•
BALL STATE
Aug. 29 — at Kansas
Sept. 7 — Miami,
Ohio
Sept. 14 — at
Minnesota
Sept. 21 — Central
Florida
Oct. 5 — at Western
Michigan
Oct. 12 — Ohio U.
Oct. 19 — at Bowling
Green
Oct. 26 — at Central
Michigan
Nov. 2 — at Eastern
Michigan
Nov. 9 — Kent
Nov. 16 — Toledo
SCHEDULES
TCU
Sept. 7 — at
Oklahoma
Sept. 14 — Kansas
Sept. 28 — at New
Mexico
Oct. 5 — at Tulane
Oct. 12 — Texas-El
Paso
Oct. 19 — at Utah
Oct. 26 — Brigham
Young
Nov. 2 — Nevada-Las-
Vegas
Nov. 9 — at Tulsa
Nov. 16 — Rice
Nov. 21 — at SMU
Aug. 31 — at Utah
State
Sept. 7 — at Stanford
Sept. 14 — at SMU
Sept. 21 — Fresno
State
Sept. 28 — Kansas
Oct. 5 — at Texas El-
Paso
Oct. 19 — Texas
Christian
Oct. 26 — Tulsa
Nov. 2 — at Rice
Nov. 9 — at New
Mexico
Nov. 23 — Brigham
Young
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 64E
7. (2014, 6)
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD'S KU EDITION F August 1996 KU arts & entertainment
Plugged in
University Theatre's "Wings" flies into the realm of virtual reality.
Page 3
A pipe dream The 35-foot tall organ in Bales Recital Hall is ready for its voice to be heard.
Page 11
To the beat New York City's STOMP promises to liven up the Lied Center with its percussion.
JIMIYA WILLIAMS
Page 2
MOTHER TREE
Strands of the '60s The tribal rock musical "Hair (Revised)" will spread a little peace, man.
Page 6
2F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
I am not a singer. I am a drummer.
STOMP, an eight-piece percussion group, will perform at 8 p.m. Feb.21 and 22 and 7 p.m. Feb.23 at the Lied Center. The troupe appeared on last spring's Academy Awards broadcast.
Lied creates family series
- The Lied Center has created a new performance series — one geared toward families.
BY JAN BILES
JOURNAL-WORLD ARTS EDITOR
Ticket sales mean just about everything to a performance venue like the Lied Center.
Small audiences will not generate the revenue needed to pay the fees of touring acts and eventually will hurt the chances of getting major acts in following seasons.
Those are considerations the Lied Center staff must keep in mind when determining the dance, music and theater programs of each season's lineup.
"Ticket sales are really door-die to maintaining this type of programming, especially in the areas where we're taking risks," said Jackie Davis, director of the Lied Center. "Without knowing what the revenue will be at the end of the year, we are committing money for the fees a year in advance."
This year, the Lied Center hopes to attract more ticket buyers with its new Family Series, which will offer ice skating, mime and puppet performances.
"We're fulfilling the mission of (Lied Trustee) Christina Hixon, that programming should be diversified and for everyone," she said.
Davis said she and Hixon had talked about ways to reach those who weren't
THAT'S THE TICKET
Tickets to all performances are on sale at the Lied Center Box Office, 864-ARTS; Student Union Activities Box Office in the Kansas Union, 864-3477; and any TicketMaster outlet. (913)234-4545 or (816) 931-3330.
attending Lied events and realized the center had not tapped into the family market.
Last year, the chamber music concerts each drew from 800 to 1,000 people. The New Directions performances were either sold out or drew at least 700 people. The Broadway and Concert series were sold out.
"It's a good indication that people will take advantage of it." Davis said.
Davis said tickets for the family series are selling well.
Here's the schedule for the 1996-'97 season.
Lied Family Series
- 8 p.m. Sept. 19, Seattle Mime Theatre, a physical theater troupe. Besides giving the nighttime performance, the troupe of three actors will be in residence with Lawrence public schools and will offer a children's performance at 2 p.m. Sept. 22 in the Lied Center.
- 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Dec. 14 and 15, "The Sleeping on Ice," featuring the St. Petersburg State Ice
Ballet from Russia. The company of 25 skaters will perform on an ice rink placed on the Lied Center's stage.
- 2 p.m. April 13, "The Crown of Destiny," performed by the Theatre Sans Fil. Twelve black-clothed puppeteers and five offstage technicians handle 6-foot, stringless puppets in this production, which also features a medieval castle courtyard, black-light, lasers, fireworks and original music.
Concert Series
- 7 p.m. Oct. 6, Pittsburgh Symphony with Andre Previn conducting.
- 8 p.m. Oct. 25, Queensland Ballet with the Kansas City Symphony in "Pirates!," based on Gilbert and Sullivan's "Pirates of Penzance." The show mixes classical dance style with jazz and tap steps.
- 8 p.m. Feb. 25, Dawn Upshaw,
soorano, and Richard Good, piano
- 8 p.m. March 7 and 8, New York City Opera National Company's "La Boheme," featuring English supertitles of the original Italian opera projected above the stage.
8 p.m. April 9, Russia Village Festival, comprised of five Russian folk groups. The performance includes a Yarmorka, or traditional Russian fair in the Lied Center's lobby, where Russian national costumes and crafts will be displayed.
Swarthout Chamber Music Series
8 *p. 10*. Oct. 1, Beaux Arts Trio,
with pianist Menahem Pressler, violinist Ida Kavafian and cellist Peter Wiley.
- 3:30 p.m. Nov. 10, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center.
- 3:10 p.m. Feb. 16, New European Strings Chamber Orchestra, with its first North American tour.
Gwendolyn Brooks to head Hall events
3 p. 1m. April 6, Ying Quartet, in a return engagement.
- 3:30 p.m. April 20, Blair String
There's a small, classically designed building nestled behind Watson Library on the Kansas University campus. Despite its size, the Hall Center for the Humanities houses some of the most productive academic work, programs and seminars at KU.
See Lied, page 3F
The Center was founded in 1976 by the Kansas Board of Regents as the Center for Humanistic Studies, and became the Hall Center for Humanities in 1983 after a major endowment gift from the Hall Family Foundation of Kansas City, Mo.
Working to foster interdisciplinary study in the humanities, the Hall Center sponsors wide-ranging lecture series, seminars, forums and research discussion groups for both faculty and graduate students.
A schedule of the center's events for the 1996-'97 academic year follows.
- Sept. 4: Lecture and panel discussion, "Technology, Public Debate, and the Electoral Process." Paul Kirk, co-chair of the Commission on Presidential Debates, will speak, followed by a panel discussion at 7 p.m.
- Location to be announced. Free.
- Sept. 10: Humanities lecture series, "John Steuart Curry, Prairie Prodigal."
Charles Eldredge, Hall Distinguished Professor of art history at the KU, 7:30 p.m. Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium. Free.
- Sept. 16: Public lecture, "Ethics of Life Narrative Writing." John Eakin.
- Time and location to be announced. Free.
- Oct. 23: Public lecture,
"Poetry Reading with Commentary." Gwendolyn Brooks, author, 8 p.m., Lied Center. Free.
- Feb. 20: Humanities lecture series, "Working in Nature." Richard White, McClelland professor of history at the University of Washington in Seattle, 7:30 p.m.
- Location to be announced. Free.
- March 11: Humanities lecture series, "The Spanish New World in the Narrative Imagination, Past and Present." Rolena Adorno, professor of Spanish and Portuguese at Yale University, 7:30 p.m. Location to be announced. Free.
- Nov. 12: Humanities lecture series,"Rembrandt's Originality." Simon Schama, Old Dominion professor of humanities at Columbia University, 7:30 p.m., Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium. Free.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 3F
Room with a virtual view
Audiences will have to gear up for 'Wings'
The sophisticated headgear that audiences will have to wear during "Wings" projects imagery that is translucent enough for viewers to still see the stage.
MIKE YODER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
- A new production takes technology to its onstage limits.
BY MARK LUCE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Without technology, theater would be nothing but naked actors sitting in the dark.
For Mark Reaney, Kansas University associate professor of theater and film, technology has led to a new type of theater that incorporates the high-tech world of virtual reality.
After the success of the KU production "The Adding Machine," which incorporated computer generated three-dimensional imagery and real-time video projection and had audiences wearing polarized glasses, Reaney and director Ron Willis, KU professor of theater and film, are teaming up for a more sophisticated attempt at melding theater and technology in the upcoming production of "Wings," by Arthur Copit.
"A basic level of technology is essential to the theater, and the high-tech is something we are just trying to find out about," Reaney said. There are only a handful of plays I know of that call for virtual reality or computer
graphics, but that is going to change. As the world gets more and more reliant on things like the Internet and electronic communications, playwrights will write plays to reflect that change."
The foremost difference between "The Adding Machine" and "Wings" will be the addition of audience headgear. These head-mounted displays will allow projections to be placed directly in
front of the audience's vision but are translucent so that the stage can be seen. At around $375 apiece the contraptions are expensive, but Reaney said he hopes to be able to seat 100 patrons in KU's Inge Theatre.
"This really is experimental theater and it belongs in an experimental space," Reaney said. "Even at a casual glance the project is overwhelming. We have many more options
than we have time to do them in."
With the virtual reality world changing daily, Reaney said he hopes to reach a technology plateau early in the fall and hold on until the show goes up. This means making software do what it's not designed to do, coordinating a bank of several computers and tons of experimenting, in addition to working hand in hand with Willis and the actors.
Although there are some stodgy critics who guard "traditional" theater vehemently and question virtual reality's place in productions, Reaney said, they are misguided.
"We have live actors and a live audience together having a presence," he said. "And the audience's presence with each other is very important in what separates theater from TV and film. We are not taking the live actor out of the mix; it is still the focus.
"People objected when lights and recorded sound came into the theater, and now those things are commonplace. Theater should reflect society. It should comment on what's going on. If we are in the information age, then theater should talk about it."
Mark Reaney, Kansas University associate professor of theater and film
"There are only a handful of plays I know of that call for virtual reality or computer graphics, but that is going to change."
Willis, who also directed "The Adding Machine," has nothing but praise for Reaney's tireless efforts to be a pioneer in this emerging field.
"Mark has a willingness to explore uncharted territory, to prod the way we conceptualize the theater event. to
rethink fundamental issues when facing technology as challenging and awe-inspiring," he said.
"... When we challenge long-held but unexamined perspectives," he said, "we get a renewed sense of appropriateness and a new sense of vigor."
Lied Center to offer family series
Continued from page 2F
Quartet with bluegrass and jazz banjo player Bela Fleck.
New Directions Series
- 8 p.m. Oct. 22, Sankai Juku, Japanese Butoh dance company, in a return appearance. The troupe is known for its fluid, apparently boneless movements and striking visual effects.
- 8 p.m. Nov. 2, the National Song and Dance Ensemble of Tibet, on its first tour outside of Tibet. The performance features 6-foot horns, gongs, barrel drums and chanting.
- 8 p.m. Feb. 21 and 22 and 7
p.m. Feb. 23, STOMP, an eight-
- 8 p.m. Jan. 28, Mercy Cunningham modern dance company.
member percussion group. The troupe appeared on this year's Academy Awards broadcast.
- 8 p.m. March 18, Streb/Ringside dance company in "Popaction." The dancers test the limits of physical motion bouncing and crashing off surfaces.
Broadway series
8 * p. 18, Nov. 15 and 16, the rock opera "Tommy," created by The Who. The opera has won five Tony Awards.
8 . p.m. Feb. 7, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.
Feb. 8 and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Feb. 9,
"Carousel." The production applies
new choreography and design to
Rodgers and Hammerstein's classic
fable of love and redemption.
2. p 1.m. and 7 p.m. March 2,
"The Sound of Music."
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EIGHTH ANNUAL LAWRENCE INDIAN ARTS SHOW September 7 through October 20,1996
Lawrence, Kansas
The University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology, Haskell Indian Nations University. Lawrence Arts Center
Juried Competition Show and Sale Museum of Anthropology September 7-October 20 Monday-Saturday 9 am - 5 pm; Sunday 1-5 pm Admission: $3 adults,$1 students; under 5 Free)
Benefit Opening (Awards Ceremony/
Art Preview/Reception/Silent Auction)
Museum of Anthropology
Friday, September 6, 7:30-9:30 pm
(by reservation, $35.00 per person)
Recent Works by Navajo Indian artist
Baje Whitethorne
Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont
September 6 - October 2
Monday-Friday 9 am-5 pm; Saturday 9 am-3 pm
(no admission charge to the public)
Haskell IndianArt Market Haskell Indian Nations University September 7 and 8 Saturday 10-6,Sunday 10-5 (no admission charge to the public)
Hopi/Tewa Indian Pottery Workshop with Mark Tahbo Museum of Anthropology October 14-19 (Advanced registration;Fee charged)
An Exhibition of Hopi/Tewa Pottery
Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas
September 7 - October 20
Tuesday-Saturday 10:00 am-5 pm;
Thursday till 9:00 pm; Sunday Noon-5 pm
(no admission charge to the public)
Book Discussions: Native American Writers of the Plains Lawrence Public Library, 7th & Vermont September 11 and 26; October 9 and 23 (for series registration call the Public Library at 843-1178)
For more information contact: Maria S. Martin (913) 864-4245 or write: LIAS, K.U. Museum of Anthropology, Spooner Hall, Lawrence, K6045
4F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
TV newscasters relive days at KU
*A couple of television news journalists say there's more to college than getting a degree.
BY JOHN WAKE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Although NBC news correspondent Bob Dotson only spent four years at Kansas University, his 21 years with NBC have given him a wealth of knowledge.
One thing he's learned is that students can accomplish any career goal.
"It's a marathon now and not a sprint," said Dotson, who now lives in Atlanta, Ga. "I did everything I could to learn all I could about everything."
"I've been in more motel rooms than the Gideon Bible. I've had more fun than any other job I can imagine."
— NBC news correspondent Bob Dotson
Dotson came to KU in 1964, but it was journalism that he fell in love with. For Dotson, telling a good story is the basic standard of the journalism craft.
"Do not get caught up in the technology so that
you loose sight of how to tell a story." Dotson advised. "The storytelling remains the standard."
It was Dotson's ability to tell a good story that led to his Emmy Award for a documentary focusing on the history of blacks in Oklahoma.
After seven years of working exclusively with the "Today Show" and NBC's "Dateline." Dotson still loves to tell the stories that may have been forgotten or never heard before. During this summer's Olympics, he worked for the "Today Show" and filed 11 stories, including the first segment about the city of Atlanta.
Dotson's career has taken him to various areas of the world, which he said has made for one of the most fun jobs a person could ever have
"I've been in more motel rooms than the Gideon Bible," Dotson laughed. "I've had more fun than any other job I can imagine."
D. J. SCHLAFSTER
Life-changing day
Dotson
Dotson, who turns 50 in October. has seen a lot during
CARL M. PARKS
Scillian
his career, and so has Detroit's WDIV-TV 4 news anchor Anchor Scillian.
Scillian, 33, graduated from KU in 1985 with a degree in journalism.
Last October, he won the "Best Anchor" Emmy for his KFOR-TV coverage of the Oklahoma City bombing. It was a day that changed his life and his career.
"I remember getting up for the award and the ambivalence that I was getting a reward for something that I just did without really thinking about it. ... I hadn't realized how intimate TV was until that day (of the bombing)." Scillian said.
"... It was so off the beat from almost anything I had experienced," Scillian said. "One minute you were so devastated, then you saw these wonderful acts of kindness happening. And your emotions were so off of scale.'
When Scillian got the offer to anchor the 11 p.m. news at WDIV-TV in Detroit, he was concerned about how people may have perceived his move.
"I was really concerned that everyone in Oklahoma City would think, 'Oh, he's just cashing in his chips from covering the bombing,'" Scillian said. "It was just the opposite. It made it harder for me to leave."
Having first started as a theater major at KU, Scillian said it is a wonder that he's in broadcast journalism today.
"I went to KU, because I wanted to get an ROTC scholarship. And then, when the theater scholarship came along, it was even better," Scillian said. "The theater people didn't know what to think. I was sort of the bastard child of both programs, I think."
One of the things Scillian said he received from his days in such theater productions as "Hair" was learning how to perform under pressure.
"You kind of get that (same pressure) with television," Scillian said. "But the script changes every day."
Alums talk about life after KU
- Some KU alums recall their days on the Hill.
BY JOHN WAKE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Of all of the formative years in a person's life, the college years could arguably be the best.
That was the case with Joyce Castle, Mike Finnigan, Phil Hahn and Paul Coker.
"I had a wonderful experience at KU. I was the first voice major here," Castle said.
PADMIN
Joyce Malicky Castle graduated from Kansas University
with a bachelor's of fine arts degree in voice and theater in 1961 and went on to take the stage as an opera singer.
Finnigan
Performing last year at the New York City Opera in the role of Katisha in "The Mikado" and at the Metropolitan as Orlosky in "Die Fleddermaus," Castle said her general philosophy is to lead a life of kindness.
"Life just unfolds, I think," Castle said. "My life is a journey and I'm still on it, hopefully. ... One act of kindness is a lot, and one act begets another."
Although Castle always knew her goal after graduating from KU,not all students went on to a profession that followed their studies.
Musician Mike Finnigan began his KU experience in the fall of 1963 with a full scholarship to play basketball for the lavihawks.
After two years of basketball, Finnigan passed up playing on the court to play on the stage.
"Music is kind of a passionate pursuit. ... If you are playing big-time basketball and if you are not 100 percent mentally, you're wasting your time," Finnigan said.
Currently, Finnigan lives in San Francisco and performs a variety of tasks in the music field, including producing records for other artists, station promotions for the Fox network and themes for television shows and commercials.
Another KU alum who has had extensive experience working for television is writer Phil Hahn.
Hahn earned an Emmy for his work as head writer for the '60s television show "Laugh In." He also wrote scripts for other comedies, including "Three's Company" and "M*A*S*H."
"I wasn't planning for it and I wasn't consciously training for it (in college)," Hahn said.
In 1955, Hahn got a job at
Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, Mo., and started writing for the "Contemporary Cards" series.
"Up to graduating from college, I had no idea that I would make a living doing it (writing)," he said.
A friend and former coworker of Hahn's, Paul Coker Jr., was with Hahn and later worked with Hahn for MAD magazine.
After graduating from KU, Coker served in the Navy from 1951 to 1953 and worked drawing visual aids. He went on to work as an illustrator for Hallmark Cards.
"I have some other interests, but most of my life has revolved around cartooning," Coker said.
Some of Coker's more noticeable cartooning efforts are the Christmas season animated shows "Rudolph's Shiny New Year," "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town," "Rudolph and Frosty the Winter Wonderland" and "The Leprechaun's Christmas Gold."
Although Coker didn't consider himself to be the most academic-minded student at KU, he had a great experience just the same.
"I had a good time at KU and I don't mean that in a raucous sense," Coker joked. "I was a cheerleader. ... I had a loud voice and jumped around a lot — that's about it."
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 5F
Alums coming home for theater season
RENÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Del Unruh, director of University Theatre at Kansas University, is planning the UT's third Alums Come Home celebration.
- Some familiar faces are returning to the KU stages this year.
BY JAN BILES
JOURNAL-WORLD ARTS EDITOR
Every five or so years, University Theatre invites its alums to return to the Kansas University campus to participate in some sort of production.
This year, the tradition will continue. However, instead of being involved in one production, alums will take part in events throughout the 1996-'97 season.
"It's alums come home year," said Del Unruh, University Theatre director.
Unruh said this is the third time University Theatre has held an Alums Come Home celebration.
"It's been successful for us in the past, and alums have enjoyed the proceedings," he said.
Unruh said alums will be featured throughout the season as actors, playwrights, directors and clinicians.
"The format in the past was a variety show that featured alums. This time, we changed that," he said. "We'll still do a variety show as an open mike night at a location yet to be announced."
Unruh said both Theatre for Young People productions are written by KU
alums. "Hush: An Interview with America," at 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sept. 28 in Crafton-Preyer Theatre, is written by James Still, who now lives in Los Angeles. "Alex and The Shrink World," at 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. Feb. 15 in Crafton-Preyer, is written and directed by Ric Averill, who lives in Lawrence and heads the Seem-To-Be Players and the Ric Averill Players.
"Hair (Revised)" will be directed by KU alum Kip Niven, who lives in the Kansas City area and is a professional actor with feature film and TV movie credits. The musical will be staged by University Theatre at 8 p.m.Nov.15-16,2:30 p.m.Nov.17 and 8 p.m. Nov.21-23 in Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
Two productions in this year's Inge Series are written by KU students — "Communion," by graduate student Don Schawang, and "Tales From the Wasteland," by KU Senior Will Averill.
The plays will be presented at 8 p.m. Jan. 30-Feb. 2 and Feb. 4-8 in Inge Theatre.
of the first Great Plains Play Contest. The Kansas-based drama is written by Thomas Fox Averill, a KU alum living in Topeka, and will be directed by KU professor of theater and film Jack Wright, also a KU alum.
The season finale will be "Abide with Me," the winner
"It will have both students and alums in the cast," Unruh said.
"Abide with Me" will be performed at 8 p.m. April 24 26 and May 1-3 in Crafton Preyer Theatre.
On top of the Alums Come Home celebration, Unruh said the University Theatre season can stand on its own merit and includes four original scripts, a virtual reality project and other titles from the classic to the contemporary.
"That's exciting because a large part of University Theatre is about the development of talent," he said. "We train the next generation of
playwrights and performers, and it's exciting to have that many new plays to work on."
Other UT productions planned for the coming year include:
- "The Memorandum," a thought-provoking play by Vaclav Havel, president of the Czech Republic, 8 p.m. Oct. 3-6 and Oct. 8-12, Inge Theatre.
- "Coming Here: A Trilogy," by KU theater and film professor John Gronbeck-Tedesco. The funny and poignant story of Italian immigrants will be performed at 8 p.m. Oct. 18-19, 2:30 p.m. Oct. 20 and 8 p.m. Oct. 24-26 in Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
- "Wings," a virtual reality project by Arthur Kopit, 8 p.m. Dec. 2-6, 2:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. Dec. 7-8 and 8 p.m. Dec. 9-10. Inge Theatre.
- "The Merry Winds of Windsor," by William Shakespeare, 8 p.m. March 7-8, 2:30 p.m. March 9 and 8 p.m. March 13-15. Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
- "Between Pancho Villa and A Naked Woman," by Sabrina Berman, 8 p.m. April 4-6 and April 9-12, Inge Theatre.
Tickets for all University Theatre productions are on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office, 864-3982.
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Juilliard violinist opens Chamber Players season
The Lawrence Chamber Players will hold the first concert of its 25th season at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 27 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
Featured soloist will be violinist Brian Lewis, an Ottawa native and Juilliard-trained musician. He will perform Mozart's "Concerto No. 3 in G Major. K.216."
Lewis received bachelor's and master's degrees in music from Juilliard and performs about 100 concerts a year. He has received numerous awards, including the MidAmerica Violin Competition and the Elizabeth B. Koch Fellowship, a career development grant awarded by the Kansas Cultural Trust.
The concert will be repeated Oct. 19 at Baker University in Baldwin.
The Lawrence Chamber Players is a small, semi-professional orchestra. The members are equally drawn from the Lawrence community and Kansas University. The group is committed to providing quality music as well as education and service to the community.
Conductor and pianist is Juan Francisco La Manna, born in Caracas, Venezuela, of Italian parents. His appearances include chamber music recitals, concertos with orchestras and conducting the Redlands Symphony, the Kansas City Symphony and the St. Louis Symphony.
For more information, contact Dina Evans, Lawrence Chamber Players manager, at 843-2090.
He has been conductor of the Lawrence Chamber Players since the 1994-'95 season. He also conducts the Benedictine College Orchestra in Atchison.
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6F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
1
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
From apathy to activism
Niven finds being director of 'Hair' ironic
DENIMS
A "squeaky clean" KU student in the 1960s is directing this fall's production of "Hair (Revised)."
Stevens
BY JAN BILES
JOURNAL-WORLD ARTS EDITOR
Kip Niven wasn't even close to being a radical during his years at Kansas University back in the 1960s.
He didn't go to political rallies; he wasn't even registered to vote. He didn't try to sabotage nuclear power plants. He didn't wear flowers in his hair or smoke dope.
A. R. WILSON
Niven
"I was so squeaky clean and so boring," he said, with a laugh. "I drank my first can of beer in the Army. Not even a puff of marijuana. The most
political thing I did was sign a petition to save old Fraser Hall."
So it seems somewhat odd to him that he was picked by the University Theatre's staff to direct its production of the tribal love, rock musical "Hair (Revised)."
"It's ironic. I would have chosen a dozen other musicals as my first musical to direct than 'Hair,'" he said. "But now that I'm doing it, I'm really excited about it."
A hard lesson
Ironic. Well, maybe not.
As a KU theater student, Niven said his mind was totally on rehearsals. It wasn't until after his graduation and he found himself in Vietnam that his apathy morphed itself into awareness.
Niven said he knew he was going to be drafted into the war, so he enlisted. He went to Officer Candidate's School and then to Vietnam as an artillery officer. In the field, he worked as a forward observer.
"I was willing to do it," he said. "But in Vietnam, I became politically radicalized."
Niven said he realized that because of his apathy and lack of information he had backed himself into a life- and-death situation.
"For three years, death and destruction was my livelihood," he said. "Sometimes, in hindsight, I can't imagine
allowed that to happen."
His experiences in Vietnam turned him from being a wishy-washy-GOP-becausemy-parents-were to a leftist political activist. He became a picket line captain for the farm workers' movement in California and a driver for the McGovern presidential campaign. He became active in environmental, Equal Rights Amendment, Sierra Club, gun
control and civil rights efforts.
And he discovered "Hair" as a result of his military career.
"I was in the Army when 'Hair' was on Broadway," he said. "My last duty station was as assis.
In that capacity, he coordinated social activities for the troops, such as a performance by the road show of "Hair" at a Kansas City-area theater.
tant special services officer at Leaven-worth."
"Hair," the first rock musical to hit Broadway, was created by composer Galt MacDermot and lyricist-writers James Rado and Gerome Ragni. It was irreverent, revolutionary and anarchist. It contained profanity and nudity.
"I knew the music. I must have bought the record," he said. "It was a highly publicized event."
It was not the typical military fare.
"I was so squeaky clean and so boring.I drank my first can of beer in the Army.Not even a puff of marijuana.The most radical political thing I did was sign a petition to save old Fraser Hall."
"I remember being swept
Still, Niven doesn't remember much about the performance.
up with the enthusiasm of it," he said. "I'd call it an event. It was more than a play. It was a theatrical occasion. ... They took the audience and goosed them, smacked them and tickled them and then dragged them along for a while."
— Kip Niven, director and Kansas University alum
Putting it in context Niven hopes to capture the
to capture the theatricality of the rock musical in the KU production. Like its contemporary, "Rent," the musical is loose and energetic in its presentation style.
that throws a cream pie in the face of the audience's expectations," Niven said. "Gradually, the audience members leave their inhibitions in their seats and make a connection to those on the stage."
Although the cast doesn't know it yet, Niven said, he will use the production as a teaching opportunity to school today's students on what the '60s were all about. They'll listen to music, watch "Woodstock" and hear KU professors talk about the political, artistic and social influences of that time.
so much more celebratory and participatory than film."
"The rehearsal process will be very fluid and improvisational as the tribe interacts. There will be a lot of play in the rehearsal process," he said. "That's the reason I love to do theater. The process is
"Hair" has a cast of 35, with roles for men and women of diverse backgrounds — African Americans, Native Americans, Latinos, Asians and non-theater and non-music majors.
"It's an opportunity for the university community to participate even though they are not theater and music maiors." he said.
Auditions are slated for Aug. 22 and 23. Call backs are Aug. 24 and 25.
More than skin
The nudity and profanity of the Broadway show will be retained in the KU production, but Niven stressed that is a small part of the show.
"I hope people come to see it. I hope no one will stay away because of the nudity and profanity or because of its theatricality. I also hope no one comes for the nudity and profanity, to laugh at the dirty words or to snicker at naked bodies. It will be handled with taste.
"If someone is interested in seeing a wonderful theatrical event ... that has something to say about where we were in a point of history and a perspective of where we've come or not come, they will get their money's worth."
Niven said many of the dreams of the '60s haven't come true. Political talk became rhetoric. Activism's heroes joined the Establishment, and the times seemed to have returned to the '50s, as witnessed by the recent bombings of African-American churches in the South.
"The message of the '60s was one of hope, unity and coming together, of challenging and not taking anything for granted ... to investigate
GROW IT, SHOW IT
The musical features the songs "Aquarius," "Easy to be Hard" and "Good Morning, Sunshine." The show contains nudity and profanity.
Tickets are available at Murphy Hall Box Office, 864-3982; Lied Center Box Office, 864- ARTS; or the Student Union Activities Box Office in the Kansas Union, 864-3477.
"Hair (Revised)" will be performed at 8 p.m. Nov.15-16,2:30 p.m. Nov.17 and 8 p.m.Nov. 21-23 in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
because it's part of your personal journey," he said. "They've gotten plasticized and stucced over.
"It's a sadness that some of what was so hopeful then has become so banal now."
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
From the Shrink World to Here, Kansas
The Averills dominate KU theater season
UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Will Averill, left, and his father, Ric Averill, will both have plays staged within the next year at Kansas University.
- Creativity is at the heart of the Averill family.
BY JAN BILES
JOURNAL-WORLD ARTS EDITOR
Some call it the Year of the Averills. And they're right if they're talking about the upcoming University Theatre season.
Ric Averill, a Kansas University alum, will direct his original "Alex and the Shrink World" for Theatre for Young People in mid-February. His son, Will, a KU senior, will have his play, "Tales From the Wasteland," staged in late January and early February in Inge Theatre.
Tom Averill
A. R. B. M.
Tom Averill, Ric's brother, a KU alum and Kansas folklore and literature professor at Washburn University in Topeka, will debut his "Abide with Me" in
Crafton-Preyer Theatre during the Alums Come Home celebration in late April and early May.
Jumpstarted at KU
1979 was the last time Ric Averill had a play staged at KU.
"I was in the master's program in children's theater," he said. "It was called 'Lynfeneer and the Journey Cloak.' It was science fiction, about space pilots."
The production featured two huge spaceships built in the Averills' back yard and robots. After its stint on the KU stage, the play toured the state, with Ric Averill serving as the touring company's general manager.
"That jump started the Seem-To-Be Players," he said, referring to a touring company of adult actors who formed in 1980 and continue to specialize in children's theater.
In 1985, shortly after the Seem-To-Be Players began producing full-length plays, Averill wrote "Alex."
"It's about a little boy adjusting to his newborn baby sister," he said, adding that Will was 8 and his sister, Trish, had just been born. "He shrinks to the size of an ant. He's threatened by the evil King Brown, a spider. ... In many ways, the character of
Alex is much like Willie was."
Averill said the play sat for a while and then he entered it into the Indiana University Purdue/University of Indianapolis Bonderman Children's Theatre Playwriting Symposium. It won.
The revisions cut some songs and a ballet sequence by Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia of "Star Wars" fame. Averill said he will revise the play even more before he directs it on the KU stage.
"I had submitted it three other times," he said. "Then in 1995, I gave it a big rewrite."
In addition to the KU production, Ric Averill also has written a play for the SeemTo-Be Players season. "Reliable Junk,"a play for junior high-age students, will be performed Jan. 23.
The play calls for a cast of 11 or 12, plus a person to be the voice of the baby sister. Production meetings will start in the fall.
The hour-long play is based
on the real-life story of Harvey Sheets, who runs the Cosmic Connection Museum in Maryland, and his relationship with a cynical junior high-age student. The set will be designed by Kim Peter Kovac of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
"We'll do it here and then it will do a national tour in 1997-'98," he said.
year, he wrote "The Seed," a macabre children's play with a 10-foot-tall female puppet.
"Paul asked me 'What does it mean?' I couldn't explain it so he told me do something more realistic," Averill said.
Will Averill began writing when he graduated from high school.
"I was doing Renegade Theatre and sketch writing," he said, adding that one of the sketches he co-wrote, revolving around the recurring character of Ranger Bob became a regular at the theater.
Just starting out
"I was doing lots of acting. It was a loose environment, and in a way it was a good place to start out."
As a KU sophomore, Averill enrolled in Scriptwriting I, taught by Paul Lim. That
As a junior, he took Scriptwriting II and his assignment was to write a full-length play. The result: "Tales From the Wasteland."
"It's pseudo-autobiographical," he said.
The play focuses on two men who live in an apartment after they've graduated from college. Jake's a cartoonist who's trying to get published; Scott flips pancakes for a living and is involved in a love triangle with his present ex-girlfriends. They decide to throw a party and Jake's alcoholic father shows up.
The younger Averill also has other theatrical projects waiting in the wings.
"I've been commissioned to write an adaptation of 'Peter Pan' in the spring for Central Junior High School," he said.
ALL IN THE FAMILY
Three University Theatre productions this season have the Averill mark.
"Alex and the Shrink World," written and directed by KU alum Ric Averill, will be performed at 2:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. Feb.15.
"Tales From the Wasteland," a short play by KU senior Will Averill, will take the stage at 8 p.m. Jan. 30-31, Feb. 1-2 and Feb. 4-8.
"Abide with Me," by KU alum Tom Averill, will be staged at 8 p.m. April 24-26 and May 1-3.
Finding a new voice
Tom Averill came to the stage late in life,compared to the other members of his
See Averill, page 42F
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
237 240 241
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 9F
10
RENEE KNOEEB/IOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Jan Chapman, left, and Cynthia Dahlberg, right, rehearse a scene from Jean-Paul Sartre's "No Exit." The play was staged by English Alternative Theatre last winter.
EAT takes on scripts written by students
- English Alternative Theatre focuses its attention on young playwrights.
BY MARK LUCE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Entering its sixth year, English Alternative Theatre continues to build on its reputation as the most innovative and envelope-pushing theater group in the area.
And for EAT artistic director Paul Lim, an English professor at Kansas University, the group is beginning to come into its own.
"We continue to move toward our initial impulse, which is to nurture KU playwrights," he said.
Lim, who directs KU's sixyear-old playwriting program, founded EAT to fill a gap in local theater. Too often, according to Lim, there were no production avenues for local scripts. EAT has staged more than 70 full productions and staged readings.
"While waiting for the playwriting program to catch stride, EAT did a lot of plays by marginal voices — gays and lesbians and people of color," Lim said. "This seemed to fulfill the needs of the community. Although we still do these types of plays occasionally, now we are focusing primarily on student scripts. Now that the KU playwriting program is six years old, we are getting quite a number of good scripts which can be made better by productions."
Those student scripts have met with success. In the past three years of entering scripts
.
EAT YOUR HEART OUT
Here is the English Alternative Theatre's fall schedule:
- "The Tragedy of Mariam," by Elizabeth Cary, adapted by Susan Dunn, 8 p.m. Sept. 14, 100 Smith Hall, Kansas University campus.
- "The Camp Follower," by W. Scott Pinkston, 8 p.m. Oct. 10-13 and 2:30 p.m. Oct. 14, Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth.
- Three short plays:"The Sandbox," by Edward Albee; "The Chalky White Substance," by Tennessee Williams; and "Tidings," by Phoebe Zimmerman, 8 p.m. Nov.21-23 and 2:30 p.m. Nov.24.
in the American College Theatre Festival, EAT has landed a play in the regional festival. Although none of the plays has advanced to the national competition, it is only a matter of time before a play breaks through, according to Lim.
Play tells story of immigrant family
This year's entries will be "The Camp Follower," by KU graduate W. Scott Pinkston, and "Tidings," a one-act play by KU student Phoebe Zimmerman.
- A playwright finds inspiration in the tales told by family members.
See EAT, page 10F
BY JAN BILES
JOURNAL-WORLD ARTS EDITOR
John Gronbeck-Tedesco, Kansas University associate professor of theater and film, drew upon his heritage when he began writing "Coming Here: A Trilogy," a play about the experiences of an Italian immigrant family.
S. A. R. B. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. R. S. S. S. S. S.
The three-act play is based in part on stories passed down to him by family members.
"I don't know if they are true or fanciful," he said. "I've changed the stories in some places, not at all in others."
Gronbeck-Tedesco said he began working on the play about six years ago. The first act is set in the 1940s, after World War II, in Cleveland, Ohio, and tells the story of Tonv.
"My uncle claims to have chopped down a telephone pole in Cincinnati, Ohio," he said. "He was angry at the telephone company and felt he had no way to redress his grievance. So he took things into his own hands."
RENEE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
John Gronbeck-Tedesco, chairman of Kansas University's theater and film department, will be seeing one of his own plays come to life this fall on the Crafton-Preyer stage.
"Tony is an amalgamation of a couple of people," he said. "He's not just my uncle."
His uncle immigrated to the United States as a child and became a U.S. citizen by serving in the military during World War II. However, he never quite assimilated into American culture.
During the second act, the audience is taken back to the 1920s to meet Sal,a metal smith from Sicily who recently immigrated to the United
States. In the old country, he had been regarded as an artist; in his new home, he is considered to be a tradesman.
"Sal is based on my grandfather," Gronbeck-Tedesco said.
The story goes like this: Sal supports his family by putting gutters on buildings in Cleveland, Ohio. One day, he must install inferior gutters, which he believes is an insult to the craft. He eventually rounds up some friends and they tear down the gutters one night and put up gutters he has designed.
"It's an announcement to his children about who he is," Gronbeck-Tedesco said. "It's the American typicality of taking charge by marginalized people to regain their dignity."
The final act is set in Sicily in the early 1920s.
"It depicts the reason for their coming to America," the playwright said, adding that it involved a murder of an overlord's son.
"Coming Here" grapples with the experiences of every American family that never get told.
See Play, page 10F
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10F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
LCT's season offers something for everyone
AUGUST 1985
RENEE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Performers with the Lawrence Community Theatre rehearse the Arthur Miller play "The Price" during the 1995-96 season. The new season's productions will include "Something's Afoot," "Lost in Yonkers" and "The Cemetery Club."
Musicals and comedies are on tap at Lawrence Community Theatre.
BY JAN BILES
JOURNAL-WORLD ARTS EDITOR
Mary Doveton, managing artistic director of Lawrence Community Theatre, is excited about the upcoming 1996- 97 season, which she said offers something for just about everybody.
"Lawrence has so many talented people,it's just a matter of linking up with them."
Mary Doveton, managing artistic director
And if you are a Kansas University student, you can have the opportunity to try out for parts, help with lighting or build sets.
"Lawrence has so many talented people,it's just a matter of linking up with them," Doveton said during an interview to announce the new season.
The new season's productions include:
- "Something's Afoot," a musical murder mystery by James McDonald, Davis Vos and Robert Gerlach that will be directed by Doveton, Sept.
27-29, Oct. 3-6 and Oct. 11-
13.
This whodunit, loosely based on Agatha Christie's "Ten Little Indians," revolves around a number of guests staying at an English island estate during a terrible storm.
"The people start dying in bizarre and strange ways, and singing all the while," Doveton said. "It'll be a technical challenge. There'll be poison gas coming out of a phone and a maid will be swallowed up by a vase."
- "Lost in Yonkers," a
Pulitzer Prize- and Tony Award-winning comic drama by Neil Simon, Dec. 6-8 and Dec. 12-15.
Set in 1942, the play tells the story of two brothers who are sent to live with their grandmother. The brothers must contend with their tough grandmother, the secret romance of an aunt and an uncle who may have mob connections.
"It's a really good family show," Doveton said. "We've been wanting to do it for a couple of years, but couldn't get the rights."
- "The Cemetery Club," a comedy by Ivan Menchell that will be directed by retired Kansas University theater professor Jed Davis, Jan. 17-19 and Jan. 23-26.
In this play, three widows have been meeting once a month for tea before going to the cemetery to visit their husbands' graves. The friction comes when one of the ladies has a romance with a widower butcher.
"It's funny, but it also has a touching side," Doveton said.
- "Fortinbras," a comic work by contemporary playwright Lee Blessing, Feb. 21-23 and Feb. 27-March 2.
"The play takes up where Hamlet' left off," Doveton said. "Fortinbras takes charge. He's a Yuppie who deals with ghosts and people who have survived the battle.
"It's a literary play and asks a lot of questions about leadership and authority. People who know 'Hamlet' will enjoy it on one level; those who don't will still enjoy it."
- "Blood Brothers," a musical by Willy Russell, April 11-13, April 17-20 and April 25-27.
A musical tragedy nominated for six Tony Awards, this show tells the story of twins separated at birth and raised in different social circumstances.
"The music is just gorgeous," Doveton said. "It's some of the best music I've heard in a long time."
ON STAGE OPS
The Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 N.H., is staging several plays during the 1996-'97 school year in which Kansas University students can become involved.
For information on how you can participate, call 843-7469.
Also, tickets are on sale for the LCT productions. Call the number above for that information as well.
- "Whose Wife Is It Anyway," a farce by Ray Cooney, June 6-8 and June 12-15.
The winner of the 1991 Olivier Award for Best Comedy, the plot centers on a government minister who finds a body trapped in a hotel's sash window and then tries to get out of the situation.
"It will end the season on a high note," Doveton said.
Play tells story of immigrants
Continued from page 9F
"The immigrant experience has an enormous consequence but it's usually not discussed or lost. And I think that's a problem because the majority of us are the children of immigrants."
Gronbeck-Tedesco said he hopes those seeing the play will be inspired to seek out stories about their own heritages, adding, "Immigrating is a complex incident. It's full of hope and trauma. It's a mixed bag of experiences... It's an identity-making event."
And what does Gronbeck-Tedesco get out of writing stories based on his family's immigration?
"It's given me a fresh sense of what it means to be an American and the process of becoming an American," he said.
In his statement of thematic concern, Pinkston said he hoped to look at personal relationships and sexual identity as well as the roles of politics, religion, big business and the media in American culture.
EAT takes on student scripts
"The Camp Follower," focuses on Lloyd Stiller, a TV reporter looking for the story of his life. Stiller has a run-in with a refugee drag-queen, befriends a cocktail waitress and gets involved in a hotly contested gubernatorial race. These confrontations force Stiller to reexamine his values and beliefs.
Continued from page 9F
"The play may suggest that mainstream journalism — by replacing in-depth reporting with spoon-fed, instant information that is easily digested has duped the public and now serves only those who have the most to lose from full disclosure. The potential
Zimmerman's "Tidings" is a tenderly wrought story of a presumed drowned man who returns to his life with no explanation or memory of his accident. With the aid of a doctor, he begins to move toward recovery.
result: a sort of theocratic totalitarianism," he said.
"It's phenomenal to know that anyone even wants to see it," Zimmerman said. "There are many first playwrights who would want to be involved in every step of production, but I'm fascinated just to sit back and see what they are going to do with it."
Lim said he hopes that staging plays by younger writers will help attract a new audience for EAT.
"We could continue to do the tried and true, but unless we nurture new voices of the future of American theater we'll be in jeopardy," he said.
2.
6
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The University of Kansas, Lawrence
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11
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 11F
Instrument, hall ready for debut
Organ lovers' pipe dream comes true
I
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTOS
James Louder, an organ builder for Wolff and Associates in Quebec, Canada, works on voicing a set of pipes on the organ in the new Bales Organ Recital Hall.
A 35-foot-tall pipe organ will make its debut this year on the Kansas University campus.
BY MARK LUCE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Something so big isn't supposed to sound so beautiful.
At 35 feet tall and 14,000 pounds, the new Hellmuth Wolff organ in the Dane and Polly Bales Organ Recital Hall adjacent to the Lied Center dwarfs its players.
But
"There are other universities that have organ recital halls, but this is the finest by far—acoustically, aesthetically."
But through its nearly 3,000 pipes and stops this behemoth produces a sound unmatched not only in Lawrence, but also the entire country.
— James Higdon, Kansas University music professor
"This is without question
the finest university organ hall for teaching research and performance," said James Higdon, professor of organ and church music at Kansas University. "There are other universities that have organ recital halls, but this is the finest by far — acoustically, aesthetically."
The $2.9 million project has been beset with delays, with the completion originally slated for March. Higdon said they knew delays were possible, thus they gave themselves a large window to meet the Oct. 9 dedication.
In addition, a small but vocal contingency publicly questioned why the university would contract with Hellmuth Wolff & Associates
of Laval, Quebec, instead of Reuter Organ Co. of Lawrence. But Higdon quiets the grumblings by pointing out that Reuter doesn't even build this type of organ.
Higdon said the Bales hall is unique.
"This hall has been developed just for the performance of organ," he said. "If you put an organ in a multipurpose hall it is less than ideal. It is hard to teach students how to play correctly."
For the 25 to 30 undergraduates and graduate students in the organ program, the Hellmuth Wolff organ will provide an opportunity to learn on an appropriate instrument.
"Spaces like this exist all over Europe in concert halls and churches, but there are very few in the United States," Higdon said. "Americans seem to have this living room mentality where they want everything to be like their living room. They
PIPEDREAMS
- Dedicatory recital by James Higdon, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 4 and 2:30 p.m. Nov. 10.
- Programs at the Bales Organ Recital Hall include:
- Dedication conference:
"French Organ Building," various events from October 10-13.
.
- Dedicatory recital by Michael Bauer, 7:30 p.m. Nov.18 and 2:30 p.m. Nov.
just don't know about these spaces, and the Europeans would not put up for a minute with a living room mentality for performances."
- Alumni recital with Jerald Hamilton, 2:30 p.m. Nov. 17.
- 24.
- Alumni recital with Mark Steinbach, 2:30 p.m. Feb. 16.
- Alumni recital with Carla Edwards, 2:30 p.m. March 9.
James Louder, vice president of Hellmuth Wolff and an organ builder for 22 years, is responsible for voicing the organ, or making each pipe sound fit the hall.
- Alumni recital with Laura Ellis, 2:30 p.m. April 20.
"Generally, it is thought the voicing is the most ticklish aspect," he said. "We have to make sure that the
flute pipe sounds like a flute."
hute pipe sounds like a hute. The process, which will end up taking between three and four months, is painstaking.
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"We have to adjust the
tone quality, the volume, the way it attacks and the way it blends with all the other pipes," Louder said. "It's not uncommon to spend an entire day on a single note."
Lighting Up Kansas with the Power of the Arts
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts 1996-97 Lied Center Series Season
CONCERT SERIES
All Tickets on Sale Now
THE PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY with ANDRE PREVIN October 6, 1996, 7:00 pm
QUEENSLAND BALLET
with THE KANSAS CITY
SYMPHONY in PIRATESI
October 25, 1996, 8:00 pm
DAWN UPSHAW, Soprano and RICHARD GOODE, Piano February 25, 1997, 8:00 pm
NEW YORK CITY OPERA
NATIONAL COMPANY
IN LA BOHÉME
March 7 & 8, 1997, 8:00 pm
RUSSIAN VILLAGE FESTIVAL April 9,1997,8:00 pm
NEW DIRECTIONS SERIES
CAROUSEL
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November 15 & 16, 1996
8:00 pm each evening
CAROUSEL
February 7, 1997, 8:00 pm
February 8, 2:00 pm & 8:00 pm
February 9, 2:00 pm & 7:00 pm
SWARTHOUT CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES
BROADWAY SERIES
SOUND OF MUSIC
March 2, 1997, 2:00 pm
& 7:00 pm
SANKAI JUKU in Yuragi: In a Space of Perpetual Motion October 22,1996,8:00 pm
BEAUX ARTS TRIO
October 1, 1996, 8:00 pm
BLAIR STRING QUARTET with BELA FLECK, Bonjo April 20, 1997, 3:30 pm
CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER November 10, 1996, 3:30 pm
NEW EUROPEAN STRINGS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA February 16, 1997, 3:30 pm
NATIONAL SONG & DANCE ENSEMBLE OF TIBET November 2,1996,8:00 pm
YING QUARTET April 6,1997,3:00 pm
STREB/RINGSIDE
in POPACTION
March 18, 1997, 8:00 pm
MERCE CUNNINGHAM
DANCE COMPANY
January 28, 1997, 8:00 pm
STOMP February 21-22, 1997, 8:00 pm February 23, 1997, 7:00 pm
LIED FAMILY SERIES
SEATTLE MIME THEATRE
September 19, 1996, 8:00 pm
Adult Performance
September 22, 1996, 2:00 pm
Children's Performance
THE SLEEPING BEAUTY ON ICE
featuring ST. PETERSBURG
STATE ICE BALLET
December 14 & 15, 1996
2:00 pm & 7:00 pm each day
THEATRE SANS FIL
in THE CROWN OF DESTINY
April 13, 1997, 2:00 pm
All single and season tickets are on sale now.
Tickets are on sale at the Lied Center Box Office 913/864-ARTS and all Ticketmaster Ticket Centers or call Ticketmaster at 913/234-4545.
THE LIED CENTER OF LAWSYTS
12F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
'Opera's not just a fat lady with horns'
KU offers opera subspecialty
- From zero to three each season in just four years, opera productions staged by KU's department of music and dance are on a roll.
BY BUNNY SMITH
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Three years after budgetary concerns forced the Kansas University department of theater and film to drop its opera schedule, the department of music and dance not only has picked up the ball, but is off and running with it.
"We're attempting to make opera accessible, to make it the moving and dynamic musical-theatrical event it is," explained department of music and dance chairman Steve Anderson. "Opera's not just a fat lady with horns."
"We do as much for our opera students as virtually anyone in the country and a whole lot more than most."
Steve Anderson, chairman of the KU music and dance department
The 1996-'97 KU opera season calls for three major performances: a fall production of Sondheim's contemporary work, "Into the Woods" in the Inge Theatre; Mozart's ever-popular "Marriage of Figaro" in January in Swarthout
Recital Hall; and a collaboration with the University Symphony Orchestra to stage an operatic setting of Mendelssohn's "Elijah" in the spring at the Lied Center.
A yet-to-be scheduled evening of opera scenes will round out the calendar.
"We feel very comfortable with the three-production format," said John Stephens, professor of voice and director of a number of past operas at KU.
That's up from zero in 1992, when the department
22. when the department which had no funds for an opera production in its budget got word that "the unthinkable happened," as Anderson put it. The theater department had declined to spend its own precious dollars on an opera that year.
"We scrambled to put together two small productions," Anderson said, recalling that a total of only about
SIZZLING SEASON
Kansas University's opera season will include three major productions: "Into the Woods," Oct. 25-26, Oct. 31 and Nov. 1-2, Inge Theatre.
- "The Marriage of Figaro," Jan. 17-19 and Jan. 23-25, Swarthout Recital Hall. John Stephens will be stage director.
- "Elijah," a staged version of the Mendelsohn oratorio with the KU Symphony Orchestra, April 4 and 6, Lied Center. Brian Priestman will conduct.
All performances are at 7:30 p.m. except for "Elijah," which will have an 8 p.m. curtain time.
600 tickets were sold that year. "But that gave us confidence in ourselves and what we could do with our limited budget."
Growing pains
For that initial year, which featured "Of Mice and Men" and "The Secret Marriage" in the relatively tiny Inge Theatre, a planning committee was formed to put together funds to fuel the program.
The following year — 1993'94 the program grew to three productions in three venues, including Gilbert and Sullivan's lighthearted "Mikado" in Swarthout Recital Hall and Mozart's ambitious "Don Giovanni" at the Lied in its debut season. Subsequent seasons have adhered to the three-production/three-venue format.
Anderson calls the growth in the number of productions, venues and budget "huge," adding, "There's real activity going on."
Stephens points to a dramatic increase in the number of students pursuing opera studies and auditioning for roles.
"We do as much for our opera students as virtually
And preparing students for careers in opera is what the program's all about.
"With the growth of the program, there's more interest in the program," Stephens said. "It all goes together."
anyone in the country and a whole lot more than most," he said.
A. H. W. B.
New degree
KU has long offered a bachelor of fine arts degree in theater and voice. Now, this year for the first time, students may receive a master's degree in music with a subspecialty in opera performance. The new degree program places more emphasis on language, diction and role preparation.
"It allows the student to focus more on developing the performance skills and the academics that are specific to an opera career," Stephens said.
Another goal of the growing opera program is to enrich the students' experience by bringing in "guest" directors. The guest director approach has the added benefit of showcasing the potential of KU's opera students.
RICHARD GWIN/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Kansas University performers rehearse scenes from the opera "Patience," which was performed during the 1995-'96 opera season.
Experience will continue to be the focus of the program, whether it remains at its present three-production format or whether budgetary support
allows it to expand, Anderson said.
"We've made huge steps forward," he said. "But we've either got to do this right or get out of the business, and we're doing a whole lot right."
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14F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Lied Center helps interns shape careers
- Lied Center intents learn more than just their jobs.
BY JL WATSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Kansas University graduate David Woody has a dream career. He's an art director for MTV and travels to New York and California from his home in Florida.
But in terms of career success, the yellow brick road leads back to KU and his job as a technical director for what is now the Lied Center Series.
"My KU job set the wheels in motion for a professional career for me," Woody said during a phone interview from California. "That experience alone was more influential than my education at KU."
Under the direction of Lied Center director Jackie Davis, Woody learned to negotiate contracts and work with campus offices on issues of security, traffic control and coordination of major theatrical, music and dance events. He
began working with the Concert Series as a freshman in 1985.
"It boggles my mind that I lid that at such a young age," Woody said. "Jackie put 100 percent faith in us to get the job done. It gave me real-world experience and I was 00 percent prepared to deal with the experience I started having in the professional world."
Working on the technical side of visiting productions had an added bonus for Woody; exposure to many acets of the art world.
haping cultural identity
"I had to be there for every performance," he said. "I got to see incredible artistic events most students never get to see. I got the exposure I wish every student could have. Because of that I'm a huge patron of the arts."
That high praise is echoed by KU alum Alison Hart, who also credits Davis with putting her where she wanted to be New York City.
"I got to see incredible artistic events most students never get to see.I got the exposure I wish every student could have.Because of that I'm a huge patron of the arts."
— KU alum David Woody
Hart spent her first three years at KU as a music major. She changed majors and in 1987 graduated with a journalism degree. Davis helped Hart find the right internship to utilize her talents.
Woody urges students to take advantage of the events that come to KU stages.
"She knew a guy, Judd Wheeler in New York, and he had an internship," Hart said. "She told me to take it and I did."
"Jackie is very selective in the art she chooses to bring KU,"he said."She helps tape the identity of Lawrence culturally by educating people one show at a me."
Hart packed up what she could carry and in the summer of 1987 moved to the Big Apple. She's been there ever since and is currently in charge of public relations for Life magazine. She started her PR training while working
under Davis at KU.
"I did publicity for her and I learned to take the initiative," Hart said. "She taught me how to be resourceful."
Enduring interest
It's a skill that Hart said helped her land her current position. Hart is not working in an arts-related field, but her start at KU fostered an enduring interest in the arts.
"Even though I'm not working in the arts I can go whenever I want," she said. "From the time I left school this is all I've ever known. I wonder where I'd be if I hadn't stayed at KU two extra years."
"Jeanne Mellinger taught me about the arts in general," Jacquinot said. "I sponge off of her from day to day. She has a very successful program and I have a lot of respect for that."
Davis isn't the only Lied Center mentor to receive high marks. Education director Jeanne Mellinger is one of the main reasons former student Jennifer Jacquinot returned to work at the Lied Center when she came back to KU to pursue graphic design studies after completing internships in New York and at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
While Davis and her staff instill self-confidence, they also look for it in students they hire.
"I don't think you could have a better job as a student," she said. "They treat students with such respect and put so much faith in them, and that gave me a lot of confidence."
"I look for someone who seems serious about and is interested in the arts," Davis said.
"I find that people who have a higher GPA generally organize their time better and are able to keep up their studies and work here."
Once hired, students have an opportunity to work with the public as well as visiting artists and management.
In addition, graduating seniors can put their work experience on a resume and take with them the memories from the performances they helped produce.
I am very grateful to all the people who have supported me in my career. I would like to thank you for your hard work and dedication. Your help has made a difference in our lives. I will always remember you.
RENÉE KNOEBER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Jennifer Jacquinot works as an assistant to the education director at the Lied Center while taking classes part-time at Kansas University.
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816-531-1313
Thurs: $1.50 ANY DRINK
BEST Ladies Night in Town!
Wichita
Oldtown
316-267-1782
Wed: $1.50 ANY DRINK
The Pub Is Rockin'!!
It's Always A Party At The Pub!!
M
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
2176 E. 23rd St.
(E. Highway 10,
1/2 mi. East of
23rd & Haskell)
Thanks for the ribs!
Outstanding as always
Joe Montana
Football Player
GET A 12" PIZZA FOR $1.89
GUMBY'S
Pizza
841-5000
1445 W. 23rd
- Get a 12" pizza for $1.89 with the purchase of any Gumbv's Pizza.
- HOURS •
- Additional toppings 93¢ ea.
- Original or Whole wheat Crust
GUMBY'S REVENGE
Mon-Thurs 4:00 pm-2:30 am Fri & Sat 11:00 am-3:30 am Sun 11:00 am-2:00 am
GUMBY
Extra Large 16"
BOMBSHELL
2-Topping Pizza Only $7.95 Additional Toppings
Large
PEPPERONI
2-Topping
Pizza
Only $6.78
ROLLS
Monday-
Thursday
with any Purchase 50¢
Pepperoni Rolls
Limit 8 per order
FOR ALL YOUR PARTY NEEDS.
Barb's Vintage Rose
- RENTAL COSTUMES Lowest prices & best selection
- VINTAGES CLOTHES 1900's to 1970's
- FORMALS & TUXES
- JEWELRY & ACCESSORIES
- BRIDAL GOWNS
- ETHNIC CLOTHING
- NEW SPORTSWEAR
Mon-Sat 927 Mass 841-2451
NIGHTLIFE
Welcome Back Jayhawks®
Aztec Inn
Welcome to the World of Fabulous Mexican Dining!
SPECIAL: MON. & TUES. EVENING
All You Can Eat Mexican Food (Tostados, Tacos, Burritos, $5.30 Refried Beans & Rice)
Mexican and American Foods also offering children's menu Cocktail & Margaritas
Daily Lunch Specials Also Serinvg Breakfast 7 a.m.-2 p.m.
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-2 p.m., 5 p.m.-10 p.m.
Sat. 7 a.m.-2 p.m., 5 p.m.-10 p.m.
Carryout Service Too!
933 Iowa, Hillcrest Shopping Center, 841-8639
And you thought your books were a heavy load.
Baby number: 106275
Be prepared Think before you act!
P
Planned Parenthood of Mid-Missouri and Eastern Kansas
Birth control • Pregnancy testing • STD testing & treatment
1420 Kasold Drive, Suite C Lawrence, KS (913) 832-0281
CARRY-OUT AVAILABLE!
Moon Goddess
Howling For Great Mexican Food? . .
Come in to Pancho's for Great Homestyle Mexican Food, Margaritas and a Large Variety of Mexican Beers.
Welcome Back
KU Students!
FULL BAR WITH COLOR TV'S!
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
23rd & Louisiana
in the Malls Shopping Center
VISA MasterCard
843-4044
Open 7 Days a Week!
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 22F
...
Pancho's
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 22H
NIGHTLIFE
Fine Line Tattoo, & Body Piercing
"We Get Under Your Skin"
- Quality work
- Reasonably priced
- Hospital Sterilization
- Thousands of deslans and custom work
- Family owned and operated
- 25 years of experience
Fine Line Tattoo, Inc.
29th & Mase • Topela • (913) 233-8288 • Mon-Sat 12-8
Baby Point
102B.W.6th • Junction City • (913) 23B-823B • Tues-Sat 12-8
FALL LEAGUES NOW FORMING
FALL LEAGUES
NOW FORMING
For The Whole Family
Call Now For
More Information
Bowl three games,
get the next one
FREE
(Good thru Sept 1,1996)
Royal
Grest
Lanes
933 Iowa • 842-1234
For the whole family
Call Now For More Information
Bowl three games,
get the next one
FREE
(Good thru Sept 1,1996)
Royal Grest Lanes
933 Iowa • 842-1234
Royal Grest Lanes
933 Iowa • 842-1234
DOS HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
815 New Hampshire 841-7286 Open Daily 11am
Welcome Back Students!
Margarita
Every Wednesday
$1.50 Margaritas
Margarita
BREWING
25¢ Draws
$1.50 32 0x. Draws
Beer
Call for live entertainment schedule on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays.
PLAN NOW TO ATTEND THE
25th
WALNUT VALLEY FESTIVAL
WV
WALNUT
VALLEY
FESTIVAL
NATIONAL FLAT-PICKING CHAMPIONSHIPS
WINFIELD, KANSAS SEPTEMBER 19,20,21,22,1996
- ARTS & CRAFTS FESTIVAL • ALL WEATHER FACILITIES • 4 STAGES
FEATURING IN PERSON:
- John McCutcheon
- Tom Chapin with Michael Mark
- Chesapeake (21)
- The Grass is Greener (20)
- Blue Highway
- Dan Crary
- Tim & Mollie O'Brien and The O'Boys (19)
- Mike Cross (21)
- Nickel Creek
- Bryan Bowers
- Beppe Gambella
- Aileen & Elkin Thomas
- Cherish the Ladies
- Steve Kaufman
- Marley's Ghost
- Mark O'Connor (20)
- Tom Paxton
- Cathy Barton & Dave Para
- Revival
- Charles David Alexander
- Steven King
- The Karen Mueller Trio
- The Eddie Adock Band
- Pat Kirtkwt
- Pat Donohue
- The New Tradition
- Andy May
- Byron Berline Band (20)
- David Schnaufer
- Winfield Regional Symphony (22)
- Roz Brown
- Bill Darwick
- Spontaneous Combustion
- Linda Tilton
- Crow Johnson
- Bluestem
- Julie Davis
- The Plaid Family
- Ivan Stiles
Ticket Prices Advance Gate
Weekend (4days) $50 $60
2-day Fri./Sat. $38 $45
Sat./Sun. $28 $35
Fri. Or Sat. $20 $25
Sun. (Gate Only) $12
No mail orders after Aug 31. Orders recived after Sept. 1 will be held at gate. NO REFUNDS.
- Marv Caitlin Smith
- Children age 6-11 ... $5 each, payable at gate upon initial entry NOT payable in advance
- Children under 6 admitted Free with adult.
- Barry Patton
FESTIVAL GATE AND CAMPGROUNDS WILL OPEN THURS. SEPT.
12 AT 8:00 AM. ONLY WEEKEND TICKET HOLDERS ALLOWED ON GROUNDS PRIOR TO MIDNIGHT THURSDAY SEPT 19.
ADVANCE TICKETS GUARANTEE ADMISSION.
$46,588
IN CONTEST PRIZES
WORKSHOPS & CONTESTS
Arts & Crafts Fair - 4 stages in operation. Well Policed Grounds No Animals, No Beer or Alcohol, No Drugs & No Motorcycles (Due to Noise) For more information Write or call
walnut valley
association, inc.
P. O. Box 245 916 Main Phone (318) 221-3250 Windfield, KS 67158
This will be BEST FESTIVAL IN THE U.S. this year!
NIGHTLIFE
Lawrence's first and best sub shop for over 16 years!
Yello Sub
40
Varieties
鱼
Submerge yourself in the best subs in town. Built on natural whole wheat buns baked fresh from scratch and piled with quality veggies, meats and cheeses. Our subs are healthy and hearty.
Real-In A BIG ONE! Subman Delivers!
鱼
$1 OFF
ANY
FOOT-LONG
SUB
Subman delivers every night.
5pm-Close • Call-ins are
FAST!
Yello Sub
O
1814 W.23rd St. 843-6000
12th & Oread 841-3268
One sub per coupon per person.
Not valid w/ other offers.
Expires 10-31-96
The Flamingo Club
All you can eat Friday Buffet!
$5.00
Open to the public
Serving from 11:30am-2pm
the Red Lyon tavern
Welcome Students!
Now Featuring
Ad Astra Ale
from The Free State Brewery
Unhurried Since
1993
944 Mass. 832-8228
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 24F
the Red Lyon
tavern
Welcome Students!
Now Featuring
Ad Astra Ale
from The
Free State Brewery
Unhurried Since
1993
944 Mass. 832-8228
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996.25F
NIGHTLIFE
SHEAR PERFECTION
HAIR SKIN & NAIL STUDIO
SYSTÈME BIOLAGE.
Matrix®
ESSENTIALS
$5 OFF
Any Service with this ad.
Exp. 9/30/96
123 W. 8th • 843-1465
Before the Curtain Rises... or after the Curtain Falls... Come to ...
Scott's Bruss Apple GRILL & BAR
MEN & WOMEN
Enjoy casual dining before the show or a relaxing appetizer or dessert and beverage after the show.
Bring your ticket stub for a 50% Discount on any appetizer or dessert
(does not apply to any other discounts)
Daily dinner and drink specials
Lawrence's Original
Neighborhood Grill & Bar
SCOTT'S N
BRASS APPLE
15TH
LIED CTR IOWA
You could receive up to $100 a day for participating in a clinical study.
3300 W. 15th ORCHARDS CORNERS 841-0033 OPEN SUN.-WED 11AM TO 12 AM THUR.-SAT 11AM-1:30 AM
IMTCI, an international research company is currently seeking ADULTS 18-45 years old.
TO QUALIFY YOU MUST BE In good health
1-800-669-4682 or (913)599-2044 16300 College Boulevard, Lenexa, KS 66219
- In good health
- Able to make short visits and/or stay overnight at our clinic.
Call or stop by today to find out if you qualify.
Twenty minutes from Lawrence!
IMTCI
IMTCI International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc.
SONIC America's Drive-In
Research Today for a Healthier Tomorrow
SONIC
America's Drive-In
1015 East 23rd • 3201 West 6th
Welcome
Back
K.U.
Students!
Look for our
MONTHLY
promotions?
FASTEST
SERVICE IN
TOWN
SONIC
1015 East 23rd
3201 West 6th
* Please present coupon when ordering. Not valid w/ other offers. Excludes tax. Exp. 8/31/96
$199
Burger, Fries & Medium Drink
SONIC
1015 East 23rd
3201 West 6th
* Please present coupon when ordering. Not valid w/ other offers. Excludes tax. Exp. 8/31/96
99¢
KID MEALS
Includes fries, kids drink and TOY!
(choose from a hamburger, corndog, hotdog or grilled cheese sandwich)
G
IMPERIAL GARDEN
2907 W. 6th • Across from Dillons • 841-1688
CHINESE CUISINE
Daily Lunch Buffet:
Mon-Sat 11:30-2:30 $4.95
Sun 11:30-3:00 $5.95
Daily Dinner Buffet:
Seven days a week
5:30-9:00 $6.95
Mon.-Sat. 11:30am - 10:00pm
Sun. 11:30am - 9:00pm
Voted Best
Buffet In
Lawrence!
VISA
MasterCard
Mon
Sun
Voted Best Buffet In Lawrence!
VISA
MasterCard
molly mcgees grill & bar WELCOME BACK, STUDENTS! Come And Enjoy Our Daily Food & Drink Specials! 2429 Iowa • 841-9922
Good Time
TOM HALFORD
Friendly Service
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 2F
NIGHTLIFE
Moon
A Great Gourmet Lunch For Under $6.00 At...
925 Iowa • 841-7226
Lunch:
11:00 - 2:00 p.m. Mon - Fri
Dinner: 5:00 - 9:00 Sun & Mon
5:00 - 10:00 Tues - Sat
fifi's
Restaurant
Executive Chef · Mark Ramirez.
fifi's
Restaurant
Executive Chef - Mark Ramirez
WAXMAN CANDLES
609
MASS.
843-8593
LAWRENCE'S OWN CANDLE GALLERY!
B Sunday August 21
Classes Begin
Tuesday August 22
Wednesday August 23
Lunch at Runza
Thursday August 24
Friday August 25
Saturday/B Sunday
August 26/27
Welcome Back KU Students!
No matter how busy you new schedule is there's always time for the one-of-a-kind taste of a Runza sandwich. Seasoned ground beef filling, cabbage, onions, wrapped and baked inside homemade bread. Also available with cheese.
Take a study break with Runza. Homework will never be the same again.
MENU SAMPLING
Runza $ ^{\circ} $
Cheese Runza $ ^{\circ} $
Swiss Mushroom Runza $ ^{\circ} $
Italian Runza $ ^{\circ} $
Hamburger $ ^{1}/_{4} $ lb.
Dbl. Hamburger $ ^{1}/_{4} $ lb.
Dbl. Cheeseburger
Deluxe Hamburger (lettuce, tomato, mayo)
Deluxe Cheeseburger
Swisscheese Mushroom Burger
Kids Meal:
Chicken Nuggets
Corn Dog
Runza or
Hamburger
Fish Sandwich
Polish Dog
Cheese or Deluxe on any Sandwich
Grilled Chicken Sandwich
Salad
Soups
Whatever you are hungry for, RUNZA has the taste and variety to satisfy. See for yourself today!
RUNZA DRIVE INN RESTAURANT
2700 Iowa
FREE 1/4 LB. HAMBURGER
with the purchase of french fries and any size drink.
RUNZA
RESIDUALS
2700 Iowa
One coupon per person per visit. Not good with any other offer. Offer good at participating Runza Restaurants. Expires 9-30-96
with the purchase of onion rings and any size drink.
One coupon per person per visit.
Not good with any other offer. Offer
good at participating Runza
Restaurants. Expires 9-30-96
FREE ORIGINAL RUNZA SANDWICH
RUNZA
8517462871
2700 Iowa
$5.49 DINNER FOR TWO SPECIAL
Includes: 1 Quarter-Pounder Hamburger · 1 Original Runza 1 order of Onion Rings ·2 Medium Drinks
Limit 1 coupon per person per visit. Not good with any other offer. Expires 9-30-96.
RUNZA
RESTAURANT
2700 Iowa
Moon
NIGHTLIFE
WELCOME BACK, STUDENTS!
Auto Plaza
CAR WASH
LAWRENCE'S PREMIER CAR CARE CENTER
$150 OFF
ANY PACKAGE WASH
• Complete Silver Wash • Complete
Gold Wash • Complete Platinum Wash
Offer Expires 08/31/96 • One Coupon Per Customer • Not Valid With Any Other Offer
2828 Four Wheel Drive • 749-7333
NOW OPEN!
In Downtown Lawrence
at 807 Vermont St.
Tuesday-Saturday
7 am to 7 pm
Featuring Whole Wheat Breads made from stoneground wheat milled fresh daily in our store.
Great Harvest
Bread Co.
FREE COOKIE
GIANT OATMEAL
Offer good thru 8/15/96
One cookie per coupon
CHOCOLATE CHIP PECAN
国梅
Plum Tree
Chinese · American Food
2620 IOWA • 841-6222
FREE
1/2 order of
Crab
Rangoon with
purchase of
any dinner.
Please
present
KU ID
Delivery After 5:00 PM
- Daily Lunch Buffet
- Daily Lunch Specials
American Food Also Available
- Quality Food & Service
- Variety of Vegetarian Dishes
- Cocktails Served
- Banquet Facility
- Catering Available
- Drive-Thru
- No MSG (upon request)
Hours: M-W-TH 11-10 PM • FRI. 11-10:30 PM SAT 11:30-10:30 PM • SUN. 11:30-9:30 PM Closed on Tuesdays
PANDA GARDEN
YOU ASKED FOR IT... YOU GOT IT!
SATURDAY NOON-2:30 P.M. ALL YOU CAN
PANDA CENTER
EAT BUFFET
100%
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
- Over 16 different dishes - Salad & fruit - Dessert
$5.50 per person
$2.99 children 4-10
Children under 3 Free
M
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 28F
SUSHI NOW AVAILABLE!
DIM SUM ON SUNDAYS! 11:30 A.M.-3:00 P.M. An inexpensive way to sample over 36 different dishes and 4 different authentic Sushi Dishes! A cultural experience!
PANDA LAND
PANDA GARDEN
1500 W.6th St. 843-4312
4.5
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 29F
NIGHTLIFE
REPLAY LOUNGE
C
LAWRENCE KS
10TH & MASS
749-7676
The Replay Lounge invites you to our local benefit night every other Sunday. Featuring 3 local bands for only one dollar, raising funds for local charities.
Thanks to:
Octavia
Sugar Freak
Brannic Device
Free Verse
John Geary Theory
For raising over $300 for the Douglas County Aids Project & Lawrence Humane Society.
TROP
56
- Full assortment of import beers and spirits.
In The Orchards Corners Shopping Center
- Knowledgeable wine enthusiasts able to help you make a selection.
Exotic Dancers
- Lawrence's largest and finest wine selection with over 1,500 bottles to choose from, including rare and hard to find wines.
JOHNSON WINE & SPIRITS
Bring in this coupon for 15% Off with any wine purchase.
JOHNSON WINE & SPIRITS
15th & Kasold
749-0558
Expires: 9/15/96
OPEN
4:00 TILL Midnight
Girls! Girls!
10 minutes South
of Heartland Park
793-2531
"New Dancers Welcome."
MAGIC BASE
1/4 Mile W. of Hwy 75 on Hwy 56
CITRUS
NOUVELLE tasty shoppe
Buy One Sandwich and Receive a 2nd Sandwich at 1/2 Price!! (not valid with other offer.)
Treat Yourself!!!
Nightly Drink Friday Night Specials Live Music
129 E.10th 838-3900 (Between Mass. & New Hampshire)
UPTOWN
bagels
A New York Delicatessen
We are proud to be a part of Lawrence and its growing community. Come in and try Lawrence's original locally owned bagel shop and choose from our delicious selection of . . .
16 kinds of real New York style boiled bagels (not the steamed kind)
( j ) 12 flavors of low calorie & low fat cream cheese
(j) Freshly baked bagel chips & cookies.
(1) Huge custom sandwiches, specialty sandwiches & much more... See for yourself!
Buy 6 Bagels & get 6 FREE at Uptown Bagel, 818 Mass.
Expires 10/31/96 Offer not valid with any other coupon
749-3287 818 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
Prescription for Fun? Shop at,
- Hilarious Greeting Cards
· Adult Party Games
· Over the Hill Gags
· Novelties and Gags
· Dance Wear
- Sensuous Oils and Lotions
- Lingerie
- Books and Magazines
- Video Sales and Rentals
- Interactive CD Rom
PRISCILLA'S Where Fun & Fantasy Meet
Mon.-Sat. 9-midnight 1206 W. 23rd 842-4266
Sun. 12-10 pm Lawrence
WE INVITE YOU TO TRY A FAMOUS LAWRENCE LEGEND FOR YOURSELF !
The Royal Peking Restaurant is well known throughout the midwest for its authentic, delicious chinese cuisine. If you haven't tried it, we invite you to do so. You'll find a rewarding experience.
Royal Peking Restaurant
店飯都京
FAMOUS PEKING CUISINE
店飯都京
23rd & Louisiana Malls shopping Center
Closed on Mondays
841-4599 Lawrence, Kansas
G.
Next to Westlake's Hardware
Westlake's Hardware
。
O
Welcome Students We invite you to shop at The Hot Spot
Let us excite your Chile Pepper taste buds Hot Sauce-Banana Jama Sauce to Dave's Insanity Sauce Salsas & Dips-Cilantro Green Olive to Salsa Del Diablo
BBQ · Chili Mixes · Spices · Nuts · Candy · Cookbooks · T-shirts
If you are BRAVE- we will give you a taste sample 1 Riverfront Plaza - Riverfront Factory Outlets - 841-7200
s.
See What's Coming For The 1996-97 Season
THREE BILLY GOATS GRUFF and OTHER FAIRY TALES FOR THE VERY YOUNG by Ric Averill September 28th & 29th, 1996, Saturday and Sunday at 12:30 pm Hot Dog Theatre at Liberty Hall 7th & Massachusetts
THE BOY WHO LEFT HOME TO FIND OUT ABOUT THE SHIVERS October 30th-November 3,1996 Wednesday, Thursday & Friday at 7:30 pm Saturday & Sunday at 1:30 & 3:30 pm by Guest Playwright-In-Residence Max Bush Watch for Community Auditions Lawrence Arts Center, 9th & Vermont, Lawrence and HALLOWEEN FOR THE VERY YOUNG Saturday, November 2, 1996 at 10:30 am Songs & Stories with Ric Costume Contest every performance!
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 30F
AN O. HENRY HOLIDAY December 12th-15th, 1996 Thursday & Friday at 7:30; Saturday & Sunday at 1:30 pm by Ric Averill Locations to be announced A travelling family theatre event
RELIABLE JUNK*
January 23rd,1997 at 8:00 pm
a new play for middle school audience
by Ric Averill
at the Lied Center, Lawrence, Kansas
THE SEEM-TO-BE JUST-SO STORIES April 5th & 6th,1997 Saturday at 10:30 am & 1:30 PM; Sunday at 1:30 & 3:30 pm Adapted from Rudyard Kipling by Ric Averill The Tour Show Comes Home at the Lawrence Arts Center
SEASON TICKETS: You may purchase a season ticket good for all of the home shows for $15.00 (Reliable Junk tickets on sale separately*). That's 4 shows for the price of 3! Tickets will be on sale at the Lawrence Arts Center and from our Board of Directors.
For More information call 843-5067 or 842-6622
*Tickets for Reliable Junk must be purchased from the Lied Center
A B
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 31F
NIGHTLIFE
Serenata Farms
Oregon Trail Adventure Company at Serenata Farms Share the historic Oregon Trail and the area's flowing Springs
ALL NEW!!! Self Guided Walking Tour of the Oregon Trail, Schooner Station Gift Shop and Prairie Park CHUCKWAGON DINNERS (Breakfast & Lunch now available!!!!!) SCHOOL FIELD TRIPS •SENIOR TOURS •HAYRACK RIDES •BARN FACILITY •Weddings, Corporate Retreats Birthday Parties, etc.
O
Individuals, Groups & Tours Welcome
Call for Brochure (913) 887-6660 Fax (913) 887-6046
1895 E 56 Road at Big Springs 9 miles east of Topeka, 11 miles west of Lawrence on highway 40
miles east
Video Hair Style Imaging
Thinking of a New or Special Hair Style? Preview it First with Us!
PENGUIN HIRE
24 poses for $2999
includes take home video
Other Packages available.
Lawrence
EXPRESS PHOTO
& Portrait Studio
ONE HOUR PHOTO
2340 Iowa • 842-8564
PLEASE SIGN UP TO THE FACEBOOK MARKS FOR THIS NEWSLETTER.
1/2 Price
Prints from Prints or Slides in 68 Seconds! (while you wait) Buy 1 get 1
Expires 9/30/96.
Not valid with other coupons or offers
Limit 1 coupon per person/per visit
15% OFF Black & White or slide service
(3 hour roundabout)
Limit 3
Expires 9/30/96.
Your One Stop Shopping!
Not valid with other coupons or offers Limit 1 coupon per person/per visit
Call Today for More Information!
THE MALLS
FOR DINING & GROCERY CONVENIENCE
Godfather's Pizza
Godfather's Pizza.
843-6282
2 LARGE SUPER
PEPPERONI PIZZAS
$ 1099
EXPIRES 8/31/96
Pancho's
Pancho's
843-4044
WELCOME BACK
STUDENTS!
Come Dine With Us!
Pancho's
843-4044
WELCOME BACK
STUDENTS!
Come Dine With Us!
Pancho's
843-4044
WELCOME BACK
STUDENTS!
Come Dine With Us!
COUCHER'S
A
ALDI FOODS
832-8555 The Stock-Up Store!
Royal Peking Restaurant
Royal Peking Restaurant
841-4599
World Wide Experience In
Chinese Cuisine
Serving Lawrence Since 1974
4320 6456 9018
BESTAURANT
ORIENTAL SUPER MARKET
865-0900
Come find the taste of the Orient!
CHOICE FOODS
843-8800
Meat, Seafood, Poultry & Pork!
DON'T FORGET TO CHECK OUT OUR OTHER 15 MERCHANTS,TOO.
- Westlake Hardware
- Radio Shack
- Mall's Barbershop
- Herb's Studio
- A Cut Above
- Douglas County Bank
Hotz
Cobbler's Bench
- Comic Market
Pet World
- Conklin
- Rent-A-Center
- Lasting Impressions
Hume Music
Country Krafters Mall
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK!
FIZZORS
INC.
FULL
SERVICE
SALON!
• Hair • Nails • Products
910 Kentucky • 749-4199
NIGHTLIFE
I'll just provide the image. No text to transcribe.
Original Hand Printed Lithographs Regional and National Artists
NEW RELEASES:
Adrift and Ruby Lawrence
Adrift and Ruby Lawrence by New York sculptor/painter-Robert Stackhouse
and
Corona I and Corona II
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 32F
artists also available:
L. Jimenez * S. Winters * E. Layton * R. Sudlow *
R. Shrimumoro * R. Green * T. Waddell * Z. Priede *
M. Schapiro * E. Paschke * J. A. T. S. Smith and Others
by New York/New Mexico painter-Paul Brach,
1995 Rose Morgan Distinguished Professor of Art, KU
artists also available:
The Lawrence
Lithography Workshop
7 E 7th Street
9-12, 1-5 Monday-Friday
1-5 Saturdays
843-8375
Sun
RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0055·704 Massachusetts
Taste the 's Difference
Choose from our classic spicy red wine sauce or our new homemade pesto sauce. Our cheese is our own blend that we shred fresh daily. We offer a traditional white crust as well as our own homemade whole wheat crust, and each are available in original thickness or thin St. Louis style.
Cold Beer & Wine!
Live Music on Weekends!
44 toppings & 8 different cheeses to choose from
Check out our daily specials including an everyday LUNCH SPECIAL: a slice, a salad & a drink - $3.70 plus tax ALMOST THE WEEKEND (THURSDAY) SPECIAL: large 2 topping pizza with 2 drinks- $8.99 plus tax RUDY'S FRIDAY SPECIAL: Buy a small pizza and get another one of equal value for $3, buy a medium pizza and get another one of equal value for $4, buy a large pizza and get another one of equal value for $5. (Not valid with Gourmet Pizzas).
SPECIALS EVERY NIGHT OF THE WEEK!
FREE DELIVERY
When you're on Mass at night, if you get the hungries, visit us for a late night snack! Monday-Saturday: 11:00am - Midnight * Sunday: 4:00pm-11:00pm
the Pool Room
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS!
Lawrence's Oldest and Largest
Billiard Parlor
Featuring:
- Newly Re-Modeled
- Import & Micro Selection
- Video Games & Pinball
- Daily Specials
- Cue Sales & Service
- Table Sales & Service
- Full Service Kitchen Menu
TABLES:
15 - 8 Ball
2 - 9 Ball
- Pool Tournaments
4 - 9 ft.
Hourly
1 - 9 ft. Snooker
- Rent our Party room for Birthday Parties, Date Dashes, Rush Parties, Pool Parties or any other Function
925 Iowa • 749-5039 • Mon-Sun 11am-2am
O
KIEF'S Custom Installation 24th & Iowa St. Lawrence, Ks 66046 913-842-1811 Home Theatre For 37 Years AUDIO VIDEO SPECIALISTS
BIG SELECTION SALE NOW!
NOW!
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD AUGUST, 1996 336
NIGHTLIFE
PATTERSON LIQUOR
- Keg Beer & Equipment
- Largest selection of cold micro-brews and imports in Lawrence (cases 10% Off!)*
- Low prices in our extensive wine room
- Special Orders Welcome
- Visa and Mastercard accepted
4 Taverns in 1
846 Illinois
Two Blocks North of Memorial Stadium (913) 842-0722 FAX: 842-0173 E Mail address: Liqourbiz @aol.com *For legal reasons some cases excluded
Johnny's Betty's
JOHNNY'S
Up & Under
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 35F
Agency casts for movies,TV
- Persistence pays off for casting directors.
BY JL WATSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Hand your picture to Heather Laird and you're likely to hear something positive.
"You look great," she told 12-year-old twins, taping their photos to the inside of information folders. "You've got great expression."
Laird was recently in the midst of the ordered chaos that is part of her normal routine. Laird and her business partner, Kansas University theater professor Jack Wright, own and operate Wright/Laird Casting in Kansas City, Mo.
"It gives them a chance to audition for professional gigs, and I enjoy the opportunity to learn about film."
Jack Wright
"We cast for feature films, made-for television movies, cable films, TV series, national and regional television commercials and print commercials," Laird said. "Just about anything. If it needs actors or models, I will cast it."
The late June casting session at Vedros Studio called for several children's parts and one teacher role for a national print campaign. More than 80 youths auditioned for approximately eight roles.
"I always try to bring in new clients because Kansas City is such a small market," she said. "I know a lot of these kids because I've cast them for other things. That's one thing about young people as opposed to adults. They change substantially over the course of a year."
People-watching skills
Laird said she looks for unique facial expressions and actors and models who work well with a camera. She sharpened her peoplewatching skills while attending Kansas University in the 1970s and after she graduated and headed west to Los Angeles.
"I was still planning to be an actress then," she said. "I studied acting out there and went through about three agents, but I didn't do much out there so I got out
of the business for several years."
She was still living in LA when she decided to get back into the entertainment field — this time on the other side of the camera.
"I did an internship with a production company and my first job on an action short was nominated for an Academy Award the next year," she said. "That was an auspicious start."
Ironically, it was her mother-turned-actress who brought Laird back to the Midwest.
"Jack (Wright) was doing the casting for 'Sarah Plain and Tall,'" Laird said, "and he cast my mother in the role of Mrs. Parkley. When they did the sequel a couple of years later they called from New York and asked her to reprise the role."
Laird wanted nothing more than to come home and work with her mother.
"That was my whole motivation," she said.
Persistence pays off
Her persistence paid off and Laird was hired to work on the film crew. She came
back to Kansas City and while she was working on the set, three more films began production in Kansas City.
"I came for three weeks and six months later I was still here," she said. "After 10 years I was tired of LA and ready to go. It was the best move I could've made."
Laird approached her good friend and former professor Jack Wright with the idea of pairing up as casting directors.
"I was working on two movies," he said. "I knew it was too much and when Heather helped out, we hit it off great."
Wright saw the combination of teaching and casting as a great opportunity.
"It's a nice adjunct opportunity for my students," he said. "It gives them a chance to audition for professional gigs, and I enjoy the opportunity to learn about film."
Wright said that as rewarding as casting is, his first obligation is to his students at the university.
"I have the best of both worlds," he said. "I benefit from working in the professional world and I love what I do at the university."
MARC A.
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Jack Wright, a Kansas University theater and film professor, also works as a casting director for his company, Wright/Laird Casting in Kansas City, Mo.
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36F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Local venues open doors for new acts
Looking for a gig? Well, check out the scene
MICHAEL TAYLOR
Musicians can cut their teeth during open mike nights at The Bottleneck, 737 N.H.
- Open mikes help artistic wannabes break into the local scene.
BY JL WATSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
She doesn't bungee jump, tame lions or sky dive, but Lynn Abrams is a risk taker nonetheless.
Abrams is the booking agent for the Full Moon Cafe, 803 Mass., where music, poetry and dance are part of the menu five nights a week. She is responsible for bringing tried and true acts to the Full Moon stage while leaving room for new acts who want to break into the local scene.
"That's the really nice thing about Lawrence. It's a great town for original music."
— singer Anthony Case
Open mike nights allow
"If someone comes to an open mike, then I get a chance to hear them," she said. "It gives them a chance to show what they've got. Then I can book them on the calendar."
any budding Bob Dylan to get up on stage and perform. It's a win-win situation for everyone involved. Bar owners don't pay open mike performers, customers get to hear several acts and participants get to meet like-minded individuals.
Singer Anthony Case and his band, Justin Case, are, well, a case in point. They got together a year ago just to play for fun. Their first public performance was at an open mike night at The Bottleneck, 737 N.H.
"At The Bottleneck, you just sign up," Case said. "That's the really nice thing about Lawrence. It's a great town for original music."
Case has been in other bands, but it took him four years from the time he moved to Lawrence until he played in front of an audience.
"I used to go to the Jazzhaus and think, 'I could never play here,'" he said. "You just kind of have to go out there and do it."
Justin Case is an example of a band that started out playing at open mike nights and proved popular enough to get regular bookings.
"Getting regular nights depends on how good of a following you have," Case said. "When we first started, we didn't care because we were just doing it for fun."
Case said the Full Moon gigs led to bookings on the stage at the Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Mass., which doesn't have open mike nights.
McNeely is known for drawing local fans to see national touring acts, but also caters to local needs.
"My first advice to anyone who thinks they're ready to start playing onstage is to practice another four months," he said. "All a band has to do is sell themselves to me. Then I'll try to sell them to the community."
Having a good CD and publicity photo doesn't hurt, either. Fans are more likely to spend money for a band they've seen and know will
Jazzhaus owner Rick
put on a good show, McNeely said.
"I try to make every musical show an event," he said. "I didn't get in this business just to have a bar.It's all about the energy."
That energy carries over into other performance art as well. Comedy acts, poets and performance artists have all found a corner on local stages to strut their stuff.
Poet Matt Fowler first took the stage in the 1980s and now acts as host for poetry jams at the Full Moon Cafe.
"There are some people in their 50s getting up there for the first time," he said. "And there are some teenagers getting up for the first time. That's the most fun for me."
"Poetry is making a comeback nationally," he said. But there's a need for more William Burroughs lives in town and Allen Ginsberg comes to see him. People should pay more attention to that."
Like Case, Fowler encourages anyone who wants to perform to just get up and do it.
Fowler's parting advice to poets taking the mike: "You can feel passionate about something but it doesn't have to be anger."
WHICH WAY IS THE STAGE?
The Bottleneck: 737 N.H.,live music every night.Open mike on Mondays.
Bubba Zuels:1117 Mass.,live music.
Dos Hombres: 815 N.H.,live music in the garden on Thursdays throughout the summer.
Full Moon Cafe:803 Mass., music, belly dancing, poetry and performance art Tuesdays through Saturdays.
The Granada: 1020 Mass., live music every
Free State Brewing Co.: 636 Mass., live music every Thursday and Friday night beginning at 8 p.m.
Wednesday and Saturday.
Jazzhaus:926 1/2 Mass., live music Wednesdays through Saturdays.
Java Break:17 E. Seventh, comedy every Monday and live music throughout the month.
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill:623 Vt., live music on Saturdays.
Replay Lounge: 946 Mass., live music, dates vary.
Rudy's Plzeria:704 1/2 Mass., music every weekend.
Teller's: 746 Mass. music every Monday and Thursday.
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The MAG
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Ready to get out of the house this weekend? Well, don't make a move until you've check out the MAG, our weekly arts and entertainment magazine that hits the pavement and racks on Thursday mornings and tells you
about the movies, theater, dance, art book and bar scenes in the Lawrence Topeka and Kansas City areas.
Open The MAG and you'll find inside a complete listing of area events, features about local and national bands, profiles of artists, filmmakers, previews of theater productions, some funny columns and movie, book, CD and restaurant reviews.
If you want to know what's going on, then The MAG is your source. Check it out every Thursday morning in the Journal-World—and then get ready for the weekend!
LAWRENCE
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD Plan your Weekend entertainment Every Thursday!
38F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Humor moves New Jersey choreographer
A
Choreographer Claire Porter is seen here in a scene from "Fitness Digest."
- A New Jersey choreographer will teach dance students the importance of mixing words and movement.
BY JAN BILES
JOURNAL-WORLD ARTS EDITOR
As a young woman, bytes and RAMS seemed more interesting to Claire Porter than sashays and pirouettes. But that was before the computer programmer saw a performance by New York City Ballet ballerina Maria Tallchief.
- Claire Porter, choreographer
"At first, I didn't know it was humorous. I didn't know until it was in front of an audience. It wasn't on purpose."
"I ended up in California and went back to college," Porter said during a recent phone interview from her New Jersey home. "I had a wonderful teacher and just slipped into it. I had never danced before."
Her teacher's style was athletic and aesthetically satisfying.
"I was working in the computer department part-time and they told me to come in to work whenever I felt like it. That was a dangerous thing to do," Porter said with a laugh.
Dance eventually took over her life. She went on to study with Merce Cunningham,
University Dance Company and Cohan/Suzaue Duet Company concert Nov. 21 and 22 in the Lied Center.
Also on the program are dances choreographed by KU faculty members Muriel Cohan, Jerel Hilding, Willie Lenoir, Patrick Suzeau and Joan Stone.
While she is in Lawrence, Porter also will teach master classes in dance improvisation and modern dance technique at KU.
Nina Weiner and Lester Horton, and eventually became certified in Laban movement analysis, a method of dance notation. She has received several National Endowment for the Arts and New Jersey State Council on the Arts choreography fellowships.
And Porter will bring her expertise to the Kansas University campus this fall when she performs her piece "Slipping into Weather" at a
"She forecasts humidity in language and then slips into humidity through movement," Porter said. "I've worked to translate principles into language and movement. I do humidity, high and low pressure, cool front and then build into a storm. She talks about weather and she gets caught up in it and becomes it."
The text is about a harried weather forecaster who "slips" into the weather herself.
Porter said "Slipping into Weather" is emotional, dynamic and lighthearted.
"It was made over a period of time when I got interested in the weather," she said, adding that she was doing research at a natural history museum and had even joined the New Jersey Weather Club.
Porter said she began formulating the text for "Slipping into Weather" in 1992.
Through the years, Porter has become known for what she calls "comic movement monologues," which combine words with steps.
"It quickly changes, just like the weather," she said
After the idea for the text was cooked up, Porter said she let it simmer a while before staging some readings. The next step was designing costumes.
Words and movement
"I wore a barometer and a rain hat for a while on the way to finding the character," she said. "Then I wore a white cloudy dress. Eventually I found a blue suit.
The costumes shape the characters."
"I started looking at humor seriously and researching what makes something funny," she said. "Sometimes, it's the performer and not the material."
Porter said she never intended her choreography to be funny.
"At first, I didn't know it was humorous," she said. "I didn't know until it was in front of an audience. It wasn't on purpose."
Once she discovered her knack for comedy, she started studying it.
Porter said humor is important to choreography, especially in programs featuring a number of dances.
"Heavy pieces need relief," she said, "and a lightness and softness seems to be the answer."
- Nov. 21-22: University Dance Company, with Cohan/Suzeau Duet Company, 8 p.m., Lied Center. Features "Slipping into Weather,"
- Oct. 19:Cohan/Suzeau Duet Company,8 p.m., Johnson County Community College,12345 College Blvd., Overland Park.
- May 2-3: University Dance Company, with Cohan/Suzeau Duet Company and KU Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m., Lied Center.
For more information, call the Dance Office at 864-4264.
- Oct. 5: Dance Day, master classes for secondary school students,10 a.m.-4 p.m., Robinson Center.
- April 8: Student Choreographers Concert, 7:30 p.m., Elizabeth Sherbon Dance Theatre, Robinson Center.
STEPPIN' OUT
Here's a list of University Dance events going on this year:
- Aug. 28; University Dance Company auditions, 7 p.m., Robinson Center.
choreographed by Claire Porter.
- jan. 22: University Dance Company auditions, 7 p.m., Robinson Center.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
AUGUST 1996 39F
Choreographer gives KU dancers Renaissance look
- The University Dance Company offers plenty of leaps and lively steps this season.
BY JAN BILES
JOURNAL-WORLD ARTS EDITTOR
Italian Renaissance reconstructions, a comedic performance of "Cinderella" and original choreography by Kansas University dance faculty are highlights of this year's University Dance Company season.
In November, dance instructor Joan Stone will present reconstructions of the Italian Renaissance master Fabrito Caroso. The dances will be accompanied by the KU Collegium Musicum under the direction of KU musicologist Paul Laird.
"Dance is an ethereal art form. A lot of the dancing masters left little behind. So it's how you interpret it. Most try to make it lively for modern audiences."
Joan Stone, KU dance instructor
Stone said she also may include dances by Negri and Lupi in the concert, set for Nov. 21-22 at the Lied Center.
"The dances are made up of duple- and triple-meter pieces," she said. "There's an alteration of slower and quick dances. There will also be a galliard (a lively dance of five steps to six beats of music)."
"... The problem will be getting the costumes. I hope to work with a costume historian," she said. "I'd like elaborate court dance costuming, with velvet and brocade. The men will have swords and hats."
Stone said there is no way to ensure that dance reconstructions are 100 percent accurate.
"Dance is an ethereal art form," she said. "A lot of the dancing masters left little behind. So it's how you interpret it. Most try to make it lively for modern audiences."
Also on the program for the Nov. 21-22 concerts are Claire Porter, who will perform "Slipping into Weather"; faculty choreography by Jerel Hilding, Muriel Cohan, Willie Lenoir and Patrick Suzeau; and a performance by the
Cohen/Suzeau Duet Company.
For the first time, the University Dance Company will present a concert with all live music performed by the Kansas University Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Brian Priestman.
The performance is slated on May 3 in the Lied Center.
Cohan also will perform "Cinderella," a comedic solo accompanied by Rossini's overture of the same name. Hilding, Lenoir, Stone and Suzeau will set their choreography to works by Albinoni, Ives, Prokofiev and Schoenberg.
"Sensemaya," composed by Silvestre Revueltas, will be the score for a dance choreographed by Hilding. "Xochipilli," composed by Carlos Chavez, will provide the music for a dance choreographed by Suzeau. Both dances were created in conjunction with KU's Fiesta de la Cultura Mexicana, which begins Feb. 14 and ends with the dance concert.
Other dance-related events include:
- Auditions for the University Dance Company are at 7 p.m. Aug.28 in Studio 242 in Robinson Center. Next semester, auditions will be at 7 p.m. Jan.22 in the same location. No solo material is required.
- In October, the KU Dance Division will hold its annual Day of Dance for junior and senior high school students. KU dance faculty will teach free master classes in ballet jazz, modern and dance improvisation from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct.5 in the Robinson Center dance studios. Class size is limited so advanced registration if required.
- University Dance Company will join with the Cohan/Suzieu Duet Company at 8 p.m. Oct.19 for an evening of choreography by Muriel Cohen and Patrick Suzeau at Johnson County Community College, 12345 College Blvd., Overland Park.
- Graduating dance majors will present their senior projects and other student choreographers will present their dances at the annual Student Choreographers Concert at 7:30 p.m. April 8 in the Elizabeth Sherbon Dance Theatre in Robinson Center.
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Museum puts emphasis on 'doing things'
Hands-on activities highlight the Museum of Anthropology's exhibit schedule.
This decorative clay pot is representative of the artworks to be displayed at the Eighth Annual Lawrence Indian Arts Show and Indian Art Market, Sept. 7-Oct.20.
.
Scheduled exhibits and events at the Museum of Anthropology include:
MUSEUM DATES
BY BUNNY SMITH
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
- Nov. 30-Jan. 5: The
- Sept. 7-Oct. 20: Eighth Annual Lawrence Indian Arts Show.
- Oct. 26-Nov. 17: Los Dias de Los Muertos.
Hazelle Rollins Puppets.
• Feb. 15-April 6: The Virgin of Guadalupe.
• March 15-Aug. 3: Hopi Kachinas.
- May 3-July 27: Plains Indian Beadwork.
From fall's Eighth Annual Lawrence Indian Arts Show to April's 17th Annual Museum Day, the Kansas University Museum of Anthropology's 1996-'97 exhibit lineup covers some pretty familiar territory — with one major difference.
- June 7-Aug.17:
Apache Photos.
"We're adding a lot more activities in conjunction with the exhibits."
- Maria Martin, exhibits coordinator
exhibits."
For example, the Hazelle Rollins Puppets exhibit, slated for Nov. 30-Jan. 5, will include a children's puppetmaking workshop.
"For a fee, children can come in and make their own hand puppet or marionette," Martin explained.
Hands-on activities also are being planned in conjunction with several other exhibits, including Los Dias de Los Muertos (The Days of the Dead), Oct. 26-Nov. 17; Hopi Kachinas, March 15-Aug. 3;
"This year we're putting an emphasis on doing things," said Maria Martin, the museum's exhibits coordinator. "We're adding a lot more activities in conjunction with the
The museum makes a winter holiday event of exhibiting hand, rod and stick, shadow and stringed puppets from its Hazelle Rollins collection.
and Plains Indian Beadwork May 3-July 27.
Because the puppets are representative of peoples from different cultures
Even the widely attended Indian arts show has added a juried youth competition for artists aged 16 and younger, Martin said.
The Indian arts show, from Sept. 7 to Oct.20, kicks off the museum's exhibit schedule, closely followed by Los Dias de Los Muertos. Scheduled at Halloween time, the latter exhibit and its workshops will illustrate and explain a traditional Hispanic festival that honors departed ancestors, friends and family members.
around the world, Martin said, they serve to emphasize the museum's multicultural orientation.
"We want to help our visitors understand the importance of these dolls within the Hopi culture and traditions," Martin said.
In a brand new springthrough-summer exhibit, the museum will feature more than 100 Hopi kachina dolls from its collection, which includes contemporary carvings as well as some carved around the turn of the century.
Overlapping that exhibit will be the Virgin of Guadalupe, Feb. 15-April 6. The museum has gathered images of the patroness of Mexico and other artifacts from the homes and churches of the Hispanic communities of Kansas City, Topeka and Lawrence for this display,
which explores Mexican heritage. Afternoons of Mexican music and dance will accompany this exhibit.
The museum celebrates Kansas Archaeology Week, April 6-12, with a number of special events that will uncover portions of the vast storehouse of history within the museum's walls. The 17th Annual Museum Day closely follows, April 16 or 23, when the Museum of Anthropology will join the other campus museums in presenting free special activities, displays, crafts and games.
Beginning late in the school year and running through mid-summer, visitors will have the opportunity to view highly decorated samples of the Plains Indian beadwork from the museum collections and learn how different styles and beading techniques represent different tribes.
A summer photographic exhibit, June 7-Aug.17, will feature 50 color and blackand-white works take by Helga Teiwe of a White
Mountain Apache puberty ceremony.
"I've attended a puberty ceremony," Martin recalled, "and these photographs capture it in astonishing detail. I think people will be fascinated."
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Indian Arts Show welcomes new generation
BY BUNNY SMITH
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
18+ Admitted with Valid ID
The Lawrence Indian Arts Show and Haskell Indian Art Market may be eight years old this fall, but the accent this year's on youth, not longevity.
As in past years, market entertainment
Last year, 155 American Indian artists from across the country displayed and sold paintings, graphics, basketry, sculpture, pottery, jewelry, textiles and clothing at the two-day market, Martin said.
The event, which is co-sponsored by the Kansas University Museum of Anthropology, Haskell Indian Nations University and the Lawrence Arts Center, this year will welcome a new generation of American Indian artists with a juried youth competition for artists aged 16 and younger.
Now Open 7 days a week!
"Over the years, people have wondered why we haven't included young artists," said Maria Martin, who heads up exhibitions for the anthropology museum. "I've seen some pretty wonderful things by young people and I'm excited about this show."
Works selected by judges for the youth competition will be shown concurrently
with the winners of the juried competition for American Indian artists from Sept. 7 to Oct. 20 at the anthropology museum, located in Spooner Hall.
American Indian artists also are invited to take part in the Eighth Annual Haskell Indian Art Market on Sept.7 and 8 at Haskell.The two-day market gives American Indian artists an opportunity to display and sell their recent productions in outdoor booths.
A total of $7,200 in prizes will be awarded at the benefit opening, art preview and sale from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.Sept.6 at the museum.Two best-of-show prizes of $1,500 and up to 14 merit awards of $300 each will be awarded in two- and three-dimensional art categories.
will include performances by Haskell-affiliated groups, such as the Apache Club. Haskell Singers and Dancers, the Thunderbird Theater and the Kiowa Club.
The schedule for the eighth annual show will be similar to those for previous shows, but each event will be new Martin said. This year's show will include:
- An exhibit of recent works by Navajo artist Baje Whitethorne Sept. 6-Oct. 2 at the Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth.
- A book discussion series on American Indian writers of the Plains Sept. 11 and 26 and Oct. 9 and 23 at Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vt. Books to be discussed include "Medicine River," by Thomas King; "Fools Crow," by James Welch; "The Bingo Palace," by Louise Edrich; and "Mean Spirit," by Linda Hogan. All discussions begin at 7:30 p.m. To register for this series, call the library at 843-1178.
- A Hopi-Tewa pottery workshop taught by Hopi-Tewa potter Mark Tahbo Oct. 14-19 at the anthropology museum. A fee will be charged.
- An exhibit of Hopi Indian pottery Sept. 7-Oct.
20 at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 41F
Performers, museum plan Mexican cultural fest
- Kansas University is planning a celebration of Mexican theater and culture.
As a young man, George Woodyard was so interested in Spanish and Portuguese he decided to make it his life's work.
BY JL WATSON
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
But Woodyard, dean of Spanish and Portuguese at Kansas University, also had a passion for theater. He combined the two, and in 1966 began publishing "The Latin American Theatre Review."
"I've always been involved in theater," he said. "In the summer of 1966, it just took off."
It wasn't until 1982 that Woodyard decided to help put together a festival celebrating Latin American theater and culture.
"I thought when I first did it that I would do it every 10 years," he said. "I get this bug that bites me."
The bug bit again in 1992, and the festival was so successful that Woodyard couldn't wait another 10 years. The next festival, "Festival de la Cultura Mexicana," is scheduled for 1997, and Woodyard has narrowed the focus from Latin America to Mexico.
"Anyone is welcome to come and talk about anything relating to Latin America, but the real focus is on Mexico," he said. "We'll have people from Chile Colombia and Argentina come; as many as 250 people visiting campus."
One of the guests will be Sabina Berman, author of "Between Pancho Villa and a Naked Lady," which will presented by University Theatre as part of the festival. Woodyard helped choose the play, based on its content.
10
CELEBRATING MEXICO
Feb.14: Fiesta de la Cultura Mexicana concert with the KU Symphony Orchestra, Lied Center.
Feb. 14-17: Musicology conference on Mexican music, Murphy Hall.
April 4-12: "Between Pancho Villa and a Naked Lady" production, Inge Theater in Murphy Hall.
Feb. 14-April 15:
"Images of the Virgin"
exhibit, Museum of
Anthropology.
May 3-4: University Dance Company and KU Symphony Orchestra concert, Lied Center.
While the theater department was planning its contribution, the Department of Music and Dance had ideas of its own. It was coincidence that music professors Steve Anderson, Paul Laird and Walter Clark decided to focus on a Latin American theme for a series of spring performances.
"It all dovetails nicely," Clark said, "since two of us are Hispanists. My area is Spain and Latin America of the 19th and 20th centuries and Paul Laird's is Spain and Latin America of the 17th and 18th centuries. We thought Mexico would be ideal."
CORONACION DE
NUESTRA SENORA
DE GUADALUPE
[ ] [ ] [ ] [ ]
心欧
EARL RICHARDSON/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
Images of the Virgin of Guadalupe will be on exhibit as part of "Images of the Virgin," an exhibition that will be on display this fall at the Museum of Anthropology as part of Kansas University's Mexican Festival.
The festival begins Feb. 14 with a concert by the KU Symphony at the Lied Center and a three-day conference.
"It's an Aztec ballet," Clark said. "It's going to be great."
The orchestra will perform again May 3 and 4 with the University Dance Company, performing selections from a ballet by Chavez.
**RKERPEAVETROLANDRHODESSEYMOU/RDUNCANSLIMSOUNDTECHSJUNFTASCAAMTRACEEELLIOYVOXYAMA**
The conference and music, dance and theater performances are all a way to bring the spirit of Mexico closer to KU students and faculty and Lawrence residents.
"We want to reach out to a
large community to bring attention to music and Mexican culture," Clark said. "We usually have a stereotypical and crude picture of Mexico, and the purpose is to show the richness, variety and sophistication of Mexican culture."
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42F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Spencer's art is easy on eyes and wallet
- It's free. It's visually appealing. It's the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
BY MARK LUCE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Those wanting to break out of the tired dating routine of dinner and a movie need to look no further than Kansas University's Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art, which not only is easy on the pocketbook, but also on the eyes.
Admission to the Spencer, one of the top university art museums in the country, is free. And those suitors looking to impress but afraid of walking that fine line between pretension and insight that is part and parcel of many conversations about art, shouldn't worry.
"There will always be something that will attract you and something that will repel you.I always suggest that you spend more time with the thing that repels you."
Andrea Norris museum director
According to museum director Andrea Norris, the museum has a booklet to help the artistically challenged. "Aesthetic Scanning," by Pat Villeneuve, curator of education, provides even the most art-poor a quick and easy way to learn to look at and talk about works in any medium.
"There will always be something that will attract you and something that will repel you," Norris said. "I always suggest that you spend more time with the thing that repels you."
But the Spencer is more than a cheap date. It is a treasure trove of around 18,000 items, which allows students in all disciplines the chance to explore and grow.
"If you are interested in any type of culture, we have objects that relate to your interests," Norris said.
The 1996-'97 exhibit schedule is filled with solid material with local, regional national and international shows.
Opening next is "Western Waters: Photographs by Terry
ON EXHIBIT
Here is a list of exhibitions planned at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
- "Kansas Quilts from the Spencer Museum Collection," through Sept. 29.
- "Hopi Pottery, Sept. 7-Oct. 20.
- "Western Waters: Photographs by Terry Evans, Greg Conniff and Wanda Hammerbeck," Aug. 24-Oct. 20.
- "Ports of Entry: William S. Burroughs and the Arts," Oct. 19-Dec. 29.
- "Pictorialism into Modernism: The Clarence H. White School of Photography," Feb. 1- March 30.
- "Hogarth and Shows of London," Feb. 1-March 30.
- "Stage Designs by Boris Anisfeld," April 25-May 31.
Evans, Greg Conniff and Wanda Hammerbeck," a look at the use of water in both a rural and a western urban context.
Despite his reputation as Lawrence's literary godfather, William S. Burroughs also is an accomplished artist. A retrospective of his work, "Ports of Entry: William S. Burroughs and the Arts," opens Oct. 19.
"Especially exciting is the inclusion of several of Burroughs' scrapbooks, in which he found new ways to puzzle out the potential relationships between word and image," he said.
Steve Goddard, curator of prints and drawing and professor of art history, said that the exhibit, besides being a study of Burroughs' art, will examine Burroughs' influence on many important artists of the last 20 years.
The spring will bring three more exhibits, including a look at the Clarence H. White School of Photography, a collection of stage designs by Russian Boris Anisfeld and an exhibit of the works of pioneering printmaker William Hogarth.
Averill family takes over KU stages
Continued from page 8F
family. He concentrated on novels, magazine articles and his popular public radio commentaries featuring William Jennings Bryan Oleander from Here, Kansas.
But when he set his mind to writing for the theater, he came up as the first winner of the Great Plains Play Contest, a competition sponsored by University Theatre.
Averill said he first became interested in writing a novel
in the 1980s during the American agricultural movement. The main character was a radical farmer who wanted to go to Topeka to participate in a tractor brigade to protest the takeover of family farms by corporations.
he said. "After six months and after 24 minutes, I had more people interested in that fictional character than ever before. It was disconcerting because I had been writing short stories for 25 years."
"I got the idea of a voice that would represent an older Kansan," he said, describing how Oleander was born.
But he also found that
"My brother and I have stuck here (in Kansas) because there's something here and we've tried to make a living doing something creative. And to have that recognized is really exciting to me."
In 1989, KANU public radio station in Lawrence put out a call for scripts and commentaries about Kansas. Averill submitted a story and soon afterwards he was doing a once-month spot as Oleander.
- playwright Tom Averill
"It was four minutes long, never more than 500 words,"
Oleander allowed him to be satirical and cynical, poking fun at Kansas.
Before long, Averill was doing his Oleander commentaries twice a month. He recorded "Oleander's Kansas," which has sold more than 800 copies. And
Washburn reduced his class load so he could hang out at the Kansas Legislature and write about it from Oleander's point of view.
About two years ago, UT Director Del Unruh suggested that Averill tackle a play about the characters living in Here, Kansas. What developed was "Abide with Me," which is a deepened story about Oleander, who is grieving the loss of his wife, small
towns and his way of life.The play features commentary regulars, such as Iola Humboldt and her brother Claude Anderson.
"They come to accept that they can deal with death and decay if they have love and a sense of humor," Averill said. "It's not so much a play of sentiment as a play about acceptance.
"The very fact that the KU theater department, under Del Unruh, is not just dedicating itself to doing Shakespeare and the best of theater, but also dedicating itself to regional works is a wonderful and fresh thing to do."
"My brother and I have stuck here (in Kansas) because there's something here and we've tried to make a living doing something creative. And to have that recognized is really exciting to me."
Like his brother and nephew, Tom Averill also has other irons in the fire. This fall, he will publish "Oleander's Guide to Here Kansas: How You Know When You're There," a 34chapter collection of commentaries about history, geography, culture, attitudes, courtship, women in politics and the weather.
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 43F
Lawrence book sellers brace for superstore
SHELTERS
MIKE YODER/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO
- Will Lawrence's book market survive the arrival of a chain store? Some bookstore owners give their opinions.
Jon Bunch, 11. Lawrence studies a book at locally owned The Raven Bookstore,8 E. Seventh, while his mother, Joy Bunch, searches the shelves.
BY MARK LUCE
JOURNAL-WORLD WRITER
Citing skyrocketing return rates and deceptive expansion, experts are claiming that the national book market is the worst it has been in 20 years.
However, according to local booksellers, business couldn't be better. Overwhelmingly, the merchants claimed that while Kansas University certainly helped move the book market in Lawrence, a large, highly educated book-buying public underlies the various stores' success.
"If we had to exist on what faculty and students bought, we wouldn't be in business," said Pat Kehde, co-owner of The Raven Bookstore, 8 E. Seventh.
One of the reasons the Lawrence market can support so many new and used bookstores is that the shops are nicely niched to cater to specific audiences. Kehde said.
The possibility that two national book superstore chains might open stores in Lawrence has Kehde and John Hastie, coowner of Terra Nova Bookstore, 920 Mass., wondering what the future may hold. National trends indicate that when superstores move in, the smaller independents lack the buying power to compete and often fold.
Kehde said that in the "Testosterone Bookstore Wars," businesses combat one another with the assumption that bigger is better.
"They don't care about books, they care about volume," she said. "Unfortunately they are creating serious problems for small presses and small bookstores."
Building a market
Hastie said increased sales at Terra Nova are partly attributable to the closing of Adventure Books last April. However healthy the Lawrence market may be, Hastie said it would be difficult to support one, let alone a pair, of large chain stores.
"Building a market takes a long time, and I am not sure these bookstores would wait around that long unless they grow very quickly and get the numbers they want," he said.
Jay Peterson of Hasting's Books Music and Video, Iowa and Clinton Pkwy., echoed that sales have been strong, pointing to higher numbers of hardback sales and a film-influenced return to classics. On the subject of potential new competitors, Peterson was split.
"It would open up more book titles that are harder to find," he said. "A new Borders may not be the best thing to happen, but it wouldn't hurt anyone to be exposed to one."
Lisa Eitner, supervisor and lead buyer for the Mt. Oread Bookshop at the Kansas Union, said sales are steady, but she was unsure of the effect of new competitors.
"It seems to be commonly thought that with large buying power and the ability to offer large discounts,the superstores would initially attract customers," she said. "At some later point there may be a return to the independents because of specialization and more consistent customer service."
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Diane Meredith recently opened The Dusty Bookshelf, a large, general interest used bookstore in the heart of downtown Lawrence at 708 Mass.
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However, new books aren't all that Lawrence offers.
After working as a clerk at the store in Manhattan, Meredith bought the shop in 1987. She said she hopes that the Lawrence store will take on a distinctly different feel from the one in Manhattan.
Local personality
"We want the store to have its own personality," she said. And that happens because of what Lawrence folks read, bring in and buy."
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Both John Hood of J. Hood Booksellers, 1401 Mass., and Howard Hartog of Vagabond Bookman, 1113 Mass., said that the used book market in town is robust and that they aren't terribly concerned about the effects of superstores on their highly specialized businesses.
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44F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
This calendar lists upcoming music, arts, theater, museum, gallery and community events. However, some dates and times may change as the year unfolds.
Music
LAWRENCE
Concerts.
Performances at the Lied Center, unless otherwise noted.
- Sept. 4: Visiting Artist Series, Thaddeus Brys, cello, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Sept. 6: Pianist George Winston, 8 p.m.
- Sept. 27: KU Symphony Orchestra, 7:30 p.m.
- Sept. 28; University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra Slavic Evening. 7:30 p.m.
- Sept. 30; KU Wind Ensemble, 7:30 p.m.
- Oct. 12: Band Day, Memorial Stadium.
- Oct. 14: University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra, 7:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- Oct. 18: Jazz Ensemble I, 7:30 p.m.
- Oct. 20: Concert Choir, Women's Chorale and University Singers, 7:30 p.m., First United Methodist Church. 946 Vt.
- Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Oct. 27: The Lawrence Chamber Players, 7:30 p.m.
Swarthout Recital Hall
- Oct. 28: KU Jazz Singers, 7:30 p.m.
- Oct. 30: Oread Consort and Collegeg Musicum, 7:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- Oct. 31: Visiting Artist Series, Gwen Powell, blues, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Oct. 30: Visiting Artist Series, Logan Skelton, piano, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Nov. 3: KU Percussion Ensemble, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Nov. 7: KU Chamber Choir,
7:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- Nov. 6: KU Tuba/Euphonium Concert, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Nov. 8: University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra, French-Russian Evening, 7:30 p.m.
- Nov. 11: KU Jazz Ensembles II
and Ill and Jazz Combs, 7:30 p.m.
• Nov. 12: Visiting Artist Series,
Northwind Woodwind Quintet.
7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
• Nov. 13: KU Trombone Choir,
7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall
· Nov. 24: Collegium Musicum
Instrumental Consort, 7:30 p.m.
Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Nov. 25: Wind Ensemble,
7:30 p.m.
- Dec. 3: University Band fall concert,7:30 p.m.
- Dec. 8; Holiday Vespers; 3:30
p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
- Feb. 11: Concert Band Winter Concert. 7:30 p.m.
- Feb. 14: Fiesta de la Cultura Mexicana, 7:30 p.m.
- Feb. 14: KU Symphony
Orchestra, 7:30 p.m.
- Feb. 19: University Band Winter Concert, 7:30 p.m.
- Feb. 20: Three Choirs Concert, 7:30 p.m., Southwest Junior High School, 2511
- Feb. 27: KU Symphonic Band Winter Concert: 7:30 p.m.
Inverness Dr.
Singing" Choral Concert, 7:30 p.m.
- March 4: KU Madrigal Day.
• March 16: "The lov of
- March 20: Jazz Ensemble I
* KUZ Jazz Singers, 7:30 p.m.
- April 15: KU Concert Band,
7:30 p.m.
- April 17-19: KU Jazz Festival, 7:30 p.m.
- April 21: University Band, 7:30 p.m.
- April 22: Jazz Ensemble II and III and Jazz Combos; 7:30 p.m.
- April 25: KU Symphonic Band, 7:30 p.m.
- April 26: Visiting Artist Series, Alain Patit, violin, 7:30 p.m.,
- Swarthout Recital Hall.
- April 27: Collegium Musicum,
7:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- May 2-3: KU Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m.
KU Recitals
Swarthout Recital Hall, unless otherwise noted.
- July 23: Master's recital, David Szanto, organ, 7:30 p.m.
- Sept. 16: Faculty recital, David Vining, trombone, 7:30 p.m.
- Sept. 23: Faculty recital, Scott Watson, tuba. 7:30 p.m.
- Oct. 7: Larry Maxey, clarinet,
- Oct. 7: Larry Maxey, clannet,
and Linda Maxey, marimba, 7:30 p.m.
- Oct. 14: Faculty recital, Norman Paige, tenor, and Inci Bashar Paige, mezzo-soprano, 7:30 p.m.
- Oct. 21: Kansas Brass Quintet,
7:30 p.m.
- Nov. 4: James Hidgon, organ,
7:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- Nov. 5: Undergraduate Honor recital, 7:30 p.m.
- Nov. 10: James Hidgon, organ, 2:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- Nov. 17: Alumni recital series, Jerald Hamilton, organ, 2:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- Nov. 18: Faculty recital, Michael Bauer, organ, 7:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- Nov. 24: Organ dedication recital, Michael Bauer, 2:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- Dec. 2: Faculty recital, John Boulton, flute, 7:30 p.m.
- April 10: Undergraduate Honor recital, 7:30 p.m.
- Feb. 16; Alumni recital series,
Mark Steinbach, organ, 2:30
p.m.; Bales Recital Hall.
- March 9: Alumni recital series,
Carla Edwards, organ, 2:30 p.m.
Bales Recital Hall.
- April 14: Faculty recital, Ben Sayevich, violin; 7:30 p.m.
- April 20: Alumni recital series, Laura Ellis, organ, 2:30 p.m., Bales Recital Hall.
- April 11: Graduate Honor recital, 7:30 p.m.
- April 21: Faculty recital, Michael Kimber, viola, 7:30 p.m.
KU Carillon
Memorial Drive, Kansas University.
• Recitals are at 3 p.m. Sundays and 7 p.m. Wednesdays.
- April 28: Faculty recital, Ed Laut, cello; 7:30 p.m.
Lawrence Children's Choir
• Nov. 24: Concert, Central Junior High. 4 p.m.
Liberty Hall 643 Marr
- Sept. 20: The Bobs.
KU Opera
Lied Center, Kansas University West Campus.
- jan. 17-25: "The Marriage of Figaro," 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
642 Mass.
- Oct. 29: Michael Hedges.
- Oct. 25-Nov. 2: "Into the Woods," 7:30 p.m., Inge Theatre.
- Aug. 21: Def Leppard with Tripping Daisy, 8 p.m., Sandstone Amphitheatre, Bonner Springs.
- April 20: Concert, time and place to be announced. . . .
- April 4-6: "Elijah," 8 p.m., Lied Center.
KANSAS CITY Concerts
- Aug. 23: Steve Miller and Pat Benatar, 8 p.m., Sandstone Amphitheatre, Bonner Springs.
- Aug. 25: Ziggy Marley & The Melody Makers, Cypress Hill, Fugees, A Tribe Called Quest, Spearhead, 6 p.m., Sandstone Amphitheatre, Bonner Springs.
- Sept. 7: John Tesh, 8 p.m., Starlight Theatre, 4600 Starlight Rd.
- Sept. 13: Dave Matthews Band, 8 p.m., Sandstone Amphitheatre, Bonner Springs.
- Sept. 14: Jethro Tull and Emerson, Lake & Palmer, 8 p.m.,
- Sept. 15: Sawyer Brown and Toby Keith, 5:30 p.m., Sandstone Amphitheatre, Bonner Springs.
- Sandstone Amphitheatre, Bonner Springs.
- Sept. 21: The Cranberries, Cracker, 8 p.m., Sandstone Amphitheatre, Bonner Springs.
- Sept. 21: Tony Bennett, featuring The Ralph Sharon Trio, 8 p.m., Midland Theatre, Kansas City, Mo.
UMKC Conservatory of Music
(816) 235-2700 (ticket office). Center for the Performing Arts, 50th and Cherry streets, Kansas City, Mo. Concerts at 7:30 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays in White Recital Hall unless otherwise noted.
- Oct. 27: Velvet Brass.
- Nov. 15: L'incoronazione di Poppea.
- Nov. 22: Angela Chang, piano.
- Jan. 25: Richard Cass.
- Feb. 11: Paquita d'Rivera.
- April 11: Urban Bush Women.
- April 20: Music for the Masses.
Johnson County
Community College (913) 469-4445. 12345 College Blvd., Overland Park.
Performances in Yardley Hall. Performances at 8 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays, unless otherwise noted.
- Oct. 5: Andre Previn, classical pianist.
- Oct. 11-12: Penn & Teller. *
* Nov. 8-9: Michael Wolff.*
- Dec. 6-7: Tennessee Dance
- Theatre, with Riders in the Sky and Mark O'Connor.
- Feb. 1: Leila Josefowicz.
* Feb. 7-8: Mark Russell.
* March 8: Chorwawa.
- March 8: Chorovaya Akademia.
- April 18-19: Keiko Matsui.
Akademia.
• March 14-15: "Zorba."
• April 18-19: Kılıfa.
Folly Theater (816) 842-5500, 12th and
Folly Theater
(816) 842-5500.12th and Central, Kansas City, Mo.
- Oct. 11: The Dirty Dozen, 8 p.m.
- Nov. 3: "The Complete George Shearing," 7 p.m.
- Nov. 23: The Terence Blanchard Quintet, 8 p.m.
- Jan. 18: The Yellowjackets, 8 p.m.
- Feb. 22: The Kenny Burrell Quartet, 8 p.m.
- March 14: Sonny Rollins, 8 p.m.
- April 25: The Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, 8 p.m.
See Calendar, page 45F
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 45F
Continued from page 44F
William Jewell College (816)415-5025. Liberty, Mo.
- Sept. 18: Arnaldo Cohen, pianist.
- Sept. 29: St. Louis Symphony Orchestra.
- Oct. 5; Thomas Hampson, harbiter and Jeyadh Laghey, teger
- bantone, and jerry Oct. 8: Portraits in Blue, featuring Marcus Roberts, piano.
- Oct. 29: Westminster Abbey Choir.
- Oct. 18: Rodney Gilfry, bari- tone
- Nov. 2; Jennifer Larmore, mezzo-soorano.
- Nov. 6; Vienna Symphony Orchestra.
Orchestra
• Nov. 22: Vienna Choir Boys.
• Feb. 15: New European chamber orchestra
Strings, chamber orchestra.
- April 12: James Galway, flutist.
- March 15: Joshua Bell, violinist.
- April 15: Alfred Brandel,
pianist.
- April 26: The Canadian Brass.
TOPEKA
(913) 297-9000.214 S.W.Eighth. Performances start at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted.
Topeka Performing Arts Center
- Sept. 5: Alison Krause.
- Symphony, with violinist Pip Clarke.
- Sept. 22: The Nylons.
- Oct. 12: The Toneka
- Symphony, with Holmes Lip Clank.
• Nov. 9: The Topea Symphony with the Canadian Brass.
- Dec. 14: A Winter's Solstice concert with Tuck & Patti, The Turtle Island String Quartet and Philio Aaberg.
- April 29: The Chieftains.
- April 19: The Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra.
HUTCHINSON
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• Sept. 6: All 4 One.
• Sept. 7: Randy Travis with
Tom Wonat
- Sept. 8: Lorie Morgan, Pam Tillis and Carlene Carter;
- Sept. 14: Wynonna and Trisha Yearwood.
- Sept. 15: Ray Stevens with Williams & Ree.
WINFIELD
Walnut Valley Association (316) 221-3250.
- Sept. 19-22: 25th National Guitar Flatpicking Championships.
Dance
LAWRENCE
- Oct. 19: COHAN/SUZEAU Duet Company, 8 p.m., Johnson County Community College.
- University Dance Company 864-4264.
- Nov. 21-22: University Dance Company with COHAN/SUZEAU Duet Company, 8 p.m., Lied Center.
- May 3-4: University Dance Company and COHAN/SLIZEAF
- April 8: Student Choreographers Concert, 7:30 p.m., 240 Robinson.
with the Kansas University Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m., Lied Center.
KANSAS CITY
State Ballet of Missouri Midland Theatre, 1228 Main Kansas City, Mo., unless otherwise noted. Ticket office, (816)931-3330; information, (816)931-2232
- Aug. 31-Sept. 8: Balletomania.
- Oct. 13-15: A World Premiere of Todd Bolender's work.
- Nov. 30-Dec. 15: "The Nutcratcher."
Theater
LAWRENCE
Kansas University Ticket information, Murphy Hall Box Office, 864-3982, or the Lied Center Box Office, 864-2787. Performances at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted.
- "Hush: An Interview with America," 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m.
Sept. 28, Crafton-Preyer
Theatre.
- "The Memorandum," Oct. 3-6 and Oct. 8-12, Inaugre Theatre.
- "Coming Here: A Trilogy," Oct. 18-20 and Oct. 24-26, Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
- "Hair (revised)," Nov. 16-17 and Nov. 21-23, Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
- "Wings," Dec. 2-10, Inge Theatre.
- "Communion" and "Tales From the Wasteland," Jan. 30-
Feb. 2 and Feb. 5-8, Inge Theatre.
- "Alex and the Shrink World," 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. Feb.15, Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
- "The Merry Wives of Windsor," March 7-9 and March 13-15, Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
- "Between Pancho Villa and A Naked Woman," April 4-6 and April 8-12, Inge Theatre.
- "Abide with Me," April 24-26 and May 1-3, Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
- English Alternative Theatre Productions take place in 100 Smith Hall, unless noted otherwise.
- Oct. 10-14: "The Camp Follower," 8 p.m. Oct. 10-13 and 2:30 p.m. Oct. 14, Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth.
- Sept. 14: "The Tragedy of Mariam," 8 p.m.
- Nov. 21-24; Three short plays: "The Sandbox," "The Chalky White Substance" and "Tidings" 8 p.m. Nov. 21-23 and 2:30 p.m.
Nov. 24.
- "Something's Afoot," Sept.
27-Oct. 13.
- "Lost in Yonkers," Dec. 6-15.
Lawrence Community Theatre
843-7469. 1501 N.H.
Performances at 7:30 p.m.
Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays and
Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Sundays.
• "Something's Afoot," Sept.
37 Oct 13
- "The Cemetery Club," Jan. 17-26.
- "Fortinbras," Feb. 21-March 2.
- "Blood Brothers," April 11-27.
- "Whose Wife is it Anyway?" June 6-15.
Lawrence High School 832-5050. Lawrence High School Auditorium,1901 La.Shows begin at 8 p.m.
- "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," Oct. 10-12.
- "The Crystal," Nov. 14-16.
- "Kiss Me Kate," Jan. 30-Feb.
1.
- "One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest," April 10-12
Ric Averill Players 842-6622 or (913) 876-2114.
Apple Valley Farm, Lake Perry.
- "Dangerous Damsels,"
Saturdays through September.
- "Nightmare in Nashville,"
Fridays through Oct. 5.
See Calendar, page 46F
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46F AUGUST 1996
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
Continued from 45F
Seem-To-Be Players Children's Theatre
843-5067. Lawrence Arts Center,
200 W. Ninth St.
- "Three Billy Goats Gruff and Other Fairy Tales for the Very Young." Sept. 28-29.
- "The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers," Oct. 30-Nov. 3.
- "Halloween for the Very Young." Nov. 2.
- "An O. Henry Holiday," Dec.
12-15.
- "The Seem-To-Be Just-So Stories." April 5-6.
- "Reliable Junk," Jan. 23.
* "The Seem-To-Be Just-Sc
KANSAS CITY
Armenian Heartland Theatre Co.
Crown Center, Kansas City, Mo. Tickets, (816) 842-9999. Performances at 8 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays and 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturdays.
- "Funny Money," through Aug. 31.
- "Greater Tuna," Sept. 6-Oct. 27.
- "A Wonderful Life," Nov. 8-1an. 11.
- Lyric Opera of Kansas City (816) 471-7344.1029 Central, Kansas City, Mo.
- "La Boheme," Sept. 14-22.
TOPEKA
Topeka Civic Theatre
Performance times are 7:30 p.m.
Topeka Civic Theatre Box office, (913) 357-5211. Dinner and non-dinner seating. Box office, 534 1/2 N. Kansas.
- "Laundry and Bourbon on Lone Star," Sept. 13-Oct. 5.
- Tuesdays-Wednesdays; 8 p.m.
Thursdays-Saturdays, with dinner starting at 6 p.m.; and 2 p.m.
Sundays.
9. "Shadowlands," Oct. 18-Nov.
- "Baby," Nov. 29-Dec. 28.
- 8. "I Hate Hamlet," Jan. 17-Feb.
- "Pack of Lies," April 18-May 10.
- "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," Feb. 28-March 29.
"Sylvia," May 30-June 21.
"Seven Brides for Seven
Brothers," July 11-Aug. 9.
Topeka Performing Arts Center
(913) 297-9000. 214 S.E. Eighth St.
- "42nd Street," Oct. 5.
- "Ain't Misbehavin'," Oct. 20.
- "Kiss of the Spider Woman," Feb. 5.
- "Grease!" March 28-29.
- "CATS," May 6-8.
Miscellany
LAWRENCE
Harvest of Arts/Celebration of Cultures
- Sept. 28-Oct. 6: Various arts and cultural-related events in downtown lawrence.
downtown Lawrence.
throughout the year for
Ecumenical Christian Ministries 843-4933.1204 Oread Ave. Regular meetings scheduled
- Wednesdays: Lawrence Men's Group, 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
- C. O.D.A., Interactions, Chinese Cultural Club, lcthus, Natural Ties, Coffee House and yoga classes
- Mondays: AA, 11:30 a.m.
12:45 p.m.
- First Sunday of each month:
PFLAG, 2 p.m.-4 p.m.
- Thursdays: KU Environs, vegetarian lunch, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.
*Sundays: Peace Mennonite Church, 10 a.m.
Hall Center events
Hall Center events Kansas University campus.
- Sept. 4: Lecture and panel discussion, "Technology, Public Debate, and the Electoral Process." 7 p.m.
- Sept. 10: Humanities lecture series, "John Steuart Curry, Prairie Prodigal," 7:30 p.m., Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium.
- Sept. 16: Public lecture,
"Ethics of Literal Writing."
- Oct. 23: Public lecture,
"Poetry Reading with
Commentary," Gwendolyn
Brooks, author, 8 p.m., Lied
Center.
- Nov. 12: Humanities lecture series, "Rembrandt's Originality," 7:30 p.m., Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium.
- Feb. 20: Humanities lecture series, "Working in Nature," 7:30 p.m.
- March 11: Humanities lecture series, "The Spanish New World in the Narrative Imagination, Past and Present," 7:30 p.m.
Kansas University football
Kansas University football Memorial Stadium, Kansas University. Home games with asterisk. Dates and time are subject to change.
- Aug. 29: Ball State*, 7 p.m.
• Sept. 14: Texas Christian, 7:05
- Sept. 28; Utah, 8:05 p.m.
Oct. 5; Oklahoma, 1:30 p.m.
- Oct. 12: Texas Tech* (Band Dav). 1 p.m.
- Oct. 19: Colorado* (Homecoming), 1 p.m.
- Oct. 26: Nebraska, 1 p.m.
- Lawrence Public Library
843-3833. 707 Vt.
- Nov. 16: Texas*, 1 p.m.
- Nov. 2: Iowa State, 1 p.m.
• Nov. 2: Iowa State, 1 p.m.
- Sept. 11: "Medicine River, by Thomas King, Native American Writers of the Plains book discussion series, 7:30 p.m.-9 p.m.
- Nov. 2: Iowa State, 1 p.m.
- Nov. 9: Kansas State*, 1 p.m.
- Nov. 23: Missouri, 1 p.m.
Workshop, 5 p.m. and 8 p.m.
- Sept. 26: "Fools Crow," by James Welch, Native American Writers of the Plains book discussion series, 7:30 p.m.-9 p.m.
- Oct. 9: "The Bingo Palace," by Louise Erdrich, Native American Writers of the Plains book discussion series, 7:30 p.m.- 9 p.m.
- Oct. 23: "Mean Spirit," by Linda Hogan, Native American Writers of the Plains book discussion series, 7:30 p.m.-9 p.m.
Liberty Hall
- June 14: The Imagination Workshop, 5 p.m. and 8 p.m.
- Aug. 24: KANU Goodtime
Radio Revue
Kansas University west campus.
• Sept. 19: Seattle Mime Theatre, 8 p.m.
749-1972. 642 Mass.
Lied Center
- Feb. 1: The imagination.
Workshop, 5 p.m. and 8 p.m.
- Oct. 5: The Imagination Workshop, 5 p.m. and 8 p.m.
- Oct. 6: Pittsburgh Symphony,
with Andre Previn, 7 p.m.
- Oct. 1: Beaux Arts Trio, 8 p.m.
- Nov. 30: The Imagination
- Oct. 22: Sankai Juku in "Yuragi: In a Space on Perpetual Motion." 8 p.m.
- Oct. 25: Queensland Ballet, with the Kansas City Symphony, in "Pirates!", 8 p.m.
- Nov. 10: Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, 3:30 p.m.
- Oct. 22: Sankai Juku in
- Nov. 2: National Song and Dance Ensemble of Tibet, 8 p.m.
- Jan. 28: Mercy Cunningham Dance Company, 8 p.m.
- Dec. 14-15: "Sleeping Beauty on Ice," featuring St. Petersburg State I ballet, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.
- Nov. 15: "Tommy," 8 p.m.
- Feb. 7-9: "Carousel," 8 p.m.
Feb. 7, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Feb. 8
and and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Feb.
9.
- Feb. 16: New European Strings Chamber Orchestra, 3:30 p.m.
- Feb. 21-23; Stomp. 8 p.m.
Feb. 21-22 and 7 p.m. Feb. 23.
- Feb. 25: Dawn Upshaw, soprano, and Richard Goode, piano, 8 p.m.
- March 2: "Sound of Music," 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.
- March 7: New York Opera
National Company in "La Boheme," 8 p.m.
- March 18: Streb/Ringside in "Population." 8 p.m.
Population, 8 p.m.
• April 6: Ying Quartet, 3 p.m.
• April 9: Russian Village
Festival, 8 p.m.
- April 13: Theatre Sans Fil in "The Crown of Destiny," 2 p.m.
- April 20: Blair String Quartet with Bela Fleck. 3:30 p.m.
Museums
LAWRENCE Helen Foresman Spencer Museum Of Art
864-4710. On Mississippi Street west of the Kansas Union on Kansas University campus.
Comprehensive museum with paintings, sculpture, graphics, textiles. Hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays; 10 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursdays; and noon-5 p.m.
Sundays. Closed Mondays, Dec.
24-25 and Dec. 31-Ian. 1.
- "Kansas Quilts from the Spencer Museum Collection," through Sept. 29.
- "Hopi Pottery." Sept. 7-Oct. 20.
Witness.
- "Western Waters:
Photographs by Terry Evans, Greg Conniff and Wanda Hammerbeck." Aug. 24-Oct. 20.
- "Ports of Entry: William S. Burroughs and the Arts," Oct. 19-Dec. 29.
- "Pictorialism into Modernism:
The Clarence H. White School of
Photography" Feb. 1-March 30.
- "Hogarth and Shows or London," Feb. 1-March 30.
- "Stage Designs by Boris Anisfeld," April 25-May 31.
Kenneth Spencer Research Library
Behind Strong Hall on Poplar Lane, KU campus. Hours are 8 a.m.-6 p.m. weekdays (the Kansas Collection and University Archives close at 5 p.m.).
- "Strong Hall: Crown Jewel of Mt. Oread," University Archives Gallery.
Kansas University Natural History Museum
History Museum 864-4540 or 864-4450. On Jayhawk Blvd. on KU campus. Hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays, noon-5 p.m. Sundays. Closed Thanksgiving Day. Dec. 25 and Jan. 1.
- 1995 British Gas Wildlife Photographer of the Year Competition exhibition, through Sept. 9.
- Museum of Anthropology 864-4245. Spooner Hall on KU campus. Open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays and 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Sundays.
- "People of Africa," through April 6.
- Eighth Annual Lawrence Indian Arts Show: A Juried Competition, Sept. 7-Oct. 20.
- "Los Dias de los Muertos," Oct. 26-Nov. 17.
- The Hazelle Rollins Puppets, Nov. 30-Jan. 5.
- "Images of the Virgin," Feb. 15-April 6.
See Calendar, page 47F
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Kring's Interior Fashion Center 842-3470 • 634 Massachusetts • Lawrence, KS
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AUGUST 1996 47F
Continued from page 46F
- "Hopi Katsinam," March 15- Aug. 3
- "White Mountain Apache Coming Out Ceremony," June 7-Aug. 17.
Clyde W. Tombaugh
Observatory 864-3166.500 Lindley Hall.Open to the public for observations on the first and third Sunday nights and the second, fourth and fifth Fridays of each month, if skies are clear from 8 p.m.to 9:30 p.m.
Watkins Community
Museum of History
841-4109. 1047 Mass. Open 10
a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturday;
1:30 p.m.-4 p.m. Sundays.
- "The Basketball Man; Dr. lames Naismith."
- "Douglas County, Kansas and World War II: The Home Front and Beyond," through Dec. 29.
KANSAS CITY
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
(816) 561-4000. 4525 Oak, Kansas City, Mo. Comprehensive art museum. Hours. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Fridays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays and 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Sundays.
Exhibits
- "Joel Shapiro: Outdoors," through Oct. 13.
- "Lewis deSoto: Tahquitz," through Sept. 8.
- "Pueblo Pottery: An Enduring Tradition," through Sept. 8.
- "Lola Alvarez Bravo: In Her Own Light," through Sept. 22.
Galleries
LAWRENCE
Art and Design Gallery
Art and Design Building, KU campus. Open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Mondays-Wednesdays, 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Thursdays, 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Fridays, 1:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m.
Sundays. Closed Saturdays.
Artframes Gallery and Artforms Sculpture Garden 842-1991.912 Ill.,9:30 a.m.-6 p.m.Mondays-Saturdays or by appointment.
The Bourgeois Pig 843-1001. 6 E. Ninth. Open 7 a.m.-2 a.m. daily.
* Painings by K.T. Walsh, through Aug. 31.
The Eldridge Hotel 701 Mass. Shalor's Restaurant.
• "Light of day," work by Kathryn Whitehorse.
Ethnofacts Gallery 749-0430.625 Walnut.10 a.m.-6 p.m.daily.Imported African and Asian art.Call before visiting.
500 Locust Gallery 832-9867. 500 Locust. Gallery open by appointment or by calling 841-6138 or 842-5328.
- Recent works by Bill Carswell, Ben Graham, Nellie Habegger, Hobart Jackson, Ted Johnson, Gwyn Kitos and Donna Luckey.
Free State Glass 843-4527. 307 E. Ninth. Handblown glass and sculpture. By appointment only.
Goldmakers
842-2770. 723 Mass. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mondays- Saturdays, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Thursdays and 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Sundays.
Lawrence Arts Center 843-ARTS. Ninth and Vermont streets.
- Lawrence Arts Center Faculty Show, Aug. 19-Septh. 4. Reception, 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Aug. 23.
- Lawrence Art Guild All-
Member Show, through Aug. 16.
- Lawrence Indian Arts Show,
Sept. 6-Oct. 2. Reception, 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Sept. 13.
- Louis Copt watercolors, Oct.
4-31. Reception, 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
Oct. 4.
- Cathy Ledeker paintings, Nov.
4-28. Reception, 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
Nov. 9.
- Lawrence Art Guild Holiday Arts Show, Nov. 29-Dec. 1.
- Lawrence Arts Center Invitational Arts and Crafts Show, Dec. 3-21.
- Danny Meisinger pottery, Jan.
3-Feb. 7. Reception 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
jan. 3.
- Art Guild Imagery and Form,
Feb. 12-March 12. Reception, 7
p.m.-9 p.m. Feb. 14.
Lawrence Art Guild's Riverfront Gallery
843-5044.1 Riverfront Plaza Suite 109. Open 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, noon-6 p.m.Sundays.
- Third exhibit of area artists, through Sept. 22.
- Lawrence Indian Center
1423 Haskell Ave. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Mondays-Fridays.
- Tall Grass Art Show, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday.
843-8375. 7 E. Seventh. Open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Mondays-Fridays and 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays. Original lithographs by regional and national artists, including Robert Sudlow, Elizabeth "Grandma" Layton, Roger Shimomura, S. Winters, R. Green, Z. Priede, T. Waddell, M. Shapiro, Luis Jimenez and others. Greenpeace portfolio also available.
Lawrence Lithography Workshop
842-1554. 15th and Kasold Drive.
Open 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Mondays-
Fridays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays.
Featuring glassworks, ceramics
and original artwork by artists
including J. Gaumnitz, L. Copt, R.
Sudlow, B. Opelka, J.G. Brown, J.
Orr, J. Whitenight, D. Coons, Free
State Glass, V. Brajcha and J.
Brothers
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza Factory Outlets
1 Riverfront Plaza.
· Paul Penny, oil paintings.
Santa Fe Optical
McQueen Jewelers Inc.
843-5432. 809 Mass. Open 9:30
a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mondays-
Saturdays, and 9:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
Thursdays.
Phoenix Gallery 843-0080.919 Mass.Open 10:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.Mondays Saturdays,1p.m.-5 p.m. Sundays.Works by regional artisans in clay,fiber,glass,wood and more.
Santa Fe Optical
843-6828. 737 Mass. Open 10
a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mondays-
Saturdays, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Thursdays.
- Works by T. Watson Bogaard.
Silver Hawk
749-2822. 1021 1/4 Mass. Open
10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mondays-
Saturdays. Primarily leather goods
plus sculpture, jewelry, paintings.
Roy's Gallery and Framing
Local artists include Jerry Miller and Marion Dyer.
Silver Works and More
842-1460. 715 Mass. Open 10
a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mondays-
Saturdays, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Thursdays. Featuring jewelry and
crafts by local and national artists.
Sunflower Surplus and Sunflower Bike Shop 843-5000.804 Mass.
- Photographs by G. Mark Smith.
Tribal Treasure
749-8401. Stodham Union,
Haskell Indian Nations University.
Open noon-6 p.m. Mondays-
Fridays. Indian arts and crafts.
Pendleton robots and shawls.
Vormehr Gallery
749-0744. 1 Riverfront Plaza, Suite 321. Open 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Mondays-Wednesdays. Artworks by Vicki Vormeh, Lawrence, and Kansas University scenes and photography.
Wheat Field's Bakery & Cafe
- Anahita Vossougii, prints,
through Sept. 1.
- James Nedresky, photography,
phy. Sept. 8-Nov. 3.
841-5553. 904 Vt. Open 6 a.m.-9 p.m. daily.
Wildcat Studio
841-5140 or 842-3154, by appointment. Realistic, figurative murals and paintings; specializing in portraits and commissions.
Nurturing Imaginations
The Toy MOON
619 Massachusetts
842-0505
The Toy
MOON
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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD 1G AUGUST, 1996
Lawrence Business History
BAKERY
RUGGY GROCERIES
PHARMACY HARDWARE
GROCERIES
PHARMACY
SHOE REPAIR
1854-1996
The City of Lawrence was founded in 1854 by the Massachusetts Emigrant Aid Company. The town was named in honor of Amos A. Lawrence, an officer of the company.
1854 LAWRENCE
JOURNAL-WORLD
CONTINUOUS OWNERSHIP SINCE 1892
609 New Hampshire
Lawrence Kansas 66044, Phone 832-7100
1854 LAWRENCE
1855 THE ELDRIDGE HOTEL
THE ELDRIDGE HOTEL
Rebuilt 1857,1863,&1924 Renovated 1986
701 Massachusetts
ROUND
DRUG STORE
1855 ROUND CORNER
749-5011
CORNER
801 MASSACHUSETTS 843-0200 Owner: Tom Wilcox "Oldest Drug Store in Kansas"
801 MASSACHUSETTS
843-0200
1857 Weavers
9th & Massachusetts
Weavers 9th & Massachusetts
"Lawrence's Department Store for 139 Years"
843-6360
1861 CHARLTON MANLEY
Employer Benefits • INSURANCE • Financial Services
8900 Indian Creek Pkwy
Building 6, Ste. 270
Overland Park, KS 66210
(913) 441-195
211 E. 8th
Lawrence, KS 66044\
(913) 843-5454
2348 S. W. Topeka Blvd.
Topeka KS 66604
(913) 233-2790
1869
Marks
EWELERS
Quality Jewelry, Repairs, Fine Gifts & Custom Design Since 1889
817 Massachusetts 841-4266
1874
Holmes Peck & Brown REALTORS 843-0220 3500 WESTRIDGE DRIVE
1881
"Service and Integrity Since 1874"
3500 Westridge Dr.
843-0220
SCOTCH Fabric Care Services
1882
6 Lawrence Locations to serve you 10 Topeka Locations to serve you
S
Leaders in the package industry for over 110 years.
Lawrence Paper Company
1891
LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE
Quality Lithography © Design
512 E. 9th Street (913) 843-4600
- Fast Turnaround
- Graphic Design
- Multiple Colors
- Manuals & Books
- Quality & Service
- Newsletters
- Posters & Maps
Riling, Burkhead, Fairchild & Nitcher Chartered Attorneys at Law
808 Massachusetts
1905 Ernst & Son Hardware
841-4700
Locally Owned & Operated
Mon. - Sat. 8:30 - 5:30
Thurs til 8:30
Sun. 12:30 - 5
826 Massachusetts 843-2373
1911 STRONG'S OFFICE SYSTEMS
D
Founded in 1911 by Fred Bliesner as Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 919 Iowa 843-3644
1920 PENNY
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC.
"The Concrete Specialists"
P.O. Box 365 749-1811
Sheri P. Penny—Owner
1921
EXCELLENT SERVICE IN REAL ESTATE LAWRENCE
1921 LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
1924
9th & Tennessee • 843-1011
EUDORA
101 W. 10th *542-1112
COLDWELL BANKER
101 W. 10th *542-1112
An independently Owned and Operated Member of Coldwell Banker Residential Affiliates, Inc.
Expect the best. $ ^{*} $
1926
HUXTABLE & ASSOCIATES, INC. Mechanical • Electrical • Design-Build Systems
Kansas City • Lawrence • Topeka
1927 PENNY'S CONCRETE, INC.
PENNY'S
800 EAST 8TH
BILL AND MARLENE PENNY
843-8100
1
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD 2G AUGUST, 1996
Lawrence Business History
BAKERY
MURRAY
GROCERIES
BAKERY
GROCERIES
PHARMACY
HARDWARE
FLORIST
SHOE REPAIR
GROCERIES
1854-1996
Charles Robinson was one of the founders of Lawrence, who later became the first governor of Kansas. He later served as superintendent of Haskell Indian Institute, now called Haskell Indian Nations University.
HÖTZ BUSINESS SYSTEMS The Malls Shopping Center 711 West 23rd • 842-4134 OPENED IN LAWR
1936
HÖTZ
BUSINESS SYSTEMS
•COPY CENTER
•LARGE FORMAT
COPIES
The Malls Shopping Center
711 West 23rd • 842-4134
SALES•SERVICE•SUPPLIES
OPENED IN LAWRENCE IN 1989
36
•COPY CENTER
•LARGE FORMAT
COPIES
SALES·SERVICE·SUPPLIES
1936 LairdNoller
23rd & Alabama A family tradition for over 60 years. 843-3500
TIME CAPITALS
FOUNDED 1940 Opened in Lawrence in 1985
FOUNDED
1940
Opened in Lawrence in 1985
Kopp's Decorating Center
Kopp's Decorating Center
The only one-stop decorating center in the Douglas County area 2540 Iowa ·842-9185
1945 A Heating and Air Conditioning Business That has Satisfied the Needs of Lawrence For 50 Years: 1945-1995
SCOTT TEMPERATURE EQUIPMENT Carrier Heating/Cooling Air Conditioning and Heating by "We aren't comfortable until you are" 1815 Bullene (E. on 19th) 843-22454
1946
HUME MUSIC INC.
5801 West 21st
(913) 272-3948
Toronto, Kanada
Quality merchandise with personalized service Mon.-Thur. 10-8; Fri-Sat. 10-5:30 711 West 23rd (The Malls Shopping Center) 843-2644
1946 Kaw Motor & Salvage
1946
Kaw Motor & Salvage
1549 North 3rd
843-2533
"A Family Owned Business"
1947
Castle Tea Room
1894-1994
1307 Massachusetts
843-1151
1948
Patchen Electric
& INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY, INC.
Motors - Pumps - Complete Water Systems
602 E. 9th 843-4522
Patchen Electric & INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY,INC.
1950
Kennedy
GLASS
730NEWJERSEY843-4416
Your Glass Service Center
McGrew REAL ESTATE
N43-2055
1501 Kasold, Lawrence
843-2055 1501 Kasold
1953
Hardister
Painting & Decorating
President: Larry Schomer
912 North 3rd 843-8018
P.O. Box 107
Lawrence
1956 ACE PLUMBING & SEWER SERVICE
1956
Jim CLARK
MOTORS, Inc.
Chrysler • Plymouth • Dodge • VW • Isuzu
2121 W. 29th Terrace 843-3055
1956 ACE
PLUMBING & SEWER SERVICE
RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
Bathroom & Kitchen Remodeling • Sewer & Drain Cleaning
Remodeling & Repair • Radio Dispatched Trucks
MOST REPAIRS SAME DAY SERVICE
843-9559 1-800-
846-4223
Tanks • Pumps • Engines • Hose • Guns
Sprayer • Motors
Westheffer
Servicing your needs since 1958
FOR ALL YOUR SPRAYING NEEDS.
1235 N. 3rd • Lawrence, KS • 843-1633
1961
M&M OFFICE SUPPLY
623 Massachusetts
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913)843-0763 FAX(913)843-0805
Tanks • Pumps • Engines • Hose • Guns • Reels•
Agriculture, Turf, Right of Way, and Pest Control
1959
Malls Barber Shop
711 W. 23rd
842-1547
Mon.-Thurs. 8-5:30, Fri. 8-5
Mon.,- Thurs. 8 - 5:30, Fri. 8 - 5
1962 Howar Pine's Garden Center & Greenhouses In the heart of gardening country
1320 North 3rd Lawrence, KS Specializing in Quality Bedding and Vegetable Plants Open March-June 749-0302
1963 WAGNER'S MUD-JACKING, INC. GENERAL CONTRACTOR
1963
WAGNER'S MUD-JACKING, INC.
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
SPECIALIZING IN MUD-JACKING AND FOUNDATION REPAIR
• Water Proofing
• Concert Slab Houses • Level Driveways
• Garage Floor • Sidewalks
• Porches • Patios
31 YEARS EXPERIENCE 749-1696
.
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD 3G AUGUST, 1996
Lawrence Business History
BAKERY
BAKERY GROCERIES PHARMACY HARDWARE FLORIST SHOE REPAIR
MIXTUP GROCERIES
GROCERIES
1854-1996
In August of 1863, William Clarke Quantrill and a band of about three hundred men rode in to raid Lawrence. One hundred homes were burned and most of the town's business district was destroyed.
1963
Ace Steering and Brake Service Wheel Alignment and Balancing, Brake Service Struts and Shocks, CV Joint and U Joint service Free Estimates
1963 BUD JENNINGS CARPET ONE Fine Floors and More...Since 1962
843-1300
541 Minnesota
2851 Iowa
843-9090
19 66
A "Cut" Above The Rest
Prime Cut Hair Co.
841-4488
Tuesday - Saturday
Debbie Sumner 9th and New Hampshire
Owner Lawrence, KS 66044
1968 PARK 25 Apartments
PARK25 Apartments
"Spacious and Comfortable Living"
2401 West 25th 842-1455
1969
Quail Creek
1969
Quail Creek
APARTMENT
• Distinctive • Spacious • Convenient
"A home for all seasons"
2111 Kasold 843-4300
1969
Quail Creek
1969
sunflower
cablevision
644 New Hampshire
1969
Second generation carrying on the Johnson Furniture tradition of showing quality furniture at reasonable prices
CHET
Johnson
FURNITURE CO.
722 Massachusetts 843-2448
841-2100
FREEMAN USED FURNITURE INC.
1969
FREEMAN USED FURNITURE INC.
1145 PENNSYLVANIA LAWRENCE
9-5 MON - SAT 842-8970
MC
VISA
NOVUS
DELIVERY AVAILABLE
FOR ALL YOUR
HOUSEHOLD NEEDS
Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool
Celebrating 27 years of outstanding service to the Lawrence Community.
All-Day, Part-Day, Preschool Programs, Private Kindergarten
2141 Maple Ln 842-2223
1969 Children's Learning Center, Inc.
Ages 2 weeks to 12 years Open 6:45am to 6pm Sponsors Broken Arrow Day Care Van services to Local Schools 26 years of Quality Education 205 N. MICHIGAN 841-2185
1969 GIBSON PHARMACY
Proud to be locally owned & Serving the Lawrence area for 27 yrs. 2104 - BLW 25TH 842-6325
Creating quality candles since 1971 Waxman Candles 609 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas [913] 843-8593
1970 Malls Olde English Apartments 2411 Louisiana 843-5552
1971 moon's RADIATOR REPAIR
DEPENDABILITY
"We're here when it counts"
1547 North 3rd 842-8160
moon's RADIATOR REPAIR
• Commercial Space
• Studios, 1-2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments
• 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Townhouses
1971 TRAILRIDGE
• Water & trash paid in Apts & Studios
• Gas Heat paid inApts.
• Pools, Tennis Court, Basketball Court
• On Bus Route, Close to Dillons
• Small Pets w/ deposit and Pet rent
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
...
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
2500 W. 6th • 843-7333
REALTY EXECUTIVES
HEDGES
REAL ESTATE
(913) 841-2400
1972
(913) 841-2400 1037 Vermont St. Lawrence, Ks
HEDGES REAL ESTATE
(913) 594-6983
721 W. 8th St.
Baldwin City, KS
1972
QUALITY
ELECTRIC INC.
COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL SERVICE AND NEW CONSTRUCTION 1011 East 31st Street 843-9211
1972
KASTL PLUMBING
841-2112
P.O. BOX 3894 1440 WAKARUSA DR
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD 4G AUGUST,1996
Lawrence Business History
BAKERY
GROCERIES
PHARMACY
HARDWARE
FLORIST
SHOE REPAIR
BAKERY
GROCERIES
PHARMACY
HARDWARE
FLORIST
SHOE REPAIR
1854-1996
The flood of 1903 washed away the north end of the bridge.The Lawrence windmill was destroyed by fire on April 30,1905. Regular service in downtown Lawrence of electric street cars began in 1909.
1972 D&D Tire,Inc.
D&D Tire,Inc.
1000 Vermont
1972
Village Inn
843-0191
Village Inn
Village Inn Family Restaurants, Inc. "It's gotta have that spin or it's not Village Inn" OPEN 24 HOURS 9th & Iowa 842-3251
1974 SRH
CROSS-CRAFTSMAN
Superior Refrigeration & Heating Sale and Service • (913) 842-0301 "Put your trust in the Heating & Air Conditioning experts"
Owners : Terry & Helen Cox
1974
1995
Owners Ken and Mary Ann
TACO JOCHAS
Creasey Gary Anderson and Chris Schmidt Now serving at four Lawrence locations
TACO JOHN'S
1974 Don's Auto Center, Inc. Domestic and Import
Maintenance and repair, machine shop service and engine parts and kits.
A.S.E. Certified
Master Technicians
920 East 11th
841-4833
1974 STATE RADIATOR
"Cooling System Service You Can Depend On."
613 N 2nd 842-3333
1974 C·E·N·T·U·R·Y PERSONNEL
1009 New Hampshire STE C 832-0004 Est. in Lawrence in 1996
PROVIDING TEMPERARY, TEMP TO HIRE, AND PERMANENT PLACEMENT
SERVICES, ADMINISTRATIVE, MARKETING, TECHNICAL, AND LIGHT INDUSTRIAL
HONRED BY INC. MAGAZINE AND KS 1995 BLUE CHIP AWARD WINNER
1974 WILLOWRIDGE LANDSCAPE INC
1975
TACO BELL
1453 EAST 800 ROAD · LAWRENCE, KS 66049-9133 · 842-7022
Owner, R伯 Baker
W
1976 WOMEN'S TRANSITIONAL CARE SERVICE, INC.
1408 West 23rd·843-7711
1220 West 6th·749-0601
Do you need shelter and safety to escape your partner who hits or threatens you or your children?
Are you a women who needs emotional support while going through divorce or separation?
Call WTCS at 843-3333 • 24 Hours a Day
TDD & FAX Available • Disabilities accessible
P.O.Box 633 • Lawrence Kansas 66044
Ja
842-0094
1977 Jayhawk Metal Roofing, Inc.
Ayhawk Metal Roofing, Inc.
Custom Seamless Guttering
• Insured for your protection
• 30 Colors • Cleanouts
• Tear Downs & Hauling
Lifetime Guarantee On Materials
FREE ESTIMATES
LAWRENCE TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL
MASTER KI-JUNE PARK, Ph. D.
Teaching Martial Art Since 1977
Oskaloosa and Baldwin
10th and Mass.,
Lawrence
843-2121
1977 MANPOWER TEMPORARY SERVICES
MANPOWER TEMPORARY SERVICES
"The Leaders in Temporary and Permanent Placement."
211 East 8th 749-2800
1977 PRINCETON PLACE
Where Carefree Luxury Living Begins...
2208 Princeton Blvd. 842-2575
BILL'S ALIGNMENT
1977 & BRAKE SERVICE
1977
BILL'S
AUTOMOTIVE
& BRAKE SERVICE
1977
& BRAKE SERVICE
YOUR "UNDERCAR" HEADQUARTERS
• MUFFLERS & EXHAUST • BRAKES
• STRUTS & SHOCKS • C-V JOINTS
• WHEEL ALIGNING & BALANCING • OIL & LUBE
Many years of experience 843-3520 Mon.- Fri. 6 - 5:30
530 Gateway
JAYHAWK SIDING
WHEN YOU SEE THIS SIGN...
It Represents 20 Years Of
•QUALITY •SERVICE •VALUE
"A Custom Fit With No Seams or Gaps"
100% Financing Available
Visit our Showroom at 769 Grant 769
842-6425
Local Depositable Company
1977
THE BIBLE IS THE LAW OF GOD
Bob Bloom,
Rod Griffin
1978 Stephens REAL ESTATE
FOR ALL THE RIGHT MOVES 2701 West.6th St. 841-4500
Carol Brown 1979 ELECTROLYSIS
STATE LICENSED • STATE REGulated STERILIZATION
Evening And Sunday Hours Available
865-4255
Located Downtown Lawrence 1/2 Bk N. of 9th & New Hampshire
10 E. 9th • LAWRENCE
1
LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD 5G AUGUST, 1996
Lawrence Business History
BAKERY
BAKERY
GROCERIES
PHARMACY
HARDWARE
FLORIST
SHOE REPAIR
INKENY
GROCERIES
HARDWARE
SHOE REPAIR
1854-1996
In 1880 the population of Lawrence was 8,510,by 1900 it had climbed 10,862. It then grew to 12,456 in the 1920's and 32,858 in the 1960's.
1979
Leprechaun
Lawns "for a magically green lawn"
• Competitive Prices
• No Obligation, Free Estimates
"Call Jim"
769 Grant
庙
1-800-794-6232 841-0103
1979
1979 Providing Quality Education to Douglas County and Surrounding Area Since 1979 REAL ESTATE SCHOOL OF LAWRENCE 843-1309 Charlene J. Garzillo
Yello Sub
1979
1814 W.23rd·843-6000
12th & Ind.·841-3268
Delivery 5 p.m. - close daily
"LAWRENCE'S ORIGINAL AND BEST SUB SHOP"
Our fresh baked buns are stuffed full of fresh vegetables and quality meats and cheeses so you get stuffed.
Audio 1980 Video Services
V VCRs • Camcorders • CDs • CBs • TVs Home, Car and Portable Stereos • Telephone Equipment Custom Installations • Many Features • Trained Personnel
925 Iowa David Breitenbach Hillcrest Shopping Center 841-0777
Don't Trash It. Fix it!
1980 Bobbis Bedroom
Formerly Waterbed Works Futons, Waterbeds and Furniture Furniture on Consignment
2429 Iowa "Sleep with the best" 842-7378
1982
MESLER
ROOFING
COMPANY
749-0462
P.O. Box 1259
Lawrence, KS
66044
"Quality and Dependability"
1980
BOON'S
PRODUCE
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
Wholesaler-Retailer of Quality
623 Locus
Lawrence, Kansas
66044 • 749-2666
1982
BUCKINGHAM
PALACE
HOUSECLEANING
842-6264
1720 IOWA • SINCE 1983
Red Carpet Carpet Cleaning
1982
Red Carpet
Carpet Cleaning
BUCKINGHAM
PALACE™
HOUSE CLEANING
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
842-6264
1203 IOWA • SINCE 1983
CUSTOMER SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
1982
Valentino's
All You Can Eat!
-Lunch Buffet 11am-2pm
-Dinner Buffet 5pm-9pm
-Weekend Brunch 10am-3pm
544 W. 23rd 749-4244
OPEN 5:30 A.M.
7 DAYS A WEEK
OPEN 5:30 A.M.
7 DAYS A WEEK
1983
LUNKER
The Sportsman's Store
941 E. 23rd
842-6338
1983
LUNKER
The Sportsman's Store
941 E. 23rd
842-6338
Bait, Tackle, Hunting and Trapping Supplies. Rods, Reels, Guns, Ammo, Archery & Black Powder. We buy, sell and trade guns. 10x Hunting Clothes Filson & LaCross Footwear, Gun and Reel Repair. Hunting Fishing License & Archery Tags Available - Live Bait Year Around. Special Ordering Available.
1 The Cobbler's Bench
1983 vibram
Vibram Authorized Dealer
The Cobbler's Bench
Shoe, Boot
& Leather Repair
The Malls
Shopping Center
711 W. 23rd • (913) 843-0959
vibram
Vibram Authortand Dealers
983 vibram Vibram Authorized Dealer
Shoe, Boot
& Leather Repair
The Malls
Shopping Center
711 W. 23rd • (913) 843-0959
Royal Grest Lanes
1983
"Also the Home of the Aztec Inn. Fine Mexican Food."
933 Iowa
842-1234
1984
Hair Integration
Wigs
Manicures
Pedicures
Massages
Facials
Becky's HAIRSTYLING
Full Service Salon
Becky Isaac,
Owner
2108 W. 27th, D
Park Plaza Center
843-8467
1985
LOGAN
BUSINESS MACHINES
"The first and last name in copiers."
Lawrence, KS 66044
Phone 913/841-8041
1987
KANSAS FURNITURE
FACTORY OUTLET
738 New Hampshire
since 1987
SouthWind
Heath Collective
offering
therapeutic massage
subtle energy therapy
body centered psychotherapy
941 Kentucky
by appt. 843-7500
1987 HOUSEKEEPING UNLIMITED
COMMERCIAL, RESIDENTIAL & CARPET CLEANING 1611 St. Andrews Drive 842-2444
ACRES 1988 REALTORS Attention Caring Respect Excellence Jo Barnes Owner/Broker
Jo Barnes
Owner/Broker
"We Sell Estate, But Our Business is People."
2512 W 6th ST 842-2772
LAWRENCY JOURNAL-WORLD 6G AUGUST, 1996
Lawrence Business History
BAKERY KIICRY GROCERIES PHARMACY HARDWARE FLORIST SHOE REPAIR
1854-1996
The opening date of the University of Kansas was September, 12, 1866, with a faculty consisting of professors- Elial J. Rice, David H. Robinson and Francis H. Snow.
1988
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
1,2,3 & 4 Br Apt.
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Scott's 19
Bruss Apple
GRILL & BAR
Casual dining at it's best, a cozy "Cheers" atmosphere John & Pat Scott are your hosts
1989
VANDERBILT'S
1548 E. 23rd - 841-2109
Sun - Wed, 11- Midnight, Thur - Sat, 11-1:30am, 3300 W 15th St. • 841-0033
Come see our newly remodeled and expanded store!
"Full Line of Work and Western Wear at Discount Prices."
1989
KASPAR'S
BAR & GRILL
3115 W. 6TH
832-0060
832-0060
1990 Steve's Appliance Repair "Servicing all makes of appliances.
VIP
1990 THE BIRDWATCHER'S STORE OF LAWRENCE This place is for the birds!
1111 E. 1200 Rd.
842-5535
Karyn Baker Riney 15 West 8th St.·Lawrence,KS 66044·913-832-BIRD
REDKEN 1990 PAUL MITCHELL S MAGE AVEDA. SEBASTIAN SORBIE. KMS Beauty NEXUS Lanza WAREHOUSE & HAIRZONE SALON TIGI JOICO Locally owned and operated 520 West 23rd Street 841-5885
LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1991
Camera America
Laser Logic 1991
-
- Computer Service
- Laser Printer Service
1610 W. 23rd St. (next to Pizza Hut)
Open 9am - 6pm Mon-Sat, Thurs until 8pm
1 Hour Photo, camera sales, and supplies
841-7205
- Printer Parts & Supplies
- Equipment Sales
913-865-0505
FAX: (913) 865-2339
John Ross, Owner
John Ross, Owner jross@laserlogic.com
W
2214 Yale Lawrence. KS 66049
BODYWORKS
1992
MASSAGE THERAPY
843-4020
Tim Lawrence,
Certified Therapist
Scheduling Appointments Daily
Wed - Fri & Sat. 10-7
Dinosaur riding bicycle
1992 Voted Best Vegetarian Food 1994-1995 Herbivores JUICE BAR/DELI Lawrence's only ALL Vegetarian Cuisine Hours: Noon-7 p.m. Sun; 11a.m. - 10 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 9 E. 8th • 749-2477
1994
- European Antiques - Floral Designs
1012 Mass. Ste. 208 • Lawrence, KS 66044
- Pictures - Lamps - Mirrors - Baskets
- Potpourri - Candles
the
topiary tree
15 E. 8th Street·913-8421181 Downtown Lawrence
1994
KOEHLER
PLUMBING, INC.
Excellence in Service
842-8600
Clean, Courteous 24 Hr. Service
for all your plumbing needs
Licensed —Bonded—Insured
20 yrs. experience locally
1994
KOEHLER
PLUMBING, INC.
KOEHLER
PLUMBING, INC.
PETER GILBERT
1995 Formerly G & R Imports/
FREEMAN AUTOMOTIVE
We Stand Behind Our work, and WE CARE!
MIKE KOEHLER Master Plumber
- BRAKES
• ELECTRICAL
• TUNE-UPS
• EXHAUST
• C-V JOINTS
• A/C SERVICE
• LUBE & OIL
LAWRENCE
AUTOMOTIVE
DIAGNOSTICS
• COMPUTER DIAG-
NOSTICS
• FUEL INJECTION
SERVICE
• STRUTS &
SHOCKS
• BATTERIES
842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Drive·Lawrence
1995 Parkway Dental General Dentistry
Patrick O. Moriarty DDS • Sheryl Nettletch RDH Visit our new office conveniently located in The Parkway Plaza (next to Hy-Vee) 3514 Clinton Parkway STE. G • 832-2882
Brown's 1996 SHOE FIT COMPANY
Brown's 1996
SHOE FIT COMPANY
NIKE ROCKPORT
REEBOK MIA
EASTLAND NICOLE
FILA DEXTER
AND MANY MORE ...
829 Massachusetts
Lawrence, KS 66004 (913) 842-
3514 Clinton Parkway STE. G • 832-2882
Since 1911
---
MONDAY. AUGUST 18. 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.103, NO. 1
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
---
Tough road ahead
After a winning season last year, the Kansas football team faces more challenges now. Page1B
LOCAL
Summer enrollment up
Summer enrollment increased for the first time on the Lawrence campus since 1991. Page 6A
CAMPUS
He's the man with the plan
Grey Montgomery, student body president, envisions many changes for KU. Page 1C
OUT & ABOUT
Livin' it up
Lawrence teems with activities for students needing a break. Page 1D
FYI
Local whiz kid
Scott Konzem,12 year-old computer genius, is the first elementary student in Lawrence to build a homepage. Page 1E
INDEX
Sports ...1B
National News .11A
World News...16A
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.
Shulenburger tackles new tasks
Provost starts job with the support of his colleagues
By Lindsey Henry Kansan staff writer
A veteran player for the University of Kansas is taking a first swing at his new position.
David Shulenburger, former vice chancellor for academic affairs, was named provost for the Lawrence campus this summer, and he is impressing peers with his grasp on the new role.
"I am a big David Shulenburger fan," said Lindy Eakin, associate provost for support services. "He has a handle on the major issues. He is a team player that can pull the right people together to work an issue. He can make sure the ball is carried without having to involve 18 people to do one thing."
PETER SCHLEIDER
Studeburger a provost position combines the responsibilities previously given to the vice chancellor for academic affairs and the executive vice chancellor for the Lawrence campus. Chancellor Robert Hemenway created the position during last year's administrative reorganization to make
Shulenburger's provost
David Shulenburger
the University more efficient and responsive to student needs.
A University committee assigned to fill the office narrowed its selection to five finalists, and on June 27, Mesenham announced Shulenburger as the provost.
"I am a known commodity," Shulenburger said. "People have watched me in many positions. They had the full opportunity to evaluate me."
lehburger asked Shulenburg said he thought he got the job because of his experience with the University.
Shulenburger joined the faculty as an assistant professor of business in 1974. He held various positions in the School of Business, including undergraduate director and associate dean.
In 1982, Shulenburger was the recipient of the Byron T. Shutz award, which recognizes
excellence in economics education. After four years as associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, Shulenburger was appointed vice chancellor in 1993.
ganization whatspecialism.
"I want to make sure we leave this year with a strong advising program for freshmen and sophomores," Shulenburger said. "Additionally, I would like to see a solid faculty development plan where everyone would have an area to build and improve."
Though Shulenburger said he had pages of goals scripted for the year, he hopes to live out the potential of the administration's reorganization with specific focal points.
Shulenburger's ability to deal with complicated issues has impressed Hemenway. "He continually gets people involved with decision-making, and I have no doubts as the semester progresses he will be on campus interacting with students," Hemenway said.
.
Leaving the nest, spreading her wings
LIVING THIN WAL-MART
Holly's new home in McColum Hall. Fonseca moved into McColum yesterday. See related story on 4A.
Holly Fonseca, right, Kansas City freshman, and her mother Nancy Fonseca, wheel furnishings and other belongings toward
Drug, alcohol penalties tougher
By Andrea Albright
Kansan staff writer
Penalties for some of the most common crimes committed by students will be more severe this semester.
The Kansas State Legislature has mandated stricter regulation for underage drinking and driving and stiffened the penalties for the use of fake identification and illegal drugs.
Joe Sands, Omaha, Neb., senior and Hashinger Hall resident assistant, said he worried that students wouldn't realize how severely their lives could be affected by the new laws.
"We want the residents to know about the fake ID laws," Sands said. "I was in architecture, and you can't get a professional license with a felony."
Penalties for driving under the influence of alcohol remain the same, but the state lowered the maximum blood or breath alcohol content for drivers under 21 to .02. A blood or breath alcohol content of .08 is the maximum for drivers 21 and older.
Linda Pritchard, office specialist for student affairs, said the laws were part of a crackdown on underage drinking.
Pritchard said her office cooperated with KU police to publish brochures for students and staff that outline penalties for using or distributing alcohol or drugs.
distributing drugs. Jon Long, assistant director of student housing, said the University's policy regarding drugs and alcohol remained unchanged. Alcohol and illegal drugs are not permitted in University housing.
University Housing Long said no formula had been set for punishing alcohol offenses. Incidents are dealt with by student housing judicial systems on an individual basis, and punishment depends
on a student's attitude.
"Some of the students are very apologetic and cooperative," Long said. "Others become belligerent and end up vandalizing or fighting. Ninety percent of the conduct problems in the dorms have their origin in irresponsible behavior caused by alcohol."
Long said that when drugs were involved, KU police always were called.
The law that determines sentencing for selling, distributing or manufacturing opiates and narcotics such as cocaine and heroin also has increased from four years and three months to six years and 10 months. The $300,000 fine will remain the same.
Sands said he believed that alcohol usage was more prevalent than drug usage in Hashing but that students were caught for smoking marijuana just as often as for having alcohol.
Russell student speaks at Dole's nomination
Freshman addresses Republicans on behalf of presidential hopeful
By Neal Shulenburger
Kansan staff writer
Jessica Irwin, Russell freshman, plans to major in history and political science. She got a little practical experience in both on Wednesday night.
Hence he introduced Irwin and fellow high school valedictorian C.J. Mahoney seconded the presidential nomination for Bob Dole. They spoke in front of 2,000 to 3,000 people who surrounded a stage in front of the Russell County Court House, where Dole once practiced as an attorney. NBC and PBS estimated that 50 to 90 million people viewed the speech on television.
Despite the audience size, Irwin said she was not nervous.
"I was while I was waiting for them to call my name. But when we were announced and the crowd erupted, it was so much fun that I forgot to be nervous," she said.
was so interruff that Horgun's Mark Anzotti, producer of Irwin and Mahoney's speech, selected the pair. Irwin said Anzotti told her the Republicans had planned for only one of the two to speak. However, he liked the way both read the prepared script.
While most scripts for political conventions are written by outside speech writers, Mahoney and Irwin wrote their own.
"The Republicans had sent us something," Irwin said. "But neither of us liked it. We preferred to make it a little more personal. It had to be something that we really fel."
the country." He will carry with him the principles and insight gained from a lifetime of service to our country," Irwin said. "He will also carry with him a part of this place.
Their speech touched on Dole's service and dedication to his country but emphasized his ties to Russell.
"Bob Dole says that Russell is a constant source of strength, where he learned to feel deeply for God, country and family."
try hardly. The speech drew rave reviews from Doris Kearns- Goodwin, a commentator on the PBS/NBC convention coverage team.
"I like the idea of connecting to the roots the person came from and showing that sense of enthusiasm," Kearns-Goodwin said.
As a reward for the speech, Irwin was given a ticket to San Diego, where she watched the convention.
"I am told the final speeches are the climax of the convention," Irwin said. "They are supposed to rival any sporting event. I believe it. An opportunity like this doesn't come along often. I'm glad I got a chance to be a part of this."
Getting caught with a fake ID now a felony
By Dave Breltenstein
Kansan staff writer
Getting into bars and having fun is the only reason so many underage KU students use fake identification cards.
But in an effort to crack down on underage drinking, a new Kansas law effective July 1 makes it a felony instead of a misdemeanor to use or possess a canceled, revoked, suspended, fictitious or fraudulently altered driver's license. The penalty increased from a maximum of six months in jail and a $1,000 fine to a maximum of nine months in jail and a fine of up to $100,000.
"College students are more interested in having fun than with getting caught," said Alicia Garnica, Lawrence senior.
Jerry Donaldson, researcher in the
Legislative Department of the Kansas Attorney General's Office, said the new law was uniform across the state. Kansas decided to make the law tougher, and everyone must take part in correcting the problem, he said.
"Liquor store clerks and bouncers are not required to report all attempted uses," Donaldson said. "But the only way to prove they were shown a fake ID is to confiscate it."
Businesses are held responsible for checking all identification cards because they can lose their liquor license if police discover underage customers purchased alcohol from them," he said.
People who loan ID's now are prosecuted with the same laws as those who attempt to use the ID.
Garnica, however, said stricter laws would not deter students from using
fake ID's.
Most of her friends used fake ID's before they turned 21, but they used them to enter local establishments where ID's were checked at the door, she said. They did not use fake ID's to buy alcohol at a liquor store because older friends could do that.
"We'll pull someone over and they'll accidentally pull out the wrong one." Keary said. "Or they will be trying to cover it up. Then we question them about it."
Sgt. Chris Keary of the KU police said officers did not specifically search students hoping to find fake ID's, but they did come across them by accident.
"A felony stays with them forever. Job applications ask about it. Government checks will turn it up." Keary said.
We practice age discrimination.
NO 1 B. NO SALE. NO WAY.
Brian Flink / KANSAN
Patterson Liquor, 846 Illinois St., has made a display of fake identification cards that minors have attempted to use at the store.
1
2A
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Mondav. August 19. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O1
Cultures need not clash
International students adjust to life in America but ask for understanding
By Nicholas C. Charalambous
Kansas staff writer
International students' first weeks at the University of Kansas are filled with enthusiasm, hope and wonder, if they overcome initial cultural misunderstandings.
Mukesh Dhamala, Biratnagar, Nepal, doctoral student, encounters difficulties, from understanding native speakers and the expressions they use, to figuring out how to use a coin-operated vending machine or using a phone card for a call home.
; Gerald Harris, director of international student services, said that most students adjust well, but that American students should be sensitive to challenges international students face.
"International students have the same
Pia Heinonen, Helsinki, Finland, sophomore, who led a panel discussion about culture shock during international student orientation, said most students are concerned about how Americans perceive them.
expectations as Americans: to be academically successful and socially accepted," Harris said. "Every time someone is belittled because of where they come from, the way they speak or dress, the tendency is for them to shorten their time of stay."
The video Coldwater, shown during the session, depicted situations where an awareness of cultural differences was necessary. For example, an African student was passed over in line at Burger King because he couldn't understand the server's question. "for here or to go?"
He got his hamburger, but only after another customer explained what the server meant.
"Americans often don't understand the needs of foreign students unless you point them out," Heinonen said.
She advises Americans to:
Be patient, speak slowly and clearly. Avoid complex expressions and idioms. If confusion
persists, be prepared to paraphrase or write
things down.
Be aware that body language is not universal. Indian students, for example, sometimes shake their head rather than nod for affirmation. Also, students from some other cultures use fewer verbal cues to show they follow what's being said.
Ask students directly if they would like to go out, rather than ask "What are you doing this weekend?" In other countries it's not customary to invite yourself.
Cultural problems are worsened by Americans who are ignorant of geography and other cultures, Heinonen said. For example, she was asked whether there were showers in Finland. But international students should avoid negative assumptions, be patient, and be ready to tell Americans about their home countries, she said.
Kristin George, Vienna, Va., senior, spent an exchange year in Tier, Germany, from fall 1994 through summer 1995. Her advice to international students is simple.
"If you want a full experience, you need to get to know Americans," she said.
American pie still good enough to eat
Foreign students flock to KU to learn in rewarding way
By Nicholas C. Charalambous
Kansan staff writer
The world landed on the University of Kansas' doorstep last weekend as international students from countries spanning six continents came to claim their piece of the American dream—large or small.
For Kok-Siong Lim, it's the convenience of using a microwave, to cook rice.
"You don't need to wash the pot and hang it in the sun to dry," said Lim, a Tanjong Sepat, Malaysia, graduate student.
Michalis Michael, Episkopi, Cyprus, graduate student, said the United States is the land of everything.
"The American dream is out there, I don't care what anybody says," he said.
Last week, 180 new students from
37 countries arrived for a five-day orientation, said Gerald Harris, director of international student services. He estimated that 100 more will enroll for the beginning of the fall semester. The highest proportion of international students will come from the Far East and South Asia, he said, reflecting that region's economic strength.
Almost all students agreed that education was the key to attaining their goals. Mukesh Dhamala, Biratnagar, Nepal, doctoral student said the University gives him the opportunity to study the medical applications of physics, such as computer imaging of the human body. Up to now, his access to computer technology has been limited, but he is determined that it won't stop him from succeeding.
"I'm very confident I will keep up with other students," he said.
Tugce Sarikus, Istanbul, Turkey, freshman, said that the University was her big chance to get a job when she returned to Turkey, where even graduates have difficulties finding work.
"The American dream is out there.I don't care what anybody says."
"Whenever people ask me where
Michaels Michael
Episkopi, Cyprus, graduate student
Where are foreign students from?
I'm studying, and I say, "U.S.", they just say 'Wow,' or they don't believe me," she said. "They wish they could study here."
But Sarikus also came to the United States to improve her English and to meet people from different races and cultures, she said.
However, it will take some getting used to.
An estimated 300 international students will enroll for the fall semester. Below is a breakdown by world region of international students enrolled in Spring 1996.
Africa ...43
Australia ...28
Central America ...72
Eastern Europe .47
Western Europe ... 229
Far East ... 603
Middle East ...112
South America ...135
Total ... 1,682
South Asia ...413
Sea World boat flies into crowd injuring 23 people
The Associated Press
AURORA, Ohio — Many of those who crowded into the grandstand for the water ski show on Geauga Lake at first wondered if what they were seeing was part of the stunt.
Then they heard screams and saw blood.
A red speedboat that was supposed to splash the audience hit a guardrail Saturday and soared into the capacity crowd of 4,000 in the grandstands at Sea World of Ohio, injuring 23 people.
Authorities from Sea World and the Ohio Division of Watercraft examined the boat and spectators' videotape. The state agency concluded last night that the accident was caused by mechanical failure.
Ski shows at four Sea World theme parks run by the Busch Entertainment Corp. were canceled Sunday, although other attractions remained open.
The watercraft division didn't specify the mechanical failure. An agency representative, Dennis Evans, said further details would be released when available.
"It looked to me like someone lost control, even though at first I thought it was a stunt. Then people started screaming, and I was stunned," said Don Glassmire, 44, of Coudensport, Pa.
We are reviewing all of our safety procedures at the parks in Anurora, 22 miles southeast of
Cleveland, and in San Diego, San Antonio and Orlando, Fla., Sea World representative Fred Jacobs said.
It was the first major accident at the Ohio park in 27 years, and the first in 20 years of water-ski shows, said Ted Molter, another park representative.
In the 35-minute Baywatch water ski show, an actor who appears to be operating the boat leaps from it to perform a rescue. The boat — actually piloted by a driver hidden from view — is supposed to veer toward the stands and splash the crowd before speeding out into the lake.
Instead, the boat hit the guardrail in front of the grandstand.
John Clark was sitting about 12 feet from where the boat slammed into the bleachers.
"When it landed, my only thought was that the thing is on top of people and that we need to do something." Clark said.
He joined about 15 people, including actors from the Baywatch water ski show, who rushed to lift the 18-foot inboard motorboat off the trapped people.
Most of the injured got hospital treatment for cuts and bruises; five remained hospitalized.
The most seriously hurt, Jeff Willis, 36, suffered a head injury and was listed in critical condition at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Cleveland, nursing administrator Gerri Estok said.
ON CAMPUS
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsay at 841-4585.
KU Meditation Club will meet at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Beng Beh at 864-5513.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
3A
New honors director announced
Schowen to replace current acting director
By Eric Weslander
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas honors program received a boost this summer when Barbara Schowen, associate professor of chemistry, was appointed director. Schowen replaces acting director James Carothers, who served for one year after the death of director Michael Young in 1995.
"Barbara Schowen continues the tradition of commitment to excellence in undergraduate education that Michael Young exemplified so well." Carothers said. "Her appointment signals a welcome new stability for the program."
versity for 19 years as a lecturer and then as an associate professor
Schowen has been with the Uni.
in the school of pharmacy. Since 1984, she has chaired the KU Health Sciences Committee that advises pre-medical, predental, pre-veterinary and pre-optometry students.
The honors program. a
P
part of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, admits 250 to 300 students a year. It provides challenging classes, advising and social events for its students.
Barbara Schowen
The director is in charge of honors curriculum and administration as well as determining standards for admission and completion of the honors program. Schowen will work directly with associate directors Mary
"Basically, the director gives academic and intellectual guidance." Klavder said.
Klavder and Sandra Wick.
Sally Frost-Mason, dean of liberal arts and sciences, made the appointment this summer. She said Schwen's most notable achievement was her exceptional work in advising.
"She has helped many, many students get into medical school," Frost-Mason said. "This is a logical extension of work she has done here for many years."
The college is divided into three areas: natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities. Klayder is a doctoral candidate in English, one of the humanities. Wick has a master's degree in religious studies, a social science.
With a professor of chemistry one of the natural sciences — as director, the program will be wellrounded, Wick said.
"It's nice to have people from varying disciplines," Wick said. "Part of our goal is to get students
"Barbara has been a resource for years.Now she can help students even more."
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Mary Klayder
associate director, honors program
connected to professors in their disciplines."
Schowen was involved extensively with the program before her appointment as director. Her involvement included advising, teaching honors classes and reviewing scholarship applications, Klaydersaid.
"Barbara has been a resource for years," Klayder said. "Now she can help students even more."
CLAS to reward 4.0s with a T-shirt
Any student with a knack for art and a little creativity will have a chance to pick up extra spending money this fall.
Frost-Mason holds contest for design
Sally Frost-Mason, dean of liberal arts and sciences, announced Aug. 9 that she would offer $250 for a T-shirt design that represents the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Anything relating to the arts and sciences is fair game for the design.
By Eric Weslander
Kansan staff writer
Entries should be submitted to the college office at 200 Strong Hall.
The T-shirts will be given to freshmen and sophomores who earn a 4.0 grade point average, Frost-Mason said.
Frost-Mason said that the purpose of the T-shirts was to reward good students and to raise awareness of the college.
"My hope is to see lots of these across campus," she said. "Hopefully, this will be something that students will love to wear."
Ware Flora, Decatur, Ill., sophomore, earned a 4.0 GPA last semester. He said he thought that a feeling of achievement was the best reward for good grades.
"I think it's a nice idea," Flora said. "But I probably wouldn't call home and tell my family I got a T-shirt."
Justin Loburgio, Littleton, Colo. sophomore, said that shirts from the schools of engineering and law are always seen on campus. He said it would be nice to give the college more recognition.
"Also, if I had a 4.0, it would be nice to be recognized for a job welldone," he said.
841-PLAY
1029
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Poll says most Americans disapprove of gay wedlock
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Six in 10 Americans disapprove of gay marriages, regardless of whether the couple is male or female, according to a recent poll.
The survey sponsored by the polling company Louis Harris and Associates also found that 61 percent disapprove of a female couple who live together adopting a child, and 65 percent disapprove of two men who live together adopting a child.
Previous polls have made it clear that a majority of Americans, especially older people and men, oppose giving homosexuals a legal right to marry.
The Harris Poll released today approached the question a little differently.
Opposition to homosexual marriage ran 57 percent to 60 percent in an Associated Press poll in June.
It asked separately about male and female same-sex couples and also asking respondents to say if they don't feel strongly about the issue.
On single-sex marriage between two women, 63 percent disapproved, 11 percent approved and 25 percent didn't feel strongly.
Opinions were almost identical about male marriage: 64 percent disapproved, 10 percent approved and 24 percent didn't feel strongly. About 2 percent were unsure.
The poll was taken by phone July 15 to 21 among 1,004 adults.
Results have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
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Mondav. August 19. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students' return spells extra business
By Ashlee Roll
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The shelves at SuperTarget are growing empty. As an employee restocks one shelf, a mother cries to her daughter, "You need a broom," and empties another.
This is the week many businesses have been preparing for all summer; the week that KU students return to Lawrence.
"A lot of stuff starts taking off, like plastic storage containers," said Doug Mead, seasonal team leader for SuperTarget, 3201 Iowa St. "The students definitely have an impact."
UNIVERSITY OF KU
KU
Mead said SuperTarget had prepared for the rush of students by stocking up on small appliances and housewares.
Jacque Jenkins, Towanda junior, and her mother, Connie, pay for back-to-school items at Wal-Mart, 3300 Iowa St. Students are purchasing supplies to prepare for school, which begins Aug. 22.
Employees at other discount stores in Lawrence have noticed items ranging from mini-blinds to comforters flying out of the store and have been preparing themselves for the influx of students as well.
"This is our busiest weeks," said Phil Michael, assistant manager of Wal-Mart, 3300 Iowa St. "Our sales increase extremely."
However, students don't see themselves as an impact, they just need
to buy necessities like sheets and towelracks.
"The reason I'm buying this stuff is because I'm not from here and buying it is a lot cheaper than shipping it," said Lindsey Batogowski, Chicago sophomore.
And that's exactly what many local businesses are counting on.
Discount stores are not the only businesses in town that prepare for students.
Even local banks have begun to court students seriously, realizing that students can create a huge increase in their business.
During August, Mercantile Bank, 1807 W.23rd St., increases its business by 75 percent, said Devon Haase, a temporary personal banker hired specifically to help deal with increased business.
To entice student bankers, they are giving away everything from cookies to T-shirts.
Mercantile Bank also has planned to greet students in the unions to help them open new accounts, and the bank has put up fliers in the residence halls.
"For the next three weeks we have extra help in all our branches to deal with the amount of students coming in," Haase said.
Like Mercantile Bank, Free State Brewing Co., 636 Massachusetts St. also has added employees to make the transition from summer to fall easier.
"We get hit right before school with parents coming in with students and students coming in by themselves to go out before school starts," said Debbie Fey, manager. "Our business goes up, I guess, anywhere from 15 to 20 percent. There is definitely a noticeable difference."
Renter's insurance saves trouble
By Andrea Albright Kansan staff writer
Shana Everhart, Lindsborg junior, thought her belongings were safe in her apartment. Last spring, she and her roommate Emily Morgan, Overland Park sophomore, found out the hard way that they weren't.
Everhart and Morgan's apartment was burglarized by a neighbor who took jewelry, including Morgan's great-grandmother's wedding ring.
Police caught the burglar, but the stolen items were not recovered. Unfortunately, they also were not insured.
"It was my first apartment out of the dorm," Everhart said. "I didn't know I needed renter's insurance."
Students who have valuables stolen may feel violated again when they realize they won't recover money for them.
Some students assume their parents' home owner's policy will cover their valuables at school, but this is not always the case.
Insurance agencies have renter's policies that will cover replacement costs for stolen items. These policies also provide liability insurance for pets, waterbeds and loss-of-use insurance.
"My belongings weren't covered by my parents' policy," Everhart said. "They said I had to have renter's insurance."
Liability insurance covers a student's financial responsibility in case of damage or injury to themselves or the apartment. This policy pays medical bills for pet bites and covers damage done by broken fish tanks or leaky waterbeds.
Chris Hutchens, Farm Bureau insurance agent, said students had several options when buying insurance that would meet the individual needs of the situation.
Although agencies offer cheaper policies that cover the depreciated value of lost or stolen items, Hutchens recommended policies that cover the full cost of replacing belongings. Replacement policies pay for new items regardless of their age or condition, while actual cash value policies will pay only the value of the item at the time it was lost.
"A replacement policy makes a big difference," Hutchens said. "On one claim, the difference can be several thousand dollars."
Christine Patterson, manager of Heatherwood Apartments, said the apartment's leases didn't require insurance unless a student had a waterbed.
"Liability insurance protects the student in case the bed leaks all over," Patterson said. "We do recommend renter's insurance in case of a break-in for all of our renters."
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Coming September 1,1996
UDKI THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
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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.
1
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
5A
KU on Wheels overhauls route and leadership
Bob Grunzinger replaces graduating Vanderslice
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan staff writer
KU on Wheels did some tinkering during the summer with hopes that route changes would reduce the budget crunch and make the bus system more efficient.
"We didn't make a lot of big changes," said Ron Vanderslake, who was the bus system coordinator until Aug. 1. "We just made a few
small changes that would help us in the budget."
One of the biggest changes was hiring a new coordinator of KU on Wheels. Vanderslice, who was coordinator for two years, gave up the position on Aug.1 because he graduated. Bob Grunzinger, chosen by last year's transportation board, will be replacing him.
"I did what I could while I was here," Vanderslice said. "Now I'm
Other changes will affect the bus routes.
leaving."
The Saturday Express, which ran between Ninth Street and 33rd Street, no longer exists. It has been cut for many reasons, Vanderslice said.
"It wasn't used as much as we thought it should or could be," Vanderslice said. "It was one of the things we thought we could cut to help lower the budget."
The bus system has also modified the East Lawrence route.
The buses will no longer run all the way along Haskell Avenue. Instead, they will travel only to 19th Street
"We didn't make a lot of big changes. We just made a few small changes that would help us in the budget."
Ron Vanderslice
and Haskell Avenue.
The route has been shortened because it was not being used by enough people. Vanderslice said.
Students like Elisabeth Hartz.
Ron Vanderslice
Former bus system coordinator
Kansas City, Kan., junior, are bothered by the shortening of the route.
"I'm not going to whine about it, but I am moving out there to live with a friend of mine," said Hartz.
who is moving to the 19th and Haskell area. "It will make things more difficult not having the bus come as far as I thought it would. I will probably have to buy a parking pass now."
One thing that did not change this year was the cost of a baja pax.
Passes purchased on the options form cost students $55. Passes not purchased on the options form are $60 per semester for students and $75 for non-students.
The buses will begin running on Aug. 19 and will be free to ride that day. After the 19th, however, individuals must have a bus pass or pay $1 per ride.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence bookstore boasts its specialty as no specialty
Dusty Bookshelf buys, sells variety of used books
Brian Flink / KANSAN
By Liz Musser
Kansan staff writer
As students rummage through piles of used textbooks this week, Jana Leep will be sorting through her own stack of books.
The image shows a person standing in a room filled with stacks of books and papers. The individual appears to be engaged in an activity involving the materials, possibly sorting or organizing them. The background is dark, suggesting it might be evening or nighttime. There are no visible signs of motion or light source other than a lamp on the left side.
Leep, manager of The Dusty Bookshelf, a used-book store at 708 Mass. St., doesn't buy textbooks, but those are the only type of books that do not interest her.
Jana Leep, manager of the Dusty Bookshelf, 708 Massachusetts St., puts protective covers on used books she just bought for the store.
"Our speciality is that we have no speciality." Leen said.
The Dusty Bookshelf, which opened in late June, is Lawrence's newest used book store. Leep said the bookstore's goal was to fill the niche of a general used book store. While Lawrence has a variety of used book stores, most of them are fairly specialized, Leep said. The Dusty Bookshelf tries to have a little bit of everything from western to science
fiction to foreign language.
"We've tried to create a high-volume, high-selection, high-quality used bookstore," Leep said.
The Dusty Bookshelf is particularly proud of its children's section, a genre that many of their customers have said the used book market lacked.
John Hood, owner of J. Hood Booksellers, 1401 Mass, said he agreed that The Dusty Bookshelf was filling a new niche in Lawrence.
"There is a lot of stuff of a general nature that we have very little of or just don't handle." he said.
His store specializes in scholarly and out-of-print books.
Originally a hole-in-the-wall store in Manhattan, The Dusty Bookshelf started to grow when Diane Meredith, a cashier at the store, bought the shop from the owners.
"The store was literally the size of a closet," Meredith said. "After two years, we had to move to a different place."
As business continued to pick up, Meredith was forced to move the shop to an even larger locale. As the books continued to collect, Meredith realized that Lawrence had a gap in the used-book market for a general used bookstore. While keeping the
store in Manhattan, Meredith brought some books to Lawrence and opened a new store.
The Dusty Bookshelf buys and trades both paperback and hardback books. Leep said she uses the cover price of paperbacks to determine value. Customers get 25 percent of the
cover value in trade or 10 percent in cash. With hardbacks, Leep determines the selling price and then gives the customer half the price in cash or trade.
The Dusty Bookshelf is open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday.
New aquatic center to stay open longer
On his first visit, Kevin McGinn was impressed with the new Lawrence Aquatic Center.
By Liz Musser
"It's more like an amusement park than a pool," said McGinn, Emporia sophomore.
Kansan staff writer
Completed July 20, the Lawrence Aquatic Center, 727 Kentucky St., is no longer an average city swimming pool.
Two water slides overlook one side of the pool. On the other side is a zero-depth entry area which makes the pool both handicap-accessible and manageable for children. This area also features fountains and spray tubes that swimmers can use to soak their friends. The facility has a diving well and six lanes for lap swimming.
Students just returning to town won't have to rush to try out the new center before Labor Day. The Lawrence Aquatic Center has extended its closing date to Sept. 22. Starting Aug. 22, the hours will be modified to fit the school day. Monday through Thursday, the center will be open 3:30 to 9 p.m., Friday 3:30 to 10 p.m., Saturday 1:30 to 10 p.m. and Sunday 1:30 to 9 p.
manager of the center. "Because we opened so late this year, we thought it would be nice to give everyone some more swim time."
Lockwood said that daily attendance at the pool had become four times more than before the renovations and that he had noticed more high school and college-age patrons as well as more families from small, neighboring communities.
"we stayed open later a few times in the past," said Bob Lockwood,
"We have a lot of the features of a water park, but the admission prices make it possible for an entire family to come in here and spend the day," Lockwood said.
Admission prices at the Lawrence Aquatic Center are $1 for children
Lockwood said he had heard of similar facilities in other towns that charge as much as $10 for admission.
"When we have giant crowds, the large deck space and variety of activities, make it so that everyone can still have their own space," Lockwood said.
And despite the increased attendance, the new facility is never cramped for space. Lockwood said.
The Lawrence Aquatic Center cost $2.88 million dollars to build and was financed by a county-wide sales tax.
Enrollment for summer classes increases by 164
Delgado was one of 6,656 students who took classes at the Lawrence campus, which is 164 more than last summer's enrollment.
"I liked the relaxed atmosphere during the summer," said Delgado, San Jose, Costa Rica, graduate student. "It was a lot more fun than during the regular semester."
KU experiences its first enrollment increase since 1991
Delgado said the main reason she stayed in Lawrence was because it took too much time and money to get home.
By Dave Breitenstein Kansan staff writer
Maria Delgado spent her summer having fun in the sun. But she did not leave Lawrence. She took classes and enjoyed the lower stress.
Delgado said her reasons for taking summer classes were different from other people's.
"Some students are taking courses that they may have missed during the school year," she said. "Others may need one or two more classes to graduate, so they're trying to get it done now.
"Compared to the spring semester, campus was pretty empty," she said.
But since 1991, summer enrollment has dropped by 854 students.
Rich Givens, assistant provost,
said there was no one one cause for
the increase in enrollment this
summer.
"We don't have any way of analyzing what reasons students have for taking summer classes, but we're glad they do," Givens said.
The University's fall and spring enrollment has declined for the last few years, so any increase is welcome, he said. Givens said that the University did not advertise extra for summer classes but that some individual departments might have.
Summertime school
1996 marked the end of a sixyear slide in summer enrollment at KU's Lawrence campus. Shown below are each year's summer enrollment totals.
1991 7,510
1992 7,085
1993 7,019
1994 6,832
1995 6,492
1996 6,656
First summer enrollment increase in six years
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
"We publish the Timetable of Classes to tell them what's available. but that's it." he said.
Summer classes cost 6 percent less per credit hour than last fall, but Rich Morrell, university registrar, said that was not the reason enrollment was higher.
"When new tuition rates are established, they begin with the new school year," he said. "Summer rates were the end of one year and fall rates start a new year."
Givens said students always have several options in the summer. They can work to earn money for school, relax or take classes.
"It depends on if a student needs to earn money or not," he said. "Summer is an opportunity to do whatever is best for the individual."
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Monday, August 19, 1996
7A
Easy access is Crowe's goal
Vice chancellor searches for ways to gain information
By Lindsey Henry Kansan staff writer
KANSAN PHOTO
Someone at the University of Kansas wants to electronically ease the lives of students and faculty. As the dean of libraries and the newly appointed vice chancellor for information services, William Crowe said he wanted accessing information to be as easy as driving a car.
William Crowe
"We want to make our systems second nature to everyone on campus, and with the proper navigation, that can happen," he said.
Crowe's appointment as vice chancellor of information services stems from the administration restructuring. Chancellor Robert Hemenway said the need for Crowe's position grew out of the demand for modern campus information services.
There is never a great university without access to information. This position is designed around the teaching and researching mission of the University." Hemenway said. "The combination of the dean of library services and vice chancellor is an innovative position, one only three or four universities have tried."
Jerry Niebaum, executive director of information technology services, was a member of the committee that brought Crowe to the University as dean of libraries six years ago. Niebaum said he was excited to see his peer fill the position of vice chancellor.
"I believe this position is a natural marriage between libraries and computer services," Niebaum said. "He brings an interesting perspective to the job. I am constantly impressed with his interest in details. He is not making a broad brush. He considers all elements for policy-making."
COMPUTER CENTER
"My first goal is not to do any harm. I want to have a better sense of the needs of the University and no leap to conclusions," Crowe said. "I want to be out, I want to be involved. I want the campus information systems to reach much broader."
This electronic campus community would not substitute the human community, but add value. Grove said.
Crowe said his main objective for the future was to open electronic communication on campus.
"I want to promote an electronic community," Crowe said. "There are varying electronic systems on campus and it can be difficult to find someone. I would like to see an overlying system to connect them all."
"Traditional technologies are not just catalogs and indexes in the library anymore," he said. "Technology now is so visual, and provides students with full documents. We want to provide connections in classrooms, lounges and in homes so students and faculty will have access to everything they need to succeed."
The University's Computer Center at Sunnyside Avenue and Illinois Street is students' main source for computing. Several labs also can be found in buildings around campus.
Center provides links
Computing accounts help many students stay in touch
By Bradley J. Brooks
Kansan Staff Writer
With a flick of her fingertips, Jacinta Calabro can let her friends and family back home in Melbourne, Australia, know how her first few days at the University of Kansas have been going. Calabro can do this because of the e-mail accounts available at the University's computer labs.
"I think all international students would say e-mail is very important. I will write to my friends and whomever else I need to talk to. But I will also use the lab to type assignments, and the Web I ampose." said Calabro, a junior
Like Calabro, many KU students find that the computer labs and services on campus provide support and help in educational and personal arenas.
Jerry Niebaum, executive director for information technology services, sees a specific goal for a computer lab.
The information technology services oversees the University's printing, networking and telecommunications, computing and academic services
"We are here to support research and instruction. We want students and faculty to use our technology to improve their learning," Niebum said.
The information technology services' main clients are students who use dial-in accounts. These accounts allow students with a home computer and a modern to access University computing resources, e-mail and the Internet from their personal computers.
Students can inquire at the center about getting dial-in or e-mail accounts.
Although many of labs on campus are open to all students, some are departmental and open only to students in specific majors.
Other labs are in residence halls and for residents only, and in some cases only to residents of the specific halls.
Students with questions can go to the help center in the computer center, call 864-0410, or e-mail to question@ukans.edu. The help center is open 8 a.m. to midnight Sunday through Thursday and until 10 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.
Computers help students complete papers, projects
Shoppers should weigh their needs
"I was looking for something to write papers on, but I knew I might want it for other things later on," said Carrie Williams, Baldwin sophomore.
By Bradley J. Brooks Kansan staff writer
It is this inability to look into the future that can leave students stranded with a useless machine after a short time period. Thus, carefully matching a student's needs with a computer is essential and economical.
College and computers are two words that have become almost inseparable. Selecting the right computer can be the key to college success.
"It depends on what a student wants to do," said Darin Juhnke, a technician at UNI computers, 2449 S. Iowa St., which sells Apple products."If they just want to write papers, they can buy a used computer and save some money. If they want to do labor-intensive work, they can buy a Performa or Power Mac and spend $2,000."
If perusing the classified ads for a used computer is not what students want to do, they have two options on or near campus for purchasing a computer.
The Union Technology Center in the Burge Union offers Apple computers at discount prices, and the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, carries IBM-compatible machines.
"Because we can only sell to students, faculty and staff, we can buy computers at educational prices," said Steed Bell, coordinator of the Union Technology Center.
The center offers a range of Apple products, from Powerbook laptops to the Power Mac family of desktop, mid-range computers and printers.
The Jayhawk Bookstore offers an alternative to students who do not want an Apple product.
"The availability of the software is what people like about the PC," said
"I was looking for something to write papers on, but I knew I might want it for other things later on."
Carrie Williams
Baldwin sophomore
Buying a computer
Burge Union Technology Center
Powerbook 190cs:...$ 999
PowerMac 5260:...$1,800
Performa 6290:...$1,900
Jayhawk Bookstore
Pentium 100:...$1,659.95
Pentium 133:...$1,839.95
Pentium 166:...$1,978.95
Bo Solomon, supplies manager at Jayhawk Bookstore.
Solomon said the bookstore could sell only software at discounted educational prices.
The question of what computer system — Macintosh or PC — is best for a student is an important one.
"A Macintosh is all mouse-driven," luhnke said. "You only need the keyboard to type. In that aspect, first-time users should lean toward the Mac."
However, some IBM users disagree.
"As the software gets better andbetter, the mouse is used more," Solomon said. "I will agree that Macintosh has done better with graphics, but I don't think you see that much difference with the new software."
Despite the differences in opinion of what system is best, many students make choices based on their experiences.
"The PC I use is just something that I am familiar with," said Melissa Quigley, Edina, Minn., junior. "I think people stick to one system and support it."
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Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students find adequate pay in campus jobs
University employment helps make ends meet
By Ashlee Roll Kansan staff writer
For many students, college is a challenging time, both mentally and financially. When money runs out, the majority of students turn to the most logical solution: employment.
However, in a college town such as Lawrence, finding a job may be easier said than done.
Each year, many students are shocked at how hard it is to find a job. Jobs seem scarce because a large number of people are trying to fill a finite number of positions.
"When summer started there was hardly no one applying, maybe one applicant a week. Now it's up to three or four a day," said Kiran Jayaram, sales clerk at Streetside Records,
1403 West 23rd St.
Although finding a job in Lawrence may seem like an impossible task, many students decide that the solution is working for the University of Kansas.
"It's easier to find a job through the University than wandering around town," said Jordan Shelton, Hill City senior, who works for the Kansas Geological Survey. "And once you get a job with the University, it is easier to switch jobs within it."
"It's easier to find a job through the University than wandering around town."
Students may find that the University caters more to their academic needs than other jobs. With job boards in the Burge
Jordan Shelton Hill City senior
and Kansas unions and job fairs, it is easier to stay informed about potential employment.
But all jobs boil down to one thing: money.
to work on campus, the pay is not bad.
And for students who choose
Shelton said he makes $5.75 an hour, and Jayaram, a new employee at Streetside Records, will make $5 an hour.
And as many college students know, 75 cents can equal three packs of Ramen noodles.
The University employs a large number of students, many of whom work where they live.
Students work at the front desks or academic resource centers of residence halls.
Many University-employed students' choice to work on campus goes beyond necessity. Many find that convenience and camaraderie with fellow students play an important part in their choice.
"I like it because I am closer to campus, and I get to work with people who are my own age," Shelton said.
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Monday, August 19, 1996
9A
Lied's world-class acts
1996-97 schedule showcases performances from abroad and from the United States
By Adam Darby
Kansan staff writer
The Lied Center is bringing performers from around the globe to Lawrence in its 1996-97 series, Lighting up Kansas With the Power of the Arts.
"The Lied Series is proud to be bringing work of national and international importance right here to Northeast Kansas," said Jacqueline Davis, director of the center, when she announced the season in April. "This season lights up with the best American performers and taps the creative power of a global network of artists from cultures as diverse as Tibet, Australia, Japan and Russia."
"So as people come into the event, they will be stepping into a Russian village. They'll have booths there, and there will be a sampling of crafts and foods," she said. "People can see what it would really be like to come into a Russian community."
Indeed, the audience will walk through Russian life when they enter the Russian Village Festival on April 9.
"They're going to create a Russian fair in the lobby," said Karen Christilles, director of public relations for the center.
Inside, folk groups from five regions of Russia will dance. sing and perform on Russian folk instruments.
The series fits in to what the center and its founders consider to be its most important role — bringing together audiences and performers from all walks of life.
From Japan comes Sankai Juki, a dance company that performs Butoh, a Japanese art form that evolved in the 1960s as an expression of humanitarian awareness by the Japanese post-war generation. The troupe will present Yuragi, or In a Space of Perpetual Motion, a seven-scene act, on Oct. 22.
"Sankai Juku were here before, in the opening season of the Lied Center." Christilles said.
"That's perhaps the group the people have most continued to talk about," she said. "It's absolutely fascinating."
The group's dance form employs slow movements, white makeup that covers the body and a strong emphasis on facial and body expressions.
POLYTECHNOLOGY
A dancer from the Japanese troupe Sankai Juku performs Butoh, expressing humanitarian awareness. The dance company will perform Oct. 22 at the Lied center.
Jamie Partridge, Manhattan junior and committee member, said the committee tried to provide the audiences with a diverse group of performances.
The Lied Center also will present ballets from Australia and Russia, a European string orchestra and a dance ensemble from Tibet, as well as an assortment of acts from the United States, such as The Who's Tommy and STOMP, a percussion group that performs on everything from cigarette lighters to trash cans.
This year's acts were chosen by a programming advisory committee made up of faculty members, Lawrence citizens and students.
"We provide the acts like Sound of Music, which appeal to a wide range of audiences," Partridge said. "But we also wanted to branch out and present programs from all different walks of life."
Going away to college can strain high school sweethearts' bonds
Feelings of loneliness spending time apart can cause changes
By Megan Jordan Kansan staff writer
Love endures all things. Well, most things. When students leave for college, they often find that their romantic high school relationships cannot survive under new circumstances.
Tony Kitchen, volunteer for Headquarters Counseling Center, 1419 Massachusetts St., said frustration in relationships often stemmed from not seeing each other on a regular basis.
Feeling alone can prove more devastating than feeling guilty for wanting to date someone else, Kitchen said. Headquarters encourages students to weigh the pros and cons of a relationship before deciding to end or to continue it.
When Brooke Warde, Greeley,
Colo., sophomore, came to the University of Kansas last fall, she left her boyfriend at home.
The two had decided to continue their long-distance relationship, but it took only a couple of weeks for
Warde to realize the decision was a bad one.
"I got here and I wanted to be able to date other people," she said. "The problem was, I wanted him to be faithful, but I was not willing to be faithful myself."
Warde said it was tempting to date others because she was not worried about her boyfriend finding out.
During winter break the couple broke up.
"I was ready to go home and marry him, but I got here and thought, 'Brooke, what are you doing?' " Warde said. "There's so much more, so many other people."
There are couples that successfully carry on long-distance relationships while in college.
Going away to college while involved in a serious relationship at home is not always smart, Warde said. Instead, students should be open to dating other people.
However, this does not mean it is impossible to maintain a high school relationship, she said. A couple just needs a strong base before going different directions.
Yeoman said that they realized their relationship was bound to change from high school and that it had helped them deal with new problems and situations.
relationship.
Mike Chaloud, dery senior, and Jennifer Yeoman, dery junior, have been dating for four years and agreed that college had strengthened their
"We knew we would not always be the exact same high school sweet-hearts we'd always been," she said. "We wouldn't be holding hands in the hall. We knew we would mature and grow and our relationship would change."
Dating in college requires a lot more understanding and trust than in high school. Chaloud said.
"He may not like what I have to say, and I may not like what he says, but we are a strong enough couple to deal with it," she said.
Each person has to realize that their partner is going to have friends of the opposite sex. Chalou said.
Yeoman also said that honesty is essential to maintain a solid relationship.
Most importantly, after overcoming the changes college brought to their relationship, both Chaloud and Yeoman said they could withstand any obstacle.
"We've learned we really want to be together," Yeoman said. "It's not just a high school thing."
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10A
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY AILY KANSAN
Communication needed to handle roommate stress
Relationship should evolve through time
By Megan Jordan Kansan staff reporter
A new school year means new classes, new books, new professors and for many students, a new roommate. Getting acquainted can be stressful, but steps can be taken to make your living situation successful.
"You need to recognize that part of college life is learning to meet and live with people different than you," said Jon Long, assistant director for housing. "Learn to appreciate these differences instead of seeing them as a problem."
Jim Kreider, a clinical social worker for Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS), suggested that students view their roommate as a business associate, not a close friend.
"Don't pretend you're a psychoanalyst and try to analyze their personality and motives," Kreider said. "Treat it as a business relationship, negotiating how needs fit together."
Kreider said negotiating and compromising are the keys to a happy rooming situation. Most importantly, talk about living habits before deciding to live together. Are you a studier or a party animal, neat freak or slob, outgoing or shy, night owl or early bird? If you are sharing costs, make a clear agreement about how money will be handled.
"Even people who choose to live
together often find they are not compatible." Long said. "Your best friend is not necessarily the best person to live with."
Only 10 to 15 percent of students who live in student housing request a specific roommate.
Everyone who does not want a single room is assigned a roommate by the housing department. The roaming applications include a handful of personal questions, including your year in school, smoking habits and a request for a quiet floor.
"As a public institution, it is important we don't select student roommates based on criteria that might be considered discriminatory such as race or background," Long said.
Based on this policy, there are few guarantees that students assigned to live together will be truly compatible.
Howard Lubliner, Highland Park, Ill., sophomore, said becoming accustomed to a roommate was hard.
"You don't always sleep at the same time or go to class at the same time or somebody always wants to study with music on," he said.
The University also offers room contracts that students can fill out once they move in. The contracts go into greater detail about living habits and help roommates know what to expect from each other.
"We encourage students to get to know their roommate and not make snap judgments," Long said. "Let the dust settle. Use your resident assistant or proctor when problems occur. They are people with training on conflict resolution. If you do have problems, do not let them get to the blowing point."
Freshmen frightened of first year
By Adam Darby
Kansan staff writer
Heather Wilkinson, Leavenworth freshman, is worried about coming to the University of Kansas.
"It makes me a little nervous because I don't know anyone here," she said.
She has a reason to be concerned. One out of four freshmen will not return as sophomores.
From 1983 to 1993, the number of freshmen at the University who did not return has hovered around 20 percent, according to the Office of Institutional Research and Planning. But in the fall of 1993, that figure jumped above 25 percent, where it has remained.
So the University is helping freshmen adjust to university life through the Student Assistance Center and the newly created Office of Freshman-Sophomore Academic Experience.
"This summer we had two four-week seminars, which included an orientation class and an actual three-hour academic class," said Deborah Boulware, Office of Freshman-Sophomore Academic Experience director. "The students were able to get their feet wet with academics and the size of the campus."
In addition to expanding orientation classes, the office is working to put more emphasis on academics in the residence halls by moving some faculty offices and classes into the halls. Boulware said.
"But the key for the freshmen is to try to learn what's available on campus by attending as many of the orientation sessions as possible," she said. "And if they are having trouble, they should let somebody know, so they can get help."
That's where the Student Assistance Center comes in.
"We know people struggle with the size of KU," said Kim Grassmeyer, associate director of the center.
She said that avoiding the pitfalls of the freshman year was better than trying to climb out of them later. That's why the center offers a series of academic workshops, which begin tomorrow.
"In high school, you didn't have to manage your time, it was managed for you," she said. "The workshops teach you how to personalize and internalize study habits."
But Amy Westerman, Louisville, Ky., freshman, who toured the University with Wilkinson, said she wasn't concerned about the academic challenge or the size of the campus.
"I've gone to tiny schools all my life," she said. "I'd like to get into a large, diverse school."
"You just want to get away from your parents," Wilkinson said, laughing.
Easing freshmen's woes
The Student Assistance Center offers a three-part academic workshop series called Your Academic Success:
1:30 to 3 p.m., tomorrow, 3139 Wescoe Hall
Part I: Time Management and Reading
Part II: Memory and Note Taking 1:30 to 3 p.m., Wednesday, 3139 Wescoe Hall
Part III: Preparing for Exams
7 to 8:30 p.m., Wednesday, Aug.
28, 330 Strong Hall
This workshop series will be offered again beginning Sept. 26.
For more information about academic workshops, contact the Student Assistance Center at 22 Strong Hall or call 864-4064.
Professor expects polls to be crowded
Access to registration easier with new bill
By Neal Shulenburger Kansan staff writer
When voters cast their ballots on Nov. 5, they may find the polling place a little more crowded than usual.
"I expect the turnout to be better than has been," said Allan Cigler, professor of political science.
The presidential contest between Bill Clinton, Bob Dole and Ross Perot is expected to draw a higher percentage of the population to the ballot box.
"An offyear election will usually get 30-35 (percent), while a presidential year will get 50-55," Cigler said. "In 1992, the turnout was even higher. Ross Perot brought in an extra 5 percent with his third party."
Several other key offices will be up for grabs on election day. Both of Kansas' U.S. Senate seats are vacant. Republican Sam Brownback and Democrat Jill Dokking are vying for the seat emptied when Dole
resigned. Republican Pat Roberts and Democrat Sally Thompson are competing for the other Senate seat.
Both positions are high profile and are expected to draw interest from some otherwise disinterested voters, Cigler said.
Douglas County voters will also vote on two races for the U.S. House of Representatives. In the 2nd District, Democrat John Frieden faces Republican Jim Ryun. Democrat Judy Hancock and Republican Vince Snowbarger are running in the 3rd District.
Several important state, city and county offices will also be filled on Nov. 5.
Changes in the laws governing voter registration may make it easier to participate in the Nov. 5 general election. At the state level, relaxed laws on registration drives are
Four Kansas Supreme Court justices will either be retained or dismissed, and every state congressional seat will be decided as well. In Douglas County, the sheriff, treasurer, clerk, and two commissioners will all be decided in the election.
expected to help more people meet the Oct. 21 deadline.
"In the past we would have a few week-long voter registration drives in one place," Douglas County Clerk Patty James said. "Because the organization who wanted to hold the drive had to get all of their volunteers trained and had to give advance notice to the public, that was the best way to do it. Now any organization can come in and pick up the forms and just go out and do it. That should allow a lot more organizations the get involved and more people to get the opportunity to register."
"With Motor Voter enacted, I expect turnout to be around 60 percent," Cigler said. "Of course more people were able to register because of it, but there's no telling how many will actually show up at the ballot box."
Another change, the Motor Voter bill, allows people to register to vote when they receive their driver's license. The bill was enacted in Jan. 1995, so Motor Voter's ability to get people to the ballot box will have its first test in this election.
Where to register
County Clerk's Office, 1100 Mass. St.
Lawrence City Clerk, 6 E.6th St.
Independence Inc., 1910
KinderCare, 2333 Crestline Drive
County Health Dept., 336 Missouri St.
Veteran's Affairs Office, 745 Vermont St.
- SRS Office, 1901 Delaware St.
- Audio Reader Network, Baehr
- Audio-Reader Center
Cottonwood Inc., 2801 W, 31st St.
Love Garden Sounds, 936 1/2 Mass St.
Receive a registration form via mail by calling 1-800-262-VOTE
Registration sites are generally open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. You need to be a U.S.citizen, Kansas resident and at least 18 years old. Last day to register is Oct. 21.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
11A
Campaign compromising
TOPEKA—Jill Docking, the Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, on Friday offered to sit down with her Republican opponent Sam Brownback to work out some campaign rules.
She said she wants to negotiate the details of what she calls the "Kansas Compact," an attempt at voluntary campaign reform.
Brownback campaign officials appear interested.
They just wish they had not learned about it from the news media.
"My proposals are based, in part, on campaign finance reform efforts that have languished among professional politicians."Docking said.
Docking proposed that both campaigns limit their expenditures to $1 million each, and that no contributions be accepted from political action committees.
Enforcement of the compact would be up to a board of no more than seven members of the media, facilitated by the Kansas League of Women Voters.
Brownback has been a strong supporter of campaign reform since he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1994.
He decided to run for the open Senate seat rather than seek election to the House.
REGIONAL NEWS
The Brownback campaign issued a statement
saying representatives would meet with members of the Docking camp.
TWA 800 victim found
WINFIELD — The body of a former Winfield resident who died in the explosion of TWA Flight 800 has been found, family members said.
The body of Rod Foster, 61, was found Thursday, said his sister, Gail White, of Ponca City, Okla.
Foster's body was to be returned to Winfield for burial after being released by the Suffolk County, N.Y., medical examiner, she said.
Services for Foster were scheduled for 11 am. Tuesday.
Foster, who had been living in Sherman, Conn., was chief pilot and operations officer for Dassault Falcon Jet Co.
A retired Navy pilot, he was on his way to Bordeaux, France, to pick up a new corporate jet for his company.
The family has started the Rod Foster Memorial Fund to help young people learn how to fly.
TOPEKA—Kansas Lottery officials said players will have better chances of winning larger jackpots in a new game that begins Sunday.
New lottery game
The new Kansas Cash game, with minimum jackpots of $100,000, will replace the Kansas Cash Lotto game that offered a minimum jackpot of $60,000.
"We made the changes in the game based on our players" wishes for larger jackpots and more ways to win," said Greg Ziemak, Kansas Lottery executive director.
From then on, drawings will be held on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays.
The first drawing for the Kansas Cash game will be Monday.
Kansas Cash players who match all six numbers drawn will win or share the jackpot prize, which is paid in one lump sum.
Players will pick six numbers from one to 35, and hope to match those numbers against six that are drawn.
That means the prizes will vary according to the sale of tickets.
Kansas Cash ticket holders that match four or five of the six numbers will win pari-mutual prizes.
People who match three numbers will receive a $1 Quick Pick Kansas Cash ticket.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Gorilla rescues boy after 18-foot fall
Female primate carried boy with head injury to waiting zoo officials and medical help
The Associated Press
BROOKFIELD, Ill. — A 150-pound female gorilla came to the rescue of a 3-year-old boy who fell into a private exhibit at the Brookfield Zoo, cradling the toddler in her arms and bringing him to zoo keepers.
The boy fell 18 feet Friday onto concrete in an area with seven gorillas.
The boy suffered critical head injuries, authorities said.
While zoo-goers screamed in horror, Binti Jua, an 8-year-old female gorilla carrying an infant on her back, picked up the boy and placed him near a door where zoo keepers could retrieve him, zoo spokeswoman Sondra Katzen said.
"Another gorilla walked toward the boy and she kind of turned around and walked away from the other gorillas and tried to be protective," said Carrie Stewart, who witnessed the rescue in this suburb 14 miles west of Chicago.
spokeswoman, said zoo keepers sprayed water on the Tropic World exhibit to keep the other gorillas away from the boy.
Melinda Pruett-Jones, another zoo
"They controlled the animals beautifully.
"And they had an emergency medical crew working on the little boy as soon as they possibly could," she said.
Pruett-Jones said Binti, who was raised by humans, "showed maternal-like behavior. I can't say that it was a typical response, but there have been other instances in which gorillas have shown maternal behavior to humans."
The boy, who was at the zoo with his family, was alert and crying
when paramedics took him out of the exhibit about 2:30 p.m.
His name was not released.
his name is Swahili for "Daughter of Sunshine," is a Western Lowland gorilla.
Because she was raised by humans, she had to be taught nurturing skills when she gave birth 17 months ago, the zoo said in a statement.
Katzen said she did not know how the boy got over a 31/2-foot railing near the exhibit.
Loyola University Medical Center spokesman Michael Maggio said the child was in critical condition Friday night.
AIDS nursing home opening doors in KC
Hope Care Center one of four in country
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY—A nursing home just for AIDS patients is about to become reality thanks to what its medical director calls a labor of love by hundreds of people.
The Hope Care Center, set to open Aug. 30, will be one of only four
nursing homes in the nation dedicated to serving people with AIDS.
"This has been a true labor of love," said Sharon Lee, a Kansas City, Kan., physician who treats hundreds of the area's AIDS patients. "I feel it every time I walk into here."
Lee was among those who began
System.
Lee, who will be the home's medical director, expects Hope Care Center's 16 beds to fill quickly, both with patients recovering from AIDS-related illnesses and those nearing death. Since January, the home has been getting about 10 calls a week from people across the country asking to be admitted.
"This has been a true labor of love."
The closest nursing home like Hope Care Center is in Indianapolis. The other two AIDS-specific nursing
Sharon Lee Kansas City, Kan. physician
dreaming of such a facility for the Kansas City area five years ago. Now, after all the organizing, fundraising, hard work and a few false starts, things are ready to go.
More than 1,000 people gave money, furniture, equipment and supplies. Except for a few medication carts, all the furnishings in the home were donated. Money came in amounts ranging from a dollar to six-figure grants from the J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation and the Daughters of Charity Health Care
Volunteers were putting the finishing touches on it in preparation for a dedication ceremony that was held Saturday. In all, more than 400 volunteers from churches, youth groups, schools and professional associations were involved in the project.
homes are in Seattle and New York City. "Families were begging us to get to this place open," Lee said. "It's an extraordinary amount of, not just emotional, but physical energy to help someone who is dying." Some AIDS patients have families or friends who can't —
Some AIDS patients have families or friends who can't — or won't — care for them. Finding con-
"In those situations we have people dying at home alone," Lee said. "We hope that won't happen in Kansas City anymore."
The idea for Hope Care Center grew out of conversations between Lee and nurses Jane Crnkovich and Kathy Heison when they worked together at a nursing home. They became concerned when the nursing home decided to end its program of providing AIDS care in a wing dedicated to patients with the disease.
The home is in a renovated building that used to be a Christian Science nursing home before falling into disuse years ago.
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Gain Professional Newsroom Experience Working For One of the Country's Top College Newspapers
The University Daily Kansan is looking for dedicated students interested in building a portfolio of published work.
Students interested in the areas of sports/news reporting, graphics and design can gain professional journalism skills as a Kansan Correspondent.
All students in all majors are encouraged to apply. For more information contact Amy McVey, Kansan Correspondent/Tab Editor, at 864-4810 or pick up an application in 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Real World Experience
12A
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Dole ties Clinton in Newsweek's latest poll
Survey suggests that convention boosted ratings
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — GOP presidential nominee Bob Dole is statistically tied with President Clinton in a
Newsweek poll conducted as the Republican National Convention came to a close.
Dole trails Clinton by only 2 percentage points — within the margin of error for the poll.
If the election were held today, Clinton would lead with 44 percent of the vote, Dole would receive 42 percent and the candidate nominated by Ross Perot's Reform Party would receive 3 percent, according to poll results.
A poll Newsweek conducted the
previous week had Dole trailing Clinton by 20 percentage points.
Newsweek said 933 registered voters were interviewed by Princeton Survey Research Associates for the latest poll — 465 of them on Thursday night, the day Dole accepted the GOP presidential nomination. The remaining 468 were interviewed Friday night. The overall margin or error was plus or minus 4 percentage points.
Fifty-six percent of those who watched Dole's acceptance speech
Thirty-five percent said what they saw or heard about the speech gave them a more favorable impression. Newsweek said 21 percent ended with aless favorable opinion.
said they now have a more favorable view of him, the magazine said.
"The Republican National Convention played an obvious role in heightening Dole's popularity," the magazine said. "Other factors which are helping Dole include his choice of Jack Kemp as his vice-presidential
running mate and Dole's tax cut proposal.
According to the poll, 32 percent of all registered voters were more likely to vote for Dole because of his choice of Kemp. Dole's tax-cut proposal would make 35 percent more likely to vote for him.
Newsweek said 74 percent of Americans see the economy as one of the most important issues that will help them decide whom to vote for next year. Seventy percent said crime was
one such issue, and 64 percent said the illegal drug problem would influence their decision.
In contrast, 33 percent said abortion was an important issue.
Kemp's changed positions on denying benefits to illegal aliens and ending racial preferences made 11 percent more likely to vote for Dole and Kemp. Twenty-eight percent said it made them less likely to vote for the Republicans, and 56 percent said it didn't make much of a difference.
Perot again will accept Reform Party's nomination
The Associated Press
VALLEY FORGE, Pa. — Using the information-age tactics and anti-establishment message that attracted a strong following four years ago, Texas billionaire Ross Peret is embarking on a third-party bid for the presidency based on rallying voters fed up with the Republican and Democratic parties.
venue, CNN's Larry King Lives show.
Perot was flying to this historic community yesterday to accept the nomination of the Reform Party, which he won in a mail, telephone and internet poll. After addressing his supporters, Perot was reaching out to voters through a familiar
ment.
In his first bid, Perot spent nearly $60 million of his own money, most of it on television commercials in which he appeared with pointer and charts to argue that neither Republicans nor Democrats were acting effectively to balance the budget and reduce the size and power of govern-
The 19.7 million votes Perot received in 1992 qualified his new party for $30 million in federal campaign funds. But he has not decided whether to accept the money, which would limit him to spending $50,000 of his own funds.
Perot was the choice of a vice presidential candidate.
Another major decision facing
Perot received the nomination three days after the Republicans nominated Bob Dole for president.
Former Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm, who lost his bid for the endorsement of the party Perot founded and financed, said he was
committed to building a third party but wasn't sure he'd vote for Perot.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
I'm going to sit on my back porch for a couple of weeks and really think about this," he told The Associated Press. While repeating his support for the Reform Party, Lamm said it has been "too much in the shadow of Ross Perot."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
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Faulty weather system reports snow in June
Critics oppose installation of $100,000 units
The Associated Press
LUBBOCK, Texas — Federal auditors criticize it, air traffic controllers condemn it and even the Federal Aviation Administration admits there are flaws in its Automated Surface Observing System.
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1. The unmanned weather monitor
2. lst stations have reported snow in
the summer and poor visibility on clear days. The stations also have missed thunderstorms.
Nevertheless, the FAA continues to install the equipment at airports nationwide.
"It doesn't work," said Ben Phelps, spokesman for the National Parks
Air Traffic Controllers Association.
"I'll tell you point-blank: I think it's a gigantic waste of money, and I'm concerned someday someone might get hurt."
Under pressure from the Clinton administration to streamline, the FAA and the National
Weather service must to install the $100,000 units as replacements for costly human weather observers. More than 900 units should be in place by 1999.
The system measures wind speed and direction, temperature, humidity, visibility, cloud height and precipitation. A computer processes the data and radios it to pilots, using an electronic voice. It also sends the readings to the nearest air traffic control station.
"The basic elements that a pilot needs for takeoff and landing are there," said the system's program manager, Vicki Nadolski. "They might have been used to getting something more than that, and of course they don't want to lose that."
But FAA officials said the system could not accurately identify thunderstorms, freezing precipitation, lightning and virga — rain that evaporates before reaching the ground.
An April 1995 audit by the General Accounting Office, the investigative
"I think it's a gigantic waste of money and I'm concerned somebody might get hurt." Ben Phelps National Air Traffic Controllers Representative
arm of Congress, found that the system, ASQS, was notorious for underestimating potentially hazardous weather.
"ASOS is performing neither as intended or expected," the office concluded. "While many specified
Floyd Gilliland, a weather observer in the Texas Panhandle's southeastern corner until the FAA revoked his contract last month.
requirements are being met, the system does not provide certain information that human observers do and users say is important to aviation safety, weather-related decision making and climatological analysis."
said he had noticed several problems with the system at Childress, Texas. Among them were total shutdowns when lightning struck nearby and a report of snowfall on a balmy June day.
Nadolski said human error often
was to blame for abnormal readings.
A search of NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System, initiated by The Associated Press, shows aviation professionals have reported anonymously more than 150 complaints about the system and related systems, many of them since the office's audit.
A pilot flying into Richmond, Va., in December wrote that the system was worse than useless because it misread the altitude of cloud cover, forcing him to miss an approach.
A Denver controller said in June that the system reported quarter-mile visibility for two hours when visibility actually was better than a mile.
Among the remarks:
The system's Operations and Monitoring Center in Silver Spring, Md., had a kinder assessment of the system's performance in an April 1996 report.
"ASOS itself performs very well;
some of the sensors have been problematic but those are being improved," wrote Richard K. Thigpen of the National Weather Service.
The controllers' union has called for the abandonment of the system, citing an incident in Houston 2 1/2 months ago.
Residents tuned to television and radio stations on June 2 were more aware of a violent thunderstorm than were controllers at Houston Intercontinental Airport, who said the system told them the weather was stable.
The system has a mixed reputation in the general aviation community, which generally uses airfields without towers or conventional weather monitoring.
Military plane crashes in Wyoming
"It's tough to badmouth the system when the pilots are getting something extremely valuable at so many more locations," said Drew Steketee, spokesman for the Frederick, Md.-based Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association.
Eight crew members secret service agent dead after presidential vacation
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A military plane providing support for President Clinton slammed into a steep mountainside just after taking off late Aug. 17 from Jackson, Wyo., where the president had been vacationing. Rescue workers found no sign of survivors.
One Secret Service employee and eight crew members were believed to have been aboard the plane, which burst into a fireball in rocky, remote terrain in the Grand Teton range, White House spokeswoman April Mellody said yesterday morning. And Lt. Cmdr. Karen Jeffries, a Pentagon spokeswoman, said the Air Force had confirmed that eight of its personnel were listed on the manifest as being on the flight.
A National Park Service spokeswoman,
Roberta D'Amico, said rescue workers on foot
and horseback arrived at the crash site about 4:30 a.m. yesterday and found wreckage still smoldering but no survivors.
Clinton, who had left the area by helicopter more than five hours earlier, returned safely to the White House yesterday morning after a nine-day vacation. He was notified of the crash early yesterday by Evelyn Lieberman, deputy chief of staff.
A Clinton administration official said the pilot had reported mechanical difficulties and had started to return to the airport, but others cautioned against speculating on why the plane went down.
At the Pentagon, Jeffries said early yesterday that the Air Force was dispatching specialists for the search and rescue mission from Hill Air Force Base in Utah.
Heintz said the plane was en route to John F.
Arnette Heintz, a spokesman for the Secret Service, said the Secret Service employee on the plane was a physical securities technician who was part of the broad presidential protective team. Heintz said foul play was not considered a factor.
Kennedy Airpo rt in New York and carried equipment used, in support of the president's travel. Clinton was scheduled to fly to New York later veste davi.
The plane was i equipped with both voice and data recorders, said Master Sgt. Sandra Pishern at Dyess Air Force Base near Abilene, Texas, where the plane was based.
The crash occurred mid-morning at Sleeping Indian Mountain in a popular landmark known for a craggy rock peak shaped like an Indian chief laying or his back. It is located 12 to 15 miles outside of the Jackson airport amid the Grand Teton range, northwest of Jackson Hole.
"To me it loc ked like a fire brewing on Sleeping Indian," s aid Tim Tomkinson, night manager of Buskb 3ard Cab Co. "I saw this guy at the airport who s aid he watched this plane take head south l , and go left and then it blew up into a ball of f lame."
Witnesses said fires lingered well after a mushroom-st taped fireball sent the starlit sky aglow.
The C-130 was a so-called car plane that is used to shuttle presidential vehicles.
Deadbeat dad's belongings auctioned
The Associated Press
COLCHESTER, Vt. — Marilyn Nichols Kane watched as crowds of strangers picked through her former husband's lavish belongings, put up for sale to pay the hundreds of thousands he owes her for child support.
"I cried yesterday," Kane said of her first look at the dinnerware, crystal, jewelry, antiques and appliances amassed by the man called America's worst deadbeat dad. "I saw the evil in this—I saw the decadence."
Her former husband, precious metals consultant Jeffrey Nichols, is in jail in New York City. He owes an estimated $640,000 in back child support and pleaded guilty last month to a federal charge of leaving a state to avoid the obligation.
The contents of the large Vermont house he shared with his new wife, Suzan, were auctioned off to about 350 people who jammed two large tents at a moving company warehouse.
"I knew there was going to be a lot of stuff"
said auctiongoer Ruby Huston of Shelburne.
David Lloyd said he didn't want to get involve in the issues of the case. "It's a court-ordered sale and I'm here for the bargains," he said.
After their 17-year marriage ended, she raised their three children. In the meantime, prosecutors said, Nichols moved from New York to Florida to Canada to Charlotte, Vt., to escape his $10,000 monthly support obligation.
Kane, a New York real estate agent, has called the auction perfect justice.
Nichols and Suzan filled their house with furniture, dishes, knickknacks, antiques and pseudo-
antiques. She died of cancer last summer. In February, a judge ordered Nichols' belongings sold to pay some of what he owes Kane.
"This was a man who valued things over people," Kane s aid. "I feel so appalled at what this man accumulated in five years when he was not supporting his children."
She said s everal women came to the auction not to bid b it to meet her.
"There are women here who came up and said I have no m one ony, Marilyn, but you are my hero," Kane said. "They said, 'I will not give up because you did not give up.'"
Behind her, Raymond Camire muttered loudly in disagree ment.
"It's all politics," said Camire, 48, whose own marriage ended a few years ago. "They take a man and make him into a monster."
Three professors killed by student
Gunman hid gun in first-aid kit before defending master's thesis
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — San Diego State University is struggling to cope with the killings of three popular engineering professors, gunned down as they prepared to review a graduate student's thesis.
"I have no answers or explanations for this loss of human life and potential," university President Stephen Weber told about 1,000 people gathered for an impromptu memorial Friday afternoon.
Police said Frederick Martin Davidson fired at least 23 bullets into the professors as they were preparing to review his thesis Thursday, the final hurdle before a master's degree can be awarded.
"He was upset that his thesis had been turned down previously and thought the professors were out to get him," said police Lt. Jim Collins.
Before the meeting Thursday, Davidson sneaked into the classroom and hid a semiautomatic 9 mm pistol and five spare 15-round magazines in a first-aid kit, police said. Just before he was introduced, he pulled out the weapon and started firing, police said.
Davidson, 36, was booked for
investigation of murder and was being held at the San Diego County Jail.
The campus was mourning the death of Chen Liang, Davidson's primary adviser, and professors Constantinos Lyrintzis and D. Preston Lowrev III.
"These are three of the best professors we have in engineering," said Ed Handley, who just earned a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering. "All of them were the most difficult, but they were the most popular. too."
Liang, 32, was collaborating with Davidson on research — funded by McDonnell Douglas Corp. — on metal alloys that can be twisted and retain their shape until heated.
He had more than 70 publications on so-called smart materials.
"He had all the makings of a superstar," said Pieter Frick, dean of engineering.
The father of two young sons, Liang had studied in Beijing and at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and University.
Lyrintzis, 36, was an associate professor of aerospace engineering and engineering mechanics at the university since 1987. He worked on a NASA project while a research assistant at Columbia University and held degrees from Columbia and the National Technical University of Athens.
Lyrintzis, of Greece, and his wife,
Deanna, married three years ago.
In June, they took their 14-month-
old daughter, Sophia, to Greece to be baptized.
THE NEWS in brief
Mandela won't seek second term
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — President Nelson Mandela formally told his party he won't seek re-election in 1999, the African National Congress
said vesterdav.
Mandela, 78, has repeatedly said he believes he is too old for a second term.
seek the party leadership again, came during a weekend meeting of the ANC's top decision-making body.
His formal announcement that he will not run in elections scheduled for 1999 and that he would not
Earlier this year, Mandela endorsed Deputy President Thabo Mbeki as his choice to take over the
presidency. Mbeki is also Mandela's deputy within the ANC.
Mandela became president in 1994 following South Africa's first all-race election.
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14A
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
By Jeff Ruby Kansan staff writer
Area movie theaters and video rental stores provide KU students and locals with practically all movie genres, covering everything from big-budget blockbusters to hard-core adult films.
"We tend to get a lot of testosterone-charged action movies," said Kevin Frost, assistant manager of Varsity Theatre, 1015 Massachusetts St. "But we also had The Bird Cage here for a couple months, and it did really well."
Liberty Hall, 636 Massachusetts St., is the place for independent, art house or foreign films, said Scott Bliss, who runs Liberty Hall's movie theater.
Bliss said Liberty Hall benefited from a loyal customer base.
"We have a lot of regular customers who will come to see what ever we're showing." he said.
Dickinson Theaters, 2393 Iowa St., and Hillcress Theatres, Ninth and Iowa streets, tends to show big-budget, high-profile movies, said David Inness, Dickinson's general manager. This summer's titles included *Independence Day*.
Or you can scrounge together five quarters and head to Cinema Twin Theatres, 31st and Iowa streets, Lawrence's only discount movie theater.
The Rock, Mission: Impossible,
Eraser and Twister.
Area video stores also offer varietv.
Priscilla's, 1206 W. 23rd St., an adult gift store, rents X-rated movies to patrons 18 or older, manager Brandy Anderson said.
Miracle Video, 1910 Haskell Ave. carries more than 1,000 laser discs, said manager Andy Tochtron.
"We have the largest selection of laser discs in Lawrence, including 20 adult films on laser," Tochtrop said.
Large chains such as Blockbuster Video, 1516 W. 23rd St., and Hastings Books Music and Video, 2000 W. 23rd St., have extensive selections of new releases and older titles.
Area grocery stores such as Dillons, 1740 Massachusetts St., 3000 W. Sixth St., and 1015 W. 23rd St., have new and old releases at discounted prices, including hundreds of titles for 39 cents.
Dickinson Theaters—2339 Iowa St.
$5.50, $3.75 matinee. Show first-run
feature films (Mission: Impossible, The
Rock)
Hillcrest Theatres – Ninth and Iowa streets. $5.50, $3.50. Shows first-run feature films (Independence Day, A Time to Kill)
Cinema Twin Theatres — 31st and Iowa streets. $1.25 all shows. Lawrence's only discount movie theater.
Liberty Hall Cinema - 646 Massachusetts St. $5, $3.50. Shows independent, art house and foreign films (Welcome to the Dollhouse, Kansas City)
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
Student Union Activities Films—Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. $2.50, $3 midnight showings. Shows cult favorites, second-run hits and classics.
■ Varsity Theatre — 101.5 Massachusetts St. $.5.50, $3.50. One theater showing mostly action movies.
VIDEO STORES:
Hastings Books Music and Video—2000 W. 23rd St. New releases $1.50, $2.50 on weekends. Older titles 49 cents, 99 cents. All rentals overnight. Extensive selection.
Blockbuster Video—1516 W. 23rd St.
All videos $3.50 to rent, new releases due back next night. Large selection of all genres.
■ Liberty Hall Video—646 Massachusetts St. New releases $2. Seventy-five cent discount videos. Overnight rentals
except Saturday, which has two-day rentals. Specializes in classics and foreign films.
North Second Video—910 N. Second St. New releases $3, others 99 cents. Overnight rentals except Saturday, which has two-day rentals. Mainstream titles.
Miracle Video—1910 Haskell Ave.
New releases are $3, others 99 cents
All rentals one night. Laser discs,
extensive adult selection, including
hard-core erotica.
Video Box~832 Iowa St. New releases $2,48, others 99 cents, or three movies for three days, $3. Overnight rentals. Soft-core Playboy/Penthouse erotica.
Priscila's -1206 W. 23rd St. $6.36 for first rental, 1 cent for second. All rentals one night. Strictly adult; must be 18 to rent.
■ Westridge Video—601 Kasold Drive $2.50 for new releases, $1 for other titles. Overnight rentals.
■ Dillons stores — 1015 W. 23rd St., 1740 Massachusetts ST., 3000 W.
Sixth St. $2.50 for new releases, $1 on Tuesday and Wednesday. Other videos
39 cents. All overnight.
Checkers Foods—2300 Louisiana St. New releases $1.39 Monday through Thursday; $2.39 on weekends. Other videos 98 cents. Overnight rentals.
Hy Vee Food and Drug Store—3504 Clinton Parkway, $1.99 for new releases, 99 cents for others. Overnight rentals.
Lawrence radio lures listeners
CTION
Jeff Petterson of Lawrence prepares to start his shift on the air at KLZR. Petterson has worked for the Lazer since he graduated from the University of Kansas in 1993.
| CITY | STATION | DIAL SETTING | PROGRAMING | TARGET AUDIENCE | CALL NAME |
|---|
| Lawrence | KJHK | 90.7 FM | College radio | 18 to 24 | The Hawk |
| Lawrence | KANU | 91.5 FM | Public radio | 25 to 49 | Kansas Public Radio |
| Lawrence | KLZR | 10.9 FM | Modern rock | 18 to 35 | The Lazer |
| Lawrence | KLWN | 13.20 AM | Adult contemporary | 25 to 59 | |
| Topeka | KJTY | 88.1 FM | Christian | 25 to 49 | Joy 88 |
| Topeka | KBUZ | 90.3 FM | Christian | | |
| Topeka | WIBW | 97.3 FM | Country | 25 to 54 | 97 Country |
| Topeka | KWIC | 99.3 FM | Adult contemporary | 18 to 34 | Quick 99.3 |
| Topeka | KDVV | 100.3 FM | Adult rock | 18 to 54 | V 100 |
| Topeka | KTPK | 106.9 FM | Modern country | 25 to 64 | Country 107 |
| Topeka | KMAJ | 107.7 FM | Adult contemporary | 25 to 54 | Majic 108 |
| Kansas City | KLJC | 88.5 FM | Christian | 25 to 54 | |
| Kansas City | KCUR | 89.3 FM | Public radio | general | |
| Kansas City | KKFI | 90.1 FM | Jazz, Talk | general | Community Radio |
| Kansas City | KCCV | 92.3 FM | Christian | 25 to 54 | |
| Kansas City | KMXV | 93.3 FM | Top 40 | 18 to 44 | Mix 93.3 |
| Kansas City | KFKF | 94.1 FM | Country | general | Country favorites |
| Kansas City | KCMO | 94.9 FM | Oldies | 25 to 54 | Oldies 95 |
| Kansas City | KTXR | 96.5 FM | Classical | 25 and older | Classical 96.5 |
| Kansas City | KUDL | 98.1 FM | Adult Contemporary | 30 to 55 | Cuddle |
| Kansas City | KQRC | 98.9 FM | Rock | 25 to 54 | The Rock |
| Kansas City | KLTH | 99.7 FM | Adult Contemporary | 25 to 54 | Lite 99.7 |
| Kansas City | KCFX | 101.1 FM | Classic rock | 25 to 54 | The Fox |
| Kansas City | KYYS | 102.1 FM | Rock | 25 to 54 | KY102 |
| Kansas City | KPRS | 103.3 FM | Urban Contemporary | 25 to 54 | Hot 103 Jamz |
| Kansas City | KBEQ | 104.3 FM | Young country | 18 to 54 | Q 104 |
| Kansas City | KCIY. | 106.5 FM | Jazz | 25 to 54 | The City |
| Kansas City | KISF | 107.3 FM | Modern Rock | 18 to 34 | Kiss 107.3 |
By Erin Rooney
By Ehl Rooney
Kansan staff writer
For 72 years Lawrence residents have tuned their ears and their dials to area radio stations.
Four stations now dominate the dial in the community and offer a variety of programming to Lawrence area listeners: KANU.KJKH.KIWN and KLZR.
"I think that most people like to listen to more than just one station," said Sara Embree, Davenport, Iowa, senior, a sales and promotions assistant for KLZR and KLWN.
"I think that it's good our community has a lot of different choices in the programming it offers." Embree said.
KLWN markets itself as the heartbeat of Lawrence.
KJHK is the college radio station in the community. Blake Hodges, Winnetka, Ill., junior, a development director for KJHK, said KJHK offered a different style of programming for KU students and Lawrence.
An adult contemporary music station,
KLWN also reports 13 hours of local and national news and one hour of farm news a week.
"KJHK gives smaller, lesser-known bands, who are just as good as the popular bigger bands, an opportunity to be played on the radio station," Hodges said.
Nicky Skubal, Iowa City, Iowa, junior and KJH promotions director, agreed.
"We play off-the-wall, not-so-standard songs," Skubal said. "It's an entirely different audio experience than it is anywhere else in Lawrence."
Skubal said that KJHK was diverse in the music it played, from jazz and hip-hop to rockabilly and funk.
Rob Klotz, a radio announcer, plays music and talk shows on the public, commercial-free KANU.
"I like bringing the good stuff to people," Klotz said. "We play the best symphonies, the most important jazz musicians and the premier news network in America, NPR."
KLZR, also known as the Lazer, is owned and operated by Lawrence Broadcasters Inc., the same company that operates KLWN.
The station joined the Lawrence airways in 1963.
KLZR plays modern rock. Jeff Peterson, an announcer for the station, identifies KLZR as a cutting-edge commercial radio business.
"I think anyone who lives in the Lawrence and Kansas City area should listen to the Lazer because we're a living, breathing station that really tries to focus on what's happening in the community." Petterson said. "The Lazer is one of the most progressive and leader stations in the music industry. It is 100 percent behind the Lawrence community, the town that I love."
College students tune in to Lawrence radio. Susan Hovorka, Topeka graduate student, likes to listen to '50s and '60s lounge music on the public radio station.
"When I'm in Lawrence, I listen to KANU and KLZR," Hovorka said. "I wish The Retro Cocktail Hour was on (KANU) some other time slot after seven on Saturday nights. I'd like to think I have some sort of a social life."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
15A
Summer provides us with much humility
By Jeff Ruby and Erin Rooney
Kansan staff writers
There were hits and pits in the entertainment industry summer.
The summer featured movies and songs that we loved, but we were embarrassed to admit it. As a result, between May and August, anyone who set foot in big movie houses automatically lost a minimum of 10 IQ points. And anyone who danced the Macarena lost 15 calories and dropped 200 ranks on the cool
"Yeah, I know Twister had no plot, but did you see that flying cow?"
We know these movies and songs insult our intelligence. The point is:we simply don't care.
charts.
We know we'd rather see Jackie Chan jump off a building, or the wacky hijinks of four identical Michael Keatons than watch one of those interminably dry Jane Austen adaptations.
mentary angst-ridden pop ditties than try to figure out what the Smashing Pumpkins meant when theysang, "The world is a vampire."
And we'd also rarer sing along with one of Alanis Morissette's ele-
We rationalized seeing Independence Day by sheepishly mumbling to our peers, "I was in the mood for something dumb," while simultaneously hoping no one saw us walk out of the theater pumping our fists, high-fiving our buddies and triumphantly chanting, "Earth! Earth! Earth!"
starring role in summer movies, we seem to have sacrificed some minor things in films: plot, dialogue and interesting characters. Once, we were satisfied with Elliott's flying bicycle in E.T.
Now, a cable car in The Rock explodes into a million pieces and we yawn and ask Mom to pass the popcorn.
As special effects command the
On the other hand, Mission:
Impossible, affectionately referred
to as Mission: Impossible to Under-
stand, has surpassed 2001: A Space
Odyssey as the most confusing movie of all time. Even though we couldn't follow Tom Cruise's movie, we tried to better understand the media attention he received regarding his sperm count.
But let's face it we've been herded by a shepherd simply doing his or her job as a promoter and we enjoyed every minute of it.
So let's stop feeling embarrassed about our entertainment choices and sign up for the John Tesh fan club.
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Can you draw better than this?
Diving
The Hill, a monthly magazine published by The University Daily Kansan, is dedicating a section of each issue to KU's artistically inclined. All students interested in publishing artwork, photographs, poetry or comic strips on the pages of one of the country's best college newspapers should submit an entry. Chosen entries will appear in the Fall 1996 issues of The Hill.
The Hill
Entries due by 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 3. First issue is Thursday, Sept. 12 For more information contact Amy McVey, Special Sections Editor at 864-4810.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
r
16A
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jordan's rising bread prices incites riots
40 are injured; protesters seek leader's removal
[ ]
AMMAN, Jordan — Street protests about the more than doubling of bread prices spread from the interior to Amman yesterday, the third straight day of disturbances that have left 40 people injured.
The Associated Press
Stone-throwing protesters in the capital and several southern towns have called on Prime Minister Abdul-Karim Kabari to step down.
He ordered the price increase as part of economic reforms advocated by the International Monetary Fund.
One-third of Jordan's 3.8 million people live below the poverty line, and many fear a rise in bread prices will result in across-the-board increases for other food.
In Anuman, police patrolled the streets as tight security was imposed in the Jofeh district, where protesters threw rocks and clashed with authorities early yesterday.
Political parties, trade unionists and some members of Parliament joined protesters in calls for Kabarit's resignation.
Parliament member Toujan Faisal said Kabariti made enemies of people and the Parliament because he ignored the pocketbook issues that worry Jordanians.
"The Islamic Action Front demands that popular calls to dismiss Kabariti be heeded," said a statement by the group, which has 16 parliamentary seats, the largest single block in the 80-seat legislature.
King Hussein, who has ruled this small, pro-Western kingdom for 44 years, vowed to counter protests with an iron fist and blamed the trouble on unidentified outside agitators.
Officials said privately that the monarch was referring to neighboring Iraq, Jordan's one-time ally.
nations soured in the past year when King Hussein criticized President Saddam Hussein's government.
King Hussein, who also is supreme commander of the armed forces, delivered a stern address when he appeared on television Saturday wearing a military uniform.
Relations between the two Arab
"The homeland needs you all and needs your vigilance, determination and solidarity to eradicate sedition," he said.
More than 300 people have been arrested since the protests began Friday in the southern towns of Kerak, Tafilia and Maan.
Clashes with police also were reported in the nearby villages of Mo'tah and Rubbah.
In Mouab, a Kerak suburb, witnesses reported that protesters set fire to a school Saturday night.
In a surprise visit to Kerak on Saturday afternoon, Hussein told army officers: "We are standing on a threshold. Either there is a state or there are outlaws and people who want to sabotage this . . . country."
The monarch, who commands widespread popularity, was warmly greeted by Kerak dignitaries who chanted "Long live Hussein and down with Kabari."
The protests in Amman and in the southern cities were reminiscent of riots in 1989 when the price of several consumer items rose sharply as part of an economic reform plan.
"The homeland needs you and all needs your vigilance..."
King Husseln King of Jordan and Supreme commander of Armed Forces
Tokyo police issue warning about art display's genitals
Statue's large, pierced penis seen as offensive and hidden by diaper
The Associated Press
TOKYO — The pierced, oversized genitals of an inflatable male statue are under wraps after police issued a warning that a court would find the artwork pornographic and illegal, a newspaper reported yesterday.
"Boballoon," a 20-foot tall inflatable vinyl rendition of the recently deceased lover of American artist Sheree Rose, has been on display since Aug. 10 at the Seaside Festa '96 Art Plaza exhibit in Tokyo.
It depicts Bob Flanagan with a nose ring, a gag in his mouth, and a black shirt.
And until it was partially covered Saturday, the statue also showed an oversized erect penis pierced with fishing hooks and hypodermic needles, the daily newspaper Asahi Shimbun reported.
The report could not be confirmed late yesterday because exhibit organizers had covered the statue's waist area with a large white sheet, much like a diaper.
The statue was a tribute to the pain Flanagan had overcome before he died. of cystic fibrosis in January, the newspaper said.
The exhibit's organizing committee originally persuaded Rose to display the work with the genitals deflaated. But on Aug. 9, the night before it was to go on display, she insisted on fully inflating it, the *Asahi* reported.
The next day, in a compromise measure, the committee put the statue on display fully inflated, but covered the genitals
while they consulted with Japanese artists about whether police would crack down on the statue.
The statue was completely exposed on Tuesday after experts from the arts community told the organizing committee they didn't think police would object. It remained uncovered until Saturday, a day after police issued their warning, the Asahi reported. quoting police officials.
Rose, who is based in Los Angeles, could not be reached Sunday for comment. She was quoted by Asahi as saying it was unfortunate that officials jumped to the conclusion that the statue was pornographic without fully understanding it.
Student protest in Seoul erupts in campus violence
The Associated Press
SEOUL, South Korea — Police raided offices of South Korea's largest student group Sunday and vowed to arrest some 1,000 student protesters holed up on the Yonsei University campus.
The students were among about 7,000 people who gathered last week for a rally to promote Korean reunification. Violence erupted on Aug. 12 when students protested the government's ban on the rally, which it said was pro-North Korean.
Students have refused to leave a science building on the campus unless police guarantee their immunity.
Seoul has declared it will shut down the sponsoring student group, Hanchongryon, by punishing leaders and participants to the fullest extent of the law.
Police on Saturday and yesterday raided seven branch offices of Hanchongryon, a
coalition of university student councils.
Some 12,000 police surrounded the campus, but authorities are reluctant to storm the building because it houses flammable and explosive laboratory chemicals.
Police have refused to provide the students with food or medical care.
"Mom, I'm hungry." "We want to go home," read signs hung outside the windows of the squat structure.
More than 1,000 students and police have been injured in the riots.
Some 1,700 students have been detained so far, but most have been released after questioning. Forty-seven have been arrested.
The government accused the group of supporting North Korean policies, including removing 37,000 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea. South Korea remains staunchly anti-communist after fighting the Korean War in the 1950s.
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- $ Discounted new Textbooks
- Low back to school supply prices
- Special priced KU garments
- One stop shopping for all class needs
- Free "Tradition on the Hill" T shirt with $200 min. purchase Not valid with any other offers or coupons
海
at the top of Naismith Hill
1420 Crescent Rd 843-3826
Free Parking
FrontDoor BusStop
BACK TO SCHOOL'96
Mead
HIVE-STAR
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PERFORATED PAGES
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mead
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A
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200
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3 SUBJECT SPIRAL
$3.99
Reg.$4.98 EACH
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assignments notebook
7 x 5 in.
50050
ASSIGNMENT BOOK
$1.25 EACH
Sale Ends
Sept. 14, 1996
00190
AVERY/
DENNISON
GLUE STIC,
Jumbo 1oz.
Reg.$1.75
$1.19
200
Filler Paper
15328
College Rule, 8 x 10 1/2
Reg.$1.39
EACH PKG.
Pentel
BK 90
R.S.V.P.
PENS
Reg. 98¢
EACH
00196
BORDEN
ELMERS SCHOOL
GLUE
Reg. 64¢
EACH
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Holds 8 1/2 x 11 in.
Paper
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Selected Art Supplies
• Winsor Newton Winton Oil Colors (6.75oz)
• Chamois Skin • Crayola Acrylic Paints
• Technical Pens • Wood and Plastic Palettes
• Frederick Strainer Strips • Drawing Boards
• Wyco Drawing Board Cover
• Sign Writers Bond (Rolls) • Blentang Layout
And Visualizing Paper
COUPON EXPIRES 9/14/96
20110
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$9.95 EACH
29058
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SANFORD
Clickster
Pencils
Reg. Value 79¢
49¢ each
Sale Ends
Sept. 14, 1996
00196
AVERY/
DENNISON
GLUE STIC,
Jumbo.1oz.
Reg.$175
$1.19
FINISH
NON-TOUCH
VOLUME
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NET WT. 15 g (0.5 oz.)
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OFF
Mead
Holds 8 1/2 x 11 in.
Paper
33054
6 for Only
2 POCKET
PORTFOLIO
99¢
Lawrence
Location Only
20% OFF
COUPON
Selected Art Supplies
• Winsor Newton Winton Oil Colors (6.75oz)
• Chamois Skin • Crayola Acrylic Paints
• Technical Pen • Wood and Plastic Palettes
• Fredrix Stretcher Strips • Drawing Boards
• Vine Drawing Board Course
• Sign Writers Bond (Rolls) • Blenco Layout
And Visualizing Paper
COUPON EXPIRES 9/14/96
20119
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$9.95
EACH
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(913) 865-5971
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214 S. SANTA FE
(913) 825-8151
SUPERIOR
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A Division of Superior School Supplies, Inc.
Back To School Hours
Mon.-Thur. Aug. 12-15 9AM-7PM
Mon.-Thur. Aug. 19-22 9AM-8PM
Fridays Regular Hrs. 9AM-6PM
Saturdays Regular Hrs. 9AM-5PM
Sundays Aug 4-25 1PM-5PM
COME INTO SUPERIOR AND REGISTER TO WIN A RAFT FROM YIKES!
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
17A
Liberians reach peace after seven years of war
The Associated Press
ABUJA, Nigeria — West African leaders have signed off on a peace plan to end nearly seven years of civil war in Liberia and hold elections next spring.
The Economic Community of West African States meeting in Nigeria also announced late Saturday that a former Liberian senator would lead a new interim government to be sworn in by the end of the month.
Yet another cease-fire in the war that has claimed more than 150,000 lives and left half of the country's 2.6 million people homeless will go into effect Tuesday.
More than a dozen peace accords have been broken during the war launched in 1989 by Liberian warlord Charles Taylor.
"I wish to seize this occasion to publicly accept this awesome responsibility," said former senator Ruth Perry in her acceptance speech. "We owe this pledge to God and to the Liberian people. We have
no illusions and shall endeavor to have no other loyalties to any group or faction."
Some Monrovian residents
"The whole world is now convinced that the men have failed us."
Nancy Smith Monrovian used clothes vendor
expressed optimism for peace with a woman at the helm.
"We have tried the men for more than five years," said Nancy Smith, a used clothes vendor. "The whole world is now convinced that the men have failed us."
Liberia's leading warlords, Taylor, Alhaji Kromah, George Boley and Roosevelt Johnson, all attended the summit and agreed to the new peace plan.
The plan is an amended version of an accord created last year that called for an immediate cease-fire and placed Taylor, Kromah and
Boley on an interim Council of State with three civilians. Summit members said a change in leadership on the council was needed and replaced chairman Wilton Sankawilo with Perry.
The cease-fire that went into effect with the seating of the interim government last September broke down in April when a stand-off between Taylor and his rival Johnson led to wide-scale fighting in the Liberian capital.
More than 1,500 people died during the bloodshed between April 6 and May 27. The fighting and looting prompted the U.S. military to evacuate about 2,000 foreigners from Monrovia.
Relief workers Sunday reported that 35,000 displaced people in an abandoned mining town about 50 miles outside of Monrovia are in grave danger.
The relief officials said at least five people were dying each day in Bong Mine of starvation, measles, severe diarrhea and malaria.
The interim government will oversee preparations for elections scheduled for May 30. It is supposed to hand over power to an elected administration by June 15.
Irish nationalist loses fight against extradition
Friends of Jimmy Smyth believe that he has been sent to Northern Ireland
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — An Irish nationalist's struggle to fight extradition from California to Northern Ireland may have come to an end Saturday.
Authorities at a federal prison in Pleasanton, Calif., confirmed reports that Jimmy Smyth had been removed at noon Saturday. But Ken White, an officer at Federal Correctional Institution at Camp Parks, said he could not say who took custody of Smyth or where he was taken.
Smyth's family members fear he was being extradited to Ireland but also were unable to get details.
"Extradition is a pretty safe assumption," said John Fogarty of the San Francisco chapter of the Irish American Unity Conference.
In a statement provided by the conference on Saturday night, Smyth said: "I leave this country full of thanks for the spirit and independence of the American people ... I am returning to a country I left unwillingly 12 years ago ... There are many who will seek revenge against me because I spoke the truth about Ireland."
His wife, Margaret Lynch, from whom he is separated, said she received a phone call from her husband's friend on Saturday afternoon, telling her that Smyth was taken from the prison.
Smith apparently had asked his cellmate to contact his friend if he was taken from the institution, said Lynch, who lives in San Francisco.
Smyth, an Irish prison escapee, was convicted of the 1976 attempted murder of an off-duty prison guard in Belfast, a crime he denies committing.
He took part in a mass escape in 1983 from Maze prison near Belfast and was arrested in 1992 in San Francisco.
A federal judge barred his extradition in 1994, fearing Smyth would be persecuted because of his political views.
But the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed, saying any harsh official treatment either in prison or after his release would be because of his crime, not his opinions.
Smyth tried to appeal to the Supreme Court, but the court denied review of the case in June.
"I remember Jimmy saying that he had a feeling they were going to take him away in about a week," Lynch's sister, Anne Cecchetti, said.
Fogarty said there was a 60-day statutory limit on Smyth's extradition warrant, which would have expired at the end of August.
Administration may send Yeltsin abroad for surgery
Time reports that Russian president has heart trouble
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Boris Yeltsin's health is far more precarious than previously disclosed, Time magazine reported yesterday, so serious
that the Kremlin is considering sending the Russian president abroad for double-bypass surgery.
Yeltsin's health has been a serious concern for months, especially in the run-up to his July re-election when Yeltsin inexplicably disappeared for days — prompting rumors the 65-year-old leader had suffered a heart attack or had gone on a drinking binge.
Time said it had obtained a Kremmlin medical advisory detailing the
seriousness of Yeltsin's condition.
It said V.S. Dubrovin, head of the doctors monitoring the president's health, reported that Yeltsin's cardiac ischemia — constriction of the heart caused by blocked arteries — had worsened during the election campaign following a crisis situation in mid-June.
Time reported that a source close to the president's security service said that a relapse occurred partly because Yeltsin gave up his prescribed medication and went on a drinking binge that may have affected his heart as well as the left side of his brain.
There was no official comment yesterday in Moscow to the magazine report.
Yeltsin dropped out of sight at the end of the election campaign, and on July 15 checked into a government health resort outside Moscow. Aides said he worked steadily during his stay at the resort and needed
a more thorough rest.
At his inauguration on Aug. 9, Yeltsin looked frail and slurred his words, fueling speculation that his health is deteriorating. Yeltsin has already had two bouts of serious heart trouble.
The president has been on what aides call a semi-vacation last week, working two or three hours a day but issuing a series of decrees and naming Russia's new Cabinet.
Spokesman Sergei Yastrzhembsky
said Yeltsin was likely to spend his full vacation near Moscow and undergo an unspecified course of medical treatment.
Time's reported that Yeltsin's condition was so bad that the Kremlin was considering secretly transferring him to a Swiss clinic for double-bypass surgery. The magazine also cited U.S. intelligence sources who said that if Yeltsin were under American care, an angioplasty or bypass would be ordered.
The Etc. Shop
REVO Sunglasses
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THE SWORD OF THE GREATER BLESSING
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
TANGO
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. • 841-2451
Mon-Sat 10-5:30
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- Costumes for rent and sale
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- Vintage clothes from 1900-1970
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- New, contemporary clothes, also
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Overland Park, KS
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Working on foreign cars does not mean we speak a foreign language. The professionals at Pearson Collision Repair, Inc. won't try to dazzle you with shop talk. They take the time to explain what is wrong and what needs to be done to restore your car to its pre-accident condition.
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VISA
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901 Iowa 843-2313
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18A
Monday, August 19. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
In Singapore, flush or pay
The Associated Press
SINGAPORE — The mark of a gracious society is a clean public toilet.
So says Singapore's government, which is launching a two-month campaign today to get people to leave public lavatories clean after using them.
Officials say the toilet-training drive is in response to Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong's call for Singaporeans to measure social progress by the cleanliness of their public facilities and their appreciation of music.
The state of public toilets reflects concern for public property and consideration for others, while the ability to sing and appreciate good music is a mark of gracious living. Goh said in April.
Hence the theme of the Clean Public Toilets Education Campaign: "Our Social Habits Reflect Our Progress
Towards A Gracious Society."
"We would like to involve the community in campaign activities, raise public awareness on what good toilet behavior is and persuade the public to adopt correct public toilet habits and make these habits a norm of gracious society," an Environment Ministry spokesman said.
Goh noted, however, that a gracious society was probably 15 to 20 years away.
The ministry has surveyed about 800 of the 12,000 public toilets and will check them in two months to measure the results of the campaign, the spokesman said.
Public hygiene is hardly a side issue in Singapore. Elevators in some apartment buildings are equipped with specialized sensors that detect the high salt content in urine, activate a hidden video camera and alert the janitor.
Transgressors must await rescuers, who turn them in to police.
The toilet-training campaign is the latest display of official concern about flushing.
Officials first imposed fines on those who failed to flush after using public lavatories in 1989.
First offenders may be fined as much as $106. Repeat offenders face a $355 fine, while those who fail to flush three or more times may have to pay as much as $709.
According to a 1992 ruling, owners or occupants of buildings with public lavatories must equip them with basic amenities, including toilet paper, soap and clean towels, or face the same scale of fines as wanton non-flushers.
Public toilets are defined as those to which the public has access, including those in hotels, stores,and cinemas.
Lebanese Christians Muslims go to polls
The Associated Press
BROUMMANA, Lebanon— With troops and tanks deployed in the streets, Lebanese Christians and Muslims voted yesterday in parliamentary elections that were hotly contested but unlikely to change the pro-Syrian character of the legislature.
Lebanon's Christians, who largely boycotted parliamentary elections four years ago, joined Muslims in sizable numbers in voting that ultimately will fill all 128 seats in the half-Christian, half-Muslim Parliament.
mentary election since the end of the 1975-90 civil war. The country still is rebuilding from the conflict, and its policies remain mostly under the control of Syria, which has 40,000 troops in Lebanon and is the main power broker.
It was the second parlia-
One election-related death and 16 arrests were reported in fighting between supporters of rival Drusen candidates, officials said.
About 656,000 Lebanese were eligible to vote in the Mount Lebanon region in the central part of the country. There were 180 candidates contesting 35 seats — 25 Christian, five Druse,
three Shiite Muslim and two Sunni Muslim. The first results were not expected until today.
There will be voting on five successive Sundays in the separate regions to fill the entire Parliament.
Interior Minister Michel Murr, whose ministry supervises the elections, expected an overall turnout of about 50 percent, compared with only 13 percent nationwide in 1992. In Druse and Muslim areas, turnout was projected at more than 50 percent.
Right-wing Christians participated in greater numbers this time.
It's Your PARTY
PARTY
1601 W. 23rd
749-3455
WELCOME BACK!
POOL HALL
ASTROS
8
BAR & GRILL
Relax by our pool...
Unwind from the daily grind beside one of pool tables and take your aggressions out on fifteen inanimate objects. Corne relax, and leave the sun block at home.
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601 Kasold
749-7699
RPS
ROADWAY PACKAGE SYSTEM
WELCOME BACK JAYHAWKS! GET BACK TO WORK WITH RPS!
PACKAGE HANDLERS
- IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Load and unload packages for team RPS. If you are dependable, hard working and able to work 3.5 to 5 hours a day (5-days a week).
WE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR TEAM!
RPS OFFERS:
- $8.50 or $9.50 to start.
- Tuition Reimbursement
- Regular Increases.
- Shifts start at 2 PM,6:30 PM,11:30 PM and 2:30 AM.
- Paid Holidays.
Apply in person Monday-Friday, 1pm-5pm. RPS is located in Western Shawnee, KS about 15-20 minutes from KU. Take K-10 (East) to K-7 (North) to 83rd St. exit. Turn left on 83rd. Turn right on Cole Pkwy (the second St. on Rt. after crossing over K-7) and keep straight you'll run right into RPS. For more information call:
RPS, INC.
8000 Cole Pkwy. Shawnee,KS 66227 913-492-4939
"JOIN TEAM RPS AND GET PAID TO WORKOUT" EOE/AAE-Females and Minorities and encouraged to apply.
"Laurence since 1993
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass.
832-8228
*Lincolnshire since 1903*
1947
- NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
- NATURAL BODY CARE
a basic education
NATURALWAY
•820-822 MASS •841-0100•
You don't need a PhD in fashion to know that updating a wardrobe can be expensive.
Which is why Harold's offers a huge selection of private label clothing, shoes and accessories.
You see, Harold's actually makes many of its apparel items. Knit shirts, printed skirts, suits, blouses, Italian footwear and much more.
SUNSHINE
Merchants & Manufacturers of Fine Goods Since 1948
We control the quality. We control the price. Which means we can offer great basics like these at a fraction of the designer cost. That maximizes your wardrobe and minimizes your cost. And that's just basic common sense.
HAROLDS
Quality Apparel Since 1948
BLOOMINGDALE
Country Club Plaza, Kansas City and Town Center Plaza, Leawood To receive Harold's free men's and ladies' catalog, call 1-800-676-5373. Styles may vary from those shown here. Quantities limited. Country Club Plaza location ladies' only.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
I
Monday, August 19.1996
19A
100s Announcements
1.05 Personals
1.10 Business Personals
1.20 Announcements
1.30 Loans and Found
The Kakama will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, age, disability, or familial status.
男 女
Classified Directory
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
X
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
300s Merchandise
or by disaffiliation. Furthermore, the Karman will not risk involving罢応
the Fertility Institute with the use of their equipment.
Classified Policy
ence, limitation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
图
J
100s Announcements
105 Personals
Open 24 hours everyday - Commerce Plaza
Landmark, 201st st. Iowa St. and air condi-
tions
Are you interested in theatre? ??? Don't miss The University Theatre Rally 7:00 p.m., Wednesday 8:24, Crown-Freyer Theatre Stage. Meet fellow students; the theatre students will partner you up with a "buddy"; attend a musical! A free auditions workshop will follow the rally. For more information, call 843-3831 or ask for Kathy.
Auditions for The University Theatre fall productions 7:00 p.m. August 22, 2023. Crafton - Prover Theater Stage, Murphy Hall. Audition Sign up: noon-5:00 p.m. Thursday, August 22, Murphy Hall Lobby. Productions to be cast: "The Memorialum", "Coming Here: A Triage", "Hirt (Revise)", "Wang's Auditions have two minutes of time each" and "This is not a musical." Also available. For more information, contact The University Theatre, 317 Murphy Hall, 844-3381.
12
POSTER SALE. Biggest and best selection.
Choose from over 2000 different images. ROCK,
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IMAGES ONLY $6, $7 and $8 each) See us at
KANSAS UNION GALLERY-LEVEL on MONDAY
AUGUST 19TH THROUGH FRIDAY
from 10 a.m., to 4 p.m. Moontime
Munday through Friday, Saturday 1 a.m., to
4 p.m, and Sunday 12 Noon - 4 p.m. This sale is
sponsored by SUA.
120 Announcements
Downtown Child Care
United Children Ctr. now enrolling for fall ages.
3/1/2 to 5/30/22 842-5922
Fundraiser-Plan now for the fall. Great opportunity for motivated organized groups to earn Gift card, promote top clients at your campus. Give gift card for the best fall dates at 800-592-2121 ext 110.
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!
Grants and Scholarships
avail, from sponsors!
No repayments ever!
$$$ Cash for College $$$
For info, 1-800-257-3834
**Theatre Auditions:** August 22, 2013 - Cranford-Preyer Theatre Stage, Murphy Hall. Sign up for auditions: noon-5:00 p.m., Thursday August 22, Murphy Hall, Loboy. open to all KU students regardless of major. You have 2 minutes to show your stuff! Call 864-3381 for more information.
130 Entertainment
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Spring Special
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
( on select apartments)
Short time Only!
- 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.)
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Daycare Asst need for Morning from 10:15-12:45. Ca
Marie at 749-1719
RU energetic & people-oriented? RU able to set your own hours, plan your work & work your plan? Want to make $1.26/month starting now. Call Sharon 841-1761.
Turtle Hardy's in now hiring. $60 per hour. free uniforms + 20% off meals. Lawrence Turtle Hardy's.
Gymnasia instructors needed now for girls and boys. Gymnasia instructor, Kansas City gym, PT am or pm pay call. Call Gymnasia at (215) 386-7000.
Hiring students to contact abuml. Monday-Thursday 6:40-8:45pm at association at Stone Hall at the KU Student Association in Stone Hall.
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
New company needs outgoing personality with interest in marketing. Flexible hours. Apply within at 3514 Clinton Parkway, Suite L.
Studio,1,2,3,&4BR
or
图示:鸟类识别图
Buy, Sell
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old-fashioned personalized service."
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
Managed & maintained by Professionals
Furnished, Outdoor Pool SEE today
Kansan
Call 841-5255
Southwind Villa Apartments
Trade it in the
NEW LUXURY - 2 BR
apts. Now leasing for Fall.
Classifieds
- Internet Ready Voice, Data, Video Communications for 21st Century
* Security Punchkey Entry Intercom Systems
* Excellent Location On KU bus route Close shopping/schools
* Private Decks
* Full equipped kitchen
Starting at $475/mo.
Call 749-9369
ROBERT HALF
Add professional polish to class projects, maps and posters. (up to 40 inches wide)
Howell Creative Studios
1203 Iowa 842-9289
corner of Orchard Lane & Iowa
1 BLK south of Capitol Fed.
WELCOME BACK SENIORS!
Plastic Laminating
Specializing in Accounting, Office Administration, & IS since 1970I
FREE JOB PLACEMENTI
FREE SOFTWARE TRAININGI
NATIONAL ALLIANCE WMICROSOFT
205 Help Wanted
Hundreds of KU students & Alumni have been placed in jobs, by our career expertal Never a见友. established in 1970-EOE
accountemps
Now interviewing for:
**row in dekstop**
* Staff Accountant* *Administrative Assistant*
* Human Resources* *PC Experts* *Sales* *Bookkeepers*
We offer employment during the semester, school breaks, internships &
$$$ Need Extra Money $$$
Great On Campus Jobs
The Kansas and Burge Urions
Hiring in all departments (Bookstores, Food Service, Building Services, SUA, Concessions) for Fall 1996. Come see our Job Board, Level 5, Ithresh and Orest. Have the chance to schedule your to a great, on campus job. AAEEO
ACADEMIC AID INPOSITION AVAILABLE, Lil Van Drives. Duties include *Driving KU LR VAN*, used by students with permanent or temporary disabilities to get to class. $5.50/day. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 22 Strong Hall, 84-4064. application deadline Friday, May 9. August 13.
Johnson County & KC Metro Area locationl (913) 481-760- Ask for Michelle
part-time work for general office work plus showing apartments and answering phones. 10-20 weekday hours available. Must be Kansas resident enrolled in KU at least halftime.
Classroom Assistant needed at Raintree Montessori School. Montessori exp. pref. Will训. Train. $125/mo. Late afternoon assistant. 3:15-5:30 M-F *46.25/hr., Transp. req. Call 843-6800
Better ladies retailer seals retail supervisor/resistant manager, 32-40 hrs/week. Some days and weekends.
Good wage and tuition reimbursement. Apply in person.
I Riverfront Plaza, Suite 210.
ACADEMIC AID POSITION AVAILABLE. English Reader. Duties include: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have reading disabilities. 45.40 kg. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 28 Strong Hall, 864-4004. Application deadline: Friday, 5月9th, August 2013.
KU INFO (UNIVERSITY INFORMATION GENTER) hiring for Fall 1998. You are bright, interesting, creative, and willing to take initiative! A clever problem solver who really knows KU and the Lawrence community? You're the one. Need highly motivated student housers who are excellent students, computer-literate, great communications, interested in helping others, have unique sense of humor. Pick up application at KU INFO. Learn more about student huspers who can make KU inform their primary work commitment. Deadline 5 p.m., Wednesday, August 28, 1996.
205 Help Wanted
**STUDENT CONSULTANT PROGRAMMER.** Deadline: 8.20%/Ship. Bundle $6.75-$10.50 / hour. Duties include developing software for microcomputers, mainframes, workstations, particularly software for distributed systems. Duties include providing IT support, staff, and students. Developing and delivering Unix and networking seminars. Developing and writing documentation for program maintenance and end-user support. Developing and maintaining a web experience with two or more programming languages. UNIX operating system, familiarity with computer software such as Telnet, FTP, Gopher and World Wide Web. Other duties as assigned. Complete Job Description. Req. Bachelor's degree in a cover letter and a current resume to Ann Ral, Personnel Assistant, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, SK 60455. EOAEM Employee
STUDENT HOURLY SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR:
(3 openings) 8/45,7/hour 10-15 hours/wek. Deadline August26, 1986 @ 5:00 p.m. Operate telephone operator's console and provide faculty/staff/student/direct information to students, aiding sorting, alphabetizing and data entry projects. Required Qualifications: 1) Valid KU enrollment; 2) Ability to understand and carry out verbal and written instructions; 3) Ability to spell and alphabetize names and file phone numbers correctly; 4) Ability to fluently recognize words on a computer; 5) Available to work evenings and weekends; 6) Available to work during semester break and summer recess, and be "on call" as needed; 7) Data entry computer experience; 8) Ability to type 40 wpm. Obtain and complete an online resume for positions in Telecommunications Service reception deck. Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services, University of Kansas, Ellsworth Annex, 1738 Eagle路, Lawrence, KS 60504; Phone: 913-864-9300; Contact: Ann Engel, EC004A
WANTED
UNITED PARCEL SERVICES
is looking for
X
- Part-time
* $8.00/hour
* 4:30 pm - 6:30 pm
* 5:00 pm - 5:00 am
* Company paid benefits
* Mon-Friday (No weekends)
CALL US: 212-777-3088
to schedule an interruption
WANTED
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
For Sale: American Spanish quarterly 1084-1095 complete.
Free to good quality condition.
Email: bh2276@yahoo.com 444-844-8448
1865 Subaru Wagon, 5 park, AC, newer engine, good condition,
$2000 ORD, 864-7700 or 81-5430.
MASTERCRAFT
340 Auto Sales
WALK TO CAMPUS Furnished and Unfurnished
Designed with you in mind for Fall '96.
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana 841-1429
Visit the following locations
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Campus Place
Orchard Corners 16th & Kasold • 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-5255
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood
tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mastercraft
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
---
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Pets Welcome *
South Points AMAZING
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Water & Trash Paid
apartments available
MARSHALL HOME
SOUTH POINTE ParkVillas
Ask about our 3 bedroom park villas.
2166 W. 26th
843-6446
*Restrictions Apply
430 Roommate Wanted
Roommate wanted: 4 BR, 2 bath, 3 blocks from campus
$395 / mo, upl; not paid
823-978-9758
Clean, quiet, responsible grad. student wanted to share small house in Johnson County w/ KU grad. student Avail Mid August. Must love dog. Non-smoker $25/mm + 1/8 units (013) 813-0170. Carpooling pos.
4:30 Roommate Wanted
2 Pools
Female grand student seeks name to share two birmi apt accross from bus line 20 min. walk to campus. Starts in classroom with computer and desk, pool, laundry, central air aisle, & great guest. Please be an animal lover and have previous exp, in sharing
Renter wanted. Quiet, non-smoking. New home near campus. Own bedroom & bath w/shower. $350 + split phone & utilities. Call James after at 217-223-4024.
Gay male has room to rent in East Lawrence home. $250 includes utilities. Bath #847-7741. Non smokers only.
4 stops on Property
4 stops on Property
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Volleyball Court
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
- On KU Bus Route with
NAISMITH HALL
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
ce open Monday - Saturday
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
(sorry no pets)
---
Orchard Corners
Don't forget to ask about our "Free Meal Plan Upgrade!
offer...
1-800-888-GOKU
1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559
Lawrence's premier private student housing option-the exceptional, affordable choice for KU students
LOOKING FOR A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to
Maid service
- Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath
Swimming pool
15th & KASOLD
Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet!
ASK ABOUT OREAD TOWNHOMES
MANY GREAT LOCATIONS!
- Featuring our "Dine Anytime" program that serves teriffic meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner
- Convenient location next to campus and on KU bus route
Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by!
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- Completely furnished
- 2, 3, & 4 BR apartments
- On-site management
- Swimming pool
- On K.U. bus route
- Laundry facilities
- Next to shopping, restaurants and banking
749-4226
IBM and Macintosh computer lab
Planned social activities
MASTERCRAFT
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
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| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
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| 5-7 lines | 2.10 | 1.25 | 0.85 | 0.75 | 0.70 | 0.50 |
| 8+ lines | 2.00 | 1.10 | 0.80 | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.45 |
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=118.0f (4 lines X90 g per line X 5 days).
Classifications
105 person personal 144 lost & found 360 for sale 370 wast to buy
118 business personnel 260 help wanted 340 auto sales 400 restroom
124 announcements 223 professional services 360 miscellaneous 430 roommate wanted
130 toiletroom 223 tying services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAM POLICY
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The University Daily Kancan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60845
20A
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HAWKSCHEDULEWEEK
Sunday 8/18
Residence Halls Open
6:30 p.m. Community Drum Circle or Playfair
10 p.m. Rock-A-Hawk Dance
Monday 8/19
Hawk Day programs 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
5:30 p.m. Alumni Ice Cream Social
7 p.m. Traditions Night, Memorial Stadium
Fall Orientation
Hawk Day programs 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
7 p.m. Beach-N-Boulevard, Wescoe Beach
A-K Fee Completion
Fall Orientation
Hawk Day programs 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Job Fair 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
5:30-7 p.m. Rock-A-Hawk Picnic
7:30 p.m. Opening Convocation, Lied Center
L-Z Fee Completion
Non-NSO Enrollment
* residence hall students only
Classes Start
Add/Drop Begins
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Clinton Lake Clean-up
SUA Movie On The Hill Close Encounters of the Third Kind
(Meet-A-Professor Night, August 28, 1996, 6 p.m.)
Does burning the midnight oil make you hungry
Let us feed your hunger
Open 24 hours a day.
Perkins® Family Restaurant Bakery
"for Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner & Everything in Between"
After moving in, the last thing you want to do is unpack another box.
Pizza Hut.
Unless it’s one of these.
Delivery/Carryout
2449 Iowa 1008 West 6th
843-3000 843-2211
Dine-In, Delivery or Carryout
932 Massachusetts
843-7044
Dine-In or Carryout
1606 W. 23rd 804 Iowa
843-3516 842-1667
Medium Single Topping and Medium Specialty Pizza $11.99
• Dine-In • Carryout • Delivery
CARRYOUT SPECIAL
Medium Single Topping Pizza $6.99
• Carryout Only
2 Large 2 Topping Pizzas $14.99
• Dine-In • Carryout • Delivery
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
8/18 8/19 8/20 8/21 8/22 8/23 8/24
■ Residence Halls Open
■ 6:30 p.m. Community Drum Circle or Playfair
■ 5:30 p.m. Alumni Ice Cream Social
■ 10 p.m. Rock-A-Hawk Dance
■ Hawk Day programs 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
■ Hawk Day programs 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
■ 7 p.m. Beach-N-Boulevard, Wescoe Beach
■ Hawk Day programs 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
■ Job Fair 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
■ 5:30-7 p.m. Rock-A-Hawk Picnic*
■ 7:30 p.m. Opening Convocation, Lied Center
L-Z Fee Completion
Non-NSO Enrollment
* residence hall students only
Classes Start Add/Drop Begins
■ 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Clinton Lake Clean-up
■ SUA Movie On The Hill Close Encounters of the Third Kind
(Meet-A-Professor Night, August 28, 1996, 6 p.m.)
(1)
Does burning
the midnight oil
make you hungry
Let us feed
your hunger
Open 24h
Perkins
Family Restaurant
Bakery
After moving in, the last thing you want to do is unpack another box.
Pizza Hut.
Pizza Hut.
Pizza Hut
Pizza Hut. Unless it's one of these.
CARRYOUT SPECIAL
Medium Single
Topping Pizza
$6'99
• Carryout Only
Pizza Hut.
Hurry, offer ends soon! Valid only at participating units.
One coupon per busy per visit. Not valid on TripleDicker
Plates or any other edible, limited delivery area. 1/90 cent cash
redeemation value. O'1998 Pizza Hot, Inc.
2 Large
2 Topping
Pizzas
$14.99
• Dine-In • Carryout • Delivery
pizza hut.
surprise, offer ends soon! Valid only at participating units.
coupon per party per visit. Not valid on TripleDecker
or any other offer. Limited delivery area. 1/20 cent cash
discount value. 01296 Pizza Hut, Inc.
*
FOOTBALL Big 12 preview, Page 2. NBA Charles Barkley may be blasting off to Houston, Page 10.
SPORTS ERSITY DAILY KANS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1996
A sporting summer preludes Fall action
Welcome back.
If you're like me, and I know you are, you spent your Coca-Cola sponsored summer plopped in front of the TV watching everything from baseball pitchers with cooked linguine arms to Kerri Strug's re-enactment (gymnastics style) of Kirk Gibson's 1988 World Series heroics.
So after a summer of channel surfing I've got a few ideas I want to kick around.
Enough of this hogwash that baseballs are juiced and the bats corked (with the
SECTION 2
FOOTBALL
exception of slugger Chris Sabo). The only aspect of baseball that's causing the hitters to have dream seasons is the shortcomings of pitches. Since expansion has watered down Major League Baseball, sub-par pitchers who boast an ERA in the eight range
SPORTS EDITOR
BILL
PETULLA
can safely find a home.
Pitching has sunk to such a low that guys with .500 seconds and a 4.80 ERA are selected to the all-star game. It's time to stop rewarding mediocrity and make the pitching mound higher and expand the strike zone.
What makes the Jayhawks' task to repeat in the top ten so difficult is the fact they must do it with an unhealthy and unproven quarterback. Ben Rutz is coming back from a knee surgery that hasn't been too kind for other quarterbacks. Two words: Randall Cunningham.
This season will certainly be an uphill battle for the Jayhawk football team. Playing in the north division of the Big 12 Conference, Kansas will square off against eight conference foes — one more than previous seasons. Sorry, no more North Texas or UAB to kick around.
But if Rutz's rehab is successful, don't forget this is the same guy who was second on the Nebraska depth chart his freshman year, behind Tommie Frazier and ahead of Brook Berringer.
The key for Kansas this year is the same as last season — defense. With hosses like Kevin Kopp, Jason Thoren, Dan Dercher and Ronnie Ward, the defense will hold its own. But without a quarterback who can keep the offense on the field longer than three snaps at a time, the Jayhawk defense will be in trouble. My prediction, if Rutz stays healthy, 8-3; with an unheated Rutz or another key injury, 5-6.
Was anyone surprised when Lawrence Phillips got busted for driving under the influence, ruining his parole status, but was able somehow to get off scot-free?
Once a Husker. always a Husker.
God bless America. What other country could stay tuned into gymnastics despite the monoric chinning-in of talentless John Tesh? His commentary is as bad as his music.
here's a thought that you Chicago-ins, Schaumburg-ites and Naperville-ers may not like: all of this talk about the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls being the greatest team ever assembled is ludicrous. How can anyone say with a straight face that the greatest NBA team ever has Luc Longley as its starting center. If you take away five inches from this blunder from down under, the closest he'll ever come to stardom is as an extra in Crocodile Dundee.
So who is the greatest ever? you ask.
Take a look at the 1984-85 Los Angeles Lakers. Magic, Worthy, A.C. Green and Byron Scott match up with Jordan, Pippen, Rodman, Ron Harper, with a slight advantage going to the Bulls. But comparing Kareem to Longley is like comparing T-Bone steals to Spam.
What was Albert Belle's intention of announcing that he might retire a day after he got booed out of Veterans Stadium in all-star game? Did he feel that he might evoke fear among baseball fans, scared that they might have to face a season without his shoulder-dropping, sexual harassing, child-threatening and fan-abusing antics?
2
Kansas football head coach Glen Mason leaves the field following the Jayhawks' 41-7 loss to Kansas State on Oct. 28 in Manhattan. Mason has high hopes for this season's squad.
Staff Photographer / KANBAN
Marching into a tough season
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
For years, there was only one way the Kansas football team could go — up. But this year, prognosticators are saying the only way the Javahawks can go is down.
That's the nature of the game when a team turns in one of the most improbable seasons in team history and exceeds all expectations. The 1995 Jayhawk football team will be a tough act to follow, but players and coaches believe it can be done.
Last year, the Kansas football team and coach Glen Mason enjoyed their greatest season since 1968 with a 10-2 record and a second-place finish in the defunct Big Eight Conference. The Jayhawks capped off the season with a 51-30 win against UCLA in the Jeep Eagle Aloha Bowl and finished nationally ranked in the top
10 for the first time since 1968
But last year is history.
"We can be awfully proud of what we accomplish last year but it doesn't mean a whole lot once this year starts," junior defensive tackle Dewey Houston said. "What we have to take from last year is the feeling we got from winning."
Kansas returns 14 starters, seven on each side of the ball, to a team ranked No.24 in the preseason Associated Press poll and was picked sixth in the Big 12 media poll.
The Jayhawks start the inaugural season of the Big 12 Conference in the North division with Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas State, Missouri and Nebraska. They will play South division teams Texas and Texas Tech, but have dropped Oklahoma State from the schedule for the first time in 50 years.
Kansas lost 13 lettermen, with the biggest loss coming at quarterback. Mark Williams passed for 1,937 yards with 14 touchdowns and was the MVP of the Aloha Bowl. He will be replaced by senior Ben Rutz who, like Williams last year, is an unproven commodity. He has played just 14 games in four years while completing 15 of 30 pass attempts. His health also is a question. He tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee while at Nebraska in 1992 and tore the ACL in his left knee in April during spring drills.
Rutz will be protected by an offensive line that returns a letter winner at every position and averages 6-5 and 294 pounds. The line is anchored by senior tackle Scott Whittaker, an honorable mention
Junior Matt Johner backs up Rutz while redshirt freshman Zac Wegner is No. 3 on the depth chart.
all-conference player last year.
The line will have to open holes for an experienced group of running backs. Although Kansas lost its top rusher in L.T. Levine (811 yards), it does return senior June Henley and his 2,492 career rushing yards, fifth in Jayhawk history.
"I think I can rush for 1,000 yards again," Henley said. "As long as I get the carries and can stay healthy, I don't see why I can't."
Senior wide receiver Isaac Byrd will be Rutz's main target in the air. Byrd led the Jayhawks last season with 48 receptions for 604 vards and five touchdowns.'
Senior tight end Jim Moore earned honorable mention all-conference honors last year after catching 18 passes for 224 yards.
The defense features the return of senior linebacker Ronnie Ward and junior safety Tony Blevins. Junior linebacker Jason Thoren was a second team All-Big Eight
Selection and led the team with 119 tackles, the most by a Jayhawk since 1989.
"I see signs of big plays with the offense, and defensively we can run around," Mason said.
Kansas lost Academic All-American punter Darrin Simmons, but junior college transfer Dean Royal is expected to fill that spot.
Junior Jeff McCord returns as the place kicker. He converted nine of 12 field goals last year and was 33 of 68 on extra points.
"We're ahead of schedule as far as our kicking game is concerned." Mason said.
It may be unlikely the Jayhawks will go 10-2 again, but a record good enough for a bowl bid is a possibility.
"We found out last year that we can play with anybody." Henley said. "This year we're going to be the team that everybody's gunning for so we've got to be ready.
Volleyball team has youth, experience
By Matt Woodruff Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas volleyball team is making a commitment to winning in 1996. Not only have they recruited several standout freshmen, but they also have added assistant coach Jan Madlock to improve their outside hitting and defense. Madlock will also take control as recruiting coordinator.
Although there will be no seniors on the team when they open against Ball State on Aug. 30 in Allen Field House, coach Karen Schonewise is not concerned about a lack of experience or leadership.
"We do have a lot of underclassmen this year, most of them juniors," Schonewise said. "But most of the juniors we have here have played since they were freshmen, so they really have a considerable amount of experience."
The team added more young experience in the off-season by recruiting several freshmen, some of whom should make an immediate impact and others who have raw talent and should develop into strong players.
The team lost some key players, most notably Jenny Larson, who is now a graduate assistant coach for Kansas and Leslie Purkeypile, who is out for the season with a knee injury.
"We recruited some very good freshmen who will help us on defense." Schonewise said.
"We'll definitely miss Jenny in the middle, and we lose a lot of depth with Leslie out." Schonewise said.
Madlock was a player at Illinois State and was part of a NIVC tournament team that posted a 21-12 record. She then coached at the University of Iowa as an assistant. In 1992, she helped direct ISU to a 22-12 record, a Missouri Valley Conference championship and a trip to the 1993 NCAA Tournament.
"I am really excited to have someone with Jan's experience recruiting on our staff," Schonewise said. "She brings a lot of enthusiasm for the sport, and she relates really well with people. She is a tremendous addition to the Kansas volleyball program."
"Hopefully someone will step up for them."
Chonewise also feels that adding Madlock will boost the team.
"It's been great here so far," said Madlock.
"We're in a tough conference," said Schonewise. "Nebraska is the defending national champ and Texas is the runner-up. But I think it's very realistic for us to expect to finish in the top half of the conference."
Despite playing in one of the best volleyball conferences in the country, the coaches feel they can improve drastically over last year's disappointing season in which the team finished last in the Bie Eight.
"Just from what I've seen so far I know that there is a lot of leadership on this team," said Madlock. "What the players lack in experience they make up for in heart, desire and always giving 100 percent."
Madlock agrees that the team can finish in the upper half of the Big I2.
How some Kansas athletes spent their summer 'vacation'
May 6
Senior guard Jacque Vaughn decided to forgo the NBA in favor of returning for his senior season.
May 26
May 31. June 1
Former Kansas distance runner Sarah Heeb won the 10,000-meter run with a personal best time of 35:28.79 at the Big Eight Championships at Nebraska's Ed Weir Track in Lincoln, Neb. Senior spinner Pierre Lisk and former Kansas javelin thrower Jeff Dietrich also claimed Big Eight titles.
Senior women's tennis player Kyle Hunt finished second in the nation after losing to Jill Crayas of Florida (7-5, 3-6, 3-6) in the NCAA tournament in Tallahassee, Fla. Hunt was named College Sports Magazine Division 1 Women's Tennis Athlete of the Year.
Three members of the Kansas track and field team competed in the NCAA outdoor championships in Eugene, Ore. Junior Candy Mason finished 15th in the heptathlon and senior Mike Evers finished sixth in the decathlon with 7,612 points, earning All-American honors. Senior spinner Pierre Lisk ran the 100-meter trials in 10.47 seconds, finishing 17th and missing the final cut by one spot.
May 27,28
Several former Kansas baseball players and recruits were selected in the Major League Draft. Third baseman Damion Rolls was a first-round draft pick, 23rd overall by the Los Angeles Dodgers. Senior center fielder Isaac Byrd was drafted in the 11th round by the St. Louis Cardinals, but chose to remain at Kansas. Pitcher/outfielder Mario Opipari was drafted in the 53rd round by the Minnesota Twins and shortstop Jimmy Terrell was a third-round selection by the Chicago White Sox. Second baseman Josh Kliner was signed as an unrestricted free-agent by the Arizona Diamond Backs.
June 1
June 4
The Kansas men's golf team finished in 15th place at the NCAA Men's Golf Championships at the
par-72 Honors Course near Chattanooga, Tenn. The team shot rounds of 298, 306, 315 and 329 to finish with a total of 1,248 — 62 strokes behind tournament champions Arizona State.
June 8
June 11
Concluding its first year as an athletics department-sponsored sport, the Kansas women's rowing team competed in the Collegiate National Rowing Championships on Cincinnati's Harsha Lake. The heavyweight four boat finished fourth in their race and the lightweight four ended fifth.
Kansas men's tennis coach Michael Center resigned. Center, who led the Jayhawks to three consecutive Big Eight Conference championships, cited a "great
July 1
July 20
Betsy Stephenson, who had served as associate athletic director since 1992, resigned her post at Kansas and accepted the position of associate athletic director at UCLA, effective in early August. Stephenson said she wanted to broaden her career base and experience a different environment.
opportunity in the business world" as his reason for leaving.
Former Kansas football cornerback Dorian Brew signed a three-year contract with the Miami Dolphins, reportedly totaling just under $1 million.
Former Kansas women's basketball guard Charisse Sampson was selected in the 10th round by New England of the American Basketball League.
July 16
1
V
Tracey Bunge, a member of the Jayhawk Athletics Hall of Fame, was named the new softball coach at Kansas. She replaced interim coach Gayle Luedke.
August 16
Kansas track star Kristi Kloster was the winner of the NCAA Woman of the Year Award for the state of Kansas. Kloster, a secondteam GTE Academic All-American last season, was a two-time AllAmerican in the 800 meter and won the event at the 1996 NCAA Indoor Track Championships.
i
2B
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Big 12 kicks off premier season
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
College football has a new kid in town, and if all the preliminary indications are correct, the rest of the nation will be dealing with this bully all season.
The Big 12 Conference is ready to roll with its inaugural season, and the accolades for the merger of the Big Eight and Southwest Conferences already are in. The Big 12 will be broken into two divisions — North and South. The two division winners will meet in the Big 12 championship game Dec. 7 in St. Louis.
North Division:
Six Big 12 teams are ranked in the Associated Press Top 25, with defending national champions Nebraska at No. 1.
The Cornhuskers were dominant last season, going 12-0 and defeating Florida 62-24 in the Fiesta Bowl. While Nebraska seems to be the team to beat once again, the Cornhuskers
once again, the Continue do have one question
do have one question mark entering this season.
N
With the departure of All-American quarterback Tommie Frazier, Nebraska's quarterback
to the arm of junior Scott Frost, a transfer from Stanford University.
"Quarterback is probably the biggest question on offense," said Nebraska coach Tom Osborne. "We will probably rely on Scott Frost, who is quite talented."
Nebraska's offense will once again depend on its talented corps of running backs. Sophomore Ahman Green returns as the team's leading rusher from a year ago with 1,108 yards. Green and the rest of the Nebraska backs will be running behind one of the best offensive lines in college football, led by junior center Aaron Taylor.
The speedy Cornhusker defense returns seven starters and should be especially strong at linebacker. Senior Jared Tomich was an Associated Press first-team All-American last season, and senior Terrell Farley was a second-team selection.
Nebraska should receive a strong challenge in the North from Colorado. The No. 5 Buffaloes will be bolstered by the return of senior quarterback Koy Detmer, who missed much of last season with a torn knee lig.
CU
son with a torn knee amment. Detmert will have a talented array of receivers for the high-powered Colorado offense. Seniors Rae Carruth and James Kidd and Phil Savoy will return for the Buffs.
Senior Matt Russell was a first-team All Conference selection a year ago, and he'll spark a defense that could be the key to Colorado making a run at Nebraska and at the national championship.
- The Sunflower State once again will be represented well in the college football world. No. 21 Kansas State rode a veteran defense to a 10-2 record a year ago, and the Wildcats should once again be strong at stuffing opponents. Seniors Joe Gordon, Mario Smith and junior Chris Canty return in
the secondary. How ever, K-State will have to replace three departed starters on the defensive line.
Senior quarterback Brian Kavanagh will take
C
fulltime this season. Kavanagh, the backup who led the Wildcats to their victory in the Holiday Bowl will get help from senior receiver Kevin Lockett and junior tailback Eric Hickson. Senior center Jason Johnson is one of three returning starters on an experienced offensive line.
The Wildcats' in-state nemesis, the Kansas Jayhawks, also are hoping to build momentum off one of their finest seasons. The Jayhawks were also 10-2 a year ago and enter this season at No. 24.
The Kansas offense threw the ball much more last year, and much of the same should be expected this season.
See BIG12,Page 5
1996 Big 12 Football Schedule
BAYLOR COLORADO IOWA ST. KU KSU MISSOURI NEBRASKA OU OSU TEXAS TEX. A&M TEX. TECH.
BAYLOR Oct. 28 Baylor Nov. 16 Baylor Oct. 12 NU Oct. 19 Baylor Nov. 23 OSU Nov. 2 Texas Nov. 9 Baylor Oct. 5 2 Texas T
COLORADO Nov. 9 CU Nov. 19 KU Nov. 16 CU Nov. 2 MU Nov. 29 NU Oct. 12 OSU Oct. 26 CU Sept. 28 TA&M
IOWA ST. Nov. 9 CU Nov. 2 ISU Nov. 23 KSU Sept. 28 ISU Nov. 29 ISU Oct. 19 OSU Oct. 12 ISU
KANSAS Oct.19 KU Nov. 2 ISU Nov. 9 KU Nov. 23 MU Oct. 26 NU Oct. 5 OU Nov. 16 KU Oct. 12 KSU
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
3B
Defensive core returns intact
Experienced group anchors Jayhawks'line
77 90
Staff Photographer / KANSAN
Dan Dercher (90), shown pursuing Iowa State quarterback Todd Doxzon in the Jayhawks' Oct. 14 34-7 victory, returns to a defensive line that features 21 lettermen.
By Dan Gelston
Kansan's sportswriter
Kansas will be reacquainted with some familiar faces on defense this year.
But it isn't the faces that Kansas coach Glen Mason and defensive coordinator Mike Hankwitz are concerned about.
They're concerned about the health of junior safety Tony Blevins and senior linebacker Ronnie Ward, both of whom return to the defense after medically red-shirting last year.
They rejoin a defensive corps which has 21 returning lettermen, including all seven interior linemen.
Blevins said this was very encouraging.
"We look really good on paper,' Blevins said. "We've got a lot of guys with experience and who know how to play, but a lot more is expected of us because of what we accomplished last year. I think we can be just as good or better than last year."
Defensive stalwarts returning include junior Brett McGraw, who led the line with 31 solo tackles last year, seniors Chris Jones and Kevin Keep, Juniors Maurice Gaddie and Dewey Houston, and sophomores Jason Thoren and Jamie Harris.
"We have some very good players who can make the big plays for us," Houston said.
Houston said this could be a break-out season for him and the defense.
"I think last year was just the beginning for us as far as how good we can be. We're going to have to take our level of play up because
we're in the Big 12 now."
Last year was Houston's first as a defensive tackle after spending the 1994 season as a backup tight end.
"It took a while to get used to, but I was able to make the adjustment," Houston said.
Houston had 23 tackles in the 10 games last season.
"This year I want to make at least six tackles a game and maybe a sack every other game or so," Houston said.
Thoren, a second-team all-conference selection, led the team with 119 tackles and had three interceptions, while Gaddie led the secondary in tackles with 93.
The Jayhawks suffered two major losses in Dorian Brew, an all-conference selection and secondround draft pick by the Miami Dolphins, and Keith Rodgers, who had 69 tackles.
But Ward said the team would overcome the losses.
"It's tough because they were great players," Ward said. "But every year you lose great players. We have the type of players that can step in and do the job."
Kansas finished fifth in rushing and fourth in pass defense in the Big Eight Conference last season and third in scoring defense, allowing just 21 points per game.
That came despite the fact that the Jayhawks were sixth in total defense with 386.2 yards per game.
"We could stop teams when we had to." Houston said.
"That's something we'll have to continue this year if we want to keep being successful."
1996 Kansas football schedule
Aug. 29 BALL STATE ...7:00 p.m.
Sept. 14 at Texas
Christian ... 7:05 p.m.
Sept. 28 at Utah ... 8:05 p.m.
Oct. 7 at Oklahoma ...1:30 p.m.
Oct. 12 TEXAS TECH ...1:00 p.m.
Oct. 19 COLORADO ...1:00 p.m.
Oct. 26 at Nebraska ...1:00 p.m.
Nov. 2 at Iowa State ..1:00 p.m.
Nov. 9 KANSAS
STATE ... 1:00 p.m.
Nov. 16 TEXAS ... 1:00 p.m.
Nov. 23 at Missouri ... 1:00 p.m.
*Home games in CAPS
Blevins, Ward ready to make their comeback
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
There were times last season when Ronnie Ward was hurting.
"It hurt not being able to be a part of it on the field," Ward said. "To stand and watch and not be able to contribute wasn't very fun."
But it wasn't always from rehabilitating his injured left shoulder. He couldn't tolerate standing on the sidelines watching while his teammates enjoyed perhaps the greatest year in their team history.
Last season was full of mixed emotions for senior linebacker Ward and his defensive teammate, junior safety Tony Blevins. They were forced to medically redshift last year and vowed to come back even stronger this year.
Ward will be the starting inside linebacker after missing the final three games of 1994 and all of last year. He received a shoulder injury in a 1994 game against Oklahoma State and later was reinjured in a pick-up basketball game before last season.
"I tried to brace my fall and I ended up injuring it again." Ward said. "I had to have another surgery."
Ward was forced to the sidelines by an injury for the first time in his career.
"There wasn't much I could do except cheer on my teammates," he said. "I wanted to be part of what was going on so badly. I felt like something was missing."
One thing comforted Ward, a two-time Big Eight Conference
honorable mention.
A. K. B.
" T h e defense was doing so well," he said. "They didn't miss a beat. I was really proud of everybody and the job they were doing."
Ronnie Ward
After playing his first two years as cornerback, Blevins moved to safety last fall. He enters this year as the starting free safety.
Tony Blevins
He injured his right knee, which forced him out of the final four games of 1994 as well.
"This is very exciting. I'm part of something special again," Blevins said.
Both players said they were completely healthy.
"I'm 100 percent," Blevins said. "It gets a little sore sometimes, but that's only after a game."
They said they were looking forward to this season and playing on a defense that returns 21 lettermen.
"I'm going to prove that I'm just as good as I was before," Ward said. "It won't slow me down on the field."
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4B
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Former Tarheel goalkeeper leads women's soccer to net
Team hopes to push ahead from last year
Brian A. Petrotta
Kansan sportswriter
When you think of the North Carolina connection to sports at the University of Kansas, the first name that comes to mind is Roy Williams, North Carolina assistant coach under Dean Smith before replacing Larry Brown as the head coach of the KU basketball team. But there is another name with a North Carolina connection that deserves recognition. The name is Lori Walker.
As a Tarheel from 1989 to 1991, she was the goalkeeper for the nation's most prestigious women's soccer program. UNC
won three national championships during her tenure in the net. It was this winning attitude and tradition that made her the top choice to lead last year's inaugural season of women's soccer at Kansas.
With a crew of 14 freshmen, eight sophomores and one junior, Walker guided the first-year program to a respectable 6-12 record, including a 4-4 mark at home. More importantly, they were 5-3 against other first-year teams, indicating that they are well on their way to building a competitive program.
Fifteen players are returning and 10 new players have signed on. Among the returning starters is Denise Cooke, who topped the 'Hawks in every offensive category last season. She, along with Jackie Dowell, Kim Ambruz, and Micaela Brogan, started all 18 games last year. But even with a year of experience, this still is
a young team. This year's group includes 11 freshmen, nine sophomores, and five juniors.
The Jayhawks begin the season with four home games and play 11 of 19 at SuperTarget Field. The club kicks off the year with a home match on Aug. 31 against the University of Evansville. The Aces beat the Jayhawks 5-1 last year in Indiana, so Kansas will be looking for revenge on their home turf.
The friendly schedule, a year of experience, and some talented new faces appear to be the right mix to make an exciting and competitive soccer season. And while Roy Williams may be the name that comes up when one mentions the connection between the North Carolina and Kansas sports programs, Lori Walker is building a top program in one of the fastest growing college sports.
Women's soccer schedule
Aug. 31 EVANSVILLE ...1 p.m.
Sept. 2 CREIGHTON ...1 p.m.
Sept. 5 ORAL ROBERTS ...4 p.m.
Sept. 8 ILLINOIS STATE ...1 p.m.
Sept. 13 Texas A&M ...5:30 p.m.
Sept. 15 Texas ...1 p.m.
Sept. 20 Arkansas ...4 p.m.
Sept. 22 Tulsa ...1 p.m.
Sept. 27 TEXAS TECH ...4 p.m.
Sept. 29 BAYLOR ...1 p.m.
Oct. 4 New Mexico ...8 p.m.
Oct. 6 Texas-El Paso ...1 p.m.
Oct. 11 MISSOURI ...2 p.m.
Oct. 18 IOWA STATE ...4 p.m.
Oct. 20 NEBRASKA ...1 p.m.
Oct. 25 Colorado ...3 p.m.
Oct. 27 Oklahoma State ...1 p.m.
Nov. 1 WISCONSIN-
GREEN BAY ...3 p.m.
Nov. 3 WYOMING ...1 p.m.
Nov. 6-10 Big 12 Conference
Championship ..St. Louis
Home games in ALL CAPS
Kansas sophomore middle/forward Sarah Korpi (left) and Kansas junior defender Micaela Brogan fight for the ball during an intersquad game Thursday at the soccer practice fields.
KANSAS
SOCIAL SPORTS
Staff photographer KANSAN
Pitchers outnumber other young recruits
Nannini comes to bat with an experienced hitting,fielding career
Cameron Heeg Kansan staff reporter
The Kansas baseball team received an injection of youth this summer in an effort to add more depth to the team.
With one of their largest recruiting classes, the Jayhawks brought in a total of 16 new players.
"We are following the philosophy of carrying more people in the program," said Kansas assistant baseball coach Wilson Kilmer. "It is a move away from the smaller squads Coach Bingham carried, to fit the traditional ideals of Coach Randall."
The new recruits will add depth to the team, Kilmer said. But the area most affected is pitching. Nine of the 16 new recruits are pitchers, and eight of those pitchers are freshmen.
"Last year pitching wasn't our strong point, Kilmer said. "The team is looking for some adjustments in pitching."
Casey Barrett, with eight saves last year, will return with Arcic Purses (2-6, 9.26 ERA), Chris Williams (2-1, 9.32 ERA), Linus Williams (2-0, 8.18 ERA) and Josh Wingerd (1-1, 5.66 ERA). The coaches think the returning pitchers will be improved this season, but the inexperienced recruits will be put to work.
Dickerson
"The young guys need to give us a strong pitching staff," Kilmer said. "It is a matter of the younger guys getting stronger and taking leadership roles. They need to step up and produce."
In addition to the nine young pitchers, Randall recruited two outfielders, three catchers and one infielder. They should help ease the heartache caused by the departure of the team's best hitters, Isaac Byrd, who joined the St. Louis Cardinal's organization and Josh Kliner, who joined the Arizona Diamondbacks. Byrd will return for his senior year to play football.
Kansas junior pitcher Tim Lyons pitches during a game last season. The Kansas baseball team has recruited nine new pitchers to the team. Eight of the new pitchers are freshmen.
The recent signing of California's Merced College MVP Kevin Nannini will give the team needed hitting strength and strong outfield defense. In 1996, Nannini hit .340 with 38 RBI and five home runs. He can also steal bases. He was ranked second in Northern California with 29 stolen bases, four of which were impressive robberies of home plate.
"We are very pleased that Kevin is going to be a Jayhawk," Randall said. "He is an experienced player, who we are really pleased to have coming to Kansas."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
5B
Big 12: New rivalries,new teams to watch
Senior Ben Rutz steps in at quarterback, replacing Mark
Williams. Rutz
had surger,
to repair a
torn knee
ligament
suffered
in spring
practice,
but he
should
KU
ready by opening
day, Aug. 29, against Ball State at Memorial Stadium. Senior running back June Henley ranks fifth on the Kansas all-time rushing list and should move up the chain this season.
The injury-depleted Jayhawk defense should get a boost from the return of seniors Ronnie Ward at linebacker and Tony Blevins at defensive back. Junior linebacker Jason Thoren led Kansas in tackles last year with 119.
back Troy
Iowa State returns junior tailback Trov
Davis, who was a Heisman Trophy finalist last year. Davies set an NCAA
LONG NASHVILLE
COLUMBUS
sophomore
rushing record by running for 2,010 yards.
Mobile senior quarterback Todd Doxzon returns, as does senior All-Conference tackle Tim Kohn.
The Cyclone defense struggled last season and most likely will again this year. Sophomore Dawan Anderson and senior Mike Lincavage return in the secondary.
Coach Larry Smith will continue his rebuilding process at Missouri. The Tigers offensive attack will likely depend on the running of junior Brock Olivo.
Four starters return on the offen
sive line for
M
sive lime for Olivo to run behind.
Sophomore quarterback C orby Jones also returns for M
returns for Mizzou.
On defense, the Tigers will likely have trouble stopping the run. Only two starters return from the front seven. Junior DeMontie Cross leads the secondary, which should be the strongest part of the defense.
South Division:
Texas should be near the top of the South this season. The No.
8 Longhorns
were 10-2-
1 last
season
in win-
ning the
fina l
Southwest
Conference
championship.
Mackovic said.
Senior quarterback James Brown led the Southwest Conference in total offence last season. Brown missed spring practice with a shoulder injury, but should be fine by the start of the season.
Senior running back Shon Mitchell, and sophomore Ricky Williams make up an explosive offensive backfield.
Texas returns seven starters on defense, including its entire secondary. Seniors Bryant Westbrook and Taje Allen form one of the best corner duos in the nation. Junior nose tackle Chris Akins will be looked upon to anchor a defensive line that lost All-American Tony Brackens.
"We can be satisfied in what we accomplish last year, but this group will be striving to reach the next level," Texas coach John
Another school striving to reach the top of the South will be Texas A&M. The No. 13 Aggies
were 9-3 last
s e a s o n including a w i n against Michigan in the A l a m o Bowl.
ATM
Texas A&M will
Texas A&M use more of a pro-style offense this season in the hopes that it will capitalize on the considerable talent of junior transfer quarterback Brandon Stewart. Stewart played as a true freshman at Tennessee.
The new offensive look should also benefit the Aggies' versatile running backs. Sophomores Sirr Parker, Eric Bernard and D'Andre Hardeman all saw considerable action as freshmen.
While the changes are on offense for A&M, the defense should see several familiar faces. Senior defensive end Brandon Mitchell has 15 sacks in the last two seasons and his namesake at linebacker, senior Keith Mitchell, is ninth on the school's all-time sack leaders list.
Senior Donovan Greer returns as the Aggies' top cover man at cornerback. Greer missed all of spring practice because of knee surgery.
Texas Tech starts the new season flying high from a 9-3 year and a victory in the Copper Bowl. The Red Balders
T
will be
strongest on offense
where
the t he y
return
eight start-
ers, even
after losin
Winder to division rival Oklahoma this summer.
after losing offensive coordinator Dick
Junior quarterback Zebbie Lethridge has built quite a reputation as a dangerous threat both on land and by air. Lethride passed for 1,885 yards and rushed for 400 last season.
Texas Tech's running game doesn't end with Lethridge. Junior tailback Byron Hanspard ran for 1,374 yards last season — the third best in the school's history.
The picture isn't quite as rosy for the Red Raiders' defense, which lost linebackers Zach Thomas and Marcus Coleman. Texas Tech still should be fine up front on the line, thanks to junior defensive end Tony Daniels and senior tackle Jerome Lang.
Defense will be the strength for the Baylor Bears this season. Lineman Donnie Embra and linebacker Malcolm Hamilton, both seniors, and junior linebacker Glenn Coy all have All-Conference potential. Coy recorded four sacks in the Bears' spring game earlier this year.
On offense,
BU
off offense,
junior quarter
back Jeff
Watson
could get a
challenge
before the
year is finis-
hed from freshman
Odell James.
Junior tailback Jerod Douglas should be one of the Big 12's best after rushing for 1,114 yards in 1995. The Baylor offensive line is fairly young and lacks depth. Senior David Davis and junior Michael Johnson are the tackles with the most experience.
■ New head coach John Blake begins a new era at Oldham, and the first year won't be easy. Sooner fans likely will need to be patient with a team that returns
Sophomore quarterback Eric Moore returns but he threw more interceptions than touchdowns last season.
only nine starters from a year ago.
OU
The offense likely will depend on the legs of running b a c k J am e s Allen.
However, Oklahoma must
replace all five starters on the offensive line.
Senior linebacker Tyrell Peters led the Sooners in tackles with 121, and was also an All-Conference selection a year ago.
He'll team with senior linebacker Broderick Simpson to solidify the middle of the Oklahoma defense.
Bob Simmons enters his second year as head coach at Oklahoma State hoping for continued improvements on a 4-8 record last year.
The Cowboys should be better on offense, since it's hard to get
much worse than a
oSu
ranking of 92nd in the nation.
Senior quarterback
Tone Jones
has three years of starting experience.
rience under his
Sophomore corner R.W. McQuarters and senior safety Trent Fisher should make the secondary the strongest part of the Oklahoma State defense.
belt, and senior tailback David Thompson could be one of the nation's best after rushing for 1,509 last year. Junior tight end Alonzo Mayes returns as the leading receiver.
Men's and women's golf teams focus on fall season
Tommy Gallagher Kansan sports reporter
The Jayhawk men will have only two seniors on this year's squad.
The men's and women's golf teams are ready to open the season with both new and experienced talent.
Senior Kit Grove appears to be the team's best hope to qualify for the NCAA Tournament.
While fellow senior Vance Holtzman provides the team with much-needed consistency.
The women's golf team also shows a good deal of promise. Sophomore Mandy Munsch stood out her first year in Lawrence, becoming the Jayhawks' most consistent player.
She placed in the top-25 in each of her tournaments, averaging 79.8 strokes --the best on the team.
Providing valuable experience to a young team are four talented seniors: Anne Clark, Kelly Marney, Missy Russell and Jessica Thompson. Clark and Russell have lettered every year since coming to the University of Kansas.
Although the fall tournaments are crucial to the team's success, Kansas women's golf coach Jerry Waugh says the stakes get even higher in the spring.
"In the fall, we get ready for spring golf," Waugh said. "In the game of golf there's only one thing to know — that's how many? How many strokes did it take? That's the bottom line."
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6B
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
7B
Basketball players spend summer playing, studying in Lawrence
Team members play in league games while coach looks for new recruits
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
While summer is usually the time for University of Kansas students to leave Lawrence, many members of the Kansas men's basketball team stayed in town.
Attending summer school and playing in summer leagues was part of the summer activities for several Javahawks.
At the annual Sunflower State Games in July, Kansas players were on the rosters of three teams in the tournament. KU #1 featured Jacque Vaughn, B.J. Williams, freshman Nicky Bradford and former players Sean Pearson and Calvin Rayford.
Billy Thomas, Ryan Robertson and T.J. Pugh also played on Sunflower teams. Much to the surprise
of many observers, none of the Kansas teams made it to the semifinals.
Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams saw some of the action at the tournament, and he said that he wasn't impressed with the lackluster effort, especially from the members of KU #1.
"They got killed. Our guys couldn't even beat guys that used to play for Washburn," Williams said. "I got ticked off and left the game early. I couldn't watch it."
One of KU #1's players, B.J.
Williams, faces the same question
each summer: How much weight
did he put on during the summer?
He said the answer was around 10 pounds, and that he hasn't grown tired of being asked about his lean frame.
MEN'S BASKETBALL
"I don't get tired of it, because it's true," he said. "I've asked myself all the time why I can't gain more weight."
One Kansas player who didn't spend his summer in Lawrence was sophomore Paul Pierce, who played for the USA basketball men's 22-and-under World Championship team. Pierce was a member of the team when it took on the USA Dream Team in June. He also played in the Los Angeles summer league for college players.
Coach Williams spent most of his summer on the road recruiting. This summer wasn't any easier for Williams since the Jayhawks will lose four key seniors after this year.
"Last year I thought it would be easier, as far as the number of hours and camps that I went to," Williams said. "I knew I wanted to give one scholarship and if I found a second guy that would be good."
"I think the recruiting interest has grown and grown each year."
Roy Williams Kansas men's basketball coach
Williams said the Jayhawks recent recruiting success has heightened the scrutiny surrounding each new class.
"I think the recruiting interest has grown and grown and grown each year," Williams said. "I think some people care much more about who you're recruiting than they do about winning games."
KANSAS
11
File photo/KANSAN
Part of Kansas senior guard Jacque Vaughn's summer activities included participating in last month's Sunflower State games.
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8B
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Harriers seek team evolution
Familiar freshmen must live up to names early in the season
Brian A. Petrotta Kansan sports reporter
The Kansas cross country team has one word to focus on this year—growth. The women's and men's teams finished sixth and seventh, respectively, in the Big Eight Conference Championship last year. This year Kansas track coach Gary Schwartz welcomes some intriguing recruits and a solid returning crew.
The good news is the talent's there and
the depth is there," Schwartz said, "but this is the first year I don't know how good we're going to be."
The first test will come on Sept. 14 at the Jayhawk Invite in Lawrence. Seniors Cord Criss and Bryan Schultz, junior Brian Watts, and sophomore Lewis Theobald lead the men's team. Sophomores Erica Blackwell, Ann Deveaux, and Tiffany Spratt and juniors Lyn LoPresti and Emily Miles will lead the women's team.
"Our success will depend on the growth of the returners, if they've got the excitement and the work ethic," Schwartz said. "Some leader must come out of this group."
Much needed depth will be supplied by some familiar names in the freshman class. Freshman Tommy Miles is the brother of Emily Miles, one of the top women's runners. The women's team also continues its
tradition of home-grown talent by introducing two Lawrence High graduates to the program. And then there are Drew and Ned Ryun, sons of former Jayhawk and Olympian Jim Ryun. But Schwartz won't let the last name play a big role.
"They're great talents, but unproven," he said.
These relatives of track legends will have the chance to prove themselves during the four meets prior to the Big 12 Conference Championships on Nov. 2. After the Jayhawk Invite, the Jayhawks travel to Minnesota, Maine and Iowa to wrap up the regular season. The toughest competition within the conference should come from cross country powerhouse Iowa State, as well as Colorado and Oklahoma State, who won the women's and men's Big Eight Conference titles last year.
Women rowers hope for depth during second varsity season
Big 12 statis won't affect overall team standing
By Matt Woodruff Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's rowing team expects to be more competitive in its second varsity season and its first in the Big 12 Conference.
"We've already been through the transition to being a varsity team," said Rob Catloth, Kansas women's rowing coach. "Now we're focusing on trying to improve and get a deeper squad so we have more quality boats."
As the Kansas team has added depth with new recruits this season, they also will try to become more competitive regionally and nationally.
"We'd like to make a bigger statement regionally and try and compete against the tough teams like Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan, and Ohio State," Catloth said. "Competing in the Big 12 will not be too much different because Kansas State is really the only other varsity team in the conference."
I am not a historian. I do not know what he was thinking. But I can tell you that he was a man who was kind and compassionate. He was a man who was deeply loved by his family. He was a man who was loyal to his country. He was a man who was proud of his work. He was a man who was happy with his life. He was a man who was grateful for everything that he had been given. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his family. He was a man who was grateful for the support he had received from his friends and colleagues. He was a man who was grateful for the care he had received from his parents and grandparents. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his brothers and sisters. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his cousins and nephews. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his nieces and nephews. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his nephews and nieces. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his niece and nephew. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his nephew and niece. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his nephew and niece. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his nephew and niece. He was a man who was grateful for the love he had received from his niece and nephew
Both Catloth and assistant coach Tami Odell said they suspect K-State will have a strong team, even
Rob Catloth
though it is their first year of varsity rowing.
though it is their first year of varsity rowing.
"They won't have much of a varsity team because they will be concentrating on their freshmen," Odell said. "But their freshmen will be very strong."
Outside of the conference, Kansas will be gunning for Wisconsin, who many expect to be the best rowing team in the country.
"Wisconsin's definitely been the crew to chase," O'Dell said. "But now that many schools are adding varity teams, I think
teams are catching up. Now the athletes and coaches can concentrate on workouts instead of trying to raise enough money."
Catloth said this season's recruiting, which was done mostly during New Student Orientation on campus this summer, will add to team's success.
"We lost some good people, but we have some really good athletes coming up and we've added some talented freshmen," he said.
"This year, I want all of the girls' hard work to show in regional," Odell said. "I want them to get the credit that they deserve."
The rowing team will begin practice next Monday and will compete in its first regatta on Oct. 12 at the Head of the Kaw River in Kansas City, Mo. The rowing team will also compete in regattas Oct. 20 on the Charles River in Boston, Mass., and on Oct. 27 on Iowa River in Iowa City, Iowa. They will compete in Lawrence at the Fall Sprint Regatta on Nov. 3.
Emmitt Smith injures knee, Dallas loses
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — John Elway and Bill Musgrave each threw touchdown passes Saturday night as the Denver Broncos down Dallas 20-3 in a preseason game in which Cowboys running back Emmitt Smith threw a scare into the Super Bowl champions when he sprained his left knee.
lines.
Smith, seeing his first action of the preseason, injured his left knee when his teammate, 340-pound tackle Erik Williams, fell on it in the second quarter. Smith stayed down for almost five minutes before he walked unassisted to the side-
Smith, who has led the NFL rushing four of the last six years, later walked to the dressing room for X-rays and treatment. The X-ray showed no problems, but Smith was scheduled to undergo an MRI on yesterday to make sure.
Denver (3-0) led the Cowboys 7-3 at halftime thanks to a 7-yard touchdown pass from Elway to Rod Smith. It came at the end of a 70-yard drive that featured an 11-yard pass from Elway to Smith on third-and-10 from the Dallas 30.
Elway was 7-of-12 for 68 yards in the first half, while Dallas starter Troy Aikman was
3-of-6 for 20 yards. Smith gained eight yards on three carries before the injury.
Musgrave hit former Cowboy Mike Sherrard with a 15-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter. Jason Elam connected on field goals of 47 and 19 yards for the Broncos.
Dallas (1-3) played its first-team defense throughout the first half and Deion Sanders played both ways. He caught a 39-yard pass from Aikman to set up Chris Boniol's 31-yard field goal and also made two spectacular defensive plays, knocking down two long passes by Elway.
Intramurals gain new Oklahoma director
OSU graduate plans to use student opinion for positive sport changes
By Kerry Hillard
Kansan sportswriter
A former Oklahoma State student plans to listen to the demands of KU students.
Jason Krone, who received a master's degree in sports administration from Oklahoma State, was hired as the University's associate director of Recreation Services and head of the intramural program.
"If I have 100 people down here yelling at me saying they want to play pickle ball, then we're going to try to play pickle ball," Krone said.
Recreation Services Director Mary Chappell shares that philosophy.
"We're going to take a look at what we're doing now," Chappell said, "and see if it's what students really want."
Although Krone is new to the program, he and Chappell feel the transition will be smooth. Chappell that Krone came from a similar program but had fresh ideas.
One idea is a new scheduling system. Intramural brackets will be scheduled immediately before play at the competition site. This should be more efficient and guarantee playing time for participants.
Chappell and Krone also are interested in
The effect of these changes will be seen at the first event of the semester, flag football. Other events, including sand volleyball, softball, a home run derby and soccer, will follow in early September.
"These intramural programs are an avenue for those people who wish to stay competitive in snorts." Krone said.
Participating in competitive sports has many benefits. Chappell said that participants enjoyed better physical fitness, social interaction and overall wellness.
Intramural participant and Dallas sophomore Cory Feinberg agreed.
"I love the camaraderie of team sports and the competition," Feinberg said. "Intra-murals are social as well as athletic."
Any University student, faculty or staff member may participate in intramural sports. Participants may form teams or compete as individuals.
Those more interested in employment than athletic competition also benefit from intramurals. Various jobs, such as event officials and supervisors, can be filled by students.
Information about the intramural program will be posted on campus during the first days of class. Contact Recreation Services Office in 208 Robinson Center at 864-3546 for more information.
Swimmers ready to plunge into Big 12 competition
Freshmen expected to increase strength against new opponents
Kansan staff report
The prospect of going into the newly formed Big 12 Conference and competing against swimming powerhouses Texas and Texas A&M should leave Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf bit leery.
But instead of fearing the new challenge, Kempf and the Kansas men's and women's swimming teams are embracing it.
"We're really excited about this season, going into the Big 12 Conference," Kempf said. If you want to be the best, you have to go face to face with the best in the country."
Kempf's optimism is not without reason, however. The incoming freshman class is expected to step in and provide support for the team.
"I'm very excited and pleased with the incoming freshman class,"Kempf said.
Also expected to contribute to the swimming team are men's swimmers Erik Jorgensen, Konstantinos Chiligiris and women's swimmers Rebecca Andrew and Christa Neal.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
9B
FOOTBALL Q & A
It's a whole new bowl game in college football
By Richard Rosenblatt AP Football Writer
Twenty questions about college football in 1996:
Q : Can Nebraska win a third straight national championship?
A: No team has ever won three national titles since the AP poll began in 1936, but the Cornhuskers have the ingredients to be the first. The biggest question is whether Scott Frost can adequately replace versatile Tommie Frazier, who ran and passed the 'Huskers to a 25-game winning streak for the past two
streak for the past two
Despite the offfield problems coach Tom Osborne has had to handle, he has all-star player
N
returning to nearly every position,
including tailback Ahman Green,
defensive end Jared Tomich, linebacker Terrell Farley and center Aaron Taylor.
The Big 12 schedule looks relatively easy for Nebraska, except for a game against Colorado Nov. 29 in Lincoln and a probable conference title game against Texas or Texas A&M D. 7 in St. Louis.
Other teams with two consecutive titles are: Minnesota 1940-41; Army 1944-45; Notre Dame 1946-47; Oklahoma 1955-56; Alabama 1964-65; Nebraska 1970-71; Oklahoma 1974-75; and Alabama 1978-79.
Q: Any new bowl games this season?
There are now 19 bowl games certified by the NCAA.
A: The Haka Bowl, of course.
The game, named after a Maori war dance, is set for Dec. 26 at 8 p.m. EST in Auckland, New Zealand, the first non-All-Star game to be played outside the United States since the 1937 Bacardi bowl in Havana. Created by former NFL player Riki Ellison, who was born in New Zealand, the Haka Bowl matches the Pac-10's third place finisher against an at-large team. Each school will be paid $1.5 million.
There are now 19 bowl games cer*
Q : Is there really overtime this season?
A: Incredibly, yes. Thirty years after the sport's most memorable tie — Michigan State 10, Notre Dame 10 in 1966 major college coaches, athletic directors and presidents finally agreed on a major change.
In February, the NCAA rules committee, chaired by Georgia athletic director Vince Dooley, approved the change, formally known as a tiebreaker.
How it works: If the score is tied at the end of regulation, the game
clock is turned off, a coin is tossed,
and the teams begin an overtime period. The ball is placed at the opponent's 25-yard line and the teams play until the tie is broken after both have had an equal number of possessions.
Last season the tiebreaker was approved for bowl games and was used in the Las Vegas Bowl. Toledo beat Nevada 40-37 by scoring a touchdown after Nevada kicked a field goal on its possession.
Q
: Who are the new faces in new places?
A: Bob Toledo is replacing Terry Donahue at UCLA, John Blake for Howard Schnellenberger at Oklahoma and Jim Donnan for Ray Goff at Georgia. Donahue was hired by CBS Sports. Goff is living on his farm in Athens, Ga. Schnellenberger returned to Miami.
Bill Oliver, longtime defensive coordinator at Alabama, moves to Auburn in a similar capacity.
Steve Mariucci, passed over once before at California, finally gets his chance as Keith Gilbertson's replacement.
Homer Smith is offensive coordinator at Arizona after being fired at Alabama. ... At The Citadel, coach Charlie Taaffe was suspended for the season for his second DUI in three years. His replacement is defensive coordinator Don Powers.
Q
: Any mismatches this season?
A : How about Notre Dame-
Navy? If it isn't enough that
the Irish have a 50.9 record
the Irish have a 1959 IRecord against the Middies and haven't lost to them since 1963, then try this: This year's game is being played in Dublin, Ireland, on Nov. 2.
There's also The Citadel, Division I-AA, at Miami. Originally, the Hurricanes were to play Colorado on Sept. 7, but when the Big 12 was born, the Buffaloes retooled their schedule.
Oklahoma State, meanwhile, gets a break. The Cowboys don't play Nebraska this year. The Huskers are 33-2-1 in the series, with the Cowboys winning the first two games.
Q
Where are the top games this season?
A: Michigan at Colorado, Sept. 14; Florida at Tennessee, Sept. 21; Notre Dame at Texas, Sept. 21; Ohio State at Notre Dame, Sept. 28; Florida State at Miami, Oct. 12; Navy vs. Notre Dame at Dublin, Ireland, Nov. 2; Michigan at Ohio State, Nov. 23; Southern California at UCLA, Nov. 23; Colorado at Nebraska, Nov. 29; and Florida at Florida State, Nov. 30.
Don't miss the Big 12 and SEC title
A
games on Dec. 7, where the winners may end up being ranked 1-2 and meeting in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2
Q : When are the best tradi tional rivalries played?
Q
A : The biggest day is Nov. 23.
The highlights are: Kansas-
Missouri, Harvard-Yale,
Stanford-Cal, USC-UCLA, Michigan-
Ohio State, Indiana-Purdue,
Arizona-Arizona State, Alabama-
Auburn, LSU-Tulane and South
Carolina-Clemson.
Others of note: Pitt-West Virginia,
Aug. 31; Texas-Oklahoma, Oct. 12;
Tennessee-Alabama, Oct. 26;
Florida-Georgia, Nov. 2; Texas-
Texas A&M, Nov. 29; Georgia-Georgia
Tech, Mississippi-Mississippi
State, Tennessee-Vanderbilt and
Notre Dame-USC, all on Nov. 30; and
Army-Navy, Dec. 7.
Q : Do regular-season games now have corporate sponsors?
game is the Dr Pepper Red River Shootout. Dr Pepper guarantees each school $125,000 for the title sponsorship
A : Sure enough. For the second year in a row, the Oklahoma-Texas
And then there's the Dowdy Aviation Football Classic, better known as Florida State at Wake Forest on Nov. 9. The game has been moved from Winston-Salem, N.C., to Orlando, Fla., because Dowdy Aviation has promised a payout of $900,000 to the teams.
Q
Florida State also has a road game against Maryland on Nov. 23 in Miami. Sponsors are putting up about $900,000 per team for that one too.
Q
: Any Northwesterners out there?
A
: Which coaches are on the hot seat?
Q
A: Here's one opinion: Alabama's Gene Stallings, Mississippi State's Jackie Sherrill, Pitt's Johnny Majors, Indiana's Bill Mallory, Illinois' Lou Tepper, SMU's Tom Rossley, Oregon State's Jerry Pettibone and Kentucky's Bill Curry.
A: As the season starts, six teams are on NCAA probation: Alabama, Miami, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Texas A&M and Washington State. Mississippi is banned from postseason games. None of these teams are banned from TV. All six had their scholarships reduced, and all but Alabama were cited for lack of institutional control.
A
: Who's in trouble with the NCAA?
Q : Where are the top quarterbacks?
Q
Q
A : Tennessee's Peyton Manning tops the list, with Florida's Danny Willett
ning tops the list, with Florida's Danny Weurfeil right behind. Those capable of terrific seasons are USC's Brad Otton (29-of-44 for 391 cups and 2 TDs in the Rose Bowl), Syracuse's Donovan McNabb, Arizona State's Jake Plummer, Penn State's Wally Richardson and Texas' James Brown. Notre Dame's Ron Poulus and Colorado's Koy Detmer, if he's healthy, could also have strong seasons.
Q: What's with Kentucky phenomenon Tim Couch?
A: He looks great, but coach Bill Curry plans to start Billy Jack Haskins ahead of him. If the Wildcats don't start well, and, with games against Louisville and Cincinnati, it is a possibility, look for the 6-foot-5, 230-pound Couch, everyone's high school player of the year with career totals of 12,104 yards and 133 TD passes, to get his shot.
Q. What did the CFA do, any way?
A: The College Football Association, a consortium of 67 Division I schools is in its
Division I-A schools, is in its 20th and final season. At its peak, the CFA was a powerful influence on the legislative and financial fronts. But once it became clear that the CFA could no longer deliver big TV bucks, there was no need to keep it going.
The big football schools organized it in 1977 after twice failing to gain more power by restructuring the NCAA. Even though the Big Ten and Pac-10 were convinced by the NCAA not to join, the CFA still managed to force the NCAA to give up its football TV rights to its members.
The CFA took over and a negotiated a five-year, $175 million deal with CBS from 1986-90. The next contract, with ABC and ESPN, doubled. But Notre Dame defected and signed its own deal with NBC. In 1994, the SEC signed its own deal with CBS, and CFA began crumbling.
Q
: How about conference changes?
A : The Southwest and Big Eight conferences are gone, replaced by the Big 12 and
A
Repaired by the Big 12 and an expanded Western Athletic Conference. The Big 12 includes the Big Eight teams plus Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Baylor from the SWC.
Rice, SMU and TCU move to the new 16-team WAC, while Houston joined Conference USA. The WAC also added Tulsa, an independent, and UNLV and San Jose State from the Big West.
The Big West dwindles to six teams — Nevada, Idaho, Utah State, New Mexico State, Boise State and North Texas.
Conference USA consists of Louisville, Cincinnati, Southern Mississippi, Memphis, Houston and Tulane.
The Big Sky gains Sacramento State and Northridge State from the American West Conference and also adds Division II Portland State. The losses are Boise State and Idaho.
: What happened in July with the bowl alliance?
Q
A: Nothing that will affect this season or next. This season, the Sugar Bowl gets the top
In July, ABC announced a deal that created a "super alliance" by adding the Pac-10, Big Ten and Rose Bowl to the group. The new alliance begins in the 1998 season.
the Sugar Bowl matchup in the bowl alliance. Since the Big Ten and Pac-10 are not part of the alliance until the 1998 season, the Sugar is hoping Nos. 1 and 2 come from the ACC, Big East, Big 12, SEC and Notre Dame. That takes in 42 of 109 I-A teams
: What's the bowl lineup look like?
Q
A : Most of the games — at large bids remain for the Haka and Independence bowls — are set:
Las Vegas — MAC 1 vs. Big West
Aloha — Pac-10 4 vs. Big 12 6.
Haka — Pac-10 3 vs. At-large.
Cotton — Big 12 2 vs. Pac-10 2.
WAC1
- Copper — WAC 2 vs. Big 12 5.
- Carquest — Big East 3 vs. ACC 4.
- Liberty — Conference USA 1 vs. BN East 4.
Placer
Alamo — Big Ten 4 vs. Big 124.
Holiday — WAC 1-Pac-10 2 vs.
Big 123.
Peach -- ACC 3 vs. SEC 4.
- Independence — SEC 5 vs. At large.
Orange — Alliance 4 vs. Alliance 6
Sun — Pac-10 5 vs. Big Ten 5.
Siu — Sec-3.
Fiesta — Alliance 3 vs. Alliance
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Gator — ACC 2 vs. Big East 2.
Outback — SEC 3 vs. Big Ten 3.
Rose — Pac-10 1 vs. Big Ten 1.
Sugar — Alliance 1 vs. Alliance
Q
A
: Why play the Kickoff Classic?
A: At first glance the reason is money. The minimum payout per team is $675,000. And this year's game between Penn State and Southern California at 77,716-seat Giants Stadium is a sell-out. It could even be a Rose Bowl preview.
But what about the future? With the new bowl alliance in place in 1998, and conferences adding title games after the season, why would any team risk an extra game at the start? One loss, even in the first game, could be the difference between playing for the national title and $6 million or ending up in the Gator Bowl for a whole lot less.
How big is the Big 12?
Q
seven teams finished in the Top 25 last season, and six are in the pre-season poll.
: Here are some lofty numbers:
Only 13 times in bowl history have teams scored more than 50 points. Four were recorded by Big 12 teams last year: Nebraska scored 62, Texas Tech 55, Kansas State 54 and Kansas 51.
Last season, Iowa State's Troy
Bush only.
CENTER
Barry Sanders of Okla-
the fifth player in NCAA history to rush for more than 2,000 yards. Three others are Big 12 members: Barry Sanders of Ol
homa State, Mike Rozier of Nebraska and Rashaan Salaamof Colorado).
Big 12 teams were 49-10 against nonconference foes a year ago, and 6-1 in bowl games.
Nebraska's Tom Osborne and
TAA&M A&A's R. Scoc. Loci are 1-2 in
winning percentage among coaches
with five or more years at a I-A
School. Osborne is at .827 231-47-3)
and Scocum at .812 65-15-2).
Q
: Who are the top defensive players?
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
A
A : Defensive ends Jared Tomich Nebraska), Brandon Mitchell Texas A&M) and Cornell Brown Virginia Tech), linebackers Pat Fitzgerald Northwestern), Terrell Farley Nebraska) and Jarrett Irons Michigan State) and DBs Chris Cantey Kansas State), Shawn Springs Ohio State) and Kevin Jackson Alabama).
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1
10B Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Royals beat Texas against odds
Belcher surrenders just 6 hits; snaps Rangers' 7-game winning streak
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — Tim Belcher figured that a seven-game winning streak meant Texas was ripe for a loss.
Belcher pitched a six-hitter against a team that began the night with an AL-leading .292 batting average, and the Kansas City Royals beat the Rangers 4-1 Saturdaynight.
"Sometimes the odds go against you," said Belcher, who beat the Rangers in Arlington for the first time in his career after going 0-3 with a 5.30 ERA. "It's hard to keep long winning streaks going. Sometimes you catch a well-pitched game against you."
Belcher (12-7) walked none and struck out five in his second complete game of the season. Belcher's control was the key. He gave up no walks for the third time this season.
When the Royals signed Belcher as a free agent last winter, they were hoping that the 34-year-old right-hander would provide veteran leadership, but they weren't sure how many wins he could give them. Belcher started the season with a 20-32 record in the AL.
"We expected a .500-type guy but he's been much better than that," Royals manager Bob Boone said. "He's as prepared as any pitcher I've seen. He had a good plan going in and he executed it. He was able to carry his stuff all the way through nine innings. We've seen this kind of performance from him a half a dozen times this season."
Rangers starter Ken Hill (13-7), who had won six of his previous seven decisions, gave up a career-high 13 hits in 7 1/3 innings.
"They don't hit a lot of homers but they hit the ball all over the park," Hill said. "It's frustrating, but they did what they had to do to win the game."
Kansas City scored twice in the fourth for a 2-0 lead. Singles by Bob Hamlin, Craig Paquette and Michael Tucker loaded the bases with no outs. Johnny Damon had a sacrifice fly and Mike
Paquette went 3-for-5 with two runs scored.
Texas scored in the bottom half on an RBI double by Juan Gonzalez.
Sweeney hit an RBI single.
Darryl Hamilton singled and went to third on Rusty Greer's single. Gonzalez bleoped a run-scoring single, then Texas loaded the bases when Paquette bobbled Will Clark's grounder to third base. Belcher got Dean Palmer to ground into a double play to end the threat.
The Royals scored two in the eighth on Damon's sacrifice fly and Sweeney's RBI double.
Kansas City didn't have many hard-hit balls, but the way Belcher was pitching, the Royals didn't need much offense.
"This is as good as I've ever seen him pitch," Rangers manager Johnny Oates said. "We didn't hit too many balls on the nose. He didn't give in to our hitters."
Palmer continued to struggle at the plate. In addition to hitting into the double play in the fourth, Palmer struck out with runners on first and third in the ninth, ending the game. He's 11-for-60 during his last 15 games.
Oates said. "When he's in a groove, nobody can get him out. Now he's struggling and we have to pick him up."
With the game on the line in the ninth, the Royals hoped Belcher could finish.
"We all know Deano's a streaky hitter."
"Belcher is a horse," Sweeney said. "We were all on the edge of our seats in the ninth inning. We were all really pumped when he struck Palmer out. I'm happy for Timmy."
Notes: Rangers catcher Ivan Rodriguez did not start because of stiffness in his lower back. Dave Valle started in place of Rodriguez and he threw out Tom Goodwin attempting to steal in the fifth. That broke a streak of 16 consecutive steals by Goodwin, who was last thrown out by Cleveland's Tony Pena on July 16.
Gonzalez had two outfield assists, throwing out Paquette at the plate in the sixth and Tucker at third in the fourth.
The Rangers record for most hits allowed is 14 by Oil Can Boyd and Bobby Witt.
The Rangers extended their errorless streak to 13 games, one short of the AL record. set by California in 1991.
Hamilton has scored 19 runs in his last 19 games.
Missed plays frustrate KC in loss to St. Louis
NFL's No.2 defense falters against Rams in exhibition game
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The sure-touchdown pass St. Louis rookie Eddie Kennison dropped the week before seemed far, far away Saturday night after he caught three scoring passes against Kansas City's tough defense.
"Last week was last week, and I've forgetten about it," Kennison said after the Rams, taking advantage of rare mistakes by Kansas City's defense, rallied for a 34-30 exhibition victory. "We came in here and beat a good team, and I'm sure we were underdogs."
The Chiefs' defense, which was ranked No. 2 in the NFL last year and hadn't yielded a touchdown in nine exhibition quarters, self-destructed with penalties and missed tackles in every TD drive by the Rams (2-1), who scored their most points in an exhibition game since the Los Angeles Rams beat the St. Louis Cardinals 39-7 in 1985.
It was the most points scored against the Chiefs since a 35-17 loss at Cleveland last Sept.24.
Kennison, drafted out of LSU with the Rams' second first-round pick after they took Nebraska running back Lawrence Phillips with their first, caught TD passes of 6,30 and 9 yards.
"It was a lot of fun for all of us," Kennson said. "You look at this locker room, all these guys are smiling. I'm getting there slowly but surely."
"He made some mistakes out there, but he's going to make some big plays," Rams coach Rich Brooks said.
After the Chiefs (2-1) took a 13-0 lead with 5:14 left in the first half, the Rams staged quick scoring drives of 82 and 49 yards.
"The thing that was disappointing to me was the nature of some of our penalties," Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer said. "We were involved in the stuff that goes on after the play is over. That's ridiculous. There's no place for that in this business. We'd all better understand and learn from it because there's no excuse for it."
In the Rams' first scoring drive, defensive end Vaughn Booker was flagged 15 yards for a late hit on first down. Next defensive back Dale Carter was cited for an illegal blow to the head, adding 12 yards to Steve Walsh's 27-yard completion to Todd Kinchen.
On second-and-10 from the 12, defensive back Mark Collins was flagged for a personal foul, and Walsh hit Kennison with a 6-yard scoring pass on the next play.
"It's very frustrating," Collins said. "But I'm going to leave the locker room and forget about it, to be honest with you, because it's a preseason game and I really don't care. This was definitely a learning experience."
After a dull, scoreless first quarter, Missouri's two NFL entries combined for 30 points in the second quarter in the resumption of their Governor's Cup series.
Roman Anderson, battling Bjorn Nittmo for the Chiefs' kicking job, connected on a 37-yard with 11:25 remaining. A few minutes later, after a 28-yard punt by the Rams' Sean Landeta, Danan Hughes made a leaping catch for a 34-
yard gain to the 2 to set up Donnell Bennett's TD plunge.
The Chiefs, catching everybody off guard, executed an onside kick a moment later, setting up a 33-yard field goal by Anderson.
After Kennison's score made it 13-7, the Rams scooted 49 yards in just three plays to take a 14-13 lead. Walsh connected with Jermaine Ross for 23 yards and a 17-yard pass interference penalty on Perry Carter put the ball at the one yard line. Walsh floated a scoring pass to Derrick Harris with 1:12 left in the half.
Steve Bono whipped the Chiefs 67 yards in seven plays to set up Nittmo's 25-yard field goal as time expired, putting Kansas City on top 16-14.
With 3:33 left in the third period, Greg Robinson burst up the middle, broke three tackles, and went 41 yards for the Rams' third touchdown.
The Chiefs made it 24-21 less than a minute into the fourth period when Tony Richardson capped a 76-yard drive with a 2-yard run for a touchdown.
tracy Rogers' 15-yard penalty for a late hit helped set up Tony Banks' 30-yard scoring pass to Kennison a few minutes
Barkley may rocket to Houston
The Associated Press
PHOENIX — The Houston Rockets' summer-long pursuit of Charles Barkley is about to bear fruit, according to a published report that says the Phoenix Suns will trade the All-Star forward for four players.
The story said Houston would send point guard Sam Cassell and forwards Robert Horry, Mark Bryant and Chucky Brown to Phoenix. All four players will become free agents after this season.
The Arizona Republic, citing an unidentified source in Houston, reported yesterday that the four-for-one swap likely would be announced today if details could be worked out.
Neither Suns president Jerry Colangelo nor Barkley's agent, Glen Guthrie, could be reached by The Associated Press for comment yesterday. Calls to two sources in Houston were not immediately returned.
Barkley's relationship with the Suns soured last season, and he has said he would retire if the Suns didn't trade him to a contending team.
In an interview with NBC's Bob Costas during the NBA finals in June, Barkley said Houston was among the teams he would consider joining.
The Rockets have aggressively pursued a deal for Barkley this summer. Rumors last month had Barkley going to Houston in a three-way deal that would have sent Horry and Cassell to Denver and free agent center Dikembe Mutombo to Phoenix.
According to the Republic, the Rockets made a new offer to the Suns last week that added Brown to the package of Horry and Cassell. After the deal was rejected, the Rockets agreed to the Suns' demand to add Bryant.
Bryant, an eight-year NBA veteran, would strengthen the Suns' defense and rebounding. Cassell and Horry played key roles in the Rockets' back-to-back world championships in 1994 and 1995.
Horry, 25, was the 11th pick of the draft in 1992 out of Alabama.
Cassell, 26, was the 24th player taken in the first round of the 1993 draft.
Barkley, 33, has two years left on his contract, which pays him $4.6 million next season. The combined salaries of the four Houston players are within the allowable 15 percent of Barkley's salary, which brings the reported deal into compliance with the league's salary-cap restrictions.
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
118
Strug seeks normalcy at UCLA, coaching women's gymnastics
The Associated Press
Good luck.
LOS ANGELES — Kerri Strug says she's looking forward to being a normal college student.
Strug, whose final vault with an injured left ankle in the women's gymnastics team competition was one of the most dramatic moments in the Atlanta Olympics, said she has enrolled at UCLA and will be a volunteer assistant coach for the women's gymnastics team.
"I'll be able to travel with the team, practice with them," Strug said in her first Los Angeles news conference. "it's been a lifelong dream to attend UCLA. Hopefully, I'll be able to give some help and advice to the other girls."
Strug, 18, decided to turn professional after endorsement offers began arriving.
days through Thursdays, taking freshman English, psychology and music.
"That's just to start off with while I have this crazy schedule," she said. "We'll go from there. I've been looking forward to being a college student for some time now. I'm looking forward to meeting people, exploring other areas of life."
Strug, whose family lives in Tucson, Ariz., said she might join a sorority and is looking forward to being able to hang out, go to parties, do the normal things and study, too.
"I've been so focused, in a little box, sort of," she said. "I love being near the beach. This school is great academically. I feel that once I get situated here, I'm just like anyone else."
That's unlikely to be the case for some time, if ever.
"The schedule has been pretty freetic." she admitted.
How many people have been to the White House, and on television shows hosted by Rosie O'Donnell
and Jay Leno? Or spent time chatting with Jason Priestly after having a role in an upcoming episode of *Beverly Hills 90210*?
And those around her say it couldn't be happening to a more deserving person.
Strug has.
"I can't tell you how thrilled the gymnastics world is that Kerri is finally getting the recognition she has worked so hard for," UCLA women's gymnastics coach Valorie Kondos said. "She has turned down hundreds of thousands of dollars for years, years.
"She went from that level to this level with the vault," Kondos added, moving her hand from waist level to over her head for emphasis. "She is no longer a little pixie, she's a young lady."
"I am thrilled, UCLA is thrilled, to have Kerri become a part of our program. Her role on the team, I think, is something we're going to have a lot of fun with."
Melanie Strug said her daughter
has never been a problem.
"She really is the nicest young lady, just a model kid," she said. "She's just the same Kerri. She has no idea of the impact she's had on the American people. I don't think she'll ever change in a negative way. I just really think she's grounded."
Kondos admitted she was disappointed Strug decided to give up her eligibility.
"I think I'd be lying to say I'm not disappointed," Kondos said. "We finished second (in the NCAA championships) last year. Having Kerri Strug on our team? Wow.
"But do I think she made the right decision? Absolutely," she said.
Renowned sports agent Leigh Steinberg has been hired to represent Strug.
"We've been very happy. The phone's being ringing off the hook," Steinberg said. "There are some great opportunities in the areas of books, movies, a number of commercial endorsements that will come over time."
Baseball owners find league homes for Diamondbacks and Devil Rays
Interleague play aided by placement
The Associated Press
While it's not official yet, it appears the Arizona Diamondbacks will be assigned to the National League and the Tampa Bay Devil Rays will be put in the American League when owners meet next month.
When the expansion teams were approved on March 9, 1995, owners said the league assignments would be made by January 1997. The meetings on Sept. 10-12 in Seattle are the last that owners have scheduled for this year.
Diamondbacks head Jerry Colangelo has lobbied repeatedly to get into the NL, where his team would have Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego in the same time zone for most of the season, with Colorado just one time zone away. At the last four owners' meetings, he attended the NL sessions but not those for the AL.
AL owners want Tampa Bay so they don't cede all of Florida to the NL.
Interleague play, pending final approval from the players' association, begins next season with East and Central teams playing 15 games against the other league and West teams playing 16.
Putting Arizona in the NL and Tampa Bay in the AL would create 15-team leagues which, in turn, would help facilitate the scheduling of interleague games.
TURNAROUND TIGERS. It's hard to tell how far they'll go in the future, but the Detroit Tigers sure have come a long way since one of the worst starts in baseball history.
The Tigers were 13-42 on June 7 and drawing comparisons to the 1962 Mets, whose 40-120 record was the poorest ever. After that, though, the Tigers went 29-28 — mostly against contending teams — as general manager Randy Smith reshaped the roster, bringing in the likes of Brad Ausmus, Andujar Cedeno, Damion Easley and Ruben Sierra.
The biggest deal was the swap that sent Cecil Fielder to the Yankees for Sierra and a promising minor league pitcher. Tigers manager Buddy Bell said he's noticed a difference in his team since the Fielder trade.
"We hated to lose him, but I think the guys said to themselves, "This is up to us now." Bell said. "And with all the trade talk over, they seemed to relax."
No telling, however, how far the Tigers' pitching will carry them, although Smith is trying. He's already added relievers Gregg Olson, John Cummings and Joey Eisen and starter Todd Van Poppel during the season.
THE NUMBERS GAME: The Cincinnati Reds have retired just two numbers — No. 5 for Johnny Bench and No. 1 for Fred Hutchinson — but John Allen wants to add to that total.
Allen, the managing executive of the Reds, wants to assemble a group to decide whether more numbers should be honored.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
"My theory is that you put together
this panel of representative people," Allen said. "Then, with class and style, you set up standards and a methodology for doing those things, then you give it the class and style the city of Cincinnati deserves and the fans deserve."
SINCE 1890
NATIONAL
LEAGUE
OF PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL CLUBS
Among the numbers that would certainly be considered — Pete Rose's No. 14, Joe Morgan's No. 8, Tony Perez's No. 24 and Ted Kuszewski's No. 18.
Bruske, 31, has spent nine years in the minors with three different systems.
IT'S IN THE CARDS: In the last year, relief pitcher Jim Bruske has been back-and-forth between the minors and the Los Angeles Dodgers three times. When he was sent down to Triple-A Albuquerque again last week, he left with two hopes — that he would get a callup in September, and that he would someday get his own baseball card.
"Ijust want one so my kid can see I wasn't lying when he grows up." Bruske said. "All I want is one card."
Dodgers teammates Mike Piazza
"I think it's about time that baseball recognized the contributions of a Jim Bruske. Having not done so already has been an egregious error." Piazza said.
and Eric Karros said they would help.
"There are guys who haven't even been in the big leagues yet and they have cards. My offseason mission is to make sure Jim Bruske gets on a 1997 baseball card," Karros said.
ON DECK: For the first time ever, a specially made baseball honoring a former player will be used in a big league game. It will be on Aug. 25 at Yankee Stadium, the day the Yankees dedicate a monument to Mickey Mantle. Rawlings is making a ball that will be stitched in Yankees blue (instead of the usual red), feature a Mantle logo and bear a facsimile autograph of the Hall of Famer. Copies of the commemorative ball are on sale for collectors by Rawlings. Last season, the company made a special, orange-stitched ball for the games in which Cal Ripken tied and broke Lou Gehrig's record.
Llamavered since 1993
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Plunge Into Hawk Week 1996!!
For a Complete Schedule of Day and Night Events,
Stop by New Student Orientation,
45 Strong Hall For Details!
Come Join Us For Our Night Events!!
Sunday - Community Drum Circle
Monday
SAA Ice Cream Social & Traditions Night
Tuesday
BEACH-N-BOULEVARD
Wednesday
Opening Convocation
NSQ would like to thank S.A.A.
the Student Alumni Association, the Multicultural Center, and the
Muscular Fitness Center at Hawk Point.
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But events like last Saturday's enshrinement ceremony will help, said Bernie Kish, the hall's executive director. Payton, Bradshaw and 12 other former players and coaches were inducted in a ceremony televised by ESPN.
The group was the hall's first class from smaller schools — Division I-AA, II and III, as well as the NAIA.
Plunge Into Hawk Week 1996!!
For a Complete Schedule of Day and Night Events,
Stop by New Student Orientation,
45 Strong Hall For Details!
Come Join Us For Our Night Events!!
NIGHTS
Monday
SAA Ice Cream Social & Traditions Night
Tuesday
BEACH-N-BOULEVARD
Wednesday
Opening Convocation
Sunday - Community Drum Circle
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The Olympics didn't help fund-raising efforts either, Casciola said. Companies that might have been willing to put money toward the hall were already committed to the Atlanta Games.
"It it just doesn't happen overnight." Kish said. "I think it's going to take a couple of years, but I think it's going to be tremendously successful."
Visitors said it was even better than they'd expected and promised to come back. A marketing group estimated the hall would have 160,000 visitors its first year. Fund-raisers promised the hall would be paid for with millions in corporate sponsorships.
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"I know people are questioning the attendance figures and the corporate sponsors. But it's too soon to question that," he said. "We're not at all discouraged about anything. We think we've got a great facility, and now it's our job to let more people know about it."
Other halls of fame experienced similar problems when they first opened. Cascicia said.
But reality set in shortly after the kickoff celebration ended. As
Praise and predictions for the hall were heady when it opened last August with the enshrinement of a class that included Jim Brown. The second class was enshrined Aug 11 at the hall, with Walter Payton and Terry Bradshaw being the biggest of the 14 names.
"I liked it, very neat. It's set up real nice," Fisher said after his first visit. "I would definitely comeback."
The hall features plaques of players and coaches, and a computer that gives information and video clips of hall members. Interactive displays let people test their throwing and kicking ability, and a film gave visitors the feel of being at a college football game.
Despite those facts, organizers are calling the College Football Hall of Fame's first year a success. As proof, they point to people like Norman Fisher.
SOUTH BEND, IND. — It los money, attendance figures were lower than expected and the corporate sponsors never materialized.
College Football Hall of Fame expects growth
The Associated Press
Frank Robinson, Willie Keeler.
Rogers Hornsby. Al Simmons.
The problems were not wholly unexpected, said Bob Casciola, executive director of the National Football Foundation, which sponsors the hall.
of this week, about 115,000 people had visited the hall, and organizers were still waiting for the corporate donations to roll in.
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — The names seem to click by almost as fast as the hits these days.
Molitor poised to join elite 3,000-hit club
before the end of the season, barring injury, Paul Molitor also will pass Sam Crawford, Sam Rice and Cap Anson and become the 20th member of baseball's exclusive 3.000-hit club.
Molitor, who will turn 40 on Thursday, entered last Friday's game against the Toronto Blue Jays needing 46 hits over his final 42 games to reach 3,000. He has followed his worst season — .270 with Toronto in 1995 — with one of his best.
"In a lot of ways, it doesn't seem real," Molitor said. "It's like the hitting streak (39 games in 1987). You go back and watch the tapes of it and it's almost like you're watching a story about someone else."
That's heady company for Molitr, who returned home to play his 19th season for the Minnesota Twins this year. It has become an unforgettable summer.
As the hits piled up, Molitor allowed himself to believe 3,000 was reachable this season. He called a news conference last Friday to announce the Twins would auction off the balls from hits 2,961 to 2,990 to benefit charity, similar to what the Twins did as Dave Winfield closed in on 3,000 in 1993.
He is all too aware of how quickly injuries can spoil a season, and was hesitant when the Twins came to him about a month ago to talk about ways to capitalize on the excitement his pursuit of 3,000 would generate.
major league lead in hits (165) and multi-hit games (55).
Maybe that's why Molitor has been so reluctant to talk about his pursuit of one of the game's treasured milestones. He entered the season needing 211 hits to get 3,000, and figured it would have to wait until 1997.
Perhaps his most impressive statistic is that he is the only Twin, and of only 12 players in the majors, to play every game this season, remarkable for a player who has been so brittle throughout his career.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
ED
12B
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New players, coach boost tennis teams
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
With a number of their players returning, the Kansas tennis teams seem poised to improve on their impressive spring seasons.
The Jayhawk women finished the year with a 21-7 mark and ranked 20th in the final Intercollegiate Tennis Association poll. Senior Kyle Hunt is the feature attraction on the team, having made an enormous impact in her first year as a transfer from North Carolina State.
The Australianian-born Hunt reached the NCAA singles championship match last season but lost, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, to No.4-seed Jill Craybas of the University of Florida.
The loss came at the end of a season in which Hunt won the National Clay Courts doubles title with recent graduate Jenny Atkerson, and also the National Indoor Championships singles title.
Hunt's 49-4 record in singles competition and success in the NCAA tournament earned her All-American status and a No. 6 ranking at the end of the season.
Other returning players include seniors Bianca Kirkhof and Amy Trytek, juniores Maria Abatijoglou and Christie Sim and sophomore Kris Sell. And although Brooke Shiller from Warnambool, Australia, and Julia Sidovia from Riga, Latvia, are only freshmen, head coach Chuck Merzbacher expects them to be as mentally tough as the seniors.
aThe newcomers have international experience, which will
make them tough," Merzbacher said. "We have more experience than we've ever had, which means we'll have a real solid team from top to bottom with no holes."
Although the men's team finished 25-6 and ranked 11th nationally, their season ended more abruptly than that of their female counterparts.
The men's team lost to the University of Georgia, 4-1, in the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Tournament on the Bulldogs' home court.
The Jayhawks' one point came from victories by the No. 1 doubles team of junior Enrique Abaro and former Jayhawk Michael Isroff and the No. 3 doubles team of sophomores Fernando Sierra and Luis Uribe.
"We played with a lot of heart and determination out there today," head coach Michael Center said afterwards. "We were defeated by a good Georgia team and by the 95-degree heat. We just weren't used to those conditions."
It was the last match for Center, who resigned at the end of the summer to accept a position in private business.
As head coach of the Jayhawks, Center had been named conference and regional coach of the year for the past three seasons.
"It's hard to leave Lawrence and the University of Kansas," Center said. "But I have a great opportunity in the business world."
Mark Riley, who had been head coach the past three seasons at Drake University, will take Center's place.
Riley posted a 47-26 record at
1996-97 Kansas men's tennis schedule
Sept. 26-29 National Clay Courts ... Oct. 4-6 Tulsa Invite ... Oct. 17-20 ITA All-American ... Oct. 24-28 Regional Rolex ... Nov. 2-3 Regional Team Playoff ...
Jan. 25 BALL STATE
Jan. 31 NEW MEXICO
Feb. 1 ARKANSAS
Feb. 6-9 Rolex Indoors
Feb. 15 Minnesota
Feb. 20-23 National Team Indoors
Feb. 28 DRAKE
March 2 Tulsa
March 8 Oklahoma
March 9 Oklahoma State
March 11 TEXAS
March 13-16 Blue-Grey Tournament
March 22 New Mexico
March 25 Fresno State
March 29 TEXAS A&M
April 2 Missouri
April 5 NEBRASKA
April 6 COLORADO
April 18 Baylor
April 20 Texas Tech
April 24-27 Big 12 Championships
Baltimore, Md.
Tufas, Okla.
Austin, Texas
Wichita
Des Moines, Iowa
Drake, with a 16-6 overall record and a 9-4 mark in the Missouri Valley Conference last year.
HOME MATCHES ARE IN ALL CAPS
Lawrence
Lawrence
Lawrence
TBA
Minneapolis, Minn.
Louisville, Ky.
Lawrence
Tulsa, Okla.
Norman, Okla.
Stillwater, Okla.
Lawrence
Montgomery, Ala.
Albuquerque, N.M.
Fresno, Calif.
Lawrence
Kansas City, Mo.
Lawrence
Lawrence
Waco, Texas
Lubbock, Texas
Austin, Texas
Nine of 11 players return from lastyear's team, including Abaroa, who was selected on the 1955 Big Eight All-Conference Team and
The team will lack senior leadership, however.
earned All-America honors in singles play as a sophomore.
It is fielding a squad with four juniors, five sophomores and two freshmen.
1996-97 Kansas women's tennis schedule
Fall 1996
sept. 26-29 National Clay Courts ...Baltimore, Md. ...All Day
Oct. 11-13 Arizona State Fall
Tournament ...Tempe, Ariz. ...All Day
Oct. 24-27 All-American
Championships ...Pacific, Palisades, Calif.TBA
Nov. 7-10 Central Region Rolex
Championships ...Omaha, Nb. ...All Day
Spring 1997
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Apr. 20 TEXAS A&M ..noon
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Campus MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1996
SECTION C
HULA
MADISON ROW
Orange cone Alert
Photos by Edmée Rodriguez
Buildings across campus have seen major construction changes. Budig Hall, left and below, is being renovated after it was destroyed by fire in 1991. Templin Residence Hall, above, is also being renovated.
THE WORKS
Grey Montgomery: the man with a plan
Student president wants involvement recognition for work
By Spencer Duncan Kansan staff writer
Grey Montgomery has the whole table laughing.
Everyone is eating their pizza, discussing new computers that will arrive soon and smiling. All at the table are friends, but when the discussion turns to business, it is clear who is in charge.
Montgomery, with his slick style of sounding authoritative in a friendly way, tells his friends, the treasurer and vice president of Student Senate, just how he wants things to be. They listen, and while they are not afraid of him, they know to pay attention. After all, Montgomery is the student body president.
BUTTON
Last April, Montgomery raised his hands in victory after earning 1,918 student votes and the title of the 1996-97 student body president. During the election, his mission was clear; win enough votes to earn the job. Now, with campaigning long behind him, the mission is getting more difficult to define.
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
"Grey has worked hard to get things together," says Jamie Johnson, student body vice president. "The election was probably the toughest thing the two of us
has have ever gone through, but the year ahead will be hard."
Montgomery has spent the summer appointing students to positions in student government and getting to know administrators and members of the Board of Regents. But Montgomery also has begun to define the issues he thinks are important.
"There are a lot of things that need to be done at this University," Montgomery says. "Student Senate is involved in everything, and I have a large role to play."
He thinks that faculty evaluations should be opened to the students, that more campus lighting is essential and that the terminal server fee needs to be kept as low as possible.
Montgomery wants to see a tenure review, hopes that parking can be increased without losing green space and has put together a task force to examine the future of the bus system. The list of issues is endless.
There is only one year for Montgomery, and his list could take much more time to address. But Montgomery refuses to let that discourage him.
One issue on Montgomery's list is recycling, an issue that reappears every year. This year, however, the University may be serious.
The University hired Victoria Silva this summer as its recycling coordinator. Silva has big plans for the recycling efforts of the University, some of which require backing from Senate.
"The way to define how you have done is based on results," Montgomery says. "I want to get some results."
*Any of the programs that we will try to
implement will have to have student support. Student senate should be a way of getting that." Silva says.
Montgomery says that his door is open to Silva and any other group that wants to tackle recycling.
"Students always seem to get involved when it becomes a hot topic. Then it always drops off." Montgomery says. "We are going to create a student environmental advisory board. Hopefully, this will help us deal with the environmental issues on the campus."
--img down the door with complaints.
Sometimes the arrows come out.
Grey Montgomery, Junction City senior, is this year's student body president. He has many plans for the coming year, including improving recycling, campus lighting and keeping the terminal server fee as low as possible.
"I want people to recognize what we are doing," Montgomery says. "I am not going to spend all my time reaching out to the students, though. Student Senate exists to do things for students, not to show off to the students."
But recognition would be nice, and Montgomery will work to acquaint people with him and Senate.
Being Senate president has a special meaning. Of course, it means more if people are paying attention.
"I am going to hold town hall meetings and set up tables at Wescoe," Montgomery says. "We will even give talks to organizations to let them know what is going on. Of course I would like to receive a little recognition for my hard work."
Nobody is perfect and Grey is no exception.
There are times when the wrong decision is made, and the consequences must be faced. There are moments when the right decision is made, and people still are beat-
"Grey gets frustrated, but everyone does," says Johnson, a friend of Montgomery's for four years. "He has had his moments, but really he deals with things very well. I have never really seen him completely lose his temper."
Just because Montgomery rarely loses his temper in the presence of others, that doesn't mean it hasn't happened.
X
"The technology fee got changed, and that was my biggest defeat so far," Montgomery says.
See Montgomery, page 5C
1
2C
Monday, August 19, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Residence hall life has distinct benefits
By Andrea Albright Kansan staff writer
it's hard to survive on $400 dollars a month in Lawrence anymore.
But thousands of the KU students are discovering that $996 a month will pay the rent, put food on the table, get cable and a phone hookup, and provide an e-mail account at a number of residence halls on campus.
Prices range from $396 a month for a double occupancy room in some of the University's larger halls to $735 a month for a private apartment in Jayhawker Towers.
University housing officials say residence halls offer academic support, security and social life at an affordable price.
1.
John Long, assistant director of student housing, said students who lived in organized housing were academically more successful than students who lived off-campus.
This room in Lewis Hall is shown to incoming students as part of the residence hall tour, to give students an idea of what a typical room looks like. Residence halls provide computer access, studying areas and night security.
"Studies have shown consistently that students in organized living situations do better in school," Long said.
The department of student housing reported that the overall KU student GPA for Fall 1994 was 2.82, while students living in residence and scholarship halls had an average GPA of 3.10.
Organized living offers students academic support through resource centers, time management training, study areas and computer access including the World Wide Web and e-mail accounts.
Residence halls also have security systems that make them an attractive option to female students.
Heather Scott, Overland Park freshman, was concerned about living in a coed building.
Pam Dishman/KANSAN
"I wanted either GSP or Corbin," Scott said. "I think it's safer to live with all girls."
Long said all of the University's organized living facilities have resident assistants or proctors who are trained in safety precautions, security monitors who act as the eyes and ears of the residence halls, and security officers who patrol the buildings.
"I wouldn't want to say the dorms are completely safe," Long said. "Students must still take precaution."
tions, but dorms do offer a huge safety benefit."
Residence halls also are an easy way to make new friends in an unfamiliar environment. Halls sponsor events throughout the year that are open to all organized living students.
Eric Liew, Malaysia senior, said he chose to live in Templin Hall his freshman year because he thought it would be easier to meet new people.
"I wanted to start out in a place where I would see lots of new people," he said. "I didn't want to live in an apartment and look at the same four faces every day. Today I am still close to all my friends from Templin."
But not everyone is sold on the idea of organized living
Aaron Howlett, Peabody junior, has lived in residence halls for two years. Although he has benefited from the affordability of organized living, he plans on moving off campus to get away from the rules that regulate daily life in halls.
The benefits that come with residence-hall life are accompanied by rules and regulations governing everything from candles and wall-hangings to visiting hours and overnight guests.
Most incoming freshmen do not think the rules will be a problem for them.
Matt Corbin, Andover freshman, said the people and information at orientation had convinced him that he should live in McColum Hall.
"I'm interested in the social part of dorm life," Corbin said. "I think I can live with the rules."
Many students choose to live in the dorms for a year or two and then move off campus.
Meghan Hildenbrand, St. Louis junior, lived in Oliver Hall her freshman year. She said she would recommend residence halls to freshmen because it's easier to meet people there.
"If I could do it over again, I would still live in the dorms, " Hildenbrand said. "But I have learned a lot of responsibility living off campus."
Hildenbrand does not, however, recommend hall food.
"I hated dorm food," she said. "I never ate it. I think I save money now because I don't order pizza so much."
Residence halls Rates include room, board,basic cable, telephone hook-up and 19-meals a week for the academic year. McCollum Hall 950 residents single $4,428 double $3,544
Ellsworth Hall 650 residents single $4,428 double $3,544
Lewis Hall
420 residents
single $4,428
double $3,544
Templin Hall
420 residents
single $4,428
double $3,544
Living on campus
Oliver Hall
650 residents
single $4,428
double $3,544
Gertrude Sellards
Pearson-Corbin Hall
750 residents
single $4,428
double $3,544
Hashinger
320 residents
single $4,524
double $3,640
Scholarship halls
Fees are for the academic year, including meals. Douthart, Sell-
ards, Pearson, Battenfeld, Amini, Grace Pearson, Stephenson 48 residents a hall $2,448 a person
Jayhawker Towers Fees are per person for the academic year and do not include
Watkins, Miller fees don't include meals. 48 residents a hall $816 a person
meals.
900 residents
Four-person apartment $1,656
Two-person apartment $3,316
One-person apartment $6,624
Stouffer Place
Stouffer Place
Residents must be degree-seeking and fully-enrolled, with a spouse or dependents living with them on a
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JOINTHESTUDENTALUMNIASSOCIATION ANDBEAKUTRADITIONKEEPER
FALLCALENDAR
August 18 Hawk Week Begins and SAA Officer Retreat 19 Get the Scoop from Boots...AAC 5:30 p.m. 22-25 Reno SAA/SF National Conference...Reno 26-28 Info Fair...Union 9 a.m.-2 p.m. 28 SAA Kick-Off Meeting...AAC7 p.m. 29 First KU Home Football Game...Stadium 1 p.m.
September 5 Celebrate KU! &KHP Prep/Sign-Up Meeting...AAC 7 p.m.
11-13 Celebrate KU!...Wescoe 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
24 Stalk-A-Hawk Letter Meeting...AAC 7 p.m.
October 8 Homecoming Prep Meeting...AAC7 p.m.
12 KU Alumni Association: Douglas Co. Fall Gathering...AAC 10:30 a.m.
12 KU Home Football Game- Texas Tech ... Stadium 1 p.m.
18 Homecoming Parade...Strong Hall 11:30 a.m.
19 Homecoming!
Homecoming Tent Decoration...Stadium 8:30 a.m.
Homecoming Tours...AAC 10:30 a.m.
SAA Tenth Anniversary
Reunion Brunch...Stadium 11 p.m.
Reunion Social...AAC 6:30 p.m.
Family Weekend...AAC
KUHome Football Game-Colorado...Stadium 1 p.m.
November 6 WarDrum Meeting...AAC7 p.m.
9 BIGKUHomeFootballGame-K-State...Stadium1p.m.
16 KUHomeFootballGame-Texas...Stadium1p.m.
21 SurvivalKit/Stalk-A-HawkMeeting...AAC7p.m.
23 Mizzou-WarDrum Exchange(road trip)...Mizzouall day
28 Be thankful your a Jayhawk!
JOINTODAY!
• Pick up membership applications at Adams Alumni Center (Third Floor), 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
• Fill out the membership application below!
December 6 SurvivalKits...AAC 5p.m.
Name ___Class Year ___Major ___
KU Address ___Zip ___Phone ___
Home Address ___Zip ___
Enclosed is my check for $15 payable to SAA.
Return to: Student Alumni Association
Kansas Alumni Association
1266 Oread Avenue
Lawrence, KS 66045-1600
Or drop in Campus Mail
SAA
KUSTUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
NEWSTUDENTS!
Get the Scoop from Boots!
· An awesome way to start the academic year
· Make your own sundae-free ice-cream, toppings and soft drinks!
· Enjoy great tunes played by KJHK
· Meet deans, faculty and other students.
· Sing "I'm a Jayhawk" and other traditional songs.
· Tour the Alumni Center, learn about the Student Alumni Association, and pick up an application.
· Head down to stadium for Traditions Night right after.
LUMNI
Monday, August 19 5:30 pm K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center A Hawk Week Tradition
SAAOFFICERS
President...Carrie Williams
Vice President...Ashley Aldrich
Secretary...Wendy Rohleder
Special Events...Stephanie Klosterhoff
Community Service...Ann Feeney
Campus Affairs...Katy Moses
Membership...Jennifer Galliart and Ryan More
Social...Gabriel Wacker
Athletics...Brandon Jones
Career/KHPs...Dawn Wormington
Homecoming...Casey Liebst
Publicity...Megan Thome
Rock Chalk Ball...Greg Turner and Amy Richmond
SAA Phone:864-4760
}
CAMPUS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
.
Monday, August 19, 1996
3C
Going for the save
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
15
Sand volleyball was one of the events at the Sunflower State Games in July. A player from the Killer Spikers passes the ball during a game at the Robinson Center sand volleyball courts.
Desire to skip class can hurt grades
By Gwen Olson Kansan staff writer
It's Monday morning, and it's early. Many students just hit your snooze bar for the 10th time and are wondering what would happen if they skipped class.
This thought crosses through students' minds many times during semester. They often choose sleep at the risk of hurting their grades.
Most departments at the University of Kansas do not have attendance policies that apply to all classes, but many professors have their own.
Carol Lucas, coordinator of the Kansas Algebra Program, said although there was no attendance policy for MATH 002 and MATH 101, students' grades would suffer if they skipped class often.
"Homework counts for 15 percent of their grades, and they must be present to get those points," she said. "We emphasize that students should be in class."
The department of sociology also has no attendance policy. Carol Warren, chairwoman of the department, said that attendance was left up to the instructors.
"One of the reasons we don't have a department policy is because we have so many different classes," she said.
"In most of those classes, the instructor can't take attendance," Warren said. "But students have to realize that it is going to affect their grade if they are not there."
Some large introductory sociology classes do not have attendance policies.
Students have different views on the necessity of attendance policies.
"If you miss assignments, it can affect your grades, but most of my teachers don't really care," said Brian Clark, Merriam junior.
Clark also said he thought it was unfair that students who were doing well in a class should be punished by the policies.
"If we can get an A without going to class, then more power to us," he said. "We shouldn't be punished for not going."
Kim Prout, Overland Park graduate student, said she thought students should be able to miss class if they accepted the consequences.
"I sometimes skip class," Prout said. "I think we're old enough that we shouldn't have attendance policies. I do understand why professors have them for educational benefits, but some people can skip and still do well."
'Add'til you drop'may stop
Administrators hope linear tuition will end enrollment free-for-all
By Mallorre Dill
Kansan staff writer
Under the linear tuition plan, lines for add/drop this semester may be shorter.
Students stand to lose money if they drop a course after classes begin Thursday, unless they add the same number of credit hours. Fewer students may add or drop as a result, said Brenda Selman, assistant registrar.
"Typically, when you attach money to it, you'll make a wiser decision," Selman said.
Students who drop classes will receive a full refund if they drop before classes begin. Students who drop from the first through the 10th day of classes will receive a 90 percent refund. A 50 percent refund period runs from the 11th through the 20th day of classes.
For example, a typical in-state undergraduate will pay $6.30 for each credit hour dropped during the 90 percent refund period.
Selman said that the number of add/drops in past semesters were not monitored and that there was no method of estimating how many to expect this semester.
For Jill Elliott, Hutchinson junior, the new system did make a difference. Neither plans to add or drop this semester.
"You ask for money from your parents once," Elliot said. "You don't want to ask for it again."
Doug Denney, associate chairman of the department of psychology, said he had noticed some classes usually filled in
Selman said the add/drop schedule was designed to encourage students to be settled by the 20th day of classes. That's when enrollment reports, which can affect the University's budget, are sent to the Board of Regents.
Students may drop a class at any time from today through Sept. 26 and can go to the front of the line.
If dropping classes
Add/drop information
If students drop on or before Aug. 21, they will receive full credit for the value of the class or classes dropped.
Drop Aug. 22 through Sept. 4 to receive 90 percent credit.
Drop Sept. 5 through Sep. 19 to receive 50 percent credit.
No refunds will be given for classes dropped after Sept
loss dropped after Sept. 19.
Dropping after Sept. 26 will affect students' transcripts. See page 22 of the Timetable of Classes.
If students are withdrawing from the University, they must do so between Aug. 19 and Aug. 22 to receive a full tuition refund. See pages 6 and 21 of the timetable.
If adding and dropping classes
- To owe no additional tuition, students must meet these requirements:
1) Add the same number of credit hours dropped.
2) Add and drop courses from the same campus: fees vary off the Lawrence campus.
3) Add and drop during the same refund period. There are three refund periods: Aug. 19 through Aug. 21, Aug. 22 through Sept. 4, Sept. 5 through Sept. 19.
If students do not add and drop during the same refund period, they will be billed for the full cost of the added class. For the
dropped class, students will be refunded a percentage of the cost according to the date on which they drop. See pages 6 and A1.2 of the timetable for dates and percentages of tuition refunds.
If adding classes
Students will be billed for each credit hour of classes added. See page AB of the timetable.
Check the schedule on page 23 of the timetable for appoint ment times.
1) Students may add between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. on the day of their scheduled appointment.
2) Students may add between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on the day following their scheduled appointment.
3) Students are allowed to add between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on Sept. 3 and 4.
4) There may be additional add/drop times for students. They student must present only their completed and signed add/drop form.
More information about linear tuition and add/drop is available at an information session during Hawk Week at 1 p.m. Wednesday in 31:39 Wescoe.
early enrollment were still open. He had stared at the enrollment numbers on the computer screen and said to a colleague, "This is unbelievable."
Kathy Hall, assistant director of the college advising support center, said she thought early add/drop was a nice option for students, but that it was too early to tell if it would decrease add/drops in the fall.
Source: Brenda Seiman, assistant registrar.
But Denny wasn't prepared to say it was a result of linear tuition.
"We're going to be working out a lot of little bugs in the system here," he said.
"Ungrateful since"
"I'm not sure how much it helps," she said. "I'm afraid decisions about schedules aren't made until mid-summer."
With a three-month gap between semesters, students have more time to make decisions about schedule changes or even career paths, she said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Book buyers have choices
Prices,perks differentiate local stores
By Pete Brumbaugh
Kansan staff writer
The secret to finding the best deals on textbooks this fall is knowing where to look.
Bookstores in Lawrence compete for students' business, and good deal can be found.
The KU Bookstore, located on the second level of the Kansas Union, has a wide selection of books. Operated by the University, the bookstore is required to carry books for every class listed in the timetable, said Mike Reid, manager of the KU Bookstore.
"We're celebrating our 50th year in operation, and we have increased our volume and sales almost every year," Reid said.
Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road may be more convenient for some students. The store, which opened in1978, is around the corner from many Greek houses and a short walk from the residence halls. It also offers free parking.
Bill Muggy, owner and general manager of Jayhawk Bookstore, said, "We have survived because we have developed a good relationship with our customers. They like the alternatives, the location, the convenience and the competitive prices we provide."
For students living on Daisy Hill, the KU Bookstore in the Burge Union is the closest textbook store. Architecture or design students may go there because it's the only bookstore on campus offering a blueprinting service.
Some students might want to take advantage of the University Book Shop's off-campus location at 1116 W. 23rd St., across the street from Dillons. The store opened in August 1992 and free parking.
Mike Lammers, store manager of University Book Shop, said the store was fairly generic as bookstore go, making in-and-out shopping easy. "We want to make buying books as painless as possible." Lammers said.
Getting the best value in used books may require comparing prices at all four bookstores. Each store has its own niche. Reid said the KU Bookstore specialized in volume. Muggy said the Jayhawk Bookstore offered competitive prices. The University Book Shop,
Book-buying tips
When students set out to find the best textbook deals, the following tips could be helpful:
The best way to deal with sticker shock is to take advantage of used books, which retail at 25 percent below new-book cost. Sell them back at the end of the semester if you don't want to keep them.
Don't buy a recommended or optional book unless the instructor is using content from it in class lectures.
Students shouldn't write in a new book until they're sure they will stay in the class. Once the book has been written in, the book is considered used and the value drops dramatically.
- Keep your receipts and read the store's refund/return policy.
Returning or exchanging books usually requires a receipt, and stores have limits on how long students have to return books for a full refund.
Shop early in the morning or later in the afternoon. Also, shop on weekends to beat the crowds.
Take advantage of textbook preordering. It cuts down on shopping time and the hassle of waiting in long lines.
- Put identifiers inside the book, other than the inside cover. For instance, students can write KUID number on a page in the middle of the book. This helps identify the book if someone steals it and tries to resell it.
owned by the Nebraska Book Co., provides the largest percentage of used books in stock, Lammers said.
Each store offers bonuses. The KU Bookstore offers student rebates of up to 7 percent for customers who pay with cash or check. The Jayhawk Bookstore gives away free movie passes, pre-paid long distance cards and T-shirts for any single purchase exceeding $200. The University Book Shop gives away coupons for free food at local restaurants with any book purchase.
No computer? You have options
Students can use on-campus labs
By Tracey Cluthe
Kansan staff writer
College students have nightmares about this sort of thing.
A paper worth 25 percent of a student's grade is due tomorrow. But the student hasn't started typing, and doesn't own a computer. Grudgingly, he or she go to the Computer Center only to find 100 people waiting to use the computers.
It's 8 p.m. The student figures that there still is plenty of time because the class isn't until 8:30 a.m. So he or she waits for a computer. At 12:30 a.m., the student still is waiting. It's time to think of plan B. What is a student to do?
"I usually go to the labs in Fraser or Strong Hall," said Russell McGuire, Burkburnett, Texas, senior. "The labs are smaller, but many people forget about them so there usually is an open computer."
The labs in 122 and 123 Fraser Hall are two computer labs that students can use for their coursework. The University has eight computer labs open to all students. The lab in 17 Strong Hall is open 24 hours.
Sarah Higgins, Westchester, Ill.
senior, said the panic of trying to finish a paper at the last minute made her forget about the lesser-known labs.
"There are so many times I have a project to finish in the middle of the night. I either end up going to the Computer Center or to Kinko's," Higgins said. "I forget about the other labs that are open really late. I just don't hear about them."
Watson Library has a computer lab with 10 computers. Students can use the center during library hours unless there is a scheduled library demonstration, said Doxie Larsen, circulation desk supervisor at Watson.
"The lab is always pretty busy, especially towards the end of a semester," Larsen said. "Normally, students wait about 15 minutes before getting an open computer. People use it for e-mail and the Internet."
Students enrolled in certain schools or departments can go to labs open only to its students. Law students can use computers in rooms 306B, 306C and 306D Green Hall. The labs' hours are 7:30 a.m. to 10:45 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday.
Geology students can use computers in 31 Lindley Hall, and engineering students can use computers in
3001A, 3042, 1036 and 1037 in Learned Hall. Labs in these buildings are open 24 hours a day.
Students living in residence halls have access to computers in Ellsworth Computer Lab, said Stacey Schmitz, senior staff assistant at the lab.
"We're open from 8 a.m. to 2 a.m. everyday," Schmitz said. "Students have to show us their ID, and if they are a resident, they can stay as long as they need to."
Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall, Lewis Hall and Templin Hall each have computers in their resource centers that are available to students. Lab Hours vary from hall to hall, but students can call the front desk to find out the hours.
The Computer Center, on Sunnyside Avenue, is open 24 hours a day and is staffed from 7 a.m. to midnight Sunday through Thursday and 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. The Computer Center offers more computer programs than any of the centers and is open to all students.
KU Info has the hours for all of the labs on campus. Students who need assistance should call to find out where computer they need are located.
"It is good to know that there are so many places to go if I get in a bind," McGuire said.
Little-known computer labs
Aside from the Computer Center, several lesser-known labs are spread across campus. These labs are open to all KU students.
Fraser Hall
Room 122
open 24 hours
Room 123
Monday through Thursday,
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday, noon to 9 p.m.
Robinson Center
Room 1:30
Monday through Thursday,
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Friday, 8:30 to 5 p.m.
Strong Hall Room 17 open 24 hours
- Watson Library
Clark Lab, third floor
Monday through Thursday,
8 a.m. to midnight
Friday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Saturday, 10 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday, noon to midnight
A view from above
THE COLLEGE AT AYER'S FIELD.
Ryan Hasler/KANSAN
From the seventh floor of Frasier Hall, Lippincott Hall and the Natural History Museum are in the foreground. In the distance, the Campanile and Memorial Stadium can be seen.
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CAMPUS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19..1996
5C
Montgomery: Student body president with a plan
Continued from page 1C
"That was sort of out of my control, but what happened with it kind of made me mad. I got frustrated with that, but you have to keep those things in perspective."#
At the heart of every issue is the people it affects. One of those issues is the recruitment of minority students.
"I don't know exactly what the answer is when it comes to this issue," Montgomery says. "But there are definitely some things the University can do to help recruit and retain minority students."
Sherwood Thompson, director of Minority Affairs, hears Montgomery's call.
"He has impressed upon me as someone to be very passionate about this issue." says Thompson of Montzemerv.
Montgomery would like to see more cooperation between the Office of Minority Affairs and the Office of Admissions.
"These two offices work independently
of one another," Montgomery says. "But there are people in minority affairs trained to do admission work."
As student body president, Montgomery has yet to appoint any minorities to any Senate positions.
Thompson wants Montgomery take a larger role in minority recruitment.
--shooting 18 holes is Montgomery's release. He is hitting more than a golf ball when he swings his irons. He is fighting against the stress of angry senators, picky administrators and unbending Regents.
"The leadership in Senate could serve in a lobbying role that would be exceptional in making the University more open to accepting everyone," Thompson says. "I just hope that can happen."
What was once Montgomery's nemesis is now his friend.
"It's funny," Montgomery says. "Golf used to be a stressful sport. Now, I find it relaxing."
Golf is one of the few things that Montgomery has time to do. Between overseeing Senate, attending nine hours of classes and doing his homework, finding time to relax is difficult.
Traveling twice a week to the range or
"If you go in on the day you take office and work hard from day one,then you will be OK."
Grey Montgomery student body president
"I am slowly finding out that this is a stressful job," Montgomery says. "You have to take some time out for yourself or else you will go crazy."
When he is not on the golf course, Montgomery is working. His top priorities are school and Senate. That is what he signed on for.
"I have a huge responsibility to concentrate on what I am doing," Montgomery says. "I want to make sure that I do a good job."
Every student has to enroll, and everyone takes interest when talk of a new enrollment system comes up. Montgomery thinks that he can simplify enrollment.
"I don't think it should be that hard to set up a table or a cashier that can take care of fines from all departments," Montgomery says. "That way students wouldn't have to go across campus to different buildings to pay their fees and fines."
While Montgomery makes it sound simple, Rich Morrell, University registrar, says it is more complicated.
"It sounds like a small thing to do, but there are many different tentacles to this thing," Morrell says. "We have to coordinate all the different departments, which is a big thing to do."
Another of Montgomery's ideas deals with advising.
"Advising is one of the most important things for a student, and right now it isn't getting done," Montgomery says. "I would like to see tables with advisors from each department set up for students to get help."
Again, Morrell says it sounds good, but the feasibility is not as simple as it sounds.
"There is space for this sort of thing,
but at what cost?" Morrell says. "Everything is always a trade-off. You have to look at things like how long will lines be and what you will be taking space away from. There is no easy answer."
The son of a former member of the Board of Regents, Montgomery carries with him a deep desire to succeed.
Montgomery says. "If you go in on the day you take office and work hard from day one, then you will be OK."
Although he says he doesn't think about the legacy he could leave behind, his words don't match the look on his face.
Montgomery knows that he holds a prestigious position which makes him one of the most powerful students on campus.
"Sometimes I will get up real early in the morning and ask myself, 'Why?' Montgomery says. "But I am real encouraged about what I am doing."
Montgomery knows he won't be able control many things that will occur in the next year. Some of his ideas will blossom and others will wilt.
"The best way to measure yourself is to look at what you have done that affects the most people," Montgomery says. "I want to look back and say I had some victories and some failures, but that I worked hard."
Montgomery would also like to have the last laugh.
Read all about it: Student details aren't strictly personal
By Andrea Albright
Kansan staff writer
Big Brother isn't watching you, but if a credit card company asks, he can find you for a fee.
Students may not realize that the University can release personal information to the public, such as their name, address and date of birth.
Bob Turvey, assistant registrar,
said the University publishes the KU
Student Records Policy in the back of
the timetable each semester.
"It's possible that a lot of students might not know how much information KU can release." Turvey said.
The Office of the University Registrar releases most information to benefit the student, Turvey said. The University commonly is contacted by potential employers or schools who wish to verify students' degrees and qualifications.
The University doesn't give names and addresses to sales people or sell lists of names to companies. But for a price, a credit card company can check a student's records, Turvey said.
"We will charge a $3 fee if there is a possible commercial gain for the company involved." Turvey said.
Linda Mullens, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs, said the University releases information that usually could be found in other publications.
"We only release the information that would not normally produce harm to a student," Mullens said. "In addition, every student has the ability to block all information and keep it confidential."
Each semester, the University's procedure for withholding information is published at the back of the timetable. To block information, a
"It's possible that a lot of students might not know how much information KU can release."
Bob Turvey assistant registrar
student must notify the registrar's office in writing by a date specified in each semester's timetable.
The Family Education Rights and Privacy Act, enacted in 1974, defines what information a university can call public. It also gives students the
right to review and correct records, file complaints against the University if their privacy has been violated and restrict the release of directory information.
The Office of Student Affairs seldom receives complaints from students who think their privacy has been violated. Mullens said.
"On occasion, we get called about released information. We investigate those situations. We try to take every reasonable step to keep students from harm," she said.
Michele Kessler, associate director of legal services, said that students have not come to her office with specific complaints, but that there had been some confusion.
"We've had students come in and ask about the privacy act," Kessler said. "If there was a problem, we would refer them to the University Ombudsman."
Release of student information
Directory information that can be released by the University unless otherwise notified by the student
Name
Current address and telephone number
Permanent address and telephone number
Level of school
Date of birth Major field of stu
Major field of study
Enrollment status — full-time, half-time or less than half-time
Country of citizenship
Participation in officially recognized activities and sports
Height and weight of members of athletic teams
Dates of attendance
Degrees and awards received
Most recent previous educational institution attended by the student Names and addresses of stu
den't parents or guardians may be disclosed when used for an official University news release about the student's receipt of degrees or awards or about participation in officially recognized activities or sports.
Name, position, salary and length of service may be disclosed for student employees
Students may ask the University to withhold this information. Requests must be made in writing to the Office of the University Registrar by the end of the first week of the semester.
Source: The University of Kansas Timetable, Fall 1996
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6C
Monday, August 19, 1996
CAMPUS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Memories of Hoch survive in Budig Hall
Lightning strike ends building's historic epoch
By Tom Moore
Kansan staff writer
From heat-twisted steel, rubble and charred stone, Hoch Auditorium, the home of thousands of KU memories, has risen again.
The structure was renamed Budig Hall after former Chancellor Gene Budig. It will be completed in November. Classes are scheduled to begin in Spring 1997. The main auditorium will be called Hoch Auditorium.
But for KU students and alumni, Budig Hall has been a place of history.
As the site of a 1957 speech by John F. Kennedy, Jayhawk basketball games coached by Phog Allen, and season after season of concerts and cultural events, Budig Hall was, until its fiery demise in 1991, an architectural treasure on the KU campus.
The new building will feature computers with Internet access, multimedia education, and a reconstructed interior. But a heavy sense of history will continue to surround Hoch.
Construction began in April 1926, and the building was dedicated on October 14, 1927. Named for Edward Wallace Hoch, Kansas governor from 1905 to 1909, orator and publisher of the Marion Record, the building served as a concert hall and sports center until Allen Field House's completion in 1955. Hoch seated 4,000 people, which was then about the total enrollment at the University. It cost $317,800 to build in 1926. The rebuilding costs $22 million.
From the start, the building's vulnerability to fire was a concern. The arches of the auditorium were made
of wood, but the height of the ceiling prevented any worries: If a fire started on the floor, said the building inspector, it couldn't possibly spread to the ceiling.
In 1974, Del Shankel, then executive vice-chancellor, warned of fire: "The ceiling is highly flammable and the curtains are flammable. A fire could go right through that whole roof in a hurry if one ever got started."
We now know that the fire started when lightning from a June 1991 storm struck the building, ending 65 years of history.
"My most poignant memory is getting the call the afternoon it burned down," recalled Shankel, now chancellor emeritus and professor.
"I remember being told by the fire chief that, even if they had been given the call 30 minutes before the lightning struck, they couldn't have stopped the fire," he said. "I remember watching it burn. That sort of brings a lump to the throat.
Shankel said that although he arrived at the University too late to see any basketball games played at Hoch, he did recall seeing composer Andre Previn perform with the London Symphony.
"It was a hot day in September; the entire group was in nothing but shirt sleeves," he said. "I remember Previn making nasty remarks about the Kansas heat."
Shankel had no fond memories of Hochas a teaching facility, however.
"I taught a few classes in there," he said. "It was not a great place in which to teach. Students were just too spread out and there was no way to do an overhead or anything. The new facility will be much better."
Budig Hall will boast two 500-seat auditoriums and one 1,000-seat auditorium, each equipped with the latest in multimedia educational technology, said David Schaecher, capital improvements manager for the University. There will be a computer lab, three classrooms, a technical-instrumental room and 40,000 square feet of space for libraries. The auditoriums will feature rear-
"While this is an essentially new building, the new design tried to reflect the original design of Hoch and the gothic style of Hoch."
David Schaechor KU capital improvement manager
projection glass screens that will allow professors to zoom in on experiments and documents.
"A lot of faculty like to intermingle with students as they lecture." Schaecher said. "Many students that sit in balconies had no interaction with the professor. In the 1,000-seat setup, we have the balcony connected to the ground area so that the professor will have access to those students. The professor can really just walk up into the balcony while lecturing."
Budig Hall meets all fire codes, Schaecher said, and new building's facade will remain the same.
"While this is an essentially new building, the new design tried to reflect the original design of Hoch and the gothic style of Hoch," Schaechersaid.
The additional library space, although it will remain unfinished, is a blessing for William Crowe, dean of libraries.
"We need about two miles of shelfspace every year to accommodate our growing collection," Crowe said. "This space, while unfinished, will definitely help us."
A
Brian Hott/KANSAN
Reconstruction of Hoch Auditorium, now renamed Budig Hal, began in 1991 after the building was destroyed in a fire caused by lightning.
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CAMPUS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
7C
Short classes fit into busy agendas
Melissa Hardesty
Lenexa senior
"If you get behind in a four-week class, there is no chance to get back."
By Mallorre DIII
Kansan staff writer
Students in James Gunn's summer science fiction class recline in easy chairs they moved in from the Nunemaker lobby. They take their shoes off, prop their feet on the table and discuss a whirlwind of 25 science fiction novels in two weeks.
Students in Allen Ford's fourweek tax accounting class lean forward in their desks, rub their foreheads, frown at the chalkboard and busily enter numbers into their calculators, checking answers to the dozens of problems they worked on the previous night.
Summer class formats are as varied as the subjects they cover. They range from 12 days to eight weeks, from traditional lecture formats to simulcasts between Lawrence and the Regents Center.
But summer classes are getting shorter. Of the Regents Center's 15 education classes, only one lasted eight weeks. The journalism and education schools offered three hours of credit in two weeks.
The reason, say school deans responsible for scheduling classes, is that students and faculty like it. But some worry about whether professors can cram 16 weeks of class into a few weeks in June or July.
Ford, professor of business, said he cuts very little from the curriculum to make the tax accounting course fit into four weeks. He compensates by shifting the burden to the students.
Melissa Hardesty, Lenexa senior, was in Ford's class. She said she felt the extra burden of the condensed curriculum. She said she had to work every night in order to stay caught up. She thought the class's intensity would help her with the comprehensive final, but she said she still prefers eight-week summer classes.
"If you get behind in a fourweek class, there's no chance to get back," she said.
Ford, professor in the school of business, has taught his tax accounting class in both 16-week and four-week formats.
"There is a concern about retention," he said. "That was my initial concern. The little bit of feedback I've had seems to suggest that the retention is certainly as good or better than what they do here in the fall semester."
James Gunn, professor emeritus of English, has offered short summer science fiction courses for more than 20 years. Gunn's experience with intensive language courses in the U.S. Army in World War II impressed him enough to try the format. He condensed the class into two
weeks, added Saturday and Sunday classes and offered it in the summer. That allowed students from across the country and renowned science fiction authors from around the world to meet in Lawrence and participate in the class.
Gunn required students to have read 25 novels before class began and gave them four weeks after it ended to complete a paper on which their grade is based. Despite the class's casual atmosphere, students feel the squeeze of the compressed class.
"It's an absolute breakneck speed." said Bill Pitsenberger, an attorney from Topeka who took the class during his vacation.
Aaron Rosenberg, a Lawrence doctoral student who took Gunn's class, said he thought it would have worked better if it were longer. But he added that there were advantages to completing the class in two weeks.
"When you leave here you have 25 classic plots and ideas and characters and structures wandering through your head and bumping into each other and forming all these different
combinations." Rosenberg said. "It's a great environment for coming up with your own stories, for thinking about the field as a whole. Things may get a little jumbled individually, but you come out with a sense of the way everything fits together."
Rosenberg said he thought the class was successful in two weeks because it wasn't a basic skills class.
"The difference is, here, you go away and think about it," he said. In a basic skills class, he said, the student has to go away and know it.
A course's length is determined by the professors and the department chair or dean. As long as a three-credit-hour course fills 40 hours of classroom time, it's official. The shortened three-hour class could meet 10 hours a day for four days if a teacher was willing to teach it and students were willing to take it.
The 16-week semester goes back to the time when students needed summers off for harvest. As communities have evolved beyond their agrarian roots, so has education.
The School of Journalism is one of the few schools that offers two-week basic skills courses in the summer. Dana Leibengood, director of student services for the school, said that the classes originally were condensed so that incoming graduate students could nufill prerequisites before starting in the fall. Now that there are fewer graduate students enrolling, he said, he was in favor of going back to the eightweek format.
"You simply need more time," Leibengood said.
The department of engineering only offers eight-week classes in the summer. Tom Mulinazzi, associate dean of engineering, said summer classes go fast enough as it is, and that students would rather take classes in eight weeks. He said he didn't think professors would shorten engineering classes.
The department of psychology offered most of its lower-level classes in four weeks. Dennis Karpowitz, chairman of the
"I still prefer eight weeks," he said. "It gives a little more time for things to sink in."
department, said the needs of the professors dictate the scheduling of summer classes.
Karpowitz said that professors are paid one month's salary for summer courses, regardless of their length, and added that some professors just don't teach in the summer because it's not worth it.
Some classes are not only brief' — they're beamed to other campuses.
Fred Rodriguez, associate professor of education, taught a two-week class to students in Lawrence and at the Regents Center simultaneously via twoway television. Rodriguez said he thinks he'll be encouraged to do more and more television classes, all year round, in order to increase enrollment at the Regents Center.
"I think that's probably the direction a lot of courses are taking," he said.
Condensing classes is good business for the Regents Center. Competition for students in the Kansas City area has influenced KU departments to schedule more short classes.
Bruce Lindvall, assistant dean of the Regents Center, said, "On one hand we're trying to meet the needs of the students," Lindvall said. "On the other hand, we have to be sensitive to other institutions in the Kansas City area and how they offer courses."
Lindvall said more schools eventually may offer shorter classes to students.
"I think they will certainly look at what they're doing," he said. "Change is often slow in coming."
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UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
DANCING CAT PRODUCTIONS AND SUA PRESENT
George
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A SOLO PIANO CONCERT
DANCING CAT PRODUCTIONS AND SUA PRESENT
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A SOLO PIANO CONCERT
Tickets On Sale NOW!
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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Friday, September 6 at 8:00 pm
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LINUS & LUCY - THE MUSIC OF VINCE GUARALDI. All Seats
Reserved $16.00 ($12.00 students). Tickets at the S.U.A. Box Office in the Kansas Union.
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Please join us in support of the Ballard Community Center
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Look for LINUS & LUCY - THE MUSIC OF VINCE GUARALDI, on sale everywhere September 17
8C
Monday, August 19, 1996
CAMPUS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Music and education facilities to get facelift
$44 million given for Crumbling Classrooms plan
By Andrea Albright
Kansan staff writer
Although Rob Finch, Olathe senior, is majoring in biology, his heart is in the University band.
He is fortunate to be associated with one of the 30 largest music schools in the country.
The bad news is that the University of Kansas' facilities are less than desirable. The good news is that the Crumbling Classroom project will bring improvements.
Finch said the band rehearsal room in Murphy Hall is smaller than the one in his high school. When all 250 members of the band practice, the room is so full of chairs, people and instruments, no one can leave during rehearsal.
It's also loud.
"We're required to wear earplugs during practice," Finch said.
He played clarinet in the concert band and the University band, which created some logistical problems.
"The concert band practiced in Murphy, and the University band practiced in JRP," Finch said. "A lot of times I had five minutes to pack up my instrument, get to my car, drive to JRP and make it to the next practice."
Education students also must hike to class at the far ends of campus
because Bailey Hall only has two classrooms.
John Poggio, associate dean of education, said the logistics of getting from class to class were challenging.
"Our students have 10 minutes to get from Bailey to buildings as far away as Robinson, Learned and Lindley."
Students have coped with these problems for decades. But the Crumbling Classroom project aims to calm the chaos in Murphy and send the School of Education to Joseph R. Pearson Hall, which is north of Carruth-O'Leary Hall.
Murphy and JRP head the list of campus buildings to receive money from the project.
The 1996 Kansas Legislature allocated $44.2 million for renovation and construction on more than 60 buildings across campus.
Bud Stallworth, assistant director of design and construction management, said $12 million is earmarked for the transformation of JRP into the School of Education's new home; $7.7 million will be spent on rehearsal space and a new addition to Murphy.
"It will bring classrooms up to higher standards for better learning." Stallworth said.
When Murphy Hall was built 39 years ago, it was presented to the music department as an unfilled space. That unfilled space was overloaded long ago.
Steve Anderson, professor of music, said problems had plagued the music department for 20years.
"We used Hoch Auditorium until it burned." Anderson said. "We used
"Some of our instructors have experienced hearing loss due to acoustic problems."
Steve Anderson professor of music
the military science shooting range until it was condemned. Now you find students rehearsing in hallways and outside."
Finch said he was in a band that had practiced in the shooting range. Although the range was soundproof to the outside, inside the sound roared and echoed around the room, he said.
"At the time, you actually thought you might go deaf," Finch said. "After it was condemned, we all had to go in for lead poisoning tests, but everybody was okay."
Anderson said Murphy only had one instrumental rehearsal space large enough to accommodate concert bands. That space and others are acoustically unsafe.
"Some of our instructors have experienced hearing loss due to acoustic problems," Anderson said.
See Classrooms, page 13C
Consolidation of fees,services will take time
KU job placement offices lack unity, communication
By Pete Brumbaugh Kansan staff writer
They're not hard to find on the KU's campus — 22-year-olds not sure why they went to college, worried about the future, afloat in a shrinking job pool, with parents none too happy about spending $20,000 on a college education that isn't translating into a good job for their child.
In a speech to the Kansas Coalition for Mathematics and Science Education on July 12, Jordan said, "There is a strong national concern about higher education's role in preparing students for tomorrow's work force."
"Students and parents feel that some form of post-secondary education is imperative to succeed in life," said Steve Jordan, executive director of the Kansas Board of Regents. "They view it as a ticket to getting a good job. It's something we need to address, and the national statistics overwhelmingly support this perception.
College students are looking for skills which will allow them to compete successfully in a rapidly changing and increasing global marketplace, Jordan said, and they're looking to colleges to provide those skills.
with the current system of career services on campus — the offices that schedule interviews, deal with people who hire students and sponsor career fairs and workshops. They say that changes are necessary. But don't look for better services soon. The University has known about the problem for years and not much has changed.
Most of the problems stem from separate placement centers scattered across campus. There are five placement centers on campus and another office for career exploration. Many professional schools have a placement office, while others have offices in the University Placement Center in the Burge Union.
Employers say they are frustrated by traveling to several sites to conduct interviews. In fact, University Placement Center personnel said one regional recruiter withdrew an internship offer because of the University's decentralized office structure.
University of Kansas officials admit that they aren't satisfied
Just how much the University owes students in the way of getting a job isn't crystal clear.
What cost one student an internship may be costing other students jobs.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said, "The University doesn't necessarily make a promise to place every student. But it's true, we aren't totally satisfied with our placement services."
Ambler also said that his office plans to implement changes in the system during this academic year.
Some of the changes will involve how the offices communicate with each other. Now there is no real
networking between the offices.
Michael Heuring, assistant director for experiential education at the University Placement Center, explained the problem hypothetically: "If Sprint came to our office looking for a pool of applicants, we'd empty our data banks for them. But they wouldn't get a true representation of all applicants on campus, because our database isn't linked with other offices. It should be but it isn't."
In order for employers to get a comprehensive list of KU applicants, Heuring said, they would have to make four or five calls to different offices.
Students also encounter duplication of fees and services at different campus placement centers. They may have to pay fees at two or three separate offices to register for career fairs, set up interviews, get their resumes in a database and gain access to available job listings.
Right now, fees and placement services vary across campus. The School of Business charges students $75 for use of their Resume Expert computer program, interview assessment and analysis, and registration for a career fair. The University Placement Center charges $40 to $45 for the same services, while the School of Journalism charges about $20 for their placement services.
Consultants and administrators now want placement offices to begin consolidating some of their resources, services and fees. And that's not a popular decision.
See Placement, page 13C
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
9C
Regents Center offers communications studies
Non-traditional students bring insight to classes
By Susan Franke Special to Kansan
The new communications studies program at the Regents Center is similar to the same program on the Lawrence campus, with one significant difference: the clientele.
In addition to attending class, nontraditional students at the Regents Center often work full-time and have family and civic commitments. The Regents Center in Overland Park introduced the 30-hour master's degree program in communications studies in Spring 1996.
Tracy Russo, program director and assistant professor of communication studies, said non-traditional students brought a rich perspective to the program.
"There is something special about the intensity and work experience these students bring to class," Russo said. "They take time away from their families and come to class prepared to do the work."
Russo launched the Regents Center program with a class called New Communication Technologies and the Work Place. Russo said the class provided a humanistic approach to technology.
"The angle these classes takes is to look at what happens to people in their interactions with technology," she said. "I ask students, 'Is this your experience in the work place?'"
All students in the class were given e-mail address. Russo encouraged them to surf the Internet and discover how they would respond to
items ranging from The Library of Congress to obscene materials.
The class also looks at why organizations implement technology and how relationships are formed and affected by technology.
J. P. Stonestreet, Lenexa graduate student, said the class kept pace with the latest technology. And he's already seeing some direct applications to his job as a network operations specialist for Sprint, which is based in the Kansas City area.
"We just installed a new e-mail system at work," he said. "The technology class has made me look differently at how people use technology."
Stonestreet, who graduated from the University of Kansas in 1994 with a bachelor's degree in communications studies, said the graduate program provided a more relaxed atmosphere, yet it was an intense experience.
Classes include courses on new communication technologies, leadership, organizational communications, performance feedback and improving communication between men and women in organizations.
Cal Downs, professor of organizational communication, teaches a class called Strategic Communication and Human Resources. The class surveys and compares various theories of leadership and management, such as the approach developed by author and speaker Steven Covey.
Downs said the test of a theory was whether it could be applied. He said he hoped students would accept and reject ideas to form their own perspectives on the role that communication plays in society and the work place. He added that he found working students to be refreshing because of the experience they brought to class and shared with one another.
Russo provided a picture of the Regents Center communication studies student: average age, 40.6; work experience, one and 35 years. More than 30 students signed up for the new master's program in the spring of 1996.
They represent a wide range of area companies including Hallmark Cards, Inc., Yellow Freight Systems, Inc., Johnson County Community College and Payless Shooresource. Several KU employees also are night students.
The program was more appealing to Stonestreet than pursuing an MBA.
"It's a well rounded degree that teaches you how to handle yourself in many situations, not just business," he said.
Randy Dick, a Roeland Park graduate student, said he got involved in the program because he was on a communications task force for his employer, the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The task force was designed to improve internal communication.
Dick said that with the introduction of e-mail to NCAA offices in Overland Park, he could see opportunities to apply what he was learning in Russo's technology class, such as dealing with privacy and access issues.
Although Dick sees going to school at night as a challenge, he said Russo made the class fun.
Russo said she wanted students to create a new mental framework for understanding communication through this program.
"I hope students retain an enthusiasm for the ideas of communication as well as the practice," she said.
Students diet exercise to avoid dreaded 'Fifteen'
Weight gain often affects incoming college freshmen
By Bridget Mason Special to the Kansan
Year after year, college freshman are warned of the 'Freshman Fifteen.' Despite warnings and efforts to avoid the foe, most students gain unwanted pounds, exerts say.
The combination of a slower metabolism, poor eating habits, lack of exercise and change in lifestyle adds up to freshman weight gain. Kress said.
Jeff Kress, KU fitness instructor and doctoral student in sports psychology, said that everyone's metabolism slows down as they age, so weight gain occurs naturally for most people in their early 20s.
Dawn Wormington, Garden City sophomore, enrolled in two physical education classes, intent on avoiding the 'Freshman Fifteen'. She worked out four to five days a week and ate pasta instead of the fried food in the cafeteria. Despite her efforts to stay trim, Wormington gained 10 pounds during the fall semester. She later learned that the cafeteria put soybean oil on the pasta to keep it moist.
After that discovery, Worming-on said she couldn't trust the cafeteria food. She now makes her own sandwiches or salads so she can be sure they don't have extra fat in them.
"Soybean oil is more fattening than a McDonald's cheese-burger." Wormington said.
Dieticians say most weight gain can be attributed to fattening residence hall food, but beer, late-night pizza and lack of exercise also are prime culprits.
In high school, Becky Cusumano, St. Louis sophomore, participated in soccer, softball and gymnastics. Now she finds it difficult to fit exercise into her busy schedule.
Hailey Bammes, Salina sophomore, is one of a minority of students who have achieved a bulgfree freshman year. Bammes avoided weight gain by walking everywhere and working out at Robinson Center.
"I don't have a bus pass, and I drive my car as little as possible," Bammes said. "Instead, I rely on walking to get everywhere."
Bammes said that she hadn't gained weight because she ate cereal or sandwiches instead of cafeteria foods. She said that she ate less because the cafeteria food was not available 24 hours a day, unlike the food in her kitchen at home.
Although exercise is a healthy way to lose weight, some weight loss methods can be dangerous. Allison Vaughan, Shawnee junior, learned in a nutrition class that fad diets are unhealthy and don't yield lasting results.
"A common mistake that people make is dieting. Instead of dieting, you must change your lifestyle and the choices you make about food," she said.
Vaughan said that the people interested in changing their eating habits should set long- and short-term goals. Each time a goal is reached, it should be reinforced with a non-food reward. Then a new goal should be made.
A nutrition class has taught Erin Fox, Garden City junior,
"A common mistake that people make is dieting. Instead of dieting, you must change your lifestyle and the choices you make about food."
Aileon Vaughan
Shawnee junior
how to make better decisions about the foods she eats to stay healthy. For example, cravings for sweets should be satisfied with fruit instead of candy. Eventually the body will learn only to crave natural sugars such as fruits, Fox said.
Kress said suggested controlling weight gain by exercising and making healthy eating choices. Salads are a good choice but avoid salad dressings or use vinegar without oil.
Exercise is important to keep the extra pounds off. But Kress said the exercise should be fun, not a dreaded activity.
"Many people think that exercise is a bad word, but there are a lot of sports that people enjoy playing that can also be good exercise — like biking or volleyball," he said.
Hey You!
(Yes you)
Student Senate is looking for someone like you to represent KU on committees and boards.
All students are invited to join
We are now accepting applications for Student Senate Committees and Boards. Finance University Affairs Student Rights Multicultural Affairs Graduate Affairs
Deadline: Friday, August 30th at 5 p.m.
Call 864-3710 for questions
Applications are available in the Student Senate Office - 410 Kansas Union
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10C
Monday,August19,1996
CAMPUS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Some students find fault with foreign TAs
They are confusing speak too quickly students complain
By Brian Vestle
Special to the Kansan
For some students, just passing economics is a challenge. But students may find themselves facing yet another challenge: a language barrier.
Students say they are frustrated with foreign teaching assistants' ability to present material. Many students complain that the teaching assistants speak in a cluttered and confusing manner and too quickly to understand.
"They really make understanding economics twice as hard," said Jason Leiker, Kansas City, Mo., senior. "Not only do you have to deal with the difficult material, but you also have to try and comprehend this material from someone who is just as confused."
The problem has led some students to enroll in economics classes during the add/drop period to get a discussion class not taught by a foreign student, said Jason Edmondson, Lawrence junior.
"A lot of students hear things from their friends or other students who have taken discussion classes with international teaching assistants," he said. "It persuades them to do everything they can try and enroll in a non-international teaching assistant's class."
But professors say they only accept students who have the knowledge and ability to teach economics as part of the graduate assistant program.
Gautam Bhattacharyya, director of the economics graduate assistant program, said the department made sure foreign students took the necessary steps before they were admitted to the program.
Foreign students who want to become graduate assistants must pass the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL)
"They try and use the teaching assistant's ability as a scapegoat."
Sombit Barat
Calcutta, India, graduate student
and the Test of Written English. More importantly, they also must pass the Test of Spoken English with a minimum score of 570, a score set by the Applied English Center, said Christa Hansen, speak test coordinator in the center.
"We want an international student to be able to really grasp the English language before they even begin to teach," Hansen said. "Compared to other Big Eight
schools' requirements, a minimum score of 570 is a tough limit to reach.
Last spring, eight of the 17 teaching assistants in economics were foreign students. All passed the required tests.
One of the teaching assistants, Sonjit Barat, Calcutta, India, graduate student, who is graduate assistant in ECON 522, said that teaching assistants knew that students had some difficulty understanding them and that assistants tried to make necessary adjustments.
"We try to speak slower and repeat things three or four times when we are presenting or discussing material," Barat said. "We try to open up a discussion amongst the students and ask for questions throughout the class. We also try to schedule extra office hours whenever we can give a student the opportunity to come and talk to us one-on-one."
Some teaching assistants think that students themselves often are to blame. Mike Wentz, graduate assistant in ECON 520, said many students did not take advantage of the opportunities to meet
with teaching assistants.
"The students who are really serious about getting a good grade in the class and learning the material put forth the effort," Wentz said. "The other students who are not as serious do not," Wentz said.
Barat said students who didn't put in the effort blame their problems on the presentation of the material.
"This situation really plays easily into the students' hands when they are not confident in the way they are performing in the class," Barat said. "They try and use the teaching assistant's ability as a scapegoat."
Most of the teaching assistants say they do a good job overall. This semester two economics teaching assistants have been nominated for teaching awards.
"We are really good at what we are trying to teach," Wentz said. "Some of us are not quite there yet, but the graduate experience will enable us to practice on clearly presenting what we know about economics."
Cooling off
SUNDAY 29TH JULY 1987
Casey Ramos, 11, (left) and Shannon Fisher, 10, enjoy swimming lessons at the Lawrence Aquatic Center, 741 Kentucky St. After more than two
months of delays due to bad weather. The center, which features a zero-depth entry, finally opened to the public July 20.
Edmée Rodriguez / KANSAN
Homesick students can find help,comfort
By Jean Norton Kansan staff writer
Leaving home for the first time may make some students homesick, but there are people at the University of Kansas who can help.
Counseling and Psychological Services, or CAPS, located on the second floor of Watkins Memorial Health Center, helps students deal with homesickness or any other emotional problems they may be having. The program offers individual and group counseling, said Frank DeSalvo Jr., program director.
"Some students miss the routine of seeing family and friends everyday," he said. "These students need to develop a kind of surrogate family here but sometimes need some help."
Students who are enrolled and have paid campus fees are eligible to use the program, DeSalvo said. The first session is free and each additional session is $9. Group therapy sessions form when there are enough students with similar problems.
The program's staff includes licensed social workers, psychologists and a psychiatrist.
Many students are too embarrassed to ask for help, but feeling sad after leaving home is normal, DeSalvo said.
"The point is to understand that this does happen to many folks," he said. "It is a natural part of developing
independence. It's not a weakness but an indication of transition."
Students who don't know anyone should make one good friend, DeSalvo said. If the student has trouble making that kind of connection, then the program can help develop these skills.
The Student Assistance Center also can help students who are having problems adjusting to life at the University. The center specializes in helping create better study habits and improving time management. It's located in 22 Strong Hall and can be reached at 864-4064.
Lorna Zimmer, director of the center, said center personnel find out what the students miss and help them get an idea of what their needs are.
"I think almost everybody has homesickness." Zimmersaid.
Homesick students can also find help at the KU Psychological Clinic, which provides outpatient mental health services to students and the Lawrence community. The staff includes licensed clinical psychologists, licensed social workers and graduate students in clinical psychology.
The clinic is located in 315 Fraser and is open from 12:30 to 4:30 Monday through Friday. Its phone number is 864-4121. KU students pay is $6 an hour; non-students pay $42 an hour.
Services at all three clinics are confidential.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
11C
Socializing, adapting keys to Hawk Week
Events familiarize students with KU life
By Dave Breitenstein
Kansan staff writer
Steve Riedl thinks Hawk Week is the wrong name for the orientation days preceding the fall semester.
"It should be called 'Making Friends Week,'" said Riedl, Shawnee senior. "Hawk Week is when I met most of my friends who I hang around with now."
Hawk Week, Aug. 18 to 21, is a KU tradition that allows new students to become familiar with the campus, participate in social activities and listen to staff members speak.
Hawk Week was more than just lectures on academic life, Riedl said.
"In my freshman year, I participated in athletics and other dorm-sponsored events. I liked Beach-B-Noulevard a lot," he said.
"The parties at night were what I liked the most. That's how I got to know people on my dorm floor."
Riedl said Hawk Week familiarized him with campus buildings and other important information. But he did have one complaint about Hawk Week.
"I wish it was Hawk Month," he said.
I wish it was Hawk Month. He said.
T.J. Clark, Hawk Week coordinator and program assistant for the Office of New Student Orientation, said the main goal of Hawk Week to is introduce new students
"We provide a laid-back atmosphere where students can socialize and get their feet wet before classes start," Clark said. "They can experience a little bit of KU so they're not too shocked about the myths of college life."
to campus.
Office personnel plan and coordinate all Hawk Week activities. Each program offered this year was well-attended last year, Clark said.
"The most popular programs are Beach-N-Boulevard and Traditions Night," he said. "Beach-N-Boulevard is popular because of entertainment and prizes; the KU band plays, and some campus groups will also perform."
"The personal class schedule tour is probably the most helpful tour," Clark said. "We have an orientation assistant walk with them to each building and classroom where they will have a class. That way they won't get lost on the first day of class."
offers several campus tours for students.
Daytime programs cover a variety of topics, ranging from academic matters to adjusting to life away from home. Clark said these programs helped all who attended, and he encouraged students to listen to as many lectures as possible.
"I think students who attend Hawk Week programs are further ahead than those who don't because they are more familiar with the University right away," he said.
Jason Kerschner, Old Westbury, N.Y.
junior, said he knew what to expect from Hawk Week when he arrived in Lawrence. He was sent a calendar of events, and his resident assistant explained Hawk Week.
"My R.A. helped put things together to get us to meet people," he said. "He tried to split up so we'd meet people from other dorms."
Kerschner said Hawk Week was designed to get students to meet a lot of people. He had some advice for incoming freshmen.
"You have to want to meet people," Kerschner said. "Try to get involved and be as open and outgoing as possible." he said.
For more information about Hawk Week activities, call the Office of New Student orientation at 864-4270.
Manic Panic hair colors the market
Dye's bright shades have been seen on models, musicians
By Patricia Bibby The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Forget those subtle shades of flaxen blond, copper red, and warm chestnut that Linda Evangelista would have you believe are all the rage in hair coloring.
Truly hip hair this summer is asserting itself in shades more commonly associated with artificial candy and '70s poster art.
The hair dye du jour? It's called Manic Panic, and it comes in shades such as atomic turquoise, cotton candy, shocking blue and electric sunshine.
Dennis Rodman, Manic Panic's unofficial poster child, has strutted in locks of apple green and shocking red and since has graduated to more elaborate rainbows and even a red AIDS ribbon against a white background.
But Rodman is hardly alone.
Manic Panic has graced the heads
of Green Day's Billy Joe Armstrong, Porno for Pyros' and Lollapalooa founder Perry Farrell, Scott Weiland of the Stone Temple Pilots and Mike D of the Beastie Boys.
Cyndi Lauper was an early Panic pioneer. Models Rachel Williams and Jenny Shimizu, and actresses Ione Skye and Lori Petty also have Panicked. The ever-whimsical designer Todd Oldham has gone green himself.
It's inevitable that Cher, a woman hardly known for cosmetic restraint, has taken to the Manic Panic bottle. too.
But celebrated heads aren't the only ones .. turning heads.
From New York City's Soho to Los Angeles' Melrose Avenue and points in between, the daring and probably non-corporately employed have taken Manic Panic's pigment plunge.
At only $8 a bottle and with an array of 32 shades available, dying possibilities abound. Some of the more creative are creating bilelevels of white hair on top with brightly colored ends.
"Deep, rich purply reds, I think, will be the big colors this year," says Victoria Gentry, an image
consultant on the road with the Lollapalooza tour. (An image consultant at Lollapalooza? Who knew?)
"It's anywhere between black and blond, and that's pretty boring," she says.
Tish Bellomo, Manic Panic's coowner, says natural hair color is rather limited.
Manic Panic has its roots, so to speak, in punk. Way back in the mid-1970s, Bellomo and her partner-sister, Snooky, were singing backup for Blondie when the band was just another unsigned group.
It was a time so devoid of hair coloring alternatives that lead singer Debbie Harry was using mere food coloring on her bleached-out tresses.
Being good entrepreneurs, the Bellomos sensed a need and stepped in to fill the void by importing Manic Panic from England.
"In the olden days of punk rock," Snooky Bellomo says, "it was kind of a shock value thing. But now I
think it's more just a cosmetic thing."
So just what's it like to walk down the street with a mane of, say, cotton candy pink hair?
"Everyone loves pink," says Lisa Cullen, a hairstylist and colorist at John Dellaria's in Soho who sports a pale pink hue that looks remarkably like spun sugar.
"It's kind of like doll hair. Kids look at me like some sort of magic little dolly goddam." Cullen says.
And pink's not the only color with shock value. Conn Braftain, a spokesman at Todd Oldham, has turquoise hair
"Little kids freak out and point and stare and think you're, like, a cartoon character," Brattain says. "I get lots of people who just give you weird, dirty looks."
"Then I get people who come up to me and tell me it's incredibly beautiful. They are glad somebody does it and it's happy looking."
But, dyer beware, Brattain also recounts true Manic Panic panic:
"The shocking part was putting the blue color on my hair, rinsing it off under sink and then looking up and there was blue hair! And you're like, 'Oh my God! I can't leave the house like this!' he says.
Buying a computer isn't stop'n' go shopping
Students should consider major, Internet access prior to purchasing
The Associated Press
Students soon will be packing up their books, clothes and a decent personal computer for their coming college careers.
Now considered an essential, personal computers outnumber VCRs, answering machines or microwave ovens in the residence halls at Purdue University, said Lanny Wilson, associate director of residence halls at the West Lafayette, Ind., campus. The most recent count was 4,261 computers in 6,500 student rooms.
A student's age, interests, future plans — and the computer setup on campus — will affect his or her choice of computers, said Jack
Wilson, dean of undergraduate and continuing education at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y.
"Here at Rensselaer, for example, students can choose to participate in a laptop pilot program in which they will need a computer that is compatible with the program." Wilson said.
Students also should consider the way that the campus connects to the Internet. If high-speed Ethernet connections are not available, the computer selected should include at least a 14.4-baud modem that can handle images, video and sound on the Web, he said.
Daryl Johnson, assistant professor in Rochester Institute of Technology's information technology department in Rochester, N.Y., said freshmen should check with their university to see what particular platform — Macintosh, IBM
personal computer or UNIX computer — it supports.
If the university doesn't support any particular platform, then the focus should shift to the program the student is entering. Find out what software tools will be used and choose a computer that will run that software. Software used in a particular curriculum will narrow the choice of computers.
The standard for the industry the student plans to enter after graduation is another consideration. Johnson said that IBM PCs are used most in the business world, UNIX or DOS computers frequently in engineering and Macintosh in graphic arts.
Suppose a degree program doesn't require a particular program and post-collegiate industry considerations aren't that important. Johnson said that if the student already had experience with a particular platform, he or she
should stick with it. It's easier to go with a familiar system than trying to learn a new one while concentrating on new classes.
Also, a student should think about how the computer will be used most. Johnson said many students used computers as word processors for most curricula. A liberal arts student, who doesn't take as much math or science, might do 95 percent of his or her work on the word processor, which is a good system for gathering and organizing information and writing. Johnson said Macintoshes were a good choice for students who are first-time users and mainly will be using the word-processing function. Regardless of the choice, Johnson said it was a good idea to get experience on a variety of platforms. That will make the student more attractive to an employer later on.
On-line, off-campus night classes fit into working schedules
He's studying storytelling among other subjects, at Columbia 2, the continuing education division of Columbia College in Chicago.
CHICAGO — Michael Sloat is 50 years old, a Chicago health care executive — and a college student.
"In health care, we have lots of meetings," he said. "It helps me get my points across if I can present them in captivating stories with strong messages."
Another storytelling student, Edna Montemayor, 48, has degrees in English literature and nursing, and has done graduate work in anthropology.
"Storytelling is very much related to the work I'm doing now in women's group therapy, and we certainly didn't learn this in nursing school," she said. "But I'm especially fond of it because it is also related to my personal interests in folklore and mythology."
Nearly half of all college students are over 25, according to a study by The College Board.
So universities and colleges are striving to serve up a menu of early-morning, late-evening and weekend classes, on-line classes, off-campus locations and client-based services to meet their needs.
The board estimates that about 40 percent of these students are being reimbursed for tuition by their employers.
Older students are more holistic in their approach to education, said Philip Klukoff, associate provost for Columbia 2. They're looking for courses to both advance their careers and fill personal needs. And they're signing up for classes that once might have been seen as frivolous or artsy.
Courses in performance arts are naturals for lawyers, business
people and other professionals,
Klukoff said.
"In classes such as storytelling or stand-up comedy, we learn to be credible, enthusiastic communicators not only in our public presentations, but in interviewing and job-seeking strategies as well," he said.
The storytelling class is taught by Nancy Donoval. Among her students are a corporate diversity consultant, a massage therapist and members of the clergy. All have differing needs and viewpoints, but all of them are trying to learn to communicate more effectively.
Norma Long, president of the Association for Continuing Higher Education, said, "In the past, it was typical for schools to have a narrow approach which enabled 'traditional' students to get a full-time education in the liberal arts. Now colleges have to take on a much broader scope."
That scope includes offering courses by computer, called distance learning, typified by the Distance Instruction for Adult Learning program launched in 1993 by the New School for Social Research in New York City. Or cooperating with area corporations, as does the University of Minnesota, whose adult education division, University College, worked with IBM as it was downsizing its Rochester operations.
Long said, "Some higher educational institutions are forming alliances with business groups in their communities. They're asking businesses to serve on their boards and committees, which helps them both with long-range planning."
Gayle Hendrickson, director of communications at Minnesota's Minneapolis campus, said schools must adjust to fit the older-student market.
"We can use our regular day school courses," she said, "but we must reconfigure, reconstruct and modularize them to fit an audience of working adults."
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Ancestor of T. Rex found in northwestern Thailand
Country proves to have wealth of dino fossils
The Associated Press
PHU WIANG, Thailand — With visions of the gigantic T. Rex from Jurassic Park wreaking terror in their minds, the four visitors behold the skimpy remains of the world's oldest known tyrannosaur with a twinge of disappointment.
Staring back from the dry stream bed, oblivious to Hollywood block-busters or national pride, lay the tail bones of an ancestor of Tyrannosaurus Rex experts estimate are 20 million years older than any previously known specimen.
"I thought there would be some more than this, and it would be bigger," said Nara Vaeuson, a radiology professor at a Bangkok hospital. "But Thailand can still be very proud of it."
Recent publication of the discovery in the scientific journal Nature revealed to the world — and most Thais — that this Southeast Asian country has proven a treasure trove of dinosaur fossils since excavations began just 15 years ago.
Buddhist monks find bones after seeing dinosaurs in meditations. Villagers plunder fossils in the belief they have magical powers. Even the semirevered royal family has a dinosaur named after it.
But few knew much about Thailand's dinosaurs until the tyrannosaur discovery was disclosed.
"Everybody knows tyrannosaurus from Jurassic Park," said Varavudh Suteethorn, chief paleontologist in the country's dinosaur digs. "And since this is the oldest known ancestor, everybody is curious."
A geologist uncovered the tyranosaur fossils in 1993 at the Phu Wiang National Park, an oasis of rocky hills and trees some 400 kilometers (250 miles) northeast of the capital. Bangkok.
The park lies in the Korat Plateau, where fossil-rich Mesozoic-era sedimentary rock has been thrust to the surface. Most Thai fossils have turned up there since a geologist seeking uranium found a dinosaur thigh bone in the late 1970s.
Like most fossil finds, the tyrannosaurus skeleton was only partial. The surviving portion — the tail and pelvic structure — probably lay more deeply buried than the rest in primordial mud that turned to stone.
But what remained was enough for Suteethorn and Eric B败betaut, chief French paleontologist in the Franco-Thai team coordinating the fossil research projects, to identify a tyrannosaur from the telltale hip structure.
At 6.3 meters (21 feet) long and weighing two tons, the predator was about half the length and a third the weight of its monster descendant, Tyrannosaurus Rex, but looked very similar.
It lived 120 million to 130 million years ago, about 50 million years before the oldest traces of T. Rex found in Asia and North America. The find bolsters theories that tyrannosaurs evolved in Asia and migrated to North America — like humans millennia later.
The beast has been dubbed Siamotyrannus Isanesis, after Siam, the old name of Thailand, and Isan, the northeast region where it was located.
news of the discovery has sent a flood of visitors — up to 1,000 a day
on holidays — to the formerly sleepy national park for an arduous climb to see the remains.
The hip has been removed to France for study, but the tail bones remain, surrounded by chain link fence and protected from seasonal rains by a tin roof.
Visitors are allowed to gently touch the bones, believing doing so will bring long life.
Local and national officials, arguing over tourist revenue and scientific preservation, are bickering over which proposed natural history museum should house the bones.
Meanwhile, rangers keep watch around the clock to keep away thieves who have stolen bones from some of Thailand's 25 other sites to make magic charms.
"We try to educate people that this is our country's precious heritage," said Sathathorn Polandlam, a ranger who guides visitors. "But people think if they make a Buddha image from a bone, they can't be wounded by a knife or bullet."
North:astern Thailand may be the country's poorest province, but it's rich in dinosaur remains.
Suteethorn believes that the trannosaurus find is outweighed by the graveyard of at least six plant-eating dinosaurs discovered at a Buddhist monastery about two hours drive east of Phu Wiang.
The venerable 71-year-old abbot, Prakru Vichtsahasakul, found the first bone himself.
"I first saw a dinosaur in 1992 when I was meditating." Vichitsa-hasakul, wrapped in a saffron robe, tells the curious kneeled at his feet in a temple building where golden images of the Budda mingle with plastic toy dinosaurs.
"At that time, I had no idea what kind of animal it was," Vichitsahasakul recalled. "It was huge, a lot
bigger than an elephant, and had a long neck."
In 1994, Vichttahasakul had the longest meditation of his life three days and three nights — filled with dinosaurs.
The monk went to the site in his visions, where a road was under construction at the monastery. He started digging and found bone fragments.
Vichitsahasakul's first scrapings have expanded to a pit 20 meters (22 yards) long by 11 meters (12 yards) wide that has yielded nearly 700 bones — and more are likely to be found.
Many bones remain articulated, so the skeletons can easily be reconstructed. They belong to at least two species of Sauropod, four-footed plant-eaters with long necks and tails.
"In only a few places in the world are so many dinosaurs quick-buried by nature like this," Suteethorn said. "They are very rare."
Experts believe the site was once a bend in a primeval river where the floating carcasses of dead dinosaurs snagged to a halt and became a buffet for meat-eaters. Two carnivore teeth, probably from Siamotryannus, were found at the site, indicating the predator came to the river to scavenge.
Some bones likely belong to Phwiangosaurus sirindhornae, a species named for Princess Sirindhorn, second daughter of King Bhumibol, Thailand's highly revered monarch.
Sirindhorn has frequently visited Thailand's dinosaur digs, expressing wonder and enthusiasm. Still, no one knew how she would react having her name bestowed on a long-dead rentile.
"We asked her permission first," Suteethorn said. "She was very gracious and said yes."
Bones' magic is a curse for those who try to steal it
Tales abound of those who have stolen bones and faced bad luck
KALASIN, Thailand — Thieves thinking of stealing supposedly magical dinosaur bones should reflect on a letter written by Jirawat Srangsuk, his wife and brother.
Displayed next to three bone fragments, it reads:
But the magic may be more of
With dinosaur bones popping up across the region — Thailand's poorest — some people hoping the powerful magic they think anything that old contains can improve their lives.
"We've been holding these things since Dec. 14, 1994. Since then, my business has gone under and I'm bankrupt and my family is suffering, so we've decided to return these things."
The letter is on display at a Buddhist monastery in northeastern Thailand where the fossilized remains of six dinosaurs have been discovered.
a curse. Tales abound of a monk who was paralyzed after stealing a bone to improve his preaching powers, or a family that fell ill after eating dinosaur bone soup.
True or not, the monastery dig site attracts a lot of attention. Visitors typically toss in a 1 baht (4-cent) coin through the fence surrounding the fossils in the belief they will earn merit for their next lives.
The researchers, preoccupied with classifying the bones, normally let the coins gather for a few weeks before presenting perhaps 4,000 ($160) or so to the abbot.
One morning in June, they found that the fence had been cut through overnight. Panicked, they counted every single bone to make sure none had been stolen.
None had. But not a coin was to be found.
The team now scoops up the coins every couple of days.
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Classrooms: cramped conditions will improve
Continued from page 8
"The rehearsal spaces are, shall we say, inadequate."
The existing music library in Murphy is also inadequate.
Beth Fleming, Kansas City, Mo. graduate student, is student assistant in the library. She said the library was so overloaded that new material coming in daily forced older material to be sent to other locations.
"About half of our collection is housed in other libraries," she said. "Some are inaccessible for up to 72 hours, and then they end up at Watson or somewhere else."
Besides renovating rehearsal space in Murphy, the plans include an addition that will house a new music library.
Anderson said that when Hoch burned in 1991,3 to 7 percent of the classroom space on campus was lost. Murphy's auditoriums were a logical solution for the University, but the additional students complicated the logistics of rehearsals and equipment storage.
Budig Hall is scheduled to be completed in January 1997, but until then the chaos in Murphy will continue.
"We have to find ways to reconfigure and reassign space," Anderson said. "With good cooperation and good humor, we've done a pretty good job coping with disaster."
Poggio said School of Education had been struggling to find space for faculty, classrooms and clinical laboratories.
Bailey Hall, the building that houses the school, was intended to house chemistry labs. Poggio said the rooms in the building weren't the same size, forcing some creative solutions to a space dilemma.
"We're in dire straits in terms of space," Poggio said. "We have been for 10 years."
Teaching assistants and graduate students traditionally have braved offices in the bowels of campus buildings. In the school, these offices are either cramped or shared by up to 12 graduates students.
A few staff and faculty members have private offices, but many graduate teaching assistants share large rooms divided by flimsy walls, preventing the privacy needed to assist individual students.
"The building was not originally an academic space," Poggio said. "We have inadequate facilities."
The school also suffers from a lack of laboratory facilities. In some majors, students of education are required to do clinical research with interviews, counseling and diagnostic testing.
The American Psychological Association and the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education have cited the school for its lack of laboratory space.
"We shuffle people out of their offices or use seminar rooms for lab work," Poggio said. "You just make do."
The renovation of JRP is scheduled to begin this fall, and the school will move into its new home in 1999.
"We're moving the whole opera
"We have to find ways to reconfigure and reassign space."
Steve Anderson professor of music
tion." Poggio said. "JRP is something we desperately needed."
Stallworth said the major projects will begin in spring 1997, but more preparation is required before the long process can start.
Teams from design and construction management will plan construction projects to minimize the disruption, but disturbances will be unavoidable.
"There will probably be some disgruntled students and teachers," Stallworn said, "but we have to stay focused on the bigger picture."
Design and construction management will spend the remaining $24.5 million of the state allocation upgrading buildings across campus so that each department will see a change. Stallworth said.
Anderson said the department of music was anxious to accommodate its students. Music students practically live in Murphy.
"the bottom line is we exist for kids," he said. "To give them a quality education is the most important thing."
Linear tuition may drive non-majors away from courses
Fewer enroll in HPER classes
By Jeff Ruby Kansan staff writer
Enrollment in Health, Physical Education and Recreation basic skills courses has fallen almost 19 percent since last year, according to the University Registrar's office.
As of May 2, after main enrollment and an add/drop period, the total enrollment of HPER 108 classes for Fall 1996 was 1,204 students, compared to 1,483 enrolled as of that date last year for Fall 1995 courses.
Brenda Selman, assistant registrar, said the 18.8-percent slide could be misleading.
Enrollment may change after the add/drop period and new enrollment in August, which will affect 1,000 students, Selman said.
Leon Greene, HPER undergraduate coordinator, said it would be business as usual in the HPER department despite the tuition changes.
The change from a flat-tuition rate to payment-by-the-credit-hour may negatively affect HPER course enrollment numbers, but Greene said his program wasn't ready to institute changes.
"As a department, we decided not to take any action until after the fall semester so we can get a better look at what's going on," Greene said.
Greene said the HPER instructors worried that the classes could decline in popularity under
the new system since linear tuition encourages students to only choose courses they need to fulfill graduation requirements. The department offers courses ranging from bowling to aerobic water exercise.
"Within the department we have talked about the possibility of a drop-off in the enrollment a great deal in the last year," he said. "We don't know at this point how that's going to affect our enrollment."
Jim LaPoint, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, said patterns of physical education enrollment at other schools contributed to his department's stance.
When Wichita State University switched to linear enrollment, there was an initial drop in physical education class enrollment; then it leveling-off, LaPoint said. When freshmen realized they used to get those classes for — in a sense — free, the numbers returned to normal, he said.
"Hopefully, we'll experience that same pattern in our enrolment here," LaPoint said.
Greene said most people in HPER classes were not physical education majors, and the non-majors may choose to spend their tuition money in their own departments once they begin paying by the hour. Many will probably choose classes in their fields.
"Let's wait and see, not jump to any conclusions and start dropping classes," Greene said. "We just believe we'd end up making a poor decision if we acted too fast."
That is why the HPER office is playing the wait game for now
The tuition adjustments mean
"As as
department, we decided not to take any action until after the fall semester."
Leon Greene
HPER undervrad coordinator
an undergraduate in-state student will pay $63 for a one-credit HPER course while an out-of-state student will pay $265 for the class. For graduate students, the same course will cost $94 for residents and $309 for non-residents.
According to University Relations, linear tuition was adopted "to discourage students from shopping for courses, that is, enrolling in many courses, deciding after a few days of classes which ones they want, and dropping the rest."
Selman said, "The majority of students are happy with the changes. Seventy-five percent will be paying less since they are taking less than 15 hours."
Amy Mozykowski, Lawrence senior and physical education major, said the changes affected her class choices within the department.
"I would say that things that are more recreational won't do well, things like golf," Mozykowski said.
Placement: consolidating career services will take work
Continued from page 8
Some administrators prefer the present decentralized structure. This attitude is tied to the University's tradition and history. Its heritage as a decentralized institution distinguishes it from the other Regents schools, said Heuring.
solidation isn't a new idea.
"According to statistics from the National Association of Colleges and Employers, 85 to 90 percent of all colleges and universities across the country have centralized career placement centers." he said.
The debate on better placement services for students is years old.
In 1992, the University conducted a campus-wide review of all its programs. The review suggested consolidating placement service operations. The University followed up the program review by paying two consultants $500 apiece (needs to be verified by Ambler) in 1994 to look specifically at improving career services, Ambler said. They, too, recommended consolidation.
Terry Glenn, director of the University Placement Center, said con-
"They've been talking about consolidation since I came here," said Glenn, who came to the University in 1978. "The administration was organizationally restructured this summer, but there were no immediate changes in career services. We're hoping that something happens soon."
There are merits to centralization. "Centralizing career services is a lot more efficient and organized," he said. "It's also much more cost-effective in a budgeting sense."
With centralization, Glenn explained that services and fees are more streamlined campus-wide. Centralization merges resources like career libraries and computer listings to give students more comprehensive information about particular employers, occupations and job availability. It also establishes a central location for recruiters to meet students.
There are some things centralized placement offices don't do so well.
"They've been talking about consolidation since I came here."
Dana Leibengood, associate dean of student services for the School of Journalism, said that consolidated
Terry Glenn director University Placement Center
offices would damage the personalized service that his office gives to journalism students. "I can deal directly with students, faculty and employers from my location in the School of Journalism," Leibengood said. "I wouldn't be able to give that kind of service from a centralized office.
"One of the big advantages of decentralization is that it incorporates academic advising, which involves faculty members who have ties to their profession. The key to
placement is internships, and it just wouldn't be as effective if you divorced faculty from the placement process. They know their students and their field."
Customer service isn't the only reason for academic resistance. Dealing with institutional traditions may force some administrative trade-offs, so students shouldn't expect any drastic changes.
Ambler said, "If we go to consolidated placement services, faculty members may feel like they're losing control over the program to help their students, and we don't want to disconnect the faculty from their responsibility to placement."
The best prospects for change lie in coordinating office efforts.
Fred Madaus, director of business and engineering career services partnership, said that placement personnel on campus used to meet for lunch to share problems, find solutions and create more coordination. But it didn't last.
"We got too formalized," he said.
"It almost became just like another committee meeting, which I think
ultimately caused it to crumble. My hope is that we can put that group back together."
But there are skeptics. Glenn said that past attempts at coordinating weren't very successful because not everybody supported the idea.
"Coordinating services is a possibility," he said. "We've had varying degrees of coordinated service over the past few years. At times, it worked; other times, it didn't."
Madaus agreed that support from the administration is key.
"We're still testing the idea," he said. "It has to be cooperative if we're going to be of any service to our students. And everyone has to be involved and believe in it."
Here's what the future may bring, according to Ambler:
Coordinated technology. Ambler said that offices will need to share job availability lists, employer contacts, interview schedules and resume databases.
A new director. He said that hiring a director to coordinate all campus placement activities
and program is being explored.
A uniform fee. Ambler said he prefers a uniform fee for students who use career placement services anywhere on campus.
When all this will happen depends on how quickly Provost David Shulenburger adjusts to his new administrative position, Ambler said.
"It's high on our priority list because it affects both of us administratively," he said. Ambler added that he and Shulenburger had talked about changes in career services for several years.
Students and University personnel should see more coordinated efforts and uniformed fees and services in the coming year. But University officials say it will be a slow process.
Leibengood, who has been at the University since 1969 and has seen placement trends through the years, said, "I'm 100 percent in favor of cooperative efforts. "There's room for centralized efforts through decentralized offices. There's room for both."
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Out & About
MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1996
SECTION E
[Night scene with blurred streetlights and trees in the background.]
Livin' it up in Lawrence
Photos by Edmée Rodriguez and Steve Puppe
Downtown Lawrence is teeming with action in the evenings (above). The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., offers its patrons live music and dancing (right). Mike Fowler and Larry Sandman (below) play the blues for passersby.
JIM BROWN
1
C2D
Monday, August 19, 1996
OUT AND ABOUT
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Coffee shops cater to java junkies, socialites
By Ryan Vise Special to the Kansan
It is an all too familiar scene. Young people gathered on couches, sipping lattes or mochas and socializing. From the fictional Central Perk of NBC's Friends to the rapidly growing Starbucks chain, the coffee business in the '90s has skyrocketed.
College students are on the front lines of this cappuccino revolution. Coffee shops provide the late night hours and the lively atmosphere many college students desire. It is no wonder that coffee shops in Lawrence are busy during the school year.
"We obviously are really busy when school starts up," said Gerry Vanbooren, employee at the Bourgeois Pig, 6 E.Ninth St. "Students like to study or just congregate and socialize."
Vanbooren said college students made up the majority of the morning and afternoon crowd, but the evenings were a little different.
"We are a bar and coffee shop. It's sort of a European thing," said Vanbooren. "As the evening progresses,
we tend to get more of a cocktail crowd."
The Java Break, 17 E. Seventh St., has about 40 coffee flavors. In addition to being a coffee shop, the Java Break also is a bookstore.
Hanna also said that business picked up during the school year.
"We buy, sell and trade books, and our bookcases are over filled," said Megan Hanna, manager of the Java Break.
"The nights get really busy during the school year. The majority of our customers are college students," she said.
Sebastian's Coffee House, 620 W. 12th St., offered baked goods daily along with a wide assortment of lattes and cupuccinos.
"We have a large clientele of professors and local business people." said Andrew Cohen, employee at Sebastian's. "But from 8 p.m. to midnight, we have mostly college students doing major studying."
Cohen has worked at coffee shops in Lawrence for six years and knows their clientele.
"When students get here, they are just looking for a place to hang out," said Cohen "They just start to drink
Lawrence coffee culture
Lawrence has many coffee shops.
Bourgeois Pig
6 E. Ninth St.
Hours: 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. daily
Java Break
17 E. Seventh St.
Open 24 hours
Java Break Jr.
17 W. Ninth St.
Hours: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily
Javhawker Cafe
701 Massachusetts St.
Hours: 11 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Sunday through Thursday;
11 a.m. to midnight
Friday and Saturday
coffee on the side."
Andy Goth, Lawrence senior, has worked at La Prima Tazza, 638 Massachusetts St., for three years. He said the school year sees an increase in business. Lately, however, the summers have been almost as busy.
"Our clientele includes a lot of regular customers that aren't college
La Prima Tazza
10.3ina Tazza
638 Massachusetts St.
Hours: 7 a.m. to midnight
Monday through Saturday;
8 a.m. to midnight Sunday
■ Sebastian's Coffee House 620 W. 12th St.
Hours: 8 a.m. to 1 a.m.
Monday through Saturday;
10 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sunday
Terra Nova Book Store and Cafe
920 Massachusetts St.
Hours: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Monday through Thursday;
10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Friday and Saturday;
noon to 6 p.m. Sunday
students," Goth said. "Still, you can definitely see a difference."
COFFEE BAR
Jon Miller, Topeka junior, said that going out for coffee had more to do with socializing than actually drinking coffee.
"I think that most people just want to get away from their dorm room or their apartment." Miller said. "It's
Gerry Vanbooren grinds coffee at The Bourgeois Pig, 6 E. Ninth St. VanBooren has been working at the coffee house about nine months.
like going to a bar but calmer."
Although coffee shops in Lawrence seem to be riding the high wave of the '90s, some students think coffee shops are overrated.
"It's not the coffee I don't like, it's the people there," said Julie Schecher, Lawrence graduate student. "They're all under 21 and
can't go to the bar so they go to the coffee shop instead."
Vanbooren insists that the crowd at the Bourgeois Pig is very mixed.
Local clubs offer entertainment to all ages
"We have mostly graduate students, but we have quite a few artists and random patrons, too."
By Gwen Olson
Kansan staff writer
$ ^{1} $ Students who are tired of sitting around with nothing to do and want to liven up their nights with a little music and dancing have lots of options in Lawrence.
The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St., features a variety of music ranging from retro-dance to live shows.
Students 18 years of age and older are welcome on most nights at the club. Patrons under 21 pay a cover charge of $6 and 21 years of age and older pay $3. Wednesdays are reserved for people under 21, and the cover charge is $5.
Saturday nights the Granada fea
ture live acts. Calendars for these shows are available at the club.
Coyote's, 1003 E. 23rd St., features country and dance music. The club has drink specials several nights of the week and is open Wednesday through Saturday.
"We play about 70 percent country and 30 percent top 40," said Joe Benskin, owner of Coyote's. "Thursday night — ladies night — is our biggest college night. Anywhere from 800 to 1,200 people show up, and about 50 percent are students."
Coyote's charges a cover of $3 for patrons 21 years of age and over and $7 for 18 to 20-year-olds.
The Cadillac Ranch, 2515 W. Sixth St., also provides a dance floor for
fans of country and dance music. The club has a variety of special nights, but patrons must be 21 years of age or older.
The cover charge changes at the club vary from night to night but are usually between $3 and $4.
Another club for those interested in dance music is Langston's, formerly CJ'S Dance Club, 808 W.24th St.
Langston's also offers drink specials on different nights but has something many other dance clubs don't.
"We have a room called the Good Times Lounge," said Adrian Lewis, Springfield, Mass, senior, and member of Langston's door crew. "It has
The lounge offers people a place to relax and provides an alternative to just dancing. Lisa Brady, Overland Park junior, said she enjoyed the club.
black leather couches and a big 10-by-25 foot painting that was in the show Good Times."
"I've been a few times and it's a lot of fun," she said. "It's something different to do and it seems like people from all over, not just Lawrence, are there.
These are a few of Lawrence's clubs that could provide a night of good fun and good music any time during the week for a reasonable price.
Disney show hits the road
The Associated Press
ANAHEIM, Calif. — State fairs can soon add Mickey, Minnie and Goofy to their animal attractions when Disney hits the road.
The Walt Disney Co. is putting together a $25 million road show that opens at the Washington State Fair in Puyallup in September, then heads to the state fair in Phoenix.
The company plans to visit a dozen fairs next year. Chicago may be added as a last stop this season.
Admission prices will range from $12 to $16 for two hours of Disney entertainment: Mickey, Minnie, Goofy and the gang with music from Disney movies.
About 250 people will be hired in each city, the company said.
The company also is putting together an Asian version of the show.
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OUT & ABOUT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
3D
Sizing up the shot
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
Almee Ziegler, St. Louis graduate student, Sarah Hein, Wichita senior and Ben Coleman shoot a game of pool at Fatso's, 1016 Massachusetts St.
Cheap fun within students' reach
Inexpensive activities available in Lawrence
By Emily Redmond Kansan Staff Writer
College students are notorious for having little or no money. But in Lawrence, there are several things that students strapped for cash can do.
Clinton Lake, west of Lawrence, has activities for everyone. Students can swim at Bloomington Beach, hike and mountain bike on various trails or camp on grounds around the lake.
"we like to go camping around Clinton Lake," said Krystyn Zetmeir, Overland Park senior. "We get a fire going and grill marshmallows and drink beer."
Other student enjoy the fresh air by picnicking, sunbathing or just spending time with friends by the lake.
"Ilike to drive around and look at the scenery," said Teresa Prisinzano, Tulsa, Okla., junior. "It's a great way to get away from things for a while." Other outdoor activities that students enjoy
include going to various city parks, including Centennial Park at Ninth and Iowa streets. The park is known for its swing sets and frisbee golf course.
"We go there to play frisbee a lot," Prisinzano said. "I don't know how to play frisbee golf, and I know that I probably could play it if I did, but I have watched people play it and it looks like a lot of fun."
The sand volleyball courts, located at Robinson, also are a hot spot for the physically active. Students can bring volleyballs or obtain one from Robinson with a KUID.
"I get together with my friends to play," said Brian Schmidtberger, Topeka sophomore. "There are four courts and usually not all of them are taken."
For those students who like to spend their free time at home, renting movies from local video stores, including Hastings Books, Music and Video, 2000 W. 23rd St. Watching videos and ordering pizzas is an economical way to see the movies without leaving home.
Many video stores, including Dillons, 1015 W. 23rd Street, have free video rental memberships and reasonable prices. Dillons rents new movies
"We get a fire going and grill marshmallows and drink beer."
Krystyn Zetmoir Overland Park senior
for $2.50, movies six months and older for 39
cents and video games for $1.99.
"We have a pretty good selection," said Liz Gregg, a Dillons employee. "There are a few new releases that we don't get, but lately we've gotten everything that has been released in the past six months."
Other indoor activities include watching movies at the Cinema Twin Theaters, 31st and Iowa streets, which charges only $1.25 a seat, or bowling at the Jaybowl in the Kansas Union for 90 cents to $1.25 a game, depending on the time of day.
Getty Center makes art vision a reality
$1.2 billion, 25-acre art museum to open in Malibu Roman villa
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — The new Getty Center, draped in dreams, discussions and drawing boards for 13 years, is just months away from becoming a showcase as enticing as some of the artwork it will display.
"I feel impatient," said John Walsh, museum director, as he stood before the steel skeleton of what will be his new art space. "It's the most exhilarating thing in life. We started dreaming about this 13 years ago. We got to build the museum of our dreams."
Set to open in fall 1997, the Getty Center brings together all parts of the $4 billion J. Paul Getty Trust.
The museum began with $1.2 billion left by oil baron J. Paul Getty after his death in 1976. It has made its home in Malibu in a replica of a Roman villa, filled with antiquities and an acclaimed collection of European decorative arts, drawings and paintings, including Renaissance masters and post-Impressionists.
Now the center is moving into a new 25-acre complex atop a coveted piece of hillside real estate in Brentwood, framed by the Los Angeles skyline and the Pacific Ocean.
Walsh is awaiting the final phases of construction, but some of his colleagues will move into their already-finished buildings this summer.
Miguel Angel Corzo, director of the conservation institute, is moving in this month. Trust administrators and the staffs of the grant program and education institute are scheduled to follow soon after, occupying sleek panel and glass creations by architect Richard Meier.
Corzo hopes once all employees are situated, there will be more collaboration among departments now scattered throughout the city.
"The chance encounter, the conversation in the corridor, meeting for lunch — that's what sparks projects," Corzo said.
"Some people say it will become the photographic image for Los Angeles."
Harold Williams
president,
J.Paul Getty Trust
The center will have an auditorium, exhibit space for the research institute and a 750,000-volume library with reading areas. There will also be a central garden designed by Los Angeles artist Robert Irwin.
About 1.5 million visitors are expected annually.
Paintings in the museum's growing Impressionist and post-Impressionist collection, including Claude Monet's Wheatstacks, Snow Effect, Morning and Vincent van Gogh's Irises, will be displayed in natural light.
Inside, walls will be lined with paintings and rooms furnished with European decorative arts. Outside, Meier abandoned his trademark white exterior to cover the complex with 200,000 cubic feet of beige stone imported from Italy.
Harold Williams, the trust's president, said that he thought the museum would be a cultural symbol for Los Angeles.
"Some people say it will become the photographic image for Los Angeles,"he said.
In addition to security, the center has built-in precautions for several natural disasters, including wildfires.
An underground reservoir holds 1 million gallons of water, a helipad will serve water-dropping helicopters and the art galleries are designed to become airtight if flames get close.
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4D
Monday, August 19, 1996
OUT & ABOUT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
International culture found in Lawrence store
The Casbah sells items from around the world
Dipped
10fa Piece
12 for $193
By Vicky Causey
Special to the Kansan
72.
An aroma of Middle-Eastern cuisine mixed with the incense-of-theday scent greets visitors as they enter The Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St.
Pam Dishman/KANSAN
David and Susan Millstein, both KU graduates, brought variety to downtown Lawrence when they opened The Casbah, a group of businesses. Sunflower International, the Millsteins' shop in The Casbah, is home to inexpensive collections of folk art, jewelry and clothing from around the world.
Jill Legler, the store's manager of 14 years, said the shop carried merchandise from at least 50 countries and five of the seven continents. The focus was originally international, but the shop started carrying American-made items, including some from local artists.
"I just love looking at everything in here," said Christy Couey, Lawrence senior and regular customer. "The second you step in the door, it's like you're not in Lawrence anymore. Plus, I love to wear rings, and it seems like someone is always complimenting me on the ones I buy here."
Angie Hilsabeck, Lawrence resident, agreed.
"What makes this place so great is that every time you come in, there is something new," Hilsabeck said. "I'm talking about things like exotic sounding drums or rain sticks."
Just inside the entrance are cases
filled with hand-crafted rings, necklaces, earrings, and other jewelry. To the right sits a section of multicolored handmade rugs, decorative candles and other unique pieces of home decor, such as Chinese relaxation balls.
A walk up the staircase opens up a world of American-made and ethnic clothing, as well as folk art such as African rain drums and Indian wind chimes.
In 1971,David Millstein opened Sunflower Outdoor and Bike Shop, which is located across from The Casbah.
Susan Millstein said they thought about starting up a new business in the empty building across the street, but they could not decide what kind. A trip to Marrakech, Morocco, made their decision easy.
They visited what African locals call casbahs, walled cities with shops everywhere.
"Once we experienced the friendly atmosphere of the little shops run by individuals, we knew what we would do with the building," Susan Millstein said. "We both thought Lawrence was such a great town, and it needed something like this."
In the spring of 1974, the Millsteins bought the building and named it The Casbah, home of seven businesses, including Sunflower International.
The other tenants, which originally included a potter, a stained-glass window shop, a leather shop, a jewelry store and two other specialty stores, have long since disappeared.
"Their businesses grew and went to their own buildings, or went their own way," Susan Millstein said.
Gradually Sunflower International took over all but two areas of The Casbah. Full Moon Cafe has occupied the lower mezzanine level for the past five years. F F & E — Für-
nishings, Fixtures and Equipment
—claims the basement.
Elissa Harris, a December KU graduate and employee of Sunflower International, said the Full Moon Cafe draws attention to the store. However, she wanted a job
there because she has shopaced at the store since 1990, when she began her college career.
"I love it here," Harris said. "It has a lot to do with the staff. It's the most honest, relaxed, creative atmosphere to shop and work in."
Susan Millstein said students like Harris made up a large percentage of the clientele, and jewelry is their main attraction.
Susan Millstone said that belly wear, toe rings and anklets are popular items right now. In fact, jewelry
"Merchandise changes from year to year, so it's important to go to markets to try to pick a cross section," she said.
has always been in demand. But there are spurts of popularity among merchandise, she said.
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OUT & ABOUT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
5D
Cambodian culture is set for world tour
Art exhibition to be displayed in U.S., France
The Associated Press
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—Cambodia is set to mount an international exhibition of some of its greatest art works — a show that organizers hope will help the world remember the country's cultural glories and not just its grisly killing fields.
Nearly 100 sculptures and artifacts spanning a thousand years — some treasures of Angkor among them — will be sent to France and the United States for display at museums next year.
Alongside exhibits in Paris and Washington, D.C., experts will restore imperiled pieces using technology not available in Cambodia.
"This will show the world that Cambodia is more than just about the killing fields, the horrible years of war and Khmer Rouge terror," said Minister of State Vann Molyvann.
Helen Jessup of Washington's National Gallery described the exhibition as an epoch-making, never-to-be-repeated revelation of the treasures of Cambodian art.
And one that almost didn't come to pass, given Cambodia's intense political in-fighting that impedes progress on virtually every front.
After an agreement was signed last year by Molyvann and the foreign exhibitors, officials in the Ministry of Culture voiced concerns over sending such priceless objects abroad.
Describing the situation as very sensitive and delicate, Culture Minister Nut Nareng said the exhibit would for too long empty Phnom
Penh's National Museum of its major pieces, a number of which shouldn't be allowed out of Cambodia since they represented national identity.
Some newspapers accused National Museum Director Pich Keo of trying to sell the treasures to foreigners. Exhibit advocates implied some opponents had smuggled antiques out of the country.
Nonpartisan sources involved with the exhibition say power struggles and political allegiances rather than culture are at the root of the dispute.
The Ministry of Culture is opposed to Molyvann, who heads a special organization, Apsara, charged with overseeing the jewel in Cambodia's cultural crown — the great temples of Angkor. Conflict also stems from an increasingly bitter struggle between the two ruling coalition parties.
With the fate of the exhibit in the balance, French diplomats, along with their American counterparts, applied pressure earlier this year and a compromise was reached. At least two sculptures have been removed from the original list of items to be exhibited.
One is Nandin, a stunning seventh-century figure of the bullock ridden by the Hindu god Shiva. Kept in the Royal Palace, the statue is regarded with almost mystical reverence; some Cambodians believe misfortune will befall the land if it's removed.
The second is perhaps Cambodia's best known statue, believed to be a likeness in stone of King Jayavarman VII, who ruled over a vast empire from his magnificent capital at Ankor during the 12th century.
Jessup had pleaded that the stone sculpture be brought out for restoration. Currently reinforced with rusting iron rods, it is in danger of fracturing.
"This will show the world that Cambodia is more than just about the killing fields."
Vann Molyvann Cambodia Minister of State
Apsara says six of the most damaged pieces will be transported next month in specially-designed trunks to French laboratories. Under the agreement, French experts and four Cambodian trainees have for several months been restoring pieces at a workshop inside the National Museum.
The bulk of the exhibit is to be shipped at year's end for display Feb. 11 through May 26 at the Grand Palais in Paris and July 6 through Oct. 5 in Washington.
It will be the first exhibition of Cambodian art to be held in the United States. In France, the borrowed works will be reunited with 60 art works taken out of Cambodia when France ruled the Southeast Asian nation as a colony.
The traveling exhibit will include stone sculptures, wooden images, ritual objects and a number of bronzes from the sixth through the 16th centuries.
Some remarkable pieces haven't been seen in public since the early 1970s when they were transferred from the Angkor area during the Cambodian War. They have been kept in sealed trunks in the National Museum.
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Monday, August 19, 1996
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Lighting Up Kansas with the Power of the Arts The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts 1996-97 Lied Center Series Season
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OUT & ABOUT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7D
Monday, August 19.1996
Big bugs are the buzz in N.Y. exhibit
The Associated Press
ALBANY, N.Y. — Giant hissing scorpions and swarming 10-foot dragonflies are invading the state capital.
And they won't be leaving anytime soon, to the delight of many children.
Fortunately, for the faint of heart, the insects aren't real. They're giant robotic models that are roaming an exhibit hall at the New York State Museum.
The insects are part of the museum's interactive "Backyard Monsters" exhibit, geared to increase interest in the pesky critters.
"Insects get a bad reputation," said Jeffrey Barnes, the self-proclaimed bug doctor of the museum. "We're trying to get people to see how useful they are to the world."
Without insects, there would be a shortage of flowers and plants in the world, Barnes said. Insects and flies transport seeds, pollen and other substances from flower-to-flower, helping produce new flowers.
Visitors get a bug's-eye-view of life as they come head-to-head with the mechanized creatures, which
also include a praying mantis, beetle and carpenter ants.
The models are placed in larger-than-life natural settings, complete with 12-foot-long blades of grass and giant versions of common back yard items such as golf balls and sunflowers, said said David LaPlante, supervisor of exhibit productions at the museum.
"We're trying to make people's imaginations run wild," LaPlant said. "There's so much you can do to make it fun."
The mechanical insects are part of a traveling display produced by Creative Presentations, Inc., a California-based robotics company best known for creating giant robotic displays for museums and theme parks.
Its largest models include E.T. figures at Universal Studios theme parks across the country and Greek mythological figures that "come to life" at Caesar's Palace Resort in Las Vegas.
The exhibit reveals up to 20 facets of insect movements, including darting eyes, waving antennae and creeping legs.
Children can take turns frolicking at educational
play stations, where miniature robotic bugs and build-your own models are at their disposal.
Visitors — unless they suffer from entomophobia — can sneak an up-close look at real and normal-sized specimens.
Kim Frey of nearby Schodack said her two sons also gave the exhibit a thumbs up.
"I think it's great," said 4-year-old Christian Deso, who was accompanied by his mother, Kim, of Selkirk, an Albany suburb. "I want to go catch some insects now."
"I think this is cool," said her 9-year-old son, Patrick, who aspires to build his own mechanical models one day.
"I usually just kill ants and collect grasshoppers," said Patrick's 6-year-old brother, Shawn. "But I don't think I could kill these ants. They look so big and real."
The insects are on display in Albany until Dec. 29; at the New York Hall of Science in the New York City Borough of Queens until Oct. 27; and at the Insight Science Museum in El Paso, Texas, from July 31 to Oct. 22.
Take time to check out on-line colleges before enrolling in classes
By The Associated Press
If you're taking courses through cyberspace, it's still important to check out the school's credentials the old-fashioned way, experts say.
Dubbed distance education, on-line classes have attracted more than 300,000 students, according to estimates by the National Continuing Education Association. Some educators say that in the future, most students will take at least some of their course work on-line.
"It's a buyer's market, so picking the right school is a critical choice," says Lynne D. Ballard, director of the continuing education division at Champlain College in Burlington, Vt. She recommends
checking whether the school is accredited. Potential students also might want to learn what the business world thinks about the school you're considering.
"Think carefully before investing time and money in a school that isn't accredited," Ballard said. "Ask your employer or other employers in the marketplace about how they would view a degree or certificate from that school."
Ballard's school offers SuccessNet, an on-line distance learning program that offers virtual classrooms to students who can earn a range of professional certificates and degrees entirely by computer.
Her advice is echoed by Elizabeth A. McDaniel, executive provost and vice president of academic affairs at Nova
Southeastern University in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., another school that offers on-line classes.
She adds that potential students should also find out if there are opportunities to chat electronically with other students; many of students' classmates probably will be people with real world experience. "In the best classrooms, students learn from other students as well as from the professor." McDaniel said. "It's the same on-line."
In fact, students should expect to participate more in classroom discussion than they would in a normal lecture hall setting, she said. And the teacher should be able to reply to e-mailed questions in 36 hours or less.
"If not, you may not be getting the personalized attention you deserve." McDaniel said. "A 24-hour response time should be the goal."
Distance learning methods include audio cassettes, on-line by computer, interactive audio-video and satellite networks.
Broadcast television or one-way video may be frustrating for students who like exchanges with classmates, the administrators said. But if students' reading and writing skills are weak, they may have trouble with on-line courses, which rely heavily on those skills and are the basis of interaction among students and teachers.
Wild water party to end in Ozarks
The Associated Press
OSAGE BEACH, Mo. — The state water patrol has announced plans to crack down on the so-called Party Cove area of the Lake of the Ozarks after a tidal wave of complaints of rough waters and nude revelers.
Since the start of the summer, 300 to 350 boats have gathered each weekend to create an island of sorts by linking their boats at the 4-mile marker of the Glaize Arm inside the Ozarks State Park.
Residents say the dangerously high wakes have flooded shoreline restaurants. Festivities in Party Cove often involve alcohol and partial nudity.
The Missouri State Water Patrol said officers from the parks service, the highway patrol and Camden County Sheriff's Department also would be in boats to increase pressure on area lawbreakers.
Water patrol officers will be pulled from other areas of the lake to cover the area, said Col. Larry Whitten of the water patrol.
"We will be targeting any violation of state law with emphasis on boating while intoxicated, careless and imprudent operation, coming too close to docks and inside buoys, lewd behavior, littering and any type of drug activities," Whiten said.
In addition, the patrol has asked residents to be shore deputies — even using their cameras to catch illegal activities. The patrol encouraged residents to get as much information as possible, including the name of the boat, how many people were in it and its direction.
"We've been asking these people to be like a neighborhood watch force," Whitten said.
This year has seen heightened complaints because while the Party Cove is not new, its location is.
The cove was originally located at the 14-mile cave, but the water patrol blocked the area at the start of this season to protect private developers. To the initial surprise of the patrol, the boats regrouped en masse at the 4-mile marker of the Glaze Arm.
With the increased problems, the patrol also stopped calling the area Pave Coyne, Whitten said.
"It's causing the problem, the way its being referred to," he said.
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8D
Monday, August 19, 1996
OUT & ABOUT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Antique store has a little bit of everything
Items at mall tell the stories of days that have come and gone
By Matt Kennedy Special to the Kansas
Walking into the Antique Mall of Lawrence is like walking into grandma's house.
A six-foot tall oak cabinet holds a set of fine, ivory-colored china, old Life magazines are stacked neatly on a bookshelf; porcelain plates and figurines are everywhere. You almost expect to smell apple pie baking in the kitchen.
The mall at 830 Massachusetts St. is a return to a simpler time, said Nancy Sliker, an antique dealer at the mall for the past six years.
Larry and Gwen Billings, Lawrence residents, have owned the two-story mall for four years, renting booths to about 50 dealers who carried a variety of items such as clothing, furniture, coins and even antique fishing lures. Gwen Billings said.
Billings said that the mall had a diverse clientele, from professional antique hunters to young, fashion-conscious students.
"We have many young people come in looking for clothes with the retro look to them." Billings said.
Silker said people treated the mall as a museum, a second-hand store or just a place to escape the summer heat. But whatever their reason for entering the store, many become customers before leaving.
Memorabilia from the different time periods remind shoppers of days past. In one booth, people can hear speeches from up-and-coming politicians such as a feisty Harry S. Truman or Dwight Eisenhower.
10
In another booth, sports fans can read about a talented new Baltimore Orioles third baseman named Brooks Robinson who is surprising the baseball world.
Jim and Shelah Wisler's booth has an assortment of books, antique pottery and Oriental art. One item is a $950 Oriental coffee table with a painting of a man gazing up at the sky as a dragon flies overhead.
"I've never bought anything in here,but one of these days I'll find a great piece."
Keith and Dennis Oakley's coin display features
Tea pots from the turn of the centurv are available at the Antioque Mall. 830 Massachusetts St.
Matt Peters
Wichita senior
Parm Dishman/KANSAN
U. S. and foreign coins dating back to 1828. The 1 cent coins from that era are worth more than toady's pennies, many valued at $5 to $25.
Matt Peters, Wichita sophomore, said he was in the mall to find old, wooden furniture that he could restore.
"I've never bought anything in here, but one of these days I'll find a great piece," he said.
Like the coins and newly restored furniture, many items in the mall could tell some incredible stories if only they could talk.
One such example is the 1939 Hornby miniature train priced at $650 in Sliker's booth. The train was the last model made by the Hornby Company prior to World War II, and this particular train was purchased by a young British soldier who gave it to his son before leaving for the war.
"That young soldier never saw his son or the train again because he died somewhere on the battlefields." Sliker said.
The train now is owned by a couple selling it in the mall to help renav college loans.
Items such as the train are why Sliker worked at the mall, she said, dealing in antiques and collectibles because she wanted to save things from disappearing from the face of the earth.
Bonnie Aoki, Lawrence resident, has worked five years at the mall and said she enjoyed the job's stress-free atmosphere while continuing to do what
she loves—collecting antiques.
Snowdean Arnold, DeSoto resident, has been selling her jewelry and antique dolls in the mall since its inception six years ago.
"I started in a corner of the basement and then moved upstairs about two years ago," Arnold said.
Arnold has a variety of gold, silver and costume jewelry ranging from $30 to one piece of platinum jewelry priced at $1.500.
One customer, Marietta Copeland, DeSoto teacher and antique collector, said she didn't get a chance to come to the mall as often as wanted. When she did stop by, she always seemed to find something that
piqued her interest, she said, purchasing collectibles from the mall such as dishes and linens.
Jill Thompson, Wichita resident, said she visited the mall every time she was in town.
"I am involved in Civil War re-enactment, and the mall is a good place to find things from the 1860s that I can use," she said.
Not everything in the mall is nostalgic. Many items on display may tell stories of the future, such as a baseball bat priced at $200 and autographed by Frank Thomas, first baseman for the Chicago White Sox, or an autographed picture of Kansas City Chiefs running back Greg Hill for $25.
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OUT & ABOUT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 19, 1996
9D
'Common' sound
NG.
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
Ricki Ruhe (left), and Cory Shirk, perform with Common Ground, a reggae band, at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
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Monday, August 19, 1996
OUT & ABOUT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A game of pool can be a ball
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
Several area establishments provide tables
Ben Colman, Manhattan senior, sets up his next shot during a friendly pool game at Fatso's, 1016 Massachusetts St.
By Emily Redmond Kansan staff writer
Lawrence pool parlors have become a dwelling for KU students searching for a fun and relaxing time.
For students 21 and older, several area bars, including Fatso's, 1016 Massachusetts St., are host to a number of coin-operated pool tables.
David Collins, Shawnee senior, said, "Fatso's is a good place to play because they have two new tables, and on Thursday nights you can play nine-ball for a quarter."
Spectators also enjoy frequenting Fatso's.
Matt Heidebrecht, McPherson senior, said even when all the tables are taken, it's fun just to hang out.
Another bar with a number of pool tables is the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Open from 3 p.m. to 2 a.m., the Bottleneck offers patrons free pool tables until 8 p.m.
Collins said that afternoons at the Bottleneck are fun.
"The pool is free, there are lots of tables, and if you want to just hang out with friends, it's great," he said.
Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. 2nd Street, has an ectetic mixture of students and Lawrence locals who play the game.
"Players at Johnny's are not scrappy pool players," Collins said. "There are people there who hang around the table for fun, like me, but there is definitely a higher level of playing, which makes it more interesting."
Some students play competitive pool, but most do not. Heide-
brecht said.
Some establishments are open to the pool players under 21.
The Kansas Union Jaybowl has three pool tables available to patrons. Students pay a $2.40 hourly rate before 6 p.m. on weekdays. After 6 p.m. during the week and all day Saturday and Sunday, the price raises to $3.60 an hour.
Astro's, 601 Kasold Drive, has 10 tables available everyday from noon to 2 a.m. Three tables have hourly rates with a special, buy one hour and get another for free.
The Pool Room, 925 Iowa St. recently was renovated and has an all new look.
until 7 p.m.
Jim Heather, general manager, said he got new carpeting, got rid of all the beer lights above the pool tables and installed green lights. "We totally remodeled the big room that you first come into," he said.
Minors are allowed to play on the 22 tables until 10 p.m. Then they are asked by management to leave.
Hourly tables cost $5, and coin-operated tables cost $.25 for a game of eight-ball and $.50 for a game of nine-ball.
"It's not all that competitive around here,but every once in a while you'll find pool sharks."
Matt Heidebrecht McPherson senior
Students sell goods for cash
By Paul Eakins
Kansan staff writer
Needing extra cash for beer, pizza or necessities, some students turn to selling their possessions.
Students may sell many items around town. Some sell their music and stereos while others sell the clothes off their backs. Others even sell the plasma from their veins.
At North American Biological Inc., 816 W.24 St., a person in good health may earn $15 twice a week by spending 45 minutes to an hour giving plasma.
Besides earning money, the donation of plasma contributes to medical research and producing injectable solutions for burn victims and hemophiliacs.
Katherine Carrigan, program coordinator, said donating plasma was an easy way for people to get money.
"It's safe, very sanitary, there are nice people there, and you get extra money if you need it," he said.
Dennis Hoover, Leavenworth junior, said he gives plasma often, not only for the money, but also to do a good thing. Hoover said the donation center is an excellent program.
The $15 earned is only a base payment. Carrigan said on the second donation a donor weighing 150 to 174 pounds may earn $18, and a donor weighing more may earn $20.
Donors who have special antibodies, such as for hepatitis B, may earn up to $65, she said.
This is a large amount of money for simply sitting in a chair with a needle in one's
arm, but it is limited by the amount of plasma in the human body. However, there's no limit to the amount of CDs or clothing that can be sold, though not all of them are likely to be bought.
Tamyra Heim, general manager of Arizona Trading Co., 734 Massachusetts St., said the store turns down hundreds of articles of clothing.
The store buys and sells unique used clothing. When people bring in clothing, they may get either 40 percent of the store's selling price in cash, which could be as much as $15, or 60 percent of the price in trade.
The store also buys some new clothing, but about 95 percent of the clothing is recycled clothing, Heim said. And more people are bringing in clothing every day.
"Every year, every month, we notice a difference," she said.
Heim said the more people sell clothes every month.
Even if students don't have clothes to spare but have piles of old CDs, then they can trade them for cash at many music stores in Lawrence.
Steve Rector, owner of Alley Cat Records, said CDs can be sold for $4 to $5. But, as with clothing, not every CD will be bought.
"Mainstream music comes in often, so sometimes we get overstocked," Rector said. "Hard-to-get music, such as bluegrass and reggae, I snag up the second they're in."
The majority of the CDs at Alley Cat, 717 Massachusetts St., are used. Rector said.
"We probably get a couple hundred a week," he said.
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MONDAY, AUGUST 19
SECTION E
The Lawrence whiz kid
By John Whitted Special to the Kansan
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
BLOOD
SWEAT
& GO
Scott Konzem sat at his neatly organized desk wearing shorts, a T-shirt and an Atlanta Braves cap, showing off his latest tov.
"You'll like this," he said grinning.
He popped a cartridge into the portable disc drive hooked up to his PowerMac PC and beamed proudly.
"I was running out of hard drive space on my PC so I bought this drive," he explained. "It holds up to one gigabyte of data on each cartridge." Which is, for those who aren't fluent in the language of computers, a whole lot. Certainly enough to hold the data that comprises 12-year-old Scott's home page on the World Wide Web. And certainly enough to hold all of the other projects this computer whiz-kid is working on at home, at school, and at KU's Special Education department.
The words scream out at you when you first stumble across Scott's Web site: "This is the FIRST page done by an elementary student in Lawrence, KS (launched at 4:24 on Tuesday, 3/28/05)."
Frames filled with colorful swirling backgrounds, flashing exclamation points and scrolling text messages fill the screen, all done with the latest web programming techniques. They're subtle indications that you're not dealing with an amateur here.
From here you enter Scott's world, where you can find KU trivia games he's written himself, KU pictures and sound files, helpful hints to future students looking for report ideas and his own list of cool sites to visit on the web.
But Scott's doing his best to stay ahead of the crowd. Future editions of his page will include Java scripts, which allow real-time animations to frolic across your screen, and VRML programs, which take the viewer into the world of virtual reality. An interactive baseball game will allow participants from around the world to log in and try to hit one out of the park.
These are heady concepts for your average elementary student, but Scott discusses these plans with the matter-of-fact nature of one who has no doubts about his abilities in the on-line world. He looks like your average kid in his sneakers and ball cap, but in his area of expertise, his voice resonates with confident tones that belie his age.
It probably helped that he got an early start on technology road. At the age of four he was poking around in the operating system on his family's IBM PC.
"He could use all of the applications on it," said his mother Patricia, a physical education professor at Washburn University in Toneka.
Scott's parents obviously are proud of his computer endeavors, but they don't have to push him toward it.
Not that those skills haven't come in handy in the Konzem household.
"My dad often calls me for help," Scott said of his father, Richard Konzem, an assistant athletic director at the University of Kansas.
Scott's opportunities were provided through a cooperative effort between his school's gifted program and the KU Special Education department.
Scott's gifted teacher, Elaine Schmidt, said she knew right away Scott had to be exposed to a more challenging environment.
"He had more computer skills than I had, or anybody at the school had," she said. "I knew he needed to be connected to more knowledgeable people."
Jerry Chaffin, professor of special education, agreed to let Scott come up to the University and hasn't regretted the decision.
"He just had an interest in computers when he arrived here," Chaffin said. "But he's made tremendous growth. He's a very thoughtful and responsible kid."
It was at the lab that Scott immersed himself in HTML, the code in which web pages are designed. He didn't choose the easy route, either.
"I wrote it in the actual code. I didn't use the helper programs," Scott said, referring to the multitude of programs that now are available to allow the less computer literate to throw up a web page.
He also designed the official Quail Run Elementary School home page, the first to be done by a student. Scott did the programming himself.
At the school, Scott was known as "Mac Fixit" because he used his free time to solve computer problems the teachers had. He received special recognition for his services at his elementary school graduation.
Scott, not satisfied with just these accomplishments, wanted to wrap his fingers around the actual codes that govern the world of computers. It was this desire that led him to tackle another project: C programming language.
The University provided Scott with a book outlining C programming techniques and turned him loose.
Above: Scott Konzem, 12, has set up his own World Wide Web page on the Internet. He also designed the home page for Quail Run Elementary School.
"He read seven chapters and wrote his first program that night," his mother said.
"Konzem's Mowing Service," he laughed. "I even get mail for it sometimes."
Of course Scott can't spend all of his time at the University, so he has worked to build his own home system. He has an Apple PowerBook laptop and a PowerMac PC that he works on at home, much of it paid for by a local business: his own.
It would be difficult to qualify Scott as a so-called computer geek despite his
Right: Konzem's home page offers, among other things, KU trivia, report tips for students and a list of sites on the Web.
extensive knowledge. He plays baseball, basketball and racquetball, and writes in his spare time, all fairly normal activities for your average kid.
But that doesn't mean he doesn't spend a fair amount of time pursuing his computer hobby.
"I spend about five hours a week on the Internet, Scott said. His mother made a disbelieving noise.
"Okay, maybe 10 hours," Scott added. "I'd say 15," his mother corrected. Scott just smiled.
"He's going to be the next Bill Gates," his mother joked.
This is the FIRST home page done by an elementary school student in Lawrence, KS (snares at
4:24 on Tuesday, 3/28/95)
This page really abrink when I put the menubar and other goodies below. I still have the
reason for the frame/challenged.
Where Is Scott Knowles?
Main Menu
Browse my room
Work with me
Help me find help
Help me find help again
Help me find help again
Help me find help again
http://www.sped.ukans.edu/~scottk/skhome.html
Talk shows to trade trash for positive programming
By Scott Williams
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Tall, beefy Gordon Elliott heaves a sigh of relief when he talks about repositioning his successful, syndicated talk show for its third season.
"The marketplace has changed in our favor," the jolly Australian said, after producers of the Gordon Elliott Show announced plans to relaunch the show this fall, moving away from in-your-face issues to humor, celebrities and breaking news.
"We're not so much relaunching as exploiting my strengths, which we were not doing in the conflict-generated talk arena," Elliott said. "The ratings have shown that people like what we do with this tall, rather odd Australian."
Elliott's makeover, one of several due this fall, was announced following the success of The Rosie O'Donnell Show, which debuted in June with a blend of comedy and celebrity chat — and has won the highest ratings since Oprah Winfrey's first year.
answered those critics, and allows us to take the show in the direction we've wanted for the past two years."
"We've had people tell us, You can't do it. It won't rate," Elliott said. "Rosie has
"Look at Phil and Oprah. The up-marker works," Elliott said. "If you do go down
Ricki Lake and her relationship-driven Ricki hit the road this fall, with live remote broadcasts from U.S. cities and shows that are more solution-oriented, her syndicator said.
market, there's always somebody who's prepared to undercut you."
HORSEMAN
Maury Powich hopes to fold his topical talk show and, in 1998, create an early evening syndicated news magazine with his wife, former CBS anchor Connie Chung.
Sally Jesse Rafael
Another makeover is slated for Geraldo Rivera, who said in January that he would fold Geraldo! and rechristen it The Geraldo
Rivera Show, refocused on current events and his strengths as a newsman.
Rivera, still remembered for the broken nose he received in a studio brawl, said he realized the audience was fed up with trash talk's ambush interviews, excessive conflict, even violence.
"I absolutely loathed my participation," he said. "I was getting to the point where I had to hold my breath before I walked on stage, and my show was never that bad. Compared to some others, I was doing Masterpiece Theater."
last year was a tough one for talk shows. Syndicators trotted out seven new shows, all patterned after Ricki, and watched them die in the ratings one by one by one.
"I think we got below the lowest common denominator," said Richard Perin, president and CEO of syndicator MG-Perin Inc. "The advertising community was distinctly unhappy with the direction that talk was going.
"The big gorillas in daytime — the F&Gs,
the Bristol-Meyers; the Levers, the Colgates,
the Kraft Foods — those people are
sensitive," he said. "They want to reach
Sure, there are still shows specializing in shock, schlock, sex and the dysfunctional you-fill-in-the-blank, but Jerry, Sally Jessy and Jenny seem to have turned down the heat.
people, not offend them."
"The new Jenny Jones still has titillating topics," said Janeen Bjork, vice president of Selelt, representing stations in ad sales and program purchases. "Where it used to be 'My Lesbian Girlfriend Beats Me Up,' now it's 'Please Makeover My Lesbi
Makeover My Lesbian Girlfriend."
Ms. Blork said talk shows, with bored or
"Rosie O'Donnell is telling us something about viewers," Ms. Bjork said. "She came along just about the time people were saying a variety show couldn't work. They were saying that about sitcoms just when The Cosbui Show came along."
P. R. S. S.
Geraldo Rivera
disenchanted viewers and leery advertisers, were dealt a crippling blow from an unexpected source — the O.J. Simpson murder trial.
"You want prurient interest? All the things that these talk shows appealed to were there," she said.
Talk show ratings had peaked by February 1995, just as the prosecution's case against Simpson went into high gear. Then they slumped, and they have yet to return to pretrial levels.
The only shows that were unaffected by the Simpson case were The Montel Williams Show, with its emphasis on social issues, and the breezy, celebrity-driven chat of Live with Regis and Kathie Lee.
Live, in turn, paved the path for Rosie O'Donnell, who subbed for Kathie Lee and found she liked the work.
The Simpson trial also helped Rivera. Despite his misgivings about *Geraldo*, he devoted his CNBC nighttime show entirely to the trial and found his focus.
"I'm going to cover pop culture. That's my mandate," he said.
2E
Monday, August 19, 1996
M M
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Lunaria Center specializes in yoga
Stretching and breathing get exercisers to relax
YOGA
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
By Carrie DeSandro Special to the Kansan
Preston is a student at The Lunaria Center, a renovated church at 1000 New York St. where founder Anna Lunaria holds beginner and intermediate yoga classes twice a week.
Dressed in loose, comfortable clothing, Jennifer Preston, Perry junior, begins an hour of yoga exercises by taking deep abdominal breaths, known as ujayi breath, to focus and calm her thoughts.
"Yoga is one of the most stress-relieving activities I have done, and learning the breathing techniques helps in everyday stressful situations as well," Preston said.
Anna Lunaria is in the Eka-Pada Rajakapotafana, or the King Pigeon position, a stretch exercise in yoga. Lunaria has been teaching voga for 10 years and also offers private classes.
Lunaria began taking yoga classes in college when friends suggested it as a low-exertion exercise that was easy. She did not expect it to become a key part of her life.
Yoga is defined as the union of one's individual and spiritual consciousness, or more commonly, as the union of one's body and one's mind or soul.
"Yoga brings a greater awareness to the body and has always been a huge blessing to me, which is why I teach it," she said.
Lunaria made the former single-room church into both her home and the studio for her classes.
The kitchen is on the church stage and her bedroom exists in what was probably the upper-balcony of the compact sanctuary. An old Magnavox television set sits in one corner, and a tall bookshelf flanked by two plush blue reading chairs stands in another.
The living room even has a regulation-size basketball goal hanging high on the wall. A homemade rock-climbing wall lines the corner of her office.
As eclectic as her home, Lunaria, also a massage therapist, teaches what is known as hatha yoga, performs yogassage and reads tarot cards as well.
"Hatha yoga is the branch of yoga that focuses on the physical body using a system of postures, breath and meditations," Lunaria wrote in a short newsletter she gives to newcomers.
One of the oldest forms of exercise, hatha yoga consists of 12 basic poses, or asanas, varying from the simple wind reliever pose (drawing knees to the chest), to the more difficult tricky triangle pose (bending at the waist sideways forming a triangle with one hand touching the foot), which was named by a frustrated yoga student.
A more advanced, cardiovascular workout can be achieved by combining asanas in a rapid and repeated flow to form vinyasas.
Vegetarianism is the diet of choice for many practicing yoga, based on the theory that foods lower on the food chain promote better health and are digested easier.
Hatha yoga also teaches a five-point philosophy, including proper exercise, breathing, relaxation, diet and thinking.
Yogic breathing, or pranayama, provides what Lunaria calls an oxygen cocktail that helps loosen muscles during the poses. This, combined with moving your body through a series of relaxing positions while at the same time meditating, is how yoga strengthens the body, she said.
While yoga may look easy, mastering many of the poses will take practice. Utilizing deep, rhythmic breathing and making the poses fit the body, not the body fit the poses, yoga can be done by anybody, Lunaria said.
"Yoga is about you and your body," she said. "It helps the inflexible become flexible and the flexible become strong."
The hour is over, and now it's time for Preston's favorite pose, the sponge pose, which simply requires her to lie flat on her back, breathe, relax and nearly fall asleep.
Lunaria ends every session by sitting with her legs crossed and her hands in a prayerful manner in front of her chest, sending her students off with the Sanskrit saying, "Jai Bagwan," which means, "I salute the highest in you."
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3E
NBC gambles on Brooke Shields
'Suddenly Susan' is must-see TV after 'Seinfeld'
The Etc. Shop
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SUNGLASSES
By Lynn Eiber
Although the series has had two major overhauls, the impression of chaos could be misleading. Suddenly Susan may yet turn out to be the enormous hit NBC is banking on, a show worthy of its Cartier-class gift of a time slot.
ious studio and network executives under its belt, the series has been rewritten and recast just two months before its debut at 8:30 p.m. Sept. 19.
Brooke Shields
By Lynn Elber
The Associated Press
Susan, which premieres this fall in NBC's promised land — Thursday night, immediately after Seinfeld and before ER. With one creator, two sets of producers and operators
"I can name you any number of successful shows that were thrown together at the last minute," contends William Morris executive Sam Haskell, whose talent agency represents Shields.
P
uncounted anx
"the Fresh Prince of Bet-Air, which enjoyed six seasons on
M M
LOS ANGELES — Dying is easy, goes the old theatrical wivesaw; comedy is hard. Especially if it's must-see TV comedy. Consider the case of the
Consider the case of the Brooke Shields sitcom *Suddenly*
the air, is one that came together in that amount of time or less," Haskell said.
The elements seem promising enough.
Entertainment chief Warren Littlefield seemed equally unfazed by the last-minute scramble.
There's Shields, who proved herself a surprisingly deft and likable comedienne on a Friends episode. She plays Susan, a dependent young woman thrust into an independent life.
Clyde Phillips' original concept, a single-camera show filmed without a studio audience, was solid enough to catch the eye of Warner Bros. Television, NBC and Shields.
"We thought it could be great," he said. "Not just good, great."
She just was coming off her highly touted appearance on Warner's Friends, and scripts were being lobbed at her like marriage proposals.
"We had a pilot that we thought was good," he said, Littlefield said that audiences demanded and expected a lot from NBC Thursday nights.
Some snappy writing, solid supporting cast and nice camera work to show off Shields' beauty and charming aptitude for prattfalls, and Suddenly Susan scores in its cushy time slot.
NBC was looking for a strong addition to Thursday night, and
"This is television. We're not doing cancer research." Dontzig said. "We feel everything's under control."
The producers seem confident enough.
So what's so tough here?
Guiding Shields and the series are executive producers Gary Dontzig and Steven Peterman, Emmy-winners for their work on CBS' Murphia Brown.
"I can name you any number of successful shows that were thrown together at the last minute."
Enter producers Billy Van Zandt and Jane Milmore (Martin), entrusted with a further, hurried revamp of Suddenlu Susan for Shields.
Meanwhile Shields, who had signed a development deal with Warner, fell in love with the character, Jonas said.
OK, but not great. NBC had uttered the magic words "Thursday night", and the bar was raised.
Two weeks later, their script was filmed as the pilot.
Littlefield liked it but wanted a traditional multicamera sitcom filmed in front of an audience. The Warner contingent agreed, and writers were brought in to help revise the script.
"We did it like a little play, a short play of about five scenes," he said.
Warner quickly began working
Last March 11, the studio recruited actors to put on a Suddenly Susan show for Littlefield.
Tony Jones, studio head, said he and his crew did something that doesn't happen too often: they did a sort of stand-up presentation of the series.
Warner wanted to provide it.
Enter Dontzig and Peterman. The basic theme remains of a young woman whose romance falls apart and who suddenly finds herself flying solo, but much else is changed.
Nancy Marchand (Lou Grant) cast as Shield's grandmother in the pilot, may stay with the series if Warner can find a way to accommodate the New Yorkbased actress.
At this point, without a pilot episode in hand, NBC is putting its faith in Warner Bros., and the studio is putting its faith in Shields, Donzig and Peterman.
to maximize the concept, as Jonas put it, of Suddenly Susan.
Sam Haskell William Morris talent executive
Shields' character is transformed from editor at a small book publishing house in Southern California to a magazine writer in San Francisco, an environment that the producers said was more active.
That meant the loss of Elizabeth Ashley's romance-writer character and a boss played in the pilot by Philip Casnoff.
"If we all do our jobs right,
everyone's going to win big on
this it's going to be tremendous," Jonas said.
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4E
Monday, August 19, 1996
FYI
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Crisis counselors offer hotline
Headquarters serves students 24 hours a day
By Paul Eakins
Kansan staff writer
When residents of Douglas County experience personal problems of any kind and want someone to talk to for support, they have a place to call: Headquarters.
Headquarters counselors take calls 24 hours a day. But the volunteer counselors aren't there to give advice, said Lisa Rasor, assistant director of training.
"We can't tell them the best thing to do," she said. "We're there to be supportive."
Headquarters, 1419 Massachusetts St., uses the Rogerman system, a form of reflective listening that does not force opinion or advice on
the person seeking counseling, she said. If someone calls because they are thinking about using cocaine, she cannot tell them not to use it, no matter what her opinion is.
"We will give them information on the effects of it, and they can make the decision themselves. Sometimes that's the best way for people to learn." Rasor said.
Headquarters counselors may only get involved when there is an immediate danger of someone getting hurt, such as the person calling or their child, she said. She tries to sway suicidal callers from committing suicide.
"A part of them probably wants to live — the part that called Headquarters." Rasor said.
If a person already has attempted suicide by taking pills or using another means, Rasor said she would try to get the caller's location so that an ambulance could be sent.
Also, a call might be traced if someone has attempted suicide and then passes out on the phone, Rasor said, but only after consulting one of the four paid staff members.
These things rarely have happened in Rasor's 10 years with Headquarters, she said. Usually people call to talk about their problems with relationships, depression, major traumas in their lives, or just school stress, Rasor said. Calls always are anonymous.
"Headquarters is a safe place to call," she said.
During the summer session, which ended in July, volunteers took two classes a week and observed the regular counselors in action once a week, said Jennifer, a trainee counselor and KU student. As a counselor, her last name must be kept anonymous.
Each year, 50 to 80 volunteer counselors are given more than 100 hours of training. Rasor said.
"At our training sessions we do role playing, where one person is the caller and the other is the counselor." she said.
In some classes, guest speakers talk about issues that trainees will
have to deal with, such as sexual and drug abuse. Jennifer said.
Jennifer said it was not hard to learn the counseling methods. But some found it difficult to use a non-directive approach.
"They wonder 'How am I supposed to counsel people when I can't really say anything?'" Jennifer said.
Rasor said it was emotionally demanding to talk to someone with a problem and never find out whether they have resolved it. However, some people do call to thank the counselors.
"I get caught up in the good feeling of helping somebody. We do make a difference." Rasor said.
In 1995, Headquarters received 14,621 contacts by phone and walk-in visit, an increase of 1,785 from 1994, reported Headquarters.
Training sessions for volunteer counselors are scheduled for fall and spring. For information or counseling, Headquarters can be reached in Lawrence at 841-2345 or in Baldwin City at 594-6490.
HASS BOUTLET
Balloons for the boy
Pam Dishman/KANSAN
Jacob Vogts, Lawrence, 3,
receives a balloon "train" from Bill
Wachspress, a professional baloonist. Wachspress is at the
Riverfront Outlet Mall every Saturday,
and will also be performing at the
Kansas Union on August 22
and 23, for UnionFest.
University could share resources and the study abroad program
Big 12 schools may collaborate
Kansas State University is not actively pursuing collaboration with other schools in the new conference but has had a long practice of exchanging students with other Big Eight schools in certain programs, said Suzy Auton, administrative assistant to the provost at Kansas State.
LAWRENCE — The new Big 12 Conference means more competition on the playing field but could lead to more sharing in the classroom.
Study abroad has been a priority of Chancellor Robert Hemenway, and the University is actively seeking to expand the program with the Big 12 schools. Provost David Shulenburger said the University was selected to recommend by Dec. 1 options for collaboration.
The Associated Press
Some academic officials hope that the newly formed conference will allow greater sharing of resources and prevent duplication.
Mary Debicki, director of the KU Office of Study Abroad, said, "There is no sense in us doing the same program in the same place at the same time."
Kansas State has shared students with the University of Missouri, the University of Kansas and the University of Nebraska while accepting students into its architecture program, Auton said.
She noted, however, that attempts to set up a more formal arrangement among all Big Eight schools were unsuccessful.
Shulenburger said he hoped that creation of the Big 12 — formed by adding the University of Texas, Texas A&M, Baylor University and Texas Tech to the former Big Eight — would be a catalyst to get those efforts started again.
Collaboration could also take other forms, such as the sharing of library resources, including the 6-million-volume collection at Texas. Shulenburger said.
He said faculty exchanges would be explored.
Graduate students may be able to spend a semester working under a researcher at another conference school, he said.
"It's got great potential," Shulenburger said. "If we can find what things compliment each other, each school can be more successful."
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5E
Cyberspace goes multilingual
Monday, August 19, 1996
Spanish-speaking soccer fans topple English-only rule in on-line forums
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — America Online, the nation's largest online service, reversed a week-old English-only rule in a soccer discussion forum after angry Spanish-speaking subscribers called it racist and threatened to cancel.
Many of the forum's regulars hail from countries where soccer verges on a religion, and they flooded AOL with irate e-mail messages complaining that their Spanish postings were being deleted as quickly as they wrote them.
"AOL's supposed to let you communicate with the world, but we can't talk about our teams?" said Marcelo Rossetti, a Burlingame, Calif., graphic designer who led the protest.
"It's a victory for people who have fought for their rights to be upheld," said Salvador Sahagun, a restaurant owner from Santa Rosa, Calif., who joined the protest. "If they don't want our business, we can always go elsewhere."
AOL issued a public apology and a note that AOL now encourages members to post multilingual messages.
The rule, which took effect July 17, came about because America
"It's a victory for people who have fought for their rights to be upheld."
Salvador Sehagun
Santa Rosa, Calif.
restaurant owner
Online strives to maintain a G-rating for all its public areas — which requires being able to understand what's been written.
None of the volunteers who monitored the forum for offensive
sratements spoke the language.
"We couldn't read the postings in Spanish or Portuguese," said AOL representative Cathy Johnson.
Although English is the unofficial language of cyberspace, the use of other languages is growing as more people from around the world get online.
And with Spanish speakers making up more than 6 percent of the U.S. population, they are a market that even AOL is well aware of — despite the flap.
It already sponsors a Hispanic Online forum in which all monitors are bilingual and Spanish postings are encouraged, Johnson said.
"We're listening to our members and trying to be responsive to their needs," Johnson said.
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and carry your books in style!
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If you can't send them back to school with a smile, at least you can send them with a nice haircut.
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FYI UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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841-7226
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Rolfing aids in aligning bodies
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
By Liping Chow Special to the Kansan
Debra Stang lies on a cushioned table, her body covered by a towel, breathing rhythmically as another woman leans over her, pressing on the joint of Stang's elbow and asking her to move it as firm pressure is applied.
Carol Rasor calls herself a certified roller, practicing her therapy at 303 W. 11th St.
Carol Rasor, certified roffer, applies pressure to Rod Runyan's back to release tension in the tissue layers. Rolfing is performed to align the body to its center of gravity.
"Rolfing is one of the methods of body structure integration and the oldest method," Rasor said. "Rolfing is about getting the body aligned in gravity and releasing tension in tissue layers."
Ida Rolf is the founder and namesake of rofling. She recognized that gravity was the basic shaper of the body. When the body's natural balance is disturbed, it causes body misalignment and subsequent strain, lowered vitality and impaired biological and psychological functioning.
This is where rofling comes in. Rasor said that rofling released the body's segments — legs, torso, arms
from lifelong patterns of tension and bracing. By doing this, it permits gravity to realign and balance the body. Because the body is better balanced, it expends less of its vital energies against gravity. Therefore, the body will feel lighter and movement will be easier.
"But the true ideal is doing it once a week because it allows the body enough time to integrate the work in the last session, and it allows continuity of the work." she said.
A person wanting to undergo rofing therapy first answers a health questionnaire and discusses what he or she hopes to gain from the sessions with the rolfer. Then the person is asked to stand in front of a full-length mirror in his or her underwear. The rolfer will show the person where the body is not aligned. After that, the rofing session begins.
Rasor said that scheduling 10 sessions is a client's choice.
"Rolling is broken down into 10 sessions," Rasor said. "Each session has a specific goal and territory."
The first seven sessions remove strain from specific areas of the body. The remaining sessions organize and align the body as a whole.
The person is asked to breathe in and, at the same time, move the part the roller holds. The tension created by the pressure and movement will free and reposition the connecting tissue and align the body's segments.
Rasor said that the goal of a rofter is to help a client discover the most efficient way of using his or her body and to bring the body close to its center line of gravity so fewer muscles are required when standing or sitting.
Rasor, who charges $65 a session,
said all kinds of people are roffed,
and the reasons vary. Some people do it because they have physical pains, and some just want the benefits of roffing.
A study by Valerie Hunt and Wayne Massey in the department of kinesiology at the University of California-Los Angeles found that the
benefits of roling are better posture, more flexibility and relief of pain, tension and stress.
Stang, Lawrence graduate students and a regular client of Rasor's, had a specific reason for being rolled.
"I wasn't even able to feel if I was hungry or tired. I just was tuned out so much," Stang said. "I thought that might get me back in touch to paying attention to my body signals again."
Stang said that rofing helped her to call attention back to her body.
"I notice that I have a lot more flexibility. I feel that I'm standing taller," she said. "I could move easier and breath easier because some of the work she did in certain areas."
People who have heard of rolling but never experienced or seen it may think it is painful. Rasor said that when the technique was created 50 years ago, it was painful but
is usually more gentle now,depending on the roller.
"Rolfing is about changing of the body, and for some people that is really threatening," Rasor said. "A lot of the pain factor is the fear that it is going to be painful."
She said that she usually had an on-going dialogue with her clients about pain.
"It shouldn't be painful. If it is, tell me, and I will change the way that I'm doing it so that it's not painful," Rasor says to them.
Stang said that there were times when she had felt a little uncomfortable, but that it wasn't painful.
Rolfing is completed when the 10 sessions are over, but some people go back 10 more sessions because they want to reach a higher level, Rasor said.
"Rolfing is permanent. The work holds forever, but there is always more to get," she said.
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- RAIL EUROPE & BRITRAIL passes
841-8100
- Package Tours and Cruises
- Serving KU Students &
23rd Street and Louisiana in The MALLS Shopping Center
Faculty Since 1982! 2112 W. 25th Street, Holiday Plaza
9-5 Mon-Fri
9-12 Sat
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Check out our Daily Food and Drink Specials
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Summer '97 Opportunities
Duke University Talent Identification Program offers Resident Advisor and Teaching Assistant Positions
Serve as a counselor, role model, and educator for highly motivated junior high and high school students. 4-to 8-week programs at the University of Kansas, Duke University, Davidson College, Appalachian State University, and the Duke and Texas A&M Marine Labs.
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Or, call (919) 684-3847
FYI
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
Monday, August 19, 1996
Taking in the tunes
ROULEVAC
Students and Lawrence residents enjoy listening to Common Ground at the Bottleneck,737 New Hampshire St. Many places downtown offer live music almost every night.
Daily Show laughs at the world
Comedy Central's weeknight show is news alternative
Edmée Rodriguez/KANSAN
By Frazier Moore
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Cable News Network not enough news for you? Now cable gives you even more!
More headlines, analysis, context.
More perspective, profiles, background, foreground, color — hey,
wait a minute, is this newscasting or Intro to Painting and Drawing?
Strictly speaking, it's neither. And, by the way, we're certainly not talking about the ambitious new MSNBC news-and-information channel that signed on last month with hours upon hours of — well, news and information.
Instead, asking only 30 minutes of your time each weeknight at 10:30 p.m. — and several encores — is the promising new Daily Show, which premiered last month on Comedy Central.
Almost as clever as its title isn't
Almost as clever as its title isn't—how come it's called "Daily" if it comes on at night? — it offers a fresh, distinctive look at what's going on. At least, what's going on in the minds of its writers.
But you gotta love a TV show whose anchor admonishes the young viewers in the audience to stay informed if they're going to watch. "We all have to start reading the front page," he exhorted them last month.
The anchor, by the way, is Craig Kilborn. He displays perfect hair, ends his sentences in pandering whispers, and has a hair-trigger pivot to face whichever camera is picking him up. In short, he comes across as so real it's amazing.
Stay informed, dude! How you gonna understand the report on half-price moviegoer Bob Dole's 73rd birthday if you don't know who Bob Dole is?
But, then, he used to be real.
Kilborn is a former anchor of ESPN's SportsCenter and sports director of a TV station in Monterey, Calif. Which put him in good
stead for the Daily Show coverage of the Summer Olympics, with its "smug sneaker salesmen we call 'the Dream Team'” and swimmer Michelle Smith, “the first Irishwoman to ever be fully immersed in water."
Talk about saving you time! Instead of watching all that gymnastics coverage, you could have seen actor Jon Cryer do his impression of Kerri Strug trying to stand on one leg after injuring the other.
"The Daily Show," which tapes a few hours before airtime, doesn't try to do a simple sendup of a newscast, as does Saturday Night Live's fixture. Weekend Update.
And, sparing you from having to sit through Jeopardy! at dinner time, The Daily Show supplies that day's Final Jeopardy! answer and question, phoned in by head writer Lizz Winstead's mother.
With twice the irony, The Daily Show combines the headlines of a Weekend Update segment with packaged reports a little reminiscent of Michael Moore's edgy magazine show, TV Nation, where sometimes you couldn't decide if you were watching broadcast journalism or social satire.
Indeed, contributor Brian Unger phonied up such convincing sadness for a report on the death of Princess Kitty that you could imagine this soppy tribute to a performing cat running on your local-TV newscast. Heaven knows you've seen worse there.
But you'll probably find The Daily Show more consistently, funny than the local news. It's also funnier than its ABC competition, Nightline—which means much funnier than NBC's Tonight show.
How does it stack up next to Late Show with David Letterman?
Well, does Dave keep you in the know with regular features like This Day in Hasselhoff History and the Kathie Lee Quote of the Day? (Here's one: "You can't beat a chubby little kid in a tiny little Speedo.")
Each Daily Show edition seems dedicated not to laughing with its subjects, but at them. Mercilessly. You'll probably be laughing, too.
Next season, Single Guy won't get the girl
LOS ANGELES — The Single Guy is going to be more single in the upcoming television season, says the guy who plays the title role, Jonathan Silverman.
The Associated Press
The NBC sitcom became a first-season winner for NBC and not just because it benefited from a platinum time slot — between Friends and Seinfeld on Thursday nights. Still, networks love to tinker, and the show will have a slightly different direction next season.
"I think they brought up a very good point: For him to truly be a single guy, he's gotta have a lot less luck with the ladies," Silverman said.
"I think that was fine and funny and certainly a good introduction in that first season. But we all agree we should explore other aspects of his being single and a bachelor, with the pain and pitfalls as opposed to having a 'Babe of the Week' show," he said.
"He couldn't have been so successful with all the dates, otherwise he wouldn't be the single guy. One of them would have worked out."
Silverman himself remains single, but he admits to a terrific relationship with country singer Annaee that has lasted more than two years.
"So I feel like a married man, as opposed to a single guy, in real life," he said.
Silverman was accustomed to one new project after another in the early years of his career, so he's looking forward to the sophomore season of The Single Guy. But beyond that he wouldn't predict:
It was during baseball season that Silverman and The Single Guy came together. A lifelong baseball nut, the actor is a player with the Hollywood All Stars, celebrities who play exhibition games for charity. A few seasons back, Silverman appeared at the annual Hollywood Stars night, playing the outfield before a regular game at Dodger Stadium.
"One season at a time," he said. "We'll see what happens."
"Lo and behold, Tom Selleck, 'Mr. Baseball',' hit a shot over my head. God was with me, and I robbed him of what should have been a double or a triple. A few innings later, the same thing happened. He hit one more toward right center, and I caught it," he said.
"The fine folks at Castle Rock were in attendance. Through the efforts of our shortstop, Billy Crystal, I was offered a job in a baseball picture called 'Little Big League' as a relief pitcher for the
Minnesota Twins. Castle Rock gave me an overall deal, which eventually resulted in the television show".
Silverman grew up in Los Angeles and attended Beverly Hills High School, as did current luminaries Richard Drewfuss and Rob Reiner.
"I didn't really have any specific ties to the industry," he said. "But growing up here, you can't avoid it. It's all-encompassing."
Silverman left for New York at 17 and found a patron in Neil Simon. The young actor appeared in all three of Simon's autobiographical plays: Brighton Beach Memoirs, Biliot Blues and Broadway Bound. In November, he'll appear with a stellar cast in Simon's London Suite on NBC.
"I suppose in the back of my mind, I thought, 'Hey, if I ever do pursue this as a career' — this really wasn't in the forefront of my mind. I had an inkling of how I would go about it. I would know what not to do, judging from the people I was surrounded by."
He also appeared in feature movies such as Stealing Home, Class Action and the infamous Weekend at Bernie's duo, in which he and Andrew McCarthy managed to get laughs out of escorting a corpse.
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8E
Monday, August 19, 1996
FYI
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tattoos penetrate students' lives, skin
Tattoo artist working on a client's arm.
Pam Dishman/KANSAN
Chris Bishop, Lawrence resident, draws a tattoo on a patron's arm at Skin Illustrations, 704 Massachusetts St. St.Bishop's father, "Uncle Rubris" owns the tattoo shop.
By Sarah Brown Special to the Kansar
Elizabeth Gregg's high school friends always saw her as a goody-goody. So they were surprised when she showed up with her first tattoo, a rose on her ankle.
Tattoos aren't just for Harley riders anymore. Nice girls like Gregg, Salina junior, are sporting them, too.
Shandra Dalke, Great Bend sophomore, got the same reaction from her friends when she had a Chinese dragon tattooed on her ankle in February.
"They said, 'You don't seem like the type,'"
she said. "They thought it was fake."
By contrast, friends who saw former KU student Sarah White's tattoo for the first time told her. "Well, that you've."
White considers herself a risk taker. She said getting the tattoo was true to her nature. She had a Korean symbol representing dancing women put on her upper arm.
John Hoopes, assistant professor of anthropology, said there were as many reasons to get a tattoo as people who had them. He became interested in tattoos when he noticed that many of his students had them.
Hoopes said one incentive for getting a tattoo might be a desire to exercise control over one's body, especially when other aspects of life seem out of control. He also said people might use tattoos to separate themselves from a uniform majority.
Women seem more particular than men when deciding where to place a tattoo, Hoopes said. They may use it as another way to highlight their appearance, just as they might style their hair and apply makeup, he said.
Dalke said that she had considered getting a tattoo for a long time. But on an impulsive decision, she went to a tattoo parlor with a friend.
White also gave a lot of thought about a tattoo before she actually took the plunge. She reasoned, "It's your body. You're walking around in it all the time, so you might as well decorate it." She added that it was important to get a design that is both meaningful and attractive.
"It's a lifelong commitment," she says. "It's a weird relationship that you have with it."
Gregg got hers for a more familiar reason: "At the time, everyone was doing it," she said.
Reaction to their new body decoration was almost uniformly positive, all three
women said. They figured it was because the tattoos are becoming less shocking. Some people were surprised, but few were actually hostile to the change — except their parents.
Dalke said that it took her mother a couple of months before she could bring herself to look at it.
Gregg said her parents wouldn't talk to her for two weeks.
In reaction to the common question of, "Didn't that hurt?" all three women said they'd expected a painful experience, but the reality was not so harsh.
Dalke compared the sensation to someone dragging a needle lightly across the skin.
White said it was more irritating than painful, like having a rock in your shoe.
"After you tolerate it for five minutes or so, you become numbed to it," she said. "After awhile, you almost experience a euphoria."
Euphoria did not figure into Gregg's second tattoo, a Playboy bunny. She said it was much more painful than her first, because it was on her stomach, where the skin is thin.
Body location plays a big role in determining how much the process will hurt.
Beth Lee, who does body piercing at Led Bodine the Bad Tat Graphics, 1826 Massachusetts St., said that any place on the body that doesn't get sunlight is more painful to have tattooed.
Exposure to sun toughens up the skin and pushes nerve endings farther below the surface, desensitizing the skin.
Lee explained the tattooing process. Pigments that will be needed for the tattoo are poured out into caps. A needle is placed into a hand-held machine and is dipped into the first pigment.
Lee said that many people believe a tattoo needle is hollow and color is injected into the skin through it. Actually, the needle just pokes a hole through the upper layer of the skin, and the pigment flows off the end of the needle into the hole.
Bad Tat Graphics, 1826 Massachusetts St., where Dalke got her tutorship, has been in business since January 1995. The owner, Bodine, has been tattooing for six years.
White got hers at Grimm Tattoo Studio in Kansas City, Mo. That's also where Chris Bishop, the manager of Skin Illustrations, 740 Massachusetts St., got his first tattoo. Bishop said the shop is owned by his father, "Uncle Russell" Bishop, who runs another parlor in Overland Park. The shop opened
"After you tolerate it for five minutes or so, you become numbed to it.After awhile,you almost experience a euphoria."
Shandra Dalke Great Bend sophomore
last October, and Chris estimates at least 80 percent of their customers are KU students.
The two businesses share some guidelines: Bad Tat wont tattoo minors unless they come with a parent; Skin Illustrations won't do it at all, and it doesn't pressure clients into getting a particular tattoo, or into getting tattooed at all.
Skin Illustrations also does not tattoo people who are intoxicated. Lee said drunk people usually brought a bad attitude with them. Intoxication also makes the process more painful.
Because alcohol thins the blood, drunk clients bleed more during the procedure, which can push the pigment back out of the skin, meaning the tattoo won't take. More bleeding leads to a greater risk of infection, Lee said.
Preventing the spread of infections such as hepatitis and HIV is a priority for both shops, therefore each uses disposable needles. Everything that's reused is sterilized in what's called an autoclave. This machine uses steam pressure and 270 degrees heat to kill germs.
Skin Illustrations sterilizes used needles before putting them out in the trash in a special container. Tattoo artists at Bad Tat wash work surfaces with bleach after every tattoo.
And to protect customers and themselves, the tattoo artists wear rubber gloves while working.
Despite health risks and family opposition, Dalke, White and Gregg say they would do it again. They all used the same word to describe tattoos: addictive.
Snack Bars at Wescoe, Murph Camping Equipment Rental Information/Candy Counter Food Services Post Office Duplicating Center Bowling Video Games
esign
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KANSAS & BURGE UNIONS
Union Technology Center
864-5690
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NU
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Student Union Activities 864-3477
KU
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BOOKSTORES
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864-4640
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FOOD SERVICES
Union Food Services 864-4590
KU CONCESSIONS
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http://www.rock-chalk.com/kubookstores/union.info.htm Call for more information: 864-4651
C
Volleyball Kansas team looks to rebuild from last season's 8-19 mark. Page 1B
MRC turns 1 Multicultural Resource Center celebrates first anniversary. Page 6A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
THURSDAY. AUGUST 22,1996
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.103, NO.2
(USPS650-640)
Quick LOOK
Clinton signs bipartisan health insurance bill
WASHINGTON — One day after approving a 90 cent-an-hour raise for minimum wage workers, President Clinton signed legislation that will make it easier for Americans to obtain health insurance.
The bipartisan legislation the president signed yesterday, which passed the Senate unanimously and the House with only two dissenting votes, effectively ends the practice of denying insurance coverage on the basis of pre-existing conditions.
It is the second of three bill signings this week designed to highlight Clinton's presidency in the days before the Democratic National Convention, which begins Monday in Chicago.
To read about how new minimum wage laws will affect Americans, please see page 164.
Kevorkian aids suicide of 76-year-old woman
PONTIAC, MICH. — Jack
Keworkian helped a Texas woman
Lou Gehring's disease commit suicide yesterday, refusing to let controversy about the death of a Massachusets woman slow his cause.
Stephen Shawl
Kevorkian
brought the body of Louise Siebens, 76, of McKinney, Texas, to Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital about 10 p.m., said Bob Aranosian, director of the emergency room.
Perot selects ex-boss as 'stand-in' running mate
DALLAS — Ross Perot has listed his former IBM boss as a "stand-in" running mate. His residential campaign insists that doesn't mean James S. Campbell will be No. 2 on the Reform Party ticket, although four years ago the Texas billionaire's stand-in stood with him through the fall.
Campbell's name showed up Tuesday in official papers the Perot campaign sent to the Federal Election Commission, seeking $29.1 million in public financing for his White House bid. Perot would qualify because he won 19 percent of the national vote when he ran for president in 1992.
Campbell, 69, also was listed as holding a place on state ballots in the West until after the convention Sunday, when Perot was nominated by Reform Party members. Perot's former boss and friend had said he was doing a favor by lending his name to the ballot drive.
Plane crashes, killing Yugoslav crew members
BELGRADE, YUGSOLAVIA — A cargo plane crashed and exploded in flames yesterday while trying to make an emergency landing in Belgrade. All crew members were killed, the Yugoslav Tanjug news agency reported.
Tanjug did not say how many crew members the four-engine, Russian-made liyushin 76 jet carried when it crashed half a mile from Beilgrade's airport runway at 3:10 a.m.
Belgrade radio stations, however said 11 crew members were killed during the emergency landing.
The plane circled at low attitude over the city for an hour before it plunged to the ground, witnesses said.
It was not immediately clear what the plane was transporting, but witnesses said they saw and heard explosions and tracers coming from the burning wreckage hours after the crash.
It was not known who owned the plane.
Bringin' down the house
Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
David LaClure, a Lawrence carpenter, helped guide a window onto the roof of Stouffer Place Apartments yesterday while Phillip Smith watched from inside of the roof.
Journalism dean to resign after 17 years at University
By Stephanie Fite Kansan staff writer
Provost David E. Shulenburger will meet with the journalism school faculty at 4 p.m. Friday to solicit advice and highlight a description of prospective candidates for Mike Kautsch's position as dean at the School of Journalism.
Kautsch made official Monday his intent to resign June 30, 1997, as dean of the school. He decided this summer while visiting Costa Rica as a Knight International Press Fellow that his 10th year would be his last.
His University honors include the H. Bernard Fink, Mortar Board and HOPE — Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator — awards, Kautsch plans to resume research and teaching at the University after the 1997 academic year.
Kautsch was named dean in 1987, succeeding Del Brinkman. He joined the faculty in 1979 to teach reporting and media law classes and is an award-winning teacher.
"I find myself at this point wanting to make change and act on new interests, and I am motivated with this feeling of accomplishment and completion," Kautsch said.
Shulenburger said he planned to target a nationwide marketing campaign for a new dean after a search committee is
"The William Allen White School of Journalism has a national reputation, and I am confident that we have plenty of applicants to choose from," Shulenburger said.
established in late October.
1
The search committee, appointed by Shulenburger, will
consist of students and faculty members within the school, a dean from another department and outside representatives.
Mike Kautsch
pioneered the idea of on-line journalism in the school and said Kautsch's endless support of technology and change made her on-line journalism course possible.
"We need a dean who can embrace change as this dean has," Rich said.
In addition, a proposal by Kautsch won a $1 million endowment to establish a Knight chair in journalism, and he supported international outreach to Costa Rica and other countries.
The school's undergraduate program was ranked 10th in the nation by U.S. News and World Report in 1996. These accomplishments were made possible by Kautsch's technological improvements, which included the creation of an integrated media laboratory and the University's first television station, Channel 14.
Carole Rich, associate professor of journalism.
During his fellowship in Costa Rica, Kautsch planned a cultural exchange with the School of Mass Communications at the University of Costa Rica. Hetraveled to Costa Rica after the school celebrated its 50th anniversary. When the celebration was complete and with the threat of more budget cuts, Kautsch decided to step aside.
"I had a sense of completion and found that the combination of celebration and difficult problem-solving had exhausted me," Kautsch said. "I realized that I was going to finish 10 years at the University, and maybe I could think about change at this point."
Ted Frederickson, professor and chairman of the school's editorial program, said of Kautsch's resignation, "We're delighted to welcome back to the classroom one of KU's best professors, a HOPE award winner, and owe our gratitude to him for serving as dean during a difficult decade dominated by dwindling resources, hiring freezes and growing technology needs."
On-line access limits imposed
110-hour cap added to new $50 access fee
By Bradley J. Brooks Kansan staff writer
The 6,000 KU students, faculty and staff who use dial-in access to get on the campus computer system will have their service terminated if they are spend more than 110 hours online each month. This maximum hour cap is part of a fee increase and new billing plan introduced by University officials.
"It feels like they're penalizing the heavy user," he said. "People search the Web for the wealth of information out there. It seems that at a university, searching for information would be encouraged."
The fee will increase from $30 to $50 for on-line access through the end of July.
Under the new billing plan, a student's log-on hours are metered by the computer center. While most
Wade Jones, Milford, Conn., senior and president of the Kansas University Campus Internet Association, is not happy about the new plan.
"There are a lot of people on-line for more than the limit: engineers, computer science majors, people who use the Web as an educational source," said Hafid Saba, Fort Scott junior. "The whole thing is just a little bit irritating for me."
of the on-line users won't be affected by the hour cap, those who will are concerned.
David Shulenburger, University provost and the person who made the final decision on the new billing plan, said that the hour cap was in place to keep a small number of people from occupying the limited number of spaces available in the system.
"Clearly, there isn't any attempt to ration the system." Shulenburger said. "The attempt is just to provide additional lines so that people can get in when they want."
In addition to the hour cap, there has been a fee increase for use of the dial-in system.
"The University has received no new budgeting for the system," Shulenburger said. "We want to be able to provide enough capacity so that people won't have to wait so long to get into the system."
Under the new fee plan, students pay a basic fee of $50 for access to the system through the end of July, a
See On-line, Page 12A.
Ex-professor writes new Star Trek novel
James Gunn, 73, recently wrote a Star Trek novel, The Joy Machine, based on Ted Sturgeon's nearly 30-year-old outline for a proposed episode of the original series. Sturgeon, a legendary science fiction writer and friend of Gunn's, had begun the outline while the series ran but never completed it.
The Joy Machine hit stands Aug.10
By Jeff Ruby
Kansan staff writer
"There are two ways to be happy," Gunn said. "You get what you want, or you want what you get." In The Joy Machine, a planet called Tinshel has a mechanism that fulfills the people's desires while simultaneously brainwashing each citizen.
Aretired University of Kansas English professor has boldly gone where no one on campus has gone before.
After two and a half months of writing this spring, Gunn finished his adaptation of Sturgeon's work in March. The work was an exploration of happiness and pleasure.
But an opportunity to work with a former student in shaping Sturgeon's idea changed Gunn's mind.
"When people come to me and want me to write Star Trek novels, I tell them I'm not interested. It's not real writing to me," Gunn said.
"He was one of the major driving forces behind my career choice," said Ordover, who became an editor after attending one of Gunn's science fiction workshops eight years ago. Ordover said he was thrilled to collaborate with his former teacher and mentor.
John Ordover, a former student of Gunn and editor of the Star Trek series at Pocket Books in New York City, suggested that Gunn turn Sturgeon's outline into a novel in 1995.
What kind of person writes a 280-
page novel about Captain Kirk,
Spock, Scotty and the whole gang on
the Starship Enterprise? Gunn must be
a diehard Trekkie, right?
"When it originally came out, I was not a great fan of *Star Trek* back in
"It was wonderful to work with James Gunn," Ordover said. "I was honored. It was a great opportunity to bring Ted Sturgeon's story to life. He's a legend."
See StarTrek. Page 12A.
INDEX
Scoreboard...2B
Weird News...2A
TV...2A
National News...16A
World News...14A
TODAY
PARTLY CLOUDY
High 84° Low 70°
Weather: Page 2A.
www.kansan.com
UDKI
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
interactive
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.
2A
Thursday, August 22, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
QuickINFO WEIRD NEWS TELEVISION LISTINGS LOTTO NUMBERS WEATHER
WEATHER
TODAY
80
64
Partly cloudy with a chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon.
FRIDAY
82
60
Partly cloudy with continued chance of showers.
SATURDAY
85
63
WEIRD NEWS
More clouds, more chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon.
Lead Stories
Willie King, 37, was arrested moments after he had allegedly mugged a 94-year-old woman in a housecoat just outside her front door in New York's Greenwich Village in July. The woman is the mother of Vincent "Chi" Gigante, the reputed godfather of the Genovese crime family. At press time, King was still alive.
According to a report in The People newspaper in London in July, British spies who set up high-tech clandestine cameras to gain intelligence on the Irish Republican Army discovered that the cameras also recorded much kinky sex. The newspaper said the British government is planning to use some sex scenes, including episodes in which IRA leaders have sex with the wives of their jailed comrades, in an upcoming propaganda campaign.
Brian Smith, 42, was charged in Cassville, Mo., in July with locking his three children in 55-gallon drums during the day while he was at work. And Jeffrey Hoveland, 50, pleaded guilty in St. Paul, Minn., in July to using an electrified dog collar to punish his two sons, ages 9 and 11. Jan and Joyce Duplantis were arrested in New Orleans in June and charged with forcing
their two female wards, ages 8 and 9, to live outside in a crude playhouse so as not to mess up their apartment.
In June, the Houston Health and Human Services Department warned of a local diarrhea outbreak caused by cyclospora. The department said two clusters of cases had been reported, the first among a group of executives of the natural gas industry meeting at a local club.
The Continuing Crisis
In June, the Arkansas State Medical Board ordered Waldo, Ark., family physician Jewel Byron Grimmett Jr. to start kept written records. At a hearing, Grimmett told board members that he has kept all patient histories, including prescription records, only in his head for the 35 years he has been practicing medicine. Grimmett avoided license revocation because he is Waldo's only doctor and because, according to him, he treats about half his patients for free.
In March, after the parents of Huang Pin-jen, 27, and Chang Shui-mei, 26, of Kaohsiung, Taiwan, refused to bless their wedding, the couple opted for suicide. They drove a car off a cliff (but survived), tried to hang themselves (but survived) and leaped from
atop a 12-story building (but survived, landing on an adjacent roof, suffering multiple fractures.) In April, the parents reconsidered.
On May 23, the bodies of two Dominican Republican nationals were discovered, one near JFK Airport in Long Beach, N.Y., and the other about 10 miles from Miami International Airport. Both had grease marks, and after investigations, police in both places said they believed the men had fallen from the wheel wells of airliners, where they had stowed away hoping for illegal entry into the United States.
Least Competent People
Fifteen New York City police officers were indicted in July and as many as 700 other city employees are under investigation for not paying federal taxes. The cops had bought false legal documents, for $900 to $2,000 each, from scam artists who had convinced them that, despite the fact that they were police officers, they could legally claim not to be subject to government jurisdiction. In each case, the city payroll office unquestioningly accepted the form and did not withhold federal tax, in some cases for up to fouryears.
TV TONIGHT
THURSDAY PRIMETIME AUGUST 22, 1996
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO ❶ "The Dead Pool" ❷ (1985, Drama) Carl Eastwood Flipper "Brothers Like This" Cops ❸ "Mala" ❹ (1987, Drama) Barbara Simmons
WDAF ❷ Martin (R) ❺ Living Single New York Undercover (R) News ❻ News ❻ H. Patrol Cheerleader Baywatch
KCTV ❷ Family Film Awards (in Stereo Live) 48 Hours (in Stereo) Late Show (in Stereo) Sainfeld
KSO ❷ News Plus News News Plus
KCPFT ❸ Ruckus T. Old House Mystery: Insp. Alley Being Served Keeping Up Business Pt. Ruckus Charlie Rose (R) (In Stereo)
KSNT ❹ Friends (R) Single Guy Selfield ³rd Rock-Sun ER (R) EP (R) News Tonight Show (in Stereo) Late Night
KNBC ❹ NFL Pressess Football: Kansas City Chiefs at Chicago Bears. (in Stereo Live) News Rosanne Gold girls MA*SHA™
KTWU ❹ Wildlife Symphony "The Inspector Amy Myersides" "Final Curtain" (in Stereo) Business Pt. Ruckus Charlie Rose (R) (In Stereo)
BWBW ❹ Family Film Awards (in Stereo Live) 48 Hours (in Stereo) News Late Show (in Stereo) Late Late
KTKA ❹ NFL Pressess Football: Kansas City Chiefs at Chicago Bears. (in Stereo Live) News Sainfield Coach Nightsite
CABLE STATIONS
AEE ❹ Biography "Jerry Lewis: The Last American Clown" TARGET: Mafa "Gangquansers" Law & Order "Mayhem" Biography: Jerry Lewis
CHBC ❹ Politic Equity RiversLive Charles Grood RiversLive Actions
CNN ❹ Prime News Inside Politics Larry King Live World Today Sports Moneyline Newswalk Showbiz
COM ❹ Gallagher: Totally New (R) Sandler Lounge Liz Dream On Polliticity Inc. Daily Show Kid in Hall Dream On
COURT ❹ Prime Time Justice Justice News Trial Story: AIDS Underground Prime Time Justice (R) Justice News
CSPAN ❹ Campaign '98 Convention Preview Campaign '98 Convention Preview
DISC ❹ Wild Discovery: Whites Myster, World Movie Magic Traveler "Che Guevara" Next Step (R) Beyond 2000 Wild Discovery: Whales
ESPN ❹ Cheerleading Figure Skating: World Championships - Pairs' & Dance Final Baseball Sportscenter Baseball Running
HSST ❹ Hitler (Part of 4) S (1988, Drama) Maura Shaitan Year by Year "1962" (R) Hitler (Part of 4)
LIFE ❹ Unsolved mysteries "Schenman" (1988, Drama) Polly Draper John Given Living Mysteries Mysteries Late Date
MTV ❹ Beach MTV (in Stereo) Beach House Nights Vol (in Stereo) Singled Out Beavis-Butt. Alternative Nation (in Stereo)
SCFI ❹ She-Wolf of London Early the 13th: The Twilight Monsters V "Breakout" (R)
TLC ❹ History Archaeology Ouest for the Art (R) Killer Virus (R) History Archaeology Quest for the Art (R)
TNT ❹ Joe Kidd™ (1972, Western) Ethnic Cinema "Two Muses for Sister Sisters" (1970, Zion) Eastwood "Adee Kids™" (1972)
USA ❹ Photoreality™ (1990, Contemporary) Christopher Read™ "House Party" (1989, Comedy) Christopher Read™ Big Date Love
WHI ❹ Right On "Metamorphosis™ (1972, Drama) Diane Rose Billy Dale Williams Right On "Metamorphosis™ (1972, Drama) Billy Dale Williams
WGN ❹ Major League Baseball: Toronto Blue Jay at Chicago White Soc. (in Stereo Live) News Simon & Simon W/moonor
WTBS ❼ (6:35) Major League Baseball: Corinthian Rock at Atlanta Braves. (Live) Clash of the Champions (Time Approximate) ❽ "Stone Killer"
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO ❹ Danger Zone™ (1996, Drama) Blake Lane ™ Comedy Hour: Mark Curvy "Trails From the Blood" ❽ (1985, Horror) ™ Memphis PD: War
MAX ❹ "The Gateway" ❽ (1994, Drama) Alex Silkhead News ™ HPatrol Cheerleader Baywatch
SHOW ❹ Jean and Jack Jean™ (1990, Tom) Selden-Tyron Bedtime ™ Sherman Latino Frontal Full Theatre™ (1994) ™
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Thursday, August 22, 1996
3A
ON CAMPUS
Baptist Student Union will hold a dinner at 5:30 p.m. and a meeting at 6:30 p.m. tonight at the Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th St. For more information, call Rick Clock at 841-3148 or contact http://falcon.cc.ukans.edu/~rcbsu/
■ Immanuel Lutheran Church and the University Student Center will sponsor a free barbecue from 5 to 6:30 p.m. and a concert at 7 p.m. at 15th and Iowa Streets. For more information, call 843-0620.
KU Champions Club will hold meetings and gaming activities from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Thursdays in the Kansas Union parlors. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585
KU KI Alkdoq Club will meet from 6:30 to 10 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays and from 10 a.m. on noon on Saturdays at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jill Woodworth at 864-1798.
■ The KU Meditation Club will hold a meeting at 6 p.m. Monday in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call Parun at 864-5573 or 864-5374.
The Kansas City Baptist Temple will hold a Bible study at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call John Hepford at 841-1683.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting about French-language study abroad at 2:30 p.m. on Sept. 5 at 4047 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call the office at 864-3742.
ON THE RECORD
A KU professor's video camera, television and other miscellaneous items were stolen Sunday from the 2900 block of Rimrock Drive, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $1,950.
A KU student's desk chair was stolen from the 800 block of Michigan Street, Lawrence police said. The chair was valued at $15.
A KU student's mountain bike was stolen from the 1400 block of Kentucky Street, Lawrence police said. The bike was valued at $300.
Lawrence police reported a minor in possession of alcohol at 1344 Tennessee Street early Wednesday morning.
A KU employee's windshield was damaged between 11 p.m. last Thursday and 2 a.m. last Friday at Bremer Drive and Crestline Street, Lawrence police said. The windshield was valued at $300.
A KU student's day planner, driver's license and KUID were stolen from Lot 110 between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. on Monday, KU police said. The items were valued at $58.
A Topeka Capitol-Journal newsstand was stolen Monday or Tuesday from the north side of Robinson Gymnasium, KU police said. The stand was valued at $400.
Hemenway draws convocation crowd
By Lindsey Henry Kansan staff writer
Chancellor urges freshmen to live their college dreams
Charcellor Robert Hemenway wants students at the University of Kansas to be certain of one thing: The 131st annual convocation ceremony was not just a tool to keep students onboards on the night before classes.
M. ROBERTS
Hemenay assured a near capacity crowd in the 2,020-seat Lied Center last night that convocation was not designed to keep people out of the bars but an opportunity
HONORS: New program director urges student involvement. Page 8A
to look to the future of the University and to reflect on its traditions.
Hemenway said he believed convocation was a tradition that should not be discarded. "$Convocation places you as
new students in the context of history, "Hemenway said to a crowd of mostly freshmen and faculty. "You have a role to play on a larger stage, not just in the University, but in the world."
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Likening the opening of a new academic year to the Kansas wheat season, Hemenway stressed the importance of exploring new opportunities.
"Our form of academic spring occurs in the fall. As the earth comes alive in the spring, our campus comes alive in the fall with earnest young people," Hemenway said. "As the wheat seeks illumination from the sun, students seek illumination from the University."
He encouraged freshmen to live out their dreams.
"This is a free marketplace for ideas, and you need to be a part of this marketplace to compete with the best in the world," Hemenway said. "You can drink it away, you can drug it away, you can TV it away, but I do not think you will
do that. You are Jayhawks."
Bob Kraft, Concordia senior and resident assistant, said he accompanied students from Hashinger Hall to the ceremony to experience what the University has to offer.
"I think Chancellor Hemenay has a good vision of where the University needs to go," he said. "It's good for
academic year. Hemenway spoke to a full house Wednesday night at the 2,020-seat Lied Center.
new students to hear what the top administrator has to say."
Dan Gehlbach, Des Moines, Iowa, freshman, saan attended because he wanted to learn about the University.
"I thought the chancellor's speech was informative and had a good message," he said.
University launches program to recycle paper
By Dave Breitenstein Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas and Dickerson Recycling reached an agreement Aug. 12 to begin a new office paper and green-bar computer paper recycling program.
cialist, said housekeeping and facilities had pushed for a campus-wide paper-recycling program. The University had a monthly contract last year, but Silva said the yearly contract was a sign of commitment to recycling.
Under the contract, Dickerson will remove paper from more than 140 locations in 35 buildings. The program began Monday and is a year-long contract. The University will receive about $5 for each ton that is recycled, and the remainder goes to Dickerson, which operates from Leavenworth.
Silva said one snag in the contract had been the pickup location. KU employees wanted convenient drop boxes, but more centralized recycling boxes were agreed upon.
Victoria Silva, KU environmental spe-
"Some locations are in private offices, so we think it would be more efficient to start centralizing pickup locations. It shouldn't take a lot for people to take paper out of their offices." Silva said.
Center, language labs in Wescoe Hall, major departments and large classrooms. The number of pickup spots depended on how flexible Dickerson was, Silva said. If the company agrees to spend an extra day picking up, the University can have more locations, she said.
Pickup locations include the Computer
Durand Dickerson, owner of Dickerson Recycling, said the number of days the company would spend picking up was related to the number of employees.
"If I send two men, it will take four days. If I send three men, it will only take three days," he said.
Dickerson will receive money from where the paper is recycled, but transportation and manpower costs come
from that money.
Dianna Beebe, assistant director of facilities operations, said an average of five to six tons of office paper were recycled each month.
Housekeeping originally established a program to pick up paper from every office on campus, but that took too long so drop boxes were placed in central locations, she said.
Nancy Krische, office assistant in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said her office recycled paper.
"We all put our paper in the recycling box," she said. "It is expected that we recycle. It's kind of common office practice here."
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4A
Thursday, August 22, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Kansan editorial board seeks diversity in issues
The goal of the editorial board this semester is to provide a campus forum that brings the day's events into a sharper focus.
If an issue demands a response and we do our jobs well, we hope to inspire the University of Kansas community to take action. The best way to accomplish this is by distilling the issues of the day into short, nutritious commentaries, while keeping out the impurities of inaccuracy and insensitivity.
In a student-run, laboratory newspaper, sometimes our experiments blow up in our faces, no matter how hard we try. We pledge to aim continually for accuracy and courageous experimentation.
In choosing the editorial board, the editors strived to hire students with diverse ideas and backgrounds. Board members are majoring in subjects such as environmental studies, communications and business.
THE ISSUE:
Editorial board
Contributors to the opinion page will strive for accuracy and fairness in discussing campus issues.
In deciding which issues are brought before the editorial board at our semiweekly meetings, board members gather issues from as many sources as possible. Our main criteria will continue to be issues that affect the University. The board weighs all sides of an issue and votes to determine its position.
Our goal is to open the editorial page to as many readers as possible. We encourage letters to the editor and ideas for future editorslals.
The only way this page truly can become a campus forum for issues and ideas is by getting feedback from students and others in the University community.
JOHN COLLAR AND NICOLE KENNEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
University should follow the lead on peer advising
W with the fall semester begin- ning, advising
centers and other student resources are looking for better ways to help students improve their study skills and choose their classes.
Unfortunately, resources are limited all over campus, and many students find themselves on appointment lists or waiting for help in lines.
However, one resource is not being sufficiently explored at the University of Kansas a peer system in which students offer advice, experience and time to other students.
The peer system can be adapted for use by many student resources. The peer educators at the Student Assistance Center are there to help students with study skills habits and methods while the peer advisers at the School of Business offer advice on selecting classes.
A similar system operates only in the summer in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
This time of year, the advising centers of nearly every school are flooded with questions. This certainly is why they exist. However,the process of finding an adviser that can tell students what they want to know can get pretty tough.
THE ISSUE:
Peer advising
Every school in the University should institute a peer advising system for students.
It gets even tougher when students aren't sure whether they are asking the right questions. The largest advantage in a peer system is that the peer helpers already have gone through many of the same problems themselves.
The peer system gives inexperienced students access to that experience and can help students become more successful.
Establishing a peer system is not something that is done easily. It depends on individual schools to decide whether such a system is feasible. In the peer system at the business school, the Alpha Kappa Psi professional fraternity and the Accounting Club members volunteer time between their classes.
Similar systems across campus should include any student or organization willing to donate the time to help others.
All it takes is a commitment by students and the administration to provide this system as an option.
H. MARQ CONNER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
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ALGERRA
HISTORY
Shawn Trimble / KANSAN
Embracing new challenges can conquer the unknown
Fear of the unknown intimidates all of us. In the last week, new students have trickled onto campus, meeting new roommates and worrying about the difficulty of their classes and whether they'll even be able to find the right buildings. Many of us are starting new jobs, hoping that we'll meet and, if we're lucky, exceed the standards set for us.
Suddenly, we didn't have time for fear about measuring up. The biggest worry became producing the paper any way we could.
Such is the case at The University Dalu Kansan.
Most of our staff returned this week to produce the back-to-school edition. We arrived ready to take on new jobs and bustling with ideas for a new and improved Kansan in which readers can find more information they need and more about what's happening on campus and elsewhere.
We were hustling around the newsroom, fearing the unknown and concentrating on our performances. Then our computer system crashed and stayed down for several hours, paralyzing us because we do everything by computer.
Everyone pulled together, worked as hard and as fast as they could, and eked out a paper that not only was on time but also was an excellent start for a staff of people still finding their way around and adjusting to the unknown.
But we overcome these challenges every day to bring you the best paper we can.
Many students and faculty are unaware of the amount of time and effort that goes into producing the Kansan. About 160 students write stories, edit, design, take photographs, create and sell advertisements and manage the staff.
We can ask faculty for guidance, and they're happy to give it, but the decisions we make and the newspaper we create each day is our own.
ALEXANDRA
AMANDA
TRAUGHBER
As much as we have to be proud of, we're always looking for ways to improve your newspaper. With that goal in mind, we have created new positions on staff to concentrate on specific areas:
our new public relations director, will keep an ear on the campus to listen to what readers think of the Kansan and what they would like to see changed. She will get our staff more involved in events that affect students and the community.
Darci McLain,
David Teska, our new online editor, will supervise the Sept. 1 launch of UDKi, The University Daily Kansan Interactive, which will provide news and features on the World Wide Web.
We continue to search for ideas, and we appreciate comments from readers. If you love us, if you hate us, if you have ideas for us, let us know. You can send e-mail to me at editor@kansan.com, or mail or drop off letters to the editor at:
Matt Hood, associate managing editor for design, has reworked visual elements of the Kansan to make the paper more visually appealing and a quicker reference for our readers.
Welcome, new students and faculty. Welcome back, everyone else. I leave you with a few words of encouragement to help you meet your challenges in the coming
The University Daily Kansan
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
(913) 864-4810
The Kansan staff
Experience on the Kansan has helped us gain reporting, editing and designing internships at The Philadelphia Inquirer, Newsday, The Washington Post, The Kansas City Star and several other respected, professional publications.
Some of us have had advertising internships at agencies such as Leo Burnett, DDB Needham and at newspapers such as The Lawrence Journal-World and publications in the Gannett chain.
The Kansan is the only college newspaper to win the Pacemaker Award, presented by the Associated Collegiate Press, for four consecutive years.
semester.
This excerpt comes from Nelson Mandela's 1994 inauguration speech. I thank Linda Lyle, a physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center, for passing these words on to me last semester. They have helped quell my fear of the unknown.
"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
"It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, 'Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous?'
"Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child god. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you ...
"As we are liberated from fear, our presence automatically liberates others."
Amanda Traugher is an Overland Park
Senior in Journalism.
HOW TO SUBMIT LETTERS
their positions.
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced, typed and fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
Letters: Should be double-
spaced, typed and fewer than
200 words. Letters must
include the author's signature,
name, address and telephone
number plus class and home-
town if a University student.
Faculty or staff must identify
All letters and guest columns
should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call John Collar or Nicole Kennedy, editorial page editors, at 864-4810.
Daily Kansan enters world of Internet in September
As the first on-line editor of the University Daily Kansan's Web page, the UDKi, the "1" meaning "interactive", I'd like to welcome you as the Kansan takes its bold and daring first step into the brave new world of the Internet and the World Wide Web. On Sept. 1, the UDKi goes on-line at http://www.kansan.com. Here's a brief glimpse of what you'll find that day.
ON-LINE
EDITOR
■ Newstand
— The Kansan on-line each day,
complete with photos, stories,
columns, editorials and letters
to the editor.
Election '96
Election 96
— The place to go for information on the candidates seeking your vote this November. At UDKi, we feel that with so
DAVID L.
TESKA
many issues and candidates in the running this year, including two open Senate seats from Kansas, all voters need to have a place to go for information on the candidates and the issues.
Is this healthy? What other health issues are important to students? Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, will contribute a weekly column on issues related to student health.
That page also will include a link to Project Vote Smart's site, the Vote Smart Web. There will be links to the major presidential candidates in this year's three-way race for the White House.
Dinner and a movie — How good really was Independence Day? Was Sense and Sensibility worthwhile? On this page, readers will get reviews of movies running in Lawrence. Because dinner and movies are a natural combination, we'll also have a listing of restaurants in town.
Health & Fitness — It's conventional wisdom that many college students live on a diet of coffee, cigarettes and two to three hours' sleep, especially during finals.
Other pages that will be added as we build UDKi include: The Gallery, a virtual tour of art exhibits on campus; Theatre, reviews of plays and performances at the Lied Center, Murphy Hall and the Inge Theatre; Playhouse, what's happening in Lawrence's night life with reviews and articles on the various bands appearing throughout Lawrence.
Going back to what I said earlier, the "i" represents the UDKI's interactivity. We're not simply going to have pages and pages of text designed to bore you on screen.
Each of these pages will have relevant links that will take you farther into the Web and allow you to tap into its seemingly unlimited accessibility to a key ingredient for survival today — information.
It's our goal that UDKi will become the site of choice for the University community to go for access to the Internet and the Web.
I'll be frank with you: Working on UDKi has been exciting and challenging for us all. As we expand the page, I place a high value in all feedback (both positive and negative) from you, the user of UDKi.
After all, it's your page. If you have any comments, please feel free to drop me a line at the Kansan or e-mail.
Again, welcome aboard and enjoy the trip!
David L. Teska is a Lawrence graduate student in journalism. You can reach him at WebEdit@kansan.com.
HUBIE
-Burp
I, HUBIE, HAVE DECIDED TO FORGO THE RICHES OFFERED TO ME BY THE NEWSPAPER BIGBOY ASSOCIATION...
By Greg Hardin
...SO I CAN
COME BACK AND
BE YOUR POINT GUARD
COMIC STRIP FOR
ONE LAST YEAR!!
HECK, I MIGHT EVEN MAKE YOU LAUGH THIS TIME!?
OOO. AND HE SEEMS SO SINCERE!
JACQUE VAUGHN HE AIN'T.
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22, 1996
5A
The making of the president'96
Bigot vs. hypocrite is choice
I was dancing with the devil the other night in my living room, trying to decide if condemning my soul to eternal torment would be an acceptable exchange for getting the Republican Pony Show out of the news.
It was a close call, and when he mentioned axing the upcoming Democratic convention as well, I almost took the deal. But then he posed this interesting conundrum: if I had to pick between two candidates — one a hypocrite, the other a bigot — whom would I choose?
Golly gge, I thought, what an appropriate question considering the choices for president this year.
"Maybe if I could talk with them, Satan," I suggested. "Then I could see what they had to say, and I could answer your question."
And with a flick of his forked tail, there they were in my living room.
Clinton looked a little confused at first, so I got him a Snickers from the refrigerator and followed that with a question about homosexuality and the government. He told me that he wholeheartedly supports equal rights and protections for gays and lesbians, and he has even done some things that support his claim.
He has included homosexuals in civil rights legislation, ordered the government and military not to discriminate based on sexual orientation and come out in opposition to the Victorian/Klan mentality of such states as Colorado, where citizens are trying to write intolerance into their state constitution.
STAFF COLUMNIST
TODD HIATT
"Nicely done, Mr President," I said. "Now tell me, why can't those in the military mention their spouses or talk about their families?
"Oh, wait. My mistake. That is only homosexual members of the military who can't speak of their families. Heterosexuals can talk about whatever they want. They can put up pictures of their wedding, their 2.3 kids, and last year's vacation to Bermuda. They can even complain aloud that their spouse kept them up all night obsessing over Bob Dole's infatuation with Reaganomics. It is only homosexuals who are discriminated against I see.
"And then — tell me if this is right, Mr. President — you say that the government can't discriminate against homosexuals, but you also support a ban on homosexual marriage. Well, I see no contradiction there. As usual, your position
on this matter is crystal clear. Thank you for your time. Give me back the candy bar."
My conversation with Dole mercifully went much quicker. After he turned green and mildly apoplectic at the thought of consummated gay love, he belted out, "No quotas! Affirmative action is a sign of the Antichrist!"
While wondering what this had to do with the topic at hand — which I usually do while Dole is speaking — I turned to Satan to see if this were true. He gave nothing away, however. Not even a twinkling in his cute little Stygian eyes.
So I reached a decision and held on to my soul for now. The course of a nation cannot be decided in my living room over a Snickers bar.
Unfortunately, it is necessary to endure the weeklong party love-fests and the corresponding repetitive, biased news articles to gain a clearer picture of the candidates. Picking between hypocrites and bigots is a messy, time-consuming process. At least I can be thankful that the Perot Party didn't make it to prime time. Eternal torment would be cake compared to that.
Todd Hiatt is a Lyndon senior in social welfare.
I watched some of the Republican National Convention last week in a somewhat misguided attempt to stay politically informed. Being blessedly independent in my political views, I was amazed by the spectacle. I found it interesting that the organizers went to such great lengths to stage a huge party for citizen Bob Dole to accomplish one goal — to woo women. At least, women voters.
Not all women won by speech
The entire week, wherever I turned, be it to Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings or The Kansas City Star, discussion of the so-called gender gap ran rampant. According to political analysts, women everywhere, including Republican women, are growing disillusioned with the Republican party.
It seems that they were successful, at least in numbers. In the latest polls, Dole and President Clinton are virtually even.
Therefore, it became Dole's campaign goal to use the convention to speak out to women everywhere. Come see the softer side of Dole, they screamed.
That means an almost 20-point jump in the polls for Dole, so it would seem that the attempt to show Dole as a man for all people, including women, was successful. However, it was not. And the obvious question here is, why?
STAFF COLUMNIST
STACY
NAGY
The answer is that Dole did not reach me; therefore, he did not reach all women voters. He failed to woo fairly moderate female voters.
In fact, after watching bits and pieces of the convention,
I have a lower opinion of Dole than I had
before it. That alone is a feat greater than his jump in the polls. I really did not think that my opinion of him could get much worse.
Dole's problem is that throughout the convention, many people said many good things in an attempt to bring women and minorities into the Republican Party. And while I did not see all of the convention, what I did see made me sick to my stomach.
Everything seemed, at best, staged, and at worst, insincere. The party tried to reach out to every group in an attempt to prove that anyone can be and should be a Republican. What they ended up doing was excluding anyone who just wanted honesty.
Furthermore, Dole's jump in the polls will not last. First of all, the convention is now finished, and
he cannot ride on that apparent success for the remainder of the campaign. The American people have a fairly short attention span, and many people will forget. Some people already have.
Second, we still have the spectacle of the Democratic National Convention to change our minds. Clinton is a more gifted speaker than Dole and has the edge for two reasons: He already holds the office, and he is a mere 50 years old. Everyone who jumped on the Dole bandwagon at the Convention will jump off when the Democrats get their turn.
While they too will be horribly fake and somewhat insincere, they will have the benefit of the last laugh.
Women voters cannot be wooed merely by the insincere words of a party that has been the good-ol'boys' club for generations. It takes actions that recognize women as both half of this planet and as other human beings to do what Dole hopes his words will accomplish.
Until the Republican Party recognizes this, the so-called gender gap will continue to haunt Dole in the polls and will be the deciding factor in the November election.
Stacy Nagy is a Topena junior in Russian and women's studies.
Professor rejects use of Jon's Notes in classes
As a professor in one of the larger courses on campus, Biology 104. I have been approached repeatedly about permitting a professional notetaking service, Jon's Notes, to operate in my class.
Liking service. Moreover, several students in the class when I last taught it also asked my reasons and suggested that I was irresponsible, selfish or overly hard on my students for refusing to participate. Because I will be teaching two large classes this semester, I feel that it is the time to state my opinions more publicly, in the hope that the students and professors of KU can arrive at a better understanding of the implications of a commercial, for-profit note-taking service.
Jon's Notes has sent me several packets of information regarding its operations.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
operations.
I quote, "Jon's Notes is to help good students become great students
by providing them with detailed, accurate notes of your lecture material.
"We agree that students should take their own notes; that note-taking is an important part of the learning process. However, students do not have equal note-taking abilities."
All this rhetoric sounds quite positive and well-intentioned, and a good number of my colleagues have agreed to participate in the program.
Enthusiasm for a commercial note-taking enterprise at KU, however, is not universal. Several professors insist that note-taking, and reliance on the quality of those notes, is a critical phase of the learning process. Others worry that attendance will decline when students know that quality notes will be available regardless.
KU's administration has pointed out the basis in University regulations for refusal of such a commercial venture, founded on the property rights of the lecturer. My complaint, however, is much more basic.
Because Jon's Notes is a commercial venture, its actions are designed around turning a profit; thus, they charge for access to the lecture notes. My lectures are made available to students regardless of income or economic ability, so also should be all matters related to the class.
Jon's Notes has offered me "scholarships," free notes that I could use to allow access to students with no possibility of purchasing notes, but that is only a Band-Aid approach. The point is that some students can easily afford to purchase notes, whereas others may have to choose between purchasing notes and, say, buying a new shirt, eating a dinner out or obtaining some necessity.
The case is therefore one of differential access to class materials based on economic situation; this arrangement is unacceptable to me.
A. Townsend Peterson
Assistant professor, systematics and ecology
6A
Thursday, August 22, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Resource center to mark first year next month
By Nicholas C. Charalambous
Kansan staff writer
The Multicultural Resource Center turns one year old this September.
The center's facilities are used by staff, faculty and student organizations who are interested in multicultural issues and want to increase awareness of diversity on campus.
A women's studies class and a minority student leadership seminar will meet at the center this semester. Groups such as the Asian-American Student Union and Native-American Student Association will hold committee meetings there. On any given day, about 25 students will use the center's computers, books and periodicals, said Evan Heimlich, graduate assistant at the Office of Minority Affairs and Marlboro, N.J., doctoral candidate.
But because of the center's out-of-the-way location, many students still are unaware of the center, said Gloria Flores, assistant director of the office of minority affairs.
"We try to provide a comfortable atmosphere for people to come in," she said. "Once they are introduced to the center, we think they'll come back."
The center, a gray-colored building between Summerfield Hall and the Military Science Building, assists the department of student life and the
Semester events
The Multicultural Resource Center is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. This semester the center will present a brown-bag lunch series, Hot topics, at noon on Wednesdays, featuring issues in multicultural affairs.
The series begins Sept. 11, with Music of the Jewish New Year, noon to 1 p.m. at the center. The discussion and demonstration of Jewish music will be led by Western Civilization instructor Richard Buck, who often leads services at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. For more information, call 864-4350, or send e-mail to:
http://ukanaix.cc.ukans.edu/cws/units/
oafacts.
department of human resources with diversity training, Flores said.
"I'll talk to the person or group who brings the issue to the table, diagnose the problem and give a general talk about diversity and the importance of communicating." Flores said.
Issues of racial conflict often are issues of human conflict, she said.
harassment, race, sex and disability.
Marc Adin, director of human resources, which provides staff training for all institutions on campus, said sessions were well-attended and that training dealt with issues such as
"Flores also has visited residence halls and Greek houses to talk about diversity issues.
"More groups could be soliciting us." Flores said. "People need to be challenged when it comes to being aware. We still have some students who are not comfortable with being at KU."
The center houses an auditorium for 40 people, a conference room, a reading room, two study rooms, four Power Macintosh computers and an image scanner.
The center plans the following improvements this semester:
A recorded information line that will give time, day and place details of multicultural events sponsored by University and student organizations.
A diversity peer education program, where students will speak to other students about diversity. The program was developed by Grey Montgomery, student body president, and Amy Turnbull, co-director of the Center for Community Outreach.
But Flores said the center was underfunded and understaffed. The center relies heavily on volunteers, and the staff at the Office of Minority Affairs does double duty at the center. Ideally, there should be a full-time staff member assigned to the center, with student assistant support and a secretary, she
Students at the Multicultural Resource Center scramble for their chairs during a game of said.
KANSAN PHOTO
James Kitchen, dean of student life, said there were no plans to increase funding to the center. He added that all department budgets were frozen this year. The Multicultural Resource Center receives an annual allocation of $20,000 from Student Senate.
Flores said she that would like more
"I have never" and musical chairs during an orientation yesterday.
students to use the center's resources, and that she urges faculty to consider scheduling classes at the center. She welcomes contributions such as research, books and videos on diversity themes.
"We know there is a vast wealth of information related to multicultural issues on campus," she said.
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7A
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8A
Thursday, August 22, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New honors director outlines goals
At program's convocation, Schowen urges involvement
By Eric Weslander
Kansan staff writer
Last night, members of the University of Kansas honors program got a first look at their new leader. At the annual honors convocation at Nunemaker Hall, Barbara Schowen, newly appointed director of the honors program, urged students to get involved.
Schowen described the honors program as an opportunity for students to access the best education the University could provide. The honors program offers smaller classes and faculty mentors to academically gifted students.
She advised students to go beyond the limits of assignments, to take difficult classes and to not be intimidated by large or challenging classes.
Schowen also talked about the future of the honors program. She announced several goals for the honors program under her direction:
To introduce more honors courses for
honors and seniors
To find more public service, research and internship opportunities for honors students.
To continue coordination with other offices and programs, such as the study abroad program.
To encourage and facilitate faculty involvement with the honors program.
Barbara Schowen, professor of chemistry and the new director of the honors program, spoke Wednesday at Nunemaker Center about the program goals she has set for the semester. Schowen replaces acting honors program director James Carothers.
The honors convocation, is a ceremony to mark the beginning of the academic year. It is also a chance for honor students to meet faculty informally.
Catie Heaven, Shawne sophomore, said she met some interesting people at last year's convocation, many of whom she still is in contact with today.
"It gave me a chance to get to know people I would be seeing a lot through the honors program goals she has set for the semester. Schowen replaces acting honors program director James Carothers.
gram," she said. "It's important to make a lot of connections."
She returned to this year's convocation to be recognized, along with more than 100 other students, for a scholarship she was awarded through the honors program.
Campus shines brighter as another year begins
By Spencer Duncan Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas is only a few poles away from being a little brighter.
Thanks to a $2 campus fee and money from the parking and housing departments, facilities operations began installing additional lighting in six areas around campus during the summer. However, Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said that there still was one thing missing in two of those areas.
"We have the bases in and the wiring is all hooked up, but we are still waiting for the poles and lights." Porter said.
Facilities operations did not order the poles until the end of July, Porter said. Because shipping takes six to eight weeks or more, the department is still waiting.
The areas without poles are near the chancellor's house along 16th Street and near Green Hall. Porter said the lights around Green Hall also needed a transformer.
While those areas are dark, four areas are experiencing new brightness. Facilities operations installed new lights near the sidewalk along Irving Hill Road and leading toward Nunemakr Center, at Learned and Burt halls, on
the south side of Lindley Hall and in the nearby parking lot. They also pulled out the old hook lights around Allen Field House and replaced them with modern poles.
The new lights are important in the fight to stop campus crime, said Grey Montgomery, student body president.
"The Senate and lighting board have worked hard over the last three years to get more lighting on campus," Montgomery said. "I just got here, but I know that it is important to continue. The more lights that we have, the less risk there is to people who are walking out on campus at night. It's that simple."
The people who are most pleased with the additional lights are those who walk on campus late at night.
Lindsey Tuffley, Olathe junior, often is on campus after dark. When she leaves the campus, she walks past 15th Street, where new lights have been installed. Tuffley said she was glad to see that the University was doing something to keep her and others safe.
"Parts of this campus can get very dark and, for women especially, it can be dangerous." Tuffley said. "Sometimes I have to be here late, and I will feel a little safer when I go home because there are more lights.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22,1996
9A
Police searching for arsonist Six apartments burned in Meadowbrook fire
By Ashlee Roll
Kansan staff writer
Like most dumpsters around town, the ones at Meadowbrook Apartments, 15th Street and Crestline Drive, are full. But the dumpsters at 104 Dover Square, apartment building ZZ, are full of belongings damaged by a fire.
Quilts, couches and appliances, scorched and smelly, overflow in the brown dumpsters outside the gutted apartments.
The fire that created the mess was reported at 12:21 a.m. on Aug. 14, according to the incident report from the Lawrence Fire Department
Jim McSwain, fire chief, said the three-alarm fire started on the first floor of the building.
"A three-alarm fire is about as bad as it gets here," he said. We called one full unit back in to help with the fire, so there were 45 firefighters at the scene."
The fire had two points of origin on the first floor. "This fire was an act of aggravated arson," McSwain said.
Upon arrival at the apartment complex, firefighters discovered smoke in the parking lot north of the building, and coming from the west entry door.
Within an hour and a half, the fire department had the blaze under control, but not before six apartments were consumed by the fire and 10 to 12 more were damaged by smoke, heat and water.
"There were 18 apartments that had occupants at the time of the fire," said Gary Sampson, interim chapter manager of the American Red Cross.
The Red Cross has helped place eight apartment residents who were displaced by the fire.
Aggravated arson is being blamed for multiple fires in the Meadowbrook apartments at 104 Dover Square. The fires were reported at 12:21 a.m. on August 14th.
Between 20 and 25 of the estimated 36 residents involved in the fire were students, Sampson said.
"But at this time we have only heard from about eight," he said. "They have been hard to find because I assume that they have returned home since the fire."
Although the fire and police departments are working together on the fire investigation, they have no suspices.
Meadowbrook management had no comment about the fire.
The fire department is asking that anyone with information call 843-TIPS.
KU skips own license plate for now
By Stephanie Fite Kansan staff writer
The blaze of purple and white on some Kansas license plates is going to come with a price — a price the University of Kansas is not willing to pay.
The plates are part of a program called Collegiate License Plates, which aims to raise funds for scholarships for students at Kansas State University and other universities in the program.
Fred B. Williams, president of the University of Kansas Alumni Association, said that the program has been successful in some states and unsuccessful in others. Therefore, the University of Kansas has chosen to forgo the program because it is perceived as a gamble.
"We want to do programs that benefit our resources at the University, but this program is not efficient because it is largely bureaucratic and is too costly for it to be effective," Williams said. "The law needs to be revised before the collegiate plate program can be more appealing."
Kansas State University Alumni
Association implemented the collegiate license plate program. The association expects the program to raise $112,500 over the next five years. That is the equivalent of awarding 225 scholarships of $500.
Car owners who want Kansas State's purple and white license plate will have to pay an extra $50 in addition to the regular tags- and registration fees.
Kansas State has been marketing the plates since last April and has sold about 500.
See PLATES. Page 12A.
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Hawk Week and beyond
For More Information about SUA, stop by our office on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union, or call 864-3477. You can reach our showline at 864-SHOW. Visit our homepage at http://www.ukans.edu/~sua
August '96
Art Print Sale - Aug 19-30.
In the Kansas Union Gallery
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
18 Community Drum Circle Ice Cream Social & Traditions. Night 19 Beach-n-Boulevard 20 Convocation 21 Class! Union Fest 23 Union Fest 24 Clinton Lake Cleanup Chiefs tix on sale
25 Movie on the Hill 26 27 28 Meet-a-Professor Night 29 KU v. Ball St. 30 31
Canoe Trip
Friday Saturday
23 Union Fest
24 Clinton Lake Cleanup
Chiefs tix on sale
30 31
Canoe Trip
September '96
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Canoe Trip No Class Labor Day Movie Poster Sale George Winston
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 KU @ TCU
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Movie KU @ Utah Steven Hager Editor" HighTimes"
Poster Sale
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
Jeong Ah Shin Gallery Exhibit
29 30
Exhibit (thru 10/4)
Community Drum Circle - 6:30 pm on the lawn of Allen Fieldhouse. Become a part of the KU community.
FREE! FREE! FREE! Hawk Week Movie - 9:30 pm Aug.19 - Aug.22 ( on Aug.22, there will be another showing at 7 pm. Rumble in the Bronx.
KU
Ice Cream Social - 5:30 pm at the KS "Boots" Adams Alumni Center & Traditions
Night - 7 pm in the Stadium. Get in touch with the Jayhawk tradition.
Beach-n-Boulevard - 7 pm on Wescoe Beach. Good music, hilarious comedy & great times!
Convocation - 7:30 pm at the Lied Center. Experience KU's oldest tradition!
Union Fest - 10 am - 2 pm at the Kansas Union. Come-n-get-it. FREE STUFF!
Clinton Lake Clean Up - at Clinton Lake (where else?!). Do your good deed for the day.
Movie on the Hill - 9 pm on Campanile Hill. Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Meet-a-Prof. Night - Just what it says. Coordinated by Student Housing.
KU v. Ball St. - 7 pm at the Stadium. Get out there and cheer on the Hawks!
SUA Canoe Trip - Labor Day Weekend. Get info at SUA.
Movie Poster Sale - 8 am - 5 pm in the Kansas Union Gallery. Cover your walls!
Great for the room in the residence/scholarship hall, house or apartment.
George Winston - 8 pm at the Lied Center of Kansas. Solo piano concert.
KU @ TCU - 1 pm. Beak 'em Hawks!
Steven Hager - 7:30 pm in the Kansas Union Ballroom. A lecture on marijuana legalization.
Johnny Cash - 8 pm at the Lied Center. Tickets on sale NOW.
Jeong Ah Shin Gallery Exhibit - in the Kansas Union Gallery.
KU @ Utah - 1 pm.
FALL MOVIE SERIES
FALL MOVIE SERIES Movies play every night of the week. Call 864-SHOW for details.
Here's a little bit about Student Union Activities...
Forums - this committee coordinates guest lectures, like Steven Hager. First committee meeting will be Tuesday, Aug. 27 at 7 pm in the Regionalist Room, Union.
Rec & Travel - sets up great events like the Chicago talk show trip. First Committee meeting will be Tuesday, Aug. 27 at 6pm in Alcove D, Union.
Live Music - brings the bands, singers, soloist, Tunes at Noon & Day on the Hill. First meeting will be Wednesday, Aug. 28 at 5:30 pm in the Kansas Room, Union.
Special Events - this committee brings to you comedians, Homecoming events and so much more. First committee meeting will be Wednesday, Aug. 28 at 6:30 pm in the Walnut Room, Union.
Promotions - this committee coordinates strategies to promote SUA and the Union. First committee meeting will be Monday, Aug. 26 at 6 pm in the English Room, Union.
Fine Arts - this committee is responsible for events like the gallery exhibits. First committee meeting will be Wednesday, Aug. 28 at 5:30 pm in Alcove B, Union.
Feature Films - this committee selects the new films, blockbusters and popular wide screen movies to be shown at KU. Contact SLA for information on first committee meeting.
Spectrum Films - this committee chooses the avant-garde, classic, foreign and cult films to be shown at KU. First committee meeting will be Monday, Aug. 26 at 5 in woodruff Audit., Union.
I
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A1410A
Thursday, August 22, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Long-distance deals make cents
Several savings plans let callers communicate longer for less
By Liz Musser Kansan staff writer
Long-distance bills haunt every student on a monthly basis. Although long-distance companies do a more than an adequate job of alerting customers of their latest deals, knowing the options beforehand could make confronting eager sales operators easier.
When working with the basics, telephone companies have similar state-to-state rates. No matter what long-distance company customers use, if they are not on a special program, callers pay 28 to 30 cents a minute between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., 17 to 19 cents from 5 p.m. to 11 p.m., and 14 to 16 cents from 11 p.m. to 8 a.m. All discounts offered are based on this basic rate.
The list of long-distance savings plans is long and complicated. Pat Barrett, an account representative for AT&T, said the most important thing to keep in mind when choosing a savings plan was the calling pattern.
"The person really needs to figure out when and where they call the most." she said.
Barrett said that one popular plan with students was the True Reach plan. Under this plan, customers' bills are discounted 25 percent when they spend more than $25 a month. Customers get a 10 percent discount when they spend less than $25. Another popular AT&T plan is Simple Savings. This targets people who make calls primarily in the evening. Between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m., customers pay 10 cents a minute. Daytime calls cost 25 cents a
minute. Sprint offers this same rate under the Sprint Sense plan.
For in-state calls, 10-cent-a-minute plans actually cost 15 cents a minute because of Kansas state taxes and local telephone regulations.
Jeffrey, a new customer sales representative at MCI who asked to remain anonymous, said the 10-cent-a-minute plans were slightly misleading because most people don't wait until after 7 p.m. to make phone calls.
"The average American person makes their calls between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. Ten cents a minute may sound cute and all, but if they're not waiting until 7 p.m. to call, they are not saving," he said.
MCI instead offers MCI Minutes, a 15-cent-a-minute rate 24 hours a day. Rusty Owings, Blue Springs, Mo., senior, said he spent about $75 a
"I always know when my bill is going to come, and I always know how much it is going to be," he said.
month on long distance. He said he chose AT&T not only for the savings, but also for its reliability.
For students living in residence halls, the choice of long-distance plans is limited because residence hall phones require a calling card. Jack Royer, business manager of Networking and Telecommunications Services, said that about 75 percent of on-campus residents choose the AT&T College and University Solution long-distance service. All on-campus residents receive an ACUS card that allows them to be billed individually for their long-distance calls.
A per-call service fee, charged by most calling cards, is waived for students using the ACUS card. Students
also receive a 10 percent discount on the AT&T basic rate.
If they prefer, students can choose another brand of calling card. Sprint offers a collegiate calling card that has a nine-cent-a-minute rate between 9 p.m. and 9 a.m. and an 80-cent surcharge per call.
AT&T, Sprint and MCI all have a variety of promotional savings plans for international callers. These vary according to which country that the customer is calling.
Hiyung Jang, Seoul, South Korea graduate student, said she used AT&T for her international calls because they kept her up-to-date on the latest deals.
"It's not so much the money I save, but they have good customer service and always call me about new programs," she said.
Cashing in on competition
Quick cash often made by routinely switching long distance carriers
By Liz Musser
Kansan staff writer
When it comes to choosing a long-distance carrier, Mike Pannacciulli has his own approach. He lets the companies decide for him.
Like many students, Pannacciulli, a Roxbury, N.J., senior, receives calls from long-distance companies about every three months asking him to switch carriers. Sometimes the companies offer him a cash rebate for switching. He usually takes the bait, he said, and he usually comes out ahead.
money," he said. "I don't make a lot of calls, so they pretty much pay my bills with the checks they send me."
"I let them fight, and I just take the
Pannacciuli is just one customer who has realized how to make the competition between long-distance carriers work in his favor. With the sales technique of offering cash awards for switching long-distance carriers, callers can switch companies on a regular basis and some pay virtually nothing for their phone bill.
Zach Alexander, Hutchinson senior, said he switched every time a telephone company called him.
"The more we started switching, the more rebates they started offering," he said. "We've probably gotten almost $250 in rebates."
Alexander said that AT&T paid him the largest sum of money. They gave him a check for $50 for switching from MCI. While rebates often are valid only toward phone bills, this check was for cash.
Jennifer Adams, Consumer Affairs and Media Relations specialist for MCI, said that because the long-distance marketplace was so competitive, this sort of activity was inevitable.
"It's the nature of the beast," she said. "The consumer is the benefactor in a competitive marketplace."
Jim Van Orden, an AT&T media relations representative, agreed that the competition was healthy and said that the company's revenues continued to increase.
But he said that people needed to be careful that they were getting long-term savings and not just quick cash.
"The consumer needs to be aware and careful of what they are really getting into," he said. "It can be easy to get caught into something you don't want."
Alexander did not agree.
"If I ever get into to something that I don't like, 'Tl just switch," he said.
First impressions are not everything Students have entire semester to put forth a positive image
By Megan Jordan Kansan staff writer
While students should strive to make a good first impression on their professors, it may not be as important as they think.
"Of course it is good practice to make a positive first impression," he said. "But don't be frustrated if you don't; you can make it up."
"Unless it is extremely negative, faculty will usually give students a chance to show what they know," said Douglas Houston, professor of business.
Marshall Jackson, administrative associate of the Student Assistance Center, agreed that it is not the end of the world if students fail to make a good impression during the first days of class.
"It wouldn't hurt, especially if you are interested in the class, to go up and introduce yourself after class," Jackson said.
Although first impressions may not be essential to success in the classroom, they cannot be ignored. The Student Assistance Center suggests that students sit at the front of the class, be on time and bring all required materials on the first day.
Chris Engle, Wichita freshman, plans to follow Jackson's advice.
"I think you should always introduce yourself to the professor, not so they know you but so you can get to know them and feel comfortable asking them questions." Engle said.
Houston also said professors appreciate students who show an interest in the class.
"It never hurts to be alert and even assertive early on," he said. "It energizes faculty members to see students thinking." Houston encourages students to ask questions and respond to professors' questions.
When asking questions, Jackson said, don't be shy. Sneak clearly and look the professor in the eve.
' While Engle wants to make a good impression on his professors, he does not worry about them judging him early in the semester. He said most of the faculty are open-minded and do not make hasty evaluations.
Nicole James, Kansas City, Mo., junior, makes an effort to sit in the front of the classroom but does nothing else to impress a professor. James also said she is not concerned with the impression she makes on her classmates.
"I think that's a bigger deal for freshman," she said.
"That's not what I'm here for now."
Regrettably, all sections are full this semester for Remedial Thermodynamics. Discounts off AT&T basic rates. Refers to AT&T home or AT&T Calling Card accounts. Subject to billing availability. Certain exclusions apply. Subject to credit approval. Valid for 1 yr. Must sign up in 1996 and use service at least 1 hr./mo. $2.50/hr. for additional hrs. or $1995 for unlimited usage. Customers pay separate telephone charges to reach the service. © 1996 AT&T
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22, 1996
11A
?
Kansas could lose clout at Capitol
Voters will elect two new senators and a representative
By Neal Shulenburger
Kansan Staff Writer
On Nov. 5, Kansas will lose three congressional delegates with 47 years of combined experience.
For the first time since 1978, Kansas residents will not be able to vote for Bob Dole or Nancy Kassebaum for the U.S. Senate.
Their experience has brought both senators into the national
Bob Dole
spotlight. Dole, the senate majority leader, left his position earlier this year to run for president. Kassebaum chose to retire from the Senate last November.
In addition, Kansas will lose Jan
Meyers, who has been in the House of Representatives since 1985.
PANCAKE
Obviously, the effect for Kansas is that we've lost a lot of clout in Washington." said Kenneth Collier, assistant professor of political science. "We've gone from having a very seasoned, well-respected congressional delegation to a bunch of newcomers who are not going to
Nancy Kassebaum
PETER L. BURGESS
Jan Mevers
carry any kind of weight in the short term."
Just what their absence will mean for the University of Kansas and the state is unclear.
Several KU projects have received federal money, including the Dole Center. Federal funds also sponsor
Political science professor Burdett Loomis said he thought the absence of Dole, Kassebaum and Meyers would have a limited effect on the University.
several smaller research grants.
"I think that their impact on the Kansas economy is overplayed," said Steven Maynard-Moody, associate professor of public administration. "There are obviously tangible things like the Dole Center and highway money, but the average citizen will probably not notice."
"Not having them will affect the University pretty modestly," Loomis said. "For Dole and Kassebaum, maybe some people in the sciences who rely on the federal grants they bring in might be affected. Meyers was good at funneling small business money into the University, so the business school might not get some money that they would have gotten before."
What the loss will mean to the state is unknown.
However, Maynard-Moody said that Kansas will be affected in other ways.
"There are two levels it will affect us on," he said. "One is a loss of
"Obviously,the effect for Kansas is that we've lost a lot of clout in Washington."
Kenneth Collier
Assistant professor of political science
senior leadership. I think that there will be a big lapse, and that is not just a loss to the state of Kansas but to the country. The senior leadership are the guys who are able to get things done, like the Kassebaum-Kennedy Health Care Bill. The second is there is a much higher chance Brownback or Roberts might lose than a Dole or especially a Kassebaum."
Whatever the effects, Kansas' delegation to congress will look different after Nov.5.
Graves speculates on a second term
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Seeking to quell speculation generated by his own comments in San Diego, Gov. Bill Graves said Tuesday chances are "eight to 10" on a scale of 10 that he will seek a second four-year term in 1998.
During a news conference in his office, the popular Republican governor placed at just "a one or two" the chances that he would retire after one four-year term.
"I was asked a fair question, which was if there were any circumstances under which I could perceive not running in '88, and I gave what I hope was an honest answer, when I said that, of course, I think in all our lives the uncertainty of two years down the road is hard to predict," Graves said.
"But let me also tell you that if someone were to say, 'Are there circumstances under which you see yourself running?' I would
say absolutely.
"In fact, on a scale of 1-to-10, if you want to assess the scenarios under which I might not, I would rate them probably one or two at the most. And if you want to rate the scenarios under which I see myself running again, you probably rate them as much as eight, nine or even 10."
Graves said he is continuing fund-raising activities to raise money for a re-election campaign in two years.
He also said he is "doing a lot of public policy analysis and political analysis, trying to set the stage for the possibility of seeking re-election."
"I don't want to put a damper on anyone's stories or speculation, but the truth is, while I still would admit there always are those scenarios like the proverbial speeding bus that might make it impossible to be involved in '98, certainly my intentions at this time are to seek re-election."
Task force takes steps to preserve mutilated library books
By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan staff writer
Nearly half of widely-circulated volumes in the KU libraries' stacks are mutilated
That's just one finding in a report released this summer by the Preservation Task Force.
Of volumes circulated six or more times in the last 10 years, about 48 percent of those surveyed were damaged in some way, including by pencil, ink or highlighter marks, dog-eared pages or missing or stained pages.
Pencil marks by far were the
major culprits. They were found in about 28 percent of the volumes surveyed, according to the report. The number of volumes with pages stained by food, drink or water was also high, at almost 15 percent.
can responsibly maintain them."
William Crowe, vice chancellor for information services and dean of libraries, commissioned the survey. He said this kind of problem made library workers anxious.
"Our objective here is not to castigate but to bring attention to the problem," he said. "But we try to oalance this with the fact that the collections are there to be used — not just today, but as long as we
The task force also identified problems in the type of paper some books are printed on.
About 65 percent of volumes from the combined stacks are on acidic paper. Chemicals in acidic paper react with air and the paper breaks down, becoming brittle, said Brian Baird, preservation librarian and chairman of the task force.
"You can crumple them up like corn flakes," Baird said.
Crowe said the acidic paper was an inherent vice.
"These books have the seeds of
their own destruction," he said.
Research libraries of similar size to the KU libraries have the same kind of problems on a similar scale, Crowe said.
The task force included several recommendations to correct the problems. One suggestion is to hire a conservator to address problems of maintaining the most-used volumes. Crowe said interviews for that position were being conducted.
The task force also recommended taking action to improve staff and user education to reduce mutilation of materials, and it recommended increasing preservation financing to $530,000. The estimated preservation financing for fiscal year 1996 was $318,000.
Finally, the task force suggested that surveys similar to this one be conducted every five to 10 years. Crowe said this survey was the first for KU libraries.
Members of the task force were Baird, Milissa Boyer, Judith Emde, Nancy Jaeger, Jana Krentz and Brad Schaffner. All members worked in the libraries during the survey and did not receive extra pay for participating in the task force.
The task force conducted the survey in two segments. The first was from materials returning from circulation and included 495 volumes. The second was from materials in the stacks and included 3,679 volumes. All materials were selected randomly. The survey included materials from Watson Library, Anschutz Science Library, Government Documents and Map Library, Spahr Engineering Library, Murphy Art and Architecture Library, Thomas Gorton Music Library and East Asian Library as well as some materials in storage in J.R. Pearson Hall.
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12A
Thursday, August 22,1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Star Trek
Continued from Page 1
the '60s," Gunn said. "I watched a few of them."
Gunn said he preferred Star Trek: The Next Generation to the original series because the stories have improved, and Captain Jean-Luc Picard's intellectuality provided more interest than Captain James T. Kirk's impulsiveness.
Many would find putting words into the mouths of mythical television characters an intimidating experience, but Gunn said he had no problem.
"The way they spoke was fairly obvious," he said. "One falls into their speech patterns without much difficulty."
Gunn said the most fun part about writing the novel was the opportunity to answer questions he'd always pondered about the television show.
"A thing that occurred to me was that they never seemed to have any problem coordinating their activities according to some timed schedule," Gunn said. "Since they're down on the planet and the ship is orbiting the planet overhead, there's no way, really, for either of them to know what time it is."
Gunn answered his own question by inventing "Federation Standard Time" for his novel.
Gunn, who has published 95 short stories and 19 novels and has edited numerous science fiction collections, finds it ironic that he faces his greatest success with a story that wasn't even his idea, full of characters that weren't his own.
"When I teach fiction-writing classes, I tell my students not to write in somebody else's universe, to do their own thing." Gunn said. "You can't really become an effective writer until you
On Star Trek's enduring success, Gunn said that science fiction would always have a niche in American culture.
start writing your own perceptions."
"Star Trek is peculiarly American. We have been future-oriented. We're less interested in how things used to be than we are interested in how they're going to be done. So science fiction acquired a particularly American characteristic.
"Star Trek, at its worst, is merely a soap opera in space." Gunn said. "At its best, when it really deals in ideas and change, is based on the belief that we will have solved most of our human problems."
Gunn has done much for science fiction enthusiasts at the University. Aaron Rosenberg, Lawrence graduate student, and a pupil of Gunn's for 10 years, said Gunn was one of the main reasons he stayed at the University.
"What a lot of students always liked about him was that he's not only a professor, he's a well-known writer," said Rosenberg, a science fiction enthusiast. "He really knows the people he's talking about: The writers, the editors and historians."
The Joy Machine hit bookstores Aug. 10. Lisa Eitner, a supervisor at Mt. Oread Bookshop in the Kansas Union, said her store had not received Gunn's book yet but still planned a September autograph signing party for Gunn.
Ordover expected Gunn's novel to sell well, saying the Star Trek novels were consistently best-sellers. Unfortunately for Gunn, the royalties go mostly to Paramount Pictures, which owns the work. But Gunn's not complaining.
"If my novel does as well as my editors say it will, it will still be the most lucrative work of my career," he said.
Brian Hott/KANSAN
James Gunn, a retired University of Kansas professor, shows off his new Star Trek book, which was released Aug. 10. Gunn will be signing his book in early September in the Kansas Union.
Plates
Continued from Page 1
expense
The University of Kansas has sought to implement the collegiate license plate program for over a decade under the direction of David Atkins, Rep., Leawood Kan. Initially, the program was not set up with the intent to charge an additional fee. Atkins thinks the fee and time delay is unacceptable.
"When the novelty wears off, people will realize that this program is ineffective." Atkins said.
must be purchased six months prior to issuance and the time delay to receive the finished product can stretch from six to 17 months, depending on where the consumers name falls within the alphabet. Williams and Atkins think because of the fee and time delay, the program will be perceived as a "rip off" by students and alumni in years to come.
Under Kansas law, a voucher
But other schools plan to go ahead with the program.
Larry Shell, Associate to the executive director at Oklahoma State University, said he was excited about the program.
"We are looking forward to getting initiated into this beneficial
program," he said.
Indiana University has had success with the collegiate program, which other schools are trying to replicate on their own license plates.
Atkins is not ready to give up on the collegiate license plate program, in fact, he will propose a new bill this fall with no extra fee or time delay. He said the collegiate plate program will be a good way to generate revenue for the University.
On-line
"Isee this as an entrepreneurial venture and Kansas should look for way to encourage this to happen, not discourage it from happening," Atkins said.
Continued from Page 1.
$20 increase over last year's rate.
A second option is to pay $20 for use until the end of December or to pay $30 in January for use until the end of July. This option was introduced for people on campus for just one semester.
The basic fee allows students 50 hours of on-line time a month. Once this time is surpassed, a student is billed 50 cents for every additional hour.
There is a grace period in the billing. No bill will be issued to students for less than $10. This means that a student can stay on-line for 69 hours a month and not pay the extra fee. Once 70
hours of usage is reached, though, a $10 bill will be sent.
Also, the maximum monthly fee is $30. After this is reached, a student's service for that month will be cut off. Users will have no way of knowing how much time they have been on-line during the month because the University doesn't have software capabilities to for that. The University estimated the increase would affect only 6 percent of users.
Shulenburger said the fee increase would be used to buy 96 new modern ports, giving the University a total of 352. This would provide a port for every 20 users, as opposed to one for every 25 users last year, decreasing the chance of being denied access to the system.
The new equipment needed to add
Grey Montgomery, student body president, said that while the fee increase was needed and expected, the plan had a problem.
these modern ports will cost the University $150,000. Another $70,000 will be spent on additional staffing to answer user questions during extended evening and weekend hours.
"This is just a scenario where it is necessary to make the ends meet to allow for expansion," he said. "I am just concerned about the students affected by the monthly hour cap."
Faculty or staff who have an account will be renewed automatically and sent a bill.
All students' accounts need to be renewed on-line at
http://www.cc.ukans.edu/renew.html
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Thursday, August 22. 1996
13A
Russians block escape routes in Grozny
10
KNIGHT-RIDDER TRIBUNE
The Associated Press
Russian troops attacked the main exit route of the Chechen capital of Grozny Tuesday, killing more than 100 civilians. It is not clear if the Kremlin had endorsed this attack on the city.
GROZNY, Russia — While terrified residents fled the Chechen capital any way they could and scores of people were reported killed, it was not clear Tuesday whether the Kremlin had endorsed the Russian attack on the city or exactly who was in charge of the war.
Russia's military commander in the region had warned residents of an all-out attack yesterday morning and promised a safe corridor out of Grozny until then. But Russian troops attacked the main exit route on Tuesday, clashing with Chechen separatists while thousands of panicked refugees were caught in the middle.
More than 100 civilians were killed as Russian troops reportedly blew up a bridge outside Grozny, the Interfax news agency said Tuesday night.
Russian troops fighting to encircle Grozny and trap the Chechen rebels there were backed up by Russian artillery and aircraft firing on the city.
The rebel fighters overran Grozny on Aug. 6, and since then only isolated pockets of Russian soldiers have remained in the battered city.
The flow of refugees turned into a flood after Russian helicopters dropped leaflets warning civilians to leave. Some people carried babies, small children, or a few possessions in plastic shopping bags as they fled on foot. Others crammed into cars and trucks decorated with white flags, bracing for a harrowing ride.
On Tuesday evening, a second road was opened for refugees out of the city; it was not clear if it remained open.
Gen. Konstantin Pulikovsky's threat of a massive attack on Grozny put him at odds with the man President Boris Yeltsin placed in charge of ending the 20-month war: security chief Alexander Lebed. Just last week Lebed had initiated new peace talks and a shaky cease-fire in the breakaway republic.
On Tuesday, Lebed criticized plans for an assault.
"Air raids even after civilians'
evacuation would only expand the conflict," said Lebed, who planned to fly to Grozny Tuesday to meet with commanders on both sides.
In a statement that cast doubt on who was giving orders, Lebed said the copy he got of a presidential directive Monday to retake Grozny bore only a facsimile of Yeltsin's signature.
Yeltsin's office added to the confusion, saying Yeltsin had formulated the latest instructions but the instructions had concerned negotiations.
On Monday, Yeltsin ordered Lebed to return Grozny to the control of federal troops and to continue peace talks.
The president has remained largely absent, dogged by reports of serious health problems. Aides said he was visiting a country resort in northern Russia.
Pulikovsky was transferring control of Russia's Chechnya operation yesterday to Lt. Gen. Vyacheslav Tikhomirov, who indicated he would stick to the ultimatum.
ests around the main road out of the city to the southwest, with rebels firing mortars on Russian soldiers. The Russians succeeded in cutting the corridor Tuesday afternoon, but it was not clear they could hold it.
Fighting raged Tuesday in the for-
The rebels' military chief, Aslan Maskhadov, ordered his fighters Tuesday to prepare for the second stage of their "Zero Option" plan to conquer Grozny, Interfax said. Russian commanders said rebei reinforcements had arrived in the city.
Hundreds of Russian soldiers have died and 1,000 have been wounded in the rebel assault on Grozny. The tally of victims from the entire war, most of them civilians, tops 30,000.
Russian news agencies reported small anti-war rallies Tuesday in towns around Chechnya and other parts of Russia's North Caucasus.
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which had helped arrange and mediate previous peace talks, said it had pulled its mission out of Grozny until the fighting stops, Interfax said.
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---
Thursday, August 22,1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'All the world's a stage,' and now the Bard's original theater is open again
After 383 years Shakespeare's Globe reopens its doors
The Associated Press
LONDON — It been a long intermission — 383 years.
The blare of trumpets from the $45 million reconstruction of William Shakespeare's circular, open-air Globe Theater yesterday heralded the first performance since the original theater burned down in 1613.
William Shakespeare
While actors warmed up Tuesday for a short season of The Two Gentlemen of Verona, staff members anxiously watched for signs of tempests above the painstakingly rebuilt wood-and-tatch construction on the south bank of the Thames River.
"I am like a fisherman, watching the Thames, watching the skies," artistic director Mark Rvance said.
Just in case, plastic raincoats were sold for 2 pounds — $3 at the relaunch of Shakespeare's famous wooden O, as the chorus in Henry V describes it.
Apart from the fanfare on a
balcony above the stage — a tradition dating from Shakespeare's day — there will be little razzmataz.
No celebrities were invited to this production of Two Gentlemen, set in the 20th century. The play will be performed through Sept. 15 under the direction of English actor Jack Shepherd.
Five pounds — $7.50 — buys the right to be a groundling, standing on the floor of the theater, but 12 or 16 pounds — $18 to $24 — purchases a terrace seat
Eighty-five percent of tickets have been sold, Rylance said. This is well above the number that the 1,394-seat venue needs to cover the $800,000 cost of the opening run.
The gala opening is set for June14,1997.
The Globe's first full season begins in May 1997 with a Globe ensemble performing four repertorial plays. Performances will run from May to September and include works by various writers.
American actor Sam Wanamaker envisioned the rebuilding of the Globe. In 1970 Wanamaker established a trust to raise funds for the project. Construction began in 1993, the year Wanamaker died at age 74.
The completed site will include a Shakespeare museum and education center, and a second, 300-seat indoor theater
built from Elizabethan architect Inigo Jones' plans. Jones introduced the proscenium arch and movable scenery to the English stage. This completed site will open Sept. 21, 1999 — the 400th anniversary of the first recorded performance at the Globe.
The project is still $10 million short. In an unusual request, critics have been asked to pay for their seats at performances of Two Gentlemen.
Just 200 yards from the original theater's site, the new Globe is a faithful copy down to the Norfolk reed roof, the oak beams, the hand-turned balustrades — and the rope and bucket for special effects. As in Shakespeare's day, large iron balls will run down a channel behind the stage to simulate thunder.
The reconstruction lacks any sound equipment. Lighting will mimic daylight, as most performances in Shakespeare's Globe took place in the afternoon, said Globe publicist Lucy Beevor.
The temporary stage of plywood and scaffolding will be replaced with an oak one, and the floor will be lined with a layer of ash and nut shells — a quiet, absorbent covering found in the remains of the 16th century Rose theater nearby.
For modern reasons of safety and comfort, the new Globe will
accommodate half the original theater's audience to cheer or toss fruit at the sumptuously dressed members of Shakespeare's company, known as the King's Men.
Once fully operational, the Globe is expected to finance itself.
Shakespeare was both a shareholder and a performer in the original theater, built by Cuthbert and Richard Burbage
In 1613 two cannons fired during a performance of Henry VIII, setting the tatch on fire and destroying the theater.
between 1598 and 1599 using timbers from a theater in nearby Shoreditch.
The unfinished Globe site attracts some 150,000 visitors a year. This figure is expected to triple by the year 2000.
The Puritans demolished the theater's replacement in 1642.
California pastor gives marijuana to terminally ill
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Although it looked like a line for communion, the Rev. Jim Mitulski was handing out something more unusual — and controversial — than bread and wine.
He distributed tiny packets of marijuana.
The pastor of the Metropolitan Community Church said his gesture Sunday — a felony in the eyes of the law — was a response to an Aug. 4 raid on the Cannabis Buyers' Club.
Five hundred protesters marched through San Francisco after the Bureau of Narcotics raided the club and seized 150 pounds of marijuana and $60,000 in cash.
The raid followed a two-year investigation that revealed evidence of non-medical marijuana sales.The club provided marijuana to AIDS, cancer and terminally ill patients and claimed 11,000 clients.
"I did it here because the sanctuary is traditionally seen as a safe place," Mitulski said. "I acted in good faith, and I expected that the people were here to receive it in good faith."
Authorities made no attempt to arrest Mitulski, who said a doctor was on hand to make sure the 25 people in line had a medical need.
Steve Telliano, a spokesman for state Attorney General Dan Lungren, told the San Francisco Chronicle he had not heard about the church's decision to distribute marijuana and declined to comment.
California voters will decide in November whether to legalize the use of marijuana for medical purposes.
Harpoon to hook speeders
While the club operated for five years, Mitulski isn't sure if he'll distribute marijuana again.
"I did it this time to make a statement," he said. "If I do it again, I need to sit and think about it and pray about it."
Finland finds a way to decrease crime
The Associated Press
The car was developed by police in Oulu, 380 miles north of Helsinki. They're seeking government approval to put it into regulus.
HELSINKI, Finland — Police in northern Finland have come up with a whale of a plan for stopping speeders: a police car equipped with a harpoon.
"We were fed up with not being able to
stop runaway drunk drivers or speeders," said designer of the device and Oulu police Sgt. Markku Limungoja. "This harpoon will bring them to an abrupt halt with a bang and not a whimper."
Unlike a traditional harpoon, the road version is not fired. Instead, it is mounted on the police car's front bumper, and pursuing officers ram it into the trunk of a fleeing car. It locks into place with hydraulically operated barbs, and the runaway vehicle comes to a halt as the police car brakes.
Of course, the police car does have to catch the fugitive before it can engage the harpoon. And some might consider the
impact little different from a collision.
impact little different from a collision. Limingoja said there would be some risk associated with using the harpoon.
"There is a danger that the runaway car could jam on the brakes," Limingoja said. "Officers using the car will have to be well-trained so that they get a feel for it."
If the getaway driver refuses to come out, tear gas can be released through the harpoon's hollow shaft.
The 1-yard-long harpion swivels so it can be aimed for a precise hit, and is equipped with infrared sights for night use, Limingo said.
A single officer can operate the harpoon while driving.
Veterinarian ruins bird's sex life
The Associated Press
Roger Schulp told the New South Wales District Court that he took his blue and gold South American macaw named Nelson to veterinarian Ross Perry with a broken right leg in 1994.
SYDNEY, Australia — A bird lover has filed a lawsuit against a veterinarian for ruining the sex life of his favorite parrot.
He alleges that Perry somehow broke the bird's other leg during treatment and then failed to fix either properly.
Schlup claims strong legs are essential
for the macaws' intricate mating ritual.
"As a result of the negligent treatment, Nelson has been left with a ... significant deformity of the left leg, a loss of mobility, and loss of power and strength and consequent inability to mate," Schulp said.
"It is necessary for the male and female to stand on a perch next to each other, twist around and align their rear ends," Schulp said in a statement to the court.
Schlup said he now had no chance to breed the willing but unable Nelson and sell his offspring and asked for $192,000 in damages.
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Thursday, August 22, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton signs wage increase
Minimum pay to rise to $4.75 by October
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton ensured millions of Americans a 50-cents-an-hour raise by Election Day, approving the first minimum-wage increase in five years.
The legislation, which will raise the hourly minimum by 90 cents to $5.15 an hour during 13 months, was enacted Tuesday in the first of three bill signings this week that Clinton hopes will portray him as a can-do leader at the Democratic National Convention next week.
The bill, passed by Congress on Aug. 2, raises the minimum from $4.25 an hour to $4.75 effective Oct.
1 and to $5.15 an hour on Sept. 1.
1997. The minimum has dropped
near a 40-year low when adjusted for price increases in recent years.
"This is a cause for celebration for all Americans of all parties, all walks of life, all faiths," Clinton said at a campaign-style ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House. "It will give 10 million Americans . . . a chance to raise stronger families and build better futures."
"This bill says to the working people of America: 'If you're willing to take responsibility and go to work, your work will be honored,'" Clinton said.
He also signed legislation yesterday expanding working Americans' access to health insurance and is expected today to sign a bill ending the six-decade federal guarantee of welfare benefits to the poor.
The health bill was pushed by both parties, but the welfare legislation was championed largely by Republicans. The signings fit with Clinton's re-election strategy of running as a moderate Democrat who can work with Republicans while blunting their excesses.
"This is a cause for celebration for all Americans of all parties,all walks of life."
President Clinton Speaking of the new wage bill
But Tuesday's minimum-wage script was written to play to the administration's core Democratic constituency. Clinton signed the bill with AFL-CIO president John Sweeney looking on and with children of minimum-wage workers at his elbow. He sat at the desk of Frances Perkins, secretary to Franklin Roosevelt, who enacted the first federal minimum wage — 25 cents an hour — in 1938.
The bill marks a rare Democratic legislative victory during the 20 months that Republicans have controlled Congress. But moderate Republican reminded Clinton that without them the wage increase, as well as the health and welfare bills, would have remained bottled up in Congress.
Conservative Republicans had argued that raising the minimum wage would destroy entry-level jobs, and House Majority Leader Dick Arney, R-Texas, had pledged to fight the raise.
But GOP leaders relented after moderate Republicans threatened to join Democrats, who were using parliamentary tactics to bring the already glacial pace of Congress to a standstill.
All sides readily agreed to include a $21-billion package of tax cuts during 10 years, mollisfing conservatives and their small-business backers, who are getting more generous equipment writeoffs and a new type of simplified pension plan for companies employing 100 or fewer workers.
Powell denies rumors of getting post
Favorability grows with talk of possible job offer from Dole
The Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Retired Gen. Colin Powell said Tuesday he has not been offered and thus, not accepted an offer to be secretary of state if Bob Dole is elected president.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich commented on the latest reports about Powell's potential role in a Dole administration at a rally in Georgia Monday night.
"Colin has already indicated he'd accept it," Gingrich said to about 150 campaign volunteers. Gingrich said he believes Dole would
announce Powell's selection in September before the election.
Powell denied the report while campaigning in Kentucky with Dole and vice presidential nominee Jack Kemp.
"We haven't had any such discussion," said Kemp, the retired chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Powell commented on accepting the post of secretary of state should Dole win in November.
"Anything's open. But right now the more important thing is to get the team elected," Powell said.
Dole spokesman Nelson Warfield suggested that the talk of Powell's potential role in a Dole administration was premature.
"I would consider anything that the president asked me to do."
Rumors that Powell would be Dole's choice for the Cabinet position were floated during last
"It's putting the Cabinet before the election," Warfield said. "There's plenty of time for that."
“
Colin Powell Retired General
--week's Republican convention
Powell himself fueled speculation last Tuesday, saying that if Dole were elected, "I would consider anything that the president asked me to do."
The convention's opening night showcased Powell with his speech, calling for a Republican Party built on tolerance and diversity.
The alreadypopular Powell came out of the convention with an even better image, according to a CBS- New York Times poll.
In early August, 55 percent of registered voters had a favorable opinion of him.
Only 6 percent had an unfavorable view.
In polling Friday through Sunday, 61 percent did.
Democratic convention gets on track
The Associated Press
1. ___
WASHINGTON—President Clinton will try to whip up excitement at the Democratic National Convention next week with televised appearances each night on his four-day train trek to Chicago.
Showing off the powers of incumbency, Clinton also will roll out a series of initiatives dealing with crime, education and the environment in what the White House hopes will be a contrast with the Republicans' convention in San Diego.
"In our convention, it's safe to say, there will be one thing that was lacking from the convention in San Diego," said presidential spokesman Mike McCurry. "There will be some news."
The president will fly to West Virginia on Sunday to begin a whistle stop train trip that will carry him to Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana and Illinois. He will arrive in Chicago on Wednesday evening.
The Democratic convention opens Monday. On Wednesday, Connecticut Sen. Christopher Dodd will nominate Clinton as the Democratic presidential candidate, and Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer will second it. The convention closes late Thursday after Clinton's acceptance speech.
While Clinton rides the train, Vice President Al Gore and the president's wife, Hillary, will spend the week in the convention city, and both plan to address the delegates.
Each day, the convention will see large-screen videos of Clinton on the road, campaign officials said. Some appearances will be live, and others will be taped, showing highlights of the president's day, officials said.
McCurry, in his daily press briefing, needled Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole for saying that he had not read the GOP platform and would not be bound by it.
"We have a party platform that the president not only has read but actually took part in drafting," the presidential spokesman said. "It's a platform that he'll be proud to stand by as we go into the fall election."
Ann Lewis, Clinton's deputy campaign manager, said there would be an event each day of the train trip coinciding with themes of the convention. She said Monday night would be devoted to personal stories that demonstrate why the election is important and the impact it can have on people' lives.
A leadoff speaker will be Sarah Brady, head of a handgun control advocacy group and wife of James Brady, who was press secretary to President Reagan when both were shot in 1981. She will speak Monday about the Brady law, which requires a waiting period for handgun purchases. Actor Christopher Reeve, paralyzed after a horseback riding accident, also speaks Monday.
The convention will focus on strengthening families Tuesday, Lewis said. Indiana Gov. Evan Bayh delivers the keynote address that night. Hillary Rodham Clinton, Tipper Gore and several Democratic congressional candidates also speak Tuesday.
Wednesday, which Lewis said would examine comparisons between the records and visions of Dole and Clinton, also will feature a video tribute to Gore and a speech by the vice president.
Campaign spokesman Joe Lockhart said the major television networks probably will devote one prime time hour to each of the first three nights of the convention and likely will go longer Thursday for Clinton's speech.
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Just weeks after a his cocaine-possession trial ended, MICHAEL IRVIN, of the Dallas Cowboys, is being sued by several Dallas-area car dealers. The dealers claim that Irvin wasn't honest with them when he signed a contract to endorse their cars. The suit was filed yesterday, but will not be heard in court until March 10.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
Full Story on Page 12B
Football Update
The Kansas football team selected its captains for the 1996 season yesterday. Senior linebacker Ronnie Ward and senior running back Mark Sanders were chosen by their team
I
mates. Ward missed all of last season because of a shoulder injury. Sanders missed the last six games of the season after suffering a knee injury versus Colorado on Oct. 7.
THURSDAY. AUGUST 22,1996
Yesterday Chiefs head coach MARTY SCHOTTHEIMER cut twenty players in order to meet the mandatory roster
CHIEFS UPDATE
requirement of 60 players.
The most notable cuts were Dietrich Jells, a wide receiver from Pittsburgh, and Siran Stacy, who played in the World League last season. In other news from the Chief's training camp, an undisclosed draft choice was traded to
33
camp, an undisclosed draft choice was traded for Miami Dolphins kicker Pete Stoyanocich.
Fast BREAKS
Angels manager checks into hospital with blood clot in leg The Associated Press
NEW YORK — California Angels manager John McNamara was hospitalized yesterday with a blood clot in his right calf.
BROOKLYN
McNamara, who has had
trouble walking in recent weeks, was admitted to Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center by Alan Benvenisty. McNamara is expected to be hospitalized for about four days.
CA
Joe Maddon, the team's third-base coach, took over the managing duties for yesterday's game against the New York Yankees.
McNamara, 64, became manager Aug. 6 after Marcel Lachemman's resignation.
Earlier this month, McNamara's leg was so painful that he remained in the clubhouse and let Maddon run the team.
Benvenisty was one of the doctors who operated on Yankees pitcher David Cone's right shoulder May 10.
The Kansas Volleyball drills during practice yesterday. The Lady Jayhawks began practicing August 8 and will be ready for their first rangle on August 30.
U.S. Open plants its seeds
Seedings for the 1996 U.S. Open tennis tournament were released yesterday. Match play begins Monday at the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
1. Pete Sampahr, Tampa, Fla.
2. Michael Chang, Henderson, Nev.
3. Thomas Muster, Austria
4. Goran hansisevic, Croatia
5. Richard Kraijek, Netherlands
6. Andre Agasel, Las Vegas, Nevada
7. Yevgeny Kafennikov, Russia
8. Jim Courier, Miami, Fla.
9. Wayne Ferrera, South Africa
10. Marcelo Rios, Chile
11. MailVal Washington, Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
12. Todd Martin, Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
13. Thomas Envist, Sweden
14. Alberto Costa, Spain
15. Marc Rosset, Switzerland
16. Cardiic Pioline, France
Women
1. Steffi Graf, Germany
2. Monica Seles, Sarasota, Fla.
3. Arantha Sanchez Vicario, Spain
4. Conchita Martinez, Spain
5. Iva Majoli, Croatia
6. Anke Huber, Germany
7. Jana Novotna, Czech Republic
8. Linda Davenport, Newport Beach, Calif.
9. Mary Joe Fernandez, Key Biscayne, Fla.
10. Kimiko Date, Japan
11. Chanda Rubin, Lafayette, La.
12. Maggie Malevea, Bulgaria
13. Brenda Schultz-McCarthy, Netherlands
14. Barbara Paulus, Austria
15. Gabriela Sabatini, Argentina
16. Martina Hingis, Switzerland
Cubs' slugger breaks hand; Sosa likely lost for season The Associated Press
X-rays taken yesterday revealed a fracture at the juncture of the hand and wrist. Sosa will be out for four
CHICAGO — Sammy Sosa, the Chicago Cubs' top run producer and the National League's leading home run hitter, could be lost for the rest of the season with a broken bone in his right hand.
Lisa will be out for four to six weeks.
CUBS
Sosa, who has 40 home runs and 100 RBI, was struck on the hand by a pitch from Florida's Mark Hutton in the first inning of Tuesday's
of Tuesday's game at Wrigley Field.
The injury ends Sosa's streak of 304 consecutive games. It was the third longest active streak in the majors behind Baltimore's Cal Ripken and San Francisco's Barry Bonds.
The Cubs said there was only a slim chance the outfielder would return before the end of the season. They are still in the race for the NL Central title and the wild card.
All set to improve
Jayhawks join Big 12 hoping for a new start
By Adam Herschman
Kansan sportswriter
While preparing for the fall volleyball season, Kansas junior Kendra Kahler saw the game this summer from a perspective she never sees during the year.
Kahler, a right-side hitter for the Jayhawks, spent part of her summer coaching kids at volleyball camps in Lawrence and in her hometown of Ottawa.
She said her experience coaching at the camps helped her understand more about what her coaches expect.
A light that may help to improve the Jayhawks 8-19 record last year that tied them for sixth in the Big Eight Conference.
"As a player you don't understand what your coach wants," Kahler said. "It shined a new light."
"It's always frustrating when you have a losing season," Kahler said. "We're learning new things, improving everyday."
The Kansas volleyball team practiced twice a day from Aug 9 to 20.
Kahler, a first-team Phillips 66 Academic All-Big Eight selection, said now that the two-a-days were finished the team would prepare for a tournament in Corvallis, Oregon. The Jayhawks will open the season against Ball State and Purdue Aug. 30 at the Oregon State Tournament.
"Every time you have a new season it's a great chance to just have a fresh start," Kahler said.
Not only will Kansas have a fresh start, but the conference will as well.
This season will be the inaugural year for volleyball in the
Big 12 Conference. Joining the Big Eight schools will be four Texas schools: Texas, Texas Tech, Texas A&M, and Baylor.
"Adding the Texas schools definitely improves the schedule, it's going to be a lot more competitive," Kahler said.
With NCAA Volleyball Champion Nebraska and runner-up Texas, the Big 12 is considered the most competitive conference in the nation.
Not only will the conference be more competitive this year, but the Jayhawks will have no
seniors. The only upper classmen on the team are juniors Kahler, Stephanie Blackwell, Maggie Mohrfeld, Leslie Purkeypile and Tiffany Sennett.
Kansas sophomore outside hitter Moira Donovan said that at times last year the intensity level dropped, but that was what the team was working on in practice.
"We need to try to give 100 percent," Donovan said. "People are going to have to step up."
After posting a 7-3 record during the spring season, the Jayhawks are poised to reach their goals, which include having a winning record and having the highest GPA of the other Kansas sports teams.
"Our team goal is to be in the top six of the Big 12 Conference." Kahler said.
Rutz and Johner battle for starting quarterback spot
Kansas kicks off season next week against the Ball State Cardinals
The starting quarterback for No. 24 Kansas' season opener against Ball State Thursday will be named on game day.
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
Or it could be tomorrow.
Rutz, who is listed No.1 on the depth chart, is recovering from reconstructive surgery on his left knee for a torn anterior cruciate ligament that he injured in spring practice.
Who will lead the Jayhawks' air attack is still in the air and changing daily between senior Ben Rutz and junior Matt Johner.
Mason.
"I thought he looked good.
I didn't think he was favoring it at all. So I don't know. I guess we'll see if it's sore tomorrow."
"My whole opinion if Rutz could play the first game changed today," Mason said. "I thought he performed awful well. I saw him make plays.
It appeared Rutz would be too sore to start, but his performance yesterday in a practice game was encouraging to Kansas coach Glen
Rutz's recovery will be aided by Kansas' schedule. After the opening game, Kansas has a bye week and doesn't play again until Sept. 14. Then Jayhawks have another week off before a Sept. 28 game.
Rutz saw limited playing time last season, appearing in six games but starting none. He was 8-for-19 on pass attempts with one interception and no touchdowns.
Johner has played in 15 games for Kansas as a quarterback. He appeared in all 11 games last year but only as a special team holder.
"I kind of came into camp thinking (Rutz) would be starting," Johner said. "But I kind of in the back of my mind thought I'd better get ready to prepare myself the best I can."
Johner is a left-handed quarterback, but he said that might be the only difference between Rutz and himself.
But it's still more experience than Johner has.
"We're both mobile; we're both agile," he said. "It's not like either one of us has an extremely better arm."
Mason said his decision can change by the day, or even by the play.
With the injury to Rutz,
Sophomore cornerback Jamie Harris will sit out the Jayhawks' season opener against Ball State for violation of team policy.
Johner said he had to prepare differently.
Harris started eight games in 1995 and is listed No. 1 on Kansas' preseason depth chart at right cornerback.
SECTION B
Mason said freshman Mitch Bowles would take
Jayhawks face tough schedule in Big 12 season
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sports writer
Kansan sports writer
See Football. Page 6.
Kansas basketball fans should have no problem finding the Jayhawks on their televisions again this season.
Kansas could have as many as 15 nationally-televised games on the 1996-97 schedule, which was released last week. The Jayhawks will also have trips to California, Hawaii, Chicago and Connecticut.
"We have the type of schedule that our fans should enjoy," said Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams.
The next big test for Kansas should come Nov. 25-27 at the Maui Classic in Hawaii. The Jayhawks will face LSU in the first round, and either Iowa or California in the second round. Massachusetts and Virginia are also in the field. Kansas last played in the Maui Classic during the 1987-88 season. This year's entire
Eleven teams that appeared in last season's NCAA tournament are on the Kansas slate, with the season opener Nov. 22 at Santa Clara. The Jayhawks defeated the Broncos in the second round of the NCAA's last season.
See basketball, Page 6.
New job brings new thoughts on sports
Welcome back.
I was the associate sports editor last semester. Maybe it was by the grace of God or the envelope of twenties, but I got a promotion and the associate part of my title got dropped. So I'm sitting at the grown-up table now.
Carlyn Foster will be taking my old position.
I'm going to dispense with all of the English 101 My-name-is-I'm-from-I-did-this-summer icebreaking garbage, except to mention a few changes in the sports section of the Kansan this semester.
But for now, let me tell you what
The sports page itself will have more color, more pictures, and when possible, more Lionel Ritchie — the greatest musician of our time.
But for now, thoughts went through my mind during this Macarena-filled summer.
USA Basketball, enough is enough. After America failed to win gold in the 1988 Olympics, the USA Basket Committee felt they had to prove to the world who is the greatest basketball country on earth. So led by Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, Team USA annihilated
SPORTS EDITOR
BILL
PETULLA
any team that had the nerve to step on the same court in the 1992 Olympics.
OK, you made your point. There is no doubt in the mind of any clear-thinking basketball fan what country has the best players in the world. The USA Basketball Committee completely took the competitiveness out of men's Olympic basketball.
If you're a fan of professional basketball, I suggest you enjoy all the action in the coming years because the NBA has set itself on a collision course for a major strike.
Experts say other countries are catching up to the level of U.S. basketball. Yeah, maybe by the year 204 Argentina will put up 50 points against the Red, White and Blue, but until then give me Allen Iverson, Marcus Camby, Kerry Kittles, Tim Duncan, Stephon Marbury, and TIL coach them to a gold medal.
The day will come when owners eventually reach their breaking points — maybe when Shaquille O'Neal refuses to suit up unless he is awarded Southern California as a signing bonus — and have to give players like Jim McIvaine (Seattle Supersonics center making $35 million over seven years) less than multimillion dollar deals.
Every year, greedy players with sinister agents keep asking for more money and every year, spineless owners cave in to their demands. This trend must be stopped.
Until owners take a stand, salaries will continue to escalate, causing the NBA become a rich man's game televised solely on pay-per-view with $100 general admission tickets.
Although the Coca-Cola ads hulled me to sleep, the Summer Olympics provided me with one thought. In an age where lazy, mediocre and unproven athletes collect multimillion dollar contracts in the professional ranks, the Olympics Games reminded me of what athletic competition should be.
In fact, when you look around the sporting world, while everything else is declining and is far removed from its glory days, the Olympics show a different side of sports. They allow the fan to watch a lifetime of practice and commitment unfold. A lifetime of falling down and picking themselves up. The athletes have just one goal in mind — not a lucrative offer under the new collective bargaining agreement or a Nike shoe contract, but just a simple medal which hangs around the neck.
1
I'll take one Kerri Strug or Dan O'Brien over 200 Derrick Colemans or Michael Irvins.
0
2B
Thursday, August 22, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PRO BASEBALL
Wednesday's Major League Linescores
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Detroit 001 011 04x-7 11 7
Alvarez, Simas 8), Bertott 8) and Karkovice; Lira, Lima 7), Olison 9) and Ausmus. W-Lima,
4-6, L-Simas, 2-8, S-Vilson 7), HRs-
Chicago, Tartabull 18), Detroit, Nieves 20),
Ausmus 4).
California 200 100 005—7 9 0
New York 100 100 000—1 13 1
Dickson, Holtz 7), Percival 8) and Greene; Key,
Nelson 8), Polley 9), Wickman 9) and Giardi;
W — Dickson, 1-0, L — Key, 9-10. Sw — Percival
32), HRs — California, Davis 2 15). New York,
Jeter 8)
Milwaukee 110 000 053—10 12 0
Minnesota 010 010 211—7 12 3
Minnesota 020 010 211 — 7 12 3
Eldred, Florie (6), Jones (7), Lloyd (8), Fetters (8)
and Stinnett, Levis (7); Radek, Guardado (8)
Stevens (8), Hansell (8), Trombyle (9) and Walbock,
1.0-L, Stevens, 1.3-S, Valeen (23), HRs—Milwaukee, Jaah (26),
Valenio (2)
Oakland 002 010 100-4 7 0
Boston 011 200 02x-6 11 4
Wasdin, Telgheder 7), Johns 8), Corsal 9)
Groom 8), Acre 8) and Steinbach; Wakefield,
Eselmanhe 8), Brandenburg 8), Slocum 9) and
Stanley, W - Brandenburg 4.4, L - Johns, 6.
12. Su - Slocum 22), HRs - Oakland, Brosius
21. Boston, OCL, age 12)
Toronto 120 020 100—6 10 1
Kansas City 011 000 020—6 1
Guzman and Mosquera; Haney, Bluma 7);
Jacome 9) and Sweeney, W—Guzman 10-8;
L—Haney, 9-12. H—Toronto, Samuel 7).
Seattle 100 040 000— 5 8 2
Baltimore 201 210 31x— 10 12 0
Hitchcock, R. Johnson 5), Jackson 8) and Wilson;
Erickson, Corbin 7), Orosco 8), Mills 9)
and Holes, W. Erickson-8, 10-L, Hitchcock
12-6. HRS—Seattle, Rodriguez 2 31). Baltimore,
C.Ripken 21), Bonilla 8), Hoiles 23)
**texas** 100 007 000 2-10 17 0
Cleveland 330 000 000 8-1 17 3
Burkett, Gross 4), Cook 7), Russell 8), Henneman
9), Mosvog, 9) and Rodriguez, Nagy,
Shukey 9), Assmenerchion 9), Tavarez 9) and
S.Alomar, Pena 10). W—Vosberg, 10.-L —
Tavarez, 4-7, HRs—Texas, Greer 15), Palmer
30).
NATIONAL LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Florida 000 020 001—3 9 0
Chicago 150 200 00x—8 8 1
Rapp, Bastista 5), Heredia 7), Powell 8) and Natal; Castillo, Bottenfield 8) and Servais. W—Castillo, 6-14. L—Rapp, 6-14. HR—Saint, Connite 21), Colbrun 10), Chicago, Bullett 3), Hernandez 9).
New York 001 050 032—11 17 1
San Francisco 720 012 02—10 1
Person, Wallace (3), DIPoto (5), Byrd 7), Milicki (8)
and Hundley; VanLandingham, Dewey 5),
Poole 6), Scott 8), Beck 4) and Lampkin. W—
Dewey, 5-2. L—Person, 2-5. Sv—Beck 28).
HRS—New York, L.Johnson 8), Hunley 38).
San Francisco, G.Hill 13), Lampkin 5).
Canizaro 2).
Cincinnati 000 011 010—3 10 10
Atlanta 000 020 011—4 10 0
Remlinger, Shaw 5), Carrasco 7), L Smith 8),
Brantley 9) and Taubensee, Oliver 8); Smooth,
Clontz 8), Borbon 8) and Lopez, Perez 9). W-
Borbon, 3-0-L—Brantley, 1-2 HR—Cincinnati,
Brantley 8)
Pittsburgh 012 002 000—5 14 1
Houston 001 100 00—2 10 3
Neagle, Wilkins 7), Plesaic 8), Ericks 9) and
Kendall; Hampton, Small 7), Brocail 9) and
Manwaring. W—Neagle, 13-6, L—Hampton,
10-8, Sv—Ericks 3).
St. Louis 010 100 100—2 15 10
Colorado 313 100 20x-18 10 8
An.Benes, D.Jackson 3), Fossas 7), Bailey 7)
and Pagnozzi, Reynoso, S.Reed 8), Burke 9)
and J.Reed, W.-Reynooy, 8-8-L-An.Benes,
13-9-H-HR-Colorado, Galaverra 36).
Royals Box Score BLUE JAYS 6, ROYALS 2
Blue Jays Royals
ab r h bi
Brmfld cf 5 1 2 2
Offmm 2b 4 0 0 0
AGniz ss 5 1 1 0
TGdwn cf 4 1 1 0
Samuel rf 5 1 2 2
Lokht 3b 4 0 1 0
Carter dh 4 1 1 1
Mcfrine dh 3 0 0 0
CDigdo dh 1 0 0 0
Hmelin 1b 4 1 1 0
Sprgue 3b 3 0 1 0
Tucker lf 3 0 1 0
Olerud 1b 4 0 2 1
Sweeny c 3 0 1 1
RPerez lf 3 1 1 0
Damon rf 3 0 0 0
TPerez 2b 4 1 0 0
DHwrd ss 3 0 1 0
Msqera c 3 0 0 0
Totals 37 6 10 6
Totals 31 2 6 1
Toronto
TV
120 020 100—6
Kansas City
011 000 000—2
E—Guzman 3), Hamelin 2), DP—Toronto 2,
Kansas City 1.LOB—Toronto 8, Kansas City 3.
2B—Hamelin 12), HR—Samuel 7), SB—TGoodwin 59).
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV. sports coverage for Thursday (schedule subject to change and/or blackouts):
(All times Central)
THURSDAY, AUGUST 22
12 p.m.
ESPN — Men's tennis, Du Maurier Open, early round coverage, at Toronto
ESPN — Golf, U.S. Amateur Championship, rounds No. 2 and 3, at Coronilla, Ore.
USA PGA Golf World Series of Golf first round, at Akron, Ohio
ESPN — Little League Baseball,
World Series, American Championship Game, at Williamsport, Pa.
PRIME — Women's tennis, Toshiba Tennis Classic, quarterfinals, at
6:35 p.m.
ii. same-day
6:30 a.m.
WPIX — Major League Baseball, California at N.Y. Yankees
TBS — Major League Baseball,
Cincinnati at Atlanta
7 p.m
ABC — Presseason NFL Football,
Nationwide.
Kansas City at Chicago
ESPN2 — Little League Baseball,
World Series, International
Championship game, at Williamsport, Pa.
WGN — Major League Baseball,
Toronto at Chicago White Sox
9 p.m.
ESPN2 — Major League Soccer, Dallas at San Jose
11 p.m.
ESPN2 — Men's tennis, Du Mauner Open, early round coverage, at Toronto same-day tape)
Toronto IP H RER BB SO
Guzman W,10-8,9 6 2 1 1 6
Kansas Citv
Haney L,9-12 6 2-3 10 6 6 1 2
Bluma 1-2 3 0 0 0 0 1
Jacome 2-3 0 0 0 0 1
T—2:33. A—12,238 (40,625).
PRO FOOTBALL
National Football League
Preseason Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
| | W | L | T | Pct. PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Buffalo | 2 | 1 | 0 | .667 | 65 |
| Miami | 2 | 1 | 0 | .667 | 58 |
| New England | 2 | 1 | 0 | .667 | 51 |
| Indianapolis | 2 | 2 | 0 | .500 | 62 |
| N.Y. Jets | 1 | 2 | 0 | .333 | 60 |
Baltimore 2 1 0 .667 69 53
Cincinnati 2 1 0 .667 66 45
Houston 2 1 0 .667 70 59
Pittsburgh 2 1 0 .500 56 57
Jacksonville 2 1 0 .333 65 51
Denver 3 0 0 1.000 80 48
Kansas City 2 1 0 .687 104 46
Seattle 2 1 0 .667 56 51
San Diego 2 2 0 .500 85 59
Oakland 1 3 0 .250 85 89
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
| | W | L | T | Pct. | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Arizona | 1 | 2 | 0 | .333 | 57 | 68 |
| N.Y. Giants | 1 | 2 | 0 | .333 | 57 | 67 |
| Philadelphia | 1 | 2 | 0 | .333 | 49 | 70 |
| Washington | 1 | 2 | 0 | .333 | 49 | 69 |
| Dallas | 1 | 3 | 0 | .250 | 51 | 117 |
Green Bay 3 0 0 1.000 65 39
Detroit 2 1 0 .667 90 71
Minnesota 1 2 0 .333 52 79
Chicago 1 2 0 .333 57 82
Tampa Bay 1 2 0 .333 29 26
St. Louis 2 1 0 .667 61 56
New Orleans 2 2 0 .500 63 97
Atlanta 1 2 0 .333 44 41
Carolina 1 2 0 .333 58 76
San Francisco 1 2 0 .333 43 71
Saturday's Games
Pittsburgh 13, Tampa Bay 3
Green Bay 17, Baltimore 15
Buffalo 24, Carolina 0
Indianapolis 15, Seattle 13
New Orleans 14, Chicago 21
New York Jets 13, New York Giants 6
St. Louis 34, Kansas City 30
San Diego 34, Arizona 10
Sunday's Games
New England 37. Philadelphia 10 Jacksonville 38. San Francisco 10
Monday's Game
Thursday, Aug. 22
Monday's Game
Aiami 24, Minnesota 17
Friday. Aug. 23
Miami 24, Minnesota 17
Thursday Aug. 28
Kansas City at Chicago, 7 p.m.
Arizona at Atlanta; 6:30 p.m.
Baltimore at Buffalo; 6:30 p.m.
Detroit at Cincinnati; 6:30 p.m.
Miami at Tampa Bay; 6:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia; 6:30 p.m.
Carolina at New York Giants; 7 p.m.
Jacksonville at Denver, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at New Orleans, 7 p.m.
San Diego at St. Louis, 7 p.m.
Washington at New England, 7 p.m.
New York Jets at Oakland, 9 p.m.
San Francisco at Seattle, 9 p.m.
Jacksonville at Denver, 7 p.m.
Dallas vs. Houston at Orlando, Fla., 5:30 p.m.
Green Bay at Indianapolis, 6 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 24
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
College Football Schedule
By The Associated Press
Saturday, Aug. 24
FAR WEST
Texas A&M at Brigham Young, 11 a.m.
Sunday, Aug. 25 EAST
Southern Cai vs. Penn St. at East Rutherford,
Thursday, Aug. 29 EAST
Illinois St. at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Northeastern vs. Maine at Portland, Maine, 6
SOUTH
William & Mary at Cent. Florida, 6 p.m.
Liberty at e.Tennessee St, 6 p.m.
Appalachian St. at Wake Forest, 6:30 p.m.
Nicholas St. at NE Louisiana, 7 p.m.
Ky. Wasley at w.Kentucky, 7 p.m.
MIDWEST
Mars Hill at Indiana St, 5:30 p.m.
Akron on Ohio U, 6 p.m.
Wofford at Youngstown St, 6 p.m.
NW Oklahoma at W. Illinois, 6:30 p.m.
E. Illinois at W. Michigan, 6:30 p.m.
SOUTHWEST
E. New Mexico at Stephen F. Austin, 7 p.m.
FAR WEST
New Mexico at New Mexico St., 7:30 p.m.
W. New Mexico at N. Arizona, 8 p.m.
at Stephen F.
FAR WEST
Friday, Aug. 30
MIDWEST
nationi 6:30 p.m
MIDWEST Tulane at Cincinnati, 6:30 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 31
American Intl. at Rhode Island, 2 p.m.
Villanova at Rutgers, 5 p.m.
West Virginia at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.
Miami at Memphis, 12:30 p.m.
Bowling绿 at Alabama, 2 p.m.
Clemson at North Carolina, 2:30 p.
Southern Miss, at Georgia, 3 p.m.
N. Carolina A T& vs. N.C. Central, at Raleigh,
N.C. 3 a.m.
Troy St. at Alcorn St. 4, p.m.
SWLouisiana at Florida. 5, p.m.
Georgia Southern at S. Carolina St. 5, p.m.
Ala-Bimingham at Auburn. 5:30 p.m.
Louisville at Kentucky. 5:30 p.m.
Morehouse at Beltune-Cookman, m.
N. Illinois at Maryland. 6, p.m.
Idaho St. at Mississippi. 6, p.m.
UNLV at Tennessee, 6 p.m.
UNLV at Tennessee, p. 6.m.
Florida AAM at Tennessee St, 6.p.m.
Middle Tenn. at Louisiana Tech, 7.p.m.
MIDWEST
SOUTHWEST
Purdue at Michigan St. 11:30 p.m.
Kent at Miami, Ohio 12:30 p.m.
Morgan St. vs. Cent. St. Ohio at Columbus,
Ohio 1:30 p.m.
Cent. Arkansas at S. Illinois, 1:30 p.m.
Texas et al at Kansas St. 2:30 p.m.
Illinois at Michigan 2:30 p.m.
Temple et E. Michigan, 6 p.m.
FAR WEST
SW Missouri St. at Oakland St, 6 p.m.
Missouri at Texas, 6 p.m.
Sam Houston St at Houston, 7 p.m.
Grand Valley St at SW Texas St, 7 p.m.
Tulsa at Southern Meth, 7 p.m.
View contrast vs. Texas Southern at Houston, 7 p.m.
Sain Jose St. at Air Force, 1 p.m.
Idaho at Wyoming, 2 p.m.
Washington St. at Colorado, 2:30 p.m.
Chattanooga St. at Marionato St, 2:30 p.m.
Cedar Lake Boise St, 8 p.m.
Arkansas St. at Brigham Young, 8 p.
N. Iowa at S. Utah, 8 p.
Utah at Uttal St, 8 p.
Boston College at Hawaii, 8:30 p.
Texas-El Paso at Arizona, 9 p.
Oregon at Fresno St, 9 p.
Sunday, Sept. 1 SOUTH
Hampton U. at Clark Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Miss. Valley St. at Morris Brown, 6 p.m.
Jackson St. vs. Alabama St. at Birmingham,
Ala, 7 p.m.
SOCGER
Major League Soccer
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
Eastern Conference
W L SOW Pts GF GA
x-Tampa Bay 14 11 10 62 54
D.C. 11 14 1 1 34 50
NY-NJ 9 13 1 3 30 36
New England 7 13 6 27 35
Columbus 6 16 4 27 46
Western Conference
W L SOW Pts GF GA
Kansas City 12 12 12 67 54
Los Angeles 12 9 3 39 47 36
Dallas 11 10 4 37 42 36
San Jose 10 13 1 31 40 41
Colorado 9 17 1 28 41 50
Thursday's Game
Dallas at San Jose 9 p m
Friday's Games
Kansas City at Columbus, 6:30 p.m.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22,1996
3B
Golf teams seek success
Squads set goals for Big 12 season
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
New talent and experienced veterans on the men's and women's golf teams will combine this season to provide plenty of optimism about the upcoming year.
The Jayhawk men, ranked 15th in the nation at the end of last spring, lost four of their top seven players. The team now will rely on a trio to make the inaugural Big 12 Conference season a successful one.
The top returning player from last year's team is senior Kit
Jerry Waugh
Grove who, along with Vance Holtzman, is one of two seniors on the roster. His consistency and leadership will be important to a team dominated by youth.
In fact, the Jayhawk men will field a team with only two seniors and two juniors. The rest of the team consists of six of sophomores, who saw valuable playing time last year, and four freshmen.
Leading the sophomore class is Chris Thompson, who will challenge Grove as the team's number one golfer. Sophoiores Andy Bengtone and Brad Davis hope to improve on their freshmen seasons.
Perhaps the highest expectation will be placed on freshman Ryan Vermeer, who could make an immediate impact when the season opens Sept. 23 and 24 at the
Kansas Invitational. Last spring Vermeer won the Nebraska State Amateur Championship and had four top 10 finishes in American Junior Golf Association tournaments.
Vermeer, combined with Grove and Thompson, seem to be the trio that coach Ross Randall hopes can lead the team to success.
"Grove, Thompson and Vermeer will all be competing for the number one spot when we start practice. Sept. 9." Randall said. "Ryan is such a good player and has
so much talent that I think he can make a good run to be our top golfer this year.
Another true freshman who could see playing time is Randy Stewart, who won the Kansas Junior Championship in 1994. Ry Edwards and Jake Istnick give the team depth after being
A. G. HUNTINGTON
Ross Randall
red-shirt freshmen last year.
"Team performance is important for a good ranking," Randall said. "We need to find out who will play for us and, at the same time, assure ourselves a spot at regionals at the end of the season."
The Jayhawk women share many of the same goals as the men but will have a deeper blend of experience and youth.
Four seniors, including Missy Russell, will help the Jayhawks break into the Big 12 on a positive note. Other seniors include Anne Clark, Kelly Marney and Jessica Thompson.
Sophomore Mandy Munsch returns after a freshman season in which she established herself as one of the team's better golfers. Munsch, along with juniors Beth
"We need to find out who will play for us and, at the same
"
time, assure
ourselves a spot at
regionals at the end of
the season."
Ross Randall Men's golf coach
Reuter and Lori Lauritsen, form a nucleus to build on in the future, which is now for women's head coach Jerry Waugh.
"We want to finish in the upper division of the Big 12," Waugh said. "It doesn't sound like much, but it would be quite an accomplishment for a northern school in the Big 12, considering the addition of the Texas schools."
Kansas freshmen Susan Tessary and Jill Simpson could press for playing time as early as this season, which starts Sept. 14 and 15 at the Minnesota Invitational in Minneapolis, Simpson, a four-time Kansas 4-A state champion, has impressed Waugh.
"Jill proved throughout her high school career that she can golf and golf with great consistency," Waugh said. "She may have won four consecutive titles at a small school, but the fact that she won them was enough to prove that she has plenty of talent."
Big 12 soccer grows with sport's popularity
Women's team prepares for second year at Kansas
By Brian A. Petrotta Kansan sports writer
in the summer of 1992, the World Cup descended upon several U.S. cities and sent them into a soccer frenzy. Despite its newness, soccer survived, especially at the college level.
The Big 12 Conference has responded to soccer's rise in popularity. In the past three years, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa State, Missouri, Colorado, Oklahoma State and Baylor have added women's soccer teams. This influx of new programs and higher interest have prompted the NCAA to expand the postseason tournament from 16 to 32 teams.
Some may wonder if there is enough interest and talent to keep these upstart programs afloat. Two cases say there is. Texas A&M formed a team in 1992. Last year the Aggies were 18-6 and advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament. Nebraska began NCAA play two years ago, but they've shown enough promise to be named College Sports magazine's the No. 18 team in the nation by College Sports magazine.
The invasion reached Kansas last year. Former North Carolina goalie Lori Walker coached Kansas in its first season. She came from a program that has won 10 national championships since 1982, and had the tough job of recruiting for the new program.
PETER WILSON
Lori Walker
"Recruiting is hit or miss," Walker said. "You either find someone who wants to be part of something or just wants to be the part. We look for players that want to make a difference from the get-go."
The fledgling program did make a difference last season, as the Jayhawks wone of their first five games, though they finished the season 6-12. Combine a highly competitive recruiting class with Walker's tutelage and the Jayhawks appear primed to improve in upcoming seasons.
But recognition of the women's soccer team may not come until an appearance in the NCAA tournament. Northeastern Kansas slowly is warming to the world's most popular sport. Even The Wiz, Kansas City's new professional team, is drawing more than 14,000 fans a game.
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4B
Thursday, August 22, 1996
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The men's and women's team members say they are looking forward to the heightened level of competition.
The quiet, summertime atmosphere of the Kansas swimming office gave way this week to excitement about Big 12 competition and to the rush of incoming freshman and returning swimmers.
Swimmers dive into Big 12
In the Big Eight Conference, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa State and Nebraska were the only schools with swimming programs. Nebraska has been the dominant force when it comes to Big Eight championships. From 1980 to 1994 the Nebraska men took home 15 titles. Nebraska women claimed seven titles since 1985.
100
By Cameron Heeg
Kansan staff writer
Rebecca Andrew
"We all get pumped up for Nebraska," said Rebecca Andrew. Kansas women's team leader in All-American awards. "In the Big Eight, Nebraska was our main competition. I think Texas will dominate, but Texas A&M I think we stack up pretty well against."
The new Texas rivals take their swimming very sorely and have the numbers to prove it. The NCAA Championship, never won by Kansas, has been won by the Longhorn men six times — including last year — and seven times by the women.
"The whole conference is close other than Texas," junior Kostaki Chiligiris said.
That high level of swimming could prove helpful to Kansas and other conference schools.
The returners will be called on to swim at an increased level, Kempf said. All-American Eric Jorgensen returns to the men, and Chiligiris is back as a major factor to the team.
ule," Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf said. "You get to be better by swimming against the best."
"It is great to have Texas and Texas A&M in our sched-
"Kostaki is one of the best all-a- have ever had at the University of Kansas," Kempfsaid.
The women have strong returners in Andrew and fellow All-American Adrienne Turner.
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
Kostaki Chillgiris
The freshmen — 13 for the women and 11 for the men — will add to the teams, but the main focus is on the older swimmers. The team will concentrate first on how the returning swimmers are doing, and then Kempf will take time to look at the freshman class potential he said.
Don't get me wrong, we have an outstanding freshman class," Kempf said. "They are a real good group of swimmers, but this is all new to them. The real key of our season depends upon our upper class stepping up — our upper class doing the job they are capable of doing."
Training begins on Monday, with the first race on Sept. 14 at Carbondale, Ill. The next meet will be the Big 12 Invitational, Oct. 18-19 in St. Louis. There the swimmers will meet for the first Big 12 competition.
To prepare for powerhouses like Texas, Kempf has channeled the focus of the team's training program.
"Every aspect of our program is geared toward improving the individual athlete," Kempf said. "No two athletes are identical, so you can't train them like they were."
Rodman's nuptials just a stunt
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Why stop at something blue?
Dennis Rodman, power forward/publicity hound of the world champion Chicago Bulls, sported blond hair and a white wedding gown at a Manhattan book signing where he coily deflected questions about his marital status.
One thing's for certain: Married or single, the 35-year-old Rodman is a bridal party.
Center.
"Oh, yes. I'm so thrilled," the over-the-top Rodman tamed between autographs when asked if he was tying the knot yesterday. While appearing with David Letterman the night before, Rodman promised he was getting hitched in Rockefeller
But there was no bride or even his current beau, a Manhattan stripper, at Dennis' side when he arrived inside a horse-drawn carriage — just four tuxedo-clad women. Rodman lifted his lace veil to greet the howling crowd, revealing a blond wig reminiscent of ex-flamma Madonna, twin nose piercings and lips painted bright red.
cus and buy an NBA franchise
Rodman, best-selling author of the autobiography *Bad As I Wanna Be*, signed copies of his $22.95 book beneath a mural with the 20th century's other great writers: Hemingway, Orwell, Nabokov, Joyce. His pen was clasped in a hand delicately sheathed in silk, arm-length gloves.
This was a sideshow so appalling — yet luracative — that it could have convinced P.T. Barnum to dump the cir-
Fifth Avenue was packed with hundreds of Dennis wannabes. Free Rodman temporary tattoos were distributed. The crowd, which stretched for two blocks, began assembling at 6 a.m. for a peek at their head-butting hero.
As he does on the court, Rodman was creating chaos.
"Our sound guy got arrested in the stupidity and hysteria coming over here," complained Patrick Byrnes, an MTV producer working on the new fall program, The Rodman World Tour.
The sound man was briefly held in a police car and then released—just in time to record the latest fix for publicity junkie Rodman since the Bulls' title.
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22, 1996
5B
1996-1997 men's basketball schedule
Nov. 12 AUSTRALIA-GEELONG (EXH.) 7:05 p.m. Dec. 15 UNC-ASHEVILLE 1:05 p.m. Jan. 29 at Texas Tech 8:05 p.m.
Nov. 18 CONVERSE ALL-STARS (EXH.) 7:05 p.m. Dec. 21 N.C. STATE 7:05 p.m. Feb. 1 NEBRASKA 3:05 p.m.
Nov. 22 at Santa Clara 9:35 p.m. Dec. 30 WASHBURN 7:05 p.m. Feb. 4 at Missouri 8:05 p.m.
Nov. 25 at Maui Classic (vs. LSU) 8:30 p.m. Jan. 2 BROWN 7:05 p.m. Feb. 9 at Iowa State 2:05 p.m.
Nov. 26 at Maui Classic (vs. Iowa or California) TBA Jan. 4 at Kansas State 9:00 p.m. Feb. 12 OKLAHOMA STATE 8:05 p.m.
Nov. 27 at Maui Classic (championship game Jan. 6 TEXAS 8:35 p.m. Feb. 15 COLORADO 7:05 p.m.
— vs. Chaminade, Massachusetts, Jan. 9 NIAGARA 7:05 p.m. Feb. 17 MISSOURI 8:35 p.m.
South Carolina or Virginia) TBA Jan. 11 at Baylor 12:45 p.m. Feb. 22 KANSAS STATE 3:00 p.m.
Dec. 1 SAN DIEGO 1:05 p.m. Jan. 13 IOWA STATE 8:35 p.m. Feb. 24 at Oklahoma 8:35 p.m.
Dec. 4 vs. Cincinnati (Great Eight — Chicago) 8:45 p.m. Jan. 19 at Connecticut 1:00 p.m. March 2 at Nebraska 2:45 p.m.
Dec. 7 at UCLA 2:30 p.m. Jan. 22 TEXAS A&M 7:05 p.m.
Dec. 11 GEORGE WASHINGTON 8:30 p.m. Jan. 26 at Colorado 3:00 p.m. HOME GAMES IN BOLD. All times are Central.
Basketball
tournament will be on ESPN.
Several marque matchups also highlight the December slate. For the second straight year, Kansas will play in the Great Eight, which will be held in Chicago Dec. 4. The Jayhawks will face Cincinnati in an ESPN televised game.
The first of Kansas' three appearances on CBS will be Dec. 7 in a rematch with UCLA in Los Angeles. The Jayhawks defeated the Bruins 86-70 last year in Lawrence.
The Jan. 19 game at Connecticut and Feb. 9 game at Iowa State will also be televised on CBS.
George Washington will invade Allen Field House in a Dec. 11 ESPN contest. The game will be the only matchup with an NCAA turnament team at home during the non-conference slate.
"It's also a schedule that should challenge our players," said Williams. "We will face some extremely tough competition, and many of those games will be away from Allen Fieldhouse."
Big 12 Conference basketball begins this season. The birth of the new conference brings plenty of schedule changes for the Jayhawks. Kansas will not play Oklahoma State in Stillwater for the first time since 1950.
The first nationally televised Big 12 game will be Jan.4, with Kansas taking on cross-state rival Kansas State in Manhattan.
Games against new Big 12 opponents this season will be home games Jan. 6 against Texas and Jan. 22 against Texas A&M, as well as Jan. 11 at Baylor and Jan. 29 at Tech.
Two of the Jayhawks conference games will be on ABC, the Jan. 26 contest at Colorado, and the regular season finale March 2 at NIT Champion Nebraska.
Football
Continued from Page 1.
- Harris' place.
Seniors Mark Sanders and Ronnie Ward were named team captains.
They were selected by the team.
Both Ward and Sanders are coming back from seasons cut short by injury. Ward was a medical redshirt last season, and Sanders sustained a season-ending knee injury against Colorado.
Two of the four former Jayhawks selected in the 1996 NFL draft survived the cut as teams reduced their rosters to 60. Offensive lineman Chris Banks, a seventh-round pick, survived the
Cincinnati Bengal seventh-round pick Rod Jones also made it through, but in the most surprising move, former Big Eight all-conference selection Darian Brew, a third-round pick of the Miami Dolphins, was cut. This despite the fact that he signed a three-year deal worth just less than a million dollars and received a $310,000 signing bonus.
Denver Broncos cut, but running back L.T. Levine, another Broncos seventh-round pick, did not
Banks said he was happy to be part of the Broncos.
"Right now I'm on the third string, but it's good just to get a chance to play," he said. "I'm comfortable with the coaching staff and the guys on the team."
SPEEDY
Troy Dinges, Victoria sophomore, makes a drive to the basket in the Rock-A-Hawk basketball tournament behind Templin Hall on Wed. Aug.21.
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Thursday, August 22.1996
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Schottenheimer chops 20
60 still on roster, more cuts to come
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Practice was lousy for the Kansas City Chiefs on Tuesday.
Coach Marty Schottenheimer expected that. He knows that on cut-down day.
— something
he sweated
out every year
during his
own nine-year
p l a y i n g
career
CS
They can stay focused for long. "Everybody's concentration is not on the task at hand," Schottenheimer said before he announced the names of the 20 players who were cut after the practice.
nobody can stay focused for long.
"It's a hard day for work. Even the starters are affected by it." he said.
There were no established players released in the mandatory cutdown to 60. But 1996 draft choices given their walking papers
included Dietrich Jells, a wide receiver from Pittsburgh taken in the sixth round, and Ben Lynch, a center from California taken in the seventh.
Roman Anderson, a free agent kicker who battled Bjorn Nittma all during camp for the place-kicker job, was among the released, as was Siran Stacy, who led the World League in rushing for the league champion Scottish Claymores.
Placed on the non-football injury list were veteran linebacker George Jamison, cornerback Kenny McEnyre and defensive end Bryan Proby. Tight end Robert Williams was put on the injured reserve list.
The final cut-down to the 53-man roster is Sunday. The Chiefs based their decisions Tuesday in part on considerations for Thursday night's exhibition game in Chicago.
"We think it's important to limit the play of our starting players," Schottenhheimer said. "We in fact kept a couple of players this cut-down who may not be as good a prospect as some who were let go."
The Chiefs are expected to retain 47 of the 53 players who were on
There are any number of these guys who will ultimately end up playing in the NFL. Marty Schottenheimer Kansas City Chiefs coach
their roster last year when they led the NFL with 13 regular-season wins.
"There are any number of these guys who will ultimately end up playing in the NFL," Schottenheimer said. "And things happen very quickly. There are many things that might result in these young men, if they're available, being back with us, particularly on the developmental squad."
One free agent who found his name on the list of players let go was Brandon Sanders, a 5-foot-9, 176-pound defensive back from Arizona. The former Pac-10 defensive player of the year made a deep impression during training camp with hustle and brains.
"At this time he's just not big enough. But I'm not sure that in time he might be able to work through an off-season program and put himself in a situation where he could compete more favorably," Schottenheimer said. "I've already told him if he's looking for an internship coaching, we've got a job for him. The young man is bright. In minicamp, about the third practice, we were running draw plays and he was calling them out before the ball was snapped."
Schottenheimer said Sanders declined the offer of a coaching job.
"His dream is still to play in the NFL, and I wouldn't sell him short." Schottenheimer said. "He's very determined, and he's a play-maker. His perspective was very interesting. He said, 'Maybe it's just not the right time yet.'"
Woman tackles gender barrier
Football player gains respect
The Associated Press
WILSON, N.C. — Freshman Donnell Finnaman loves the look on a quarterback's face when she plants him back-first into the ground.
Yes, she.
"She's a tough girl," said coach Leonard Baker. "All the boys respect her."
Finnaman's not the first girl to play football in North Carolina. But the hard-hitting, 5-foot-6, 150-pounder is in the running for a starting job on the defensive line at the Eastern North Carolina School for the Deaf.
"She's challenged every one of the boys," he said. "She's tough. Some people on the outside ask us why we let a girl on the team, and we said because she's tough."
Junior running back Jeffrey McMillan agreed.
But some problems are expected for Finnaman, who has played football for 14 years.
"She's going to have a hard time with other teams," said fullback Jermaine Black. "They'll probably pick on her, but the team will look out for her."
Another player recalled a recent tackling drill. A 6-foot-3 boy knocked Finnaman flat. She stood up, motioned for him to try that again and, this time, Finnaman returned the favor.
"She stood him straight up and pushed him back," said school athletics director Gary Farmer. "She wants to be a good football player and not just make the team, but contribute."
The Goldsboro native could get a chance to do that quickly. The team has only about as many players as the 22 positions on offense and defense.
Finnaman said the roughest part so far was getting adjusted to the equipment, especially the shoulder pads.
Handling the physical needs of a full-contact female football player has proved the most delicate part of the process, Baker said.
"We still haven't figured out exactly where she'll dress," Baker said. "We don't have a female trainer, so if she gets hurt, we may have to look at some things, maybe the other sideline first and then if a parent has training."
So far, Finnaman has been dressing in her dormitory room on the school's campus. She will stay with the cheerleading squad on overnight trips.
"Some people on the outside ask us why we let a girl on the team. And we say because she's tough."
Jeffrey McMillan Juniorrunning back
"We're trying to make it a positive thing," Farmer said. "She knows she has limitations. She talks about being sore in the shoulders and upper body."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22, 1996
7B
Baseball helps ease the pain
Montoursville's Little Leagues keep people busy
The Associated Press
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — For one small town near here, baseball is more than just the national pastime. It's a diversion from tragedy.
Sixteen members of a high school French club, their teacher and four chaperones from Montoursville (population 5,000) died July 17 when a TWA jet exploded off Long Island on its way to Paris.
TWA Flight 800 went down as two of Montoursville's youth baseball teams were advancing in the Little League and Junior Little League playoffs in northern Pennsylvania. The Little Leaguers
bowed out early, but the 13-year-old junior team made it as far as the state finals, losing 12-8 and 7-1 in the same day to DuBois for Montoursville's only losses this year.
The progress of the teams and this week's series have kept the minds of many in Montoursville just across the Susquehanna River from Little League's Lamade Stadium off of the search for bodies and on baseball.
"The series is a good thing for us. Baseball is so important here, especially at this time," John Dorin said. "Everything helps from this point on.
The mayor believes in the healing power of sports.
"The jump start is here with Little League. From then on, there will be a lot of activity going on at school with classes and fall sports starting."
expected to be at Montoursville High School on Aug. 27 for the first day of school.
A van load of counselors is
"When our teams were still in it, anything like that provides a healthy diversion. And the World Series creates the right atmosphere," school superintendent David P. Black said.
Before the crash, the city was perhaps best known as the hometown of Baltimore Orioles' pitcher Mike Mussina, whose parents will be honored this week for contributions to Little League.
The dovetailing of the tragedy with the end of baseball season has resulted in at least one conflict. The town organized a parade Sunday for the junior league team but did not publicize it. It came just one day after 3,000 people attended a memorial service for TWA Flight 800 passengers.
"Life has to go on," Little League coach Rex Hilton told the
Williamsport Sun-Gazette. "If you get caught up in your own life, in your own troubles and your sorrows too much, then you tend to lose sight of what is good.
Hilton said he later came to realize how much pressure the crash had put on his players. The Little League team will be part of ceremonies before Saturday's series final at 3:45 p.m.
"When this first occurred, people would ask, 'Is this affecting your team?' Does it have anything to do with your winning and losing?' And my first reaction was that I just didn't know," he said.
Among the victims was Amanda Karschner, the cousin of junior league player Derek Rupert. His father, Rich, kept her picture in his pocket while he was in the bleachers.
"I had an angel in my pocket. I know it helped," the elder Rupert said.
Rodman sued for lewd behavior
SALT LAKE CITY — A woman has sued NBA star forward Dennis Rodman, claiming he pinched her during a San Antonio Spurs game two years ago.
Utah woman claims player pinched her
Lavon Ankers, who was a Delta Center usher at the May 5, 1994, game against the Utah Jazz, alleges Rodman pinched her buttocks after running out of bounds to grab a ball.
The Associated Press
"As defendant Rodman walked past the plaintiff, he placed his hand on the plaintiff's buttocks and pinched her," according to the civil suit filed last week in U.S. District Court. "The touching and pinching was witnessed by bystanders and spectators."
The suit also states that a broadcast transmission of the game shows Rodman walking past
10
Ankers, turning around and touching her on the backside.
Dennis Rodman
Ankers, who is seeking $750,000 in d a m a g e s, claims she was sh a m e d, embarrassed and endured
Ankers' attorney Harry Caston said he and his client decided to file the suit after receiving no response from Rodman's agent in an attempt to resolve the matter without litigation.
great mental suffering.
"Frankly, she didn't invite or in anyway ask Rodman to touch or pinch her on the buttocks," Caston said. "It's been something that she doesn't think is funny and never thought was funny . . . and it's undignified."
Ankers, who is still employed at
A call seeking comment from Rodman's representatives with the Rodman Group also was not immediately returned.
He averaged 14.9 rebounds last season while winning his fifth straight NBA rebounding title. Chicago acquired him from the San Antonio Spurs for Will Perdue last October.
Rodman, who earned the moniker "The Worm" during his years with the Detroit Pistons, made $2.5 million last season as the Bulls won the NBA championship and set a league record with a 72-10 regular-season mark.
the Delta Center, did not return a telephone message left at her home.
Rodman, 35, known for his aggressive rebounding and dyed hair, played for the NBA-champion Chicago Bulls last season and signed a one-year contract with the team earlier this month.
He was the subject of another lawsuit last year by Lisa Beth
Legal year since 1993
"Frankly, she didn't invite or in any way ask Rodman to touch or pinch her on the buttocks."
Harry Caston Lavon Ankers'attorney
Judd, who claimed Rodman infected her with a incurable sexually-transmitted disease on Jan. 14, 1993. Rodman said there was no evidence he suffered from a transmittable form of herpes and a U.S. District Court jury ruled in his favor.
Judd was seeking $1.83 million in damages.
NOW IS THE TIME!
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NOW IS THE TIME!
All-Sports Combo
Student Ticket Distribution
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Wescoe
Beach (In front of Wescoe Hall) 8:30 - 4:00
If you missed your assigned pick-up date, you may pick up your tickets today!
Today is Make-Up Day
Pick up your tickets for tonight's home opener with Ball State 7:00 pm, Memorial Stadium
You may pick up only your own ticket.
You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1996 fee sticker to receive your tickets.
You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the men's basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your Sports Combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up.
If you miss your assigned pick-up date and make-up day,you may pick up you tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East Lobby of Allen Fieldhouse beginning Friday,August 30,1996..
KANSAS FOOTBALL 1996 Home Opener, Tonight, 7:00 pm Jayhawks ys. Ball State
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8B
Thursday, August 22,1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS
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AMES, Iowa — Fame has changed Troy Davis. Now, the Iowa State running back may be even harder to tackle.
Although it would have been easy to kick back and bask in the glow of his 2,000-yard sophomore season, Davis spent his time doing something more purposeful. He went to the weight room and got bigger. And stronger. And faster.
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The Associated Press
The only thing the Iowa State running back didn't beef up, it seems, was his ego. Success went to his arms and legs, not his head.
Troy Davis ready for new season
PETER KIMBURG
"He's still just a 20-year-old kid who walks to and from
practice and class every day," said Kirby Wilson, who coaches Iowa State's running backs. "He doesn't even have a car. He just likes being one of the guys. It's the way he's always been. It's the way he is today. He's just a normal guy."
Normal until he gets on the football field. Then he becomes something special.
After carrying the ball just 35 times as a freshman in 1994, Davis led the nation in rushing last fall with 2,010 yards. He became the fifth NCAA Division I back and first sophomore to reach 2,000 yards. He was a first-team All-American and finished fifth in the Heisman Tro
"Last season was like a dream," Davis said.
phy voting.
Unknown outside Ames a year ago, Davis begins his junior season as the preseason player of the year in the new Big 12 Conference, a member of everyone's preseason All-America team and listed along with Florida's Danny Wuerffel and Tennessee's Peyton Manning as leading contenders for the Heisman.
And he did it on a 3-8 team against defenses that knew full well who was going to get the ball.
If so, the Cyclones are hoping he never wakes up.
"There's going to be more pressure," Davis said. "I know defenses are going to be keying on (number) 28. I've got to get prepared for that and keep running hard."
His preparation actually started months ago. Already one of the best conditioned players on the team, Davis attacked his off-season workouts with even more vigor.
He added weight to his 5-foot-8 frame, going from 183 pounds to 190. He upped his bench press to 365 pounds — 80 more than last year. He increased his vertical jump from 28 inches to 32-1/2 inches. He shaved time off all the sprints the Iowa State coaches use to test quickness.
"He turned up the intensity, and he has the numbers to prove it." Wilson said. "We're all happy for him, and he's happy for himself. But he's not finished. Troy's road to success is always under construction. He's going to continue to work hard because it means something to him."
Iowa State's losing record and Davis' lack of preseason recognition hurt his Heisman chances last year. Those two factors were so much to overcome that he was the first 2,000-yard rusher not to win the trophy.
"I think Troy's the best college football player in the nation. I've
Not that getting 2,000 yards again is a sure thing. No one has ever done it twice. With defenses stacked against Davis, the Cyclones may have to pass more often, which would mean fewer carries for their star runner. All of which Davis recognizes.
neverseen
anybody run like that."
He has the name now but still doesn't have the team. Starting play in the Big 12, the Cyclones will be hard pressed to match their three victories of last season, even if Davis has another big year.
"I'm not even going to think about the Heisman now. I'm not even looking at it," Davis insisted. "I'm just thinking about playing this season and winning games."
"We need to be a balanced team this year," he said. "We need to be half run and half pass. We've got to pass more."
If that makes Iowa State a better team, Davis is all for it, even if it means fewer yards for him — and no Heisman.
Todd Doxzon IowaState quarterback
Davis' 1995 season included some dazzling performances, starting with the opener against Ohio University. He ran for a school-record
Three games later, Davis broke that record by rambling for 302 yards in less than three quarters of action against UNLV and the Heisman talk began.
291 yards in that game, when he carried the ball five more times than he did in all of 1994.
But Davis didn't just pad his statistics against weaklings. He also ran for 203 yards against Colorado, 183 against Kansas State and squeezed, out 121 against Nebraska.
"I think Troy's the best college football player in the nation," Iowa State quarterback Todd Doxzon said. "I've never seen anybody run like that."
"But I've got to admit, on a couple of draws I said the heck with that fake. I'm going to watch this guy run. Man, he'd be shaking people off, I'd like to do that kind of stuff."
One question is how much longer Davis will be doing it at Iowa State. If he runs up big numbers again, the temptation to declare for the NFL draft next spring will be strong.
What frustrated Doxzon is that he didn't always get to see his teammate run in person.
"It was mostly watching film," Doxson said. "I'd sit back, and I'd be like, he did that? I'm carrying out my fake, and most of the times I don't even see what he does.
"That's a lot," Davis said. "He's worth it. That's my role model. I think about it once in a while, but it's not like my everyday thing. I know I've got a tough season coming up. I've got to put that to the side right now."
Davis said he was trying not to think about that now, although he laughed and smiled and his eyes sparkled when someone mentioned Emmitt Smith's $8 million contract.
Davis was standing in the south end zone of Iowa State's new grass field as he spoke. It's an area he hopes to be running into a lot this fall.
SLAB
...working to provide to the students of the University of Kansas the means to be active participants in the political life of their community.
Board
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Applications are now being accepted for the following coordinator positions:
Education/Forums Publications Voter Participation Issue Research Jayhawk Network Treasurer Lobby Coordinator
- Applications are available in the Student Senate Office, 410 Kansas Union.
- Application deadline:
5:00 PM, Friday,
August 30, 1996.
- For more information call 864-7337/864-3710
-SLAB is a division of the University of Kansas Student Senate
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22, 1996
9B
Jimmy's in control again
Johnson says he's in a 'perfect situation'
The Associated Press
DAVIE, Fla. — Jimmy Johnson has his priorities in order.
First is football. The next three are his boat, his tropical fish and his girlfriend, hairdresser Rhonda Rookmaker. To put things in further perspective, the only non-football related item in the Dolphins' office after he replaced Don
Shula is a picture of the boat.
"The perfect situation," Johnson says after two years in the coaches' holding tank as an analyst for Fox Television. "I'm in Miami and I'm coaching."
Johnson is a Texan who fell in love with south Florida when he became coach of the University of Miami Hurricanes in 1984. In the questionnaire she
A. H. P. G. W. M. R. S. A. N. O. L
Jimmy Johnson
NFL sends to all new head coaches, Johnson came to the section "favorite college town," and filled in "Miami" — not State College, Pa.; South Bend, Ind.; Ann Arbor, Mich.; Norman, Oklahoma; or College Station, Texas.
Miami certainly isn't the same as Irving, Texas, where Jerry Jones would pop up beside Johnson on the sidelines or in the locker room, a Saudi prince or two in tow, and suggest that the glory due Johnson and the Dallas Cowboys was really the work of the owner.
Here Johnson is in total control as coach and general manager of the Dolphins. Wayne Huizenga, the team's owner, keeps a low profile. And Shula, the team's vice chairman, stays out of the way after being pushed aside following a record 347 wins in 33 NFL seasons, 26 of them with the Dolphins.
How much control does Johnson have? Less than three weeks before the season opener, he made it clear to rookie free agent Larry Izzo, who knocked down two Chicago Bears on a kickoff in an exhibition.
"Izzo!" he yelled. "Where ya from?"
"Woodlands," Izzo replied.
"Outside Houston?" asked Johnson.
"Yo, I know."
"Well, call your family and tell them that only two guys have made the Dolphins right now — Dan Marino and Larry Izzo.
That's Jimmy Johnson.
The Dolphins, picked last year to reach the Super Bowl, struggled to make the playoffs then were ousted in the first round by the Buffalo Bills. Johnson sat on his boat and listened
to the voices calling for him to replace Shula. He had to be laughing.
When Johnson took over in January, he replaced Tom Landry in Dallas, then Shula in Miami — two men who dominated the NFL for nearly three decades.
Why settle for replacing guys like Rich Kotite and Sam Wyche when you can go after legends?
"I always listened when someone called," Johnson said of the offers he got after leaving the Cowboys in 1993 and becoming a TV commentator. "But to tell the truth, I really wasn't interested. It would have taken an awful lot to get me out of Miami."
In fact, south Florida's romance with Johnson has come full circle.
When he arrived in Miami from Oklahoma State in 1984 to take over a national championship team abandoned by Howard Schnellenberger, he was known in south Florida as the guy who went 0-6 against Oklahoma. In fact, he wasn't nearly as well-known as his high school classmate in Port Arthur, Texas — Janis Joplin.
It took Johnson 13 months to establish himself. The breakthrough came Oct. 19, 1985, when he took the Hurricanes to Norman and beat the University of Oklahoma 27-14. That was the catalyst toward a national title at Miami two years later.
"Life's funny sometimes," said Barry Switzer, who replaced Johnson in Dallas and won the Super Bowl last season. "When Jimmy went to Miami, he was a nobody. When I got here, he was the legend, and I was the nobody."
The question is whether Johnson will be able to maintain his stature.
This year's Dolphins look — on paper, at least — like a .500 team. Johnson might get an extra victory or two with his motivational psychology, based on an obscure book called Flow, by Mihaly Csikszentmihaly.
The philosophy of Flow is Johnson's philosophy: Success in big things builds on success in little ones. It certainly did in Dallas, and it might in Miami, where the waiting time can't be as long. Marino is almost 35 and has three years left on his contract.
Johnson acknowledges that it's a different team in a different situation, but he's approaching his first year with the Dolphins the same way he approached the Cowboys when he took over in Dallas in 1989.
That Dallas team was 3-13, while the Dolphins went 9-7 last season and made the playoffs. And in Dallas he didn't have Marino to build around.
At least four first-year players could start, including both running backs. Keith Byars has been shifted to fullback to fill a yawning gap there.
That's Jimmy Johnson.
The Dolphins lost Bryan Cox, Troy Vincent and Marco Coleman to free agency, costing
"When Jimmy went to Miami,he was a nobody. When I got here, he was the legend and I was the nobody."
Barry Switzor Dallas Cowboys head coach
them three defensive starters. Jeff Cross, their best remaining pass rusher, had back surgery in July and is lost for at least half the season.
Zach Thomas, an overachieving fifth-round draft choice, got the job at middle linebacker, and Daryl Gardener, Miami's first-round pick, is being counted on at defensive end — a big load for a rookie labeled in college as an under-achiever.
The players who were let go say they respect Johnson. Cox, who signed with Chicago because the Dolphins didn't have the salary cap room to keep him after last year's splurge, said: "I appreciated Jimmy Johnson saying, 'Bryan, I don't know if you'll like it or not, but this is the situation we're in.' I appreciated him being honest. Basically, he had a wish list and told me, 'You call at No. 3, so basically you're not going to be here.'"
Wide receiver Fred Barnett, one of the key free-agent signings, is out because of knee surgery. Johnny Mitchell decided to quit football. He had been signed to play tight end in place of Eric Green and Ronnie Williams, who were both cut.
Still, winning here is supposed to take less time than in Dallas, where Johnson won the Super Bowl in his fourth season.
"When I first got there (Dallas), I was literally running a tryout camp," he said. "I remember one week, we had a guy named Kevin Lilly. He worked out on Tuesday, we signed him on Wednesday, he practiced Thursday and Friday, started Sunday and we cut him on Monday. That won't happen here."
But on one day of training camp last week, Johnson cut two players, demoted cornerback J.B. Brown to second string, and installed second-vear man Calvin Jackson in Brown's spot.
"I'm not going to say anything's changed," Jackson said when he learned of his promotion. "Because around here, things are always changing, and it could change back tomorrow."
That, too, is Jimmy Johnson.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Barkley trade lets Suns release point guard
Elliot Perry moving to Milwaukee in swap for first-round pick
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — The Phoenix Suns, with a glut of guards following the Charles Barkley trade, will send Elliot Perry to the Milwaukee Bucks, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.
The Bucks, who have pursued the point guard for two years, will send Phoenix a conditional first-round draft pick for Perry, the paper reported yesterday.
The newspaper reported that the deal would be announced officially after Sept. 1 because the bonus money Perry received last year would not count toward his base salary after that date.
Bucks representative Joe Condo said the team wouldn't comment on the report
If you look at the point guard situation, we have four point guards. You could pretty much believe that something will... take place at that position. It will probably be announced a month or so from now, but something will happen."
"We never comment on rumored
trades." he said.
Perry, who averaged 8.6 points and 4.4 assists last season, became expendable when the Suns acquired Sam Cassell along with forwards Robert Horry, Mark Bryant and Chucky Brown from the Houston Rockets in Sunday's trade for
Jerry Colangelo Phoenix Suns president
Barkley.
The Suns also have point guards Kevin Johnson and Steve Nash, their top draft pick, on their roster.
Suns president Jerry Colangelo alluded to the likelihood of a deal at a news conference in Phoenix when Barkley was
"If you look at the point guard situation, we have four point guards," he said. "You could pretty much believe that something will, if it hasn't already happened, take place at that position. It will probably be announced a month or so from now, but something will happen."
traded.
The Bucks sought Perry earlier this summer in a proposed three-way deal that had Milwaukee signing free agent Dan Majerle and then trading him to Phoenix for Perry. The NBA nullified the deal, saying the Suns were trying to circumvent the salary cap.
The Bucks also tried to sign Perry last off-season, when he was a free agent, but he refused their offer and returned to the Suns.
Perry, 27, was selected in the second round of the 1991 draft out of Memphis State by the Los Angeles Clippers.
He made the roster but was waived that November and had stints in the Continental Basketball Association before joining the Suns during the 1993-94 season.
Des Moines team out of Little League World Series
Dominican Republic youngsters will face Taiwan in semifinals
The Associated Press
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Marshalltown, Iowa, was eliminated from the Little League World Series despite beating Cranston, R.I., 6-1 yesterday behind Jeff Clemons two-hitter on two days of rest.
Cranston (1-2) awaited the outcome of yesterday evening's game between Moorpark, Calif., and Panama City, Fla., to see whether the Rhode Islanders were eliminated from the series. A win by undefeated Florida would leave California at 1-2 and tied with Rhode Island.
Also yesterday, Taiwan routed Canada 21-2 to set up today's semifinal against the Dominican Republic, which beat Saudi Arabia 13-0.
Iowa (1-2) was ousted because it gave up only a fraction more runs per inning (16 in 17 innings) than did Rhode Island (15 in 16 innings). If Iowa had surrendered one less run, Rhode Island would be out.
Rhode Island manager Mike Varrato said his team's chances were about as good as winning the Rhode Island Powerball. But they were much better than that. His team's progress depended on California losing and giving up more than seven runs.
Clement get two days' less rest than major league pitchers and won yesterday despite walking three,
throwing two wild pitches and hitting a batter. He doubled and singled and was hit twice himself.
"We kept him out of batting practice and had him make a few throws, and he said his arm felt tired but not sore," manager and father Brad Clement said. "He got through those last two innings, but it looked like he was a little more than tired."
Iowa gave up the run that kept it out of the semifinals in the top of the first. Rhode Island took a 1-0 lead when Tom Michael's single to right scored Craig Stinson, who had been hit in the head by Clement but was unhurt.
Michael then walked in two Marshalltown runners in the bottom of the inning and another in the second and also hit three batters in his three innings.
"I thought the strike zone was kind of small today," Varrato said. "Tommy felt that he was getting sneezed."
Mike Mogard had an RBI double in the third, scoring Jason Nusbaum and Jory Krueger, then scored ahead of a double play on Tyler Davis' fly ball to center. Mogard scored after a walk in the fifth on Stinson's throwing error.
The top two U.S. teams meet in one semifinal today, with the other matching the top two international teams. The championship game is Saturday.
For Taiwan, Chen Chao-ping homered twice and Chiu Chi-pin homered once during a 13-run second inning. The game ended after 3 1/2 innings under the Little League's 10-run rule.
Taiwan also scored five runs in the first, and Hsie
"We kept him out of batting practice and had him make a few throws, and he said his arm felt tired but not sore."
Brad Clement manager
Chin-hsiung hit a three-run homer, his fourth of the series, and scored four runs.
Darwing Hernandez pitched a two-hitter, striking out six for the Dominican Republic, which has a team in the series for the fourth time in the 1990s. The game was called after five innings.
Roman Solano drove in two runs with a single during the Dominican Republic's three-run first inning and hit a home run, leading off a six-run fourth.
Also in the fourth, Romer Guillen hit his second home run of the series, a three-run shot, and Julio Lara hit his second homer of the series. Guillen went 4-for-4 and is batting .555.
Jury acquits Neon Deion in civil lawsuit
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Deion Sanders was acquitted yesterday of injuring a security guard while leaving Riverfront Stadium on a motor scooter two years ago.
"This proves you can't take advantage of a person because he's financially secure, and I think that was the whole issue." Sanders said.
The jury in the $1 million personal injury lawsuit said Sanders, then playing with the Cincinnati Reds, did not injure the guard.
Sanders, now a defensive back with the Dallas Cowboys, was acquitted last year of criminal charges stemming from the confrontation.
Deliberations in the civil trial, which began Monday, lasted about an hour.
The jurors also ruled the countersuit filed against Cincinnati police detective Herb Kohus for malicious prosecution was not valid.
Kohus sued Sanders in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court. The civil suit said Kohus was injured when Sanders allegedly dragged him with his bike during a dispute after a Reds game in 1994.
Kohus' lawyer, John Rockel, said Sanders' celebrity status might have contributed to the outcome.
"We tend . . . to cut them more slack than the average Joe. I think that was a factor, but I don't know how much," Rockel said.
No appeal was expected.
"It's like we won one and he won one," Rockel said. "We can live with that."
"It wasn't a case about race or the quality of the Cincinnati police," Lawson said.
making the counter to imply that said.
"We didn't want anything; we didn't want
"We didn't want anything; we didn't want money." Lawson said...
During his closing arguments, Lawson urged the jury not to award Kohus anything.
"You can't use your badge with the Cincinnati police as a way to make money," he said.
Kohus was seeking reimbursement for about $7,100 in lost wages and medical costs, $30,000 in pain and suffering, and up to $500,000 in punitive damages. Rockel said they never had expected to receive $1 million.
Kohus testified that he could not work as a security guard at the stadium because of injuries he sustained during the dispute with Sanders.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22, 1996
118
Cowboys'reign ends; Green Bay could pack Super Bowl victory
By Dave Goldberg Associated Press football writer
A lot of strange things have happened to the NFL since the Dallas Cowboys beat the Pittsburgh Steelers to win their third Super Bowl in four years.
The Cleveland Browns are the Baltimore Ravens. The Houston Oilers are on the way to Tennessee, showcasing young stars like Steve McNair and Eddie George before 40,000 empty seats in the Astrodome during a lame-duck season.
Between Sept. 1 and Oct. 13, Michael Irvin will be picking up roadside trash and serving meals in AIDS hospices, not catching footballs.
Brett Favre, the NFL's MVP, is two months out of drug rehabilitation.
For the first time in 27 years, Don Shula no longer coaches the Miami Dolphins. Jimmy Johnson does.
Oh yes, the Cowboys won't become the first team ever to win four Super Bowls in five years and six overall. Take it to the bank. Take it to Vegas. Take it to the Oneida Casino near Green Bay International Airport.
For the Vince Lombardi trophy could very well go back to Green Bay, to the team that Lombardi coached to wins in the first two Super Bowls, the Packers. If not, look to the Buffalo Bills, who could make their fifth appearance in seven seasons in the NFL title game. And maybe win it this time, say 27-24?
But that's in the future. Here's the now.
"We all have short memories," said commissioner Paul Tagliabue. "We've had stars in trouble before — remember Lawrence Taylor (suspended for four games in 1988 for violating the NFL drug policy)? The overwhelming majority of more than 1,500 players stay cut of trouble."
That's the kind of thing commissioners are paid seven figure salaries to say. It's also true.
But it doesn't lessen the impact when one of the biggest stars on the highest profile team
in football — if not all of sports — is arrested in a hotel room with a quantity of cocaine and two women who describe themselves as self-employed models. That's what happened to Irvin March 4 in Irving, Texas, not far from the Cow boys' training complex.
DALLAS
The upshot: a plea bargain to cocaine possession, a sentence of 800 hours of community service and a five-game suspension by the NFL, which will keep the game's second-best wide receiver off the field until Oct. 13.
The other upshot: a lot of hemming and hawing about partying by sundry Cowboys off the field and just a touch
of paranoia from Dallas.
"I'm not saying we're being singled out," said Jerry Jones, in the second year of his marketing battle with the NFL hierarchy. "But this is a result of our prominence."
In Irvin's place at wide receiver — and this is a sidelight that could turn into a sideshow — will be Deion Sanders, switching from cornerback to pass-catcher. That kind of switch would be akin to moving from centerfield to catcher in Sanders' former career.
Irvin's woes emphasize the problems of the Cowboys, who have paid so much to their major stars that they have little room below the salary cap for role players. Smith enters the season with a sprained left knee, the same injury that's sidelined left tackle Mark Tuinei, and Sanders' switch to offense leaves the secondary thin.
There are no such problems in Green
G
pay, where rave will be playing after he voluntarily entered the Meninger Clinic for an addiction to the painkiller Vicodin.
Volunteering makes him free from NFL sanction, and there's little reason to think he won't continue the pace of the last two
Talk about strange.
seasons — 72 touchdown passes and just 27 interceptions.
Here was Don Shula in the press box at Giants Stadium for a Jets-Giants exhibition, plugging the satellite TV package that allows fans to get all of a week's games at the same time. After 33 seasons and 347 wins as a head coach, 26 of the seasons and 274 of the wins of them in Miami, he is now a "consultant" to the Dolphins.
One name Shula does not utter often is "Johnson," who between trips to the Fox Television studio last year sat on his boat in Biscayne Bay listening to South Florida fans clamor for him to replace Shula.
"When you get down to it," said Johnson, who coached the Cowboys to Super Bowl wins in 1992 and 1993. "I don't think I would have gone anywhere but here."
His team probably isn't going anywhere. Not this year. Although Johnson said his window of opportunity in Miami was three years—the length of Dan Marino's contract—he's spending the first year a bit like he did in Dallas, where he finished 1-15.
But Johnson's old team has its problems, too.
But Johnson's team has its problems. The free agent attrition continued in the offseason and into training camp, thanks largely to the salary cap. A total of 22 free agents have left since an incredibly deep Dallas team beat Buffalo 52-17 after the 1992 season for the first title in its run.
"We have stars, but most teams have a lot more depth," says coach Barry Switzer.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Group takes car back;sues Irvin for more than $1 million dollars
Toyota dealers sue Dallas football star
DALLAS — Michael Irvin will return the car he has been driving to publicize Dallas-area Toyota dealers, but whether they'll get their money back will be settled in court.
The Associated Press
The North Texas Toyota Dealers Association sued Irvin on Tuesday for about $1.4 million in damages, alleging the football star misrepresented himself as a moral person when he signed an endorsement contract on Feb. 12.
State District Judge Candace Tyson yesterday set a March 10 trial date in the case filed against Irvin, who pleaded no contest to cocaine possession last month.
"Had the dealers association known of Michael Irvin's immoral lifestyle, it would not have entered into the agreement," the lawsuit states.
The suit accuses Irvin of violating deceptive-trade laws, which means that a jury could assess a verdict three times the specified amount of damages if Irwin is found liable.
The group also wanted the judge to order Irvin to immediately return a 1996 Toyota Land Cruiser that was furnished to him for one year under the terms of the contract. His lawyer agreed to return the car, valued at $50,000, by early this afternoon.
88
Telephone calls to Irvin's agent, Steve Endicott, were unanswered vesterday.
Police in Irving, Tex., found Irvin, a former teammate and two topless dancers in a hotel room on March 4, along with marijuana, cocaine and drug paraphernalia.
KNIGHT-RIDDER TRIBUNE
Dallas Cowbys star Michael Irvin is being sued by an area Toyota dealer
Larry Friedman, attorney for the association, said the scandal had prompted the group to scrap a spring advertising campaign at the last minute. The campaign cost the association $200,000, including $110,000 for Irvin's services, Friedman said.
Last month, inch pleaded no contest to a felony cocaine possession
charge after another topsless dancer testified outside the jury's presence that Irvin had attended all-night drug and sex parties.
The player was sentenced to four years deferred adjudication, fined $10,000 and ordered to perform 800 hours of community service.
for more than $1.4 million in damages.
He was later suspended for the first five games of this season by the NFL for the drug violation.
The lawsuit seeks to recover the lost cost of the campaign, along with $1.2 million the group alleged that it lost in sales because of the aborted campaign, plus court costs.
Stefan Edberg set to play in his last U.S. Open
Top-seeded Graf to compete for second straight Open title
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Twice a U.S. Open champion, Sweden's Stefan Edberg could find that his first appearance in this year's tournament will be his last.
Edberg, who will retire later this year, will play eight-seeded Jim Courier in the opening round of the U.S. Open, which begins its two-week run at the National Tennis Center on Monday.
The 30-year-old Edberg won America's Grand Slam tournament in 1991 and 1992. Also the winner of the Australian Open in 1858 and 1878, and Wimbledon in 1888 and 1990, Edberg was ranked No.1 in the world in 1987 and 1988.
Courier reached the No.1 ranking in 1992, the year he won his second-straight French Open and his first of two Australian Opens.
Pete Sampras, currently ranked No. 1 and the defending U.S. Open champion, is top-seeded for
this year's tournament. His first-round opponent will be David Rifk of the Czech Republic.
The U.S. Open made several changes to the men's seedings instead of following the ATP Tour rankings.
Michael Chang, ranked No. moved to No. 2 in the seedings, changing places with second-ranked Thomas Muster of Austria.
Yevgeny Kafelnikov of Russia, ranked fourth, was dropped to seventh in the seedings. With Boris Becker pulling out of the tournament because of an injured wrist, Goran Ivanisevic was seeded fourth, followed by Wimbledon, Champion
in the world, was
in the world, was
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Monica Seles, co-ranked No. 1 with Graf and seeded No. 2, will face Anne Miller in her first match.
Eighth-seeded Lindsay Davenport, who won the gold medal at the Atlanta Olympics, is scheduled to play Karina Habsudova of Slovakia in one of the most competitive first-round battles. Habsudova is ranked 17th in the world.
Other matchups include No. 6 Anke Huber against South Africa's Amanda Coetzer, No. 5 Iva Majoli against Judith Wiesner of Austria, and No. 16 Gabriela Sabatini, the 1990 champion, against Patria Hy-Boulais of Canada.
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DIVE
Can you draw better than this?
The Hill, a monthly magazine published by The University Daily Kansan, is dedicating a section of each issue to KU's artistically inclined. All students interested in publishing artwork photographs, poetry or comic strips on the pages of one of the country's best college newspapers should submit an entry. Chosen entries will appear in the Fall 1996 issues of The Hill.
Entries due by 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 3. First issue is Thursday, Sept. 12.
For more information contact Amy McVey, Special Sections Editor at 864-4810.
The Hill
Brought to you by.. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 22, 1996
13B
AFC PREVIEW
Buffalo Bills favored to win the AFC
Barry Wilner AP Football Writer
The last three AFC representatives — OK, losers — in the Super Bowl were Pittsburgh, San Diego and Buffalo. The three teams who will win the AFC division crowns this year likely will be the Steelers, Chargers and Bills.
Like every other team in the league, however, this trio has its holes. Free agency, age and injuries, even bad luck, have made sure of that.
The entire AFC is a jumble in which only one team,
HALL OF FAME
be truly awful. Those on the rise, such as Houston, Cincinnati, Jacksonville, New York and Seattle, aren't quite ready to leap into the elite category, such as it is. Instead, the old stand-bus in Buffalo see.
ready for one last-gasp drive for the elusive championship. This time, the Bills just might get it.
The core cast of Jim Kelly, Thurman Thomas, Bruce Smith, Kent Hull and Andre Reed is intact. It's older and more banged-up but with enough experience and remaining talent to get back to the top.
"I've done just about everything I can possibly do except win a Super Bowl," Hull says. "If it comes around the time that we win a Super Bowl, I'm probably going to hang it up."
Kelly had off-season show der surgery and is throwing well again. The amazingly consistent Thomas now has a decent backup in Darick Holmes, if Holmes overcomes a tendency to fumble. Reed might be the No. 3 receiver behind free-agent
g
pickup Quinn Early and rookie Eric Moulds. Hull, the always-reliable center, has two solid players to his left in tackle John Fina and guard Ruben Brown.
But it's Smith who has gotten the most help in the past few years. The Bills added Bryce Paup last season and the linebacker-end led the NFL with 171/2 sacks to be named Defensive Player of the Year. This season, the big addition is inside linebacker Chris Spielman, a monster against the run and a better team player than the departed Cornelius Bennett.
The secondary, if cornerback Jeff Burris keeps developing and stays healthy, might be the best the Bills have had. Phil Hansen, Ted Washington and Jim Jeffcoat are strong complements on the line for Smith, around whom everything still revolves.
"He's amazing, that guy," Paup says. "He could probably just show up on Sunday and not even look at anything until two minutes before the game, and he'd still be Bruce Smith."
Pittsburgh
The Steelers have some players
like that, too. Limebacker Greg
Lloyd is an All-Pro on an out-
standing unit. Cornerback
games.
Rod Woodson made the league's all-time greatest squad and is the anchor of another first-rate group. Pittsburgh's defense will decide many
But the offense will miss Neil O'Donnell more than anyone imagined. O'Donnell's last two seasons were terrific, and Jim Miller has much to learn to reach that level.
At least he has lots of support, particularly if Jerome Bettis breaks out of his funk to complement Erric Pegram in the backfield. The receiving corps is deep and skilled, and the offensive line, despite losing tackle Leon Searcy, remains solid, especially at center (Dermontti Dawson) and left guard (free agent Will Wolfford).
San Diego needed a 5-0 run to qualify as a wild card last season, a year after going to its first Super Bowl.
injuries and inconsistency hurt the Chargers, but they produced when they had to.
G
They still have players who can come through in the conference's most competitive division.
We've been there before, and we want to get back there, to the top," says star linebacker Junior Seau. "We still have the foundation of players who got us to the Super Bowl."
"We've been there before.
Actually, not that many. But enough for another solid shot.
Seau is joined by dependable Kurt Gouveia and unheralded Lewis Bush, but the strength of San Diego's defense is up front, particularly if newcomer Marcus Coleman plays as he did for coach Bobby Ross at Georgia Tech, where they won the national championship.
The Chargers are confident Aaron Hayden's 96.8-yard average in four starts last year was a harbinger. Hayden replaces Natrone Means as the workhorse back, while standout Tony Martin (90 catches in '95)
KC
is by far the best of a questionable for or receivers. Nobody has a better kicking game than the Chargers.
Kansas City, which went 13-3 a year ago and has almost the same cast, should push the Charg-
Which Steve Bono will show up at quarterback? Can Marcus Allen keep going forever in the backfield? Is Tamarick Vanover ready to step up as a game-breaking receiver?
ars. Still, the memory of that 10-7 loss at home to the Colts — after a perfect regular season — is haunting.
At least there are few doubts about the offensive line.
If the Chiefs are a power this year, it will be because of the defense. Neil Smith, Derrick Thomas, Dale Carter, Dan Saleaumua and mates are capable of carrying a team to unexpected heights.
The Raiders were at those heights,
2 and surging, when everything went wrong last fall. They lost their final six games after Jeff Hostetler
8
was injured and the backup quarterbacks flopped. There was turmoil in the locker room and among the coaches.
But there's too much talent for a healthy Raiders team to flounder. Added to the defense were Super Bowl MVP Larry Brown at cornerback, Russell Maryland at tackle and Lorenzo Lynch at safety. The Raiders already had monstrous tackle Chester McGlockton, end Pat Swilling and linebacker Rob Fredrickson.
The offense, when run by Hoss, also is impressive, sparked by steady wideout Tim Brown and runners Harvey Williams and Napoleon Kaufman. Top draft pick Rickey Dudley could be a force at tight end.
Indy should grab another wild-card slot, and the Colts proved how dangerous they are in that position with their postseason spurt last January. A shakeup in the coaching staff might be detrimental, but memories of coming within a dropped desperation pass of the Super Bowl should spur Jim Harbaugh, Marshall Foulk, Touw Bennett, Jeff Horn.
Faulk, Tony Bennett, Jeff Herrod et al.
If Houston could expect any kind of home support, it might catch Pittsburgh in the Central. Wait a year on the Oilers, who have rebuilt well.
A
Cincinnati doesn't have
enough defense to make the playoffs, and Jacksonville doesn't have the experience yet. Miami is being remade by Jimmy Johnson. All three could be major factors in 1997.
But this is 1996.
PREDICTIONS: EAST — Buffalo; CENTRAL — Pittsburgh; WEST — San Diego.
Wild Cards — Indianapolis, Kansas City, Oakland. AFC Champion — Buffalo.
Player may help Chiefs meet goals
Dolphins send steady kicker Stoyanovich to Kansas City for an undisclosed draft choice
Associated Press
DAVIE, Fla. — The Miami Dolphins traded Pete Stoyanovich, the NFL's fourth all-time accurate kicker, to Kansas City yesterday for an undisclosed draft choice.
"I kind of saw things coming," a teary-eyed Stoyanovich said after being informed of the trade. "There will always be a place in my heart for South Florida. It's been a great thrill."
Dolphins coach Jimmy Johnson, who puts a high price on field positions, decided to go with untested second-year kicker Joe Nedney because of his long kickoffs.
"Pete can kick off the ball as well, but not as long as Joe," Johnson said.
Kansas City's weak kicking game was highlighted in the Chiefs' first playoff game when Lin Elliott missed three field goals in a 10-7 loss to Indianapolis.
The Chiefs waived Roman Anderson this week, and it was thought that Bjorn Nittmo had won the job. On Monday, Nedney made a 48-yard field goal in the rain against Minnesota, while Stoyanovich hit the uprights on a 42-yard attempt.
Stoyanovich spent seven years with the Dolphins. He holds the Dolphins record for field goals 50 yards or more with 16. He also made the longest goal in NFL playoff history — a 58-yarder against the Chiefs on Jan. 5, 1991.
He ranks as the second leading scorer in Dolphins history with 774 career points. In the past seven seasons, only Atlanta's Morten Anderson has scored more points or made more field goals.
"Very rarely do you trade kickers," Johnson said. "It's an unusual case. Pete is a quality kicker, and Kansas City had problems with their field goals last year. It cost them in the playoffs."
The draft pick that the Dolphins receive from the Chiefs could move up one round if Stoyanovich makes the Pro Bowl.
Nedney, cut by Green Bay in 1995, was signed by the Dolphins last march as a free agent and spent time on the team's practice squad. He made only 39 of 70 field goal attempts while at San Jose State. However, he has worked on his foot work with Miami coaches to eliminate a hook in his kick.
"He's got some big shoes to fill," Stoyanovich said.
"But he has a size 13 foot."
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Gain Professional Newsroom Experience At THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan is looking for dedicated students interested in publishing work in the Kansan, the Hill and on UDKi.
Students interested in the areas of sports/news reporting, graphics and design are encouraged to attend the Correspondent meeting at 5:30pm on Aug.26 in room 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For more information contact Amy McVey, Kansan Correspondent/Tab Editor at 864-4810 or pick up an application in 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Real World
Experience
4
14B
Thursday, August 22, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Golf tournament is whole family affair
The Associated Press
AKRON, Ohio — As director of the World Series of Golf, Jim Cook is supposed to be impartial.
But Cook had a rooting interest when the tournament began yesterday at Firestone Country Club. His son John, who has won two tournaments this year, is in the elite 48-man field.
"Whatever happens now, happens," Jim Cook said. "There's nothing I can do to help him. He has his business, and I have mine."
John Cook, who grew up in Akron, Ohio, is part of a star-studded field
that includes the winners of the four major championships — (Nick Faldo, Masters; Steve Jones, U.S. Open; Tom Lehman, British Open; and Mark Brooks, PGA) — plus a strong international contingent.
Tom Watson, Phil McKielson,
Corey Pavin, Davis Love III and Fred
Couples will play, along with defending
champion Greg Norman and
Craig Parry of Australia, Ernie Els
and Wayne Westner of South Africa
and Constantino Rocca of Italy. They
will vie for a $360,000 first-place
check in the 72-hole, winners-only
event.
John Cook won a U.S. Amateur
championship 1978, and he has won eight PGA Tour events, including the St. Jude Classic in late June and the CVS Charity Classic a month later.
Regardless of how Cook plays, the week figures to be a giant reunion for the Cooks. While Jim helps run the tournament and John plays in it, the rest of the family will be nearby.
"I hope I don't create any unnecessary disturbances," Jim Cook said.
Without a doubt, there will be a lot of time to talk — particularly for father and son.
The tournament director hopes there aren't any disturbances like the one last year involving Greg Norman and Mark McCumber.
Norman accused McCumber of improving his lie by removing a blade of grass. McCumber said he was merely flicking away a bug. Norman almost quit, but he was talked out of leaving by his wife and his agent.
Winners of 74 tournaments around the world are eligible to play in the tournament, which is sponsored by NEC.
Then he overcame a six-stroke deficit in the final round and beat Billy Mayfair and Nick Price on the first hole of a playoff when he chipped in for a birdie.
Preseason practice injuries hurt Buffaloes
The Associated Press
BOULDER, Colo. — Colorado football coach Rick Neheisel was forced to call off practice ahead of schedule after several players were injured during preseason scrimmages.
Neueihie ended practice Tuesday afternoon after linebacker Ron Merkerson bruised his lower leg and linebacker Allen Wilbon sprained his foot.
Free safety Steve Rosga, meanwhile, left the field with a bruised knee and was scheduled to be re-evaluated today.
Neuheisel, in his second season with the Buffaloes, called off practice early with a goal-line session still remaining.
"We were iust too thin," said Neuheisel.
The Buffaloes, who will open their 1996-1997 season Aug. 31 against Washington State, were to move into their residence hall rooms today and practice only once a day thereafter.
Neuheisel said he would consult director of sports medicine Dave Burton before making a decision on how much to taper the remaining contact work.
Despite the injuries, Neuheisel called the camp spirited and said his players gave everything they had.
"They're just a little down right now because a couple of their teammates had to leave the field hurt. But that's part of football, and we might as well understand that." he said.
Also injured Tuesday were defensive tackles Jesse Warren, who sprained his foot, and Aaron Marshall, who suffered a hyvextended knee.
Sidelined when practice began were receiver Phil Savoy with an ear infection; defensive tackle Viliam Maumau with calf strain; defensive back Maurice Henriques with an injured knee; tight end Desmond Dennis with tendinitis in a knee; receiver Ayyub Abdul-Rahmann with a pulled hamstring; and guard Chris Naeole, who suffered a minor muscle strain in his neck.
Offensive tackle Melvin Thomas missed drills to return to Louisiana to be with his ill mother. Place-kicker Jason Lesley took the day off after undergoing tests to determine the cause of persistent stomach cramps.
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The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
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Refreshments provided.
The Staff invites you to drop by for a visit. Find out about our exciting fall programs and the many services offered by the Women's Center.
Tuesday, August 27, 1996 2:00-4:00 p.m. 115 Strong Hall
LABOR DAY WEEKEND CANOE TRIP
STUDENTS: $56 NON-STUDENTS: $66 INCLUDES:
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1
100s Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
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Classified Directory
200s Employment
235 Typing Services
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
X
300s Merchandise
A
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United Child Care PC now enrolling for fall ages
31 to 67 in LBG-2822, 3292
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305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
120 Announcements
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
Poster Sale. Biggest and best selection. Choose from over 2000 different images. ROCK, FINE ART, MOVIE POSTERS, ALIENS, WILD LIFE, X-FILES, MOVIE POSTERS, ALIENS, WILD LIFE, X-FILES, ALLIES (Brad Pitt, Sandra Bullock, Einstein, Val Killner, Pam Anderson, and many others), ALIENS, WILD LIFE, X-FILES, ALLIES (Brad Pitt, Sandra Bullock, Einstein, Val Killner, Pam Anderson, and many others). MOST IMAGES $46, & 8 each! See us at $K UNION GALLERY. LEVEL 4 on MON AUG. 13TH TRIUIR AUG. 30TH. The hours are 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday through Friday. Saturdays are Sunday 12 Noon-4 p.m. Sales sponsored by SAUSEA
1
105 Personals
Free BBQ Sat. Aug 24, 5-6:30pm followed by a free concert at 7p.m. The Frontline Continuents will present a contemporary Christian music concert on Thursday, March 18th in Iowa. Farewell!
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas City.
100s Announcements
NEED TO TYPE A FORM? A PAPER? Good old-fashioned, electronic typewriters available for student use. Student Assistance Center, 22 Strong
Auditions for The University Theatre fall productions: 7:00 p.m., August 22-23, Crafton - Preyer Theatre Stage, Murphy Hall Audition sign up: noon-5:00 p.m., Thursday, August 22, Murphy Hall Lobby. Productions to be cast: "The Memorandum." "Coming Here A Triology," performed by the Cherry Players to perform prepared pieces; cold reading material will also be available. For more information, contact the University Theatre, 317 Murphy Hall, 864-3381.
NEED A RIDER/RENDER? Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
24 hour everyday! Commerce Plaza Laundromat,
3028 Iowa St. Clean and air conditioned.
We are not God
We are simply
the image
of God
and
our task
is gradually
to discover
that image
and set it free
Christian Fellowship and Bible Study
for KU Students
Tuesday dinner at 5:30 pm;
Meeting at 6:30pm
192.9 w19 The Baptist Center 841-3148
http://falcon.cu.ukans.edu/
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against a person on race, sex, color, creed, gender, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of Kansan regulation or law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1908 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap or other protected intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
120 Announcements
Caring People Needed Headquarters Counseling Center looking for volunteers. Interested? Informational Meeting室 Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont Questions! 814-2345
130 Entertainment
**Theatre Auditions:** August 22-23, Crafton Preyer Theater Stage, Murphy Hall. Sign up for auditions noon - 5:00 p.m., Thursday August 22, Murphy Hall Lobby. Open to all KU students regardless of age. You have 2 minutes to show your stuff! Call 864-3381 for more information.
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200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Child care, part-time, 11:30-1:00 M-F. Call Sunshine
Acres Preschool at 842-223-911
Gymnastics instructors needed now for girls, boys and preschool classes at Kansas City gym. P/U am or pan Good pack, Call Eagles 516-941-0829
Hiring students to contact alumni Monday Thursday
9:30AM p.m. $15 d.h. Call Shannon站 at the KI
Bank 800-267-6842
Accepting applications for part time sales position at Floribeth Shoe Store. Apply in person, suite 111
Daycare assistant needed mornings. Flexible schedule:
Call Marie at 749-1710. Need own transportation.
Christian Daycare needs enthusiastic employees for
work. Must be highly reliable and stable. Good
pay. 842-2088.
Couple needs reliable exp. person to care for infant in their home for approx 1 week, ref. required on request.
Emergency, responsible person to care for our 4-year-old in our home. MWF 12 per hour, $600/hour Call or Beep on 518-795-2230
Golf course work, Doble hours, FREE GOLF 2, Apply at
National Country Club
400 Country Club Terrace, 842-682-8821
HOMEPOT NETWORK ASSISTANT
Uni. Relations. 45 h 15 m 30 hs wky. Call 864-3256 for information before 5 p.m. Aug. 27.
New company needs outgoing personnel with interest in marketing. Flexible house. Applicant within a 35%ile of the average salary.
Classroom Assistant needed at Raintree Montessori School. Montessori exp. prof. Will train: $12/room/wk Late afternoon assistant: 3:15-5:30 M-F $6.25/hr, Transp. call: Call 843-6800
Adams Alumni Center/Learned CBL openings for PT diskshoppers. Above a wide胃, meals & uniforms provided. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1266 Oak Ave.
Adams Alumni Center/Learned Club has openings for
full-time banquet prep, cook, includes benefits. Apply in
person at the Adams Alumni Center 1260 Orcad Ave
Adams Alumni Center/Learn Club has openings for part time banquet servers. Some daytime and weekend availability preferred. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1260 Cord Ave.
Aerlofcs instructors invite for on camp training.
Experience is a must! Call Shannon at 8457070.
Immunised Lutheran Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning and afternoon teachers' aides. Experience with children required. Apply 2104 West 15th Street.
Part-time opening for general office work plus showing apartments and answering phones. 10-20 weekdays hours available. Must be Kansas resident enrolled in KU at least hafftine. 841-5797.
Yoga instructor needed for on campus fitness program
Experience required. Call Sullivan at 863-04790
Adams Alumna Center/Leaned Club has openings for fine dining, lake sunset cook. Some exp. required. 5 day full-time pos. with benefits, both AM & PM ships. Apply in person at the Adams Alumna Center 1280 Orcad Ave.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
158
205Help Wanted
Part-time help needed in busy doctor's office. Morning
preferred. Call 749-1491.
Better indoor retailer seeks retail supervisor/manager
management, 32-40衣周. weekly. Some days and weekends.
Good wage and tuition reimbursement. Apply in person.
IHiverFront Plaza, Suite 210
COMMUTER STUDENTS After school supervision for 11 year old girl and 14 year old boy. My home, near 10rd & Nierman in Overland Park: 3:30-6:30 pm M-F; non-sun, reff, and own transportation required (913) 844-6400.
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**SPRING BREAK 79-* SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH, *& GO FREE.** STS is hire at CAMPUS REP/GOROUP ORGANIZER to promote a trip to Caracun, Jamaica, or Antigua. STS offers the opportunity on joining America's #1 Student Tour Operator.
Customer Service. Need one self-motivated, sharp-dressing, energetic individual with good communication skills. Good driving record, manual transi-
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Netsakers needed for Econ 140, Bio 141, Geol 101, Geol & 191, Asir 101. Must have completed this class or higher with an A and have a 3.0+ GPA. Eum 10-15 to Eum 16-20. Kearse Student Union Bookstore, 2 floor, Kearse Students Union.
Immediate Opening for Conference Assistant, with Work Study Experience MSW and Word E0. 0 knowledge along with strong oral and written comm. skills required. Basic accounting and office experience required. Apply by mail or visit the job listing hour maximum. Fax or send resume to ASK Associates PO Box 385, Lawrence, 60046. Fax 913-841-3854.
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Great On Campus Jobs
The Kansas and Burge Unions
Hiring in all departments (Bookstores, Food Service, Building Services, SUA, Concessions) for Fall 1996. Come use our Job Board, Level 5, 15th and Great. Use your schedule to a great on campus job.AEE.
STUDENT RECEPTIONIST
West campbook book publisher seeks student to answer phones, process mail, handle walk-in sales, etc. Must be able to work 35-hrs daily. M- Come by 2015 W 19th h. 4:00-6:00hr. F- Comby 1 W 19th h. 8:00-10:00hr. to computer application. Baseline on application is 5m friday. B 8:29am. An EEO/AA employer.
KU Athletic Club Clerk, The Kansas and Burge Union,
part-time, $4.00/hour. Would work 2-3 hours prior to KU
football game time and 1-2 hours after game-
Aug.28 evening game). Oct 12, 19, Nov. 16 Will pay in
cash Monday following employment. Must have retail
work experience. Please contact us to able to stand for long periods. Apply Kansas and Burge
Unions' Personnel Office, Level 5, 13th and Oread.
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MICROSOFT, YAHOO THE COACH'S EDGE Only one of these nationally known companies is still operating out of the basement. Only one is located in our office and we have a huge opportunity. The Coach's Edge, as seen on CBS TV, needs coaches, programmers, graphics, PRI, market research, only requirement. Call George or 841-747-1930.
Brookwood Learning Center is hiring part-time teaching assistants. Opportunities include experience in model classroom setting, working with a special population of children who are at-risk for developmental delays, have identified disabilities, as well as typically developing children. Complete applications to 200 Mt. Appointment Court. For more information call 365-0022 AMAEO
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Cottonwood, Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their Residential division. Positions include evening and weekday work, as well as academic work. College coursework or related experience is helpful but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Excellent benefit. Startup hourly pay $6.00 to $9.50. Please apply at Cottonwood, Inc. 2901 W. Sturst E.O.E.
WANTED UNITED PARCEL SERVICES is looking for
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CALL TOLL FREE 1-888-877-3388 to schedule an interview.
ATTENTION STUDENTS - Local Branch of Nat. PC 85/PET entry level openings in Lawrence & JCO. FC,Schedule all Majors opened up to ¥9.25. All majors will receive JCOJOFFER. (913)-867-9675. (150-630 on air).
KU INFO (UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER) hiring for Fall 2016. You are bright, interesting, creative, and willing to take initiative! A clever problem solver who really knows KU and the Lawrence community? You're the best. Need highly motivated student houries who are excellent students, computer-literate, great communication, interested in helping others, and committed to work with students. Job ID: 420 Kansas Union. Work study preferred. Need students who can make KU_info their primary work commitment. Deadline 5pm, Wednesday August 28, 1966.
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB welcomes KUstudents
205 Help Wanted
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN. Deadline: 8/30/96.
Salary $4.50/7-hour, 20 per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software products. Participate in system testing & applications library maintenance. Required qualifications partial listing required. Reqs for job include two (2) programming languages, experience in software testing, experience in database programming and/or management. Complete job description available. To apply, submit a cover letter and current resume and a proposed curriculum vitae to the University Center, University of Kansas, EOAA ENGLOYEE
back to town. Alvamar is THE place to work in Lawrence. Now hire for:
Day Dining Room Server
AM Snack Bar Server
AM Lite Golf
PM Dish Washer
AM Pro Shop Cart Help
Golf Course Maintenance
Nursery Attendance 8:00am
Language Workshop 10:30am
For more information contact Malinda at 842-2764 or complete application at 4120 Clinton EOE.
MICROCOMPUTER SOFTWARE SUPPORT
MICROCOMPUTER SOFTWARE SUPPORT -
Student position: 47.30 per hour; 20 hours per week.
Deadline: September 13th. Required Qualifications:
knowledge of one or more M-DOS or Windows based microcomputer applications; excellent oral and written communication skills; and ability to complete assigned tasks with a minimum of supervision. Preferred Qualification: Master's degree field; some experience with training or tutoring; and at least two or more years of Course work remaining at KU. To apply, contact Carlo Daniels (864-806-4668). Computer lab: 8:00 am and 5:00 pm Monday through Friday. The University of Kansas is an EOA/A Employer.
**STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER.**
Date/8/3096, Salary: $40.50-7.50 hour, 20 hrs per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software programs, maintain an enhance, or obtain existing programs. Participate in system testing, applications library maintenance. Required Qualifications: Currently enrolled in 6 hours of coursework in software design and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages including PAScal or C, good or better computer skills, and/or ability in software testing, ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job descriptions available. To apply, contact the Computer Center EOE at EAEMPLOYER 202 of the Computer Center. EOE AT EAEMPLOYER
Student Computer Specialist and Student Computer Programmer
positions available in the College of LAAS & Systems Analysis Office, beginning AP暑 after August 30. Duties or both positions include installation and configuration of hardware & software, troubleshooting departmental issues, and project management of programs (particularly HTML documents). Required qualifications: Experience with installation of boards in microcomputers; ability to communicate with users; knowledge of dbase, FOSE & IT programming; fluency in "C" programming on MS-DOS microcomputers; familiarity with Windows 3.1, Telnet/PF, Novel Netware & WordPerfect. Approx. 20hrs/wk full time position offered. Applicants must be 20强 Fall hard. Applicant deadline August 30, 1996.
Staff Psychologist, Adult Services
The Bert Nash Center has a full-time opening for a Staff Psychologist. The Staff Psychologist is responsible for providing individual, couple, and group treatment to children with developmental difficulties or focus on adult sexual offenders. Requirements minimum of Master's degree and two years experience in the area of psychology, especially treatment of sexual offenders. Candidates must possess technical skills in computer-aided planning and dappering digital心理测试 instruments, strong organizational skills, and the ability to work both independently and in cooperation with colleagues. Some evening hours required. Send resume/cvletter to Human Resources, 1021 W. 46th St., Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Lawrence, KS 66044. Open until filled. EEO
FALL SEMESTER OPENINGS
- Local Branch of National Co.
filling 36 Entry level positions
in Lawrence and JOCO.
Part, full time flexible schedules
◆ A.A.S.P. scholarships- cond. apply
◆ Up to $9.25
To apply call JOCO. office (913)381-9676
Club 729
Coyote's
MAD. and Assoc. and equal opportunity Co.
Now taking Applications for:
Now Taking Applications for: Door Staff wait staff Bartenders
Bar Backs Promo Assistants Apply in person wed-sat 8-10 p.m.
Door Staff Wait Staff Bartenders
Apply in Person wed-sat 7-9 p.m.
205 Help Wanted
**STUDENT CONSULTANT / PROGRAMMER:** Deadline: 8/9/19, Salary: $40.75-$40.75, Duties include developing software for microcomputers, manuframes, workstations, particularly software for distributed systems. Providing consulting support to University faculty and network members. Developing and writing documentation for program maintenance and end-user support. Required Qualifications: Currently enrolled at KU experience with or two more programming languages. Req's Bachelor's degree in Computer Applications software such as Telnet, PTP, Gopher, and World Wide Web. Other duties as assigned. Complete job description available upon request. To apply, submit a cover letter and current resume to Ari Rai, Personnel Office, Lawrence, KS 60045, OEAA EMPLOYER
The University Placement Center has an open GA position to work with internships cooperative education adjustment. 20 hwk, $7hr, to begin Sept 9. Dеlpine 15 hwk, $8hr, to begin Sept 6. Pick up complete job description in 110 Burge Union.
Graduate Assistantship
EVENING SUPERVISOR
BPI Building Services is looking for a dependable self-starter to supervise our evening and weekend custodial teams.
Qualified applicants should possess leadership, training, and motivational skills along with an eye for detail.
Approx. 25-30 hours per week, Sunday - Thursday, start times vary.
Starting wage of $7.00 per hour, on-site transportation provided.
Interested applicants should contact Mo at 842-6264.
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
CUSTODIANS
BPI Building Services has immediate openings for the following custodial positions:
205 Help Wanted
- Mon.-Fri. 8p.m.-11p.m.
Earn cash on the spot
Custodial positions are perfect part-time jobs for students and those looking for supplemental income. Approx. 15 hours per week in an independent working environment. Self-motivators should call 842-6264 or come in to apply.
- Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
& Mon.-Thurs. 5:30p.m.-8:30p.m.
• Sun. 9a.n-12noon
& Mon.-Thurs. 7p.m.-10p.m.
• Sat. 7a.m.-11a.m.
• Mon-Fri. 6a.m-8a.m.
bpi
A DIVISION OF BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
939 Iowa (Hillcrest Shopping Center/Behind Appliance Plus)
Part-time court position available. M-P 8-12
$4.85 rmb, requires valid driver license & good driving
skills. Possible courtroom or moderner lifejewelry.
Not appearance & reliability. Call Heather Johanning at the KU Endowment Association.
225 Professional Services
BUILDING SERVICES
Immunel Lutheran Childhood Center, 210W west 105th Street is now accepting enrollment applications "or the fall session. Opening are available for toddlers and preschoolers of scholarship available. Call 842-8131 for information.
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
Call Today!
$20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week
Walk-ins welcome!
TODAY
for Thanksgiving &
Christmas Tickets Home
Lawrence's Travel Agent since 185
831 Massachusetts
749-0700
TRAVELLERS INC.
X
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 832-894-844 for applications, term papers, *desertations*, transcriptions, etc. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Drafting Table, T-square, pets. All the good stuff for sale. Make offer. 842-1292 after 6pm.
1900 Honda Accord EX 360-horse/5-speed, 102,000 miles,
loaded w/雾灯. Excellent condition, 7,000 'Call'
for details.
Very good Schwinn road bike. 22 1/2 inch frame. Reccom-
bined, $175. Cat made at 842 3800 (call after 6pm).
Classified Work
340 Auto Sales
Thursday, August 22, 1996
1985 Subaru Wagon, 5 apc, AD, no engine, good condition,
OBO 8600, BOGA 7679 or 841-5430.
400s Real Estate
Customer Service
All utilities paid except electric. 2 bedroom. 1400 Tenn
available now. #475. Call 832-1648.
405 For Rent
At Vanguard Reservations there is only one way to go. Up.
... with Vanguard Airlines' dynamic expansion into more cities, our staff continues to grow. Here at Vanguard Reservations, our advancement potential can put your career on the fast track to upward mobility. If you are positive minded, with excellent customer service and moderate typing skills, we would like to hear from you.
Customer Service Representative
We offer:
- tree flight privileges for employees & family
- competitive salary
- safe, professional environment
V
- many excellent benefits
We have immediate part-time openings. Must be available to work morning shifts. Three week training/aptitude testing required. Apply in person at:
203 W. 23rd St., Suite 206,
Lawrence, KS or call 843-7879.
VANGUARD RESERVATIONS
3 b available at Lortman Townhouses, included wd,
dishevair, microwave, fireplace, cable paid, back
payment. Call 714-620-4500.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
3 bedroom, 2 bath, at Bradford Square. On KU Bus
route, cats allowed. Private deck or patio. B411-84486.
and 4 lydpe bate, 2 bath, new carpet, basin counter, cove-
tain floorfry, large kitchen, no pet please. $830, $750
for one bedroom, $1,150 for two.
405 For Rent
Kansun
Classifieds Work
Spacious, affordable furnished 2 bedroom apartment w/ fireplace and dressing room. some utilities paid. 2-bedroom suite in prime location.
ASK ABOUT
FREE RENT AT
TRAILRIDGE
Quiet, spacious, affordable, furnished rooms and 1 bedroom apartments. 2 blocks to KU. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. 841-5500.
Get all this with the same great location on the KU bus line.
- NEW CARPETS
* NEW APPLIANCES
* NEW LIGHTING FIXTURES
* NEW WIRED Painted WHITE CABINETS
Excellent studio, 12, or
BR apartment & water pal-
ed. 2 & laundry room.
& with PF, carpet &
laundry room.
843-7335 or sit by
2500 W. 8th today!
TRAILRIDGE
405 For Rent
GRAYSTONE
Apartments that fit your lifestyle
AUGUST RENT FREE on our 3 BR TOWNHOMES
FREE USE FOR ONE YEAR OF WASHER & DRYER
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 Team a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, democratic control. $180-200 each. Call to campus. Close to Mass. Call or store lb1-814-4948.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1102
Shop Kansan
Classifieds
Shop Kansas Classifieds
AVAILABLE FOR FALL
NEW 4 BATTERY, at 11720 Ohio 2 full baths, vanity (sink) in each BRE. all appliances. in dwm & microwave. no pets. $ 600 per mo. owner/ Manager 841-5333. George Waters Management.
South Point
A FARMHOUSE
Pets Welcome -
- 1,2,3 & 4 bedroom apartments available
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- Water & Trash Paid
SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas
- Sand Volleyball Court
Ask about our 3 bedroom park villas.
2166 W. 26th
843-6446
*Restrictions Apply
430 Roommate Wanted
Male gay male has room to rent at East Lawrence house. $250 includes utilities. Phone: 842-741-9211. Non smokers only.
Looking for a female roommate for a 1.2 bedroom apartment in Burton Street $420 per month. Call Lailah Blake on (866) 345-7452.
Roommate wanted M/F. $188 a month plus 1/4 utilities.
On KU札机 off-street parking. Large house new
room. Please contact KU.
F need to Share 2 htrm house ASP, WD, int, new.
quiet area. Must Love touch cage! Prefer 25 yrs. + MS.
$222.50/mo + 1/2 tui. + dep. Sublease thru Ang.
Heather 841-508.
How to schedule an ad:
- Byphone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAIY KANSAN
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
Female grad student seeks same to share nice 2 bbm
apt. across bus line, 20 min. walk to campus. Starts
A87 $207.10+ half utilities. Large living rm & kitchen.
pool, laundry, central ac & heat, & great night. Please
be an animal lover and have previous exp. in sharing
space. Call Bath 843-3074.
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be h made.
Supply the Kansan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Classified Information and order form
We may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas on-
to have billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a
unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Calculating rates
The rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of aqle 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.
Refunds
cancertain a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. The advertiser can cancel an ad without charge, but the discount cannot be reclaimed.
Drink box number:
The advertiser may have responses sent to blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Rates
Cost per line per day
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions:
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
3 lines 2.30 1.80 1.20 1.00 0.85 0.60
4 lines 2.15 1.40 1.90 0.80 0.75 0.55
5-7 lines 2.10 1.25 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.50
8+ lines 2.00 1.10 0.80 0.70 0.65 0.45
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$18.00 (4 lines X 90 per line X 5 days)
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale 730 want to buy
118 business personal 265 help wanted 340 salesute 430 for rent
122 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous 430 roommate wasted
128 retaillement 225 retail services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form · Please Print:
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper ___
Total ad cost: ___ Classification: ___
Phone: +1-
Address:
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:
Expiration Date:
Signature:
1
MasterCard
The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence. KS. 66045
16B
Thursday, August 22,1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nuria
You get your tongue pierced
You can barely talk
You call dad 1-800-COLLECT
He's proud you saved him money
38
He can't figure out a word you're saying
C8
He thinks you're ill
He sends you extra cash
You get your nose pierced
1-800-COLLECT SAVE THE PEOPLE YOU CALL UP TO 44%
Big 12 Football coaches are upset with the year-end championship game.Page 1B
ZY Queen Bey will perform at a free concert at the Lied Center tonight. Page 6A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1996
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.103,NO.3
(USPS650-640)
Quick LOOK
Rayford's attorney asks to drop battery charges
With the consent of former Kansas men's basketball guard Calvin Rayford's girlfriend, Rayford' attorney entered a plea for dismissal to the charges of battery yesterday at Douglas County Courthouse.
Rayford pleaded not guilty July 3 to a battery charge after he was arrested July 2 for allegedly hitting his giflerrie in the face. He was charged with domestic battery and released after posting a $500 bond.
Before Judge Paula B. Martin could dismiss the case, she ordered that Rayford's girlfriend sign the dismissal.
Rayford's girlfriend had repeatedly called the courthouse urging the judge to dismiss the case
Neither the district attorney, Rayford or his girlfriend were present in the courtroom.
According to police reports, Rayford is accused of punching his 26-year old girlfriend in the face during an argument concerning another woman.
Kansan staff report
Yeltsin upset by Lebed's efforts in Chechnya
GROZNY, Russia — Boris Yeltsin criticized his security chief yesterday for how he handled the Chechyna crisis, raising doubts about a truce signed earlier in the breakaway republic.
Yeltsin's comments came during a television interview in his Kremen office intended to dispel rumors that his health is failing.
The 65-year-old leader's remarks raised questions about the chaotic situation in Chechnya and seemed to undermine a new agreement hammered out by his security adviser, Alexander Lebed.
"I'm not completely satisfied with Lebed and his work in Chechnya," Yeltsin said in excerpts from the interview, broadcast on Russia's NTV television.
The president complained that when Lebed was running for president, he constantly promised to resolve the Chechnya crisis.
Clinton's welfare reform finds jobs, wins votes
WASHINGTON — President Clinton, who promised in his 1992 campaign to end welfare as we know it, made new promises to create the jobs needed for the controversial new system to succeed. He also pledged to work on changing some provisions decried by key Democratic supporters.
The ceremony was the president's third effort in as many days to take the headlines away from Republican rival Bob Dole by giving a dramatic send-off to high-profile legislation.
The welfare transformation ends a federal guarantee to the poor that has existed since the New Deal days of President Franklin Roosevelt. It was denounced by many Clinton allies.
Marian Wright Edelman, president of the Children's Defense Fund, said Clinton's action was the biggest betrayal of children and the poor.
The Associated Press
Teacher gets $5,000 shock
Award brings Hemenway's visit to class
By Lindsey Henry
Kansan staff writer
Many instructors might expect a few students to stroll into class a little late on their first day. What they probably are not expecting is Chancellor Robert Hemenway and an entourage of guests to march in and present them with a $5,000 check.
Such was the case for Greg Shepherd, associate professor of communication studies. Shepherd was yesterday's first recipient of the William T. Kemper Fellowship for Teaching Excellence.
going," Shepherd said. "I am truly honored with the award. I was originally attracted to the University because it cares a great deal about undergraduate education, and so do I."
"This really gets the heart
The W.T. Kemper program, established after Kemper's death in 1989, is a five-year project to recognize outstanding teachers and advisers at the University of Kansas. In conjunction with Commerce Bank, the W.T. Kemper foundation established $250,000 to finance the program. The University of Kansas Endowment Association provided an additional $250,000 so that 60 more instructors may receive cash prizes in the next four years.
Twenty cash awards of $5,000 each will be given out in unannounced classroom visits through Sept. 3. Sixteen professors from the Lawrence campus and four professors from the University of Kansas
Medical Center will receive recognition. Instructors were nominated for the award by faculty and staff members
Burdett Loomis
as well as by students and alumni.
Amy Stetzler, Overland Park junior, was in Shepherd's COMS 244 class when Hemenway, University officials and representatives from Commerce Bank entered 330 Strong Hall.
"I was shocked to see all of the men in suits," Sitzler said. "I thought it was a FBI shake-down."
The element of surprise is something Hemenway said he looked forward to witnessing.
"This is a great tribute to teaching," he said. "I wish we had checks for more of the great faculty."
The $5,000 award will be included in the recipients' next paycheck and may be used at their discretion.
Jerry Samp, president of Commerce Bank, said that Kemper had a philanthropic interest in higher education in Kansas and Missouri. A similar program for the University of Missouri began in 1991.
Yesterday's other award recipients include Paul J. D'Anieri, assistant professor of political science; Robert C. Rowland, associate professor of communication studies; Marylee Z. Southard, associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering; Burdett A. Loomis, professor of political science; and Bozenna Pasik-Duncan, professor of mathematics.
TALKING WITH DAVID BROWN
Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Chancellor Hemenway and Commerce Bank President Jerry Samp congratulate Bozenna Pasik-Duncan, professor of mathematics. Duncan, along with five other professors, were presented yesterday with the W.T. Kemper Fellowship for Teaching Excellence Award, which included a check for $5000.
Festive inflatables
BATES
Tyler Wirken/KANSAN
Bill Wachspress creates a Jayhawk head out of balloons for Susan Robison and Dessie Orear, Lyndon freshmen. Wachspress was part of the Union Fest, which took place yesterday in front of the Kansas Union to promote services available to students. See Page 3A for Story
Dial-in users will not face hour cap
Computer Center plan includes grace period
By Bradley Brooks Kansan staff writer
There will be no maximum hour cap imposed on any KU student, faculty or staff who use dial-in access to the campus computer system, as was erroneously reported in the University Daily Kansan yesterday.
"Users will have unlimited use of the system; use will not be limited in any way," said Jerry Niebaum, executive director of information technology systems.
Niebaum said these are the facts on the
fee increase:
Students will be charged $50 for service through July 31, 1997.
Students who wish to discontinue service at the end of December will pay $20.
Users who begin service on or after Jan. 1, 1997, will make a one-time payment of $30 for service through July 31, 1997.
A person can sign-up for or renew an account at http://www.cc.ukans.edu/ renew.html.
According to a memo prepared by William Crowe, dean of libraries and vice cancellor for information services, these charges allow dial-in users 50 hours of online time a month. After 50 hours is reached, a 50 cent-per-hour charge is assessed to the user. But no bill less than $10 will be issued, so a user has a 19-hour
"Users will have unlimited use of the system."
Jerry Niebaum Executive director of information technology systems
grace period before he will be charged.
The maximum fee is set at $30 a month for a dial-in user, no matter how much time he spends online.
Theft victim takes law into her own hands, chases robber
By Andrea Albright Kansan staff writer
When Tracy Floreani went to see Lonestar last Tuesday, she could not have predicted that on the way home she would have to take the law into her own hands.
Floreani, Lawrence resident, and Christy Prahl,
Lawrence graduate students,
left Liberty Hall,
642 Massachusetts St.,
and proceeded home down Massachusetts
Street.
As Floronei carried a bag of vegetables from the Farmer's Market in one hand and her wallet in the other, she noticed a man with his head down approaching her and Prahl. The man, wearing a baseball cap, bumped into Floreani as he passed her, knocking the sack of vegetables onto the sidewalk.
"It seemed like it was a long time," Floreani said. "But it was probably two seconds before I realized he had the wallet."
Florean chased the man down Seventh Street and through the alley between Massachusetts and New Hampshire streets.
She ran toward a public parking lot as the assailant pulled away. Floreni said as soon as she yelled, a man in the parking lot reacted immediately and ran after the assailant.
After the losing him near the dumpsters at Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire St., Floreani and the man from the parking
stopped chasing the assailant.
Prahl, who called the police, said she was not afraid when her friend began chasing the suspect.
"The whole time I was running I was yelling "There's nothing in it anyway!" Floreani said. "A woman in the parking lot saw him ditch the wallet."
Bryan Bowden, head instructor at Tracy's Karate, 1104 E. 23rd St., said that a person can lower his or her chances of becoming a victim by making eye contact with others on the street and walking confidently.
"Just the way you carry yourself can make you look like a victim," said Bowden.
Bowden said the best thing to do after a robbery was to point, yell and make a scene.
"I was impressed by her quick thinking and wondering if I could ever dulcate it. "Prahl said.
He also said that chasing the assailant was a good idea only if there were others around and you had no intent to actually catch him.
"It's not worth taking a chance with your health over money," Bowden said.
For Florean, the chase is over, but she will continue to be shocked by the incident.
"I just got back from Italy, a place that's well known for pick pocketing," Floreani said. "It was weird to have this happen in Lawrence."
UDKI
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Visit it today!
www.kansan.com
TODAY
INDEX
Features...10A
Scoreboard...2B
Weird News...2A
National News...9A
World News...9A
Opinion...4A
PARTLY SUNNY
High 82° Low 68°
Zebra
Weather: Page 2A.
KU student bares all
Anne McAlister, Lawrence sophomore will appear in this month's Playboy. Girls of the Big 12
Story on 10A
JULIEN AUGUSTA BELLEAU
27
(2)
One man's waste is another's $5,000
Department of chemistry has saved $5,000 by recycling hazardous waste.
Story on 5A
4.
2A
Friday, August 23, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
Quick INFO WEIRD NEWS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER LOTTO NUMBERS
WEATHER
TODAY
85
60
WEIRD NEWS
Partly cloudy with a chance of rain in the afternoon.
SATURDAY
86
60
Continued clouds with rain possible in the evening.
SUNDAY
84 60
Thunderstorms possible.
The Weirdo-American Community
Terry Klemann, 42, received several traffic citations and was ticketed for filing a false report after her car rammed two pickup trucks in Belleville, III., last month. An apparently serious Klemann maintained that her cocker spaniel, Mutzie 2, had gotten behind the wheel and maneuvered the car into the trucks. Later, she told the Belleville News-Democrat that several years ago the original Mutzie had driven Klemann's car into a tree in New York City.
Update
Although Los Angeles police-beating victim Rodney King was convicted in Alhambra, Calif., in July of misdemeanor hit-and-run for driving away while his estranged wife still was reaching into his car, he was acquitted of more serious charges, including assault with a deadly weapon. Outside the courtroom, a triumphant King told reporters, "Tm going to Disneyland."
Least Competent People
Columbus, Ohio, police arrested Timothy E. Lebo, 39, and Charles J. Kinser, 32, about 5 a.m. on June 5 and charged them with ripping an ATM out of a bank's wall and attempting to carry it away in the trunk of their car. When questioned by police, the pair tried to convince officers that the ATM was a washing machine.
In March, in Clawson, Mich., and in January, in Federal Way, Wash., parents mistakenly packed cans of Bud ice beer in their elementary schoolchildren's lunchboxes. They said they confused the Bud Ice with a Hawaiian Punch can (Clawson) and a holiday can of Pepsi (Federal Way).
Entrepreneurial Spirit
In an April Associated Press story, Leven Yueksel's and his wife Sherri Kane's 32-seat Dardanelles restaurant in Philadelphia was profiled, not for its food but for its attitude. According to a sign in the window, the restaurant refuses to serve "negative people." Say Yueksel and Kane, that includes people who smoke, who are
rude, who demand their food in a hurry, or who want the music turned down. The owners say they insist on respect "for the people who feed you."
The magazine Tokyo Weekender, reporting in late 1995 on the specialty-bra rage in Japan, cited the Triumph Co.'s "Body-Warmth Bra Two-Cup Ozeki." As padding, the bra contains a waterproof pocket sealed with a cork stopper and which comes with about 40 cc's of sake, which will warm to body temperature in about an hour.
Malaysian Gurcharan Singh announced in April that he was marketing a breakthrough, $40 "disposable circumcision device" approved by Muslim religious authorities. It is described as resembling a corkscrew and is called the Tara Klamp.
A Budapest, Hungary, novelty shopkeeper introduced condoms that, when unrolled, play one of two tunes ("Arise, Ye Worker" or "You Sweet Little Dumbbell"). And an Oakland, Calif, man has marketed a talking condom using similar technology but with message options ("You turn me on" or "I love you" or "Thank you for your business").
FRIDAY PRIMETIME
TV TONIGHT
AUGUST 23, 1996
TV PRIME TIME
| Date | 7 PM | 7:30 | 8 PM | 8:30 | 9 PM | 9:30 | 10 PM | 10:30 | 11 PM | 11:30 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
BROADCAST STATIONS
**KSMO 10** "Coronel the Batman" **** (1992) Antelope Schwager's Wizardry! Land's End R* (*in Strobe*) **Cops 10** "Psycho!" **** (1990) Anthony Pinkman!
**WDAF 10** Shields R* (*in Stereo*) **X-Files" "Quasignee" (*in Stereo*) **News 10** "Talks-Crypt" *Talks-Crypt* **Beyatch 10** KCTV "Price is Right 29th" Diagnosis Murder (*in Stereo*) Nash Bridges "Varishing Act" **News 10** Late Show (*in Stereo*) **Seinfeld 10** KSOM "Pattern-Living" News Plus **News 10** NeptunePlus **News 10** NeptunePlus
**KCPT 10** Wash. Week Week-Review McLaughlin Wall St. Week Judy Garland Concert Years Business RPT Signal to Noise: Life With TV Hidden
**KSNT 10** Unsolved Justice Batman* (*in Stereo*) Dateline (*in Stereo*) Law & Order "Homesick" **News 10** Tonight show (*in Stereo*) Late Night 10
**KMBC 10** Fam. Met. Boy-World Step by Step Mr. Cooper 20 **News 10** Roseanne 20 "Golden Girls" M"A'SH 10KTU 10 Wash. Week Wall St. Week Swing Alive at the Holywood Peladium (*in Stereo*) Buddy Guy - The Real Deal Business RPT McLaughlin
**WISW 10** Price in RIGHT 29th Diagnosis Murder (*in Stereo*) Wash. Week
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions of $1.68 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
Friday, August 23,1996
3A
ON THE RECORD
A KU professor's video camera, television and other miscellaneous items were stolen Sunday from the 2900 block of Rimrock Drive, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $1,950.
A KU student's desk chair was stolen from the 800 block of Michigan Street, Lawrence police said. The chair was valued at $15.
A KU student's mountain bike was stolen from the 1400 block of Kentucky Street, Lawrence police said. The bike was valued at $300.
Lawrence police reported a minor in possession of alcohol at 1344 Tennessee Street early Wednesday morning
A KU employee's windshield was damaged between 11 p.m. last Thursday and 2 a.m. last Friday at Bremer Drive and Crestline Street, Lawrence police said. The windshield was valued at $300.
A KU student's day planner, driver's license and KUID were stolen from lot 110 between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. on Monday, KU police said. The items were valued at $58.
ON CAMPUS
KU Champions Club will hold meetings and gaming activities from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Thursdays in the Kansas Union parlors. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
Geoff Krieger/Kansan
The KU Meditation Club will hold a meeting at 6 p.m. Monday in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call Pannil at 864-7736.
KI-Aikido Club will meet from 6:30 to 10 p.m on Tuesdays and Thursdays and from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturdays at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jill Woodworth at 864-1798.
A hair out of the ordinary
Joshua Ellis, Overland Park freshman, talks to Kate Wilson, Overland Park freshman, who is reflected in Ellis' sunglasses. whose hair is naturally this way, was handing out leaflets in front of Wescock Hall yesterday.
Late withdrawal proposal gives professors authority
By Eric Weslander
Kansan staff writer
Instructors should have the authority to decide whether students can withdraw from College of Liberal Arts and Sciences classes after the first ten weeks of the semester.
That is a proposal that the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising has presented to the governing body of the college, the College Assembly. Now, the decision to approve or deny late withdrawal requests rests with the committee.
Members of the College Assembly, which consists of faculty and student representatives, will vote on the proposal this week through mail ballot.
If the motion passes, students who wish to withdraw from college classes after the first 10 weeks of the semester must petition each instructor individually rather than write one petition to the committee.
Sara Rosen, associate professor of linguistics, said the change would be beneficial to students because they would be able
to get a quick response to their withdrawal requests. Each semester, the committee receives hundreds of requests for late withdrawal, and students often must wait weeks for a response.
One concern, however, is that students who need to withdraw from all of their classes because of illness or family tragedy will run into difficulty.
Pam Houston, director of the college undergraduate center, said that each instructor would have different views regarding late withdrawal.
"It's possible that some students with strong reasons will not be allowed to withdraw, while other students with fliysy reasons will be allowed to withdraw," she said. "I worry that the students will feel that they're not been treated fairly."
In addition, she said, the committee's decision to allow a student to withdraw is an enrollment issue, not an academic issue.
of the decision of the instructor."
The proposed motion states that if a student thinks an instructor's decision is unfair, he could appeal the decision to the college office. The committee then will make the final decision.
"The issue is whether they have a legitimate excuse to drop the class," she said. "I worry that the academic level of the student in the class will be the driving force
"I could very effectively argue it either way, and I have," said Sally Frost-Mason, dean of the college. "If we do give the right to the instructors, we should have some very firm guidelines."
The rules and regulations of the college say that only the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising can allow a student to withdraw late, said Deborah Smith, associate professor of entomology.
However, she said, the rules also say that only an instructor can change a grade.
Smith, who directed the subcommittee that proposed the motion, said it could be argued that "a W" is a grade.
"We were stumped by the rules and regulations," she said. "We had petitions from students that couldn't be acted on by anyone. This proposal looked like the best way out of a bureaucratic mess."
Unions stage annual event to show services
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan staff writer
Using free stuff as their bait, the Kansas and Burge Unions kicked off Union Fest '96 yesterday.
Event sponsors offer free gifts from different Union services. Students can get chips and salsa or popcorn from the Unions' food service, or enter drawings for a free computer modem, offered by the Union Technology Center in the Burge Union.
Union Fest is an annual two-day event geared at showing KU students the services offered by the Kansas and Burge Unions. It continues from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in front of the Kansas Union.
"This should be fun," Warren said. "This is kind of a fun event to give students the chance to relax on the first days of class and have a little fun at the Unions."
caricature drawings.
Students can also have their pictures taken with Baby Jay and enter drawings giving away everything from cases of soda to a free SUA movie card.
Campus police have an information table at the fest, at which officers will answer questions. The bands Level and Azure Bloom will play from noon until 2 p.m. today, and clowns also will entertain students.
All of this has been well received by the students, said Steed Bell, Burge Union Stores coordinator.
Among the activities is a basketball shoot out and free
"This is kind of a fun event to give students the chance to relax on the first days of class..."
Katrina Warren Unions marketing director
Bell handed out free posters and encouraged people to register for the modern drawing yesterday. Bell, who will be at the fest again today, said he had seen many students take interest in Union Fest.
"This is a great thing for the Unions," Bell said. "I have seen a lot of students taking advantage of the stuff we have out here. We hope students will now use our services more."
Free stuff is an easy way to attract students, Warren said, and the Unions are taking full advantage of that.
"The Unions are here for everybody and they offer a lot of services people don't know about," Warren said. "If we can show off the Unions by giving free things away, then we will. We have some corporate sponsors helping us."
Warren said the majority of the cost for the event came from corporate sponsors. She did not have an estimation of how much the Union will spend on the fest.
Meggin Kendrick, Topea junior, said Union Fest was a different experience for her.
"I haven't really seen anything like this before," Kendrick said. "I think it is a good idea and who is going to turn down free stuff?"
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New Student Orientation Would Like to Thank These 1996 Hawk Week Sponsors
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KU
4A
Friday, August 23, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Fake ID possessors don't deserve felony
We're taught that the punishment for breaking a law should be set according to the seriousness of the crime. The Kansas Legislature has abandoned this principle in its decision to punish possessors of false ID's as felons.
As of July 1, Kansas law began treating the use or possession of a canceled, revoked, suspended, fictitious or fraudulently altered driver's license as a felony. The offense previously was treated as a misdemeanor, and the change is an attempt to strengthen Kansas' deterrents to underage drinking.
in their capricious decision, Kansas legislators have not considered the motives of most who use false ID's. Many wish only to socialize with their peers in a casual atmosphere. While their behavior is undeniable criminal and deserving of punishment, it does not warrant a permanent stamp as a felon. The new guidelines also punish individuals who loan ID's using the same laws that apply to those who attempt to use them. While their role, too, is unlawful, it is far from
THE ISSUE:
False ID penalties
The Kansas Legislature should reconsider its decision to make carrying or loaning a fake identification a felony.
felonious.
Jerry Donaldson of the Kansas Attorney General's Office notes that Kansas sentencing guidelines draw distinctions in the severity of felonies, which include murder, rape, burglary and now, possession of a falsified Kansas driver's license. Felonies in general, however, are inherently more serious because they remain on records permanently. The consequences include significantly fewer career options and the label of a serious criminal.
The Kansas Legislature should reconsider its decision to treat underage drinkers as hardened criminals. Strict punishment may be in order for those who use false ID's, but offenders do not deserve to be marked for a lifetime.
LEWIS GALLOWAY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Class advising can save students tuition money
The introduction of linear tuition this semester has made it necessary for students to trim the fat from their schedules. No longer can students lump classes that aren't degree requirements into a set tuition fee.
Because each class has a price tag, students on a budget must take precautions to arrange their schedules with classes they need.
This should be an incentive for students to drop the do-it-yourself approach to choosing classes and seek an academic adviser.
The cost of discovering one three-credit class has failed to meet a requirement will now cost an instate student $189 and an out-of-state student $795.
Although speaking to any adviser is better than leaving your schedule up to chance, finding the correct adviser, who is knowledgeable about the specific degree being pursued, is crucial.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Services, Room 109 Strong Hall, will screen students to determine needs and then refer the student to a suitable advising service.
THE ISSUE: Academic Advising
Students should actively seek advising to save money and time.
Sandy Williams, acting assistant dean of Student Services for the School of Business, believes the need to seek an adviser goes beyond picking the right classes.
It also is a way to gain access to the most accurate information about programs of interest,to get referrals for other services and to develop a relationship with a faculty member who can help students work toward career goals.
Confusion about class schedules is worth a trip to an adviser's office. The consequences could be costly.
ERIN KRIST FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
Shawn Trimble / KANSAN
AMANDA TRAUGHBER
Editor
CRAIG LANG
Managing editor
MATT HOOD
Assistant managing editor for design
KIM CRAFTREE
CHARITY JEFFRIES
News editors
DARCIL L, McLAIN
Public relations director
Campus ... Suasanna Lóðr
... Jason Strait
... Amy McVoy
Editorial ... John Collar
Nicole Kennedy
Features ... Adam Word
Sports ... Bill Petulla
Associates sports ... Carlyn Foster
Online editor ... David L. Teaska
Photo ... Rich Devkinl
Graphics ... Noah Muser
Andy Rohrbeck
Special sections ... Amy McVoy
Music ... Emily Bauer
TABLEN
General manager, news adviser
KAREN GERSCH
Business manager
HEALY SMART
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JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUP
Technology coordinator
Business Staff
WASHINGTON — It was the most notable presidential birthday since Marilyn Monroe cooed a seductive "Happy birth-day, Mr. Pres-i-dent" to John F. Kennedy in 1962 in Madison Square Garden.
Increasingly, I hear boomers say age is only a state of mind, that, "If you don't mind, it doesn't matter." In this election year, we'll see how much it matters.
This, then, could be the greatest choice between generational images Americans have seen since 1960, when some voters had a hard time believing Richard Nixon was only four years older than Jack Kennedy. He sounded and seemed much older.
Up the street from where that happy event took place, President Clinton celebrated his birthday on Sunday in Radio City Music Hall. The president turned 50 the next day, and he was taking a generation with him.
Campus mgr ... Mark Ozdemik
Regional mgr ... Dennis Haupt
Assistant Retail mgr ... Dana Centeno
Marketing mgr ... David Singer
Internet mgr ... Steve Sanger
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Production mgrs ... Dan Kopc
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Marketing director ... Eric Johnson
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Classified mgr ... Shelly Wachter
Fathered by a returning war veteran immediately after World War II, Bill Clinton is on the leading edge of the baby boom. Crossing the half-century mark is a big deal for any generation.
Just yesterday, you were qualifying for your first scout merit badge. Suddenly, you're eligible to join the American Association of Retired Persons. The passing of the 50-year milestone is particularly big for us boomers because of the great conceit with which we deluded ourselves in the 1960s, the turbulent decade in which the boomers first came into college age and adulthood. It was the conceit of believing on a deep, visceral level that we would never grow old. Now, we must face a different truth. At 40, we could fudge about whether 40 was really old. At 50, the fudge is running out. Suddenly, the generation known for the phrase, "Don't trust anyone over 30" is saying, Yes, there is life after 50, if you do it right.
Clinton's 50th birthday brings new boomer age
Watch for Clinton and his fellow Democrats to try to fill that gap at next week's Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Don't expect them to replay Fleetwood Mac's Don't Stop Thinking About Tomorrow much (The Clinton-Gore team just about wore out that fine song's welcome four years ago through overplaying), but do expect the song's sentiments to be rested loudly, clearly and repeatedly.
BIG CORPORATE BUSINESSES
MAYBE THEY JUST WANT TO BE FRIENDS...
LAWRENCE DOWNTOWN
WHEN LIFE IS AS BAD AS A CRAPPY MOVIE.
Clarence Page is a syndicated columnist for The Chicago Tribune.
Putting aside the incongruities of using glowing terms to describe Russell during the Great Depression, Dole spent a lot of time describing the past and little time painting a picture of the future. Where, one wonders, does he expect to go with this grumpy, old man act? What, one wonders, does he have to say to the MTV and Internet generation about the next century?
But he sounded old-fashioned. I don't remember much from his nomination acceptance speech other than the refrain "I remember," as he recalled an American that was a better place, a place of "tranquility, faith and confidence in action."
Supporting this theme, it was significant to me that the same delightfully sprightly boomers dominated the stage at Clinton's birthday bash. There was Jon Bon Jovi, Smokey Robinson, Carly Simon, Kenny Rogers and Murphy Brown's favorite. Aretha Franklin.
a clever video on MTV a few years ago, instantly making him a role model for late-bloomer boomers. So Clinton could afford to have a good time at his birthday party. Age 50 is a time when most people begin to feel the bitter reality of life's limitations. Clinton is lucky enough to
CLARENCE
PAGE
More significantly, there was Tony Bennett, a star of the 1940s and '50s who launched a second career with
be turning 50 at a time when 50 has never been younger. He gets the wisdom that comes with experience and still has enough youthfulness to enjoy it.
Boomers, the generation that questioned everything, have raised the question: What is "old"? The question is of particular significance this year, as one of history's youngest presidents is challenged by one of history's oldest presidential candidates.
Four years ago, we boomers were shocked when one of our own was elected president. What a relief it was to know that he was only the third youngest, behind Theodore Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy, to be inaugurated into the job. Now, we can appreciate his gravitas, that he has learned better than to parade his thighs in public in running shorts. We can appreciate the way age, though it brings wrinkles and bald spots, also brings wisdom, patience.
Republican challenger Bob Dole's age is the factor everyone is reluctant to talk about in polite company, yet everybody thinks about. Dole, 73, received a big boost in the polls after he showed at the Republican National Convention that he does
have energy, a compelling personal story and something in his head that vaguely resembles a vision for America.
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
Lawrence residents should use turn signals
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
This is for those Lawrence drivers who fail to use their turn signals. You're breaking the law! I refer you to the Kansas Uniform Act Regulating Traffic; Rules of the Road, page 433, section 8-1548: "Turning movements and required signals. (a) No person shall turn a vehicle or move
Lawrence drivers regularly violate this regulation. Lawrence and KU police, KU facilities employees, Lawrence cab drivers, residents and students violate the law.
Failure to signal before turning is discourteous, disconcerting and dangerous. This, of course, applies to people on bikes, mopeds and motorcycles as well.
right or left upon a roadway unless and until such movement can be made with reasonable safety, nor without giving an appropriate signal in the manner hereafter provided. (b) A signal of intention to turn or move right or left when required shall be given continuously during not less than the last 100 feet traveled by the vehicle before turning."
Bob Lewis, Lawrence resident
1 estimate at least 50 percent of
College a time to evaluate and accept beliefs
Dear first-year students . . snooze.
No, this won't be another sedate orientation but some practical advice from someone who was a college freshman when you were in the eighth grade. As a graduate student, I'm entitled to pontificate about "how to make the most of your college experience." So here it goes.
As you explore your University community, you'll see all kinds of people, from guys who could have been in Nirvana's *Smells Like Teen*
The key to coping with the diversity at the University of Kansas is to be
JOHN HART
STAFF
COLUMNIST
guys who went to the Kiss full make-up reunion concert. You'll also see sorority girls from Johnson County and who could be nicknamed Teva Vonbirkenstock.
tolerant — a sort of laissez faire, live-and-leet live ethic. To most KU students, tolerance isn't so much of a well-thought out philosophy as it is an attitude.
It's impossible to be consistently tolerant unless you want to tolerate everything — including Nazis, racists and people who picket funerals of AIDS victims. Most people feel compelled to express moral outrage at such activities, and rightly so. Yet, the definition of moral outrage is intolerance, the only thing a tolerant person can't practice.
Don't question another person's beliefs — that would be offensive. Don't criticize another person's lifestyle — that would be judgmental. Don't describe anything as wrong — that would be intolerant. You can hold passionate convictions, but please keep them to yourself.
Therefore, it's impossible to be tolerant and be intolerant of injustice at the same time. This contradiction consumes the tolerance philosophy like a snake ingesting its tail.
Tolerance sounds good on the surface. If we could all tolerate one another, we would live in peace in a little utopia on the hill — a noble goal with a flawed approach.
As a new student, don't tolerate anything. Evaluate everything. Then, after some careful moral reasoning, decide if something should be tolerated.
Tolerance attempts to create harmony in our world of differences, but only creates a dull monotone of voices in numbed agreement about a nonconfrontational approach to life.
Many people preaching tolerance appear diverse and sophisticated but are more like the Borg from Star Trek, assimilating new students into a culture of mindless conformity.
Only by acknowledging a moral reality higher than our shifting attitudes, what the Bible describes as truth, or the Greeks cosmos, will our community become truly tolerant.
While tolerance encourages some good values, respect and compassion, it asks its practitioners to subscribe to an unrealistic view of the world — moral relativism — in which truth, or right and wrong, is defined by personal opinion.
Genuine tolerance is an overflow of a conviction grounded in that higher reality that all people possess equal worth and should be treated with dignity, regardless of whether you agree with their lifestyle or beliefs. Of course, you can disagree with a person but still treat them with tolerance.
The overflow of academic tolerance, on the other hand, is indiffer
John Hart is a Shawnee graduate student in journalism.
OUT FROM THE CRACKS
BUS STOP
HUH?
Excuse
ME, SIR?
WHICH WAY TO WESCOE HALL?
By Jeremy Patnoi
YOU WANT
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CLASS, I WANT YOU TO MEET YOUR T.A., HE'LL BE GRADING YOUR TESTS AND HOMEWORK...
CLASS, I WANT YOU TO MEET YOUR T.A. HE'LL BE GRADING YOUR TESTS AND 12A HOMEWORK...
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 23,1996
5A
Chemistry department praised for recycling
Program returns hazardous material for safe disposal
Recycling anything and everything has been a goal of the department of chemistry for years and, as a result, the effort has saved the University of Kansas $5.000.
By Dave Breitenstein
Kansan staff writer
Susan McAfee, director of chemistry laboratories, said the department placed an advertisement in the Lawrence Journal-World last January to find someone to dispose of the hazardous material created by the department.
"We wanted to get the best price for our material, and after looking through the bids, we chose the one who would pay us the most," McAfee said.
Previously, mercury was sent back to the manufacturer to be cleaned, then returned to the department for reuse.
DFG Mercury Corporation of Evanston, Ill., was chosen for the job. The company paid the chemistry department $1.45 per pound of
If the department would not have found a business to recycle the material, it would have had to call a hazardous waste material removal company, which would have charged about $5,000 for its services.
mercury, with approximately 950 pounds being recycled. This netted the department more than $1,300.
Metallic mercury had been stored in the basement of Malott Hall for several years, and the department sought ways of disposal.
"We had too much on hand, so we were trying to cut back," McAfee said. "It is a hazardous material and having a lot is dangerous."
McAfee said she had been working on the recycling project months before the material was hauled away in February.
McAfee said the mercury came from a variety of chemistry equipment, including thermometers. The mercury was placed in seven containers for storage, each about the size of a fire extinguisher.
McAfee said the containers were very heavy. One pound of mercury fits into a container the size of a small eavedropper.
In addition to large recycling projects, the department of chemistry recycles cardboard boxes, office paper, Styrofoam, newspapers, packing material, catalogs and even junkmail. McAfee said.
She said volunteers from the department took all recyclable materials to Wal-Mart on their way home, and everyone in the office did their part.
"One of the reasons we recycle is to save the University money," McAfee said, "but we do it for the environment as well."
"Compared to everyone else, they are probably the leaders in chemical recycling, reuse and reduction," Russell said. "People have worked on recycling in every department, but chemistry is probably at the top."
Mike Russell, director of the department of environmental health and safety, commended the department of chemistry for their recycling efforts.
Russell said the department of chemistry contacted him prior to recycling the mercury and asked for help. Together, they searched for ways to dispose of the material, and recycling was the best way.
Russell said he tried to spread the word on what needed to be done to help the environment.
"We send out things to all departments about recycling, pollution prevention, and minimizing waste," Russell said. "We inform chemical users of the different things they can do to cut down on volume."
None of the service charges in the 50-to-69-hour grace period will be forwarded to the next month; they simply will be voided.
Continued from Page 1
The bills will be sent out by the University of Kansas' billing/receivables system. Karen Bailey, University bursar, said that if a student didn't pay his bill, a hold is put on his student records. He will be unable to pre-enroll or order transcripts. Once someone is not a KU student, he is sent two bills, after which his
Online
Niebaum said student accounts that aren't renewed by Oct. 1 will be deactivated. Faculty accounts will be deactivated if they are not renewed by the end of October.
Mary Ann Munsch, assistant director of information technology services, said that yesterday's Kansan story had caused some extra work for computer center employees.
"We will have more phone inquiries," Munsch said. "People already have questions. This will just add to it."
was a difficult one.
Crowe said that deciding to increase the fee for online access
"The increase was hard," Crowe said. "It was very attractive to just keep it at last year's price. Nobody wants to raise the fee. We just want to provide a system that is open to the user."
The increase in modem ports that will be financed by the new fee increase will make the system more accessible. he said.
account is eligible to be given to a collection agency.
Crowe said that this fee has an important role in maintaining the University.
"It all translates into whether or not KU will be the kind of place it has been in the past — a place of high quality," he said.
THE UNIVERSITY TAKES YOUR CASH. WE'LL TAKE YOUR CREDIT.
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- University Affairs
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE,410 KANSAS UNION
QUESTION? 864-3710
APPLICATION DEADLINE: Friday, August 30 at 5 PM
Check out the Senate Homepage on the
WWW @: http:// ukanaix.cc.ukans.edu/~senate/senate.html
6A
Friday, August 23, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jazz Queen kicks off Lied Center season
By Neal Shulenburger Kansan staff writer
Jazz legend Queen Bey will open the Lied Center's 1996 series with a free outdoor concert on the northeast lawn.
Karen Lane Christilles, public relations director for the center, said Bey was an easy choice for the series opener.
"We were looking for an event that would go over really well outside," Christilles said. "We decided that an outdoor jazz concert would be excellent. We decided to pick local performers because of Kansas City's rich history in jazz. Whenever we talked to patrons, her name just kept coming up. So, I guess you can say we got her by popular demand."
The concert is expected to draw a crowd of about 1,500 and will begin at 7 p.m. with a performance by the Dan Gailey Quintet. Bey will take the stage at 8 p.m.
Bey, of Kansas City, Kan., has had a long, distinguished career. She began singing at the age 12 in Kansas City's Orchid Room, a popular jazz club, in the 1950s.
She left for Los Angles, where she sang at Dino's Lodge, a club owned by Dean Martin. There she performed with jazz masters such as B.B. King, the Platters and jazz pianist Earl Gardner.
Bey was appointed Kansas City's Jazz Ambassador by Kansas City, Mo., Mayor Emanuel Cleaver on Dec. 29, 1995.
As part of that title, Bey has traveled to Los Angles, Palm Springs and Europe to represent the Kansas City jazz community. However, despite her many travels, Bey never has given a concert in Lawrence.
"I guess you can say we got her by popular demand."
Karen Lane Christilles
Lied Center public relations director
"I'm definitely looking forward to it," she said. "I'd never done one at KU before, and since I'm the Jazz Ambassador for Kansas and Missouri, I thought that it would be a good thing to do. The students are part of my audience, too."
Bey's recent projects include a series of one-woman shows and a starring role in the movie Ninth Street.
In addition to the concert itself, the Lied Center will host an information fair from 6 to 7 p.m. Several local organizations, including the University Theatre, the Lawrence Arts Center and the Douglas County AIDS Project will have information booths.
"We were really looking for a way to give information about several local organizations to the audience," Christilles said. "They all have positive contributions to make to the community. The people who come to see the events should know about them."
Prizes will be given away, including two $50 savings bonds from Mercantile Bank, tickets to Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun, and season tickets to the new Lied Family Series.
New group aims to help students use the Internet
Untangling the World Wide Web
Casey Wilkinson is suffering from a problem that is prevalent among many KU students. She has found that she is drowning in, rather than surfing on, the World Wide Web.
By Bradley Brooks
Kansan staff writer
"I'm so confused about e-mail and AmericaOnline," said Wilkinson, Olathe sophomore. "I couldn't get either to work from my computer last year."
Fortunately for Wilkinson and others, a new student group is emerging: the Kansas University Campus Internet Association, or KUCIA.
"We can offer a student an environment in which they won't be intimidated by jargon — where they can get help," Jones said.
Wade Jones, Milford, Conn.,
senior, is the group's president.
Last January, Jones and vice president David Veatch, 1996 graduate, took control of the group. The KUCIA began in 1994 but hasn't been active for nearly a year.
"It took us all of eight days to set it up, to get a Web page going," Jones said.
Veatch sees the opportunity for KUCIA to be a unique and helpful organization.
"There is nothing else that fills this niche on campus. No other group lets students get together and learn about the Web. This is just an ideal vehicle for students to jump in." Veatch said.
Veatch said he wanted KUCIA to be a place where students could gather and explore problems that
face today's computer user, such as the recent fee increase for dial-in access to the campus computer system.
KUCIA faculty adviser Michael Grobe, manager of distribute computing support at the computer center, thinks the group will be able to assist students the computer center cannot.
"With the increase in the number of accounts in the last few years, we can't support our new customer base," Grobe said, referring to e-mail and dial-in access users. "I think that this student group could facilitate learning and organization."
While the KUCIA encourages all students to join, it also welcomes students who just want questions answered to contact them.
"That is half of what we are here for," Jones said. "We are students trying to help other students."
For those who do choose to join
KUCIA
Where to reach the KUCIA:
On the World Wide Web:
http://www.ukans.edu/KUCIA
By e-mail:
KUCIA@ukans.edu
the group, Jones thinks they will receive nothing but benefits, such as being more marketable in the workforce.
"Companies are looking for people who can do things like create their own Web pages," Jones said. "You'll be ahead of the guy who is afraid of the technology, who doesn't take advantage of this stuff."
The group plans to have monthly meetings, but a specific date has yet to be determined.
Shortened Hawk Week complicates rush events
Until then, students can contact
Bv Ashlee Roll
By Ashlee Roll
Kansan staff writer
For one week each year, the University of Kansas celebrates the beginning of the fall semester with Hawk Week.
This year, for the first time, Hawk Week overlaps the first days of school, and this new schedule has posed some obstacles for fraternities and sororites.
"The new schedule worked out fine for us," said Alex Franz, Colorado
"Because of the new schedule, it changed rush a lot," said Melissa Morgan, an Olathe senior and rush coordinator for Sigma Kappa. "It wasn't all negative, even though it separated rush and Hawk Week."
Morgan also said that the past separation of the events enabled rushees to move in sooner, to be more active during Hawk Week and to be well-rested for class.
The new schedule posed no real problems for fraternities, whose rush was finished three days before the sororites' rush.
junior and pledge trainer for Phi Delta Theta. "The only thing was that the girls couldn't go out and stuff, which was a bummer."
The schedule the University is following for 1996 was made up three years ago.
"We don't want to keep students here unnecessarily when they could be at home working to make money for school. I look at it as a tradeoff between students and the University," Morrell said.
But automation and improved efficiency in enrollment have shortened the time that students need to be at the University before classes start.
"The school calendar is mandated by the Board of Regents for planning purposes," said Richard Morrell, University Registrar. "We already have our calendar made up for 2001."
The planning was born out of a feeling that there was too long a period between pre-class activities and the start of classes. Morrell said.
"Pre-class activities used to stretch out over three weekends, and we felt that was too long to be here," he said.
Group urges against bookstore
By Liz Musser
Kansan staff writer
If the Lawrence Historic Resource Commission has its way, no downtown buildings will be demolished to make way for a new Border's Book Shop.
The commission made a unanimous decision in a meeting last night to recommend that the Kansas State Historic Preservation Office not approve a site plan for a Border's bookstore in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street.
The plan, which was submitted by Wint Winter Inc., called for the demolition of the 125-year-old Lawrence Buick Co. building at Seventh and New Hampshire streets.
The commission got involved because the site is close to the Eldridge Hotel, which is on the national historic register.
About 130 Lawrence residents attended the meeting. Many of them did not want to see the historic building demolished and thought that the new bookstore should include the Buick Co.
building in its construction. Lawrence resident Pat Kady gathered a petition against the demolition that had 1,150 signatures.
"I want to see this project go forward," said Austin Tearney, a Lawrence resident.
Tearney also said he wanted the building to be incorporated into the new bookstore.
Lawrence resident Jay Smith agreed.
"We can do better than what is proposed here. I invite the Winters to use their and our resources in a more challenging wav." he said.
Wint Winter, spokesman for Wint Winter Inc., said that the building was not historic under legal standards and that the proposed structure was consistent with the downtown atmosphere.
"This commission's legal job is not to save neat buildings," he said.
The commission's decision is advisory only. The Kansas State Historic Preservation office will make a recommendation to the Lawrence City Commission, which will vote on Sept. 10.
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Course #177
Test 1 Sun, Aug. 25 9am-1pm
Class 1 Tues, Aug. 27 5pm-6pm
Wkshp 1 Tues, Sept. 3 6pm-8pm
Class 2 Sat, Sept. 7 2pm-6pm
Wkshp 2 Tues., Sept. 10 6pm-8pm
Class 3 Sat, Sept. 14 2pm-6pm
Test 2 Sun, Sept. 15 8am-1pm
Wkshp 3 Tues, Sept. 17 1pm-2pm
Class 4 Sat, Sep. 21 2pm-6pm
Wkshp 4 Tues, Sept. 24 6pm-8pm
Class 5 Sat, Sep. 28 2pm-6pm
Test 3 Sun, Sep. 29 8am-1pm
Wkshp 5 Tues, Oct. 1 6pm-8pm
Class 6 Sat, Oct. 5 2pm-6pm
Test 4 Sun, Oct. 8 9am-1pm
Wkshp 6 Tues, Oct. 8 6pm-8pm
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Students interested in the areas of sports/news reporting, graphics and design are encouraged to attend the Correspondent meeting at 5:30pm on Aug.26 in room 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Gain Professional Newsroom Experience At THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan is looking for dedicated students interested in publishing work in the Kansan, the Hill and on UDKi.
For more information contact Amy McVey, Kansan Correspondent/Tab Editor, at 864-4810 or pick up an application in 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Real World Experience
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 23, 1996
7A
A cheat sheet for your phone.
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• Roommates on phone,
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• Speed Calling - 8 - on your
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Get connected and win free stuff! Stop by the Southwestern Bell booth at the Kansas Union Bookstore on August 22nd or 23rd. Rates quoted are for services listed only. Residential line services apply. Call us for details. Services described are not available in all areas on all calls. One-time service connection charges and applicable taxes may apply. Other restrictions may apply - so ask about these when you call. Display equipment is required for Caller ID Name and Number services and must be purchased separately. Cailers can block their numbers from display by calling *167 or placing *67 before placing calls. These services have been combined for your convenience and could be purchased separately.
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8A
Friday, August 23,1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
Parking in the rear
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-training begins in September
call 832-5172 for app, today
1. Rock Chalk Revue Advisory Board Applications are available in OAC for the following positions:
·Member at large
·Secretary
·In Between Acts Director
·Business Committee
·Promotions Committee
2. Applications are due by Sept. 30 at 5:00 pm
3. An informational meeting will be held on August 27 at 7:00 in Aldershot, Audigium
7:00 in Alderson Auditorium
4. Questions? Call the RCR Office at 864-4033
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Student Legislative Awareness Board
SLAB
...working to provide to the students of the University of Kansas the means to be active participants in the political life of their community.
Applications are now being accepted
the following coordinator positions
Education/Forums Publications Voter Participation Issue Research Jayhawk Network Treasurer Lobby Coordinator
- Applications are available in the Student Senate Office, 410 Kansas Union.
- Application deadline:
5:00 PM, Friday,
August 30, 1996.
- For more information call 864-7337/864-3710
-SLAB is a division of the University of Kansas Student Senate-
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--a little of everything," said Emile Crawford, San Francisco senior and vocalist for the band.
HILLEL KANSAS UNIVERSITY
The Umpteenth Annual Welcome Back BBQ!!
Stop by for free food before you go to the music fest!!
Studies require balancing act
Musicmakers weigh show dates, classes
Contributed Photo
IMPLEMENTUM
By Erln Rooney Kansan staff writer
College bands find it difficult to combine life in the classroom with life on concert stages.
"We'll be driving while these two guys are cramming books in their face," said Azure Bloom guitar player Ken Labonski, a recent graduate of DePaul's School of Music. Jeff Kolwitz, the band's bassist, is also a recent graduate of the music school.
Members of the bands Azure Bloom and Level, both playing in today's Union Fest, face the challenge of juggling studies and songs. The Lawrence-based band Level will play in front of the Kansas Union at noon, and Azure Bloom will follow at 1 p.m.
The band's first album, Looking is Free, is scheduled to be released in September by 312 Records. The band is working on a follow-up record, Labonski said.
Azure Bloom has an eclectic acoustic sound that draws on the member's backgrounds in rock, folk, jazz and classical guitar.
Christian Larsen, Azure Bloom percussionist, and Mark Lonsway, guitarist and vocalist, attend DePaul University in Chicago.
bring your frisbees, your basketballs, and your tennis rackets!!
Crawford is joined by drummer Steve Campbell, Lawrence sophomore, guitarist Josh Raines and bassist Nathan Trotter, Kansas City, Kan., sophomores. The foursome met while living in Oliver Hall two years ago.
Members of the band Level (from left) Emile Crawford, Steve Campbell, Nathan Trotter and Josh Raines will play at Union Fest at noon tomorrow in front of the Kansas Nation.
"The music for our second album combines
Playing to a hometown audience in Lawrence is a pleasure for the band. Crawford said.
Sunday, August 25 4:00-6:00 p.m. Veterans Park 19th and Louisiana
all of our talent," Labonski said. "Each instrumental part is so intricate that I almost dread working on it. We demand a lot of each other."
Like two of the members of Azure Bloom, all of Level's members balance classroom work with their music.
Level is a band comprised of KU students. They have a diversity in their educational pursuits — from history to music — and in their musical styles.
Kill Creek enjoys Lawrence popularity
"Our music is a combination of hip-hop, funk, hard grooves, a little jazz, a little reggae,
"The crowds tend to be a little more enthusiastic, and that's what we really love," he said.
By Jeff Rubv
Gone are the days when Kill Creek was in awe of The Bottleneck.
Kansan staff writer
Ron Hayes, 27, guitarist of Lawrence's band Kill Creek, says the popular local venue for live music used to seem out of reach for bands such as his.
"We started out playing at The Outhouse," Hayes said, referring to the now-defunct punk rock club several miles east of Massachusetts Street. "And the Bottleneck, for us, back then was pretty much a huge concert hall. We never had much of a chance to get in there."
Doug.Richards, a promoter for Pipeline Productions who schedules the Bottleneck's shows, anticipated Kill Creek's concert at The Bottleneck tonight would sell out.
Now, Kill Creek is perhaps the biggest band in Lawrence. After signing with Mammoth Records, their shows at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., have become major events.
"They rule," Richards said. "We used to hang out together at The Outhouse when we were 15. I've seen them go from being a little garage band to a real professional groun."
Kill Creek's past fear of The Bottleneck has evolved into a longtime partnership.
Hayes said because touring could be an uphill battle, the band enjoyed playing there.
"It's hard to tour and have your expectations shot on a daily basis," he said. "There always could be the sad possibility that maybe you're just not very good. That's a hard thing to accept.
"When you go and play in Balti-
more for nine people, it makes you
you really appreciate playing in front of
people who are familiar with your
material," he said. "But I always just
assume our next Bottleneck show
is going to be our next disaster."
Jen Plantz, a publicist for Mammoth Records, said tonight's Bottleneck show was the first in a month-long tour, and emphasized the
"I've seen them go from being a little garage band to a real professional group."
Doug Richards Promoter for Pipeline Productions
importance of seeing the band live.
"They're pretty serious up there, but the type of music they play is good for kids of a college age," Plantz said.
"Their songs are about the kind of stuff people our age experience. They're definitely not your average college band."
"The kind of stuff that isn't immediately catchy, it doesn't hit you right at first," Hayes said.
Yet Hayes, whose band's previous album, St. Valentine's Garage, was considered a melodic punk masterpiece, is ambivalent about people's reactions to the new album.
Kill Creek, which consists of Hayes, Scott Born, Patrick Grassy and Ken Anderson, received much local air play and critical praise for their recent LP, Proving Winter Cruel.
Kill Creek's patented pop hooks are still on the record, they're just quieter and harder to catch than they are live.
Opening for Kill Creek tonight are locals Let's Rodeo and St. Louis' Stillwater. Admission is $5.
"We all don't go out enough to know what people think about us," Hayes said. "I guess I sort of care, but I'm not too caught up in it. We were kind of worried with the new record, because we thought we might alienate some of the fans."
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The University Theatre IS Your Theatre!
University Theatre Series (73rd Season)
Coming Here: A Trilogy by John Gronkoe-Tedesco
October 18, 19, 20*, 24, 25, 26, 1996
*Hair (Revised)*, book & lyrics by Gerome Ragni & James Rado,
music by Gail MacDermot
November 15, 16, 17*, 21, 22, 25, 1996
The Merry Wife of Windor by William Shakespeare
March 7, 8, 9* , 13, 14, 15, 1997
All performances are in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Abide with me by Me from Avertis *Come Home III* production) April 24, 25, 26, May 1, 2, 3, 1997
KU Theatre for Young People
Husb: An Interview with America by James Stillen
Saturday, September 28, 1996 (2:30 & 7:00 p.m.)
Alex and The Shrimp World by Rac Averill
Saturday, February 15, 1997 (2:30 and 7:00 p.m.)
All performances are in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Original Play Festival. Communion by Don Schawang and Tales From the Wasteland by Will Averill January 30, 31, February 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 1997
Inge Theatre Series
The Memorandum by Vaclav Havel
October 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 1996
Wrigs, by Arthur Kopi, a virtual reality project
December 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7*, 8*, 9, 10, 19
All performances are in the William Inge Memorial Theatre
Between Pancoco Villa and A Naked Woman by Sabina Berman,
translated by Shelley Tepperman
April 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 1997
Unless noted, performances are at 8:00 p.m.
* 2.50 p.m. matinee
** 2.50 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.
James Still
Most likely to become a prize-winning playwright
Season tickets now on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. Call 913/864-3982.
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 23, 1996
2 military planes crash in Md.
Pilots only crew on board; wrecks were unrelated
The Associated Press
ELLIOTT, Md. — An A-10 Air National Guard plane crashed in a marshy area on Maryland's Eastern Shore yesterday, hours after another military plane crashed in
the ocean off the Maryland-Virginia coast. In both cases, only the pilot was on board.
Air Force spokeswoman Maj. Laura Feldman said the second plane went down in Dorchester County about 1:25 p.m., less than four hours after the earlier crash. The weather yesterday was clear.
The pilot in the Atlantic Ocean crash was missing. The second pilot was being taken to a hospital, said John Hoffman, a National Guard spokesman in Washington. But he didn't know the pilot's condition and couldn't say for sure whether
The plane that crashed yesterday morning was a single-seat Marine Corps FA-18 Hornet that was on a training mission. The attack jet was based at Andrews Air Force Base in suburban Maryland as part of a Marine Corps Reserve unit, said Gunnery Sgt. Don Hooper.
the pilot was alive.
The precise location of the crash, which happened around 9:30 a.m., was unclear. Coast Guard Petty Officer Matt Borders said it was 40 miles east of Ocean City, Md., but other reports put it off the Delaware or Virginia coasts. Commercial fishing
boats reported seeing debris in the water. Borders said.
The second plane was on a maintenance test flight following repairs when it crashed roughly 75 miles southeast of Washington, between Fishing Bay and the Wicomico River. Feldman said the plane took off from Willow Grove Air Reserve Base in Pennsylvania.
American neo-Nazi convicted in Germany
Judge sentences man who sent anti-Jewish propaganda from Neb.
The Associated Press
HAMBURG, Germany — American neo-Nazi Gary Lauck, German fascists' main supplier of hate literature, armbands, flags and other paraphernalia for two decades, was convicted and sentenced to four years in prison yesterday.
After a three-month trial meant to demonstrate Germany's hard line against extremism, the judge explained his verdict by quoting from Lauck's newsletter, which calls Jews "subhumans" and "rats."
Lauck, whose cropped moustache and parted hair are meant to resemble Adolf Hitler's, did not testify. His lawyer argued that the trial was illegal because Germany has no right to tell a U.S. citizen what to do in the United States.
Lauck, who calls himself a Nazi, prints his material in the United States and mails it overseas. Pro-
Hitler, anti-Jewish material denying that the Holocaust occurred is protected by the U.S. Constitution but illegal in Germany under laws Americans helped formulate at the end of World War II.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Glyn Davies said Lauck was tried in accordance with German law and U.S. officials had access to him.
Lauck was arrested on an international warrant from Germany while attending a convention of neo-Nazis in Denmark in March 1995. He was extradited to Germany in September under a little-use Danish law against racist statements.
"Neither the communists nor the Nazis ever dared to kidnap an American citizen," Lauck shouted in German before he was led back to his cell yesterday. "The fight will go on!"
Lauck, who is of German descent, heads the National Socialist German Workers' Party-Overseas Organization — the name Hider gave the Nazis' overseas branches. Lauck's group was banned in Germany in 1974. He also distributes the NS-Battle Cry newsletter, which is illegal in German, from Lincoln,
Neb.
Lauck has said Jews were the "main belligerents" in World War II and were treated too nicely in Nazi concentration camps.
German prosecutors say Lauck has been the main supplier of neo-Nazi literature, armbands, flags, posters and videos to Germans for 20 years.
He was convicted of inciting racial hatred and distributing the propaganda of organizations that violate the German constitution. Lauck's lawyer, Hans-Otto Sieg, said he would appeal.
Lauck, 43, will spend no more than 2 1/2 years in jail because the court deducted time served since his arrest.
"Lauck will pick up where he left off the day he returns to America," Judge Guenter Bertram said, but Germany must show that no one could run rings around its laws.
Anti-foreigner and anti-Semitic attacks surged in Germany with the hardships brought on by re-unification in 1990. The attacks declined when the government tightened immigration laws in 1993, banned several extremist groups and put some members on trial.
There were 2,000 neo-Nazis in Germany at the end of 1995, down from about 3,000 in 1994, according to Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, which tracks extremists.
Lauck's group has been in disarray since his arrest, mailing the newsletter only occasionally and struggling to keep up its supply lines, said a source at the office, speaking on condition of anonymity.
In Omaha, Neb., the regional director of the Anti-Defamation League said he was pleased with the verdict but concerned about the future.
"This could give him a good boost in his martyr status, especially in Europe, where his influence is strongest," Bob Wolfson said. "It gives him battle scars, and in certain circles he needs that. I don't anticipate that a visit to the German prison system will deter him."
German politicians hailed Lauck's conviction. Interior Minister Manfred Kanter, a conservative, called it an appropriate response against a mastermind of international neo-Nazism. Herta Daeubler-Gmelin of the opposition leftist Social Democrats said, "It's about time he went behind bars."
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts LIED CENTER SERIES PRESENTS Lighting Up the Night
A GIFT TO THE COMMUNITY
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7 P.M. FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1996
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BIRD'S EYE VIEW
Offering a different perspective
Aug.23,1996
Page 10A
PLAYBOY
EXPOSES KU STUDENT'S BODY
by Ian Ritter
Anne McAlister appears to be a typical KU sophomore with only a few exceptions: she's a bit quiet and seems to be a trifle shy.
Oh yeah, she also appears nude in this month's Playboy.
This month's issue, called the Girls of the Big 12 issue, features girls from each school in the Big 12 Conference. McAlister is the only one that represents KU in the nude.
"It's one of the most tasteful and prestigious magazines that you could do that for," she said about posing nude. "You should be proud you were chosen to do something like that."
McAllister, a business administration major from Lawrence, said she mainly did the photo shoot for the money.
Though the $500 she received for the shoot may not seem like a lot, McAlister said that she needs all the money she can get because of her student loans and two jobs.
As far as the photo shoot went, McAllister said that the $500 was n't the easiest money that she's ever made in her life.
"It took all day," she said.
The shooting process took a total of nine hours to create one photo that was used the magazine.
"You had to hold certain poses—it was just work," McAllister said. "It wasn't as
glamorous as you think it would be."
Though she said posing nude for a photographer was weird, McAlister said that David Chan, the Playboy photographer, was very professional.
"He was nice and he really wanted his work to be perfect," she said. "It's not like a younger guy who I'd be intimidated to do that in front of."
The photo that made it in the magazine, which only subscribers have received so far, is of McAlister sitting upright wearing only an unbuttoned shirt and a holding a graphing calculator.
Biographical information about McAlister's major and job as a library aide was included. It also said that McAlister wasn't fond of calculus exams, snowy weather or frat bovs.
What's wrong with frat boys?
"Some of them make it out to be that school's all about just getting drunk and partying," she said.
But she said that she thinks some members of fraternities are decent people. In fact, her boyfriend is a fraternity member at Kansas State University.
McAlister, who had yet to see the new issue, said she was upset that Playboy used her quote about frat boys because she didn't think the magazine was going to use it.
Speaking of her boyfriend, McAlister said that he had few qualms about her posing nude for Playboy.
"At first he was like, 'Yeah, do it, why not,' but he didn't think I would actually do it."
she said. "But now he's ready to give them to his dad and his friends."
McAlister's mother, Pat McAlister, wasn't enthusiastic about the shoot, but doesn't hold the nude posing against her daughter.
"She's gonna have to live with whatever comes out of this," she said. "But what she wants to do is the important part and what makes her happy."
Pat said that she wasn't informed of the photo shoot until after it took place.
The Big 12 issue of Playboy comes out in stores next Tuesday, and McAlister will be sign issues on Aug. 29 at the EZ Shop on 1414 W 6th St
Susie Coleman, manager of area EZ Shops, said that she was certain that the turnout for the signing would be large, and she encouraged people to go to the store with their Playboy magazines.
McAlister was chosen to be in the magazine last semester when recruiters came to the KU campus.
Karen Ring, Playboy publicist, said more than 100 women from KU were in line for the position.
Even though most university students who pose in the magazine don't continue with careers in Playboy, Ring said, McAlister has a chance to do so.
McAlister said that she would take on a career in modeling if the money was right, but for now her future plans are to work as an accountant in Arizona.
"It wasn't as glamorous as you think it would be."
– Anne McAllister
KU student pictured in Playboy
Geoff Kreiger / KANSAN
JACKOPIERCE
THE LEGEND OF THE NIGHTINGALE
Jack O'Neill
Cary Pierce
Contributed Photo
THE DALLAS BAND IS SLATED TO PLAY WITH THE BIG BOYS AT THE JAYHAWK MUSIC FESTIVAL
by Erin Rooney
This is not surprising since Pierce has been to Lawrence not only to play musical venues, such as at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St., but to drink beer at Free State Brewing Co., 636 Massachusetts St. and shop in the stores along Massachusetts St.
Cary Pierce often finds himself wearing a Sunflower Outdoor & Bike Shop T-shirt when touring with his band.
Pierce is a co-founder of the Dallas-based band Jackopierice. He and Jack O'Neill combined their names and formed their acoustic guitar and vocal group more than five years ago.
Jackopierie will be one of the bands featured on the main stage during Sundays' Jayhawk Music Festival. The band is scheduled to take the stage at 4:10 p.m.
The first time Jackopierce played in Lawrence was at Benchwarmers, a bar that has since gone out of business. Pierce and O'Neill jammed in front of a crowd of about 500 people, Pierce recalled in a recent phone interview.
Since that debut, Jackopierce has played to sold-out crowds
every time they have returned to the city.
Pierce and O'Neill met their first year of college at Southern Methodist University in Texas. Both were theater majors and knew that they really wanted to play music.
Freshmen at SMU have to complete an acting audition at the beginning of the year, Pierce explained. The arts department is invited. The first day they must perform a piece. The next day the heads of the department are allowed to present their criticisms.
"The band truly cherishes Lawrence; it is one of the most important places we play," Pierce said.
"They came to me and said, 'Cary Pierce, you're so arrogant up there, you should buy a bus ticket home,'" Pierce said. "As the professor was ripping me apart, Jack turned to me and just shook his head."
O'Neill then leaned over and wrote, "I'm next," in Pierce's notebook. O'Neill was the next to be scrutinized by the professor. The two did not know each other at the time, but have been friends ever since.
Jackopierce produced three albums independently before
Pierce claims that artists like Neil Diamond and Fleetwood Mac influenced his playing style.
signing with A&M Records in the summer of 1993. The band has since recorded two albums, the latest released earlier this summer, and added two more members to the band, drummer Earl Darling and bassist Clay Pendergrass. The two play on the most recent album Finest Hour and are touring with the band full time.
O'Neill gained influence from popular bands of the '60s such as Santana, Neil Young and Bob Dylan.
But the band is not stuck in the past musically or technically.
"Jackopierice has a page set up on the Internet where people can respond to questions asking, 'What do you like most about Jackopierce?'" Pierce said. "People have written in some great stuff. They discuss what our music has done for them. They say that we sing about the way things in life should be. how things could be.
"Personally, I like to know that I made peoples' lives better, that the music makes them happy."
Jayhawk Music Fest
11:15 Detar-X
Noon Sister 7
12:50 Shag
1:40 Self
2:30 Semisonic
3:20 Hum
4:10 Jackopierce
5:00 Poe
5:50 The Urge
6:45 The Violent
Femmes
Regional Stage
11:45 Means to an End
12:30 Danger Bob
1:15 Outhouse
2:00 Palomar
2:45 Skybopfly
3:30 Citizen King
4:15 MU330
5:00 Super 8
5:45 Tenderloin
5:45 Tenderloin
OUT WITH THE OLD...
After spending a majority of this season under the unblinking scrutiny of the media and fans, Cleveland Indians outfielder ALBERT BELLE has managed to steer clear of trouble.
Less than three months removed from the incident involving Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Fernando Vina, coaches and players say that Belle is changing his image.
Story on Page 5B
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
UPDATE
Thirteen Division I schools, including Big 12 Conference members BAYLOR and KANSAS STATE, received certification from the NCAA for their athletic programs.
The certification process is an evaluation done by the NCAA of all 305 Division I schools. It includes a self-evaluation by the athletic department and a review by an outside team.
FRIDAY. AUGUST 23,1996
The exhibition game between the CHIEFS and the CHICAGO BEARS last night was cancelled in the third quarter because of a severe thunderstorm.
CHIEFS UPDATE
The Chiefs were leading 14-10 with 4:20 left in the third quarter when referee Red Cashion sent the teams to the locker rooms.
"I'm glad they called
5
it," Chicago quarterback Erkf Kramer said. "The last thing I wanted to do was get lit up tonight. I think clear heads prevailed."
100%
SECTION B
Fast BREAKS
Dole's enthusiasm helps Kansas keep Roy Williams
KANSAS CITY, MO. — The Los Angeles Lakers offered Roy Williams a large contract to leave Kansas for the NBA team.
Jayhawk fans everywhere held their breath when the offer was made
a new years back, but not in Washington. Bob Dole, then the powerful Senate minority leader from Kansas, placed a call to Chancellor Gene Budig in Lawrence.
Roy Williams
CAROLYN KELLY
"I don't know
who all he talked to. I don't know if he talked to Roy," said Budig. "But he expressed his strongest possible support for Roy. And that impacted in a very positive way."
Budig, who always was involved in athletics during his 13 years as chancellor, said it wasn't only the Lakers' offer that caught Dole's attention.
"There was speculation on several occasions about others being interested in Roy, and Sen. Dole always responded to me," Budig said. "The senator never lost his enthusiasm for college basketball."
Still coached by Williams, the Jayhawks will return every starter from last year and are expected to be at or near the top of all the preseason polls.
Hickson, who gained 81.6 yards in 158 carries last year, broke both
K-State's leading rusher breaks leg in scrimmage
MANHATTAN — Eric Hickson, the leading rusher last year for No. 21 Kansas State, is lost for the season after suffering a broken leg in a scrimmage, coach Bill Snyder said yesterday.
bones in his lower left leg Wednesday, Snyder said. Hickson, a junior, was injured when he
T
was tackled by teammate Nyle Wiren.
"It happened so fast that I didn't know what happened," Wiren said. "I hit him, and he came across and hit the ground. I just followed him down the line and tackled him."
Hickson's 816 yards last season were the sixth-most in Kansas State history. Mike Lawrence, Hickson's backup last year, likely will assume the starting position.
"Eric is a strong emotional leader for our team and will be sorely missed," Snyder said.
USTA redraws U.S. Open seedings after player fuss
NEW YORK — Protests by players forced the U.S. Tennis Association to redo the men's draw for next week's U.S. Open, believed to be a first for the tennis tournament.
The new draw was held yesterday at 3 p.m.
"After talking to players, agents and a variety of interested and informed people, we have decided to redo the draw, but not change any of the seedings," USTA president Les Snyder said.
On Wednesday, the tournament announced men's seedings that did not match tour rankings, drawing questions and anger from some players.
Thomas Muster of Austria was seeded third behind American Michael Chang, and favorite Andre Agassi of the United States was moved up one.
Some players apparently believed the seedings were done after the draw, which is a rule violation.
Big 12 football not so super
The Associated Press
Academic rules also toughened
Rv Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
It's been tabbed the Super Alliance, but some players and coaches are having a hard time figuring out what's so super about the Big 12 Conference.
The Big 8 Conference added former Southwest Conference teams Baylor, Texas, Texas Tech, and Texas A & M. Each team except for Baylor made a bowl game and they had a 7-4 record.
XII
The glut of teams forced the conference to split into two divisions - the north, consisting
of the Big 8 schools minus Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, and the south, consisting of the two Oklahoma schools and the four Texas-based teams.
Kansas plays all northern teams plus southern teams Oklahoma. Texas and Texas Tech.
Divisional play will culminate in the Big 12 championship game Dec. 7 at the TWA Dome in St. Louis. A few conference coaches question the championship game's importance.
"Was the Big 12 championship the best thing for us? No I don't feel that way," said Kansas State football coach Bill Snider.
The conference forced Snyder to change his teams' goals.
"People are always talking about getting to the next level. The next level for us has
always been to get a little bit better. But winning the conference championship is something we have to think about."
certainly pleased to be playing the other schools from the Southwest Conference," he said. "But I think the championship can reduce the conference's success. You could have two great teams but instead of playing in the big game, they'll have to play in the playoff. I don't necessarily think that's the best way."
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said he was looking forward to the Big 12 but not the championship game.
Let's say Kansas and Texas A&M both go undefeated in their respective conferences. Theoretically, they could be ranked No. 1 and No. 2 in the country, but instead of playing in the national championship game, where the expected revenue could reach as high as $8 million per school, only the winner of the Big 12 championship game would get the alliance barth in.
Winning the championship is important because it is now the only way a team has a shot at the national championship.
The Big 12 championship is officially known as the Dr. Pepper Big 12 Championship with AT&T also being a major sponsor.
The conference will get six bowl berths overall.
Big 12 also introduced tougher academic standards that demand more than those set forth by the NCAA. The Big 12 states that recruits cannot attend prep school, take entrance exams after Aug. 1 following graduation from high school or be on scholarship as a non-qualifying student. Each school can
"I think there's a lot of potential, and we're
10
Kansas volleyball graduate assistant Jenny Larson spikes terderay. The team has been on a schedule of two practices a the ball during a team practice at Robinson Gymnasium yes- week.
Volleyball practice intense
Jayhawks work out six hours each day
After finishing a practice schedule that includes twice-a-day workouts for two weeks, the Kansas volleyball team still has its sense of humor.
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
After practice yesterday in Robinson Center, the Jayhawks tried to cool off when they walked to the orange
Kansas assistant coach Jan Madlock turned her back to the team about 20 feet away. Seconds later, several yelling and laughing Jayhawks, drenched in sweat after a three-hour practice in the hot and humid gymnasium, ran to give Madlock a hug.
Gatorade coolers to get a drink. The Gatorade coolers stood by one fan. This one fan was the only source of ventilation.
Madlock, who was a volleyball assistant coach at Iowa last year, said the Hawkeyes used to do the same thing.
Madlock, who has only been at Kansas for one week, is just starting to get a feel for the team, the program and the preseason workouts known as two-a-days.
"They don't have to worry about school or anything. They're here, and all they have to worry about is training," Madlock said. "We don't do tons of sprints. We're trying to prepare them. The intent is to get them ready as quickly as possible for competition."
See VOLLEYBALL. Page 8B
Board displays latest lowdown in intramurals
Students find game schedules standings and coming events
By Kerry Hillard
Kansan sports writer
One out of three isn't bad, but that isn't good enough for Jason Krone.
Krone, assistant director of recreation services, said that although 10,000 KU students participate in intramural sports, he wants them to realize that the program is for everyone.
"This is a program for all students; I want them to feel welcome." Krone said.
One of Krone's main goals is to increase awareness among female, residence hall and international students.
About 10 feet of neon-bordered bulletin board outside the recreation services office, 208 Robinson Center, is one way for students to be aware. This board is designed to attract attention and is one of the main information sites for students.
The board boasts what is coming up in the world of intramurals, what is under way and who is winning. Participants also can find their playing times on the board.
Scott Donner, Derby sophomore, has mixed emotions about what is posted on the board.
Teams nave to physically go and look on this bulletin board to get their schedule instead of just calling," Donner said. "It got to be a pain in the neck."
Krone said that with more than 200 teams participating in some of the intramural programs, calling the office for playing times was not a possibility.
Although Donner was frustrated that call-ins were not possible, he was impressed with the publicity of the intramural program.
"Last year we missed some managers' meetings because we didn't know the schedule," he said. "We've already received a schedule of all the fall sports this year."
The schedule, which is posted on the board, shows that flag football is just around the corner. Flag-football team managers will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in 115 Robinson Center.
At this meeting, team managers will receive a roster sheet and a list of possible playing times. Attendance at this meeting gives managers scheduling priority.
Managers in attendance will be able to sign up for playing times on Sept. 3 and 4 from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Any manager who did not attend can sign up on Sept. 4 at 2 p.m.
Scheduling is on a first-come, first-served basis. Krone said that scheduling will be much easier for teams that have more than one possible playing time.
Tryouts muster players despite large roster
By Cameron Heeg Kansan staff reporter
Ongoing draft fills holes builds team competition
Enthused sums up how Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall feels about what might come from trvouts this season.
With 36 members on the roster, it is arguable that the squad is large enough, but the prospect of acquiring more talent keeps Randall coming back for more recruits.
"In the tryouts, we are looking to increase
the talent level of our team," Randall said. "A recruiting philosophy is to keep recruiting more talented players than you currently have on the team. That's what we are looking for in recruits in this walk-on (trout)."
What will impress the coach at the tryouts are pitchers who have good velocity — about 85 mph — and position players who show good speed — running a 6.8-second 60-yard dash. These are the basic athletic skills used to find the best, but there are more ways to shine.
After the test for basic skills, potential players will be put in various baseball-playing situations to evaluate their individual abilities.
"I hope that anyone that is really interested
Second, Isaac Byrd, Josh Kleiner and Ted Meadows are gone.
in trying out at least come to the organizational meeting and find out what is going on." Randall said. "We had so many guys that showed up in December and said 'I want to play baseball.' If they really want to be a part of the baseball team, they need to begin now."
Although many new recruits have joined the team, the chances of making the squad aren't out of sight.
First, the Jayhawks lost three of their starting pitchers, including Josh Belovsky, who went 7-6 with a 4.93 ERA, and Clay Baird, who went 6-6 with 6.28 ERA.
Randall needs a large pool of players to replace the lost pitchers and star hitters. A large number of players also promotes strong competition for positions. It is this competitive drive that is essential to push players to step up and fill holes.
Third and fourth are injury concerns and the replacement next year of nine seniors.
With all the factors to consider, building and keeping a large squad is a positive step to staying competitive in a growing conference.
---
14
"Somebody asks me, "What is your philosophy with big squid, small squids?" Randall said. "The size of the squad is not the deter-
See BASEBALL. Page 8B
1
2B
Friday, August 23,1996
SCORES & MORE
PRO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BASEBALL
Baseball Expanded Back-Bunting
By the Associated Press
All Times CAT
All Events CAT
East Division
West Division
W L Pct GB Lt0 Lift Street Aware哼
New York 72 54 17 W 1 Pet 6L 7-1 3-7 Lift 102 35-29
Baltimore 67 68 532 W 1 Pet 7-3 Lift 103 32-19
Boston 67 68 500 W 9 Pet 7-3 Lift 104 32-19
Toronto 59 69 461 W 14 Pet 8-4 Lift 105 28-34
Detroit 45 82 144 W 17% 24% Lift 105 31-36
Digit 45
W L W L Pct GB LT0 Streak Hacemny
Cleveland 76 51 58 1 5-1 Lost 1 5-1 Least 17 39-27
Chicago 69 60 535 8 8-3 Lost 1 5-1 Least 34 36-35
Minnesota 63 60 496 13 8-7 Lost 1 5-1 Least 34 36-34
Milwaukee 60 68 581 18 1/4 5-5 Lost 1 5-1 Won 1 31.35-39.33
Kansas City 60 68 496 18 1/4 5-5 Won 1 5-1 Won 1 31.35-39.33
W W L Pct GB LtS L1b Streak Away Horns
Texas 74 61 61 4.2- 2*Hon 2 8-2 Hon 42-34 31-30
Beauregard 75 61 61 4.2- 2*Hon 2 8-2 Hon 42-34 31-30
Beaufort 62 68 477 13 14- 2*Hon 2 8-4 Lord 30-36 33-22
Oakland 62 68 477 13 14- 2*Hon 2 8-4 Lord 30-36 33-22
California 62 68 477 13 14- 2*Hon 2 8-4 Lord 30-36 33-22
NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division
W L W Pct GB GB1 LT0 Storm Haircase
Atlanta 79 46 45 Pct - 1-9-1 Won 10 6 32-35
Montreal 67 58 536 12/1 4-6-6 Loss 1 38-25 29-33
New York 67 58 436 11/1 4-6-6 Loss 1 38-25 29-41
Florida 58 69 457 22 4-6-6 Loss 2 39-25 19-44
Philadelphia 58 69 457 22 4-6-6 Loss 2 39-25 19-44
W L W Pct GB GB 10 Streak Home Away
Houston 68 60 531 — 4-6 10-2 Streak 36,25 32,35
St. Louis 67 60 527 3/15 6-5-4 Stunk 35,28 32,31
Chicago 67 60 504 1½ 6-5-4 Stunk 35,28 32,31
Cincinnati 62 62 500 4 6-4-4 Stunk 33,31 29,31
Pittsburgh 61 62 425 13/15 6-4-4 Stunk 33,31 29,31
W L W Pct GB L10 Streak Home Awave
San Diego 70 59, 54 1/3 2-4 Won 4 2-4 36.30 34-29
Los Angeles 66 60, 52 2½ 2-4 Lost 3 33.28 33-23
Colorado 62 60, 52 1/2 3-5 Won 5 32.19 32-43
San Francisco 54 70, 43 13½ 1-5 Won 1 29.31 25-39
2 first game was a win
Wednesday's Games
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Friday's Games
California 7, New York 1
Detroit 7, Chicago
Wilkesboro 10, Minnesota 7
Boston 6, Oakland 10
Kansas City 9, Kansas City 2
Baltimore 10, Seattle 5
Texas 10, Cleveland 8, 10 inches
Hockey **5 games**
Seattle Multicolor 10 (Boston Gordon 8) 6:50 p.m.
Milwaukee McDonald 10 (Boston Cleveland Herner 13) 7:50 p.m.
Oakland Winger 8 (at New York Golden 10) 8:35 p.m.
California Bowl 14 (Baltimore Wells 9) 8:15 p.m.
Toronto Herger 15 (Chicago Beaver 1) 7:05 p.m.
Texas Oiver 15 (Oklahoma City 6) 7:05 p.m.
Texas Oiver 15 (Oklahoma City 6) 7:05 p.m.
Sedar King 2 or Kearney 3 (Kansas City Appleton 1) 7:05 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Salt Lake at Boston, 12:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Milwaukee, 12:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m.
Toronto at Toronto, 7:05 p.m.
Oakland at Oakland, 9:35 p.m.
Texas at Minnesota, 7:05 p.m.
Detroit at Kansas City, 7:05 p.
Sunday's Games
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Wednesday's Games
Seattle at Boston, 12:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m.
California at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m.
Oakland at 12:35, 12:55
Toronto at 1:05, 1:55
Atlanta at 1:05,
Detroit at Kansas City, 1:55
Chicago 8, Florida 3
Cincinnati Camera 0-0 and Jamie 6-5) at Florida A.Lather 12-11 and Valides
San Francisco 2, New York 11
San Diego 4, Atlanta 23
Pittsburgh 8, Houston 2
Columbus 10, St Louis 2
Philadelphia 6, Los Angeles
San Diego 7, Montreal 2
0-12, 3-9, 5-6
Chicago Hailey 11-4 at Atlanta Madison 11-7, 8-9; Chicago Leonard 11-8 at Houston Kale (10-7, 7-9, 5-6)
Pittsburgh Lübner 5-4 at Colorado Rice 19-9, 8-15; Philadelphia Hummer 1-4 at San Francisco TI-Woods 10-9, 8-15
Philadelphia Hummer 1-4 at San Francisco TI-Woods 10-9, 8-15
Montreal Hummery 1-4 at San Francisco Garden 10-9, 8-15
Sunday's Games
Chicago at Atlanta, 12:55 p.m.
St. Louis at Houston, 12:05 p.m.
New York at Los Angeles, 3:05 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago, 4:05 p.m.
Montreal at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m.
Cincinnati Florida, 6:95 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Colorado, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago at Atlanta, 12:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Colorado, 2:05 p.m.
New York at Los Angeles, 3:05 p.m.
Montreal at Vancouver, 3:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Bayonne, 3:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 3:06 p.m.
St. Louis at Houston, 7:26 p.m.
Thursday's Major League Linescores By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE
Dakland 000 000 001-1 8 0
Boston 000 010 001-2 8 0
Cleveland (Ace 9) and Boston (Ace 10). Clemens and Hasselman, W—Clemens, 7-11.
L—Acre, 0-1; HR—Boston, "BOLT" (13),
California 500 016 000—12 14 0
New York 010 100 001—3 6 1
Finley, Gohr 8) and Greene; Rogers, Pavlas 6)
Polley 9) and Girard. W—Finley, 12-12, L—
Rogers, 10-7 HR—New York, O'Neill 15)
201 070 000—10 15 0
000 000 000 0 0 0
Seattle
201 070 000 -10 15 0
Baltimore 000 000 003 - 3 6 0
Moyer, Chartton 9 (Michinch), Teathe Mathys 9,
N Rodriguez 5, Milchin 8), Teathe Mathys 9,
Holles, Devarez 8), W—Meyer, 10-2, L—Copinger, 5-7, HR—Seattle, Sorrento 21), Baltimore, Deveaux 8), B. Anderson 38).
Detroit 012 010 024—10 14 0
Kansas City 000 300 024—3 6 0
J.Thompson, J.Cummings 6), R.Lewis 7), Elischen 9) and Ausmus, Belcher, Granger 9) and Macfarlane. W—J.Thompson, 1-2; L—Belcher, 12-8.
Texas 103 320 020—11 10 0
Minnesota 000 000 200—1 2 10
K.Hill and I. Rodriguez, Robertson, Parra 3),
Adlred 4), Hansell 9) and Waalke W.-K.Hill,
14-7-L. -Robertson, 6-12-HRS -Texas, Greer
16). Minnesota, R.Kelly 4).
TV
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackouts):
(All times Central)
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
ESPN — Men's tennis, Du Maurier
Open, quarterfinal match, at Toronto
ESPN — Senior PGA Golf, Bank of Boston Senior Classic, first round, at Concord Mass.
3 p.m.
ESPN — Golf, U.S. Amateur Championship, quarterfinal matches, at Cornelius, Ore.
4p.m.
USA PGA Golf, World Series of Golf, second round, at Akron, Ohio
PRIME — Women's tennis, Toshiba
Tennis Classic, quarterfinals, at
Carlsbad. Calif., same-day trip.
4:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
ESPN2 -- NASCAR Auto Racing,
qualifying for Goody's Headache
Powders 500 at Bristol Teen
ESPN — NASCAR Auto Racing,
Busch Chuck National Series, Food
City 250, at Bristol, Tenn.
ESPN2 — Women's NCAA Volleyball,
NACWA Volleyball Tip-Off,
Florida vs. Hawaii, at Lincoln, Neb.
same-day tape)
PRIME — A-League Soccer, Colorado
WGN — Major League Baseball.
Chicago Cubs at Atlanta.
6:35 p.m.
TBS — Major League Baseball.
8 p.m.
WPIX — Preseason NFL Football, N.Y. Jets at Oakland
ESPN2 — Men's tennis, Du Maurier Open, quarterfinal match, at Toronto same-day tape)
9 p.m.
10 p.m.
PRIME — Hockey, World Cup of Hockey Pre-Tournament, U.S. vs. Detroit, at Russia same-day tape)
WWOR — Major League Baseball.
N.Y. Mets at Los Angeles
Hanson and O'Brien; A.Fernandez and Karkovice. W—Hanson, 11-15, L—A.Fernandez, 12-8.
6 (innings, rain)
Toronto 000 001-1 4 0
Chicago 000 000-0 3 0
NATIONAL LEAGUE
St. Louis 400 010 000—5 8 1
Colorado 350 100 10x—10 6
Morgan, Petkovsk 4), Honeycutt 8) and
Sheaher; Balley, Holmes 8), B.Ruffin 9) and
J.Owens. W—Balley, 2-2 L—Morgan, 4-7,
HRS—Garrago, Galagama 238).
Pittsburgh 001 002 104—8 11 0
Houston 001 100 301—8 13 1
Loakah,ordova 6,M.Williams 8,Ericka 9) and Kendall;Drakeb, Dawkin 6,M.William 9,Worman 9,Hxemandez 9) and Manwaring. W—M.Wilkins,30-L. W-Wagner,21-S. Erickas 4) HRs—Pittsburgh,King 25), Houston,Biggio 14) Bagwell,7,Dell B 16), Spiers 6)
Possible Free Agents
NEW YORK — The 20 players who would become eligible for free agency following the World Series if players are credited with major league service time for the period of the 1994-95 strike.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
x-depends on service time this season:
BOSTON (1) --- Tim Naehring, 3b.
CHICAGO (2) — Alex Fernandez, rhp; Chad Kreuter
CLEVELAND (1) — x Scott Leus, 3b.
NINESOTA (1) — Chuck Knoblauch, 2b.
OAKLAND (1) — Mike Bordick, ss.
SEATTLE (1) — Mark Whiten, of.
TORONTO (2) — Tony Castillo, lhp; Mike Timon, hp
NATIONAL LEAGUE
CICAGO (1) — Luis Gonzalez, of.
CINCINATI (1) — Thomas Howard, of.
FLORIDA (1) — Chris Hammond, lhp.
MONTREAL (2) — Bernard Glikey, of; Brent Mayne, c.
PHILADELPHIA (2) — Mike Benjamin, 3b;
Mickey Morandini, 2b.
SAN DIEGO (1) — Craig Shipley, 3b.
SAN FRANCISCO (1) — Jose Baurista, rhp.
PRO FOOTBALL
Chiefs-Bears. Stats
Kansas City 7 7 0—14
Chicago 7 3 0—10
kick). 6:00.
Chi—Jennings 22 pass from Kramer Huerta
kick) 10:07
KC—Vanover 36 pass from Bono Stoyanovich
Cn- PG Huang 27, 11:06.
KC- Dawson 16 pass from Gannon Stoy-
anovich kick), 13:06.
A—NA.
Second Quarter
| | KC | Chi |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| First downs | 11 | 14 |
| Rushes-yards | 20-118 | 26-77 |
| Passing | 128 | 139 |
| Punt Returns | 1-19 | 2-39 |
| Kickoff Returns | 1-9 | 3-66 |
| Interceptions Ret. | 0-0 | 1-6 |
| Comp-Att-Int | 9-16-1 | 10-18-0 |
| Sacked-Yards-Lost | 0-0 | 1-11 |
| Punts | 3-42 | 3-47 |
| Fumbles-Lost | 1-1 | 2-2 |
| Penalties-Yards | 7-62 | 5-55 |
| Time of Possession | 18:28 | 22:12 |
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Kansas City, Allen 20-7, Hill 7-14, Richardson 2-10, Bono 2-6, Bennack 4-5, Green 1-1, Hickey 1-minus 1), Chicago, Green 10-5, Hickey 1-minus 4, Carter 1-2, Harris 3-minus 1), Cranen 1-0
PASSING - KING City, Gannon 5-8-1-50,
4-bomb 8-0-78, Chicago Kramer 6-10-0-10
RECEIVING—Kansas City, Vanover 3-74
Johnson 2-4, Hughes 1-8, Dawson 1-56
Smith 1-11, Allen 1-4, Chicago, Jennings 2-38
Ingram 2-5, Timpson 1-35, Jackson 1-17
Hannah 1-13, Green 1-11, Coleman 1-7, Harris
1-4.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
College Football Schedule
By The Associated Press
Saturday, Aug. 24
FAR WEST
Texas A&M at Brigham Young. 11 a.m.
Sunday, Aug. 25 EAST
Southern Cal vs. Penn St. at East Rutherford,
N.J., 1 p.m.
Thursday, Aug.29
EAST
Illinois St. at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Northeast vs. Maine at Portland, Maine, 6
SOUTH
William & Mary at Cent. Florida, 6 p.m.
Liberty at E. Tennessee St., 6 p.m.
Appalachian St. at Wake Forest, 6:30 p.m.
Nichols St. at NE Louisiana, 7 p.m.
Kwesleyan at W. Kentucky, 7 p.m.
MIDWEST
SOUTHWEST
Mars Hill at Indiana St, 5:30 p.m.
Akron at Ohio U, 6 p.m.
Wofford at Youngstown St, 6 p.m.
NW Oklahoma at W. Illinois, 6:30 p.m.
E. Illinois at W. Michigan, 6:30 p.
Ball St at Kansas, 7 p.m.
FAR WEST
E. New Mexico at Stephen F. Austin, 7 p.m.
New Mexico at New Mexico St., 7:00 p.m.
W. New Mexico at N. Arizona, 8 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 30
MIDWEST
innail. 8:20 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 31 EAST
SOUTH
Miami at Memphis, 12:30 p.m.
Bowling Green at Alabama, 2 p.m.
Clemson at North Carolina, 2:30 p.m.
Southern Miss. at Georgia, 3 p.m.
N. Carolina A&T vs. N.C. Central, at Raleigh.
American Intl. at Rhode Island,2 p.m.
Villanova at Rutgers, 5 p.m.
West Virginia at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.
Troy St. at Alcorn St, 4 p.m.
SW Louisiana at Florida, 5 p.m.
Georgia Southern at S. Carolina St, 5 p.m.
Ala.-Birmingham at Auburn, 5 p.m.
Louisville at Kentucky, 5:30 p.m.
Morehouse at Bethune-Cookman, 6 p.m.
N. Illinois at Maryland, 6 p.m.
N.W. Indiana at South Dakota, 6 p.m.
UNLV at Tennessee, 7 p.m.
Florida &AM at Tennessee St, 6 p.m.
Middle Tenn. at Louisiana Tech, 7 p.m.
MIDWEST
Cent at Michigan St. 11:30 a.m.
Kent at Miami, Ohio; 12:30 p.m.
Morgan St. vs. Cent St. Ohio at Columbus,
Ohio; 1:30 p.m.
Cent Arkansas at S. Illinois; 1:30 p.m.
Texas Tech at Kansas St.; 2:30 p.m.
Illinois at Michigan; 2:30 p.m.
Temple at E. Michigan; 6 p.m.
SOUTHWEST
SW Missouri St. at Oklahoma St., 6 p.m.
Missouri at Texas, 6 p.m.
Sam Houston St. at Houston, 7 p.m.
Grand Valley St. at SW Texas St., 7 p.m.
Tulsa at Southern Meth, 7 p.m.
Prairie View vs. Texas Southern at Houston,
7:30 p.m.
FAR WEST
San Jose St. at Air Force, 1 p.m.
Idaho at Wyoming, 2 p.m.
Washington St. at Colorado, 2:30 p.m.
Tn.-Chattanooga at Colorado St., 2:30 p.m.
Cent. Michigan at Boise St., 8 p.m.
Arkansas St. at Brigham Young, 8 p.m.
N. Iowa at S. Utah, 8 p.m.
Utah at Utah St., 8 p.m.
Boston College at Hawaii, 8:30 p.m.
Texas-Et Paso at Arizona, 9 p.m.
Oregon at Fresno St., 9 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 1 SOUTH
Hampton U. at Clark Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Miss. Valley St. at Morris Brown, 6 p.m.
Jackson St. vs. Alabama St. at Birmingham,
Ala., 7 p.m.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 23, 1996
3B
Michael Irvin returns Land Cruiser
Dealers demand vehicle's return after failed deal
The Associated Press
DALLAS — An attorney says Michael Irvin dropped off a $50,000 sport utility vehicle lent by car dealers now suing the troubled Dallas Cowboys' All-Pro receiver.
Larry Friedman, who represents the dealers, yesterday confirmed that the Land Cruiser was behind his law office on Wednesday night.
"Apparently they dumped it at the back of my building between 8 and 8:30 last night and left the keys with a note at the security desk,"
he said.
A deadline for the return of a Toyota Land Cruiser, lent to Irvin as part of an endorsement contract, passed at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday without word from the football star.
defiance of authority."
"It's more of Michael Irwin's petulance," Friedman said. "It's his
authority." On Tuesday,
the North Texas Toyota
Dealers Association
sued Irvin
DALLAS COWBOYS
for damages, contending that he violated deceptive-trade laws when he signed an endorsement contract misrepresenting himself as a moral person.
The dealers scrapped their spring ad campaign featuring Irvin when police found him, a former teammate and two topless dancers in an Irving, Texas, motel room on March 4 with marijuana, cocaine and drug paraphernalia.
The lawsuit seeks $1.2 million for lost sales and $200,000 in production costs.
On Wednesday morning, state District Judge Candace Tyson gave Irvin and the auto dealers one week to negotiate a settlement. Otherwise, the case goes to trial on March 10.
"We don't think he's entitled to any compensation because he didn't disclose to us his immoral lifestyle," Friedman said. "If we can't settle the case in the next week, we will be taking depositions of some of the members of the Cowboys
team in order to develop the facts of the case."
Friedman requested the return of the Land Cruiser as part of the contract. Chris Frederiksen, Irvin's attorney, agreed to return the vehicle by early afternoon.
He said his client didn't believe the contract dispute would lead to litigation.
"He was not expecting that Toyota would rush him to the courthouse to file a lawsuit," Frederiksen said.
Last month, Irvin pleaded no contest to a felony cocaine possession charge. He was sentenced to four years' deferred adjudication, fined $10,000 and ordered to perform 800 hours of community service.
The NFL suspended him for the season's first five games.
Cone performing well after aneurysm
Shoulder operation a pitching success
The Associated Press
NORWICH, Conn. — Fifty-four pitches, 40 strikes, seven strikeouts, no walks and, most important, no pain.
David Cone was back on the mound Wednesday night, pitching well in his first game since undergoing surgery May 10 for an aneurysm in his right
Yankees
shoulder, originally thought to be career-threatening.
"All in all, it was pretty good. In the area where the aneurysm was repaired, there was no problem, and I think I'm even past the point of thinking about the vein graft," Cone said after allowing four hits and two runs, one earned, in four innings for Class AA Norwich in a 5-2 loss to the Binghamton Mets.
Cone's repertoire was evenly mixed between fastballs, sliders and
split-finger fastballs. His sliders were clocked between 87 and 69 mph and his split-finger fastballs between 81 and 83 mph.
His fastest pitch registered 90 mph on the radar gun, but Mets first baseman Brian Daubach hit it over the fence in right field in the first inning. Cone also allowed two doubles by Phil Geisler and a single by Dwight Maness. He retired nine of the final 10 batters he faced and left with the score tied 2-2.
"Those last two innings are right where I want to be," Cone said. "It was a good way to finish and hopefully I can carry it into my next start Monday when we'll get up around 75 or 80 pitches."
Cone's third rehab start would be a week from Saturday, and he is tentatively penciled in as New York's starter in a Sept. 6 home game against Toronto.
The Yankees have been in first place in the AL East almost the entire season, but their lead has slipped from 12 games three weeks ago to five games yesterday.
Cone was 4-1 with a 2.03 ERA for the Yankees before undergoing surgery. He left the hospital five days after surgery and made his first
"I was surprised I didn't walk anybody and was able to throw strikes, even though a couple of them went pretty far." David Cor
fingers were numb and blue.
David Cone New York Yankee's pitcher
soft tosses six weeks later. He had been throwing at Yankee Stadium for the past two weeks.
"I felt like I could have pitched one or two more innings, and I felt better than I did the last time I pitched against Chicago May 2 — nine innings with an aneurysm when my
"Tonight was the first step back, and I've pitched again. It's something I've been looking forward to for a long time and I feel great," Cone said. "I was surprised I didn't walk anybody and was able to throw strikes, even though a couple of them went pretty far."
He was scheduled to throw 60 pitches, but he left after 54. The standing room only crowd, gave him a standing ovation as he walked off the field. He acknowledged it with a wave of his gloved hand.
Perhaps his shakiest moment came in the second inning when he skipped one past the bag and allowed an unearned run to score from third base.
Still, it was hard for anybody from the Yankees to find much to gripe about with Cone finally back in a real game.
“Initially, when I first heard the word aneurysm, that was scary because I didn't know what was going to happen,” Cone said. “After the surgery, I felt comfortable that I'd be able to come back this year. A lot of people doubted it and looked at me kind of funny, but now I have.”
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All-Sports Combo
Student Ticket Distribution
Please read before picking up your tickets
Your Assigned Picked-Up Date
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Last Name
A - G
8:30 - 4:00
Monday, August 26
H - P
Tuesday, August 27
Q-Z
Wednesday, August 28
Make-Up Day
Thursday, August 29
You may pick up only your own ticket.
You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the men's basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your Sports Combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up.
If you miss your assigned pick-up date and make-up day, you may pick up you tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East Lobby of Allen Fieldhouse beginning Friday, August 30,1996.
You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1996 fee sticker to receive your tickets.
KANSAS FOOTBALL 1996
Home Opener, this Thursday, Aug. 29, 7:00 pm.- Jayhawks vs. Ball State
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4B
Friday, August 23, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Big 12 unhappy with bowl system
Authorities seek changes with Alliance contract
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Several Big 12 Conference schools are unhappy with the special treatment that the proposed Super Alliance bowl system gives the Rose Bowl and the Big Ten and Pacific-10 conferences and will seek changes, The Dallas Morning News reported yesterday.
Athletic directors at Nebraska and Missouri also expressed concern for the new system the way it's drawn up and said they're not sure they can go along with it.
"I don't see it happening," Texas A&M athletic director Wally Groff said Wednesday of the agreement, which has yet to be signed. "They want to have their cake and eat it, too."
"We are going to try to work this out," Big 12 commissioner Steve Hatchell said.
The Big Ten and Pac-10 confer
M. KNIPMAN
Steve Hatchell
ences are scheduled to join the Alliance in a new structure that would guarantee a national championship bowl m at c h u p beginning in 1998.
Under terms
of the proposed Super Alliance agreement, the champions of six major conferences, and possibly Notre Dame, would be put in a pool for the four bowls to choose from in order to create the title game between the Nos. 1 and 2 teams in the national rankings.
The leagues are the Big 12. Atlantic Coast, Southeastern. Big East,Big Ten and Pac-10.
The Rose Bowl will be allowed to keep the Big Ten and Pac-10 champions in its game in the Super Alliance unless one of those conferences' teams is ranked No. 1 or No. 2 and the Rose Bowl isn't staging the title game.
The other Super Alliance bowls—
the Fiesta, Sugar and Orange — gave up their traditional tie-ins beginning last season, when the Alliance's current three-year run began with No. 1 Nebraska meeting No. 2 Florida in the Fiesta Bowl.
Also, for the seven years of the Super Alliance, the Rose Bowl will be allowed to stay in its traditional late afternoon start except for 2002, when it is slated to stage the national championship game.
The other three Alliance bowls must change their kickoff times to accommodate the Super Alliance.
The Rose Bowl will be able to trade its 2002 title game for one in 1999, 2000 or 2001 if the Big Ten or Pac-10 team is ranked No. 1. No other Alliance bowl has that option.
ABC would own the television rights to all four Super Alliance games and be able to stage a national championship game each year in a different bowl.
The Rose Bowl is assured a spot in the rotation, and the Fiesta, Sugar and Orange bowls are to be given a 60-day period later this year in which to negotiate for their spots.
"If we had known of the Big Ten Pac-10 contract, we would have not
moved ahead in the Alliance," Nebraska athletic director Bill Byrne said of his school's vote. "Luckily, we have not signed anything. We did not know their contract had been officially extended."
Texas athletic director DeLoss Dodds labeled the new deal among the Rose Bowl, Big Ten, Pac-10 and ABC "disappointing," but said he could live with it.
"Our clear understanding was we would have an opportunity to have jump ball in 2002 to put this on the open market and let the market dictate what the terms might be," Byrne said.
"We understood what the rich history of the Rose Bowl was, and we would phase them into the Alliance. But after 2002, everybody would be an equal partner. The way this has happened, some partners are more equal than others."
"The Big 12 doesn't want to wear the black hats in this. But, by the same token, we should be treated the same as everybody else," Missouri athletic director Joe Castiglione said. "The days of good faith negotiations seem to be over."
Former Cornhusker serving sentence
Peter to spend 10 days in county jail
The Associated Press
KEARNEY, Neb. — Former Nebraska football player Christian Peter was in jail yesterday serving a 10-day sentence for grabbing a woman at a Kearney bar last March.
Peter began serving his sentence Tuesday night, said Chief Deputy Dick Larson, who oversees the Buffalo County Jail.
"He has been treated no different than any other prisoner we have here," Larson said. "And he has not
asked for any special treatment either."
Peter was being kept in an individual cell and was allowed to watch television and interact with others in his jail block once a day, Larson said.
P.
Christian Peter
Larson would not comment on Peter's behavior or how many other prisoners were in his cell block.
Peter began serving his sentence after an appeal was dismissed this
week in Buffalo County District Court.
In addition to his jail sentence, Peter was fined $300.
Peter was convicted of disturbing the peace after grabbing Janelle Mues, 21, around the neck several hours after attending a football boosters' banquet March 2.
Police were called twice that night about Peter's actions.
"It is obvious I was wrong," Peter said at his sentencing May 21. "I can't make it better. I know Christian Peter and alcohol don't mix."
Peter's lawyers have said their client already has been punished by losing a salary of up to $2 million when he was dropped by the New
England Patriots three days after being drafted in the NFL.
Team officials said Peter allegedly "showed conduct which our organization found to be unacceptable, specifically criminal violence against women."
Peter pleaded guilty in May 1994 to third-degree assault of a former Miss Nebraska. He served 18 months probation, which expired in early January.
He also has been arrested on suspicion of disturbing the peace, trespassing, urinating in public, refusing to comply with the order of a policeman and third-degree assault for threatening to kill a parking attendant.
NBC apologizes for comments made by Costas
Amends had not satisfied angered Chinese groups
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — An NBC sports official apologized for hurting the feelings of Chinese groups upset that Bob Costas mentioned China's human rights problems and other issues during the Olympics opening ceremonies.
Ed Markey, vice president of NBC's sports section, said in a brief letter of apology, "Mr. Costas did not intend any disrespect to the People's Republic of China or its citizens."
"We apologize for any resulting hurt feelings," said the letter, a response to Chen Kai, a representative of Chinese and Chinese-American groups that wrote NBC and published ads in U.S. newspapers to protest.
China's state-run media and Foreign Ministry officials assailed Costas for remarks he made during the July 19 opening ceremony. According to a transcript provided yesterday by NBC, Costas said, "Every economic power, including the United States, wants to tap into that huge potential market, but of course there are problems with human rights, property-rights disputes, the threat posed to Taiwan."
He went on to mention their athletic achievements — and suspicions that performance-enhancing drugs are behind
some of them.
Markey's letter said: "The comments were not based on NBC beliefs. Nobody at NBC ever intends to offend anyone."
Markey declined to comment further in a phone call yesterday.
In Beijing, the apology appeared to have done little to mollify those offended by Costas' comments, which widely were perceived in China as openly anti-
Chinese.
1
"Any new agency in the world should respect and comply with the most fundamental professional ethics and not produce reports which disport facts."
C. J. KENNEDY
Bob Costas
the foreign Ministry said in a statement. "It is hoped that NBC will draw lessons and make sure that there will be no recurrence of things like that."
Kai, a student at the University of California at Berkeley, complained that the apology was not made in public and was not made by Costas.
"It is only fair to ask Mr. Costas to apologize on air during prime evening hours and in writing," the Xinhua news agency quoted Kai as saying.
Regrettably, all sections are full this semester for
Remedial Thermodynamics
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 23, 1996
5B
Roughhousing days are done
CLEVELAND
Belle's recent behavior an improvement
After spending a majority of this baseball season under close scrutiny, teammates say Indians outfielder Albert Belle is turning over a new leaf.
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — The last time the Cleveland Indians faced the Milwaukee Brewers, Fernando Vina got decked, Albert Belle got suspended and the Indians' season started looking like a circus.
Now take a look: Belle is still hitting home runs, still striking fear in pitches. He's also staying out of trouble, which is the best part to manager Mike Hargrove.
"Yeah, I think it helps us play more relaxed," Hargrove said. "I also think that controversy and that attention was totally unwarranted."
Cleveland hosts Milwaukee for a three-game series starting today at Jacobs Field. It will be the first series between the teams since Belle leveled Vina in the basepath on May 31, resulting in a brawl, three suspensions and the largest fine ever issued by a league president — $25,000 against Belle.
With the exception of conflicting reports of a Gatorade cup being thrown at a cameraman in Chicago, Belle has been awfully quiet lately. The player who has been suspended five times in six seasons has gotten back to concentrating on the game he plays so well and so fiercely.
The lack of controversy seems to have done wonders for Belle and the Indians, who will have at least a 7 1/2-game lead over second-place Chicago when they take the field today.
Belle (batting .303) is second in the majors with 41 homers and tops in the majors with 119 RBI. He is on a torrid streak lately, hitting two home runs in his last 11 at-bats.
"I think he realized that some of the guys weren't really happy with the things he was doing," Omar Vizuell said. "I think everybody's really happy to see that. You don't have to get mad after every play."
Hargrove said Belle hasn't made a conscious effort to change. It's just that people are leaving him alone now.
"It's just Albert being Albert," Hargrove said, "and things have settled down."
There is a notable change in the Indians' clubhouse. Belle is in there a lot now, joking with teammates and talking to coaches. He's even been taking batting practice with the team lately, standing around the cage and chatting.
Pranksters abound. Music blares.
You never know what Casey Candaele is going to do.
"It's very typical of a championship ballclub," said Jeff Kent, who was acquired in an unpopular trade that sent Carlos Baerga to the New York Mets. "I was with the Blue Jays in '92, and I watched them, how everybody reacted. This team is definitely similar to that."
This is nothing like the atmosphere of three months ago, when the Belle-Vina incident triggered accusations and apologies, a threatened lawsuit by Belle, a class action lawsuit by fans and negotiations that finally resulted in Belle's suspension being reduced from five to two games. Back then, the clubhouse was just an empty place where the players hung their clothes.
Hargrove has noticed the change, but insists it's mostly about perception.
"I think a lot of that sometimes has to do with what you hear and read about it," Hargrove said. "I think the longer you're around it, as long as you stay away from certain areas, there's no reason to feel intimidated."
tance on Belle's actions. There are other factors. The Baerga trade, for example, seems to have done the team some good.
It's easy to place too much impor-
There's also this little matter of the Indians being the defending AL champions. They want to get to the
World Series and win it this time,
whether Belle behaves or not.
"Albert's going to be Albert."
Sandy Alomar said. "He's going to do what he's going to do. And we don't care what he does — as long as he keeps going out and hitting
Kickoff Classic pits USC with Penn State
Weekend also will see Brigham Young Texas A&M battle
The Associated Press
Penn State's Joe Paterno and USC's John Robinson are taking the cautious approach to the Kickoff Classic.
"The Kickoff Classic cannot influence us," said Robinson, who has a 92-24-4 record at USC. "If we win, and people start saying we're real good, we can't listen. If we lose, and people say we're real bad, we can't listen. We'll probably be neither regardless of the game."
And why not? Both coaches have been around too long to get caught up in national title mania on the first weekend of the season.
Paterno, with a 278-72-3 record, takes his usual early-season approach: "Win or lose, I think we'll be a better team coming off the Southern Cal game than we might have been. It's probably a good thing for us."
In what could be a preview of the 1997 Rose Bowl, the Trojans and Nittany Lions have similar strengths. Both have experienced quarterbacks, tough defenses and a stable of good running backs.
On Sunday, it's No. 7 Southern California against No. 11 Penn State in the Kickoff Classic at sold-out Giants Stadium. On Saturday, it's No. 13 Texas A&M at Brigham Young in the Pigskin Classic.
Wally Richardson completed 193 of 335 passes for 2,198 yards and 18 TDs for Penn State. USC's Brad Otton, who shared time
with Kyle Wachholtz in 1995, was 159-of256 for 1,923 yards and 14 TDs.
Curtis Enis is Penn State's top runner. Rodney Sermons and LaVale Woods will share time for USC after the suspension of 1,000-yard rusher Delon Washington.
Eight starters return on defense for Penn State, including tackle Brandon Noble, inside linebacker Gerald Filardi and cornerback Brian Miller. For the Trojans, the defense is anchored by tackles Darrrell Russell and Matt Keneley and cornerback Davlon McCutcheon.
Paterno is 11-5 against the Pac-10, while Robinson is 11-3 against the Big Ten. The Nittany Lions are 9-2 in Giants Stadium; the Trojans are 1-0. Penn State is favored by 2 1/2 points.
in the Pigskin Classic, two other highly successful coaches, BYU's Lavell Edwards (214-80-3) and A&M's R.C. Slocum (68-15-2) are preparing for their second meeting. The Aggies clobbered BYU 65-14 in the 1990 Holiday Bowl.
For Texas A&M, Brandon Stewart, a transfer from Tennessee, replaces Corey Pullig as quarterback. Eight starters are back from one of the nation's best defenses. Among the top players are end Brandon Mitchell, linebacker Keith Mitchell and noseguard Eddie Jasper.
BYU returns 12 starters, including Steve Sarkisian, who threw for 3,437 yards and 20 TDs last year.
"Texas A&M has unbelievable quickness in the defensive front," Edwards said. "We have to slow down their running attack and protect and buy enough time for us to operate."
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6B
Friday, August 23, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rams take risk on former Nebraska star Phillips
Good behavior a must for the reckless rookie
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — For Lawrence Phillips, the challenge is not just to display his worth in the NFL games. Phillips must also prove he has the discipline and disposition to succeed off the field.
Phillips is considered such a talent that the St. Louis Rams used the
the draft on him, then traded the incumbent the same day.
I
In the eyes of offensive coordinator Johnny R o l a n d , Phillips will surpass the accomplishments of
Lawrence Phillips
departed Jerome Bettis, who made the Pro Bowl his first two seasons and now is with Pittsburgh.
"If you had a Secretariat or a Cigar, you don't leave them in the barn," Roland said. "You get them out on the track and you race them."
"We're going to get him on the football field and let him go to town."
But going to town, away from the stadium, has been part of Phillips' problems.
Concern about his legal troubles led the Rams to force a three-year, $5.625 million deal — with no signing bonus — on Phillips in late July. Unlike the rest of the first-rounders who are instantly set for life with multimillion-dollar bonuses up front, Phillips — who has acted like an out-of-control kid off the football field — has to carry his new car into
"We're not going to throw money
down the drain." Rams coach Rich Brooks said back in June.
The deal, so unusual in the NFL these days, prompted Phillips to make one more ill-advised decision. He held out for the first 16 days of training camp while he and his agent confronted the realities. Then, they hammered out the contract details with the Rams.
"We're going to get him on the football field and let him go to town."
The ramifications of the holdout — daily remedial pass-blocking seminars and backup status during the exhibition season — are nothing compared to his legal woes.
"Most definitely," he said
Last year, after an attack on his former girlfriend, Phillips received a five-game suspension, then was reinstated by Nebraska coach Tom Osborne three games before the Fiesta Bowl.
Phillips believes he'll avoid jail.
Phillips might have been the top pick in the draft, if not for his offfield problems. While on probation for his attack on a former girlfriend at Nebraska, he was arrested for drunken driving in June.
Nebraska officials said they probably would try to revoke Phillips' probation if he is found guilty on that charge, which would mean an automatic 30-day jail sentence. Phillips' initial court appearance is Aug. 28, four days before the season opener at home against Cincinnati.
Phillips allegedly had a blood-alcohol level twice the legal limit when a California Highway Patrol officer spotted him driving 80 mph on a flat tire, then pursued him for five miles before pulling him over.
For a time, the situation was so dicey the Rams signed free-agent running back Harold Green, the Bengals' leading rusher last season, just in case Phillips wasn't available. Now the Rams and Phillips' attorneys are confident that jail time, if any, won't come until after the season.
"I guess I could have been a hero by booting him off permanently, but I just didn't feel right doing it," Osborne said. "I became a win-at-
all-costs guv."
Johnny Roland
St. Louis Rams Offensive Coordinator
Starting in training camp, the Rams took pains to keep Phillips, who turned 21 in May and will wear No.21 on the field, from making any more risky moves. Besides workouts and meetings that take up most of his day, the team has four ex-Nebraska players on the roster.
"We have a close-knit group, a family-type situation," Roland said. "The players will wrap him up in their cocoon and he'll be on the straight and narrow."
"They're all older than me and I think it'll help a lot to hang out with those guys," he said.
Phillips acts like he wants the help.
Phillips is counting on big numbers, like the 165 yards and two touchdowns against Florida in the
But the Rams aren't taking anything for granted. Judging from his first news conference after signing, when he related that instead of soulsearching he decided the wisest course of action was to take a limousine the next time he went night-clubbing. Phillips remains a risk.
"You cannot help someone who doesn't want to be helped," Brooks said in June, a few days after Phillips' DUI arrest. "Lawrence has obviously got to make some very important decisions in his life as to what direction he's going to go, who he's going to trust, who he's going to put his faith in."
Fiesta Bowl and the 30 touchdowns in 27 college games, to put his shaky past to rest.
"I hope me playing well and doing the things I have to do will be enough for the fans," Phillips said. "Everybody has an opinion and not everybody is going to like you."
"But if you worried about everything that's said, you'd spend your whole life trying to defend yourself."
In his first extensive NFL action, he showed making the transition from Nebraska to the pros might not be a big deal. He ran for 37 yards and was particularly impressive on a 3-yard touchdown run, avoiding a tackle in the backfield before speeding into the end zone.
"I'm running mostly on instinct right now and my instincts are pretty good," Phillips said. "You don't want to think too much, just basically react, and when I learn the offense I'll be better."
The Rams have no doubt about that. Brooks has noticed that Phillips always seems to get the most out of his carries, falling forward.
"Lawrence is doing a great job on the field, I want to underscore that," Brooks said. "He's a pleasure to coach on the field and he's making up for lost ground."
If he can just stay out of trouble away from the action, that No. 6 pick might look like a steal.
Favre could join multimillion ranks
Deal would add drug stipulation
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Brett Favre is seeking a contract extension on par with Troy Aikman's $50 million deal.
But a new pact would include a stipulation that the Green Bay Packers quarterback forfeit some of that money if he violates the NFL's substance-abuse policy, his agent said yesterday.
"Logically, the team would like to have some protection," said James "Bus" Cook, the Hattiesburg, Miss., attorney who represents Favre. "That's understandable, and Brett has no problem with that."
Favre, in the third year of his five-year, $19 million contract, entered the NFL's substance-abuse program in May to be treated for an addiction to painkillers.
Favre also can't use alcohol for two years and told the Green Bay Press-Gazette that he is being tested for drugs and alcohol as often as four times a week.
Favre, 26, was the NFL's Most Valuable Player last season while leading the Packers to the NFC title game. He threw an NFC-record 38 touchdown passes in 1995 and in the last two seasons has thrown 71 TDs and just 27 interceptions.
He is seeking a new deal that would put him on par with Dallas' Aikman, $50 million in eight years; New England's Drew Bledsoe, $42 million in seven years; and Denver's John Elway, $29.5 million in five years.
"That's what the market has dictated for the top quarter-backs," Cook said. "And I think Brett Favre is the best quarterback in the NFL. A lot of people must share that same opinion since he was the MVP last year."
Cook said he would like to reach agreement on an extension by midseason.
"We've been talking on and off for several months," he said. "Right now we're kind of in a holding pattern."
Mike Reinfeldt, the Packers' chief financial officer, said the team is intent on renegotiating Favre's deal, but he said the team has no timetable.
"It's something we'd both like to have had done already," he said. "As for a specific time frame, there's no drop-dead dates. But I think it's something both sides realize the importance of."
Reinfeld refused to confirm that the team would want a substance-abuse stipulation included.
"I really don't like to go into specifics on any of our contracts," he said.
Neither side would disclose the length of the deal they are seeking.
"We would like to extend it a number of years," Reinfeldt said. "I'm not sure of the specific number yet, but it would be a lengthy extension."
If an agreement isn't reached, the Packers could designate Favre their franchise player, meaning he would earn the average of the league's five highest-paid quarterbacks. He could strike a deal as a free agent, but the Packers would have the right of first refusal.
Reinfeldt said it won't come to that.
"We have a good relationship with Bus and with Brett," he said. "We have a good history of working together. There's no doubt we really want him. He really wants to be here. All those ingredients make everybody optimistic that we'll work something out."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 23, 1996
7B
U.S. Open redraws seeds
Sampras,Agassi could meet again
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — reacting to a wave of player criticism and the threat of a boycott, the U.S. Tennis Association yesterday remade the men's draw for the U.S. Open.
Two-time champion Stefan Edberg still got a tough first-round match, and the changes could result in top-seeded Pete Sampras and No. 6 Andre Agassi meeting in the title match for the second straight year.
"We are responding mostly to the players," said Les Snyder, president and chief executive officer of the USTA. "The main idea is we must do what we feel is best for tennis and what is best for the U.S. Open."
The draw for the 128-player men's field originally — without the 16 seeds — was made Tuesday night. The next morning, the seeds were announced during a ceremony at a Manhattan restaurant. The U.S. Open then proceeded to place the seeds in the draw by selecting names from a cup.
In naming the seeds, the U.S. Open made three changes from the ATP Tour rankings, which only the four
Grand Slam tournaments are allowed to do.
Third-ranked Michael Chang of Henderson, Nev., was seeded second; second-ranked Thomas Muster of Austria was seeded third.
Yevgeny Kafelnikov of Russia, ranked fourth in the world, dropped to seventh in the seeding. With No. 5 Boris Becker out of the tournament with a wrist injury, sixth-ranked Goran Ivanisevic of Croatia moved to fourth in the seedings. No. 7 Richard Krajicek of the Netherlands to fifth and No. 8 Andre Agassi of Las Vegas to sixth.
But the fact that the bulk of the draw was made before the 16 top players were seeded brought howls of protest.
"It is an insult to the players, to the ATP rankings and to the game of tennis the way the draw was made for the U.S. Open," Andrei Medvedev of Ukraine said at a tournament in Commack, N.Y., before learning of the new draw. "Wimbledon has an unusual seeding system, but it's fair. They list the seedings before they make the draw. The U.S. Open draw was made before they made the seedings."
"I don't think we can allow that to happen. When it happens once, then the Australian Open will do the same
for Australians, the French Open for the French. ... I believe if they don't change it, we should not play."
Snyder said he had not been told by a player of a threatened boycott.
Paul Settles, an ATP Tour manager, said that the main draw was made before announcement of the seeds and that it was not made in a public ceremony accounted for the strong player reaction.
"I'm sure all of us wish it hadn't occurred," Snyder said. "The integrity of this tournament is the most important thing."
With the new draw, Agassi drops down to the bottom half, where he could play Chang in a semifinal. In the first draw, he could have met Sampras in the penultimate men's match. Agassi now will play Mauricio Hadad of Colombia in the first round.
Adrian Voinea of Romania replaces David Rikl of the Czech Republic as the first-round foe of Sampras, who is seeking his fourth U.S. Open title. Rikl now faces Hicham Arazi of Morocco.
Edberg, playing in his final Grand Slam tournament before retiring, didn't fare well in either draw. Originally scheduled to play eighth-seeded Jim Courier in the first round, Edberg now will meet Wimbledon champion Richard Krajčić of the Netherlands.
Juniors knock ball out of park
Final World Series game is tomorrow
The Associated Press
The Rhode Islanders (2-2) will play either Taiwan or the Dominican Republic in tomorrow's final. Those teams played last last night.
Cranston became only the third eastern U.S. team in the last 21 years to advance to the series final and the first since Shippensburg, Pa., lost to Taiwan 9-0 in 1990.
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Craig Stinson homered and Brett Bell struck out seven batters as Cranston, R.I., beat Panama City, Fla., 6-3, yesterday to advance to the championship game of the Little League World Series.
Cranston batted around and scored five runs in the third inning on Stinson's solo home run, Brett Bell's bases-loaded double and two errors on Panama City pitcher Mark Sauls. He threw wildly to third on a grounder, could not field a bunt, threw a wild pitch and walked two batters in the inning.
Lucas Ashton doubled for Cranston in the fourth and scored on the third of Sauls' four wild pitches. Sauls' father and coach, Dennis Sauls, then replaced him with Clete Thomas. Sauls struck out 12 on Monday in a victory over Moorpark, Calif.
Chris Sison, who batted .750 in the series, tripled in the second and scored on Jeff Boutwell's single for Panama City (3-1). In the fourth, Boutwell walked and scored on
Ryan Harris' double, and Harris score on Heath Anderson's single.
Eighty-one-pound reserve Drew McQuagge, pinch-running for 165-pound Florida infielder Josh Cooper, hesitated between second and third bases in the fifth inning and was thrown out by shortstop Sauls following Sison's single to deep center.
Sison reached third on two wild pitches, but Bell struck out Bouttown to end the inning.
Cranston this year became the first team to advance to the series semifinal with a losing record. It won its opener, then lost two in a row, including Panama City's 8-6 win Tuesday, but advanced because it gave up the fewest runs per inning of the three U.S. teams that were 1-2.
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8B
Friday, August 23, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Baseball now a game of talk
Negotiations still hang on
Associated Press
These are the dog days of baseball's summer, that challenging time in a season when players are convinced they have been at this grind forever and just as certain that it will never end.
History tells us they are wrong. The season is like a rainstorm. We know it will end because it always has.
Contract negotiations are less predictable.
The on-again, off-again talks between union and management were back on again briefly last week, just long enough for the owners to make an offer they knew would be rejected. It was, of course, rejected.
picture. It is oneupsmanship, looking for an edge, shortcutting the other guy. It has been that way in baseball's talks since the guns of August were first fired two years ago. It remains an integral piece of this tawdry situation.
So why make this grandstand play in the first place? Do we really need posturing at this point in the game?
Fans long ago lost interest in labor-speak, the language of luxury taxes and free-agent filing, arbitration and repeater rights, the stuff that has nothing to do with the essence of the game — runs, hits and errors. The suits — the accountants, agents and attorneys who have attached themselves to the sport — are the ones who thrive on that stuff.
Fans want to talk about John Smoltz reaching 20 wins with six weeks left in the season or Mark McGwire, closing in on 50 home runs despite missing 31 games. Fans wonder about the Yankees hanging on in the American League East and the Rockies, Padres and Dodgers batting it out in the National League West. Fans care about their teams and their games. The suits prefer their baseball in the form of ledgers
and charts.
Hung up on the issue of service time for the strike that destroyed the 1994 season — that particular rainstorm became a hurricane — the owners decided to become benevolent. They would grant the service time, they said, except for the 20 or so players who needed it for free agency.
That meant leaving a fistful of players including Bernard Gilkey, Moises Alou, Chuck Knoblauch and Alex Fernandez hung out to dry and that proposal had as much chance of being accepted as Donald Fehr has to be baseball's next commissioner.
Thanks, but no thanks, the union told the owners and they adjourned until next week. Does this all sound vaguely familiar? For 16 months after a federal court issued an injunction that ended the 232-day players strike, the union and management bargained only occasionally and then the negotiations were like the work of so many current relief pitchers: brief and ineffective.
Then, suddenly, they found common ground. For 35 frantic hours, they agreed to agree. One after the other, in rapid succession, issues tumbled. Baseball's nightmare was about to end.
And then, nothing. The filibuster,
like so many before it, had failed.
For 10 days, there was silence, like a submarine going back under water. And when talks resumed, the sub went nowhere, anchored in the morass that has surrounded this debate for so long. We are back, it seems, at Square One.
Fehr sounded properly outraged by the management stance, the suggestion that the union would leave part of its constituency out of luck. "Obviously the players are not going to take 15 or 20 players and leave them high and dry," the union boss said.
Management negotiator Randy Levine was far more upbeat after the latest talks. "The bargaining process is moving forward," he said. "I think we inched a little closer today."
He didn't say closer to what.
Nittmo released as KC Chiefs kicker
Bjorn Nittmo had just that feeling even after he was introduced to cheers at the Kansas City Chiefs annual luncheon as their kicker.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In their solitary existence, NFL kickers always know they can be replaced at any moment.
Chiefs make quick trade for accurate Stoyanovich
"Everybody was saying to me, 'Congratulations,' Nitmo said Wednesday. "But I wasn't going to let this get to me until I got past the Chicago game. It never got past Chicago."
The Chiefs ate lunch with their fans, then got on a plane to Chicago for the final preseason game yesterday against the Bears — without Nittmo.
The Associated Press
"I was getting ready to head out the door," said Nittmo, who was released when the Chiefs traded a draft pick to the Miami Dolphins for Pete Stoyanovich.
"They pulled me aside and said, 'Go home.' You think you have something and then they yank it away from you," said Nittmo. "I'm ticked off about it, but, hev, that's the business."
With Stoyanovich, one of the most accurate kickers in NFL history, the Chiefs had no room for Nittmo. He was out the door, just like Roman Anderson before him. Nittmo apparently had won the job when Anderson was released earlier this week.
Just about everybody in this town — including Nittmo — knew that the Chiefs wanted a proven kicker to replace Lin Elliot, whose three missed kicks in a 10-7 playoff loss to Indianapolis last year spoiled a 13-3 regular season.
The 30-year-old Nittmo wasn't that proven kicker.
[Literature of India 1993]
He's kicked for the New York Giants and been to training camp with the Bills, Oilers and Chiefs. He's kicked in the Canadian, World and Arena leagues.
In 1990, he was matched up against Nick Lowery in the Chiefs camp. Lowery
"Everybody was saying to me, 'Congratulations,' but I wasn't going to let this get to me until I got past the Chicago game. It never got past Chicago."
Bjorn Nittmo
Former Kansas City Chiefs kicker
was either the first- or second-most accurate kicker along with Morten Anderson, depending on who had missed last.
But the Chiefs thought Lowery needed some competition.
Nittmo knew what would happen.
"We were just about tied in camp with the numbers we had," Nittmo said. "But that was just my second season coming in.
"Nick is Nick," Nittmo said then with a kicker's resignation.
Experience — the lack of it — cost Nittmo again.
"I have no doubt that (Nittmo) would be a solid performer in the NFL," Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer said. "He just didn't have the background Pete did."
And so it's back to south Florida and his construction business for Nittmo unless some other team comes calling.
"It's tough," Nittmo said. "There are 30 kicking jobs in the world. And there are what? Five billion people? Good luck.
"We all have a dream to chase. We're trying to do the best we can.
Big 12
Although Nebraska has had only about two dozen partial or non-qualifiers on its team in the last decade, Osborne is against the stringent standards.
"The tighter you draw the noose, the smaller the pool, and when you compete outside the conference you're not going to be as good," he said. "It won't show up this year, and won't show up next year. But three or four years from now, it probably will."
Continued from Page 1B
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Continued from Page 1B
"When you come back the first couple days, you're sore because you're practicing six hours a day." Mohrfeld says. "Volleyball becomes our life for those two weeks. We don't do anything but play volleyball."
Dermatology Center of Lawrence Since 1978
The two-a-day workouts lasted from Aug. 9 to Tuesday. Kansas junior captain Tiffany Sennett said the team had had only one day off — Aug. 18 — during those practices.
Kansas junior captain Maggie Mohrfel, who led the team's last year with 15 solo blocks, said that even if a player returns in shape, there is nothing like the long practices in the gym's heat.
Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D.
The team worked mostly on individual drills during two-a-davs.
10
"It's exciting to get back and get in the gym, but two-a-days aren't fun." Larson said.
"Sunday is the Sabbath; you are not to work on the Sabbath anwav." Sennett said laughing.
First-year Kansas volleyball graduate assistant Jenny Larson, who finished her Kansas volleyball career last year, said she had mixed feelings about the workouts.
930 lows St. • Hillcrest Professional Building
Lawrence, KS 68044 | (913) 847-7001
Kansas volleyball tryouts were at 5:30 p.m. yesterday in Robinson Center.
Madlock said the team wanted to add to the Jayhawks' 11-member roster, as teams usually carry 12 to 14 players.
Baseball
Continued from Page 1B
mining philosophy. My philosophy is good players."
So, tryout players have a chance to find room on the team because Coach Randall is still on the hunt.
Red Lyon Tavern
The first tryout meeting will be at 5 p.m. Tuesday at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. Those wishing to try out need to bring a copy of their personal insurance information. For more information call the Kansas baseball office at 864-7907.
Barb's Vintage Rose
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- Smiley face accessories
- Oriental raven robes
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
- Thigh-high hose
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Fitness Equipment
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2429 Iowa, Suite G Lawrence, KS
842-7378
Monday-Thursday 10 am - 8 pm Friday - Saturday 10 am - 5 pm
Bobhis Bedroom
Mattress Sets
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
Class 2 Sun., Sept.8 2 pm-5pm
Wkshp 2 Wed., Sept. 11 6pm-8pm
Test 2 Test, Sep. 14 9am-1pm
LSAT • LSAT • LSAT
Class 3 Sun., Sept. 15 2pm-5pm
Wikaph 3 Wed., Sep. 18 6pm-8pm
Test 3 Sat., Sep. 21 9am-1pm
The LSAT is on Oct. 5th.
Are You Prepared?
Test 1 Sat, Aug. 24 9 am-1pm
Class 1 Wed., Aug. 28 6 pm-9pm
Wksp 1 Wednesday, Sep. 4 6 pm-8pm
Wksp 1 Wednesday, Sep. 4 6 pm-8pm
Lawrence
Course #187
"Unward since 1993
Class 4 Sun, Sept. 22 2pm-5pm
Wkaph 4 Wed, Sept. 25 8pm-8pm
Tust 4 Sat, Sept. 25 9am-1pm
Course #187
Class 5 Sun., Sept. 29 2pm-5pm
Wkshp 5 Wed., Oct. 2 6pm-8pm
THE PRINCETON REVIEW
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(800) 865-7737
>
841-PLAY
1029
Massachusetts
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816 W. 24th suite B
(behind Laird Noller)
Hours: Mon-Fri 9-6;30
"A TERRIFIC TWISTED COMEDY!"
"COEN FANS HAVE REASON TO REJOICE!
The miscellaneous siblings have turned out a brilliant,
macabre thriller that rivals their classic, 'Blood Simple.'
Guy Flatley, COSMOPOLITAN
a film by
Joal & Ethan Coen
Fargo
a homespun
murder story
Friday 7:00 & 9:30 Saturday 7:00 & 9:30 Sunday 2:00
NOW PLAYING
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
>UA FILMS
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union Tickets available at SUA Box Office
Classified Directory
I
100s Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
112 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Servi-
...
. . .
X
300s
Merchandise
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
400s Real Estate
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1908 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, offer, invitation or race, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Classified Policy
100s Announcements
The Karsan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against female sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, education or disability. Further, the Karsan will not knowingly accept advertising that in a Karsan institution of Karsan region or law.
105 Personals
Open 24 hours everyday. Commence Plait Laun-dromat
3029 lawn St. Clean and air conditioned.
Poster Big.Sale! Biggest and best selection. Choose from over 200 different images. ROCK, FINE ART, POSTERS, INSTANTS, STATES, LANDSCAPES, PERSONALISTIES (Brad Pitt, Sandra Bullock, Einstein, Vul Kilmers, Pam Anderson, and others), HUMOR/ROMANCE, PHOTOGRAPHY/TAPESTRY, MUSEUM GALLERY, AND BACK BY 8 each See us at KS UNION GALLERY- LEVEL 4 on MON AUG.19TH THRIU FRUAG 30TH. The hours are 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. and Sunday 12 noon-4 p.m.
Kansan Ads Work for YOU
110 Business Personals
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU CENTER
New Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday8-4:30
Sunday12:30-4:30
864-9500
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 23,1996
9B
120 Announcements
NEED A RIDER/ADDER? Use the Self Serve Cat Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
COMMUTERS Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Karaus Union.
Downtown Child Care
Unfit Child Diet. CY is now enrolling for full ages
8 1/2 to 16 years.
***FREE***
LOSE WEIGHT FOR FREE!"
CALL NOW 013-814-7416
NEED TO TYPE A FORM? A PAPER? Good old-fash
toned, electronic typewriters available for student use.
Student Assistance Center, 22 Strong.
Free BBQ *Sun. Aug. 24, 6:30pm followed by a Free Concert at 7pm. The Frontline Contenders will present a contemporary Christian music concert; host the church, 10th & Iowa.
Everyone Welcome!
FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $4 billion in public and private sector grants & scholarship is now available. All students are eligible for recognition of grades, income, or graduation. Visit Student Financial Services 1-800-265-6495 f. E75702.
Caring People Needed
Headquarters Counseling Center
looking for volunteers.
Interested? "Informational meeting
with children"
Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vernon
Questions? 841-2345
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!
Grants and Scholarships
avail. from sponsors!
No repayments ever!
$$$ Cash for College $$$
For info. 1-800-257-3834
205 Help Wanted
Bartenders wanted at Riverside Bar & Grill. Call 841-2400.
Child care, part-time, 11:30-1:00 M-F. Call Sunshine
Acres Preschool at 842-2223.
part-time help needed in busy doctor's office. Morning preferred. Call 7419-0130.
(gymnasms instructors needed now for girls, boys and preschool classes at Kansas City gym. P/T am or pm.
6 good pay Call Eagles 516-041-0629)
Filming students to contact alumn. Monday-Thursday from 10am to 4pm at the RU Endowment Association at 829.965.3780.
Babysitter needed Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5.
Car a must. Pay negotiable.
865-2670 evenings.
Christian Daycare needs enthusiastic employees for MWF or TW. They must be highly reliable and stable. Good communication skills are required.
Couple needs reliable exp. person to care for infant in their home for appt. week. re.f. required. Caregiver needs exp. week. re.f. required. Dawid or Katy?
Hiring all positions! A.M.P./M.-f. flexible hours.
Outgoing personalities allowed. Apply within.
Mr. Gatti's, 3814 Clinton Parkway - Suite 1.
Golf course work, flexible hours, FREE GOLF. Apply at Lawrence Country Club.
Univ. Relations, 85 hr 15 to 20 hw krs). Call 864-3256 for information before 5 p.m. Aug. 27.
Classroom Assistant needed at Raintree Montessori School. Montessori exp. pref. Will train. $1250/mo.
Late afternoon assistant. 3:15-5:30 M-P $6.25/hr.
Transp. req. Call 843-6800
Adams Alumni Center/Learned Club has openings for PDT washrooms. Above main, wafe, meals & uniforms provided. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1260 Broad Ave.
Aerobics Instructors
Adams Alumni Center/Learned Club has openings for part time banquet servers. Some daytime and weekend availability preferred. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1266 Edmond Ave.
Aerobics instructors need a must! Call Schauen at 840-0793.
Experience is a must! Call Schauen at 840-0793.
Atkins Abnormal Learning Club has openings for full-time bake-pot, cook, includes bobath. Apply in person at http://www.atkinsabnormallearning.com.
Irmanian Lutheran Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning and afternoon teacher's aides. Experience with children required. Apply 2104 West 15th Street.
part-time work for general office work plus showing apartments and answering phones. 10-20 weekday hours available. Must be Kansas resident enrolled in KU at least halftime. 841-5797.
ATTENTION STUDENTS - Local Branch of Nat. College 36 PT/PT entry level openings in Lawrence & JOCO. Fee schedules. All majors accepted, up to **¥92.25**. Residency required for JOCO office. (913) - 391-9675, (913) - 391-6309, m.p. on weekdays.
COMMUTER ST. DENTS~After school supervision for 11 year old girl and 14 year old boy. My home, near 103rd and Nieman in Overland Park. 3:30-6:30 pm M-F, non-mon, reiff, and own transportation required. (913)844-6046.
SPRING BREAK '79- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH, & GO FREE. STS is training HAMP'S REPS/GRP ORGANIZERS to promote trips to Cancun, Jamaica, and Haiti. Students will learn on joining America's #1 Student Tour Teacher
Part-time courier position available. M-F 8-12
Part-time time position available. M-F 8-12
$4.85 hour, requires valid drivers license & good driving record car provided. Ability to do moderate heavy lifting.
Call Heather Johanning at the KTF $195.
Call Heather Johanning at the KU Endowment Association,
832.7955.
Phone Center Reps wanted for growing inbound/outbound call center, PT & FT shifts, 6am-12pm. Must have nice phone voice, be detail oriented, responsible, friendly, courteous. Apply in person at 200 Lakeview Rd or call 845-738-9800.
2051Help Wanted
New company needs outgoing personality with interest in marketing. Flexible hourly jobs within at 1031 Church Ave, Chicago, IL 60627.
Adams Alumni Center/Learning Club has openings for fine dining, lake cooking. some cook use.探险 required. 5-day full-time pot, with benefits, both AM & PM membership. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1206 Oread Ave
Better ladies retailer seeks retail supervisee/management manager, 32-40 man/wheel. Some days and weekends. Good wage and tuition reimbursement. Apply in person.
1 Riverfront Plaza, Suite 210.
Customer Service. Need one self-motivated, sharp-dressing, energetic individual with good communication skills. Good driving record, manual tram, experi-ience in office work. Requires in your Face Graphics 8230 Metro辆a
YOGA INSTRUCTORS
Yoga instructor needed for on campus fitness program.
Experience required. Call Shannon at 864-0790.
Journalism Student! Great part time job opportunity.
International known news agency needs
specialized skills in writing, interviewing,
reporting.
Brookwood Learning Center is hiring part-time teaching assistants. Opportunities include experience in model early intervention program, teaching in an inclusive classroom setting, and working with a special population of children who are at-risk for developmental delays, have identified disabilities, as well as typically developing children. Complete applications at 200 Mile Hour Court. For more information call 855-0022-AA/EE.
CARING PEOPLE NEEDED
Headquarters
Counseling Center
looking for volunteers.
Interested? info. Meeting
Wed, Aug 28, 7:00 pm
Park Hall, 615-739-3348
Questions? Call 841-734-3348
$$$$ Need Extra Money $$$$
**** Need Extra Money *****
Great On Campus Jobs
The Kansas and Ridge Unions
Hiring in all departments (Bookstores, Food Service,
Building Services, SUA, Concessions) for Fall 1996.
Come use our Job Board Level 5, 19th and Oread.
Come use your schedule to a great on campus job. AE.AEO.
Kitchen staff needed at Mass St. Dell and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Food prep and lining cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. Starts at $5.00 an hour up to $7.44 an hour after 8 months which includes profit shifter training. Bake apples at Schumum Food Company business appliance at Schumum Food Company business appliance, then thru at 719 Mass (Upstairs above Smokehouse).
STUDENT RECEPTIONIST
West campus book publisher seeks student to answer phones, process mail, handle walk-in sales, etc. Must be able to work 5-8 hrs/day. M, F and B will join W 15th St. w/ 4c credit hours. $4,56-$0.60/hr. Come by 2 W 15th St. (h: 344-4154), to complete application. Deadline for applications is m. P. Friday. @ 8:25/96. EEO/AAA employer.
KU Athletic Sales Clerk. The Kansas and Burge Union, part-time, 60p/w. Will work 2-3 hours prior to KU football game time and 1-2 hours after game - Aug 29 (evening game), Oct 12, 11, Nov 9, Will pay in cash Monday following employment. Must have retail sales experience, verifiable record of cash handling, able to stand for long periods. Apply Kansas and Burge Personnel Office, Level 5, 13th and Oread. AA/EO
MICROSOFT, YAHOO THE COACH'S EDGE Only one of these nationally known companies is still operating out of the basement. Only one is located in the U.S. and offers the highest opportunity. The Coach's Edge, as seen on CBS TV, needs coaches, programmers, graphics, PR, marketing HTML. Enthusiasm only requirement. Call George
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS
$$**Work from home$$**
Eliminate your long distance phone bill and earn a substantial income!
Only $4 per week get started.
Call 988-300-1761 for information, call 1-800-370-1451
Yacht Club Now hiring Cooks Day/Weekend Shifts Apply at 930 Wisconsin
WANTED UNITED PARCEL SERVICES is looking for
UNLOADERS
* Part-time
* 8:00-hour
* 4:30 pm - 8:30 pm
* 9:30 pm - 10:30 pm
* Company paid benefits
* Mon-Friday (No weekends)
CALL TOLL FREE 877-877-3388
KU INFO (UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER) hiring for Fall 2019. Are you keen, interesting, creative, and willing to take initiative? A clever problem solver who really knows KU and the Lawrence community? You are the one. Need highly motivated student hourlies who are excellent students, computer-literate, great communications, interested in helping others, and familiar with KU's programming. Info, 423 Kauai Union. Work study preferred. Need students who can make KU their primary work commitment. Deadline 5月, Wednesday, August 28, 1996.
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB welcomes KUstudents back to town. Alvamar is THE place to work in Lawrence. Now hiring for:
Dy Dining Room Server
AM Restaurant Bus Server
AM Line Cook
PM Dish Washer
AM Pro Shop Cart Help
Golf Course Maintenance
Humane/Supporting Animals
For more information contact Malala at 842-2764 or complete application at 4120 Clinton Prk. EOE.
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN. Deadline: 8/30/99,
$4.50 $7.5/hour. 20th per week. Duties include
install, configure & customize software products.
Participate in systems testing & applications library maintenance.
Required qualifications partial listing: experience
in programming languages, programming languages, experience in software test-
ing, experience in database programming and/or man-
agement. Complete job description available. To apply,
submit a cover letter and current resume and a pro-
gramming language proficiency certificate to Center,
University of Kansas, EOAAEMPLOYEE.
Coyote's
Apply in Person wed-sat 7-9 p.m.
Now Taking Applications for: Door Staff wait staff Bartenders
Club 729
Now taking Applications for:
Door Staff Wait Staff Bartenders
Bar Backs Promo Assistants Apply in person wed-sat 8-10 p.m.
205 Help Wanted
The University Placement Center has an open GA position to work with internships/incompetency education advisement. 20 hw/hr, 4/7hr, to begin Sept. 3. Dendallin Pick. Pick up complete job description at 110 Burguer Street.
Cottowood, Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their Residential division. Positions include evening and weekend job opportunities. Students in College coursework or related experience is helpful but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Excellent benefits. Startup hourly pay $6.00 to $10.00. Please apply at Cottowood, Inc., 2801 W. Stilar, E.O.E.
Graduate Assistantship
MICROCOMPUTER SOFTWARE SUPPORT - Student position: $7.20 per hour; 20 hours per week. Deadline: September 13th. Required Qualifications: Enrollment in at least six credit hours at KU, working on computer applications, microcomputer applications; excellent oral and written communication skills; ability to complete assigned tasks with a minimum of supervision. Preferred Qualifications: Course work in computer science or related field. Experience required. Must have two or more years of Course work remaining at KU. To apply, contact Carol Daniels (864-3068). ControLLer's Office, Room 237, Carruth O'Leary between 9:30 am and 5:00 pm. The University of Kansas is an EOA Employer.
STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER.
Deadline 8/30/1990. Salary: $6.50-$7.50 per hour. 20 hrs per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software products. Design and write programs, maintain, or enhance existing programs. Participate in systems testing, applications library maintenance. Required Qualifications. Currently enrolled in 8 hours of design and writing programs, designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages including Pascal or C, or good oral and written communications skills, experience and/or ability in software testing, ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and employees, and ability to apply. To apply complete an application available in Room 202 of the Computer Center EQA AE AMOYPLER.
*STUDENT CONSULTANT #/PROGRAMMER*. Deadline: 8/30/96. Salary: $4.75-$10.00. Duties include developing software for microcomputers, mainframes, workstations, particularly software for distributed sys- tems, consulting support to University faculty, staff, and students, providing networking seminars. Developing and writing documentation for program maintenance and end-user support. Required Qualifications: Currently enrolled at KU. Job duties include programming language UNIX operating system, financial management and computerunications software such as Tftp, FTP, Gopher, and World Wide Web. Other duties as assigned. Complete job description available upon request. To apply, submit resume to: R.P. Hirschman, R.I., R.P. Persona, Assistant, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60035, EOAA EMPLOYER
$20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week
Earn cash on the spot
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
Walk-ins welcome!
EVENING SUPERVISOR
BPI Building Services is looking for a dependable self-starter to supervise our evening and weekend custodial teams.
Qualified applicants should posses leadership, training, and motivational skills along with an eye for detail.
Approx. 25-30 hours per week, Sunday - Thursday start times vary.
Starting wage of $7.00 per hour, on-site transportation provided.
Interested applicants should contact Mo at 842-6264.
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
Shipping position open. Starting ASAP 68 per hour. hs per week. Afternoons M-F. Must have own transportation. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and/or resume w/3 references and copy of class schedule to: EEL PO Box 1304, Lawrence KS 65044.
205Help Wanted
Immediate Opening for Conference Assistant with Work-Study eligibility. MS Word and Excel 6.0 knowledge along with strong oral and written communication skills. Demonstrate proficiency in a computer-desired. Flexible work schedule not to exceed workday hour maximum. Fax or send resume to ASK Association PC Box 385 Lewis, KS 60465. Fax 913-841-8384.
Notakenked need for Econ 140, Bia 414, Goal 101, Moer 322, & Aer 191. Must have completed this class or higher with an A and have a B+3, GPA. Earn 10-15 per semester. Mail resume to Kassandra Uni Bookstore, 2nd Floor, Kansas State University.
JON'S NOTES
- Local Branch of National Co. filling 36 Entry level positions in Lawrence and JOCO.
FALL SEMESTER OPENINGS
Part, full time flexible schedules
Up to $9.25
◆ A.A.S.P. scholarships cond. apply
To apply call JOCO. office (913)381.9676
(913) 381-9676
MAD. and Assoc. and equal opportunity Co.
CUSTODIANS
BPI Building Services has immediate openings for the following custodial positions:
- Mon.-Fri. 8p.m.-11p.m.
- Mon.-Fri. 9a.m.-12noon
• Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
& Mon.-Thurs. 5:30p.m.-8:30p.m.
• Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
& Mon.-Thurs. 7p.m.-10p.m.
• Sat. 7a.m.-11a.m.
• Mon.-Fri. 6a.m.-8a.m.
Custodial positions are perfect part-time jobs for students and those looking for supplemental income. Approx. 15 hours per week in an independent working environment. Self-motivators should call 842-6264 or come in to apply.
bpi
BUILDING SERVICES
A DIVISION OF BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
939 Iowa (Hillcrest Shopping Center/Behind Appliance Plus)
225 Professional Services
**Immigration NOW!**
New Law Benefit? Do You Qualify?
* National Work Visa *Permanent Residence *Nevada *Green Card *Adaptive *Appeals *Credit Cards
* GREEN CARDS
Employers I-8 HELP + EXEC. TRANSFERS
15 U.S. MLS or larger *Call for Apply*
IMMIGRATION LAW CLINIC
2029 SUNDAY, JULY 24TH at 10 AM
(800) 412-3545 (24hrs) *Toll Free USA (800) 365-2355 + FAX (815) 421-124
Workers Compensation; Personal Injury Help; Tax
There's No Place Like Home..
Join CLO as we continue to expand services for adults with disabilities. We are currently seeking full and part-time teaching counselors to work weekend and evening hours. We'll train you in the internationally-known Teaching Family Model (Prefer course-work in behavioral sciences and/or experience with persons with disabilities.)
Meet Carlee. She lives at one of Community Living Opportunities' group homes and also works within CLO's horticultural program. Creating new possibilities for persons with disabilities is what CLO is all about.
Career Growth Potential...Excellent Opportunity for Students and New Graduates in Social Services!
FT and PT Eve, Day & Wnd.
positions
- positions
- PT Wnd position scholarship
- FT Wnd position wage differential
- Great bonfits, competitive salaries
- Flexible, autonomous work
Flexible, autonomous work environment
Applications are accepted and screening interviews held on
*Lawrence & Overland Park work locations
Applications are accepted and screening interviews held on Tuesdays, 12p-4p & Thursdays 9a-1p, or send cover letter and resume to CLO, Mollie Kohn, 6900 W. 80th, Overland Park, KS 66204 or
CLO, Stacy Wright, 2113 Delaware, Lawrence, KS 66046.
Or...come see us on campus! We'll be there Monday (26th) and Tuesday (27th) in front of the KANSAS ANNIT EOE.
225 Professional Services
Immunelle Lutheran Childhood Center, 2104 West 15th Street is now accepting enrollment applications for the fall session. Openings are available for toddlers and preschoolers. Scholarship available. Call 842-8134 for information.
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsley
16 East 13th 842-5116
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake DUI's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 833-8544 for applications, term papers, materials documents, transcriptions, etc. Satisfaction information: info@satisfaction.com
305 For Sale
Drafting Table, T-square, pens. All the good stuff for sale. Make offer. 842-123-0912 after 6pm.
Good very Schwinn road bike. 32 1/2 inch frame. Reconditioned. 4756. Call Mike at 842-5898 (call after 6pm).
1992 Ford Escort TG, Power steering, brakes, cruise,
automatic, 6000 or will negotiate. 832-0025.
1090 Honda Accord EX 2-Door, 5 speed, 102,00 miles, loaded w/ mounted Excellent condition, $7,000, Call
Bose 901 Series 6 with equalizer pedestals. New in box, transferable warranty. $150 value. ONLY 1000. Call 811-349-3656 at 6pm.
Gottstein's Auction. Perry, KS 807-5169 Sale every sale. 9 am. 1 12 mL. e of Ferry on Hwy. 24. Lumber, lumber, rabbits, eggs, RR ties, vehicles, household goods, furniture, tools, etc.
340 Auto Sales
1985 Honda Accord LX; 2-door hatchback, has A/C
power; blue Very well maintained $200, 855-803-6740
**88 Escort GT $20000 o. b.o. Must sell 100,000
mileway高速. Good condition. Cold acc. 5 speed.
1991 MAZDA MX 6 GT Turbo, 5-ped, 60,000 pw, MO,
AC, acum surfco, AMFM fass, spoiler, mags, locks,
alarm, 1-owner, maint records. Excellent cond. $850
OSBO 4000
405 For Rent
2, bath n carpet, bus ride route, carte,
bandage facility, large closes no pet please. $800, $750
and $600.
3 bedroom, 2 bath, at Bradford Sparrow. On KU bus
route, cats allowed. Private deck or patio. Call 814-8468.
3 br available at Lorimar Townhouses, included wd,
dishwasher, microwave, fireplace, cable pad, back
shelving.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406 Tenn.
a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership,
non-profit operation, democratic control, 1819-240
Campus. Attendance closes. Close to campus &
Mass. Call or sit by 814-4148.
AVAILABLE FOR FALL
NEW 4 BPs at apus 1712 Ohio. f卫
baths, vauxhall (sink) in each BR, all
appliances. indw DW & microwave.
No pets. $900 per mow. Owner/ Manager
$631.84. Mountains Water Management
- NEW CARPETS
* *NEW APPLIANCES
* *NEW LIGHTING FIXTURES
* *NEWLY PAINTED WHITE CABINETS
ASK ABOUT FREE RENT AT TRAILRIDGE
Get all this with the same great location on the KU bus line.
Excellent studio, 1,2 or 3 BR apts. gas & water paid.
2,3. & 4 BR Townhouses with PfL carpeting & HP carport
843-7333 or stop by
2500 W 8th today!
TRAILRIDGE
All utilities paid except electric, 2 bedroom, 1400 Teen.
Available now, call 852-1648.
405 For Rent
Room for rent, utilities divided by six. A/C/water heater $300 a month. Beds deposit $1,025. Car insurance $475.
Spacious, affordable furniture 2 bedroom apartment w/ fireplace and dressing room, some utilities paid, 2 BR, $179k. Call (800) 654-3700.
Quiet, spacious, affordable furnished rooms and 1 bedroom apartments. 2 blocks to KI. Some utilities paid. No stairs. Parking is free.
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
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Managed & maintained by Professionals
GUST RENT FREE
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old-fashioned personalized service."
GRAYSTONE
FREE USE FOR ONE YEAR OF WASHER & DRYER
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1102
Apartments that fit your lifestyle
130 Roommate Wanted
Gay male has room to rent in Lawrence East bedroom. $250 includes utilities. Calls 8427 7741. Non smoke only.
Grad student wanted, 5-minute. run, RCU. 1743 LA. $200
for transportation and courtroom security,
planned by layer plan & acupuncture.
Looking for a female roommate for a 3 bedroom apartment in San Francisco. $210 per month. Call Linda
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate wanted M/F. $118 a month plus 1/4 utilities.
On K1士 route, off street parking. Large house near
Jewish school.
Professional seeking Faculty or Graduate student to
share 280 sq. ft. Detail home. Non-Smoking, Clean,
Responsible. $40 per month, utilities included. Call
913-883-3466.
- By phone: 864-4358
Renter wanted. Quiet, non-smoking. New home, near campus. Own bedroom & bathroom with $350 + split phone and utilities. Call James after 5 at 217-222-4024.
Need F to share 2 bhmouse ASAP. WD, int.wn,
quiet area. Must love cast! Prefer 25 yrm +. NS.
$222.50/mo + 1/2 url + dep. Sublease thru Aug.
Heather 841-508-360
Female grade student seeks same to share new 2 bdrm
apt. access from bus line. 20 min. walk to campus. Stars Au.
$207.50+ 50 utilities. Large living rm & kitchen,
pool, laundry, central a/c sheat, & great mngle. Please
be an animal lover and have previous exp. in sharing
space. Call Ruth 843-3074.
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The University Daily Kansan. 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60045
Dillons FOOD STORES
Prices Effective Aug. 23-27,1996
Low Prices On The Items You Buy The Most.
"Just For You
MATERIALS REQUIRED:
1. A 30cm x 50cm sheet of graph paper.
2. Two sheets of A4 paper.
3. Two sheets of A4 paper with black ink.
4. A pen or pencil.
5. A pair of scissors.
STEP 1: Cut the graph paper into four equal squares.
STEP 2: Place the first square on top of the second, third, and fourth squares.
STEP 3: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the fourth square.
STEP 4: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the fourth square.
STEP 5: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the fourth square.
STEP 6: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the fourth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 7: Place the second square on top of the third square.
STEP 8: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the third square.
STEP 9: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the third square.
STEP 10: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the third square.
STEP 11: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the third square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 12: Place the third square on top of the second square.
STEP 13: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the second square.
STEP 14: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the second square.
STEP 15: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the second square.
STEP 16: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the second square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 17: Place the fourth square on top of the third square.
STEP 18: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the third square.
STEP 19: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the third square.
STEP 20: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the third square.
STEP 21: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the third square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 22: Place the fifth square on top of the fourth square.
STEP 23: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the fourth square.
STEP 24: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the fourth square.
STEP 25: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the fourth square.
STEP 26: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the fourth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 27: Place the sixth square on top of the fifth square.
STEP 28: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the fifth square.
STEP 29: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the fifth square.
STEP 30: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the fifth square.
STEP 31: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the fifth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 32: Place the seventh square on top of the eighth square.
STEP 33: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the eighth square.
STEP 34: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the eighth square.
STEP 35: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the eighth square.
STEP 36: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the eighth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 37: Place the eighth square on top of the ninth square.
STEP 38: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the ninth square.
STEP 39: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the ninth square.
STEP 40: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the ninth square.
STEP 41: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the ninth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 42: Place the ninth square on top of the tenth square.
STEP 43: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the tenth square.
STEP 44: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the tentth square.
STEP 45: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the tentth square.
STEP 46: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the tentth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 47: Place the tentth square on top of the eleventh square.
STEP 48: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the eleventh square.
STEP 49: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the eleventh square.
STEP 50: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the eleventh square.
STEP 51: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the eleventh square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 52: Place the eleventh square on top of the twelfth square.
STEP 53: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the twelfth square.
STEP 54: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the twelfth square.
STEP 55: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the twelfth square.
STEP 56: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the twelfth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 57: Place the twelfth square on top of the thirteenth square.
STEP 58: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the thirteenth square.
STEP 59: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the thirteenth square.
STEP 60: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the thirteenth square.
STEP 61: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the thirteenth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 62: Place the thirteenth square on top of the fourteenth square.
STEP 63: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the fourteenth square.
STEP 64: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the fourteenth square.
STEP 65: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the fourteenth square.
STEP 66: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the fourteenth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 67: Place the fourteenth square on top of the fiveteenth square.
STEP 68: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the fiveteenth square.
STEP 69: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the fiveteenth square.
STEP 70: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the fiveteenth square.
STEP 71: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the五teenth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 72: Place the fiveteenth square on top of the sixteenth square.
STEP 73: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the sixteenth square.
STEP 74: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the sixteenth square.
STEP 75: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the sixteenth square.
STEP 76: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the sixteenth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 77: Place the sixteenth square on top of the seventh square.
STEP 78: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the seventh square.
STEP 79: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the seventhsquare.
STEP 80: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the seventhsquare.
STEP 81: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the seventhsquare to the bottom right corner.
STEP 82: Place the seventhsquare on top of the eighteenth square.
STEP 83: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the eighteenth square.
STEP 84: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the eighteenth square.
STEP 85: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the eighteenth square.
STEP 86: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the eighteenth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 87: Place the eighteenth square on top of the nineteenth square.
STEP 88: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the nineteenth square.
STEP 89: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the nineteenth square.
STEP 90: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the nineteenth square.
STEP 91: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the nineteenth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 92: Place the nineteenth square on top of the twenty-first square.
STEP 93: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the twenty-first square.
STEP 94: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the twenty-first square.
STEP 95: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the twenty-first square.
STEP 96: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the twenty-first square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 97: Place the twenty-first square on top of the thirty-first square.
STEP 98: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the thirty-first square.
STEP 99: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the thirty-first square.
STEP 100: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the thirty-first square.
STEP 101: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the thirty-first square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 102: Place the thirty-first square on top of the forty-first square.
STEP 103: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the forty-first square.
STEP 104: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the forty-first square.
STEP 105: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the forty-first square.
STEP 106: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the forty-first square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 107: Place the forty-first square on top of the fifty-first square.
STEP 108: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the fifty-first square.
STEP 109: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the fifty-first square.
STEP 110: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the五十first square.
STEP 111: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the五十first square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 112: Place the五十first square on top of the one hundredth square.
STEP 113: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one hundredth square.
STEP 114: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one hundredth square.
STEP 115: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one hundredth square.
STEP 116: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one hundredth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 117: Place the one hundredth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 118: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 119: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 120: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 121: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 122: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 123: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 124: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 125: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 126: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 127: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 128: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 129: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 130: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 131: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 132: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 133: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 134: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 135: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 136: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 137: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 138: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 139: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 140: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 141: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 142: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 143: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 144: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 145: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 146: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 147: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 148: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 149: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 150: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 151: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 152: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 153: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 154: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 155: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 156: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 157: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 158: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 159: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 160: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 161: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 162: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 163: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 164: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 165: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 166: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 167: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 168: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 169: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 170: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 171: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 172: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 173: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 174: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 175: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 176: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 177: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 178: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 179: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 180: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 181: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 182: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 183: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 184: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 185: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 186: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 187: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 188: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 189: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 190: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 191: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 192: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 193: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 194: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 195: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 196: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 197: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 198: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 199: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 200: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 201: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 202: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 203: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 204: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 205: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 206: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 207: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 208: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 209: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 210: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 211: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 212: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 213: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 214: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 215: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 216: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 217: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 218: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 219: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 220: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 221: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 222: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 223: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 224: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 225: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 226: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 227: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 228: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 229: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 230: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 231: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 232: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 233: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 234: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 235: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 236: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 237: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 238: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 239: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 240: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 241: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 242: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 243: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 244: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 245: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 246: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 247: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 248: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 249: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 250: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 251: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 252: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 253: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 254: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 255: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 256: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 257: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 258: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 259: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 260: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 261: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 262: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 263: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 264: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 265: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 266: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 267: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 268: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 269: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 270: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 271: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 272: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 273: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 274: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 275: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 276: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 277: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 278: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 279: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 280: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 281: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 282: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 283: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 284: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 285: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 286: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 287: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 288: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 289: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 290: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 291: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 292: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 293: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 294: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 295: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 296: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 297: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 298: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 299: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 300: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 301: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 302: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 303: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 304: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 305: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 306: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 307: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 308: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 309: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 310: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 311: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 312: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 313: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 314: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 315: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 316: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 317: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 318: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 319: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 320: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 321: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 322: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 323: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 324: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 325: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 326: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 327: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 328: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 329: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 330: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 331: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 332: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 333: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 334: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 335: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 336: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 337: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 338: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 339: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 340: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 341: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 342: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 343: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 344: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 345: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 346: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 347: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 348: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 349: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 350: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 351: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 352: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 353: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 354: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 355: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 356: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 357: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 358: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 359: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 360: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 361: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 362: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 363: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 364: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 365: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 366: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 367: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 368: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 369: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 370: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 371: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 372: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 373: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 374: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 375: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 376: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 377: Place the one thousandth square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 378: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 379: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 380: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 381: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 382: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 383: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 384: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 385: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 386: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 387: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 388: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 389: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 390: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 391: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 392: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 393: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 394: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 395: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 396: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 397: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 398: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 399: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 400: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 401: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 402: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 403: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 404: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 405: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 406: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 407: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 408: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 409: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 410: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 411: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 412: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 413: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth square.
STEP 414: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 415: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 416: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 417: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth square.
STEP 418: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 419: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth square.
STEP 420: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 421: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 422: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 423: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 424: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 425: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 426: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 427: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 428: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 429: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 430: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 431: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 432: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 433: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 434: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 435: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 436: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 437: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 438: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 439: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 440: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 441: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 442: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 443: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 444: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 445: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 446: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 447: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 448: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 449: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 450: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 451: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 452: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 453: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 454: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 455: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 456: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 457: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 458: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 459: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 460: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 461: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 462: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 463: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 464: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 465: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 466: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 467: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 468: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 469: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 470: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 471: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 472: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 473: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 474: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 475: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 476: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 477: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 478: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 479: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 480: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 481: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 482: Place the one thousandth Square on top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 483: Place the pen or pencil in the center of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 484: Draw a vertical line from the pen or pencil to the bottom of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 485: Draw another horizontal line from the pen or pencil to the top of the one thousandth Square.
STEP 486: Draw a diagonal line from the top left corner of the one thousandth Square to the bottom right corner.
STEP 487: Place the
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Football Quarterback Matt Johner will start against Ball State Thursday. Page 1B Recycling Students do not find recycling centers to be convenient. Page 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
MONDAY, AUGUST 26.1996
SECTION A VOL.103,NO.4
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Oregonians still at risk after fire ravages area
BEND, ORE. — A fast-moving wildfire swept into a residential area in the seagrass near this south-central Oregon city on Saturday, destroying 19 homes, damaging five and threatening hundreds of others.
Three trailers burned to the ground.
Damage was estimated at $1.5 million, and was expected to grow.
No injuries were reported.
Five hundred homes in two subdivisions six miles southeast of Bend were evacuated in the morning before the blaze approached.
The blaze was one of about 30 Oregon fires started by lightning on Friday. More lightning was forecast during the weekend.
R.E.M. signs contract with Warner Bros. again
ANAHEM, CALIF. — Warner Bros. Records won the bidding war for Grammy-winning rock band R.E.M., reportedly paying $80 million for a five-album contract.
The signing, which keeps R.E.M. at Warner Bros., was a surprise announcement Saturday at an annual meeting of Warner Bros. music executives at the Anaheim Convention Center.
R. E.M. recently completed New Adventures in HI-FI, the sixth and last album from its old Warner Bros. contract. Companies that reportedly vied for the band included DreamWorks SKG. Capitol Records and Sony.
Russian negotiators stop Chechen peace talk
The Athens, Ga., rock quartet — guitarist Peter Buck, 39, singer Michael Stipe, 36, bassist Mike Mills, 37, and drummer Bill Berry, 37 — has sold 30 million albums and won four Grammy Awards since forming in 1980.
The 1996 Jayhawk Music Festival
Terms were not released by representatives of R.E.M. or Warner Bros.
The fate of an earlier cease-fire accord signed by Lebed and separatist commanders also appeared uncertain. The Russians cited cruel violations, and a top commander refused to confer with his Chechen counterpart.
GROZNYJ, RUSSIA — Russia's security chief Alexander Lebed interrupted peace talks with Chechen rebel leaders yesterday, casting doubt on the future of a political agreement they discussed to end the 20-month war.
But Lebed, who returned to Moscow yesterday to work out legal difficulties with the draft accord, insisted the peace process was on track.
Gen. Vyacheslav Tikhmiroiv refused to meet with the Rebel Chief of Staff Aslan Maskhadov to sign a withdrawal agreement in Grozny. Tikhmirov said he would not play cat and mouse following a rebel attack on a Russian convoy Saturday night.
S. Korean court sentences ex-presidents for coup role
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA — Former military strongmen Chun Doo-hwan and Roh Tae-woo were found guilty of mutiny and treason yesterday.
Chun was sentenced to death, and Roh was given 22 1/2 years in prison.
A three-judge panel found the two expresidents guilty of staging a coup 17 years ago, then causing hundreds of deaths in a violent crackdown on a pro-democracy uprising six months later.
Chun's death sentence is subject to automatic appeal.
Roh's attorneys also were expected to appeal.
Chun, helped by Roh, seized power in 1979.
Chun became president in 1980 and was succeeded by Roh in 1988.
Both have claimed their indictments were a political circus by President Kim Young-sam to boost his sagging popularity.
The Associated Press
[Image of a person raising their arm in excitement at an outdoor event. The background shows a crowd and stage equipment.]
Fans cheer as the band Jackopierce finishes up their last song at the Jayhawk Music Festival. The concert, sponsored by the Kappa Sigma fraternity, featured 19 bands yesterday afternoon at Clinton Lake State Park.
Rock profits to aid voting, state park
By Erln Rooney
Kansan staff writer
Sweat, sunburns and sounds highlighted the 1996 Jayhawk Music Festival yesterday afternoon at Clinton Lake State Park.
Thousands of people flocked to the park to listen to bands from across the nation. The philanthropic event was sponsored by the Kappa Sigma fraternity, who will give all profits from the festival to two non-profit organizations, Rock the Vote and Clinton Lake State Park. The amount raised is not yet known.
"These two organizations go along with our philosophy of giving back to the Lawrence community," said John Hill, St. Louis senior and coordinator of the festival.
Nineteen modern-rock bands performed throughout the afternoon and early evening on either the regional, side stage or the national, main stage.
"We chose 'Rock the Vote' because this is an election year," Hill said. "We have the opportunity to open peoples' eyes to voting. 'Rock the Vote' supports people our age making a difference in the election."
New to the festival this year were a variety of arts and crafts tents, educational tables and food stands.
"We only had to wait two to three minutes in line for the good jerky chicken," said Matt McClimans, Topeka resident.
The crowd hiked through muddy fields
And, of course, there was music.
"There are too many young kids that want to crowd surf," Wurtz said. "To them it doesn't matter who is on stage, they just want to be silly."
and tolerated 80-degree temperatures to watch the bands.
Kelly Wurtz, a sophomore at Georgetown University, and Shane Grebal, Hutchinson junior, were more concerned about the people than they were about the dirt.
"Yeah," Grebal said. "If I was a 17-year-old, this would be a gold mure."
After he finished laughing, Grebal went on to add that he had a good time.
"Overall, though, this has been a better experience and a better value than Lollapalooa was this year," he said.
Music Fest more costly than a ticket
By Andrea Albright Kansan staff writer
More Music Festival coverage and photos on page 8A
Hundreds of students leaving the Jayhawk Music Festival yesterday got an extra souvenir as they left Clinton Park — a $50 parking ticket.
At 7 p.m., at least 150 cars remained along the side of County Road 13 into the festival, each with a yellow ticket tucked under the windshield wipers.
Todd Hall, Overland Park senior, said he tried to park in the designated lot, but the parking attendant turned him away.
"He said the lot was full," Hall said. "He pointed us toward the road we parked on."
A park officer said the State Park Violation
See PARKING, Page 8.
KU split on presidential pick
Clinton and Dole nearly tied in a poll of 50 KU students
By Neal Shulenburger
Kansan Staff Writer
If the results of an informal poll hold true for the entire student body, no presidential candidate has a large advantage among KU students.
The University Daily Kansas asked 50 students who they would pick as president. Bob Dole had a slight lead with 23 supporters, 21 backed Bill Clinton, four were for Reform party candidate Ross Perot, and two said they did not support any of the three candidates.
"I think that a lot of students who were Democrats and liberal are unhappy with some of Clinton's positions," Cigler said. "He seems to be getting more conservative these days. On the Republican side, there are a lot of people who wish that Dole was even more conservative than he is."
Political Science professor
Allan Cigler said that despite the small sampling size, he was surprised more students didn't express disgust with all of the candidates.
"I would rather have Dole in the White House because he is a much better man than Clinton," said Aaron North, Columbus, freshman. "Honestly, I don't believe that Clinton has a very good character."
Students favoring Dole said that his character was one reason for wanting him in the White House.
ELECTION 96
Julius Fackler, Leavenworth freshman, agreed.
"I would rather see Bob Dole in the White House," he said. "Bill Clinton promised a lot of things that he couldn't deliver on, and I just don't trust him. They give Dole a hard time with his age, but that means he has a lot more ideas and experience than Clinton does."
Several students who supported Clinton did not feel that his character was negative.
"He's very humanistic and approachable," said Livi Regenbaum, East Longmeadow, Mass., freshman.
For the four students who preferred Perot in the Kansan's informal poll, disgust with both Clinton and Dole figured prominently in their responses.
"He cares about people.
After the TWA crash, it seemed like he lost someone on that plane."
"I really don't like Clinton or Dole just because neither one is really capable of serious change," said Ryan Dambro, Emporia junior. "If I was going to vote, and I'm still not sure whether I will, I would have to consider the Reform party candidate, Ross Perot. Perot's ideas may seem a little wacked-out, but some of his ideas are really good ones. And any of his ideas that could be too damaging to the country won't make it past Congress."
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2A
Monday, August 26,1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(
WEATHER
Quick INFO CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER LOTTO NUMBERS
TODAY
85
60
Partly cloudy with a chance of rain in the morning.
TUESDAY
86
62
CAMPUS EVENTS
Mostly sunny with no chance of rain.
Continuing sun.
WEDNESDAY
86
61
ON THE RECORD
A cigarette ash urn was stolen between 4 p.m.
Aug. 17 and 3 p.m. Aug. 20 from the Burge Union,
KU police said. The urn was valued at $198.
A KU employee was threatened Thursday in Strong Hall, KU police said. A criminal complaint was not filed.
A KU student's identification holder, photograph holder and miscellaneous items were stolen Monday from a hallway in Ellsworth Hall, KU police said. The items were valued at $53.
A KU student's car stereo and compact discs were stolen between 10:30 p.m. Wednesday and 8 p.m. Friday from the 1000 block of Emery Road, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $350.
A KU student's car window was damaged between 7:30 p.m. Thursday and 2 p.m. Friday in the 2700 block of University Drive, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $400.
Lawrence police reported a minor in possession of alcohol early Saturday morning at 700 block of New Hampshire Street.
A KU student's mountain bike was stolen between 8 p.m. friday and 2 p.m. Saturday from the 200 block of Hanover Place, Lawrence police said. The bike was valued at $400.
A KU student's car stereo, compact discs and other miscellaneous items were stolen from a car between 9 p.m. Friday and 4 p.m. Saturday in the 1000 block of Emery Road, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $360.
- A KU student's cameras, lenses, light meter, flash and other miscellaneous items were stolen from a car between 2 a.m. and 10:20 a.m. Saturday morning in the 1500 block of W. 24th St., Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $5,455.
ON CAMPUS
The Episcopal/Lutheran Campus Center will hold worship at noon every Tuesday at Danforth Chapel. Call the Rev. Joe Alford, 843-8202, for more information.
Gay and Lesbian academic and staff advocates will hold a brown-bag meeting at noon tomorrow. Everyone is welcome. Call 864-0624 for location.
The MS support group will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the North Room at Holcomb Park's recreational center. Call Dawn at 842-6175 or Shannon at 842-1011 for more information.
AIESEC is having its first meeting of the semester at 7:10 p.m. tomorrow at 2023 Haworth. Call Kia Flesher at 865-5575 for more information.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold a reception to welcome returning study abroad students at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union. Call Ted Noravong at 864-3742 for more information.
Study Abroad Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at the English Room in the Kansas Union. Call Ted Noravong at 864-3742 for more information.
The Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Adams Alumni Center. Call Mezan Thome at 832-1567 for more information.
The Study Abroad Club and the Office of Study Abroad are sponsoring the Lawrence Garage Sale Adventure at 9 a.m. Saturday. Meet at parking lots A and B at the Jayhawker Towers to show international students around Lawrence. Call Ted Noravong at 864-3742 for more information.
The KU Ballroom Dancing Club will meet at 2 p.m. every Sunday at the Kansas Union Ballroom. No experience necessary. Couples and singles welcome. Call Shane Haas at 864-6597 for more information.
MONDAY PRIMETIME AUGUST 26, 1996
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO 3 In the House Malcolm Goode Beh. Sparka ☑ Highlander: The Series (R) Cops ☑ Lazarus Man (R) (In Stereo) High Tide (R)
WDAF 4 "Uninterrestful Entry" ★★★ (1992) Suspense Kurt Russell. ☑ News ☑ H. Patrol Chearna ☑ Baywatch
KCTV 5 Nanny (R) ☑ Almost Murphy Cybill (R) CBS News Special News ☑ Late Show (R) (In Stereo) Seinfeld ☑
KS06 6 Silhouettes News Plus News News Cathy H. News Plus
KCPT 7 National Political Convention (Live) ☑ Business Rpt. MotorWeek ☑ Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
KSNT 8 "The Distinguished Gentleman" ★★★ (%192) Eddie Murphy. NBC News Special News Tonight Show (In Stereo) Late Night ☑
KMCB 9 New Passages (in Stereo) ABC News News Roseanne Golden Girls M'A'SH ☑
KTUW 11 National Political Convention (Live) Travel Mag. Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
WIBW 10 Nanny (R) Almost Murphy Cybill (R) CBS News Special News ☑ Late Show (R) (In Stereo) U.S. Open
KTKA 11 New Passages (in Stereo) ABC News Special News Selfield Coach ☑ Nightline
AAE 82 Biography: Shakespeare Pride and Prejudice (R) (Part 2 of 3) ⊔ Law & Order “Pride” Biography: Shakespeare
CHNBC 83 Politics Equal Time Rivera Live Charles Godlin America After Hours Rivera Live (R)
CNN 84 Convention Coverage (Live) ⊔ Convention Recap Larry King Showbiz
COM 85 Drew Carey 1 Night Stand Louise Liz. Drew Carey Politically Incorrect Daily Show Dream On
COURT 87 Prime Time Justice Kaufman on Appeal News Trial Story: Accident? Prime Time Justice (R) On Appeal (R) News
CSPAN 88 (6:00) Campaign ‘98 “Democratic National Convention” Campaign ‘98: Convention Campaign ‘98 “Convention Wrap-Up”
DISC 89 Wild Discovery Loch Nees Discovered (R) Rivals ‘Manson & Bugliosa’ Next Step (B) Beyond 2000 Wild Discovery
ESPN 8(6:30) NFL Prime Monday Arena Football: Arena Bow—Albany or Iowa, Arizona or Tampa Bay Sportcenter B baseball
HIST 8(7) Classic Cars (R) “Lincoln” **** (1988, Drama) (Part 2 of 2) Sam Waterson. Year by Year ‘1944’ Classic Cars (R)
LIFE 8(3) Unsolved Mysteries "Indictment: The McMackenian 'Tail' **** (1955) James Woods. Living Mysteries Late Date
MTV 8(5) Beach MTV (in Stereo) And the Nominees Are... Road Rules VMA History Singled Out Convention Alternative Nation (in Stereo)
SCIFF 8(6) Forever Knight (in Steno) “Teeschi Mayo in Love” (1996) Science Fiction Twilight Zone Monsters Forever Knight (in Steno)
TLC 8(8) Wonders Seven Wonders of the World Glass Jungle (Part 1 of 3) Wonders Paleoworld Seven Wonders of the World
TNT 8(7) WCW Monday Nitro (Live) Thunder In Paradise WCW Monday Nitro (R)
USA 8(4) (6:30) U.S. Open Tennis: Open Round (Live) Silk Stalking “Dead Weight” Big Date Love
YH1 8(1) Best of Times (R) Best of Times (R) Stevie Ray Vaughan Stevie Ray Vaughan Soul of VH1 Music Videos
WON 8(7) Hoon’t Prolist“ Savannah News (in Stereo) Night Court Simon & Simon H'mooner
WTBS 8(10) "Matlock: The Court Martial" ***% (1987) Andy Griffith." Perry Mason: The Case of the Fatal Framing" ***% (1992) Bitter Women (R)
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 8(4) "Normal Life" **** (1996, Drama) Ashley Judd. R"⊔ Sinbad's Summer Jam It: 70s Soul Music Festival (R) Real Sex 15 (R) (in Stereo)
HBO **30** "Normal Life" *%* (1986, Drama) Ashley Judd, R' *CH* Sibinba's Summer Jam II: '70s Soul Music Festival (R) *** Real Sex 15 (R) (in Stroete) ***
MAX **32** "Make in America" *%* (1983, Whioca Film) PG-13 **CH** "To the Limit" *%* (1985, Nicole Smith). "Eyes of a Stranger" *%* (1985) Lucian Tees.
SHOW **32** "Operation Dumbo Drop" *%* (1995) Danny Glover, PG' *CH* Bodilme (R) "Inside" (1996, Drama) Nigel Hawthorne, R' *** Medium Clown *** (1995)
University Campus Internet Association's home page. The correct address is:
http://www.ukans.edu/kucia.
LOTTO NUMBERS
PICK 3
6-5-9
PICK 3 KANSAS CASH LOTTO 6-5-9 6-9-14-17-19-25 2-13-15-35-40 Powerball: 10 Jackpot: $5 million
CLARIFICATION
KANSAS CASH
6-9-14-17-19-25
A story on page 6A of Friday's University Daily Kansan provided incorrect information regarding the World Wide Web address of the Kansas
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions of $1.68 are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 StauFFER-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 26, 1996
3A
Taking a bite out of sky
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND CAMPUSES
Jeff McCord, Mesquite, Texas, junior, tosses a frisbee to Alex, his 9-month-old dog. McCord, a placekicker for the Jayhawk football team, and Alex were practicing yesterday for a frisbee-throwing competition scheduled for Sept. 8 at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
Technology director plans to switch roles
Niebaum will focus vision on education
By Bradley Brooks
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Jerry Niebaum announced Friday that he would step down as executive director of Information Technology Services. He will remain at the University of Kansas as director of academic computing, a role he retained while director of ITS.
"This decision is motivated solely by my
desire to return to responsibilities of greatest interest to me personally and professionally," Niebaum said.
Niebaum, director since 1994, said that the broad responsibilities of being executive director of ITS didn't allow him enough time to do what he wanted: to explore technology
Jerrv Niebaum
and its applications to education.
"I want to be closer to education,"he said. "I want to work with faculty to explore the use of technology in instruction."
Niebaum is working on a World Wide Web-based project using RealAudio that would allow curriculum to be taught over the web. RealAudio combines visual graphics and audio instructions that would guide a user through a subject on the web.
William Crowe, vice chancellor of information services and dean of libraries, said that while he wished he could talk Niebaum out of this move, he understood his motivations.
"Jerry has earned the right to do this," Crowe said. "He is first and foremost a teacher. Students will benefit from this move. Jerry can teach a person something every time he talks to them."
as director of academic computing, Niebaum will no longer be responsible for
"I want to be closer to education.I want to work with faculty to explore the use of technology in instruction."
Jerry Niembaum
Resigning ITS executive director
the networking and telecommunications department.
Jan Weller, director of networking and telecommunications, said, "I'm happy he is staying on at the University. We need his vision, expertise and most of all his friendship."
Niebaum came to the University in 1957 as an undergraduate. After receiving his bachelor's degree in math education in 1961, Niebaum received a master's in mathematics from Northwestern University. He then went to Iowa State as assistant director of the computation center and to work toward a doctorate in computer science, which he received in 1973.
In 1981 Niebaum returned to the University as the director of academic computing, a role he has kept since. He also served as director of the office of information services from 1982 to 1987. In April 1994 Niebaum became executive director of ITS.
Crowe said a search committee would be appointed within a few weeks.
Niebaum will continue as executive director of ITS until a replacement is found, he said.
University hires environmental specialist
By Lindsey Henry Kansan staff writer
Victoria Silva is ready to try to save at least one corner of the earth. As the newly appointed campus environmental specialist, Silva wants that corner to be the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas.
Although the University has many recycling programs, Silva wants a more coordinated effort, she said.
"We need to be the glue for the campus," Silva said of the department of environment, health and safety. "We
need to be one whole unified group."
Silva was appointed in July. The position was created to serve as the main contact for all campus recycling efforts.
Silva will
Victoria Silva
tion, waste reduction and recycling projects for faculty, staff and students.
make impact assessments and recommenda tions for pollution repre-
Mike Russell, director of the department of environment, health and safety, said, "She is very motivated.
"She has a great depth of knowledge and knows more of the details than I do. She can deal with the problems on campus and make them go away."
Silva said her main focus was to strengthen a campus-wide paper recycling program that included newsprint as well as office paper.
Eventually she would like to see a unified program for aluminum cans, she said.
"We can't do that on our own," Silva said. "The biggest resource this campus has is the students."
Prior to her arrival, Silva was an environmental specialist with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment in the Bureau of Waste Management in Topeka.
There, Silva coordinated state recycling implementation grants, assisted agencies with waste-reduction programs and reviewed comprehensive
solid-waste management plans for compliance with state statutes.
Silva said she believed her experience with the state earned her the position with the University.
"Because I was with the Bureau of Waste Management, I know all aspects of solid-waste disposal," Silva said. "I have the overall big picture of waste management."
Silva has a bachelor's degree with a double major in geology and geography and environmental studies from the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs.
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4A
Monday, August 26,1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Downtown bookstore should be welcomed
The development of a Borders Book Shop in downtown Lawrence should be welcomed by the community. In deciding whether to accept the project, the City Commission should not follow the Historic Resources Commission's rejection of the new complex. Its decision was based on the false assumption that a building that would be demolished has historic value.
The Historic Resources Commission apparently was swayed by arguments that one of the buildings to be demolished, the Lawrence Buick Co., at the corner of Seventh and New Hampshire streets, had historical value. A study conducted for the city in 1994 by Three Gables Preservation Co., a private historical preservation company, determined that the building was not worthy of preservation.
In addition, the city's already strong economy would become healthier with the new development, which is planned for the block at New Hampshire and Rhode Island streets between Seventh and Eighth streets.
Another issue of concern is the effect the new store would have on small businesses in the community.
Downtown Lawrence is not an environment for big chain stores," said Pat Kehde, co-owner of The Raven Bookstore, 8 E. Seventh St.
She said that locally owned stores lost 15 to 20 percent of their business to big chains. Debi Moore, assistant director of economic development at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said she hoped the changes would not have an adverse effect on the city's small businesses.
Even though some stores may be hurt by the new development, Borders could boost Lawrence's overall economy.
While every effort should be made to ensure that the new buildings improve the aesthetic value of downtown, the new store's presence is in the best interests of Lawrence.
THE KANSAN EDITORIAL BOARD
Faculty bonuses may improve legislators' view of education
Half a million dollars are pouring into University of Kansas classrooms to reward faculty who excel in the art of teaching.
Sixteen professors on the Lawrence campus and four at the KU Medical Center will receive checks for $5,000 from the W. T. Kemper Fellowship for Teaching Excellence and the University Endowment Association. During the next five years, this program will disburse $500,000 to good teachers.
Not only will the program provide an incentive for faculty, but it will send a message to the Legislature. If the private sector has decided that education is something worthy of support, perhaps certain members of the House and Senate will reconsider their definition of state-supported education.
"This was done to show Kansas that there is not only great research going on at the University of Kansas but that we have some darn good teaching as well," said Jerry Samp, president of Commerce Bank, who is helping Chancellor Robert Hemenway distribute the checks.
As usual, not everyone is happy. Some have commented that the money could be better spent elsewhere. But what better goal is there than rewarding teachers who genuinely try to teach well?
John Scarffe, director of communications for the Endowment Association, said, "They offered $250,000; we said we'd match that. Why would we want to turn that down? We are among the top 12 endowment funds in the country. If we would give our money to the University as part of its operating expenses, we wouldn't have any money left."
In an age when education and educators have become the targets of budget cuts, it is wonderful to see the private sector responding by rewarding those who stay on to build an educational community.
TOM MOORE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
AMANDA TRAUGHBER
Editor
CRAIG LANG
Managing editor
MATT HOOD
Associate managing editor for design
KIMBERLY CRABTREE
CHARITY JEFFRIES
News editors
DARCIL McLAIN
Public Relations Director
Campus ... Suzanne Lóel
Jason Strait
Amy McVey
Editorial ... John Collar
Features ... Nicole Kennedy
Features ... Adam Wint
Associate sports ... Bill Petulli
Associate sports .. Caryln Foster
On-line editor ... David L. Teaska
Photo ... Rich Devkind
Graphics ... Noah Muser
Andy Robbins
Special sections ... Amy McVey
Wire ... Debbie Staine
AUREN GERSCH
Business manager
HEALY SMART
Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Editors
Campus mgr ... Mark Ozdemk
Regional mgr ... Denna Haupt
Assistant Retail mgr ... Dana Centeno
National mgr ... Krista Nye
Special Sections mgr .. Heather Valler
Production mgrs ... Don Kopec
Marketing director ... Lisa Quebbman
Public Relations dir ... Sara Rose
Creative director .. Desmond Lavelle
Clasified mgr .. Shelly Wachter
DIDN'T YOU BRING ANYTHING
FOR YOUR DORMROOM?
NAH.
I HAVE FAITH IN MY
ROOMMATE.
DO NOT OFFEND THE DOOR
THRASING CARNIVAL
Shawn Trimble / KANSAN
Ex-freshmen should help the new kids on the block
I've been there, I think to myself as I watch my hapless freshman roommate attempt to repair his alling PC.
The grunts and shouts of frustration, the prayers of, "Please let this work," muttered through clenched teeth, the exasperated return to the toolbox for a hammer — they all are too familiar. Computers are useful, powerful tools, and sometimes it seems as if they know it.
It is my turn to play that role.
Computer trouble is one of those experiences that show up in everyone's life, like the 17 pounds of coupons, planners and other shameless advertising stuffed in sacks from the bookstore.
There is a set of standard-issue situations for every freshman. And I guess now that I'm a sophomore, I can look at those situations and laugh at myself.
I am one of few sophomores blessed with three freshman roommates this year. Like an episode of Mr. Bean, I get to sit back and watch them grow up, going through the ups and downs of getting to know the University of Kansas.
But running through the whole episode is that I've been there feeling. And I think back to all the upperclassmen who straightened me out when I was confused: enrollment, advising, add/drop and everything that followed.
It is not something one thinks about — the importance of the relationship between upperclassmen and freshmen. Before I started college, I heard all the stories about how cruel the seniors were to the
freshmen, and those stories contribute quite a bit toward the anxiety that characterizes freshmen. But when I got here, I found people who saw a little of themselves in my plight and decided to help me out.
ANDY
ROHRBACK
STAFF COLUMNIST
They still do contrary to popular belief, a
sophomore is just a freshman with 30 credit hours and a little more attitude.
We've dealt with difficult professors, impossible classes and laborious term papers. We owe something to the students who fill our shoes this year.
That is why it is important for me, and my fellow ex-freshmen, to take an occasional break from the rush of upperclassmanhood and reach out a hand to the newcomers. We've been there, and we survived. We've waited in line for seats at Allen Field House.
But I know what it is like to be lost completely, inundated by classes, sports and something called a social life. And for the most part, I've come through it all right.
It begins with a welcome. It is simply a wave of the hand. It is giving someone that unique gift of remembering their name, of introducing them to other people, of respecting them and treating them as friends,
It thrives on memories. Those unforgettable road trips, memorable moving days and classic late nights watching cheesy movies are what make up the college years.
not children.
But the other half of the equation is equally important.
Freshmen must realize that upperclassmen aren't just a source of degradation and intimidation. There is a reason why college is more than one year long; so we can learn from those who have gone before.
That means, freshman, that you first have to ask questions. No matter how plain and simple the catalog looks, have someone explain it. There is always a certain hoop you have to jump through that isn't listed.
There is the essence of college life and of life beyond the ivory tower. We have to talk to each other, and we have to listen.
And chances are, someone in your living unit has run into the same problem and can save you a lot of embarrassment and maybe a little money.
Second, you have to listen. Not everything out of your elder roommate's mouth is a pearl of wisdom, but for the most part, you are better off not plugging in the Discman when he starts talking. The man before you knows the trail ahead as well as you know the back of his head.
Andy Rohrbock is an Andover sophomore in Journalism and political selence.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Clinton abandons vow to help poor citizens
Shame on Bill Clinton for selling out the poor and the needy of this country in what amounts to an election-year cave-in to rival any other in recent history.
The president's decision to sign the shamefully shortsighted welfare reform bill, which is currently being shuffled through Congress, is a move that will win him marginal respect from conservatives, who will soon happily cast votes for his opponent in November.
Ironically, those same individu
This welfare reform bill will reinquish federal control of social welfare programs' day-to-day operations to state agencies. The goal is to open the door to states and allow them to create new systems specifically structured to suit each state's needs.
vent a massive migration of impoverished Americans to their state in search of the best benefits package. It appears that Bill Clinton's commitment to be the "Man That Ended Welfare As We Know It" is greater than his commitment to defend and protect this nation's poor.
Unfortunately, we live in the real world. Financial concerns will force states to rush to the lowest possible level of compliance with federal guidelines in order to pre-
als will ultimately lay the blame for the tragic ramifications of this legislation on the shoulders of Bill Clinton and at the doorstep of the Democratic Party.
Shame on you, Bill Clinton. Shame on all the hypocrites and double talkers who dine at election fund-raisers and claim to feel our pain but quietly stab us in the back.
André M. Espinosa Lawrence senior
HUBIE
GOSH, I'M SO UNCERTAIN ABOUT MY FUTURE!! WILL I GET GOOD GRADES THIS YEAR? A STEADY GIRLFRIEND? A JOB WHEN I GRADUATE??
I KNOW!!!
I'LL CALL MY PERSONAL
PSYCHIC! FOR ONLY
$2.00 A MINUTE, SHE'S A
BARGAIN!!!
HI, LATIVA?
Cyber punks are scheming to take over the universe
This year, as seniors approach graduation, freshmen begin their quest for intellectual enrichment (the ultimate buzz) and the rest of us attempt to decipher sidewalk chalk messages around campus, a younger computer-literate generation is planning a takeover.
I recently uncovered a plot that will put everyone born before 1980, with the exception of Bill Gates
WOW! SHE WAS AMAZING
SHE KNEW THINGS ABOUT
ME NOBODY ELSE COULD
KNOW! MY PSYCHIC
CHANGED MY LIFE!!!
WHAT-DID-SHE SAY?
STAFF COLUMNIST
(wait, is he really that old?) at the mercy of those young enough to buy tickets to a Kiss comeback concert, naively thinking, "Hey, these guys look pretty cool."
Consider as evidence for this plot the following message left for my 15-year-old brother on my family's answering machine.
JEFF
MUDRICK
"Listen. . . We've got trouble. The mud is out of control. Ninety percent of the users were implementers. . . There were implementers making other gods implementers. . . There were people making regular people that logged on that we don't even know implementers. I did player file white, and only we will be implementers! There will be no more implementers! We have to talk about it; it's way out of control, and it's crazy. Look, I gotta go before they trace this call." (All right, I made up the last line.)
My original interpretation was that the individual who left this message was merely some fruitcake hopelessly immersed in a computer fantasy, so much so that it never occurred to him that such a message, delivered with the urgency of a 911 accidental torso amputation call, might seem odd to the non-implementers of my family.
I soon realized that there had to be something more to it. And while the boys down at the FBI have yet to break the code, I am convinced my brother and millions of other young computer nerds are conspiring to conquer the world. I believe one process involves shrinking entire cities to fit on a single Sony Mini Disc.
If Scott and his comrades are successful, every time some poor fool such as myself steps through a doorway, he'll get hit with 200 volts (roughly 6,984 gigabits in computer terms) of electricity. Although I know of their plan, there is nothing to do but wait out my final years of freedom.
Realistically, what chance does a simpleton like myself have against a smaller, weaker, less educated but technologically superior sixth grader? Sure, I could fight him or challenge him to a video game on my home turf (Coleco 2000). But what's the use? Even if I won, all he'd have to do is program a group of computers to kick my butt.
Jeff Mudrick is a Topeka sophomore in psychology.
It may sound paranoid, but what legitimate excuse, besides playing Pac Man, could any person have for spending 10 hours a day in front of a computer?
Take Scott Konzem, also known as "The Lawrence Whiz Kid," a 12-year-old computer prodigy featured in Monday's *Kansan*. Scott spent the summer at the University of Kansas, learning the ins and outs of computer programming, or so he says. I say his fancy words like html, java script, and hard drive (whatever that is) are merely a front to confuse us illiterates and prevent us from unveiling his true intentions — to implant a computer chip into the earlobe of every mammal without an e-mail address.
By Greg Hardin
I'M PREGNANT!
CAN YOU BELIEVE IT?!!
WOW! I'M GOING TO CALL
MY PSYCHO
RIGHT NOW!!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 26, 1996
5A
Recycling important, but not convenient
On-campus bins are available for many
By Dave Breltenstein Kansan staff writer
Used pizza boxes and graded term papers do not have to clutter land-fills. Instead, they can be recycled at any one of five Lawrence recycling centers.
One such center, located at Wal-Mart, 3300 Iowa St., recycles everything from aluminum cans to junk mail. The Wal-Mart Recycling Center runs on a non-profit basis, and customers are not paid for bringing in items.
John Clayton, teacher for disabled workers at Wal-Mart, said that the company considered the recycling program a donation. With the help of Clayton, the center is run by employees with disabilities.
"Our motivation is not to make a profit, but to employ people who otherwise may have a problem finding a job because of their disabil-
ties," he said. "By recycling, you are not only helping the entire world, but you're helping people in your own community."
Each of the Lawrence recycling centers provide slightly different recycling services.
Clayton said he saw a lot of students unload recyclables at the center east of the Wal-Mart building.
"Our business really picks up when students are in town. You definitely can tell a difference around the beginning and end of each semester," he said.
Jon Drago, office manager of Conservation Resources Recycling, 3009 W. 28th St., said that few students subscribed to his service, though some fraternities, sororities and scholarship halls did.
Conservation Resources Recycling offers a weekly curbside pickup for recyclable goods, and little presorting is required. The fee is $5.50 a month, but subscribers must have a recycling bin to store the items.
"I think we have an advantage because we come to your house and pick up things instead of you coming to us," he said. "We also are the only one who takes many items."
The company picks up tires for an extra $1 fee per tire. Drago said each item the company recycled was important.
"The generation in college now will see a huge problem by the time they retire," he said. "We'll have to recycle because there will be no more room for trash. We cannot continue to waste materials at the same rate."
Mike Russell, director of the KU department of environmental health and safety, said all the area recycling centers were good. His office takes recyclables to various on- and offcampus locations, depending on the item.
"Newspapers go to Stauffer-Flint. Office paper is picked up by Dickerson Recycling. Other materials go to Wal-Mart." he said.
Russell said there were some accessibility problems with recycling centers in Lawrence.
"A lot of people would like to see recyclables picked up with their trash, but the city has to do something about that first," he said.
While there are five recycling centers in Lawrence, some students do not use their services.
Leonid Akimov, Nizhniy Novgorod,
Russia, graduate student, said he
only recycled soda cans.
He said he always put them in campus bins,but never took them to a Lawrence recycling center.
"It's really easy to recycle things on campus, but taking them somewhere else is a lot of trouble," he said.
Places to recycle
Name of place Location Phone # Hours of operation
Conservation Resources Recycling 3009 W. 28th St. 842-1167 no walk-ins accepted pickup on M, W-Sat.
Offers: Weekly curbside pickup of aluminum cans, newspaper, metals, plastic
Eco Services Recycling 303 W. 11th St. 841-1615 N/A
Offers: Weekly curbside pickup of aluminum cans, newspaper, metals, plastic
Kaw Motor & Salvage Co. 1549 N. 3rd St. 843-2533 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M-F
Offers: Recycle aluminum cans, steel, brass, iron, pots, pans, radiators, appliances, car parts
Lonnie's Recycling 501 Maple St. 841-4855 8 a.m. to noon M-Sat
Offers: Recycle aluminum cans, tin cans, copper, junk cans, scrap iron, machinery
Wal-Mart Recycling Center 3300 Iowa St. 841-9558 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. M-Sat
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sun
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Resident inquiries answered by peer
Brian Wozniak creates Kansas residents.
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan staff writer
Three weeks ago, Woznian, Lawrence senior, became the University of Kansas' first peer counselor helping students apply for Kansas residency.
Basically, we're smart people who will come to your home and help you out.
"I help out a lot of people that just don't understand the process," Wozniak said. "They have problems and so they come and talk to me."
The idea for his position came from Cindy Sanders, who works with residency and veterans services.
When students had questions about applying for residency, Sanders was either too busy to help or could not answer certain questions because, as a person who helps approve the applications, there was a conflict of interest. However, Sanders wanted to find some way to answer all students' questions.
Sanders went to the Educational Opportunity Fund Committee and requested a grant to pay for the position. The fund was created in 1990 by the Board of Regents to help provide money for groups that need extra funds. The committee consists of KU administrators, faculty and students appointed by the Student Body President. The money it awards comes from a $6 fee included in the student campus fee.
Sanders' request was granted by the committee with two stipulations. The grant only lasts for one year and the peer counselor is not allowed to work more than 10 hours a week.
Wozniak, who works out of the Registrar's office, said he understood that his paycheck came from student fees.
Sanders said she hoped Wozniak would be so successful that permanent funding could be found when the grant expires.
"My duty is to the students first," Wozniak said. "What I tell a student is between me and the student. A lot of times I will tell students things the Registrar might not, but I will also tell a student if I think that they don't have a chance of getting their application approved."
Rates, fines to increase at downtown meters, lots
By Liz Musser
Kansan staff writer
On Jan. 1, the city will raise downtown parking rates and fines in an effort to reduce illegal parking. Lawrence City Commission voted on the issue Tuesday. The increased revenue will add three new police officers to the downtown patrol.
The changes include a hike in the basic parking fine from $1 to $2. If a person receives more than four tickets in a 30-day period, every ticket after the fourth will cost $15. In addition, the 10-hour parking meter rates will be increased form 25 cents to 50 cents.
GEEKS ON WHEELS
Mike Wildgen, city manager, said the request for the increases came as a reaction to concerns about security downtown. Another issue was the abuse of the free, two-hour parking lots by downtown employees.
"There are a lot of spoiled folks," Wilden said. "The two-hour lots are closer than the ten-hour lots, and the fine is very low. Most people think nothing of paying $1."
Jill Legler, manager of Sunflower International Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St., said she did not think that the fine or police-force increases were fair solutions to the parking problem.
"It seems like a double whammy," she said. "They are being hard on us about parking, but they are also making us pay more. I'm not sure that it's the downtown employees' job to pay for more policemen."
The two-hour lots are specifically for downtown shopper.
Legler also said the issue is not laziness, but safety. After dark, she does not feel safe walking to the ten-hour parking lots. Many of the lots are not well lit and are in poor condition, she said.
She also said the 110-hour parking lot closest to her store was usually full because of the nearby Aquatic Center at 701 Kentucky St.
Formal rush participants are sparse
By Ashlee Roll
Kansan staff writer
Many fraternities found themselves faced with a dilemma during formal rush this year—lack of participants.
Alex Protzmian, Overland Park sophomore and head rush chairman for Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, said the number of formal rush participants was ridiculously small this time around.
However, about 20 had already pledged by the time formal rush started.
"This year, there were 34 guys total for formal rush, and there were 80 the year before," Protzman said.
Bill Nelson, assistant director of the Organizations and Activities Center and the coordinator for Greek programs, said there were 85 rushes on the list for formal rush for all fraternities.
"It is a challenge for fraternities to rely on formal rush as a mechanism to get the bulk of its members," Nelson said. "They should rely on informal rush."
Informal rush is recruiting year-round.
Most fraternities have informal rush, while sororites have only formal rush at the beginning of each fall semester.
Fraternities' all-year recruiting may be a reason for the drop in numbers during formal rush, but for some houses, this reduction can cause a problem in trying to fill vacancies in the fraternities'houses.
Whether the numbers are down for rush as a whole has yet to be determined.
"It depends on the number of spaces that a house has open," Protzman said. "If they have 15 spaces and get two guys, they're screwed."
Fraternities use signing cards as a form of commitment and rushes turn in these cards to the fraternity they want to pledge.
Until all these cards are turned in, the actual number of participants in both formal and informal rush will not be known.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 26, 1996
7A
11 dead in ship mutiny
Sailors overpower rebels; Japanese guard intervenes
TOKYO — Japanese patrol boats yesterday reached a tuna ship where mutineers apparently killed the South Korean captain and 10 crew members before being overpowered and locked up by other shipmates.
Tomohiro Inami, representative for Japan's Maritime Safety Agency
in Tokyo, said the Japanese coast guard was waiting for foreign officials to work out legal and diplomatic arrangements before making arrests.
Officials were interviewing crew members as the 294-ton ship drifted about 330 miles south of Tokyo Bay, Innami said. The suspected muteiers remained locked in a cabin.
"Right now, we're getting so many different stories on what happened out there, it's going to take a while before we know what went on," Innami said.
The Honduras-registered Peskamar-15 was reported missing earlier this month with 24 people on board.
Police said that in the ship's last radio communication, made on Aug. 3, Capt. Choi Ki-taek said Chinese crewmen were refusing to work, and his ship was returning to a Samao base to get replacements.
The mutineers dumped the bodies into the sea.
Maritime police in South Korea said the Chinese crewmen staged the mutiny, but authorities did not disclose a motive.
The survivors eventually overpowered the mutineers and locked them in the cabin, police said. The Chinese crewmen apparently were trying to steer the ship toward China, but it ran out of fuel and drifted.
Indian pilgrimage turns deadly
The Associated Press
SRINAGAR, India — Tens of thousands of pilgrims stranded near a Himalayan shrine moved to safety yesterday in helicopters, trucks and on foot as floodwaters receded.
PressTrust of India news agency reported that 160 people had died while Kulbhushan Jandiyal, a government representative, confirmed 116 dead.
About 80,000 pilgrims had been filing to and from a cave honoring the Hindu god of destruction. They were trapped along the 30-mile path Thursday when a freak snowstorm and torrential rains hit the route at various
points.
Thousands remained stranded yesterday. But snow had melted and waters had receded enough to allow rescuers to reach several pockets of pilgrims.
The trekkers most at risk were at the highest elevation, near the village of Pajnantri, about 1 1/2 miles from the Aamarnath cave honoring Shiva.
Pilgrims there — many of them from lowlands and unaccustomed to cold weather — were huddled inside torn tents and around small fires. Muslim villagers gave the Hindu pilgrims tea, food and blankets despite tensions between the two ethnic groups.
Most people apparently died of exposure. Thirteen people reportedly died of heart failure.
Heavy fog, rain and low clouds hampered helicopter flights until yesterday. Roads near the cave were blocked by floodwater or nearly 1 1/2 feet of snow.
Authorities called off the annual pilgrimage on Friday, telling Hindu worshipers who had not already left to stay at home.
The pilgrimage, which began Aug. 16, includes a 185-mile bus ride and a three-day, 30-mile trek up to the cave. Usually, fewer than a dozen pilgrims die each year from exertion or accident.
Clinton approves FDA regulations on nicotine
THE NEWS in brief
WASHINGTON — No more Joe Camel in Rolling Stone magazine. No more Marlboro Man on roadside billboards. No more cigarette vending machines in grocery stores.
President Clinton hopes to cut teenage smoking by ending the
advertising images that portray tobacco use as fun, sexy and glamorous — and by making it harder for teens to illegally buy tobacco.
Clinton approved Food and Drug Administration regulations on Friday that declared nicotine an addictive drug and identified cigarettes and smokeless tobacco as the devices that deliver it.
The move gives the FDA authority to curb the sale and promotion of tobacco, just as the FDA regulates the sale and marketing of heart valves or insulin pumps.
The Associated Press
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A8
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1.9.9.6
JAYHAWK
Music
FESTIVAL
Tyler Witken/KANSAN
RIGHT: Cary Pierce, of the Dallas-based band Jackpiperie, plays guitar yesterday during the band's set at the Jayhawk Music Festival, which was held at Clinton Lake.
Tyler Wirken/KANSAN
TYler Wirken/KANSAN
BELOW: Trying to escape the heat of a Sunday afternoon, Jessica Honaker, Topeka sophomore, cools off with the help of Jayhawk Music Festival security guard Doug Cheatham of Kansas City. Cheatham and other guards at the concert were throwing water on hot fans in the front rows.
ECRIT
Chris Hamilton/KANSAN RIGHT: Clint Gengry, Lecompont resident, sleeps next to his friends as the band Jackopierce performs on stage.
Kathleen Driscoll/KANSAI BOTTOM: Members of the crowd at the Music Festival are lifted up and passed above the crowd.
Sweat, sun and Rock'n'Roll
By Jeff Ruby
Nineteen bands got the royal treatment backstage yesterday at the Jayhawk Music Festival, basking in the sun when not performing for a less-than-capacity but energetic crowd at Clinton Lake State Park, west of Lawrence.
"I definitely feel like a rock star," said Mike Mahaffey, guitarist for Self. "I love it because they've got these veggie trays."
Self, a Murfreesboro, Tenn., self-described buzz-hop band, played at 1:40 p.m. on the main stage. Then Mahafey was able to relax with a cold drink under a shady tent while thousands of fans baked in the sun out front.
For bands accustomed to playing for a few night owls in dark, smoky bars, the bright-and-early outdoor concert for thousands of sunbathers was a welcome contrast. The pandemonium involved in playing this type of outdoor gig excited Mahaffey.
He said he liked the aspect of not knowing what was going to happen, the daytime atmosphere and that there were so many bands running around.
The large stage and extensive crowd altered his band's on-stage performance. Mahaffey said.
"You want to give them something to look at, you know, jump around a little," he said. "Days like this, we have to draw together during the hard parts, like a little huddle. Because when you're spread out on a big stage and you're about 50 feet apart, it's hard to be tight. But it's been a great event — a lot of exposure for us."
Karl Grable, bass player for the St. Louis band The Urge said his approach to performing was the same whether playing in a small club or at a huge venue.
"I go up there and I just want to play a good show and act like a moron," he said.
Jeff Dimpsey, bassist for the Hum, a band from Champaign, Ill., said his band's on-stage attitude took the opposite persona.
"We're not very creative with our stage show," said Dimpsey. "We get up there and stare at our feet and play."
Hum, a veteran of outdoor music festivals, played at the Lollapalooza side stage last year.
Band members were hesitant to use the word "alternative" in reference to anything, but some said the Midwest's tolerance for non-mainstream music had grown in recent years.
"I don't know if it's improved so much as people have stood up and taken notice," Dmpsey said. "There are
always good bands everywhere, it's just a matter of people paying attention."
Lawrence got rave reviews from The Urge's Grabble, who said he believed KU students and local residents were some of the most knowledgeable music fans in the country.
"The kids here are just great," he said. "They just love everything."
TOMMY JOHNSON
Kathleen Driscoll/KANSAN
The guitarist and the drummer of the band Shag jam at the Music Festival. The second-annual festival lasted until dusk yesterday at Clinton State Park.
Parking
Continued from Page 1.
tickets that were given for having no vehicle permit would cost each driver about $50. The tickets included a $9 permit fee and penalty charges.
Officers on the scene would not comment on the parking situation, and no one in the Sheriff's Department could be reached.
Marshall Loo, Stillwell, Okla., senior, came to the park at 3 p.m. to see the live music that began at 11:15 a.m. Not wanting to miss any more of the show, Loo and his friends decided to park along the road where they were stuck in a traffic am..
"We were waiting in line for at least an hour," Loo said.
Craig Hanson, Wichita senior,
also waited in line when he arrived
at the park at 3:15 p.m. He parked
along the road to avoid a long wait
on the way out of the park.
"We were just trying to think ahead," Hanson said. "We didn't see any no parking signs."
Travis Laudermilk, Abilene freshman, said he had no idea there was no parking on the road, and he didn't mind walking.
Hall couldn't believe that the park would give tickets to so many people. When he was told the parking lot was full, he turned around with all the other cars to find another place.
"There was no movement in the traffic so I just parked," Laudermilk said.
"There were probably already a hundred cars lined up to park there," Hall said.
---
BIG 12 SPOILER
In the first game played by a Big 12 Conference member, **TEXAS AAM** was upset by Brigham Young University 41-37 on Saturday in the Pigskin Classic, the opening game of the college football season.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
A&M,ranked No.13 in The Asso-
AM
aided Press presenion poll, allowed 363 passing yards by BYU quarterback Steve Sarkisian in the game. The loss was the first in eight season openers for A&M coach R.C. Slocum.
Story on Page 8B
KANSAS FOOTBALL PRESEASON UPDATE
Senior linebacker RONNIE WARD was one of 65 candidates named to the watch list for Butkus Award. The award is given each season to the nation's outstanding collegiate linebacker. Ward, who was recently named co-captain of the team, missed the 1995 season due to a shoulder injury. The Butkus Award winner will be announced December 14.
BASKETBALL UPDATE
The men's basketball team has received an oral commitment from ERIC CHENOWITH, of the top-rated players in the country. Chenowith, a 7-foot center from Orange, Calif., averaged 17 points and 11 rebounds at Villa Park High School last season. He chose Kansas Instead of Duke, Arizona, UCLA, Notre Dame, Indiana and Utah. "I like the his-
MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1996
KU
any of the big men at the school," Chenowith said. "The alumni are pretty supportive. And Lawrence seemed like a pretty good place."
SECTION B
Fast BREAKS
Athletic department gets a new associate director
Amy Perko, NCAA staff member since 1990, was named associate athletics director and senior woman administrator at the University of Kansas on Friday.
Perko joins the KU Athletic Department staff after serving as an NCAA enforcement representative since 1992. She also worked for two years as a legislative assistant with the NCA.
"I am really pleased and excited about having Amy join our staff," said Bob Frederick, Kansas athletic director. "She is a bright and talented individual who will do a superb job in this important position. Amy Perko represents everything we hope happens to our student athletes."
Perko attended Wake Forest where she was a two-time GET Academic All-American and an NCAA postgraduate scholarship winner, as well as an All-ACC basketball player.
Perko replaces Betsy Stephenson, who resigned to become senior woman administrator at UCLA.
MIAMI — Joe Robbie Stadium, the home of the NFL's Miami Dolphins and MLB's Florida Martins, is undergoing a name change.
According to a published report, the stadium will soon be known as Pro Player Park.
Say it ain't so — Joe Robbie replaced with corporate name
Francisco, formerly
known as Candlestick Park. New arenas come ready-made with sponsors, many of them airlines, such as Pacific Airlines.
The switch follows a nationwide trend to attach sponsor names to venues, such as 3Com Park in San Francisco.
MARLIN BAY SPORTS CLUB
Phoenix's America West Arena or Chicago's United Center.
Stadium president Bob Kramm said that the deal to rename it was near completion with only a few details to be worked out.
"We know it's a good organizational fit." he said.
Pro Player is a New Hampshire- based division of Fruit of the Loom that manufactures licensed sports apparel.
Team and stadium owner Wayne Huizenga stands to make millions, but could take a public relations hit by removing the late Joe Robbie's name — the man who brought pro football to Miami.
Russian Olympian stabbed by watermelon peddlers
MOSCOW — Russian Olympic champion Alexander Popov, considered the world's fastest swimmer, was stabbed in the stomach by watermelon vendors in Moscow, police said yesterday.
Mason says it's Johner
Popop, who won two gold and two silver medals at the Olympics in Atlanta, underwent surgery at a Moscow hospital. Doctors said he was conscious despite his injury, the ITAR-Tass news agency reported.
Prime Minister Viktor Chemomyrid said he was outraged by the attack and ordered an investigation, ITAR-Tass reported.
The 25-year-old swimmer was walking a young woman home Saturday night when he got into an argument with watermelon vendors.
Alexander Shechuk, duty officer at Moscow's interior department, said Popov received a knife wound in his torso.
Gennady Alyoshin, president of the Russian Swimming Federation, told ITAR-Tass that the knife penetrated Popov's stomach, *grazing his lungs and kidney*.
The Associated Press
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
when he was five-for-nine for 46 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions in four games. He was in all 11 games last year but as a special teams holder.
"My first year I came in just thinking I was going to redshirt," he said. "With the situation we had last
He's unproven, untested, was injured during spring practice and probably will start the Kansas season opener Thursday against Ball State.
With Rutz still trying to come
And he's not Ben Rutz.
back from a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee, the starting quarterback for Thursday's game will be Matt Johner.
At least for now, that is. Kansas coach Glen Mason said yesterday, and has been saying for the past week or so, that Johner would start.
out Rutz, saying that he keeps looking good in practice and is getting better.
But he also has not officially ruled
But for now, the man who will lead the Jayhawk offense is junior Matt Johner.
Johner has had three years to learn the Jayhawk offense. He red-shirted his freshman year in 1993 and was the No. 3 quarterback in 1994 and 1995.
While Johner may be a relative unknown to Jayhawk fans, he's a veteran of the Kansas offense.
And he's ready to play.
However, Johner has seen his only quarterback action in 1994,
"I've been waiting for this chance for a while," Johner said. "I'm really anxious to play."
See FOOTBALL, Page 4B
2
Kansas iunies setter Tiffanv Sennet, and middle blocker Maggie Mohrfeld will be the captains on the Javhawks volleyball squad this fall.
Kansas rides beach wave
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
Beach volleyball has arrived - dudes.
From Gabrielle Reece's Nike ads to its first year as an Olympic sport, beach volleyball has set itself up for a bright
future. One indication of the sport's popularity was that NBC gave beach volleyball a better time slot than that of indoor volleyball, which was mostly shown against late-night talk shows.
Members of the Kansas volleyball team, including coach Karen Schonewise, have taken a liking to this
two-on-two outdoor contest.
"I think it's just done great things for the sport overall in terms of its on TV a lot more," Schonewise said. "People are just a little more familiar with the sport in terms of watching it."
See VOLLEYBALL, Page 4B
New coach for men's tennis is a familiar face
Riley set to lead team through another winning season of play
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
Coming off its third consecutive, and final, Big Eight Conference title, it would seem that the last thing the Kansas men's tennis team needed was a change.
This off-season, the Jayhawk men received a major change when coach Michael Center resigned to accept a position in private business. His successor, Mark Riley, served as an assistant coach for the men's and women's teams in 1993 under Center.
After that season, Riley was named head coach at Drake University and coached there for three years. In that time, he accumulated a 47-26 record, including a 16-6 overall record and a 9-4 mark in the Missouri Valley Conference last year.
"Coaching at Drake gave me the opportunity to be responsible for a whole program, not just parts of the whole," Riley said. "But even more important was my experience at KU, to allow me to step into this job and know how the program works."
Riley graduated from Kalamazoo College in 1982 with a bachelor's degree in economics. While he was there, Riley earned All-America honors in both singles and doubles competition.
What soon followed was a professional career from 1985 to 1989, in which he was world-ranked in singles and doubles while competing on the United States and European Tours.
After his professional career, Riley worked as director of tennis for the Washington Tennis Foundation from 1990 to 1992. He also doubled during that time as a head coach for the United States Tennis Association, located in Washington.
From there, Riley served as an assistant coach for the men's and women's teams for a year at the University of Pennsylvania before he came to KU in 1993.
"For now, I just want to get settled in," Riley said. "I want to get to know the guys and have them place their trust in me, to help give the team a chance to develop."
Although Riley believes the system Center had worked well, he said he thought that there was room for improvement in the way the program was run.
"I don't want to do too much too soon," Riley said.
“There won't be any surprises for the team in the way things are run, but I do think there are some areas where we can improve the system and improve our results.”
Two players who know Riley from his earlier days at Kansas in 1993 include juniors Scott Marshall and Trent Tucker, both of whom Riley anxiously anticipates coaching again. With a talented roster and Riley's enthusiasm entering the season, there's no reason to believe that a new head won't further the winning ways of the tennis team as it enters its inaugural Big 12 Conference season.
Kickoffs and pennant races brighten fall scene
Ah, fall. It's my favorite time of the year. That is, it's my favorite sports time of the year. College football started this weekend and the pros kick off in just a few days. The baseball pennant races are heating up. We have a few more months before being bombarded by basketball, and hockey is just a cold memory.
With the NFL opener scheduled for Sunday, everyone's already making their Super Bowl picks. I have to admit, I don't know who is going to be living it up in the French Quarter on Jan. 26, but I do know who's not going to be there. Sorry, Chiefs fans, the only Kansas City representative in New Orleans that week will be Jason Whitlock.
So what's happening this last week of August?
I also know, and it breaks my heart to say this, but San Francisco
won't be there,
either. The glory
days are finished and even
Mr. Walsh on the sideline won't
change that.
But don't think I'm just giving the NFC to those pesky Cowboys. Take a look around and you'll notice the luster has faded from the so-called America's Team. People are falling off the bandwagon left and right. That wouldn't just have anything to do with Michael Irvin and his off-season problems, would it?
ASSOCIATE
SPORTS
EDITOR
CARLYN
FOSTER
Sticking with this professional sports theme, what's with Major
League Baseball? Is anyone surprised there still isn't a labor agreement? Does anyone still care after two years of seeing Donald Fehr everywhere? Apparently the only "stumbling block" is whether players get service time for the 75 regular-season days missed during the strike.
OK. Does this only seem strange to me? Why should they get service time for not playing? If memory serves, the players were the ones who walked out. And why is service time such a big deal? Because some players could become free-agent eligible with those missed days. In short, money. Big surprise.
On a more positive note, it looks as if Brett Butler will play again — this season. Maybe as soon as the second week of September. That could be exactly what baseball needs. With nothing as big as Cal
As a St. Louis native, I'm required by law to root insanely for the
Ripken's streak this season, the fans are looking for that one special story to care about. Besides, with the loss of Kirby Puckett and the impending retirements of Andre Dawson and Ozzie Smith, the game needs some good news.
One last baseball note — how about those pennant races? I mean, who ever thought the closest — and most interesting — races would be in the National League West and Central? The West is interesting simply because the Dodgers, with their talent, should be running away with the division, but the Padres won't let them. In the Central, the Astros and the Cardinals have been consistently trading the top spot all season, and that will probably continue to be the trend for the next month.
Cards until they disappoint me in the final week of the season. But because they haven't been even this close to the postseason in more years than I'd like to admit, I have and will continue to enjoy the ride.
To wrap this up, I'd like to comment on a campus sport — Kansas football. I, like many others, I'm sure, was overwhelmed by last season's 10-2 record and convincing Aloha Bowl victory. However, I am aware that the chances of repeating those achievements are somewhat slim. So I have just two hopes for this season. One, that the Jayhawks beat Kansas State here in Lawrence on Nov. 9. And two, a bowl bid somewhere in the continental United States would be nice. If not, that Haka Bowl in New Zealand sounds like fun.
V
2B
SCORES & MORE
Monday, August 26, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BASEBALL
American League Standings
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
New York 74 55 .574 —
Baltimore 68 61 .527 6
Boston 66 65 .504 9
Toronto 61 70 .466 14
Detroit 47 83 .362 27
Central Division
W L Pct. GB
Cleveland 77 53 592 —
Chicago 70 62 530 8
Minnesota 65 65 500 12
Milwaukee 62 69 473 15½
Kansas City 59 73 447 19
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Texas | 75 | 56 | .573 | — |
| Seattle | 66 | 63 | .512 | 8 |
| Oakland | 63 | 70 | .474 | 13 |
| California | 61 | 69 | .499 | 13½ |
Boston 9, Seattle 5
Milwaukee 4, Cleveland 3, 10 innings
Toronto 9, Chicago 2
San Francisco 5, California 4
Kansas City 9, Detroit 2
New York 5, Oakland 4
Minnesota 6, Texas 5
Sundav's Games
Boston 8, Seattle 5
Cleveland 8, Milwaukee 5
California 13, Baltimore 0
Oakland 6, New York 4
Texas 13, Minnesota 2
Detroit 7, Kansas City 4
Chicago 10, Toronto 9, 10 innings
Monday's Games
Cleveland Nagy 12-4) at Detroit Lira 6-10), 6:05
p.m.
Oakland Wasdin 7-6) at Baltimore Coppinger 7-
5); 8.35 p.m.
Minnesota Radke 8-13) at Toronto Guzman 10-
8); 8.35 p.m.
Milwaukee Eldred 2-2) at Chicago Alvarez 14-
6); 7.05 p.m.
Boston Wakefield 10-11) at California Dixon 1-
0); 9.05 p.m.
New York Key 9-10) at Seattle Hitchcock 12-6),
9.05 p.m.
Only names scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Cleveland at Detroit, 6:05 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore, 6:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Toronto, 6:35 p.m.
Milwaukee at Chicago, 7:05 p.m.
Texas at Kansas City, 7:05 p.m.
Boston at California, 9:05 p.m.
New York at Seattle, 9:05 p.m.
National League Glance National League Standings At A Glance
By The Associated Press All Times CST East Division
| | W | L | Pct | Celer | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Atlanta | 81 | 48 | .628 | — | — |
| Montreal | 70 | 59 | .543 | 11 | — |
| Florida | 61 | 70 | .466 | 11 | — |
| New York | 59 | 72 | .450 | 23 | — |
| Philadelphia | 53 | 78 | .405 | 29 | — |
Central Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Houston | 70 | 61 | .534 | — |
| St. Louis | 68 | 62 | .523 | 1 1/2 |
| Chicago | 64 | 64 | .500 | 4 1/2 |
| Cincinnati | 64 | 65 | .496 | 5 |
| Pittsburgh | 65 | 75 | .423 | 1 4/12 |
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Diego | 72 | 60 | .545 | — |
| Los Angeles | 70 | 60 | .538 | 1 |
| Colorado | 68 | 63 | .519 | 3½ |
| San Francisco | 55 | 73 | .430 | 1 |
Sunday's Games
Atlanta 6, Chicago 5
Houston 3, St. Louis 1
Montreal 3, San Francisco 0
Los Angeles 7, New York 5
Florida 5, Cincinnati 3
Colorado 9, Pittsburgh 3
San Diego 7, Philadelphia 1
Chicago 3, Aftrica 2
Colorado 13, Pittsburgh 9
Los Angeles 6, New York 5
Connecticut 4, Philadelphia 2
San Francisco 7, Montreal 2
Florida 6, Cincinnati 5
Houston 4, St. Louis 1
Monday's Games
Philadelphia Schlittig 6-8) at San Francisco
VanLandingham 7-13), 9-15)
St. Louis Andy Benes 13-9) at Houston Hamp-
ley 7-05). 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati Salkeld 6-4) at Colorado Swift 0-0),
8:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled
Tuesdav's Games
Philadelphia at San Francisco, 2:5 p.m.
Los Angeles at Montreal, 6:35 p.m.
Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 6:35 p.m.
San Diego at New York, 6:40 p.m.
Florida at St. Louis, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago at Houston 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Colorado, 8:05 p.m.
Sunday's Major League Linescores By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Seattle 000 000 140—5 9 0
Boston 100 502 68—8 14 4
M.Wagner, Carmona 4), Charlton 8) and Wilson; M.Maddux, Hudson 8), Gunderson 8), Brandenburg 8), and Slocumb 8) and Stanley. W.-M.Maddux, 2-1. L—M.Wagner, 3-5. Sv—Slocumb 23). HRs—Seattle, A.Rodiguz 32), Griffey Jr 40). Whiten 3). Boston, Frye 4), O'Leary 14)
Milwaukee 021 020 000—5 7 1
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Monday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackouts).
(All times Central)
MONDAY, AUGUST 26
10 a.m.
USA — Tennis, U.S. Open Tennis Championships, men's and women's opening rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
0634 A
USA — Tennis, S. Open Tennis Championship, men's and women's opening rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
ESPN — Arena Football, Arena Bowl. Tampa Bay at Iowa
10 p.m.
8 p.m.
PRIME - Boxing, champion Miguel Martinez 35-10-1) vs. Arthur Johnson 12-3-0) for NABF flyweight championship; champion Jorge Julio 32-1-0) vs. Mike Gallati 13-3-0) for NABO bantamweight championship, at Inglewood, Calif.
Cleveland 001 002 50x-8 11 0 D'armico, Florie 6), Miranda7), D. Jones7) and Levis', M.Dcowell, Mercker7), Shuey7), Mesa9) and S.Alomar, W.-Shuey, 4:2-L.-Miranda, 7:6. Sy—Mesa 31). HRs—Milwaukee, Selitzer 121
California 111 720 200—13 18 0
Baltimore 000 000 000—0 5 1
D.Springer and Fabregas. Erickson, Yan 4),
N. Rodriguez 5, Milchin 8), Corbin 9)
and Holles. W—D.Springer, 4-2 L—Erickson, 8,
11. HR—California, Valarde 10). Salmon 28).
Texas 700 032 001—13 14 1
Minnesota 100 000 012—2 7 1
B.Witt, Ke.Gross 9 and Valle; Miller, Parra 5,
Stevens 6 and G.Myers, W.-B.Witt, 13-9, L-
Miller, 0-1, HR—Texas, Greer 17, J.Gonzalez
38), W.Clark 9), Elster 22), Valle 2)
Oakland 010 003 002-6 10
New York 101 100 104-10 4 10
Adams, Mohler, 7) Ace, 9) Molina; Pettite,
J. Nelson, 8) Polley, 9) Pavlas, 9) Leyitz,
Giardi, 8) W—Mohler, 5-2. L—J, Nelson, 4-4.
Sv—Ace, 2) HRS—Hocken, McGwire, 44)
Stairs, 7) New York, Strawberry, 9) T.Martinez
201
Detroit 001 300 102—7 12 0
Kansas City 000 120 100—4 11 2
Van Poppel, Eisench (7), Lima (8), M.Myers (8)
and Nevin, Ausmus 9); Linton, Magnante 6);
Hulman 5), Pichard 6) and Macmarty, W—
Van Poppel, 2-6. L—Linton, 5-9. Sv—M.Myers
6). HRs—Detroit, Pride 6), Fryman 19), Kansas
City, Lockhart 5).
Toronto 022 121 110 0—9 16 0
Chicago 521 100 01—10 16 2
San Jose 743 100 01—10 16 2
Flener, Risley 13), Quantrill 6), Timlin 9) and O'Brien; Tapani, Levine 6), C堡莉 6), R.Hernandez 8) and Karkovice, Borders 9). W—R.Hernandez 5), K-1. L—Timlin 1), L-HRs —Toronto, Oleand 18), A.Gonzalez 11), Chicago, Tapartil 18).
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Chicago 000 000 201—3 11 0
Atlanta 000 010 102—2 7 1
Foster, B. Patterson (9), Wendell (9) and Servails,
Houston (9), Glavine, McMichael (9), Wohlers (9)
and Lopes. W—Foster, 5-2. L—Wohlers, 1-3.
Sv—Wendell (14).
Pittsburgh 510 100 101—9 15 4
Coloradg 301 301 23x—13 13 0
Colorado 301 201 32x = 13 13 0
Micell, M.Wilkins 5), Plesiac, E7icks 8) and
Oskil, J Wright, M.Munoz 5), Leskanic 8)
B.Ruffin 9) and Je.Reed, W.Munoz-2,
M.-Wilkins, 3-1.HR -Pittsburgh, King 26),
J.Bell 8), Colorado, Burkes 36), L.Walker 18).
New York 004 000 010—5 6 1
Los Angeles 000 123—5 6 1
New York 000 300 12x-6 8 0 Los Angeles 000 300 12x-6 8 0 Hamisch, D.Henry 8), Franco 8) and Hundley; I. Valdels, Radinsky 8), T.D.worlney 9) and Prince, Piazza 9), W-Radinsky 2-,1-L. Franco, 3-Sv -Td.Worlney 35), HRs -New York, Glikey 28), Los Angeles, Karros 28), Mandeel 00)
Montreal 010 011 000—2 7 2
Renewal 029 030 001 4
San Francisco 202 003 00x — 7 81 Cormier, Manuel 4), Panagia 5), Dyer 6), Urbina 7), Juden 7), D.Fletcher, Fernandez and Lampkin, R.Wilkins 3), W—Fernandez, 6—L—Cormier, 7-10, HRS—Montreal, H.Rodriguez 33). San Francisco, Hubbard 2).
Philadelphia 010 010 000—2 12 1
San Diego 321 010 40x-11 17 0
West, L.Mitchell 2, Bortland 6), R.Jordan 7,
Parrett 8) and Bennett; S.Sanders, Blair 6),
D.Veras 7), Qusit 8), Bergman 9) and
Flaherw. V. S.-Sanders, 7-4 L.-West, 1-2.
Cincinati 004 010 000—5 12 1
Florida 200 002 011—7 1
Remlinger, Carrasco 6, Shaw 8, LSmith 9,
Brantley 9 and J Oliver; Miller, Y Perez 4;
Hammond 6, Powell 8, Nen 9 and Natal. W—
Nen, 5-1, L—L, Smith, 3-3, HRs—Cincinnati,
W. Greene 9). Florida, Colbrunn 12), Connely
St. Louis 000 011 000—1 3 1
Houston 001 001 01x—4 8 2
Al.Benes, Bailey 7) Petkovsk 8) and Pagnozzi; Wall, X Hernandez 8) and Manwaring; W—Wall, 8-4. L—Al.Benes, 11-8. Sv—X Hernandez 4). HR, Humbrow, Bagwell 28J.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
The Top 25 By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty Five teams in the Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Aug. 25, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and last week's ranking.
| | Record | Pts | Pvs |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Nebraska (5) | 0-0-0 | 1,646 | 1 |
| 2. Tennessee (8) | 0-0-0 | 1,555 | 2 |
| 3. Florida St. (5) | 0-0-0 | 1,530 | 3 |
| 4. Florida | 0-0-0 | 1,485 | 4 |
| 5. Colorado (3) | 0-0-0 | 1,402 | 5 |
| 6. Notre Dame (1) | 0-0-0 | 1,302 | 6 |
| 7. Penn St. | 1-0-0 | 1,247 | 11 |
| 8. Texas | 1-0-0 | 1,099 | 8 |
| 9. Ohio St. | 1-0-0 | 1,059 | 9 |
| 10. Syracuse | 1-0-0 | 1,050 | 10 |
| 11. Miami | 1-0-0 | 881 | 12 |
| 12. Michigan | 1-0-0 | 805 | 14 |
| 13. Alabama | 1-0-0 | 669 | 15 |
| 14. Virginia Tech | 0-0-0 | 610 | 16 |
| 15. Northwestern | 0-0-0 | 583 | 18 |
| 16. Auburn | 0-0-0 | 552 | 17 |
| 17. Southern Cal | 0-1-0 | 549 | 7 |
| 18. LSU | 0-0-0 | 519 | 19 |
| 19. Brigham Young | 1-0-0 | 497 | — |
| 20. Arizona St. | 1-0-0 | 432 | 20 |
| 21. Kansas St. | 1-0-0 | 389 | 21 |
| 22. Iowa | 1-0-0 | 338 | 22 |
| 23. Texas A&M | 0-1-0 | 296 | 13 |
| 24. Virginia | 0-1-0 | 257 | 23 |
| 25. Kansas | 0-0-0 | 207 | 24 |
Others receiving votes: Washington 155, Clemson 145, Oregon 142, Texas Tech 84, Utah 70, Georgia 60, East Carolina 50, North Carolina 24, San Diego 52, St. Arizona 18, Wisconsin 17, Stanford 12, Wymaning 5, UCLA 4, Colorado 17, Michigan 2, Toledo 2, Georgia Tech
AMATEUR Golf
Amateur Results U.S. Amateur Result
CORNELIUS, Ore. AP) — Result Sunday of the U.S. Amateur Championship, played on Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club's 9,755-yard, par-72 Witch Hollow course;
Tiger Woods 136) Cypress, Calif., def. Steve Scott 145) Coral Springs, Fla., 38 holes.
Championship
PRO FOOTBALL
National Football League Expanded Glance By The Associated Press Sundev's Games
Arizona at Indianapolis, 12 p.m.
Atlanta at Carolina, 12 p.m.
Cincinnati at St. Louis, 12 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 12 p.m.
Kansas City at Houston, 12 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore, 12 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore, 12 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 12 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 12 p.m.
Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 3 p.m.
New England at Miami, 3 p.m.
New Orleans at San Francisco, 3 p.m.
New York Jets at Denver, 3 p.m.
PRO SOCCER
Major League Soccer At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times EDT Eastern Conference
Western Conference
W L SOW Pts GF GA
x-Tampa Bay 14 11 11 62 54
D.C. 11 14 1 14 50 48
NY-NJ 9 13 1 34 36 35
New England 7 13 6 27 35 46
Columbus 7 16 6 24 49 58
W L W SOW Pts GF GA
Kansas City 12 13 14 40 58 56
Los Angeles 12 9 3 9 39 47 36
Dallas 11 11 4 3 37 42 36
San Jose 10 13 2 32 40 41
Colorado 9 17 1 28 41 50
x-clinched playoff spot
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for shootout win and zero points for loss.
Columbus 2. Kansas City 1
No games scheduled
No games scheduled
No games scheduled Saturday's Game
Columbus 2, Kansas City 1
Sunday's Games
Tampa Bay at D.C. 3, p.m.
Colorado at San Jose, 7 p.m.
Dallas at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m.
PRO
GOLF
CLOVERDALE, British Columbia AP) — Final scores, their relation to par and money won Sunday in the $1 million Greater Vancouver Open, played at the 6,817-yard, par-71 Northview Golf and Country Club.
Guy Boros, $180,000 71-65-65-71—272 -
12
Emlyn Aubrey, $74,667 68-68-70-67
273.1 11
Lee Janzen, $74,667 71-65-66-71 -273 -
108
Taylor Smith, $74,667 71-65-65-72 -273 -
19
Shane Bertsch, $33,900 70-71-68-66—
275 -9
Kenny Perry, $33,900 70-70-68-67—275 .0
Joey Gullion, $33,900 71-69-67-68—275 -
9
Mike Weir, $33,900 72-68-56-70-275 -9
Tom Browm, $24,000 72-37-69-64-296 -9
Russ Cochran, $33,900 72-67-67-69—
275 - 9.
Mike Weir, $33,900 72-68-56-70-25
Tom Byrum, $24,400 72-71-69-64-26
Chris Perry, $24,000 71-72-67-66—276 -8
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 26, 1996
3B
Horoscopes
Aries
(March 21-April 10)
Today is a 7.
A potential romantic involvement could lure you away from a difficult chore you had scheduled. Figure out a way to do both. A conversation with a person who doesn't fit; your pictures could lead to a fascinating relationship.
Taurus
(April 20-May 20)
Today is a 6.
Schedule twice as much time as you normally need to do everything on your list. Resist the urge to argue, since it probably won't help matters any. There will be plenty of time for modifications later if you don't get exactly what you want right now.
Gemini
(May 21-June 21)
Today is a 6.
Act as the moderator if others get into a quarrel. Things are in a state of flux. It's best not to make any big decisions until the dust settles. Keep your money in the bank instead of buying the toy you had in mind.
(June 22-July 22)
Today is an 8.
Cancer
If there' s not enough, consider taking out a loan. If there's too much, invest it at the best rate you can find. But make sure you read the fine print. Details matter even more than usual. They could make the difference between a profit and a loss.
Leo
(July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 5.
You're full of good ideas, but you're not always very pragmatic. If you do some of the work yourself, you'll make your money stretch further. That brings us to the subject of planning. If you're not very good at this, not a problem. Get an Aquarius to help.
Virgo
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7.
There's too much for one person today — even you. Get a machine to help. You're good at learning complicated material. Your routine is being disrupted, so make sure it's being changed for the better. Meanwhile, don't take a flirtatious person too seriously.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) — Today is a 7.
Somebody needs you to perform a service, and you shouldn't let that person down. Don't put it off until the last moment, either. Leave plenty of time for unwelcome surprises. Meanwhile, don't worry about your sweetheart's latest demands. You can work out a compromise.
Scorpio
(Oct. 24-Nov. 21) -
Today is a 6.
Although you might have a clear idea of what you want, you'll meet arguments at every turn. Wednesday and Thursday will be much better, so put off major decisions until then. Today, try not to argue with your spouse, your roommate, your children or your pets.
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Today is a 5.
You may be rarin' to go on a new project, but it's not quite time yet. There is something to be said for knowing what you're doing before you get started. Reschedule a conversation about money for next week and it'll be more productive.
Capricorn
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) —
Today is a 6.
You may find the very item you've been shopping for today. If you're going to get it, do it this morning. If you can't cinch the deal before noon, wait until Wednesday. Love that's been withheld may become available again. Clear up a misunderstanding.
Aquarius
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -
Today is a 6.
Spend today getting the details straight. This might take a bit of study, but you're good at that sort of thing. If you get interested in doing the research, you may come up with another source of funding. Turn your problem into another opportunity.
Pisces
(Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 7.
Things will calm down soon. Just take your time between now and then. You tend to be more spiritually than scientifically-oriented. Interestingly, your method works at least as often as theirs. Share a pizza and a mushy movie with a friend tonight.
1. Rock Chalk Revue Advisory Board Applicaions are available in OAC for the following positions:
- In Between Acts Director
- Business Committee
- Secretary
- Member at large
2. Applications are due by Aug. 30 at 5:00 pm
- Promotions Committee
3. An informational meeting will be held on
3. An informational meeting will be held on August 27 at 7:00 in Alderson Auditorium
August 27 at 7.00 in Alderson Auditorium
4. Questions? Call the RCR Office at 864-4033
ROCK · CHALK
R EV U E
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Open House
The Staff invites you to drop by for a visit. Find out about our exciting fall programs and activities, and join us in planning the event.
Refreshments provided.
Tuesday, August 27, 1996
2:00 - 4:00 p.m.
115 Strong Hall
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Holden Hall, University of Kansas. For more information, contact Pete Rachford
(855) 252-3523
W
Attitudes Everything!
351-3477
Wild Things
Oak Park Mall
All-Sports Combo
NOW IS THE TIME!
Student Ticket Distribution Please read before picking up your tickets
KU
Your Assigned Picked-Up Date
Wescoe Beach
Last Name
8:30 - 4:00
H - P
A - G
Q-Z
Make-Up Day
You may pick up only your own ticket.
You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1996 fee sticker to receive your tickets.
Monday, August 26
Tuesday, August 27
Wednesday, August 28
Thursday, August 29
You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the men's basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your Sports Combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up.
If you miss your assigned pick-up date and make up day, you may pick up you tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East Lobby of Allen Fieldhouse beginning Friday, August 30, 1996.
KANSAS FOOTBALL 1996 Home Opener, this Thursday, Aug. 29, 7:00 pm - Jayhawks vs. Ball State
LABOR DAY WEEKEND CANOE TRIP
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30-SUNDAY, SEPT. 1
ON JACK'S FORK AND CURRENT RIVERS
IN SOUTHERN MISSOURI
STUDENTS: $56
NON-STUDENTS: $66
INCLUDES:
•FOOD •CANOE RENTAL
•CAMPING PERMIT FOR 2 NIGHTS
IN TWO RIVERS, MO.
(MUST PROVIDE YOUR OWN TENT)
AVAILABLE AT WILDERNESS DISCOVERY
LEVEL 1, KANSAS UNION 864-4249
LEVEL 1, KANSAS UNION 864-4249
SIGN UP NOW
AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE
LEVEL 4, KANSAS UNION
FOR MORE INFO CALL 864-3477
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANABAS
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
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Jayhawk Spirit Available now!
BIG 12 TEES
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Hours Mon - Sat 9:30 to 5:30
Thurs 'til 8:00, Sun 12:00 to 5:00
(913)749-5194
New Location
Behind Old Chicago 23rd and Iowa
Welcome back students
Rod's Hallmark Shop
Give it up on your birthday
HOURS: Mon-Fri 10-9pm, Sat 9-6pm, Sun 12-5pm
Bring this coupon in and get a free Shoebox card with a purchase Exp. Oct. 31, 1990
---
Exp. Oct. 31, 1996
4B
Monday, August 26,1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE AUTOMATIC REPRESENTATION
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Football
year, I knew Mark (Williams) would play. I came in thinking this year I'd get some playing time. Last year, I was hoping for a little more and didn't get any."
But with Rutz hurting, Johner said he had to approach this year differently.
Continued from Page 1B
"I kind of had it in the back of my mind that I'd be starting," he said. "I kind of practiced that way. That's kind of what you have to do."
Johner said that what he lacked in game experience he has made up for with knowledge of the Jayhawk offense. He said he had learned a lot during the last three years.
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
77 76 41
"I'm a lot more mature now," he said. "I know the offense a lot more. I know I don't have any real playing experience, but as far as being aware of the offense and being able to read defenses, I'm a lot better. I think that's only going to help me."
Johner, 6-1, 200 pounds out of Costa Mesa, Calif., also brings a different look to the team: He's a left-hander.
"I don't think anybody really has a problem with it," he said. "It doesn't make much of a difference as far as catching the ball."
Like Rutz, Johner also injured himself while playing spring ball. He dislocated his right kneecap the week before the spring game but said it felt good entering the season.
Kansas junior quarterback Matt Johner, in lighter-colored jersey, works out with the Jayhawk offense on Friday afternoon. Johnner is expected to start Thursday night against Ball State at Memorial Stadium.
But he also has resigned himself to the fact that once Rutz is healthy, he may have to go back to being a backup. For now, however, he's focused on Thursday's game and is making the most of his long-awaited opportunity.
"I'm excited," he said. "I feel I'm ready and prepared."
Mason said junior running back Eric Gal-
breath will get his first career start in the Jayhawk backfield. He's subbing for an injured Mark Sanders.
Senior wide receiver Andre Carter will start for Kansas, despite a strong camp by true freshman John Gordon.
"Carter will get the nod, but Gordon will play a lot," Mason said.
Volleyball
Continued from Page 1B
Kansas assistant volleyball coach Jan Madlock played in a few beach tournaments this summer.
"I was surprised at the amount of attention that it drew in television coverage, but I found one of the reasons probably why it received more television coverage." Madlock said.
Practicing in the sand also has a couple of benefits.
She said that the AVP, which is the Pro Beach tour, had a contract with NBC, and that the Olympics being on NBC helped to publicize the sport.
"Training in the sand can make you faster, jump higher, because it's a resistance." Madlock said.
"In the indoor game, a lot of times players can specialize and be very good in one or two aspects of the game, but not be really well rounded." Schonewise said.
During the summer, a couple of current and former Kansas volleyball players took on several coaches from other Kansas sports on the sand courts outside of Robinson Center.
'Universidad once 1993'
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
"I think we won three and they won one," said junior middle blocker Maggie Mohrfeld.
Kansas graduate assistant Jenny Larson said basketball assistant coach Matt Doherty, who participated in the match, asked her to keep the results quiet.
"He told me that I didn't have to mention this to anybody," Larson said.
12043027288
Although the team does not practice in the sand during the fall season, the off-season is a different story.
"If we do go outside, it would be some in the spring during our individual training time," Schonewise
said.
"It's great for working out, but I pick up a lot of bad habits when I'm out there," Mohrfeld said. "The indoor game to me is intense because when I'm out on the beach, I like to have fun."
Mohlrief said she enjoyed playing beach volleyball in the summer.
Beach volleyball, however, is not for everybody.
"I personally do not enjoy playing it because most of the time I see it as doubles," said junior setter Tiffany Sennett. "For me, when I think of beach, I think of relaxing, not volleyball."
ALMIGHTY
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Remedial Thermodynamics
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 26, 1996
5B
Taiwan's Little League team conquers the World Series
Rhode Island team hurt by five errors and unearned runs
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Taiwan's Little League champions were nervous and shy when they arrived as the heavy favorites in the League's 50th World Series.
The Taiwanese not only outplayed the Americans in their 13-3 win over Cranston, R.L. on Saturday, but they also outdanced them in the popular Latin Macarena before the game. They learned the dance at Little League parties they attended despite 6 a.m. daily practices.
Hsieh Chin-hsiung, a 4-foot-11, 95-pounder, hit a series-record seventh home run and Yang Chia-chen homered and scored four runs for the elementary school team from the port city of Kaohsiung. Lin Chih-
hsiang, who stands half a foot taller than Hsieh, hit six home runs for Taiwan's 1995 champions.
Craig Stinson and Tom Michael hit first-inning home runs for Cranston (2-3), which became the only team to advance to the final with two losses since the League adopted its pool format in 1992. Michael became the first pitcher to lose three games in a series.
A few days of mixing with the American players took care of that.
The Associated Press
The Rhode Islanders turned two double plays, which are rare on the Little League's 60-foot base paths, and trailed only 4-2 after two innings. Taiwan (5-0) had outscored its four previous international opponents, including the slick-fielding Dominican Republic team, 49-6 in four games.
"They didn't surprise us. We knew we were a big underdog coming in," manager Mike Varrato said.
But Cranston was hurt by five errors, as five of Taiwan's runs were unearned.
For a 13-3 game, the final was surprisingly entertaining.
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"They didn't surprise us. We knew we were a big underdog coming in."
The game was ended one inning early after five innings because Taiwan had a 10-run lead.
team in the world and the best in the United States. That's something no one else can say. There's not much for us to be sad about." Michael said.
Mike Varrato
Cranston manager
The Taiwan team, the country's 12th Little League champions in 23 years, headed for Disneyland in Southern California. The Cranston team was welcomed home with a parade and party.
Dialing in for dollars
October 1 is the deadline to renew dial-in accounts on KU multi-user systems. Existing accounts may be renewed on the World Wide Web from http://www.cc.ukans.edu/renew.htm. All dial-in users pay a basic service charge of $20 for the fall or $50 for the fall and spring semesters.
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6B
Monday, August 26,1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Penn State wins Kickoff Classic
Sophomore powers Penn State to victory with three touchdowns
The Associated Press
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Curtis Enis can't hide anymore.
The sensational sophomore ran for 241 yards and scored three touchdowns Sunday as No. 11 Penn State cruised to a 24-7 victory over No. 7 Southern California in the Kickoff Classic.
Enis, a 6-foot-1-inch tall, 231-pounder who was rarely allowed to be interviewed last season, dazzled a Kickoff Classic crowd record of 77,716 at Giants Stadium with scoring runs of 24, nine and four vards.
His 24-yarder, made with 1:57 left in the first half, displayed Enis' power and speed. He ran directly into safety Rashard Cook at the 15-yard-line, bounced off and sped into the end zone to give the Nittany Lions a 10-0 lead.
Penn State dominated so completely in the second half that coach John Robinson's team barely averted a shutout, scoring with 29 seconds left when linebacker Chris Claiborne recovered a fumble by tailback Chaffie Fields in the end zone.
After a scoreless third quarter, Enis, whose coach, Joe Paterno, said he still had to work on his game, ran 57 yards to the USC 27 to set up his 9-yard score with 13:22 left. Just 1:40 later, after Kim Herring intercepted a pass by Brad Otton, Enis was at it again, scoring from four yards out.
Enis, who had 27 carries, produced the fourth-highest rushing total in Penn State history and the most by a sophomore. Only Curt Warner, with 256
| | USC | PSU |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| First downs | 12 | 23 |
| Rushes-yards | 34-138 | 54-313 |
| Passing | 144 | 149 |
| Comp-Att-Int | 11-28.1 | 12-22.2 |
| Return Yards | 38 | 30 |
| Punts-Avg. | 7.46.9 | 4.39.8 |
| Fumbles-Lost | 2.1 | 2.2 |
| Penalties-Yards | 8-41 | 2-15 |
| Time of Possession | 25:52 | 34:08 |
The Nittany Lions vs. the Trojans
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS
RUSHING —Southern Call, L. Woods 17-85, Sermons 15-61,
Otonin 2mins 8). Penn State, Enis 27-141, Harris 15-64,
Mitchell 1-7, Richardson 5-5, Cleary 1-2, Eberly 1-1, Sloan 1mins
2). Fiskes 3mins 5)
ninth 2), r-bets 3-min 1)
Lytton 1-8, 21-8-1-144 Penn State
Richardson 18-1-8-102 McQueary 2-4-047
RECEIVING —Southern C, Miller C, 84-3, Bastiani 2-34,
LWoods 2-10, Alled 1-7, Powell 1-6, Sermans 1-4, Penn
State. Juvenius 4-6, Nastasi 2-30, Enis 2-17, Olsmier 1-
13, Campbell 1-42, Sload 1-8, Harris 1-6.
yards against Syracuse in 1981, Shorty Miller 250 vs. Carnegie Tech (in 1912) and Bob Pollard 243 vs. Rutgers (in 1951), ran for more.
His total was also the most ever allowed by Southern California. Russell White of California ran for 229 vards against USC in 1991.
Otton, USC's Rose Bowl hero against Northwestern, had a poor day, completing just 11 of 28 passes for 144 yards and an interception. Penn State's Wally Richardson was 10-of-18 for 102 yards and two first-half interceptions. He was replaced late in the third quarter by Mike McQuary.
Enis, who was moved from linebacker early last season, had 136 yards on 16 carries in the first
half, nearly breaking the Kickoff Classic game record of 140 yards by Alonzo Highsmith of Miami against Auburn in 1984. As a freshman, Enis had a team-best 683 yards with three 100-yard games.
After a scoreless first quarter, one in which Richardson threw interceptions on both Penn State drives, the Nittany Lions finally broke through for a 3-0lead.
Two plays later, Brett Conway kicked a 28-yard field goal with 7-12 in the half.
And it came on a USC turnover. Darrell Kania's punt was fair caught by USC at the 12-yard line. On the next play, Otton fumbled the snap and defensive end Chris Snyder recovered at the 12. Richardson almost was intercepted again, but USC's Sammy Knight and Brian Kelly both bobbled the ball and it fell incomplete near the goal line.
USC blew a scoring chance when it took over. Otton, who earlier in the quarter overtweed two passes to wide-open receivers on their way into the end zone, hit Chris Miller with a 60-yard pass to the Penn State 21. The Trojans moved to the 8, but Adam Abrams was wide right with a 26-yard field goal attempt.
Enis took over with 3:51 left in the half. He ran left for 11 yards, shedding tacklers along the way. Then, he ran 13 yards up the middle, carrying USC players with him until Knight finally made the tackle at the 50.
After Richardson hooked up with Joe Nastasi for 21 yards to the USC 24, Enis took a handoff, ran into Cook and broke loose for his first TD.
Just when it looked as if raterno might give a rest, back he went in the fourth quarter, running three times for 73 yards on the second TD drive. On his 57-yarder, he took a handoff from McQuary and ran around left end until he was forced out of bounds.
Before his final score, McQuery completed a 35-yard pass to split end Joe Jurevicius to the USC4.
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Too Much Time . .
Don't Know What To Do . .
Check Out REC SERVICES
Flag Football Managers' Meetings: Wed, 8/28, 7:00 p,115 Robinson
Sand Volleyball Managers' Meeting:
Tues, 9/3, 7:00p,115 Robinson
Upcoming Intramural Sports
Home Run Derby Entries Open: Mon, 8/26-Wed,9/4 in 208 Robinson
Softball Tournament Entries Open: Mon, 8/26 - Wed, 9/4 in 208 Robinson
Field Goal Contest Entries Open: Tues, 9/3 - Wed, 9/11 in 208 Robinson
Soccer Managers' Meeting:
Sun, 9/8, 7:00p, 115 Robinson
Officials wanted for team sports! For more information contact the Recreation Services Office 208 Robinson, 864-3546
The Kansas Jayhawk Rugby Club
Anyone interested in playing the game of rugby to attend an informational meeting being held
August 27,1996 at 7:00 p.m.
in the Frontier Room of the Burge Union
Invites
The KJRFC will be holding its Annual General Meeting at 8:00 p.m.
Come meet the players, learn about the game, watch videos and enjoy refreshments!
Classified Directory
1
100s Announcements
男 女
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
X
200s Employment
300s Merchandise
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
HOLLOW HOUSE
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
105 Personals
Open 24 hours everyday. Community Plaza Laudromat,
3028 Iowa St. Clean and air conditioned.
110 Business Personals
Poster Sale. Biggest and best selection. Choose from over 200 different images. ROCK, FINE ART, MOVIE POSTERS, ALIENS, WILD LIFE, X-FILES, STAR WARS, SCENIC LAUNCHCAPES, PERSONALIST, Brad Pitt, Sandra Bul洛克, Einstein, Valin O'Reilly, Marvel, Harry Potter, others), HUMOR, ROMANCE, PHOTOGRAPHY(Talbot, Adel Adams, and others). MOST IMAGES 67,47 and $8 each! Use us at KS UNION GAMELY. LEVEL 3. All hours are 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. and Sunday 12 noon-4 p.m.
New Hours
Monday - Friday 8-8
Saturday8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
CENTER
864-9500
COMMUTTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
120 Announcements
NEED A RIDER/RIDE? Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kauna Union
Downtown Child Care
United Child Dev. Cr now enrolling for fall, age
3 1/2 to 14 (485-489, 502-509)
****FREE***
LOSE WEIGHT FOR FREE!™
CALL NOW 013-841-714
NEED TO TYPE A FORM* A PAPER* Good old-fashioned, electronic typewriters suitable for student use.
FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 Billion in public and private sector awards & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or academic status. See www.freefinancialaid.org. Financial Scholarships: 1-800-356-4945 ext. F76752.
Caring People Needed
Headquarters Counseling Center
looking for volunteers.
Interested? Informational meeting
Wed Aug. 28 7:56 p.m.
Lawrence School Vermont
Questions 841-3245
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS
Grants and Scholarships
avail. from sponsors!
No repayments ever!
$$$ Cash for College $$$
For info, 1-800-257-3834
205 Help Wanted:
Babysitter needed Sat. 10:5, Sun. 1-5.
Car a must. Pay negotiable.
865-2670 evenings.
Bartenders wanted at Riverside Bar & Grill. Call 841-2440.
Classified Policy
Now hire cooks, utilizes hot and cold饼. No expertise required will train. App in person. Sirtioin (MIDL) 603-285-1214.
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against women on sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that in its name Kansan has regulated law or law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1908 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, national origin, family status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are heavily informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
205 Help Wanted
bring students to contact alumn. Monday-Thursday:
<4:45 p.m., $8.95 mln. Call Shannon St at the RU
1072. Contact Bentley at the RU 1072.
Child care, part-time, 11:30-1:00 M-F. Call Sunshine Acres Preschool at 842-223-1
Part-time help need in busy doctor's office. Morning preferred. Call 749-0130.
Christian Daycare needs enthusiastic employees for MFW or T, Th. Must be highly reliable and stable. Good pay. 842-2088.
Energetic, responsible person to care for our 4-year-old in our home. MWP-12 p/n, $6,000 Call Joe or Bcff (866) 555-1234.
Couple needs reliable exp. person to care for infant in week of first week, re-require St. Blair or David or Kathy
Golf course work, flexible hours, FREE GOLF. Apply at Lawrence Country Club,
Boston, MA 02217
Univ. Relations. $5 hr 150 tbs wkly. Call 864-3256 for
information before 5 p.m. Aug. 27.
Hiring all position! A.M.P/M.-F. Excible hours.
Outgoing personalities wanted. Apply within.
Mr. Gatti's, 3514 Clinton Parkway - Suite 1.
Male or female receptionist wanted.
Lawn care company seeking hard working individual for moveming crew, PT, will perform hours: 843-6520.
Male or female receptionist wanted
to work on phone calls please.
Apply in person at Sizieux 910 Killeen.
New company needs outgoing personality with interest in driving and commuting hours: within 10 a.m. to 6 a.m. at 1014 Church Parkway, Sutter St.
Now hiring cooks, utilizes hot and cold prep. No experience necessary, will train. Apply in person. Striking job.
Classroom Assistant needed at Raintree Montessori School. Montessori exp. pref. Will train. $1250/mo.
Late afternoon assistant, 3:15-5:30 M-F $6.25/hr.
Transp. req. C48 83408
Adams Alumun Center/Learning Club has openings for PT dailewashers. Above min. wage, meals & uniforms provided. Apply in person at the Adams Alumun Center 1266 Dreadland
Adams Alumni Center/Learned Club has openings for full-time banquet prep, cook, includes benefits. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1268 Broad Ave.
Adams Alumni Center/Learned Club has openings for part time banquet servers. Some daytime and weekend availability preferred. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1286 Road Ave.
Aerobics instruction needed for on campus fitness program. Experience is a must! Call Shannon at 865-0790
gr.
nce is a must! Call Shannon @843-0790
Artist Model needed (female) 18 or older, level-headed, good work for the right person, serious calls on们
please. 843-5274 after 4, detail interviews.
Couple seek person(s) for daycare of our 2-year-old daughter in our on. home bus; route 281 and Kasidou. All hours available. Prefer KU students. 749-0045. Evenings.
Immamul Haroon Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning and afternoon teacher's aides. Experience with children required. Apply 2104 West 18th Street.
YOGA INSTRUCTORS
Experience required for on campus fitness program.
Experience required. Call Shannon at 847-0700.
Adams Alumni Center/Learned Club has openings for fine dining, line sausie cook. Some club requires. 5 day full-time pos, with benefits, both AM & PM shops. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1268 Oread Ave
Therapeutic Horizons instruction of Lawrence needs volunteers to work with people with disabilities and social anxiety.
SPRING BREAK '97- SELL TIPS, EARN CASH,
& GO FREE! The hits is campus HIPPUS REPS/GROUP
ORGANIZERS to promote trips to Cancun, Jamaica,
and Florida for information on join
and Florida's #1 Student Team.
Part-time counter position available. M-F 8-12
$4.95 hrs, requires valid drivers license & good driving record, car provided. ability to do moderate heavy lift.
New appearance & ability to work.
Call Heather Johanning at the KU Endowment Association, 832.7365
start-time opening for general office work plus show
apartments and answering phones. 10-20 weekday
hours available. Must be Kansas resident in KU
at least halfhive, have a GPA of at least 2.0 and major
in business, accounting, or related field. $6.00/hour. 841-
5797.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 26,1996
7B
205 Help Wanted
Journalism Student! Great part time job opportunity.
International known news agency needs research assistant. Fax resumes A.S.A.P. P.749-0098.
**ATTENTION STUDENTS:** Local Branch of Nat. Col.
39 PT/PT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCO.
40 SAS, SAS entry level. All majors accepted, up to
$9.25. AAS School only. Major JCO office.
(813) - 381-6765 (m.p. 6:30 m.m. only).
iPhone Center Repairs wanted for growing inbound call center call. PT & FT shifts, 6am-12pmidust. Must have nice phone voice, be detail oriented, responsible, trustworthy. Send resume to iPhone Center, an iPhone 3000 Lakeview Rd, or call 805-3623 for directions.
GRAPHIC ARTS
Customer Service. Need one self-motivated, sharp-dreening, energetic individual with good communication skills. Good driving record, required trans. expertise. Hours required; manual required. Face Your Graphics 2325 Ponderosa
JON'S NOTES
Notekinders need for Econ 140, Bloi 414, Goel 101, Moore 32, & Aarg 191. Must have completed this class or higher with an A and have a 3+ GPA. Eum 10-15 IDs, English 6, Math 8, History 1, Bookstore 2, Floor 2, Kansas Student Union.
Shipping position open. Starting ASAP 64 per hour. 20 min per week. After雾霾 MF. Max hours available. Portion. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and/or resume w/ references and copy of class schedule to: EEL, PO Box 1304, Lawrence KS 60044.
Immediate Opening for Conference Assistant with Work-Study elegitring MS Word and Excel 0.0 knowledge along with strong oral and written competence, skills in job search and interview. Desired. Flexible work schedule not to exceed workday hour maximum. Fax or send resume to ASK Anson 385 James 3885莱斯 K 65046 Fax 913-841-2968 EOE.
CARING PEOPLE NEEDED
CARINS PROPLE NEEDED
Headquarters
Meeting room
looking for volunteers
Interested? I见 Meeting
Wed Aug 28, 7:30 pm
Talks on issues
Questions? Call 814-2345.
Kitchen staff need at Mass St. Dell and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Food prep and line cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. Stairs at $5.50 an hour up to $7.44 an hour after 8 months which includes profit-sharing for service house apples At Schumfurd Company business office of service house apples On thru, frm Tue to July 19 (Upstairs above Smokehouse).
KU Athletic Sales Clerk, The Kansas and Burge Union, part-time, 6-ppm. Would work 2-3 hours prior to KU football game time and 1-2 hours after game - Aug.29 evening game), Oct 12, 11, Nov. 9, 10 Will pay in cash Monday following employment. Must have retail sales experience, verifiable record of cash handling, and for long periods. Apply Burge and Burge Unions' Office, Level 1, 8th and Orcad. A/A/EO
MICROCOMPUTER SOFTWARE SUPPORT - Student position - 7.30 per hour; 20 hours per week. Deadline: September 13th. Required Qualifications: Enrollment in at least 13th grade credit hours at KU, working with microcomputer applications; excellent oral and written communication skills; and ability to complete assigned tasks with a minimum of supervision. Preferred Qualifications: Course work in computer science or related field. Coursework must include two or more years of Course work remaining at KU. To apply, contact Carol Daniels (846-3064). Controller's Office, 237, Carruthen-O'Leary between University of Kansas in an EOA Employer.
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS
$$$Work from home$$$
Eliminate your long distance phone bill and earn a substantial income!
Only $100 to get started.
For more information, call 1-800-370-1451
Yacht Club Now hiring Cooks Day/Weekend Shifts Apply at 930 Wisconsin
Cottwood, Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their Residential division. Positions include evening and weekday duties. Applicants must have College coursework or related experience is helpful but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Excellent benefits. Starts hourly pay $40.00 per week. Please apply at Cottwood, Inc.; 2801, W. Stair; E.O.E.
Tutors need for HDPL, Phlex, Chem, Bus, Bio, upper level psych and, for the fall semester of 96. Interested applicants must have at least 15 hours of course work in subject areas in which they will tutor students. Students must be KUAC's Hale Achievement-Center, 230 Athletic Complex expansion Monday than Friday 8 a.m. A.T.P. For more information call: 804-7927. The University of Texas can an equal opportunity affirmative action employer.
Student Hourly! Duties include data entry and analysis; figs & org. of data; copying, collating, errands; library research; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Punitility at Macintosh computers with a Bachelor's degree or equivalent in 10-15 hwr/ organizational and filing skills. KU student; ability to work independently and efficiently. Deadline 00:25:00. Skillset 64.85: Pick up application from your school on Learning, 3001 Kolde Center, OEEA employees
WANTED
UNITED PARCEL SERVICES
is looking for
LOADERS AND UNLOADERS
* Part-time
* 48.00/hour
* 4:30 pm-3:30 am
* 10:30 pm-3:00 am
* Company paid benefits
* Company paid incentives)
CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-777-3388
to schedule an interview.
KU INFO (UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER) hiring for Fall 2009. Are you keen, interesting, creative, and willing to take initiative? A clever problem solver who really knows KU and the Lawrence community? You're the one. Need highly motivated student hourlies who are excellent students, computer-literate, great communications, interested in helping others, and have unique sense of humor. Pick up application at KU! The department will accept residents who can make KU Info their primary work commitment. Deadline 5 pm, Wednesday, August 28, 1909.
205 Help Wanted
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB welcomes KLudestants back to town. Alvanfar is THE place to work in Lawrence. Now hiring for:
Day Dining Room Server
Midnight Bar Server
AM Line Cook
PM Dish Washer
AM Pro Shop Cart Help
Golf Course Maintenance
Instrucional Training
For more information contact Malinda at 842-2764 or complete application at 4120 Clinton Prty. EOE.
A position is available immediately for a person to operate a Molecular Biology Core Laboratory. A minimum of a B.S. degree (higher degree preferred) in Chemistry, Biochemistry or Biological Engineering with HPLC very desirable. Duties include synthesis of oligoaminoctetiles and peptides, protein/peptide sequencing, order and keep records for billing, and laboratory support. Experience required. Send letter of application, resume and names of three references to: Dr. William T. Morgan, School of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri-Kansas City 6007 Rockhill Road, Kansas City, MO 64103.
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN. Deadline: 8/30/96.
$4.50 $1.50/hour, 20 per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software products. Participate in systems testing & applications library maintenance. Required qualifications partial listing experience. Requires proficiency in computer programming languages, experience in software testing, experience in database programming and/or management. Complete job description available. To apply, submit a cover letter and current resume and a program description to the University Center, University of Kansas, EOIAA EMPLOYEE
PART-TIME POSITIONS CITY OF LAWRENCE
TELEPHONE OFFERATOR-HS GRIEUG'D AND society
TELEPHONE OFFERATOR-HS GRIEUG'D AND society
METTER READER-Reading water meters & accurate recording of amounts of water consumed. HS GradLED. Possess valid driver license & provide own vehicle. $G7.12*12/12hr, 20hr.wk. flexible
Complete application by 9/16/04 at Admin. Services, City Hall, 2nd floor, bth & 6th Massachusetts, Lawrence Rw
Recruitment is underway for two temporary receptionist positions with the possibility of positions leading to regular, part-time. Clever individuals are needed to answer phones, greet guests, complete various clerical duties, and work in a telecommunications office personnel. Qualifications include experience in an office setting, excellent verbal communication skills, good interpersonal skills, and computer experience. Positions are temporary, part-time, with schedules of 8 a.m. to 12 a.m. or 12 a.m. to 6 p.m. Apply in person at CLO, Inc., 2113 Delaware, Lawrence or call 865-5630 for more information. Cover letter and resume must be provided. EOE
The University of Kansas Natural History Museum is looking for undergraduate and graduate students to fill two temporary positions assisting with the PEET workshop in September. Both positions begin immediately upon completion, approximately September 20, 1986. Salary up to $10,000 depending on experience and qualifications.
Receptionist
Technical Assistant;Assist with technical set-up of workshop to include: hardware/software set-up, testing and maintenance user support. Required qualifications include working knowledge of common hardware set-up; be familiar with both PC and Mac products; be proficient in internet software. Preferred qualifications include background in biology experience with user support. Must have completed application, resume.
Clerical Assistant: Assist with workshop implementation and logistics to include: word processing, filing, receptionist duties, running errands. Required qualification: Master's degree in computer science or word processing software; valid driver's license, experience with common office functions. Preferred qualifications: experience with scientific meeting. Must be proficient in Microsoft Office.
Please contact the Natural History Museum-PET
Workshop, Amanda Sites, 602 Dyce Hall, 844-3833.
EVENING SUPERVISOR
BPI Building Services is looking for a dependable self-starter to supervise our evening and weekend custodial teams.
Qualified applicants should posses leadership, training, and motivational skills along with an eye for detail.
Approx. 25-30 hours per week, Sunday - Thursday, start times vary.
Club 729
Starting wage of $7.00 per hour, on-site transportation provided.
Interested applicants should contact Mo at 842-6264.
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
Bar Backs Promo Assistants Apply in person wed-sat 8-10 p.m.
Now taking Applications for:
Door Staff Wait Staff Bartenders
Coyote's
Now Taking Applications for: Door Staff wait staff Bartenders
Apply in Person wed-sat 7-9 p.m.
205 Help Wanted
Student Computer Specialist and Student Computer Programmer
positions available in the College of LARS Systems Analysis Office, beginning ASP after August 30. Duties for both positions include installation & configuration of microcomputer problems; and coding, testing & documenting of programs (particularly HTML documents).
Required qualifications: Experience with installation of boards in microcomputers; ability to communicate effectively with students; Knowledge of dBases, FoxPro & HTML programming; fluency in "C" programming on MS-DOS microcomputers; familiarity with Windows 3.1, Teletype PTP, TPC-C, and SQL Server 9x. Spring & spring, $7.90 thr. Complete application form in 210 Strong Hall. Application deadline August 30, 1996.
Brookfield Learning Center is hiring part-time teaching assistants. Opportunities include experience in model early intervention program, teaching in an inclusive classroom setting, and working with a special population of children who are at-risk for developmental delays, have identified disabilities, as well as typically developing children. Complete applications to 200 Mt. Court. For more information call 865-0023 AMAZ02.
MICROSOFT,NETSCAPE,YAHOO
THE COACH'S EDGE
Only one of these nationally known companies is still operating out of the basement. Only one is located in Lawrence. Only one is looking for interns seeking a position as a Senior Associate in IT, needs coaches, programmers, graphics, PR, marketing, HTML. Enthusiasm only requirement. Call George or Brenda at 843-1797.
FALL SEMESTER OPENINGS
- Local Branch of National Co.
filling 36 Entry level positions
in Lawrence and JCOO.
Part, full time flexible schedules
A. A.S.P. scholarships-cond. apply
Up to $9.25
To apply call JOCO. office
MAD. and Assoc. and equal opportunity Co.
(913)381-9676
CUSTODIANS
BPI Building Services has immediate openings for the following custodial positions:
- Mon.-Fri. 5p.m.-11p.m.
* Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
&Mon.-Thurs. 5:30p.m.-8:30p.m.
* Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
&Mon.-Thurs. 7p.m.-10p.m.
* Sat. 7a.m.-11a.m.
* Mon.-Fri. 6a.m.-8a.m.
Custodial positions are perfect part-time jobs for students and those looking for supplemental income. Approx. 15 hours per week in an independent working environment. Self-motivators should call 842-6264 or come in to apply.
205 Help Wanted
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
A DIVISION OF BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
939 Iowa
(Hillcrest Shopping Center/Behind Appliance Plus)
Shop Kansan Classifleds
$20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week Walk-ins welcome!
Earn cash on the spot
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
mamuan Lutheran Childhood Center, 2104 West Street is now accepting enrollment applications for the fall session. Openings are available for toddlers and preschoolers at Scholarship availability. Call 842-8131 for information.
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Herbert C. Hodes, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
**TRAFFIC-DUI'S**
Fake Al's & alcoholic
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
**The law offices of**
**DONALD G. STROLE**
Donald G. Strole Salty G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-5116
305 ForSale
Call Jacki at 835-8844 for applications, term papers,
call Jacki at 835-8844 for transcriptions, etc. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
235 Typing Services
Drafting Table, T-square, squar. All the good stuff for sale. Make offer. 842-1292 after 5pm.
ICU Special pentium 100 for $800 Pentium 60 $650 1-913-341-9231 collect calls accepted.
Macintosh classic $100, Apple personal Laptop WRITE 19
New 8th & 6d CD ROM 850, 749-1431.
Schwinn top model road bike. Recently reconditioned.
$250 or best offer. Bike #814-9047 6:00am-fi.
Beautiful old rectangular dining room table with four Mission-style chair. in good condition. $841, 841-2832.
Schiwm top model road bike recently recondition $250
or best offer. Call 841-0947 6:0pm-8:00am
Boe 901 Series 6 with equalize pedestals. Bose in. Transferable warranty. $150 value. Ships free. For additional information call (800) 327-4000.
Compact Refrigerator
great condition, 2.5 cu. ft. capacity
$65 331-3188
Neon Bud bowtie $75
queen waterbed $50.
843-7087
Very good Sewillian road bike; 12.21 iii height, Re-conditioned. 75 call Mike at 842 3983 (call after 6pm).
Gottstein the Auction. Perry, KS 507-5169 Sale every Sat 4 am, 11/22 m. E. of Ferry on Hwy. 24. Lumber, lounge, rabbits, eggs, RR ties, vehicles, household goods, furniture, tools, etc.
486 DX, 8 MB RAM, 500 MB hard drive, full page Genius
BMP monitor, great for desktop publishing. 292 MB Colorado
tape backie. Win 3.1, Dos 2.4, $500, call 841-0947
phone or 844-0542 or 844-5252
340 Auto Sales
1985 Honda Accord LX, 2 door hatchback, HA-65,
blue body, blue well maintained $2,500. 855-1635.
1000 Honda Accord EX 2-door, 5 speed, 102,000 miles,
loaded w/ snorkel. Excellent condition. *7,000* Call
800-627-4390.
1922 Ford Escort GT, Power steering, brakes, crush,
a/c, automatic £6000 or will negotiate. 832-0025.
$8" Escort GT $2000 0.0 b. Must sell! 100,000
highway mileage. Good condition. Cold ave', 5 speed.
1991 MAZDA M6 G X GT 307 sp.54, 5000 mL pW, MAJC, auro cruise,船AMF5机,scaper, mags, locks, alarm, l-owner, main. record. Excellent cond. $8850 OBQ. 842-5149.
There's No Place Like Home...
Meet Carlee. She lives at one of Community Living Opportunities' group homes and also works within CLO's horticultural program. Creating new possibilities for persons with disabilities is what CLO is all about.
Join CLO as we continue to expand services for adults with disabilities. We are currently seeking full and part-time teaching counselors to work weekend and evening hours. We'll train you in the internationally-known Teaching Family Model (Prefer course-work in behavioral sciences and/or experience with persons with disabilities.)
Career Growth Potential...Excellent Opportunity for Students and New Graduates in Social Services!
*FT and PT Eve, Day & Wknd.*
positions
♦ PT Wind position scholarship
♦ FT Wind position wage differential
♦ Great benefits, competitive salaries
♦ Flexible, autonomous work
Applications are accepted and screening interviews held on Tuesdays, 12p-4p & Thursdays 9a-1p, or send cover letter and resume to CLO, Mollie Kohn, 6900 W. 80th, Overland Park, KS 66204 or
- Lawrence & Overland Park work locations
to CLO, Mollie Kohn, 6900 W. 80th, Overland Park, KS 66204 or
CLO, Stavc Wright. 2113 Delaware, Lawrence. KS 66046.
Or...come see us on campus! We'll be there Monday (26th)
and Tuesday (27th) in front of the KANSAS UNION EOE.
360 Miscellaneouss
We're open! Gag per customer. Your container.
As low as 20 cents per gallon with coucher.
Water Weld Cottage; at the north end of
Mast St. Bridge. Moe-Pri. Nop-FPM. 841-1190.
FREE BOTTLED WATER
405 For Rent
Two rooms for rent. Close to campus. $300 per month each. Contact Joyce at 842-2238.
and 4 lbd lqr. 2, bdh new carpet, bus route, cave,
lamb and 4 lbd large closet pet jetski, $600, $750
lamb and 4 lbd large closet jetski, $600, $750
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, at Bradford School. On KU Buse
rolls, cans allowed, Private deck or patio. Call 814-8468.
3 bavable at Lortim Townhouses, included wid,
dishwasher, microwave fireplace, cable pay, back
payment.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus "fourplex"
fairly new appliances and carpet. 414 call 811-5454
free of charge.
Room for rent, utilities divided by six. A/C,
washer/dryer, $2,000 month, $2,000 deposit (12)
month, $3,500 deposit (18) month.
Utilities paid for non-smoking females. 2 blocks South of Winnaton Library, ACD, WTD use. Off street parking.
Spacious, affordable 2 bedroom apartment w/
fireplace and dressing room, some utilities paid,
two bedrooms, kitchen, laundry, bath.
CLASSY SECURE 1-8床 now available on East side of beautiful downtown Downtown, just minutes form KU. Call Charles Gruber at 766-3400 for app. $375-$550, rebate & deposit
A large, quiet,new remodeled 2 bedroom bannit,
apt. no smoking, WD wook-ups, AC. on bus route.
$533 a month. ALL UTILITIES PAID.
1603 West 2nd Terrace. Call 842-5257
Quiet, spacious, affordable, furnished rooms and 1 bedroom apartments. 2 blocks to KC. Some utilities patio. Parking available.
AVAILABLE FOR FALL
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406 Tenn.
a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation; domestic control. $189-240;
Messal, call or stop by 814-0484. Close to campus &
Mess. Call or stop by 814-0484.
AVAILABLE FOR FALL
NEW HIRS at apus at 17:12 PM, 2 full batches
NEW HIRS at apus at 17:12 PM, 2 full batches
All appliances inc. DW & microwave. No
480 per room. Own Manager. Male.
600 per room. Female.
GRAYSTONE
AUGUST RENT FREE
Apartments that fit your lifestyle
AUGUST RENT FREE on our 3 BR TOWNHOMES
or
FREE USE FOR ONE YEAR OF WASHER & DRYER
405 For Rqnt
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1102
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old-fashioned personalized service."
Managed & maintained by Professionals
843-7333 or stop by 2500 W.6th today! WHO
ASK ABOUT FREE RENT AT TRAILRIDGE
Excellent student, 1,2,3 or
BR apts, gas & water paid
2,3,4 & BT Townhouses
with FP, carpenter &
construction
844.7239 or stop by
2000 W 8th today
Get all this with the same great location on the KU bus line.
- NEW CARPETS
• NEW APPLIANCES
• NEW LIGHTING FIXTURES
• NEWLY PAINTED WOOD CABINETS
430 Roommate Wanted
TRAILRIDGE
Gay male has room to rent in Lawrence Estate. $250 includes utilities. Call 842-7741. Non-smokers only.
.
Grad student wanted, 5 walk-in, mkt to KU, 1743 LA, $250 per month, plus 45 utilities, beautiful space
Roommate wanted M/F. $188 a month plus 1/4 utilities. On RU bus, road off-street parking. Large house near Wanda Station.
Looking for a female roommate for a 3 bedroom apartment in Sunrise Terrace. $210 per month. Call Lindsay at (630) 655-8706.
Professional seeking Faculty or Graduate student to
share 280 sq. ft. Deforest home, Smoking Clean,
Responsible. $40 per month, utilities included. Call
913-883-3456.
Renter wanted. Quiet, non-smoking. New home, near campus. Own bedroom bathroom with wshower; $850 + split phone and utilities. Call James after 5 at 217-222-4024
Need a home? Two females seeking one roommates for 4 bedroom2 bath with washer and dryer. $125 per month. Walking distance to campus. Call 331-2075.
Need F to share 2 dhb house ASAP. WD, int, new,
quiet area. Must love cats! Prefer 25 yrs +, NS.
$222.50/mo + 1/2 unit + dev. Sublease
Heather 841-5088.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIIX KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
Female grad student seeks same to share nice 2 bdm
acp. across bus line, 20 min. walk to campus. Starts
$827.50+ half utilities. Large living rm & kitchen,
pool, laundry, central air & heat, & great mpg. Please
be an animal lover and have previous exp. in sharing
space. Call Ruth 843-3074.
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flat, Lawrence, KS. 66045
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
Classified Information and order form
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Stop by the Klanen offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day injections 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.
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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.
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Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$18.00 (4 lines X 90+ per line X 5 days).
Classifications
105 personal
110 business personals
129 announcements
130 entertainment
379 want to buy
405 for rent
439 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68645
8B
Monday, August 26, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Unranked BYU tops No.13 A&M
Big 12 newcomer opens with a loss
The Associated Press
PROVO, Utah — Steve Sarkissian wrecked the "Wrecking Crew."
The Brigham Young quarterback threw six touchdown passes Saturday as the Cougars upset No. 13 Texas A&M 41-37 in the Pigskin Classic, the opening game of the college football season.
ATM
"One thing to remember is when BYU gets rolling on offense, it's kind of hard to stop the train."
944 Mass.
832-8228
"Once we got in the groove and got people going we were all right," the senior quarterback said.
said Sarkisian, who completed a career-best 33-of-44 passes for 536 yards against A&M's vaunted "Wrecking Crew" defense.
Exploiting the Aggies' sophomore-laden secondary, Sarkisian threw the winning, 46-yard TD pass to K.O. Kealaluhi with 1:03 remaining.
Two of Sarkisian's TD tosses went to Kaipo McGuire, who finished with seven catches for 146 yards. Kealaluhi gained 151 yards on six catches.
"This was a great victory for us. But we've always stepped up for big games," said BYU coach LaVell Edwards.
The loss was the first in eight season-openers for A&M coach R.C. Slocum.
"We knew going into the ball game that we had a real vulnerability in the secondary," he said. "We lost three out of four of our starters. Also, we had a lot of respect for BYU's capability to exploit that."
The upset ruined Brandon Stewart's heralded debut as A&M quarterback. Before a national television audience, he finished with 232 yards and two touchdowns on 20-of-28 passing.
Trailing 37-34 after Kyle Bryant's third field goal for A&M — a 51-yarder with 1:31 left — Sarkisian needed only 24 seconds to complete the winning drive.
Starting at his 22-yard line, he moved the Cougars to the Aggies' 46
with quick down-and-out strikes of 11 and 21 yards to McGuire before throwing the TD pass to Kealaluhi.
The Aggies, who forged a 20-20 halftime tie after blowing an early two-touchdown lead, found the Cougars impossible to shake in the second half. Time and again, A&M scoring drives were countered by Sarkisian's passing.
Bernard's 40-yard TD run early in the third quarter was answered by Sarkisian's 51-yard pass to McGuire. After Stewart's 6-yard lob to Hardeman gave A&M a 34-26 lead late in the third period, Sarkisian threw a 12-yard TD pass to James Dye and added a 2-point pass to Dustin Johnson to tie it again at 34.
BYU struck first when Sarkisian threw a 5-yard scoring strike to Chad Lewis early in the first period. But A&M controlled the ball and the tempo for the rest of the opening quarter and half of the second, building a 20-6 lead.
Bryant's 45-yard field goal gave the Aggies their first score of the 1996 season with 7:29 left in the first quarter. More than four minutes later, Parker streaked 19 yards down the right sideline to cap a nine play, 67-yard touchdown drive to give A&M a 10-16 lead.
Another Bryant field goal, a 43-yarder early in the second quarter, and Stewart's 57-yard scoring pass on a post pattern to Aaron Oliver with 9:55 left in the half gave the Aggies a two-touchdown lead.
A&M's defense swarmed the Cougars on the next series, stopping two runs short before forcing a harried Sarkisian to throw incomplete on a third-and-4 at the BYU31.
But just as the Aggies seemed poised for an early blowout, disaster struck. The ensuing punt was fumbled by A&M's Michael Jennings, and BYU's Greg White recovered at A&M's 23.
With fourth-and-5 at the A&M 18, McGuire held on to Sarkisian's hard pass, even as hard-hitting Aggies linebacker Warrick Holdman leveled him, popping the Cougar receiver's helmet off.
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
The 6-yard gain gave BYU a first down at the A&M 11, and two plays later Aggies cornerback Justin Lucas tipped Sarkisian's 9-yard pass into the arms of BYU's Itula Mili for a touchdown.
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FORE! Greg Ostertag raised money for charity in golf tourney yesterday. Page 10
Busted Residence hall staff members are keeping a look out for drug use. Page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103 NO.5
TUESDAY AUGUST 27 1996
ADVERTISING 864-4358
Quick LOOK
USPS650-640
Topeka man arrested on charges of murder
Kansan staff reporter
A 23-year-old Topeka man was arrested on charges of first degree murder in Topeka at 12:30 a.m. vetteday.
Damon McCray was allegedly involved in the Aug. 15 fatal shooting of Onzie A. Branch outside of Langston's nightclub at 804 W. 24th.
Lawrence police said they have a strong motive in the case from eyewitness accounts and physical evidence found during the on-going investigation. Police said the shooting occurred because of personal issues rather than gang activities.
McCray is being held in the Douglas County jail on one count of first-degree murder and three counts of attempted first-degree murder. His first appearance in court will be at 3 p.m. today.
Student sexually assaulted Sunday in wooded area
Kansan staff report
An 18-year-old KU freshman was sexually attacked Sunday at 11:30 p.m. in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police said. The woman reportedly left a party and was walking in a wooded area behind a basketball court when she was attacked twice within minutes. Police said the attacks may have been committed by the same man, described as a Caucasian male, who was scared away and then returned to the scene. The woman sustained no physical injuries in the attack.
U.S. officials were warned about barracks bombing
ARLINGTON, Va. — U.S. officials were warned of a high threat level at an Air Force barracks in Saudi Arabia six months before a truck bomb killed 19 U.S. airmen there, a newspaper said yesterday.
A classified report by the Air Force's Office of Special Investigations about the June 25 blast was circulated at the Pentagon and reached the Joint Chiefs of Staff, USA Today said in yesterday's editions.
Intelligence officials said threats to the U.S. military housing complex near Dhahran didn't specify a date or time, the newspaper said.
Defense Department representative Ken Bacon told the newspaper that U.S. officials had detected threats in the months before the bombing. But he also said the Pentagon had made more than 130 security improvements.
Mother Teresa's health improving from treatment
CALCUTTA, India — Mother Teresa sat up in bed and showed other signs of recovery yesterday after six days of treatment in a Calcutta hospital for a faltering heart and lung infection.
"We are very hopeful, though she is still not out of danger," said Sandeep Lahiri, who is one of six physicians treating the Catholic nun.
1
Mother Teresa found
Mother Teresa
the strength to sit up in bed for a few minutes and to scribble a note saving: "I want to see sisters."
During the weekend her condition stabilized, but her heartbeat remained irregular and she was on a respirator. By last night, doctors had cut her time on the respiator to about half, said J.C. Ghosh, a cardiologist at the Woodlands Nursing Home in Calcutta.
The Associated Press
Mother Teresa turns 86 today.
Higher wages have a cost
Minimum wage increase may pinch pennies
By Neal Shulenburger Kansan staff writer
More people than just minimum wage workers may feel the impact of the minimum wage increase.
On Wednesday President Clinton signed a bill raising the minimum wage from $4.25 to $4.75 beginning Oct. 1. The wage will increase again to $5.10 in August 1997. Before the bill was enacted, the minimum wage had dropped to a 40-year low when adjusted for price increases.
minimum wage might feel the impact of the increase at the cash register.
Gary Toebben, of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said that even students who did not make
"Most businesses in Lawrence pay higher than the minimum wage, and this will not really effect them," Toeben said. "It will immediately impact the expenses of the businesses that do. That $50 an hour jump will be about a 12 percent increase in payroll. That will mean they will have to raise their prices on goods and services."
Economics professor Chuck Krider said that the change would benefit those minimum wage workers that held onto their jobs following the increase, but a loss in jobs was a possible side-effect.
"The raise will not be an action without cost," Krider said. "The workers who will be in jeopardy are going to be the least-skilled. Now I'm not saying that a lot of businesses will start letting go of minimum wage workers when the
change occurs. I'm saying that over time employers will probably not hire as many people as they would have at $4.25."
Toebben also said there was a possibility of fewer jobs being available in the future because of the wage hike.
"There is no doubt that there will be a job loss. Some businesses will think twice before hiring someone else and some will try to get nine people to do what ten used to." Toobben said.
Mary Jane Hoffer, an account specialist at the School of Business who deals with payroll said she was unsure how the hike would effect the more than 20 employees of the school who were making $4.25 an hour.
"Right now it's just too early to tell," she said. "We'll just have to wait for next year's budget to see what happens."
Minimum wage at a glance
Minimum wage at a glance
Raising the federal minimum wage became an election year issue this spring. Democrats tried to capitalize on Republican reluctance to support the increase, while the GOP say the issue was ignored when Democrats controlled Congress between 1993 and 1995.
Raise affects
12.5 million workers
Workers now paid
$4.25 per hour or less: 4.1 mil.
Workers now paid
$4.26-$5.14 per hour: 8.5 mil.
BY AGE
Adults: 74.4%
Teens (16-19): 25.6%
BY RACE/ETHNIC GROUP
White: 68.2%
Black: 15%
Hispanic: 13.8%
Other: 3%
Growth of non-farm minimum hourly wages since 1950
The first federal minimum wage was established in 1938.
$.75
1 1.15 1.25 1.40 1.60
2 2.10 2.30 2.65 2.90 3.10 3.35 3.80 4.25 5.15
1950 1956 1961 1963 1967 1968 1974 1975 1976 1978 1979 1980 1981 1990 1991 1996
SOURCES: Economic Policy Institute, Bureau of Labor Statistics, AFL-CIO, Chicago Tribune
Raise affects
12.5 million workers
BY AGE
Adults:
74.4%
Teens
(16-19): 25.6%
BY AGE
Adults:
74.4%
Teens:
(16-19): 25.6%
BY RACE/ETHNIC GROUP
White: 68.2%
Black: 15%
Hispanic: 13.8%
Other: 3%
The first federal minimum wage was established in 1938.
$ .75 1 1.15 1.25 1.40 1.60 2 2.10 2.30 2.65 2.90 3.10 3.35 3.80 4.25 5.15
1950 1956 1961 1963 1967 1968 1974 1975 1976 1978 1979 1980 1981 1990 1991 1996
SOURCES: Economic Policy Institute, Bureau of Labor Statistics, AF-CIO, Chicago Tribune
Set to show some spirit
Ken Marshall / Knight-Ridder Tribun
GO HAWKS!
The KU Spirit Squad performs at last night's Get Ready Rally at Memorial Stadium. A crowd of Kansas football fans cheered with the spirit squad in support of the football team.
The Lawrence Journal-World and SuperTarget were two of the sponsors for the event.
Wescoe pitches in to recycle
Bv Dave Breitenstein
Old-fashioned plastic foam food containers used at Wescoe Terrace may appear to be an environmental nemesis, but they're not.
"We have recycling bins for these containers, plus ones for aluminum cans and newspapers," said Denise Svaglic, supervisor of Wesco Terrace.
Plastic foam containers at Wescoe now are made of recycled materials.
Kansan staff writer
Svagliic said the cafeteria had used the recyclable plastic foam containers for about one year. Employees take plastic foam containers to Wal-Mart, but do not receive any money from them. "Hopefully students are recycling the food containers, but it's too early in the school year to
Photo Illustration by Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
tell if they are," she said. "We've got recycling containers here, but it's up to the students to do their job."
Not all students are aware that plastic foam containers can be recycled.
Jennifer Brown, Olathe junior, said she had seen only aluminum can and newspaper recycling bins at the cafeteria. She did not recycle plastic foam containers because she never noticed a bin there.
Cafeterias in the Kansas and Burge Unions use plastic foam containers that are not only made of unrecycled material, but are non-recyclable. Signs urge customers to recycle cans and newspapers, but no information is given about plastic foam containers.
See FOOD. Page 7.
Jay Glatz, manager of food services at the Kansas Union cafeteria, said the unions were looking into recycling the
Mike Russell, director of the Office of Environmental Health and Safety, said KU
KU food services use recyclable plastic foam containers and provides recycle bins.
plastic foam containers, which he says are the best takeout containers.
Policy changes ease battery victims' roles Domestic battery charges will be filed by district attorney's office
By Andrea Albright Kansan staff writer
On Friday, after finding her on the telephone with a friend, Law's boyfriend of eight years tore two phone lines from the wall and damaged a third.
"Lately I've been wanting a better relationship and he doesn't like me getting phone calls," Law said. "He's done this before."
Living in a violent relationship made Bridget Law handy at fixing a broken phone. Saturday, she decided she didn't want to be a repairman anymore.
Law's boyfriend also knocked her to the floor, which left no visible marks, and forced her to stay in their home when he threatened to kill her and himself.
Saturday morning, Law, a secretary at the University, had police remove her boyfriend from the property and filed a domestic battery report.
The district attorney's office, instead of the victim, will now file charges in all cases where there is sufficient evidence to prosecute a case.
Thanks to some new policies and programs announced by newly appointed District Attorney Christine Tonkovich, someone like Law might have an easier time pressing charges.
Sgt. Susan Hadl said Lawrence police did not make an arrest because of the time lapse between the incident and the report, a lack of obvious signs of violence and the man's willingness to cooperate with the police.
"Police must find probable cause to establish that one party was the primary aggressor over the other," Hadl said.
The domestic battery report will be submitted to the district attorney's office to be reviewed, and they will decide how to pursue the case.
Tonkovic said this policy would lower the number of complaints that were dropped before they could go to
See BATTERY,Page 7A
TODAY
INDEX
Weather . . . 2
Horoscopes . . . 2
Campus . . . 3
Opinion . . . 4
Scoreboard . . . 8
Sports . . . 10
KRIS
SUNNY
High 83°
Low 60°
...
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UDKi THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
Visit it starting Sept. 11
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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.
1
2
Tuesday, August 27, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
QuickINFO HOROSCOPES TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER LOTTO NUMBERS
WEATHER
TODAY
83
60
Mostly sunny with light, variable winds.
WEDNESDAY
85 63
Mostly sunny with little or no chance of rain.
THURSDAY
HOROSCOPES
86
61
Continuing sun.
Today's Birthday (Aug. 27):
You'll do best this year if you go back to a previous method. Buy something to lighten your workload in October. A change at home reveals a treasure in December. An old friend makes the best sweetheart, especially in January. There will be hassles to overcome on the job in February. Money's tight in April; find another source through a parent. A reunion with friends in July revitalizes an old relationship
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 7.
A delay caused by a change in procedures could get you way off schedule. Or the wrong button could get hit, making the new machine go berserk. You may have to get the work done the old way. Concentrate on learning and you'll get past the confusion faster.
A big disruption to the status quo is under way. You can help the ones who are having difficulty adjusting. Tonight will be good for romance, especially the kind involving long talks about important issues. You might provide the solution.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Today is an 8
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
You're blocked by somebody who doesn't understand you or a rule you don't want to obey. Try not to get too upset. You'll be more effective if you stay cool, as usual. It's a pretty good evening for romance with a person who can't figure you out. That's part of the fun.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 6.
Things could be falling apart faster than you can put them back together. Don't panic; all is not lost. Do be careful, however, especially if you're playing with electricity. Fix the old instead of buying new; you'll impress your sweetheart by being thrifty.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan.19)
Today is a 7.
You know it's possible to work your way from rags to riches, and you even know how to do it. Offer your skills to one who thinks success is somebody else's privilege. Use your experience in a new way. You repair something that hasn't worked right in years.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
Today is a 6
Watch for a change in plans this morning. A disruption could cause a mad scramble. Don't throw money at the problem - you'd be in debt for years! Tonight, you've done enough thinking. Plan to do a little dancing instead.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7
Today is a 7.
A private conversation with a bureaucrat can help you understand the system. Be patient; the results you want may not be available for a while. Your sweetheart and maybe the children are in a ranbunction mood. Play with them tonight and forget your frustrations.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 5.
Although people will be decisive, it may be difficult to get things done. Take it slowly. If you overlook something tiny now, you could have a huge problem later. If your sweet-
heart's in a cranky mood, more talking won't help. Actions speak louder than words.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
An accident today could mean you have to start over, so be careful. Although you and a friend state your positions clearly, you may not come to an agreement. You may have to accept each other just the way you are. Don't worry, that could be fun.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 7
Today is a 7.
Traveling could be more expensive than you'd planned, because of an unexpected breakdown. Give your selfpleness of time to reach your destination. Also take care of your machinery. Preventative maintenance is the cheapest kind. Spend money on romance instead.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 7.
There may be a major disruption in the way you've been doing things. Remember what you already know and use assets you've stored away. The end result can be positive, but there's quite a bit of work involved before you get to that point.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is on 8
You will be able to think of creative solutions to old problems today and should have a great time doing it. Find a way that's easier and gives you better results. Watch out, though. Don't rely too heavily on a partner who's under stress.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only
TUESDAY PRIMETIME AUGUST 27, 1996
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO 3 Mooseha Homeboy Malcolm Bearks (R) Kung Fu Legend Cont. Cope **Spies: Ulysses and Nathan Thighs** *1988*
WOAF "Point of No Return" #1983 Drama Bioscoff Florida. News **H** Patrol Cheers **Beywatch**
KCTV Rescue 911 (In Stereo) World's Most Dangerous... CBS News Special News **Late Show (R) In Stereo** Selinfield
KS03 Lawrence City Commission Meeting (Live) News News Plus
KCPT 2 National Political Convention (Live) Business Rpt. Trailido Charlie Rose (In Store)
KSNT Mad Abo You Newradio Fraser (R) Caroline NBC News Special News Tonight Shower (In Stereo) Late Night
KMBC Rosanne Drew Carey Home Imp. Coach (R) ABC News Special News Rosanne Golden Girls MFA*M'H **A**
KTNU National Political Convention (Live) Travel Mag. Business Rpt. Charlotte Rose (In Store)
WIBW Rescue 111 (In Stereo) World's Most Dangerous... CBS News Special News Late Show (R) In Store) U.S. Open
KTKA Rosanne Draw Carey Home Imp. Coach (R) ABC News Special News Selinfield Coach Nectime
CABLE STATIONS
ABE 12 Biography: Kennedy Pride and Prejudice (Part 3 of 3) Lew & Order "Renunciation" Biography: Kennedy
CHBC Politics Equal Time Rivera Live Charles Grodin America After Hours Rivera Live (R)
CNN Convention Coverage (Live) Convention Recap Larry King Showbiz
COM Comedy Net 2 Mendoza Gallagher: The Maddest Lounge Liz. Comedy Net 2 Politically incorrect Daily Shoot Dream On
COURT Prime Time Justice Justice True Story: Paranons on Trial Prime Time Justice (R) Justice News
CSPAN (6:00) Campaign '96 "Democratic National Convention" Campaign '96: Convention Campaign '96 "Convention Wrap-Up"
DBC Galápagos: Beyond Darwin (R) Revelat "Cacoe & Ness" Next Step (Beyond 2000 Galápagos: Beyond Darwin
ESPN 10 Doggers Too Hot to Skate 8 Women's Volleyball Baseball Sportcenter Baseball Doggers
HIST Real Resputin (R) "Wila Rides" (1988) An American film Addison Ville's Mexican Revolution Year by Year Neal Resputin (R)
LIFE Unspeakable Mysteries For the Future: The Irvine Fertility Scandal" (1988) Fertility Finality Mysteries Late Date
MTV Beach MTV (In Stereo) Beach House Nights Buzzkill Memories Singed Out Convention Alternative Nation (In Stereo)
SCFI V "The Decipition" "Call For Eternal Story" (1986) Science Television Twilight Zone Monsters V "The Decipation" (R)
TLC Need Stuff (R) America Seven Wonders of the World Glass Jungle Part 2 of 3 Need Stuff (R) America Seven Wonders of the World
TNT "The Taking of Pelham One, Two, Three" #1974 Walter Matthews "Hickey and Boggs" #1972/1975 Walter Matthews Coby Robert Clay.
USA 6:34 U.S. Open Tennis Trenning Round (Live) Stik Stallings "Glant Steps" Bake Love USA 6:34 U.S. Open Tennis Trenning Round (Live) Stik Stallings "Glant Steps" Bake Love
VH1 Top 10 Video Countdown (R) One-Hit Wonders (R) Beatles (R) Bandstand Crossroads Sex Appeal Soul of VH1 Music Videos
WGN "Superman V" The Queen for Police" (1973) Fantasy (N) News in Stereo Night Court Simon & Simon H'mooner
WTBS (6:35) Major League Baseball: Atlanta Braves at Pittsburgh Pirates. (Live) Horrible Goes to Mexico Carlo.*1977 Dean Jones White Writ
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 20 "Writhfulness" *#1995* Denis Washington (In Stereo) R "Dready Past" *#1995* Drama Cruel All R" Comedy Hour Mark Curry "Writhfulness"
MAX "The Roote" *#1990* Drama Cimt Eastwood. R "Cyberwave" *#1995* Mac Single. R" Not Line R "Saints and Sinners" (1988)
SHOW Roger Coger公 presents "Suspected Devil" Outer Limits Outer Limits "Vanishing Act" Polester: The Legacy Love Street
LOTTO
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9-4-6
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3-9-14-16-27-35
2-13-15-35-40 Powerball: 10 Jackpot: $5 million
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 27, 1996
3
DJ spins music with a message
Alternative station increases diversity
By Erin Rooney
Kansan staff writer
Vertical Reality may sound like most of the programs on the Lazer, but it's not.
Zach Shear, a 1993 KU graduate and host of the radio show, said he played real alternative music on his program. Music that, he said, has a message.
THE HAMMER'S RADIO STATION
"The grass-roots of alternative music were based on sounds that were not mainstream, not part of pop-culture," Shear said. "So I would have to say that Christian music is at the center of alternative music. The music has caught up with the mainstream in its quality but still sits on the back burner in its popularity."
Zach Besheer, a KU graduate, is a disc jockey at KLZR. He hosts a Christian alternative radio show from 8 to 10 a.m. every Sunday morning under the pseudonym Zach Shear. Christian music is at the center of alternative music, he said.
While Zach Shear is his on-air name,
Zach Besheer is his real name. His show
airs 8 to 10 a.m. Sunday on 105.9 FM, the
Lazer.
Shear got the idea for his show during the summer of 1992, which he spent in Wichita. He listened to a commercial Christian rock station, and when he returned to Lawrence, he decided the
area needed a Christian alternative show.
He tried to find a station that would allow him his own radio show. Shear recorded a sample program at a friend's studio and sent tapes to all the major radio stations in Kansas City and Lawrence.
All of the stations turned him down except for the Lazer, which told him to try again later. Shear tried to convince the station to give him a chance and a year and a half ago, he made his way onto the air.
Roger the Dodger is programming director for the Lazer. "He sent us music, a list of potential sponsors and lists of friends and acquaintances who would be interested in listening to a show of his kind," said Roger, who wouldn't give his last name. "He was constantly giving us reasons why we should do something like this. It was really persistence on his part, more than anything else, that got him on the air."
Michael McShea, Stockton junior, said Vertical Reality had been tuned-in on his radio more than once. He said the lyrics of regular music had affected his decision to listen to music with a Christian theme.
"Garbage was being poured into me and
I wanted to be filled with something that was more clean," McShea said.
Statistics were not available on how many people listen to Vertical Reality. Shear said the majority of his listeners were in high school and college.
The only common theme in Shear's
show is Christian bands. Not every song mentions Jesus, he said.
"I don't ever preach while on the air." Shear said. "I just jock and let the music speak for itself. I want to give people an opportunity to hear about God through music that isn't dorky or out-dated."
ON CAMPUS
The Episcopal/Lutheran Campus Center will hold worship at noon today at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Rev. Joe Allford at 843-8202.
KU KI Aikido Club will meet at 6:30 tonight at 207 Robinson. For more information, call 864-1798.
AIESEC will hold its first meeting of the semester at 7:10 tonight in 2023 Haworth. For more information, call Kia Flesher at 865-5575.
The MS Support Group will meet at 7 tonight at the Holcom Park Recreation Center in the north room. For more information, call Dawn at 842-6175 or Shannon at 842-1011.
Kansas City Baptist Temple Bible Study will hold a question and answer bible study at 7:30 tonight in the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call John Henford at 841-1683.
Gay and Lesbian academic and staff advocates will hold a brown-bag meeting at noon tomorrow. Everyone is welcome. Call 864-0624 for location.
Office of Study Abroad will hold an information session about French-speaking countries at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at 4058 Wescoe Hall. For more information call the Office of Study Abroad at 864-3742.
Office of Study Abroad will hold a study abroad returnees welcome back reception at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Malott Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ted Noravong at 864-3742.
Group's name change stirs debate
By Nicholas Charalambous Kansan staff writer
It's OK to be queer.
Once a term used only by bigots, the word "queer" has been reclaimed by KU Queers and Allies, a student organization serving lesbian, bisexual, gay, transsexual and transgendered students.
Using the word risks offending those who consider it derogatory. But Rob MacRae-McKie, director of Queers and Allies, said the name was chosen to reflect the group's inclusive philosophy and was catchy.
"We're not saying it's acceptable
for someone to say queer," he said, referring to people who use the word in an offensive way. "It is the intent behind the use of the word that's important."
The decision to change the group's full name from LesBiGay Services of Kansas to KU Queers and Allies, LesBiGayTrans Services of Kansas was made in May at an open general meeting. The 20 members present didn't voice any strong objections to the new name. MacRae-McKie said.
Marcia Epstein, director of Headquarters Counseling Center which often refers people to the group, said she still was uncomfortable with a word that has been used cruelly toward people she knows. She warned that reclaiming the word could backfire.
"The ideal is that you reclaim that word and it doesn't have any stigma," she said. "My fear is that it will give people permission to be even more cruel."
Only a few people have objected to the name and they had little connection with the group, MacRae-McKie said.
The name change was part of an effort to include transgendered students, who are not necessarily homosexual but behave against gender tone MacBae-McKie said
Adding the word "allies" to the
group's name will help the group establish links to other minority organizations also fighting for equality, recognition and acceptance, he said.
"When you walk in the door, you're not saying you're a gay man but that you're a friend of ours and a part of our family," he said.
The University Daily Kansan's policy is to call people what they want to be called, said Kansan editor Amanda Traugher. However the Kansan will not use the group's acronym Q&A.
"We feel that Q&A stands for questions and answers, and we try not to use acronyms because they can be misleading," she said.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's car rear window was damaged between 10:30 p.m. Saturday and 8 a.m. Sunday in the 900 block of Arkansas Street, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $100.
A KU student's car was stolen between midnight and 1 a.m. Sunday in the 1400 block of Eddingham Drive, Lawrence police said. The car was valued at $850.
A KU student's compact
NOW IS THE TIME!
All-Sports Combo
A KU student's car stereo was stolen Saturday in the 900 block of Arkansas Street, Lawrence police said. The items and damage were valued at $450.
KU
Student Ticket Distribution Please read before picking up your tickets
Your Assigned Picked-Up Date
A - G
Last Name
Wescoe Beach
A KU student's purse, cash, pen and other miscellaneous items were stolen between 5 p.m. Thursday and 1 p.m. Friday from a room in GSP, KU police said. The items were valued at $453.
KU student employees reported a person attempting to use a false Kansas driver's license and a false alien resident card at 1 a.m. Saturday at the front desk of McCollum Hall. KU police said.
discs, CD case and video tapes were stolen Wednesday morning from a room in McCollum Hall, KU police said. The items were valued at $1122.
H - P
8:30 - 4:00
Monday, August 26
Tuesday, August 27
Q-Z
Wednesday, August 28
Make-Up Day
You may pick up only your own ticket.
Thursday, August 29
You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1996 fee sticker to receive your tickets.
You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the men's basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your Sports Combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up.
If you miss your assigned pick-up date and make-up day,you may pick up you tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East Lobby of Allen Fieldhouse beginning Friday, August 30,1996.
KANSAS FOOTBALL 1996
Home Opener, this Thursday. Aug. 29, 7:00 pm - Jayhawks vs. Ball State
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Tuesday, August 27, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Students should look at Info Fair, organizations
Each year, the Kansas Union holds its annual Information Fair. The fair, which began yesterday and runs from 9 a.m to 2 p.m today and tomorrow, is
designed to introduce students to 100 student groups on campus.
The Info Fair offers a wonderful opportunity to meet people with similar interests while learning about an issue, a different culture or a new philosophy.
One of the best ways to get involved in campus issues and politics is by signing up for a Student Senate committee. Senate committees deal with pertinent issues affecting students and University governance.
Different multicultural organizations offer students the opportunity to learn about a variety of cultures.
For the religious student, groups of all faiths and devotions meet for study sessions as well as social outings. A plethora of sports and leisure activities are available to the KU student.
For students whose idea of fun tends more to the political than the physical, the Info Fair will offer plenty of opportunities. All major political parties promise to be active in this election year.
No one likes a hermit. The college experience is enhanced greatly by meeting new people and spending time doing something other than studying.
In the short term, getting involved with groups offers students something to do in their free time, and the chance to learn more about a shared interest. In the long term, involvement with an organization can pay off because employers look for students who were involved in groups, which they believe indicates interpersonal and leadership skills.
Getting involved in student organizations is its own reward. Visiting the Info Fair could be your first step to doing just that.
ANN MARCHAND FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Campus placement centers offer a variety of services
The University of Kansas offers many kinds of assistance to students seeking summer or winter internships an government employment aftergrad
internships or permanent employment after graduation. Students should make themselves aware of the job-search tools offered and take advantage of the University's services as early in the fall semester as possible. The University Placement Center aids all students, and most professional schools offer specialized search assistance to students in those schools.
The University Placement Center, at 110 Burge Union, conducts mock interviews and presents workshops on such topics as searching for a job through the Internet. Students must first register with the placement center to participate in on-campus interviews.
Engineering students may obtain specialized job search help through the Engineering Career Services Center. Students who have never registered must attend one of the registration meetings held this week. Students must renew their registration each year.
The Business Placement Center will hold a career fair that is open to all students on Sept. 5 at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Dr. Students who are registered with the Business Placement Center by Sept. 1 will have their resumes included in an electronic resume book given to employers at the career fair.
The Schools of Law and Journalism also have placement centers that offer a variety of services to students in those fields.
Students who wish to find a suitable internship or job should not procrastinate. Rather, they should use the services at their disposal to aid in the search.
BRENT SUTTER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSANSTAFF
AMANDA TRAUGHBER
Editor
CRAIG LANG
Managing editor
MATT HOOD
Associate managing editor for design
KIMBERLY CRABTREE
CHARITY JEFFRIES
News editors
DARCIL McLAIN
Public Relations Director
KAREN GERSCH
Business manager
HEALY SMART
Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Campus Susanna Lóðí
Jason Strait
Amy McVey
Editorial John Colter
Nicole Kennedy
Features Adam Ward
Sports Bill Petulla
Associate sports Carlin Foster
On-line David L. Teuka
Photo Rich Devkní
Graphics Nosh Musser
Andy Rothebock
Special sections Amy McVey
Wire Debbie Stalne
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Mark Ozmek
Regional mgr ... Donnie Haupt
National mgr ... Denny Haupt
National mgr ... Krysta Nye
Special Spections mgr ... Heather Valier
Production mgr ... Dan Kapos
Marketing director ... Lisa Quebeck
Marketing director ... Eric Johnson
Public Relations dir ... Sara Rose
Business manager ... Bennett
Classified mgr ... Sholly Wechter
HA HA HA! I'M FINALLY IN COLLEGE NOW! AT LAST!
I'M AN INDIVIDUAL! NO MORE CONFORMING! I'm MY OWN PERSON!!! AH HA HA!
SIGH
VICTOR
1996
Jeff Victor / KANSAN
American tourists leave ugly impressions abroad
At the end of my stay in Paris this summer, I finally ascended to the top of the Eiffel Tower. I expected it to be a magical experience, the epiphany of my Parisian adventure. Instead, it sucked.
Being arguably the most popular landmark in Paris, the Eiffel Tower was, of course, crowded. I can handle crowds, but this particular group was composed of loud, obnoxious, American tourists. People always complain about the rudeness of the French. But during my six-week stay in France, I encountered two or three rude French people and a plethora of annoying Americans. My Eiffel Tower experience was highlighted by girls from New Jersey with fake Valley Girl accents screaming in the elevator and an intoxicated American teenager throwing up two feet from the bathroom and also a foot from my feet. And we wonder why the French don't like us.
When one travels to a foreign country, one is generally expected to attempt to communicate in that country's language and to behave in a manner not reflecting badly on his or her native land. Many Americans obviously have problems following both rules.
When foreigners come to America, we expect them to speak English. Naturally, the French expect visitors to speak French. So why do so many American tourists in France act so surprised when the French cannot or will not speak English with them?
While staying in a hotel in Tours, I
witnessed a pathetically funny scene. An American woman tried to ask the desk clerk the location of the nearest church. The conversation went something like this: "Do you know where the cathedral is?" (This was said very loudly and very slowly.)
STAFF COLUMNIST
STEPHANIE
BREWER
"You know, the cathedral?" The desk clerk said nothing and simply stood there, looking annoyed. At this point, the woman's husband entered, prompting her to say: "Honey, can you help? He doesn't understand."
No, you don't understand. The desk clerk was not stupid. He didn't need to be spoken to as if he were mentally incapable. He simply didn't know how to speak English or just didn't want to speak it. Considering he was in France, he really shouldn't be expected to.
In my experience, if you at least attempt to speak their language, the French are perfectly polite to you. I made many mistakes in my speech and was still treated well. It's the principle of trying to fit in that counts.
he was shocked to encounter Americans that weren't rude. We hadn't gone out of our way to be overly polite to him, and I began to wonder what kind of Americans were wandering around Paris.
Sadly enough, this apparently is not a priority of most tourists. A man at a crepe stand told me and others that we were the nicest Americans he had ever met and that
I found out a couple weeks later in the Latin Quarter. I was strolling along peacefully with some friends when we (and everyone else within a five-mile radius) were suddenly informed that an American tourist did not want to leave because "these streets are the oldest streets in Paris! These streets here!" This tirade included violent pointing gestures so onlookers were absolutely positive which streets she was speaking of. I suppose I should've been grateful for this information. God forbid, I should think some other streets were older. But if I wanted a tour guide, I would've arranged it with a travel agency. I honestly don't think anyone needed her services.
I'm sure there are plenty of polite American tourists who would never dream of acting in such a manner while abroad. Unfortunately, they are not as visible as the people I've described.
These tourists are giving our nation a bad reputation abroad. If we expect foreigners to welcome us in their countries, we must treat them with the same respect and courtesy we would like them to show us.
Stephanie Brewer is a Chester, Conn.,
sophomore in Journalism and French.
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
"I was shocked to see all the men in suits. I thought it was an FBI shake down." AMY STETZLER, Overland Park junior, after officials presented Greg Shepherd, associate professor of communication studies, with a $5,000 bonus.
"They got killed. Our guys couldn't even beat guys that used to play at Washburn." ROY WILLIAMS, men's basketball coach, discussing the performance of Kansas players who competed in the Sunflower State games this summer.
JASON KRONE, associate director of recreation services, discussing his plans for intramural sports this year.
"if I have 100 people down here yelling at me saying they want to play pickle ball, then we're going to try to play pickle ball."
"I go up there and I just want to play a good show and act like a moron." KARL GRABLE, bass player for St. Louis band The Urge, on his approach to performing.
Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole played football for the University of Kansas, but he should study a page out of Roy Williams' play book for his presidential campaign. Williams knows about vision and understands the benefits of evaluating his squads early. A team tested by bright lights, big crowds and top-20 competition in December is prepared to dance in March.
Although this is his third shot at the Oval Office, Dole has not learned the lesson of a high-quality
Dole should tackle issues, not pass them
start. Not articulating a vision for the future early in his campaign may prove too costly once again. Now it is time to play catch-up.
STAFF COLUMNIST
ANDREW
LONGSTRETH
For Dole, the experience-building approach can be found throughout his legislative career. For more than 34 years in
Congress, Dole's experience and willpower have allowed him to excel in the most rancorous legislative battles. However, prior to the Republican convention, Dole obviously forgot that political skills and legislative skills are different things. It is the difference between making a product and selling it, the art and the science. During his last two presidential races, Dole's political weaknesses have been magnified. For this campaign, critiques are similar.
Dole chose Jack Kemp, an original supply-sider, as his running mate. This decision signals the campaign's lack of confidence in Dole's ability to excite the Republican party and attract undecided voters. This desperation shot have given a boost to the campaign, but people still remain skeptical about the campaign's major theme of cutting taxes. Like a freshman, Dole is straying from his game plan and looking to the sidelines for instructions. His recent political faux in which he said balancing the budget was his first priority and cutting taxes was number two, reveals his true commitment.
After the traditional bounce that presidential candidates receive in the polls after conventions, Dole has retained some of the ground he gained on President Clinton. The ball still is in his hands as he campaigns across the country; the bright lights and cameras are following his moves, and the fans are watching intently. But a hankering to be president just because he is not Bill Clinton will not win him the game. As time runs out, Dole will be forced to face the questions of the American people. Where will he cut to balance the budget if the military, Social Security and veterans benefits are off the table? What parts of the Republican platform will he adhere to? What will be the consequences of ending the IRS? What will happen to affirmative action programs under his administration?
The clerk is tickling, and we are
The clock is ticking, and we are waiting.
Twenty points down in most polls, Dole had to look elsewhere to pull himself out of a major first-half deficit. Dole and his record were not persuasive enough to excite even the most ardent Republican supporters. As a deficit hawk throughout his legislative career and a skeptic of supply-side economics, he drastically revised his beliefs, deferred to advisers and unveiled an economic package that contains a 15-percent tax cut for all taxpayers while not specifying the $400 billion of cuts required to balance the budget.
Andrew Longstreet is a Liberty, Mo.
senior in French and political science.
FATE
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IT JUST PREPARES KIDS FOR THE REAL WORLD.
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I DON'T THINK CARTOON VIOLENCE IS SO BAD...
IT JUST PREPARES KIDS FOR THE REAL WORLD.
RANDOM, THAT COYOTE JUST FELL FROM A CLUFF, BOUNCED INTO A MEAT GRINDER, AND WAS RUN OVER BY A TANK!
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesdav. August 27.1996
5
Foreign students hit road for food
Lawrence stores also offer recipes for exotic foods
By Nicholas C. Charalambous
Kansas staff writer
Ask international students what they miss about home and food is sure to be high on the list.
Food isn't just about nutrition. It's more important than that. It connects a person to the sights, sounds and smells of home and can express love and friendship.
For Arsalan Nayyar, Karachi, Pakistan, junior, the mangoes available in Lawrence just don't compare to those in Pakistan. More than 15 types of mangoes grow in Pakistan and are called the "King of Fruits," Nayyar said. People eat mangoes for an entire meal, he said, and villagers take part in a contest of endurance to see who can eat the most.
Some international students don't like eating unhealthy American fast food.
"I wouldn't mind eating hamburgers for a week," Nayyar said. "But you know how awful they are."
Nayyar tried Dillons, Hy-Vee and Food 4 Less but couldn't find what he wanted. Now he drives to Kansas City to pick up the special types of coriander, curry powder, chili powder and paprika he needs for an authentic curvy.
Daphne Charalambidou, Nicosia, Cyprus, graduate student, spent her first two weeks in Kansas holed up in the Mad Greek restaurant before she decided that a weekly shopping trip to Kansas City was the answer.
Both students stomach the added expense of fuel on top of the high cost of imported food. But international students may be overlooking stores a little closer to home.
Lawrence has two organic food stores, Community Mercantile Co-Op, 901 Mississippi St., and Wild Oats Community Market, 1040 Vermont St., with a large selection of herbs, spices and foreign foods.
At Wild Oats, Charalambidi would have found feta cheese for her Greek salad, grape
International markets
Wild Oats Community Market, 1040 Vermont St. 865-3737. Open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday and 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday.
Community Mercantile Co-Op, 901 Mississippi St. 843-8544. Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m on Sunday.
Shin Asian Supermarket, 2249 Iowa St.
841-104. Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday.
- Oriental Supermarket, 711 W. 23rd St.
Suite 4.86-0900. Open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Monday through Saturday and 10.30 a.m
to 7 p.m. on Sunday.
leaves and fresh mint for dolmades, okra, artichoke hearts, hummus and couscous. And after her shopping she could have eaten baldava with her coffee.
And Lawrence has two stores, Shin Asian Supermarket, 2249 Iowa St., and Oriental Supermarket, 711 W. 23rd St., Suite 4, serving the large number of KU students with tastes for oriental foods.
Oriental Supermarket is full of foods imported from China, Thailand, India, Hong Kong, Indonesia and the Middle East. Its shelves are stuffed with packets of dried seaweed and dried bean curd, and tins of bamboo shoots and quail eggs are stacked three high. You also can find yams, chilies and tahini, a sesame paste. Owner Ananh Manixai said about 50 to 60 percent of his customers were students.
Umanaw Hongsavase, Bangkok, Thailand, graduate student, prepares Thai food every day. She said she did the bulk of her shopping at the store, only a five-minute drive from her Meadowbrook apartment. It took only two days for her to find the store when she arrived in Lawrence. If it didn't exist, "maybe I'd move to another university," she said.
Honors tutorial examines impact of high school days
Maybe she wasn't kidding.
Kansan staff writer
By Eric Weslander
The Beach Boys loved it. Ferris Bueller didn't. But nearly everyone who survived high school thinks that it affected his or her life significantly.
This semester, 13 KU students will take an in-depth look at what high school meant to them. Four Years and a Cloud of Dust: An Analysis of High School is the name of a freshman honors tutorial that will cover every aspect of high school including class work, teachers, extracurricular activities and social life.
Freshman honors tutorials are small, onecredit courses offered to freshmen in the honors program. Michael Imber, professor of educational policy and leadership, volunteered to teach the course because he wanted to discover students' views on the goals and purposes of high school, he said.
"I think that as a society we labor under terrible misconceptions about what goes on in high school," Imber said. "It seems that often there are few connections to the supposed learning goals and that the schools are tolerant of that."
"You don't have to care to graduate from
high school," said Mindi Carden, Olathe freshman.
Carden, who is taking the class to see how her high school experiences have shaped her, said high school made a lasting impression on people because it was a time to make important social choices.
"High school is a time to develop decisions about how your personality will be," she said. "Whether it is a positive or negative experience, it does have an effect of some kind."
Sean Brumwell, Overland Park freshman, said one year of high school was the same as the next. He said his college experience has been interesting so far because it has emphasized self-sufficiency.
Each student will write a retrospective analysis during the semester, and the essays will be combined into a book, Imber said. He said the honors students' views would make the essays interesting.
"People talk about their high school days as if they were really fun, but if that's as good as it gets, that's kind of pathetic," he said.
"They will have a perspective that is going to be colored by the fact that they were successful," Imber said. "These are the ones that it's supposed to have worked for, so let's see what they have to say."
Library data will go online allow access
Workstations will be upgraded throughout the school year
Searching through the 3.4 million volumes housed in the KU library system is about to become easier, faster and more accessible to students. Throughout the academic year, the University will be installing Virtua automated library management software.
By Bradley Brooks Kansan staff writer
"A person is going to be able to do more for themselves, and there will be more power in this system for searching," said John Miller, University automation librarian.
In June, the University signed a contract with VTLS, Inc., of Blacksburg, Va., to purchase Virtua, an integrated library system. Virtua will allow many functions at the library to be accessible from a single PC workstation.
The Virtua system will be implemented in the eight libraries on the Lawrence campus, and the KU Medical Center will also implement Virtua on its Kansas City and Wichita campuses.
"This system will allow a user to do things like see what they have checked out and to renew books themselves," Miller said.
"This will be the first time all the libraries will be working together," Miller said. "We're all moving to one big, integrated commercial package."
Miller said that the University chose the Virua system over five other systems.
"It was a tough choice between two of the systems," Miller said. "The combination of the company and the fact that the product was doing what we wanted was why we went with VTLS."
Miller said the entire project was costing the University $2 million. A portion of the money is a special allocation from the state called the System Wide Access Plan. Some money is from the libraries and University's budgets, and the rest was borrowed from Master Lease Purchase, which loans money to state agencies. The University and the libraries will jointly pay back the loan over the next three years.
Included in the cost is maintenance on the system by VTLS, Inc. Barbara Scheid, manager of U.S. VTLS systems, said that this maintenance included a yearly two-day visit by VTLS technicians to the University.
"All updates and future enhancements of the software that KU bought will be provided by us for no charge," Scheid said.
Miller said that more than half of the price of the project was being spent on the hardware needed to run the Virtua software. All of the workstations in the libraries will be replaced with 300 new PCs, all of which will have Internet access.
With the new software, students will be able to access the libraries' online catalog from their home computers via the World Wide Web or by using telenet.
William Crowe, vice-chancellor of information services and dean of libraries, said Miller and others had been working on this project for nearly three years.
"This is the Manhattan Project of libraries," Crowe said. "John was the leader. He has kept it all together during this very complicated process."
Miller said that he optimistically hoped to see the entire system running by spring break, but that he was realistically looking at the end of June as the start-up time.
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Tuesday, August 27, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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in the Frontier Room of the Burge Union
The KJRFC will be holding its Annual General Meeting at 8:00 p.m.
Come meet the players, learn about the game, watch videos and enjoy refreshments!
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The seven, six-foot-tall wooden newspaper boxes that groan with the abuses of Kansas weather and KU students are going to be replaced.
The University Daily Kansan is working with James E. Modig, director of Design and Construction Management, to construct an inexpensive and functional distribution box to replace the wooden boxes sometime this year.
Only at Godfathers Pizza
By Stephanie Fite
Kansan staff writer
Godfather's Pizza
"We need to explore a list of solutions to meet the overwhelming need," Modig said.
The criteria set by Tom Eblen, University Daily Kansan general manager, includes quick and easy access, protection from the elements and a display of the front page.
Last year, the School of Architecture and the University Daily Kansan worked to create a functional and inexpensive design to replace the distribution boxes. The UDK Newsstand competition involved the University Daily Kansan and the AIAS — American Institution of Architecture Students.
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While Eblen commended the architecture students on their design, he was concerned about the
"We are looking for a better way to get the papers distributed, to give students access and, at the same time, prevent the trash problem that occurs when it gets windy," he said.
The 11-foot-tall structure of stainless steel, tempered glass, rubber and concrete that stands in front of Marvin Hall cost $1,100 and took nearly 500 hours to assemble.
distribution box prototype because it was too expensive and did not adequately shelter the newspapers.
The Design and Construction Management department plans to use metal to replace the wooden structures because it is basic and easy to maintain. Modig said he planned to create a distribution box that was smaller with more compartments to shield the papers. Modig also would like to incorporate a recycling bin or waste container for excess paper.
John C. Gaunt, dean of the Architecture School, said that although a variety of materials could be used, wood was the most functional and would end up as the material of choice because it was cheapest.
"All that is wanted is something that is inexpensive, durable and large enough to hold out wind and rain," Gaunt said. "I wouldn't be surprised if the old distribution boxes are replaced with simple wood boxes."
CHAMPIONSHIP
Rich Devinki / KANSAN
This newstand in front of Marvin Hall replaced a worn stand. Plans are being made to replace all the newsstands on campus.
Student housing staff, KU police are weeding out pot smoking
By Ashlee Roll Kansan staff writer
Drugs in residence halls is a serious matter, and smoking pot can get you a lot more than just a buzz.
"If a student is found responsible for possessing and using illegal substances, there is often severe probation and relocation," said Jon Long, assistant director of student housing.
The KU police, the Lawrence Police Department and DCCCA, a drug- and alcohol-abuse rehabilitation center, have responded to increased marijuana use in the residence halls in the last few years by helping train staff at residence halls to recognize suspected drug use among residents.
"We teach them how to recognize the smell," said Sgt. Chris Keary of KU police.
Part of that pro-activity is the educational programming student housing organizes, like dorm displays showing the negative effects of drugs.
Long said that with the measures being taken, the department was pro-active.
"We are going to enforce the law," Long said.
Long said there were three steps student housing used to deal with offenders.
The department of student housing always contacts KU police, who issue tickets that vary in cost.
A complaint is filed with the student code of conduct that may stay on a student's permanent record.
Because the use of a controlled substance is in violation of the student housing policy, the student has an opportunity to go through the student judicial process.
The student code of conduct is published in the University policy section of each timetable. This policy prohibits the unlawful possession, use, manufacture or distribution of alcohol or drugs by students or employees of the University.
Some students who are caught often face probation and community service.
"My friend and I had just finished a joint when there was a knock at the door," said a student who did not wish to be identified. "The police just said 'I can smell pot in here.'
After talking with authorities from the residence hall, he was placed on probation for a year and had to make a display of the dangers of alcohol for the residence hall.
"When we got busted, I just wanted it to be over with." Instead of being charged, the student, who lived in a residence hall, agreed to help the police find the dealer.
"They are more concerned with teaching, than punishing the people involved," the student said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 27, 1996
7A
Former baseball player back on the KU team as a recruiter
928 Mass.
Downtown
Mike Bard will sell the program in recruit effort
By Cameron Heeg Kansan staff reporter
The new addition to the Kansas baseball coaching staff is beginning to settle into the role of recruiter for the team.
Kansas coach Bobby Randall called former Kansas player Mike Bard in mid-July, offering the open position after the departure of former aide Steve Lienhard.
"He (coach Randall) asked if I was interested. I said you bet, it all took about two seconds." Bard said.
Bard comes to coaching as a former player at Kansas during the 1990 and 1991seasons with assistant coaching experience at Texas Tech for four years and at Howard Junior College in Big Springs, Texas, last season.
At Kansas he spent most of his time at first base and finished the '91 season with .333 batting average, 39
RBI and two home runs. After playing at Kansas, Bard coached four seasons at Texas Tech before going to Howard where his responsibilities grew from his job with the Red Raiders.
"The full responsibility of recruiting was on me. At Howard I did all the recruiting. So it is something I am used to," Bard said. "Hopefully that is where I can help take some of the load off Coach Randall and Coach Kilmer."
The Texas additions to the Big 12 Conference will help the whole conference in recruiting, and Bard said that Kansas won't be left behind.
"Recruiting doesn't wait on any man. You better get after it and get good or get somewhere else," Bard said. "That is my focus right now, the early signing period this November. This is an important year for us."
Bard knows that a strong program and the ability to sell that program to attract players to the school are necessary for recruiting. There are many factors that help sell the team, but a major factor is the coach.
"There are a lot of people out there that like Bobby Randall, and he is an easy guy to sell," Bard said. "I don't
think you can find anybody that doesn't like him. That somehow gets back to the kids, that if you go to the University of Kansas you are going to have a chance at a good experience."
Bard showed emotions when an outlook on two opponents this season were mentioned — Texas Tech and his playing career nemesis OSU. In Bard's playing career at Kansas, OSU defeated his team eight times, four in '90 and four in the '91 season. OSU also finished on top in the Big Eight both years.
"I hated those guys. We never won against them," Bard grumbled. "It still hacks me off."
As for Texas Tech his emotions hit closer to home. "My brother (Josh Bard) plays for Texas Tech. It will just be kind of a homecoming." Bard said, laughing. "It will be fun."
The Kansas baseball team will hold its first tryout meeting at 5 p.m. today at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium (south of Allen Field House). Participants must fill out tryout forms and bring a copy of their personal insurance information. Questions? Call 864-7907.
BATTERY
Continued from Page 1A
court.
"You're dealing with a behavioral pattern," Tonkovich said. "We want to be tough on the batter."
Victims now will be informed of their rights under the Victims' Rights Constitutional Amendment, including their right to be present and speak at public hearings regarding the defendant.
The prosecutor also will request that a no contact condition be
placed on the defendant's bond, preventing the defendant from seeing or speaking to the victim.
"We won't put a victim in a position to be pressured by the batterer to dron a case." Tonkovich said.
Law is pleased with the District Attorney's new policies. She said the most dangerous time for the victim is after charges are filed.
"That's when there is a higher emotional state," Law said. "Victims should have rights, they've been neglected for too long."
FOOD
Continued from Page 1A
Enviros tried to get KU cafeterias to change from plastic foam to paper several years ago, but no change occurred.
"We need to pursue that issue further," he said. "Once the Student Advisory Committee is formed, we can look at what needs to be done."
The Student Advisory Committee will be formed this semester to discuss environmental issues that students are concerned about.
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Meet A Professor Program for New KU Students.
Make a connection with a faculty member Wednesday,August 28 6pm. Meet one of KU's professors in the comfort of your own living group.
Sponsored by the Office of New Student Orientation, the Department of Housing and the Inner Fraternity Council and Panhellenic. Contact the New Student Orientation at 45 Strong Hall or call Kami Thomas at 864-4560 for further information.
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8
Tuesday, August 27, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PRO BASEBALL
American League
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
W L Pct. GB
New York 74 55 574 —
Baltimore 69 61 531 5½
Boston 66 65 504 9
Toronto 62 70 470 13½
Detroit 47 84 359 12
W L Pct. GB
Cleveland 78 53 .595 —
Chicago 70 63 .526 9
Minnesota 65 66 .496 13
Milwaukee 63 69 .477 15½
Kansas City 59 73 .477 15½
Sunday's Games
W W L Pct. GB
Texas 75 66 .573
Seattle 66 69 .512 0
Oakland 63 71 .470 13½
California 61 69 .470 13½
Boston 8, Seattle 5
Cleveland 8, Milwaukee 5
California 13, Baltimore 0
Oakland 6, New York 4
Texas 13, Minnesota 2
Detroit 7, Kansas City 4
Chicago 10, Toronto 9, 10 innings
Monday's Games Late Games Not Included
Cleveland 2, Detroit 1
Toronto 5, Minnesota 3
Milwaukee 3, Chicago 2
Baltimore 12, Oakland 11, 10 innings
Boston at California, n)
New York at Seattle, n)
Only games scheduled
Cleveland Martinez 9-6) at Detroit J. Thompson 1-2) 6:05 p.m.
Oakland Preto 4-5) at Baltimore Wells 9-12),
6:35 p.m.
Minnesota Aldred 5-7) at Toronto Hanson 11-
15). 6:35 p.m.
Milwaukee VanGemond 2-3) at Chicago Fernandez 12-Bl. 7:05 m.
Texas Burkett 2-0) at Kansas City Haney 9-12), 7:05 p.m.
Boston Clemens 7-11) at California Finder 12-12.
120°.9'0"m.nm.
Wednesday's Games
New York Rogers 10-7) at Seattle Moyer 10-2)
NY Rangers 10-6) at Seattle Moyer 10-2)
Wednesday's Games
1. 5pm Milwaukee at Chicago, 3:45pm Oakland at Baltimore, 2:05pm Minnesota at Toronto, 6:35pm Texas at Kansas City, 7:05pm Boston at California, 9:35pm New York at Seattle, 9:35pm
AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS
RALomar Bal 123 480 113 166 .346
Motor Min 131 537 118 162 .339
EMartinez Sea 108 392 97 132 .337
Greer Tex 123 487 90 163 .335
Cirilio Mil 128 488 82 150 .335
JGonzalez Text 104 413 75 137 .332
McGwire Oak 103 337 137 110 .326
McGwire, Oakland, 44; Belle, Cleveland, 41;
Griffey Jr, Seattle, 40; J Gonzalez, Texas, 38;
By Anderson, Baltimore, 38; MVaughn, Boston,
37; Bulner, Seattle, 36.
Pitching 15 Decisions)
Belle, Cleveland, 127; RPalmeir, Baltimore, 119; J Gonzalez, Texas, 118; MVaughn, Boston, 117; Bunheu, Seattle, 116; Griffen Jr, Guajete, Guajete, Seattle, 106; Ethanes Ching, 106
Nagy, Cleveland, 13-4, 7-65; Pettitte, New York, 18-7, 2-70; Hentgen, Toronto, 16-7, 6-98; Gooden, New York, 11-5, 687; Mussina, Baltimore, 17-8, 680; Hitchcock, Seattle, 12-6, 687; Pavilk, Texas, 14-7, 667; Baskie, California, 12-6, 687; Alvarez, Chicago, 14-7, 667; Kill, Texas, 14-7, 667.
NL Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Atlanta | 81 | 48 | .628 | — |
| Montreal | 70 | 59 | .543 | 11 |
| Florida | 61 | 70 | .466 | 21 |
| New York | 59 | 72 | .450 | 23 |
| Philadelphia | 59 | 73 | .402 | 29½ |
Central Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Houston | 70 | 62 | .530 | — |
| St. Louis | 69 | 62 | .527 | ½ |
| Chicago | 64 | 64 | .507 | 4 |
| Cincinnati | 64 | 65 | .496 | 4 1/2 |
| Pittsburgh | 55 | 75 | .423 | 14 |
West Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Diego | 70 | 60 | .545 | 1 |
| Los Angeles | 70 | 60 | .538 | 1 |
| Colorado | 68 | 63 | .519 | 3½ |
| San Francisco | 56 | 73 | .434 | 1¼ |
Chicago 3, Atlanta 2
Colorado 13, Pittsburgh 9
Los Angeles 6, New York 5
San Diego 11, Philadelphia 2
San Francisco 7, Montreal 2
Oklahoma City 8
Houston 4, Louis 1
Monday's Games
Love cannot be missed
San Francisco 1, Philadelphia 0
St. Louis 3, Houston 2
TV
miladipaldo M.Williams 4-12) at San Francisco
Los Angeles Valdes 11-7) at Montreal Fassero
13-7). 6:35 p.m.
13-7), 6:35 p.m.
Atlanta Smoltz 20-6) at Pittsburgh Neagle 13-
6), 6:35 p.m.
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Tuesday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackouts);
SPORTS WATCH
TUESDAY, AUGUST 27
USA — Tennis, U.S. Open Tennis Championships, men's and women's opening rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
TBS — Major League Baseball Atlanta at Pittsburgh
USA — Tennis, U.S. Open Tennis Championships, men's and women's opening rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
11-7). 6:40 p.m.
Florida Hutton 1-1) at St. Louis Morgan 4-7
7:05 p.m.
Chicago Castillo 6-14 at Houston Darwin 9-10,
7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati Smiley 11-10) at Colorado Reynose
8.65, 8.50
Dineland at Colorado, 2:05 p.m.
Los Angeles at Montreal, 8:35 p.m.
Miami at Pittsburgh, 8:35 p.m.
San Diego at New York, 6:40 p.
Florida at St. Louis, 7:05 p.
Chicago at Houston, 7:05 p.
Philadelphia at San Francisco, 9:35 p.
BATTING -- E-Young, Colorado; 346; Piazza,
Los Angeles, 343; Burks, Colorado; 343;
Grace, Chicago; 340; Lohnson, New York,
Atlanta; 338; McNabb, Jones,
Atlanta; 316; Richie Crawford, 316.
NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS
RBI--Garlragga, Colorado; 121; Bichette,
Colorado; 131; Burks, Colorado; 114; Bonds,
San Francisco; 107; D Bell, Houston; 102;
Glikey, New York; 102; Bagwell, Houston;
101; Sheffield, Florida; 101; Caminiti, San Diego,
101
San Diego Tewksbury 10-8) at New York Jones
HOME RUNS—Sosa, Chicago; 40; Hundley,
New York, 38; Bairagraq, Colorado; 38;
Sheffield, Florida; 36; Burks, Colorado; 36;
Bonds, San Francisco; 35; Castilla, Colorado;
34.
PITCHING 15 Decisions—Smoltz, Atlanta,
20-6, 769, 2.90; Reynolds, Houston, 16-
727, 3.32; Neagle, Pittsburgh, 13-6, 684, 3.09;
Gardner, San Francisco, 10-5, 687, 4.46;
Fassero, Montreal, 13-7, 650, 2.78; Glavine,
Athens, 13-7, 650, 2.81; Hamilton, San Diego,
12-7, 632, 4.23.
STRIKEONS—Smoltz, Atlanta, 222; Nomar Los Angeles, 189; Fassero, Montreal, 160; J.Martinez, Montreal, 171; Kile, Houston, 171; Reynolds, Hounton, 168; Alceler, Florida, 164
Major League Soccer
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
Eastern Conference
PRO SOCCER
W L SOW Pts GF GA
x-Tampa Bay 14 12 10 62 57
D.C. 12 14 1 1 73 58
NY-NJ 9 13 1 3 30 38
New England 7 13 6 27 35 46
Columbus 7 16 4 25 46 58
W L SOW Pts GF GA
Dallas 12 11 40 45 68
Kansas City 12 13 4 40 58 66
Los Angeles 12 10 3 39 49 39
San Jose 11 13 2 35 41 41
Colorado 9 18 1 28 41 51
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for shootout win and two points for loss.
D.C. 3, Tampa Bay 0
San Jose 1, Colorado 0
Dallas 3, Los Angeles 2
Sunday's Games
Anhiza at Indianaapolis, 12 p.m.
Attanta at Carolina, 12 p.m.
Cincinnati at St. Louis, 12 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 12 p.m.
Kansas City at Houston, 12 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore, 12 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 12 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 3 p.m.
Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 3 p.m.
New England at Miami, 3 p.m.
New Orleans at San Francisco, 3 p.m.
New York Jets at Denver, 3 p.
Seattle at San Diego, 3 p.
Buffalo at New York Giants, 7 p.
Dallas at Chicago, 8 p.m.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Top 25 Football Schedule
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
Thursday, Aug. 29
Ingham. Ala.. 3p.m
No. 2 Tennessee vs. UNLV, 6 p.m.
p.m.
No. 4 Florida vs. SW Louisiana, 5 p.m.
No. 5 Colorado vs. Washington State, 2:30
No. 8 Texas vs. Missouri, 6 p.m.
No. 11 Miami at Memphis, 12:30 p.m.
No. 12 Michigan vs. Illinois, 2:30 p.m.
No. 12 Alabama vs. Illinois, 4:30 p.m.
No. 21 Kansas State vs. Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m.
No. 19 Brigham Young vs. Arkansas State, 8 p.m.
U.S. Open Results
No. 8 Texas vs. Missouri. 6 p.m.
Singles
First Round
Sergi Bruguera, Spain, def. Kris Goossens,
Belgium, 6-2, 6-0, 7-6 (7-1).
Fredricar Viltou, France, def. Ramon Delgado,
Parauacu, 6-4, 6-4, 7-6(3).
Michael Stich, Germany, def. Tommy Haas,
Germany, 6-3, 6-1, 6-1, 7-5
Jeff Tarango, Manhattan Beach, Calif., def.
Alex Radulescu, Germany, 6-7-5-7), 6-4, 6-1, 3-
1, retired.
Carios Moysi, Spain, def. Kush Humphries,
Tampa, Fla.-6, 1-4, 7-3-7, 6-7-1, 6-0, 6-4,
magnus Gustafsson, Sweden, def. Carlos Costa, Spain, 7-5, 4-6, 7-6-4), 6-3.
Kenneth Carlsen, Denmark, def. Patrick Rafter. Australia. 7-6(7-9), 6-3, 7-6(8)
Anaud Boescht, France, def. Nicolas Pererea, Venezuela, 7-6 (7-4-1), 6-4, 7-5.
Jason Stottenberg, Australia, def. Stefano Pescosilo, Italy, 7-5, 6-4, 6-1.
Pacific Palisades, Calif., 6-14, 2-6, 4-4, 6-
Alberto Bastarenale, Spain, def. Cacil Mamitl
Chi. Akademie, def., Chuck Adams,
Dirk Dier, Germany, def.
Aubeno Berenagilde, Spain, del. Ceci Mamit,
Los Angeles, 6-1, 8-4, 6-0.
Michael Chang 2), Henderson, New. def.
Jaina Oncins, Brazil, 3-1, 6-1, 6-0, 7-6-8).
Jan SIemierink, Netherlands, def. Carl-Uwe Steeb, Germany, 4-6, 8-1, 7-8, 7-4, 6-4
No. 13 Alabama vs. Bowling Green at Birm
Neville Godwin, South Africa, def. Tomas Carr-
houn, Spain, 6.4, 6.2, 8.6, 8.1
Leander Paes, India, def. Marcos Ondruska,
South Africa, 7-6 (3), 7-2, 6-7, 5-
Jim Grabb, Tucson, Ariz, def. Sandon Stollie,
Australia, 6-2, 6-2, 6-1
David Wheaton, Lake Minnetonka, minn., def.
Kevin Kim, Fullerton, Culver, 6-3, 6-2, 6-3.
Andre Agassi (6), Las Vegas, def. Mauricio Hadad, Cuba, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2.
Women Singles First Round
Marina Hingis 16, Switzerland, def. Angeles Montello, Spain 6,1-6,0
Montello, Spain, 6-1, 6-0.
Brenda Schultz-Cmaryth 13, Netherlands,
Brenda Schultz-McCarthy (13), Netherlands,
def. Nana Miyagi, 6-1, 1-4-6
Agnie-Gaillé Stod, France, den. Janaetra Husoraov, Slovakia, 6-4, 6-4.
Husova, Slovakia, 6-4-6.
Aleksaandra Olsza, Poland, def. Maggie
Barbara Schett, Austria, def. Sabine Appelm,
Belgium, 1-6, 4-6, 4-4
6-10, def. 9-12
Asa Carlsson, Sweden, def. Gloria Pizzihini,
falk, 3-9, 6-11, 7-5
Maria Jose Gaidano, Argentina, def. Melanie
Schultz,琴尔·B., 6-0.
Cristina Torena-Valero, Spain, def. Sabine Hack, Germany, 2-6, 6-4, 6-2.
4-6, 8-10.
Irina Spital, Romania, def. Petra Begerow,
Germany; 6-9.
Henrietta Nagova, Slovakia, def. Gala León García, Spain, 6-1, 4-6, 3-8.
Isei Inorochtegai, Argentina, def. Mag-
alena gryzaBwpikola, Poland, 4-6, 6-4, 6-1
Amanda Coelzer, South Africa, def. Anke
Hüger 61, Germany, 2-6, 2-6
Heiena Sukova, Czech Republic, def. Yone Kamiyo, Japan, 6-2, 6-3.
*Babara Rithir, Germany, def. Katanna Stu-
brano, Brandt Bridgeman,飞, def. Andre
Brandon, Brandt Bridgeman,飞, def. Andre
Kristina Brandi, Bradenton, Fla., def. Andrea Glass, Germany, 6-2, 6-3.
Debbie Graham, Tampa, Fla., def. Stephanie Deville, Belgium, 6-4, 2-1
*Anna Kournikova, Russia, def. Ludmila Richterova, Czech Republic, 7-6(4-1), 6-3.*
{RhchrtvO, 2czche Hebepbl, 7* 7/4 7), 6'-3
Daily Rundantiany, Madagascar. del. Elena
Makaraov, Russia, 6-3, 1-6, 7-5.
Linda Winda, Haworth Woods, III, def. Sung.
Shi-Ting Wang, Taiwan, def. Corina Moraru,
6a Patron, Fla., 6-7, 5-7, 6-2
Alexandra Fusai, France, def, Jill Crayable,
East Greenwich, R.1, 6-1, 2-7-5.
Brabath#Witch, KX, 6:1, 2-6; 7-r,
Barbara Paulus 14), Austria, def. Jing Qian-
c
f, China 6-2, 6-1- 1
Laurence Courtois, Belgium, def. Flora Per-
Laurence Courtois, Belgium, def. Flora Perfetti, Italy; 6-4, 7-6, 3-6, 2-1
Jane Chi, Meridian, Idaho, def, Maria Antoria Sánchez Loren, Spain, 6-4, 1-6-8, 3-
Naoko Kijimuta, Japan, def. Tatyana Jecemica, Yugoslavia, 6-3, 6-2
Nathale Dechy, France, def. Christina Singer,
Germany, 6-4, 6-0.
Els Cailens, Belgium, def. Nicole Bradtke,
Australia, 7-6-17, 7-6-9).
Mala Osterol, Canal Winchester, Ohio, def.
Mana Endo, Japan, 6-2, 6-2.
Sarah Pitkowski, France, def. Meghann
Bachtinowitz, Scotland, Asia, 8.2.2.0
Al Sugiyama, Japan, def. Jana Kandarr, Germany, 6-2, 6-1.
Nathalie Baudonne, Italy, defy. Jolene Watanene. La Puente, Calif., 6-4-4-6-7-8-6)
Gabriela Sabatinis 15), Argentina, def. Patricia Hy-Boulais, Canada, 6-1, 6-1.
Up to $40 this week Donating your life saving blood please
College Just 20 miles south on Iowa Street (US 59)
ENROLL NOW!
Welcome Back Earn $20 Today
√
Neesucket NC
Community College
New donors or anyone who has not donated since May 1st '96
Ottawa Branch Campus
226 Beech Street in Ottawa
242-2067
NABI
Low Tuition --
Only $36.00 per credit hour
Mon. thru Fri
9:00-6:30 p.m.
call today 749-5750
816 W.24th Suite B
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Day and evening classes
Plus, our classes transfer to KU!
We've got English, Algebra, Psych - All of the required core courses
WE ACCEPT CREDIT CARDS!
invites you to an informational meeting Wednesday, August 28th at 8:30 p.m. in the 2nd floor lobby at Robinson. If you desire to play fun, competitive volleyball then come find out more about us.
KUWomen's Volleyball Club
If you have any questions feel free to call Libby at 841-6376.
I
VOLLEYBALL
100s Announcements
Classified Directory
男 女
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
114 announcements
118 Entertainers
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
Classified Policy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
The Kansas will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons in that is violation of University of Kansas regulation on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, national origin, disability, sexual orientation or discrimination based
正
Poster Sale. Bigest and best selection. Choose from over 200 different images, ROCK, FINE ART, KIDS, STAR WARS, STAR WARS, SCENIC LANDSCAPES, PERSONAL-ALTIES (Brad Pitt, Sandra Bullock, Einstein, Val Kilmer, Pam Anderson, and many others), MUSIC (Beatles, Adam Adams, and others). MOST IMAGES 46, 47, and 88 each. See us at $8 UNION GALLERY. LEVEL 4 on MON AUG. 13TH TRIHI FRUIT AUG. 30TH. The hours are 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday thrd Friday. Saturday 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday 12 Noon-4 p.m. sponsored by SAU
Open 24 hours everyday. Connect Plaza Launfordat, 3028 Iowa St. Clean and air conditioned.
105 Personals
HEALTH
Caring For KU Watkins Since 1906
CENTER
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
New Hours
Monday - Friday 8-8
Saturday8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
Buy, Sell and Trade in the Classifieds.
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main
Lobby, Kansas Union.
864-9500
Caring People Needed Headquarters Counseling Center looking for volunteers. Interested? Informational meeting Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont Questions? 814-2345
FREE FINANCIAL AID. Over $4 Billion in public and private school grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, incor, e or f. Scholarships include Student Financial Services 1-800-235-6450 or F75752.
NEED A RIDER/REDEE? Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
120 Announcements
***FREE****
LOSE WEIGHT FOR FREE!™
CALL NOW 913-814-7416
NEED TO A TYPE OF A* PAPER? Good old-fashioned, electronic typewriter for student use (you're not going to need one).
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!
Grants and Scholarships
avail. from sponsors!
No repayments ever!
$$$ Cash for College $$$
For info, 1-800-257-3834
VCWS volunteer training information session SEP 12.
7.9 p.m. at the Lawrence Public Library. For more info:
http://vcws.library.org/info/college.html
15TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
AND
SNOWBOARD
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2-20, 1997 • 4, 5, 6 OR 7 HOURS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREW
$167
AFFORDABLE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND DESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
Ski our web site at http://www.sunchase.com
NOBODY DOES SKI BREAKS BETTER!
120 Announcements
YOUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS, III PREPARED FOR EXAMS
Using your notes to review, predicting exam questions, preparing for different types of tests.
Wed, August 28, 7:00-8:30 pm
330 Strong
Lost Cat
Male, approve. I yr old. Large black fur with white cheek and no collar. No heat damage held mid-day in Kih and no chill. Mesh sleeve.
Men and Women
200s Employment
Lipor store clerk. 1-435 & Quivra. Top pay. Part-time.
913-490-9006.
205 Help Wanted
Long John Silver's. Help needed. All shifts available.
Call 841-2900.
Gymnastics teacher needed at Starstruck Dance Center.
845-3055.
Child care, part-time, 11:30-1:40 M-F. Call Sunshine
Acres Preschool at 842-2232.
Part-time help needed in busy doctor's office. Morning preferred. Q749-1130.
205 Help Wanted
Christian Daycare needs enthusiastic employees for MWP PT 07. Th. Must be highly reliable and stable. Good pay. 842-2084.
Babysitter needed Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5
Car a must. Pay negotiable.
865-2670 evenings.
Auto Plaza Carwash now accepting applications for all positions. Cashier, detailer, service order writer. Apply at 2828 Four Wheel Drive.
Now hiring cooks, utilities hot and cold prep. No experience necessary, will train. Apply in person. Sirtloin培养 1015 Iowa
Hiring students to contact alumni. Monday-Thursday 8:45-10am. Call the Shannon Stone at the KU Office: 618-294-7325.
Biring all position! A.M.M.P. - Reubil hours.
Outgoing personalities wanted. Apply within
one week.
CALL: (800) 254-1234
Lawn care company seeking hard working individual for mowing crew *Pwflexible hours* 843-5200
Energetic, responsible person to care for our 4-year-old in our home. MWF 9-12 am, $6.00/hour. Call Joe or Barb at 832-8015.
Golf course work, flexible hours, FREE GOLF. Apply at
400-823-7689, Lawrence Country Club.
www.lawrencecountryclub.com
date or female receptionist wanted.
must be able to MWV all day. No phone calls please.
Provide up-to-date information.
Classroom Assistant needed at Rainier Montessori School. Montessori exp. pref. *Will train.* $1250/mo.
Late afternoon assistant. 3:15-5:30 M-F $6.25/hr.
Transp. req. Call 843-6800
Adams Alhami Center/Learned Club has openings for PT dishwashers. Above min. wage, meals & uniforms provided. Apply in person at the Adams Alhami Center 1206 Oread Ave.
205 Help Wanted
Teacher aides needed: 7-2 or 1-6 M-F. Apply at *Children's Learning Center* 205 N. Michigan, EOE
Adams Alumna Center/Learned Club has openings for party banquet stages. Some daytime and weekend availability preferred. Apply in person at the Adams Alumna Center 1266 Road Ave.
Akumi Abunai CenterLeader Club has openings for full-time banquet guest cooks, includes Apply in the booking form.
Aerobics Instructors
Artist Model-needed(female) 18 or older, level-headed, good work for the right person, serious calls on please. 843-427 after 4, for details.inquiry
Couple seek person(s) for dayscare of our 2-year-old daughter in our home. On bus route, 234 and Kasdot. All hours available. Prefer KT' students, 739-0045.
Evenings
Immune Lutheran Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning and afternoon teacher's aides. Experience with children. Apply 2104 West 15th Street.
Needled: Relatable. Non-Snookie Sister with car and ref-
ferences to babysit two girls, 8 and 11, on most Mornings
5-5pm and Wednesdays 4-10 pm. $5 per hour. Call,
between 4-10am at 805-5903.
SPRING BREAK 97 EARN'CASH
BOOK FAST 'HIGHEST COMMISSIONS' TRAVEL
FREE ON-LINE 13 SALESMES! CALL FOR FREE
INFOJNUSPLASH 1-800-426-7710
Attention Students
Lawrence Bus Co is hiring SAFERIDE drivers for the semester.
Must be 21 and have clean driving record
Contact Cathy at a82-4544
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 27,1996
9
205 Help Wanted
Now hire cooks, utilizes hot and cold noe. No experience necessary, will train. App in person. Shriftin
Journalism Student! Great part time job opportunity.
Internationally known news agency needs
you to work as a Journalist. Send resume
to: HR@newspaper.net.
Adams Alumini CenterLearn Club has openings for fine dining, line sate cookie. Some exp. need, 5 day full-time pos. with benefits, both AM & PM admits. Apply in person at the Adams Alumini Center 1266 Broad Ave.
THRIL
Therapeutic Horningstew instruction of Lawrence needs volunteers to work with people with disabilities and young children.
ATTENTION STUDENTS - Local Branch of Nat. Caf.
38 PT/PT entry level openings in Lawrence & JOCO
Fri. schedules. All majors accepted, up to
8.25.
Lab. course: JOCO office, JOCO office
(913) 861-9676, (913) 860-9600, m.n. only.
SPRING BREAK 197- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH, GO FREE. STS is hiring CAMPUS ESPEG/RPG ORGANIZERS to promote trips to Canemba, Jamaica. Sts will be responsible for onsite job application to America's #1 Student Tour Operator.
$4.85 hr., required drivers license & go-driving record, car provided. Ability to moderate heavy lifters.
Part-time courier position available, M-F 8-12
Call Heather Johnston at the KU Endowment Association, 852-7305.
Part-time opening for general office work plus showing apartments and answering phones. 10-20 weekday hours available. Must be Kansas resident enrolled in KU at least halfway, have a GPA of 2.0 and major in business, accounting, or related field. $4,000/hour. 841-5797
Phone Center Reqs wanted for growing inbound/outbound call center. FT & PT skills, 6am-12pm. Must have nice phone voice, be detailed oriented, computer skills fly, difficulty apply. In company will accept Bachelor's degree.
GRAPHIC ARTS
Customer Service. Need one self-motivated, sharp-dressing, energetic individual with good communication skills. Good driving record, manual训, experi- mence. Provide transportation in required Your Face Graphics 235 Pondessaon
JON'S NOTES
Notakenets need for Econ 140, Bio 141, Geol 101, 302, and Aer 191. Must have completed this class or higher with an A and have a B+ GPA. Earn $10-15 per semester. Students must be enrolled in Bookstore, 2nd floor, Kansas Student Union.
Shipping position open. Starting ASAP 64 per hour. 20
hrs per week. Aftermous AP Mast. Must have own运
portation. Import airlines. Mast own con-
transportation. Send letter to: EEL, PO Box
1904, Lawrence KS 65044.
Immediate Opening for Conference Assistant with Work-Study eligibility. MS Word and Excel 6.0 knowledge along with strong oral and written competence. Skills include the ability to work as desired. Flexible work schedule not to exceed workweek hour maximum. Fax or resume to ASK Association PO Box 385 889莱斯 KS 60445. Fax 91-841-841.
CARING PFOPLE NEEDED
Headquarters Counseling Center looking for volunteers. Interested? I, Meet with counselors. Public Library, 70/Vermont Questions? Call 814-2345
Kitchen staff need at Mass St. Dell and Buffalo Bald's Smokehouse Food prep and line cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. Starts at $5.50 an hour up to $7.44 an hour after 8 months which offer profit-sharing benefits. Staff are required to work with Company business office, 5am to 1pm, Mon. frid. Fri. to 719 Mass (Uptown above Smokehouse)
KU Athletic Sales Clerk, The Kansas and Burge Union, part time, 6/04. Would work 2-3 hours prior to KU football game time and 1-2 hours after game - Aug.20 (evening game), Oct 12, 19. Nov. 9, 10. Will pay in cash Monday following employment. Must have retail sales experience, verifiable record of cash handling able to stand for long periods. Apply Kansas and Burge International Office, Level 5, 18th and Oceans A/ZEO
Brookside Learning Center is hiring part-time teaching assistants. Opportunities include experience in model early intervention program, teaching in an inclusive classroom setting, and working with a special population of children who are at-risk for developmental delays, have identified disabilities, as well as typically developing children. Complete applications to 200 M.L. AA/OE. For more information call 855-0022-AA/OE.
MICROSOFT,NETSCAPE,YAHOO
THE COACH'S EDGE
Only one of these nationally known companies is still operating out of the basement. Only one is located in lawrence. Only one is looking for interns seeking a job. TV, needs coaches, graphics, programs, PR, marketing. HTML. Enthusiasm only requirement. Call George or Brends at 843-1793.
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS
$$**Work from home$$**
Eliminate your long distance phone bill and earn a substantial income!
Only for students in need.
For more information, call
1-800-370-1451
Yacht Club Now hiring Cooks Day/Weekend Shifts Apply at 930 Wisconsin
Cottwood, Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their Restful Classes. You may be required to spend two or three hours. Some positions may require sleep overs. College coursework or related experience is helpful but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MIST. Excellent benefits. Household hourly pay $0.60 per hour. Please apply at Cottwood, Inc. 2810 W. St. E.O.E.
Student Hourly: Duties include data entry and analysis, filing & org data; copying, collating, errands; library research; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Wliamilarity w/Macintosh computers using Win95/WinXP or Macintosh 10-15 hwrk; organizational and filing skills. KU student; ability to work independently and efficiently. Deadline: 0002200. Salary: 45.25K. Up apply on Learning on. 3061 Dole Center, EOEAA employee.
STUDENT RECEPTIONIST
West campus book publisher seeks student *t*
answer phones, book process, mail handle in-
sales, etc. Must be able to work 3-8hrs/day, morn-
ing to afternoon. Must have MS Office 2007 or
.0/90. Far会 by 2510 W.151st (ph. 864-4154), to complete application. Deadline for application is
5.mw. Wed. / 9/26. an EEO/AA employer.
MICROCOMPUTER SOFTWARE SUPPORT - Student position: $7.30 per hour; 20 hours per week. Deadline: September 13th. Required Qualifications: Enrollment in at least six credit hours at KU, working on microcomputer applications, excellent oral and written communication skills, and ability to complete assigned tasks with a minimum of supervision. Preferred Qualification: Bach degree or field, some experience with training or tutoring, and at least two or more years of Course work remaining at KU. To apply, contact Card Ariel Daniels (864) 400-6840, company website, www.ku.edu/careers, or email me at 8:00 am and 5:00 pm Monday through Friday. The University of Kansas is an EO/A Employee.
<205Help Wanted
WANTED
WANTED UNITED PARCEL SERVICES is looking for
LOADERS AND UNLOADERS
* Part-time
* $8.00 hour
* 4:30 am - 5:00 pm
* 10:30 am - 3:00 pm
* Company paid benefits
* Mon-Friday (No weekends)
CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-477-3388
to schedule an interview
PART-TIME POSITIONS CITY OF LAWRENCE
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN. Deadline: 8/06/94.
Salary $45.50/7-hour. 20hrs per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software products. Participate in system testing & applications library maintenance. Perform quality assurance in designing and writing programs in at least 2 programming languages, experience in software testing, experience in database programming and/or management. Complete job description available. To apply, visit www.systemtesting.com or email program example to Ann Rai, Computer Center, University of Kansas. EOAA EMLOYEE
METER READER-Reading water meters & accurate recording of amounts of water consumed. HS GradED. Possess valid driver license & provide own vehicle. 88.17.412.12/h, 20hrs.wk. flexible
TELEPHONE OPERATOR HSCR Grad/Grad and some general office experience. 7:05-01:40 hrs./Noon-6pm
Complete application by 09/46 at Admits, City,
City, 8th & Massachusetts, Lawrence, 8044
8044 RD 132
Tuition needed for HDPL Math, Phas, Chem, Bum, Bio, upper level pge and so, for the fall semester of 69. Interested applicants must have at least 15 hours of course work in subject areas in which they will tutor. Students who wish to enroll in KUAC's Hale Achievement Center, 230 Athletic Complex expansion Monday than Friday 8 A.M. to P.M. For more information call: 842-7027. The University of North Carolina has an equal opportunity affirmative action employer.
KU INFO (UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER) hiring for Fall 1996. You are bright, interesting, creative, and willing to take initiative? A clever problem solver who really knows KU and the Lawrence community? You're the one. Need highly motivated student teachers who are excellent students, computer literate, great communications, interested in helping others, and have experience working with computers. Fax: 420 Kansas Union. Work study preferred. Need students who can make KU_info their primary work commitment. Deadline 5 pm, Wednesday, August 28, 1996.
Earn cash on the spot
$20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week Walk-ins welcome!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
The University of Kansas Natural History Museum is looking for undergraduate and graduate students to fill two temporary positions assisting with the PEET workshop in September. Both positions begin immediately upon completion approximately September 20, 1986. Salary up to $400 each on dependance and qualification up.
**Technical Assistant/Assist with technical set-up of workshop to include; hardware/support set-up, testing and maintenance user support. Required qualifications include working knowledge of common hardware set-up; be familiar with both PC and Mac products; be proficient in internet, software, Preferred qualifications include background in biology experience with user support. Must provide completed application, resume.
Clerical Assistant: Assist with workshop implementation and logistics to include: word processing, filing, document duplication, data archiving, required qualifications and the ability to type and produce word processing software; validate a driver's license; experience with common office functions. Preferred qualification: Microsoft Office 2007 or更高级. Meetings must provide completed application, resume.
Please contact the Natural History Museum-PETE
Workshop, Amanda Sitiesa, 062 Dyce Hall, 864-3803
FALL SEMESTER OPENINGS
♦ Local Branch of National Co. filling 36 Entry level positions in Lawrence and JCOO.
Part, full time flexible schedules
Up to $9.25
A. A.S.P. scholarships-cond. apply
BPI Building Services is looking for a dependable self-starter to supervise our evening and weekend custodial teams.
(913) 381-9676
MAD. and Assoc. and equal opportunity Co.
To apply call JOCO. office
Qualified applicants should posses leadership, training, and motivational skills along with an eye for detail.
EVENING SUPERVISOR
Approx. 25-30 hours per week, Sunday - Thursday, start times vary.
Starting wage of $7.00 per hour, on-site transportation provided.
Interested applicants should contact Mo at 842-6264.
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
205 Help Wanted
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB welcomes KU students back to town. Alvamar is THE place to work in Lawrence. Now hiring for:
Day Dining Room Server
Mallard Room Server
AM Line Cook
PM Dish Washer
AM Pro Shop Cart Help
Golf Course Maintenance
Processing Farm Item
For more information contact Malina at 842-2704 or complete application at 4120 Clinton Prk. EOE.
We are currently searching for an Academic Program Coordinator to develop and implement an academic program for the students at Naisimh Hall, a private student residence hall housing Kansas University students since 1967. The Academic Program Coordinator (APC) will work with a residence unit of 450+ students to facilitate academic progress, encourage good study skills, and invite an environment of intellectual inquiry.
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
Preferred Qualifications: Residence hall living experience. Supervisory experience. Working knowledge of educational programming. Knowledge of commercially-available computer applications.
Required Qualifications: At least one year of residential group living experience. Enrollment at KU as a graduate or upperclassmen in good standing.
Compensation: This is a half-time (20 hours per week) position which runs until the end of the academic year. All candidates must be able to commit three evenings working with hall programs per week to the position. Hourly rate is $7.65. Meals are also provided when our Cafe is open and serving.
How to Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; and a resume to Academic Programming Coordinator, c/o Nalsmith Hall Hall, KS 6800 Nalsmith Hall. A full job description will be available at the Nalsmith Hall Front Desk for interested applicants.
Application Deadline: Applications will be accepted effective August 26, 1996 until position is filled. EOE/AMFH
CUSTODIANS
BPI Building Services has immediate openings for the following custodial positions:
- Mon.-Fri. 8p.m.-11p.m.
- Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
- Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
&Mon. Thurs. 5:26
&Mon.-Thurs. 5:30p.m.-8:30p.m.
Sun. 8:30p.m-12:30p.m.
& Mon.-Thurs. 7p.m.-10p.m.
- Mon.-Fri. 6a.m.-8a.m.
- Sat. 7a.m.-11a.m.
Custodial positions are perfect part-time jobs for students and those looking for supplemental income. Approx. 15 hours per week in an independent working environment. Self-motivators should call 842-6264 or come in to apply.
A DIVISION OF BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
bpi BUILDING
939 Iowa
(Hillcrest Shopping
Center/Behind Appliance Plus)
BUILDING SERVICES
205 Help Wanted
205 Help Wanted
Student Hourly/Office Assistant, Research & Training Center on Independent Living. University of Kannas.
must be enrolled at KU minimum of 6 years. Complete Bachelor's degree in Computer Science or Biology. Bldg. KU campus. Application deadline: 8/9/00.
For questions contact Debbie McAery or Lyme Le Lse.
Has an equal opportunity affirmative action employer.
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES Herbert C. Hodes, M.D. Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake D.I.E & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-511-6
X
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 832-8484 for applications, term papers, *designations, transcriptions*, et. Satisfaction
[More info]
Beds, desks, lamps, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
Drafting Table, T. square, pens. All the good stuff for sale. Make offer. 842-129-1690 after 6pm.
ICU Special pennium 100 for $800 Pentium $60 1501931-641-0233 collect calls accepted.
Macintosh classic $100, Apple personal LaserWriter L2,
New 200, New CD-ROM 780, 749-1313.
Schwimt top model road bike. Recently reconditioned, $250 or best offer. Call 814-944-600. 8pm-1pm.
Beautiful old rectangular dining room table with four
Mission-style chairs, in good condition $300.841-28638
Schiwim top model tread bike recently recondition $250 or best offer. Call 841-0947 8pm-9pm
Bose 901 Series 6 with equalizer pedals. New in box. Transferable warranty. $150 value. Only $1100. LY100-931-5656 after 6pm.
Compact Refrigerator great condition, 2.5 cu. ft. capacity
895 331-3188
MTN BIKES! 04 Rockelooer, Shocks, Bar Ends; 223
MTRS! 65 Rockelooer, GOOD Condition; $175 Off
CITRUS! 897-415-7055
Neon Bud bowtie $75
queen waterbed $50.
843-7087
Very good Schwimn road bike. 22 1/2 inch frame. Recommended, $175. Call Mike at 842-5083 (after call).
Götzenin's Auction. Perry, KS 507-519-5195 Sale every 1 a.m., 1 1/2 am. E of Perry on Hwy. 24. Lumber, plywood, rabbits, eggs, RR ties, vehicles, household goods, furniture, tools, etc.
486 DX, 8 M RAM, 500 MB hard drive, full page Genius BW monitor, for great desk publishing, 250 MB Colorado tape backup, Win 3.1, Dos 6.2, 4500, call 841-0947 pmon 8-944 or bpm 8-4524
1985 Honda Accord LK, 2-door hatchback, has A/C,
automatic, bery. Very well maintained $2,500 - 1855. 86
340 Auto Sales
1900 HondaAccord EX 2-door, 5-speed, 102,000 miles
1900 HondaAccord EX excellent condition, 7,000 Call
to 848-760-7048
1991 MAZDA MXT 6 GT Turbo, 5-adp. 10,000 mW, pu
AC, aircrew, camFMF, spiller, mags, locks,
airman, 1-owner, main records. Excellent cond. $8500
OBJ. 842-8149.
1982 Ford Escort GT, Power steering, brakes, crank,
ac, automatic $6000 or will negotiate, 832-0025.
205 Help Wanted
360 Miscellaneous
BARN
We're open! 8 gal per customer. Your container.
As low as 20 cents per gallon with voucher.
Water Wheel Cottage, at the north end of
Mans St. Bridge, Mon-Pri. NOPM-641. 819-106.
400s Real Estate
FREE BOTTLED WATER
105 For Rent
Two rooms for rent. Close to campus. $200 per month each. Contact Joyce at 842-2238
3 and 4 dbr apt. 2, bthr. new carpet, route bus, cafee-
bain facility (half size, no pet plaques, $750
or $750)
5 seconds from KU, Bauset of house. 2 big room plus oval bath and kitchen. $280/month + 1 utilities. Call
3 bedroom, 2 bath, at Bradford Square. On KU Bus
route, cats allow. Private deck or patio. KUA1-841-6086
Available immediately completely remodeled studio apt, at Brady Apts. 1500 Tenn. Heat, water are paid. $300.00. No pets. 841-3192.
Room for rent, utilities divided by six. A/C/wash&detil $400, month $2,000, deposit 1215. House & office $399, month $2,000, deposit 1215.
Nice 2 bed room apt. 2 blocks from campus "fourplex"
rates new appliances and carpet. 4410 call 814-544-544
www.fourplex.com
Studio Apartment Near KU
2 Bedroom Mobil Home
841-6254
Utilities patch room for non-smoking females. 2 blocks South
Southern Library WD Use. Off street park.
Broadway Theatre 510-496-3700.
CLASSY SECURE 1-3 berns now available on East side of beautiful downtown Eldorn, just minutes form KU Call Charles Gruber at 766-3400 for app. $375-$560 refs & deposit.
Spacious, affordable 2 bedroom apartment w/ fireplace and dressing room, some utilities paid, 2 bedrooms.
3 bedroom 2 bath apartment with 2 balconies. Close to campus on bus route. Disheswasher, cable, laundry & pool facilities. $603 per month plus electricity. Call 832-2583.
A large, quietly remodeled 2 bedroom basement,
apt. No smoking. ND hook-up, AO. On bus route.
$835 a month. ALL UTILITIES PAID.
1603 West 2nd Terrace. Call 842-5257.
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
1&2Bedrooms
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
ASK ABOUT
FREE RENT AT
TRAILRIDGE
- NEW CARPETS
* NEW APPLIANCES
* NEW LIGHTING FIxtures
* NEWLY PAINTED WOOD CABINETS
Get all this with the same great location on the KU bus line.
Excellent studio, 1,2 or 3 BR ants, gas & water paid.
2. 3, 8 BP Townhouses with 4B carpet & carpet lamps . 845-7233 or stop by 2500 W. 8th today!
549 706 of step by
2500 W.6th today!
EHO
TRAILRIDGE
TRAILRIDGE
Kansan Ads Pay
205 Help Wanted
Customer Service
- free flight privileges for
/105 For Rent
Guest, spaceson, affordable, furnished rooms and 1 bedroom; 2 blocks to RC. Some facilities are per party.
Apartments & townnouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
We offer:
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 140 Tennis a student housing alternative, Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, occupational control. $180-$300, Mail: Calm, Mall or call 811-454-8148.
Customer Service Representative
Managed & maintained by Professionals
GRAYSTONE
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old-fashioned personalized service."
Quail Creek
AVAILABLE FOR FALL
NEW 4 BAPs at aa. 1712 Obs. 2 full bath, vathy (sink) in each BAB, all appliances. iDP, DMP & Microware. pets $0.00 per mo. Owner/Manager 841-5333 Georgette Management.
Looking for a female room quartier at a 3 bedroom apartment in Terrace. $210 per month. Call Linley (650) 857-9870 or linley@aviva.com
- free flight privileges for employees & family
* competitive salary
* safe, professional environment
AUGUST RENT FREE on our 3 BR TOWNHOMES
Roommate wanted MF • $188 a month plus 1/4伙业.
Roommate right off courtline. Large house
office. Please contact us.
Apartments that fit your lifestyle
Professional seeking Faculty or Graduate student to share 280 sq. ft. De垢 Home Non-Smoking, Clean, Responsible. $40 per month, utilities included. Call 918-383-3456.
or
FREE USE FOR ONE YEAR OF WASHER & DRYER
Need F to share nice 2 bdrm house ASP, WD, int, new,
Central Airflow, quiet area. Must love cats! Prefer 25 yrs.
+ NS. $22.50/month. + U2 util. + dep. Sublease three
May. Heather 841-5038.
male house man to rent in East Lawrence home $250 includes utilities. Call 842-7741. Non smoke only.
Renter wanted. Quiet, non-smoking. New home, near campus. Own bedroom bathroom with shower: $350 + split phone and utilities. Call James after 5 at 217-222-4024.
Grad student wanted, 5-minute to KI, '741LA, $260 per room & 30-hour spacious house for mother & daughter plus ACE. $800-$1,200.
- many excellent benefits
... with Vanguard Airlines' dynamic expansion into more cities, our staff continues to grow. Here at Vanguard Reservations, our advancement potential can put your career on the fast track to upward mobility. If you are positive minded, with excellent customer service and moderate typing skills, we would like to hear from you.
2 gours, girl, and a dog looking for a roommate. Rent
a car with a full bed plus utilities. Near bus route:
463-8511 or 463-8510.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1102
required. Apply in person at:
2301 W. 23rd St., Suite 206,
Lawrence, KS or call 843-7879.
Need a home? Two females seeking one roommates for 4 bedroom/2 bath with washer and dryer. $215 per month. Walking distance to campus. Call 331-2075.
E30 Roommate Wanted
At Vanguard Reservations there is only one way to go. Up.
Need M/F to share nine 2 BR house with female roommate Lg bathroom, PF, gargage, d/w dishwasher, big yard. Npt pets please. location is W. Lawrence huren & Harvard X-3680 Northwest. No deposit. Sept. rent. Call Lana 825-2553.
205 Help Wanted
We have immediate part-time openings. Must be available to work morning shifts. Three week training required. Apply in person at: 2301 W. 23rd St., Suite 206, 5480 Broadway, New York, NY 10024. 643-8729
V
VANGUARD RESERVATIONS
An Equal Opportunity Employer
There's No Place Like Home.
Meet Carlee. She lives at
Career Growth Potential...Excellent Opportunity for Students and New Graduates in Social Services!
Join CLO' as we continue to expand services for adults with disabilities. We are currently seeking full and part-time teaching counselors to work weekend and evening hours. We'll train you in the internationally-known Teaching Family Model (Prefer course-work in behavioral sciences and/or experience with persons with disabilities.)
Meet Carlee. She lives at one of Community Living Opportunities' group homes and also works within CLO's horticultural program. Creating new possibilities for persons with disabilities is what CLO is all about.
FT and PT Eve, Day & Wnd. positions
♦ PT Wknd position scholarship
♦ FT Wknd position wage differential
♦ Great benefits, competitive salaries
♦ Flexible, autonomous work
Applications are accepted and screening interviews held on
- Lawrence & Overland Park work locations
Tuesdays, 12p-4p & Thursdays 9a-1p, or send cover letter and resume to CLC, Mollie Kohn, 6900 W. 80th, Overland Park, KS 66204 or
CLO, Stacy Wright, 2113 Delaware, Lawrence, KS 66046.
Or...come see us on campus! We'll be there Monday (20th)
and Tuesday (27th) in front of the KANSAS UNION EOE.
SHE'S A FINALIST
The NCAA announced yesterday that former Kansas track standout KRISTI KLOSTER has been chosen from 51 state winners as one of ten finalists for its 1996 NCAA Woman of the Year award. This honor recognizes outstanding
10
female student-athletes who have excelled in academics, athletics and community leadership. The award will be announced Oct. 6, 1996, in Kansas City, Mo.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
KANSAS BASEBALL TRYOUTS UPDATE
THE KANSAS BASEBALL TEAM will be holding its first tryout meeting this at 5 p.m. today. The meeting will take place at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium (south of Allen Fieldhouse). Partic-
pants will need complete a tryout form and bring a copy of their personal insurance information.
TUESDAY AUGUST 27 1996
GREEN GETS THE AX
DALLAS GREEN was fired yesterday as manager of the New York Mets. Although New York began this season with the hopes of contending for a playoff spot, the Mets, plagued by injuries, were unable to live up to their expectations.
"Since spring training, we haven't done as well as we anticipated," Mets general
manager Joe Mcllvaine
ets
PAGE 10
Green will be replaced by former Texas skipper Bobby Valentine.
Ex-cheerleader jumps at new job opportunity Coaching job lets Heidi Hein stay active with KU's spirit squad, see her ideas for the squad in motion
By Kerry Hillard
Kansan sports writer
Moving from center stage to sideline has not stiffed HeidiHein.
A former KU cheerleader, Hein no longer leads the crowd in chants or dances to the fight song. Instead, she coaches the squad.
Just nung up my pompons and that was it," Hein said. After cheering for three years at two different schools, Hein, Dallas senior, said she was ready for a change. Her opportunity came when cheerleading coach Dave Barnum left the University during the summer to pursue his doctorate.
Hein has worked for this opportunity for many year$ ^{a}$
She began her cheering career at her Dallas junior high school. Her junior high coach Scott Lamontagne would lead her to cheering for Division I schools.
He took her to watch the Kansas squad perform at the National Cheerleading Association competition and to a basketball game against Kansas State, Hein decided to come to Kansas.
After being a KU cheerleader for two years, Hein transferred to the University of Louisville. One year in Kentucky was enough and it was back to Kansas.
Back in the land of the Jayhawks, Hein took a break from cheering.
However, she could not squelch her passion for long. And passion is how the spirit squad advisor Elaine Brady described Hein's cheering.
"When your eyes would center in on one cheerleader, your eyes would center in on Heidi," Brady said. "It's not just because she's darling, it's because you could just see that extra energy and charisma."
Brady said that Hein's passion and experience with the Kansas squad landed her the coaching position that she will share with Janie Kobett.
"My best coaches have been kids that have come out of the program," Brady said. "They know the program and they know what our priorities are."
Hein is happy to continue with the KU spirit squad, she said.
"I love the sport and cheering and the whole shabang. Hein said." "I love the whole effect."
though hein is no longer cheering, she still is a part of the effect. Hein said that as a coach, she could see her ideas put into motion.
Coaching is also another step in the right direction for Hein and her future. After graduation, Hein hopes to pursue a career in special events management.
Although Hein is taking some big steps, she said that her transition from cheerleader to coach had been smooth. Laurie Holmes, Memphis, Tenn., junior and Kansas cheerleader, agrees.
Holmes said even though Hein now is on the sideline, Hein had not lost her passion for the sport.
"She takes all the enthusiasm that she would have cheering and put it on the sideline," Holmes said.
Ostertagtees off for charity
The Big O comes home to sponsor golf tourney for lung association
y Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
Greg Ostertag doesn't view himself as a hero, but the man known as the "Big O" got a hero's welcome yesterday.
The former Kansas center, who plays for the NBA's Utah Jazz, was host of the Greg Ostertag Invitational Golf tournament at Alvamar Country Club, 1809 Crossgate. Tournament proceeds will benefit the American Lung Association.
"They called me up and asked me to do it, because I have asthma," Ostertag said. "This will go to kids in Northeast Kansas."
About 120 golfers turned out to play in the event, including Kansas coach Roy Williams and senior Jayhawk guard Jacque Vaughn. Former Kansas player Mike Maddox and Kansas assistant basketball coaches Matt Doherty, Joe Hollday and Neil Dougherty also played in the Invitational.
Maddox, who was a member of the 1988 Jayhawk national championship team, also was part of the organizing committee.
"It's a chance to raise some money for a good cause." Maddox said.
Maddox is one of several former Jayhawks who makes his home in the Lawrence area and stays active in the community.
"Guys come here to play and they enjoy the town and the University," Maddox said. "We all enjoy going to the KU football and basketball games and supporting them."
While he was thrilled with the large turnout, Ostertag said he didn't view the crowd's reaction to him as a hero's welcome.
Golf became a serious hobby for Ostertag about five or six years ago. He even had clubs made to suit his seven-foot plus frame.
"I just thought this would be a neat thing to do for a good cause," Ostertag said. "There are about 28 four-somes and one or two fivesomes."
Ostertag may have been busy on the golf course yesterday, but will be back to business with the Jazz before long.
Ostertag and his family recently returned from an Alaskan vacation, and Ostertag was scheduled to return to Utah this week.
Earlier this summer, Utah traded starting center Felton Spencer to the Orlando Magic. Ostertag knows that he may be called on to take a starting role. With his better form, he has taken over.
"It's definitely better for me. It helps me out in the long run." Ostertag said.
Right: Former KU basketball players Mike Maddox and Greg Ostertag and head coach Roy Williams talk before teeing off at the Greg Ostertag Invitational Golf Tournament, which was a benefit for the American Lung Association and many of Ostertag's friends came out to join him.
CAMBIO
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
Volleyball team sets realistic goals for 1996 season Coach will be happy with top-six finish in stronger Big 12
By Adam Herschman
Kansan sportswriter
With the amount of scrutiny the sports media can provide, coaches usually try to say the right thing. Consequently, preseason outlooks sometime seem more optimistic than realistic.
WRESTLING
Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise, however,
chose to give the latter.
"The team goal is to finish in the top half of the conference, and I think we're going to have to stay completely healthy in order to do that." Schonewise said.
G
"I think it's possible, but we're going to have to continue to get better with each practice in order to be able to do that." Schonewise said. "I think it's a little bit of a high goal, but I think it is possible for them to achieve."
After finishing 1-11 in a Big Eight Conference that featured NCAA volleyball champion Nebraska, the Jayhawks will have even tougher competition with the addition of four Texas schools forming the Big 12.
A top-half finish for the Kansas volleyball team in the inaugural season of the Big 12 Conference would be a tremendous accomplishment for the Jayhawks.
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Texas, Texas A&M, Baylor, and Texas Tech combined for a 79-54 mark in volleyball during the 1995 season. Exclude Baylor's 7-28 record and they combine for a 72-
Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise instructs a player on ways to improve her game.
Kansas football coach Glen Mason speaks at a news conference on Monday. Mason and the Jayhawks will open their season against Ball State on Thursday at Memorial Stadium.
26 record. The Longhorns took their 28-7 record into the NCAA championship game where they lost to the Cornhuskers. Four Big 12 teams finished the season ranked in the top 25 last season.
"In order for us to become better we have to play the best," Schonewise said.
Mason's stability yields success
Coach planned on coaching four years but stayed for nine
By Dan Geiston
Kansan sportswriter
Glen Mason remembers thinking he wouldn't be the Jayhawk coach in 1990.
But nine years later he is on the verge of having coached more games than any coach in Kansas football history.
When the No. 25 Jayhawks open their season against Ball State on Thursday, it will be Mason's 92nd game, surpassing Jack Mitchell's mark. Mason tied Mitchell for the longest tenure at Kansas with nine years.
"Back in '88, I was just worried about making it four years," he said. "I didn't think I'd be here in 1996."
When Mason came to Kansas in 1988 from Kent State, he took control of a team that finished 1-9-1 in 1987. He didn't do much better in his first year with Kansas at 1-10.
While he didn't accomplish a whole lot in records his first year, Mason said he was proud of that team.
"I did a good coaching job that year," he said. "They didn't win a lot, well they only won once, but they
kept at it."
Frederick said Mason's stability
"It represents a level of success that was hard to come by before Mason came along." he said.
As the years passed, that one win turned into four, then six and eventually an 8-4 record in 1992 and Kansas' first bowl appearance in 11 years at the Aloha Bowl. Kansas returned to Hawaii last year after a 10-win season. Kansas athletics director Bob Frederick said the bowls were Mason's greatest achievement.
made the program successful. "The fact that he's been here for nine years has been very important to our program," he said. "We haven't had a great deal of turnover in the nine years he's been here with the assistant coaches as well. Anytime you have change, it takes a couple of years to get accustomed to it, especially in football. So that stability has been very important."
Kansas coaches Vic Adamle, Reggie Mitchell, Mitch Browning, Golden Pat Ruel and Dave Warner join Mason as ninth-year coaches.
Basketball Jerod Haase spent the summer at youth sporting camps Page 4A
Election Kansan Judy Hancock will speak at the Democratic Convention.Page 3A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
SECTION A VOL.103.NO.6
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS650-640)
Quick LOOK
Iraqis surrender and end hijacking without blood
LONDON — Seven Iraqis seeking political aidism freed their 184 captives aboard a Sudanese airliner yesterday at a London airport. The release ended a 16-hour armed hiljacking without bloodshed.
Police did not release the identities of the Iraqis arrested after the drama on Sudan Airways Flight 150. Police also detained six female relatives of the men and are caring for two children.
Members of Iraqi exile groups said the hijackers may have been Iraqi government military advisers too frightened by Saddam Hussein's purges to return home.
The hijacking of the Airbus 310, which had 171 passengers and 13 crew members aboard, ended around noon when the hijackers, some armed with guns, surrendered after seven hours of negotiations at Stansted Airport in London. The Sudanese pilot conducted most of the negotiations.
Memo says first lady delayed Foster note
WASHINGTON — A recently released memo suggests Hillary Rodham Clinton was responsible for the 30-hour delay in notifying authorities about an anguished note handwritten by Vincent Foster.
The memo, which is contrary to the picture drawn in the past year by White House aides, quotes then-White House chief of staff Mack McLarty as saying that the first lady insisted the president should not be told about Foster's note until White House aides decided whether to give it to police investigating Foster's death.
Nussbaum issued a statement taking sole responsibility for the delay in releasing the note to authorities and saying the first lady had no involvement.
McLarty's lawyer, William Taylor, denied yesterday that his client made the statements attributed to him in the memo and said that McLarty spoke primarily to then-White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum about Foster's note—and never to Mrs. Clinton.
U.S. official to ensure dissolution of offices
WASHINGTON — The chief U.S. mediator for the Balkans will go to the region today to meet with the acting president of the Bosnian Serb republic and to check on guarantees that Bosnian Croats are dissolving their separate government offices.
Assistant Secretary of State John C. Klomb said the trip was planned to coincide with Saturday's scheduled dissolution of a separate Bosnian Croat government—and before Bosnia's municipal elections were called off.
He alleged that Bosnian Serbs were making widespread attempts to pack districts where they did not live but said there also were some violations of the letter or spirit of election registration rules by Croats.
National and other elections will go on as scheduled in mid-September in Bosnia - both in the area controlled by a Muslim-Croat federation and a region run by Bosnian Serbs.
The Associated Press
Smoking ads regulated
FDA aims to curb teenage smoking
By Stephanie Fite Kansan staff writer
The slender sophistication of the Virginia Slim models will no longer grace the pages of People, Rolling Stone, Vogue or Sports Illustrated.
The Food and Drug Administration announced its rule on Friday to regulate tobacco for the first time. The regulations include prohibiting tobacco advertising in media targeted toward teens.
While negotiations are in the works to eliminate some of the FDA's regulations, both the White House and FDA have announced that they intend to keep the tobacco industry from aiming its advertising at children and young adults.
Nearly a dozen advertising agencies that develop campaigns for tobacco companies will feel the effect of the new regulations.
"This is a crunch that advertisers who supported cigarette advertisements will feel," said Sharon Bass, professor of journalism. "This is a moral and economic issue that magazine advertisers have had to deal with for over the past 10 years. People who have worked for a replacement for cigarette advertisements are at an advantage to those who did not."
The new rule will prohibit ads featuring color pictures or drawings in magazines with a large teen readership. It also limits tobacco vending machines to bars, nightclubs and other age-restricted areas.
Some KU students and faculty at the School of Journalism question the legislation's effectiveness.
Stacy Marston, Topeka sophomore, has smoked since she was nine. Like many other children, she decided to start smoking because she thought it
was the adult thing to do.
She said that advertising affected her decision to start smoking because it gave her an impression that smoking was cool.
Former smoker Alisa Lasater, Albuquerque, N.M., junior, said that children were susceptible to advertising.
"Ideally, I would like to think that advertisement does not have an effect on kids, but I think it does," she said.
Cigarette advertisements are not the only factor in teen smoking, said Len Alfano, an assistant professor of journalism who teaches advertising.
There is no study to support a direct link from advertising to teen behavior, he said.
He also said the restriction on advertising worried him because it could lead to greater restrictions in the future.
"Smoking tends to be an adult habit that teens try to emulate." Alfano said.
"Whenever you restrain one aspect of advertising, you always have to look for what it will later affect," he said. "To curtail the advertisement of cigarettes is like cutting off the tail of the dog rather than putting a muzzle on it."
Linda Keeler, M.D., and psychology counselor at Counseling and Psychology Services, also said that advertisements were not the sole cause of teen smoking.
"While children are affected by the media, they are also affected by their environment and their surroundings," she said.
Many of the FDA's regulations for the tobacco industry may not last for long, however, as was indicated yesterday by an announcement from the White House that it was exploring a deal with tobacco companies. A top official told CBS that the Clinton administration would be willing to back off many of the FDA's rules.
However, one stipulation was the industry would still have to curb advertising aimed at teenagers.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Rock'n'climb
MUNICH
Krieger/KANSAN Chris Kemler, Basehor junior, reaches for a hold on the rock climbing wall in Robinson Center. Chris is a member of a rock climbing organization that meets every Tuesday and Thursday from 9:30 to 10:30 p.m.
G e o f f
Krieger/KANSAN
Institute prepares freshmen for college
A summer month of class and counsel increases success
By Lindsey Henry Kansan staff writer
way around campus.
Nichole Salters didn't need to ask for directions to Strong Hall on her first day of classes. Instead, the Frankenmuth, Mich., freshman said she was able to help others find their
Salters and 90 other freshmen spent a month at the University of Kansas attending a Freshman Summer Institute. The institute allows incoming freshmen to take two courses for credit, receive career counseling and experience college life in the residence halls.
"After the Freshmen Summer Institute, we all called ourselves freshmen-and-a-half because we had had the experience," Salters said.
The two-year-old institute was created after two years of research of the experiences and needs of college
freshmen and sophomores, said Beverly Davenport Sypher, associate dean for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
"It is designed to get students here early so they can be competent when they come for the fall," she said. "They can experience college in a less threatening, less overwhelming wav."
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawett, associate provost for academic services, said the Freshmen/Sophomore Experience Committee, which is comprised of faculty and staff, examined and polled student focus groups
to determine how the University could improve undergraduate education.
The committee's report states that freshmen need more career counseling and advising.
During the summer of 1995, 18 incoming minority freshmen were selected to attend the first summer institute.
Sypher said the first institute was open only to minority students in order to diversify the class.
"Of the 18 students, all but one returned this year. That retention rate is higher than the campus population as a whole," Sypher said.
Institute students were less likely to drop out because they had the opportunity to get connected with the University, Sypher said.
Laura Gonzalez, Lawrence sophomore, said her experience with the institute helped her.
"I felt like I knew how to cope with experiences as a freshman," Gonzalez said. "I knew how to budget my time to feel like I was on top of things. I think I am now more serious about school."
The institute is now open to all incoming freshmen, Sypher said.
1996 elections sites online:
Election '96 Information:
http://www.gte.net/election96/noframes/other.html
Project Votesmart http://www.vote-smart.org
Campaign '86 Online.
http://campaign.96.com/
Campaign Central: http://www.clark.net/central/
The Republican Party: http://www.mc.org
The Reform Party:
Political campaigns, parties going online
The Democratic Party: http://www.democrats.org.
Politics Now: http://politicsnow.com
http://www.reformparty.org/
Less than half of Kansas candidates have web sites
http://www.rockthevote.org
By Neal Shulenburger
Kansan staff writer
Now political campaigns have something in common with MTV, 311 and Playboy. They all have home pages on the World Wide Web.
Susan Smith, chairwoman of the Lawrence Republican Party, said lack of accessibility for the general public was one reason.
The three political parties and their presidential candidates are on the Internet. Several candidates for the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives are beginning to
follow, but less than half of the Kansas candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate have home pages.
"Right now we're not doing anything on the Internet because it won't reach many new voters," Smith said. "It is my understanding that less than one-third of the electorate has a personal computer and about one-fifth is online. The people who do have computers and use them online are already likely to vote."
Ken Collier, professor of political science,
Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, said he thought that political home pages would not attract new voters but that they might have other uses.
said the lack of use of the web by campaigns could be attributed to two factors: the newness of the technology and the lack of resources needed to use it.
The effect of candidates' home pages remains unclear.
"what I don't see is how the Internet can be used as a tool to recruit new voters," Loomis said. "Most of the people who will use these
See Election, Page 6.
www.kansan.com UDKi THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive Visit it Sept. 11
INDEX
Features...8A
Scoreboard ...2B
Horoscopes ...6B
Opinion ...4A
Sports...1B
TODAY
SUNNY
High 85° Low 61°
Gator
Weather: Page 2A.
Swimming coach
Despite his many achievements and awards, Gary Kempf wants to remain in the background and let his swimmers take all the credit and glory.
2A
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEATHER
Quick INFO CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER LOTTO NUMBERS
CAMPUS EVENTS
TODAY
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TODAY THURSDAY FRIDAY 85 86 84 61 62 60
THURSDAY
86
62
Mostly sunny with light winds.
FRIDAY
84
60
Sunny and dry.
Continuing sun.
ON CAMPUS
Gay and Lesbian Academic and Staff Advocates will have a brown-bag meeting from noon to 1 p.m. today to discuss plans for the semester. For location or more information, call 864-0624.
The University forum series of Ecumenical Christian Ministries will present A Vision for the College: Liberal Arts and Sciences in the 21st Century from noon to 1 p.m. today at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcome at 843-4933.
Study Abroad Club will hold an informational session about French-speaking countries at 3:30 p.m. today at 4058 Wescoe Hall. For more information call the Office of Study Abroad at 864-3742.
■ Office of Study Abroad will hold a Returnees' Welcome Back reception from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today at the Malott room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ted Noravong at 864-3742.
Kansas Crew will have an informational meeting at 5 p.m. today at the Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Matt Coday at 843-4193 or Edie Butler at 842-1767.
Study Abroad Club will have a meeting from 5:30 to 7 p.m. today at the English Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ted Noravong at 864-3742.
KU Vietnamese Student Association will hold a meeting at 6 p.m. on day 2023 Haworth Hall.
KU Women's Rugby Football Club will have practice at 6 p.m. today at Shenk Complex, 23rd & Iowa. For more information, call Stacey Stringfellow at 749-3380.
KU Women's Rugby Football Club will have an organizational meeting at 7 tonight at room 156 in Robinson Hall. For more information, call Stacey Stringfield at 749-3380.
Student Alumni Association will have a meeting at 7 tomorrow night at the Adams Alumni Center. For more information, call Megan Thome at 832-1567.
Student Assistance Center will hold a Preparing for Exams Workshop from 7 to 8:30 tonight at 330 Strong Hall. For more information, call the Student Assistance Center Staff at 864-4064.
United Methodist Campus Ministry is having Wesley Fellowship at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call the Rev. Jav Henderson at 841-8661.
AIESEC will have an informational meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kia Flesher at 865-5575.
ON THE RECORD
A woman's purse, sunglasses, camera and miscellaneous items were stolen between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. Sunday from a recital room in Murphy Hall, KU police said. The items were valued at $160.
A KU student was arrested Sunday in the 1100
A KU student's mountain bike was stolen between midnight and 1:30 a.m. Sunday from the east side of Jayhawk Boulevard, KU police said. The bike was valued at $300.
block of West 11th Street for discharging fireworks, KU police said.
A KU student was arrested Tuesday at Irving Hill Road and Constant Avenue for operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol, KU police said.
A KU student's car was broken into Tuesday morning in the 1800 block of Maine Street, Lawrence police said. Damage to the car and missing items were valued at $112.
WEDNESDAY PRIMETIME
AUGUST 28, 1996
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
SKMO ☐ Bentennial "Vow of Silence" ☐ Star Trak: Voyager (In Stereo) BabyOn "Dust to Dust" ☐ Cops ☐ The Producer ☐ ****(1997) Zero Mobile
WDAF ☐ Beverly Hills, 90210 ☐ Party of Five (In Stereo) News ☐ News ☐ H. Patrol Chews ☐ Baywatch
KCTV ☐ Nanny (R) ☐ Dave's Ware ☐ Diagnosis Murder (In Stereo) News ☐ Late Show (R) (In Stereo) Selinfield ☐ Selinfield
KSBO ☐ Health Check ☐ News Plus ☐ News ☐ Silhouettes ☐ News Plus
KCPT ☐ National Political Convention (Live) ☐ Business Rpt. Rights ☐ Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
KSMT ☐ Wings (R) ☐ Larquosite ☐ Dateline (In Stereo) NBC News Special ☐ News ☐ Tightshow (In Stereo) Late Night ☐ Late Night
KMDC ☐ Elton (R) ☐ Faculty (R) ☐ Drew Carey ☐ ABC News Special ☐ Roseanne ☐ Golden Girls ☐ MA*S*A ☐ MA*S*A
KTWU ☐ National Political Convention (Live) ☐ Travel Mag. ☐ Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
WIBW ☐ Winsley (R) ☐ Dave's Ware ☐ Diagnosis Murder (In Stereo) CBS News Special ☐ News ☐ Late Show (R) (In Stereo) U.S. Open
KTKA ☐ Ellen (R) ☐ Faculty (R) ☐ Grace Under Drew Carey ☐ ABC News Special ☐ Selinfield ☐ Coach ☐ Nightlife
CABLE STATIONS
AME ☐ Biography: Aristotle Onassis American Justice (R) 20th Century Law & Order "Guardian" Biography: Aristotle Onassis
CHBC ☐ Politics Equal Time Rivers Live America After Hours Rivers Live (R)
CHN ☐ Convention Coverage Live (Live) Convention Repeat Larry King Showbiz
COM ☐ Karen Meaney Homemay Kathy & Mo Show Lounge Liz. Kevin Meaney Politically Incorrect Daily Show Dream On
COURT ☐ Prime Time Justice Justice News Tri Story Crossing Prime Time Justice (R) Justice News
CSPAN ☐ (6:00) Campaign "96 "Democratic National Convention" Prime Time Justice (R) Convention Campaign "96 "Convention "Wrap-Up"
DISC ☐ Wild Discovery Bears Invention Next Step (R) Rivaltal "Hoover & Dillinger" Next Step (R) Beyond 2000 Wild Discovery: Bears
ESPN ☐ (6:30) Major League Baseball Teams to Be Announced (Live) Major League Baseball Teams to be Announced (Live)
HST ☐ Ghosts of Gettyburg II (R) "Disperse" (1994) Victor Garber, An account of the 1942 riot in a two-cupied French town Ghosts of Gettyburg II (R)
LIFE ☐ Unspeaked Mysteries "The Suburbia War" ****(1994, Western) Farnish Favorite Living Mysteries Lute Date
MTV ☐ Beach MTY (In Stereo) Beach House Nights Real World Real World Singled Out Convention And the Nominees Are...(R)
SCFI ☐ V "The Sanction" "Routlin' J" ****(1991, Science Fiction Twilight Zone Monsters V "The Sanction" (R)
TLC ☐ Ultrasonic World Seven Wonders of the World Glass Jump (Part 3 of 3) Ultrasonic World Seven Wonders of the World
TNT ☐ Paint Your Wagon" ****(1995) Los Marvis two projections during California gold rush share a site. On a Clear Day You Can See Forever. ***
USA ☐ (6:30) U.S. Open Tennis: Men's Opening and Women's Second Round. (Live) Silk Stalkings "Star Signs" Big Date Love
VHI ☐ big *@s Bandstand Archives "Track Flash." big *@s Bandstand Crossroads Sex Appeal Souf of VH1 Music Video
WGN ☐ sister, Sister Wickey Wayne Bros., Wickey Foxx (News) (In Stereo) Sinner and Simon *mnooner
WTBS ☐ The Living Deylighters (1987) James Bond battles luring Russia in Afghanistan. *Light to KOI ****(1989, Adventure) Timothy Dalton.
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO ☐ "Murder in the First" ****(1995, Drama) Christian Sister Rita Arliss Comedy Hall ****(1999, Drama) Amanda Asante. (In Stereo)
MAX ☐ Carnegie "2" ****(1994) John Sweave, R. Virtual Combat (1996, Drama) R. Double Napkins ****(1994) PG-13 ****(1994)
SHOW ☐ "Helipless" ****(1991) Chuck Norris, R. Human telephones (1986) Brian Grensen ****A Low Down Banner Warner
AAE **(3)** Biography; Aristotle Onassis **(1)** American Justice (R) **(2)** 20th Century **(3)** Law & Order "Guardian" **(4)** Biography; Aristotle Onassis
CHBC **(5)** Equal Time **(6)** Rivers Live **(7)** Charles Grodin **(8)** America After Hours **(9)** Rivers Live (R)
CHN **(10)** Convention Coverage (Live) **(11)** Convention Recap **(12)** Larry King **(13)** Showbiz **(14)**
COM **(15)** Kwame Kennedy *Hemsley* **(16)** Kathy & Mo Show **(17)** Lounge Liz. **(18)** Kevin Meaney **(19)** Politically Incorrect **(20)** Daily Show *Dream On*
COURT **(21)** Prime Time Justice **(22)** News **(23)** Trial Story; Crossfire **(24)** Prime Time Justice (R) **(25)** Justice *News*
CSPAN **(26)** (8:00) Campaign 98 "Democratic National Convention" **(27)** Campaign 98: Convention **(28)** Campaign 98 "Convention Wrap-Up"
DISC **(29)** Wild Discovery; Bears **(30)** Invention **(31)** Next Step (R) **(32)** Rivalt "Hoover & Dilfinger" **(33)** Next Step (R) **(34)** Beyond 2000 *Wild Discovery; Bears*
ESPN **(35)** (6:30) Major League Baseball: Teams to Be Announced (Live) **(36)** Major League Baseball: Teams to be Announced (Live)
HST **(37)** Ghosts of Gettyburg II **(38)** Dispose **(39)** (1994) Victor Garcia, An account of the 1942 rallon on a nazi-coupled French town.
LFE **(40)** Unsecured Mysteries **(41)** The "Substitute Wife" **(42)** (1994, Western Farnhill Fanciest:** Living **(43)** Mysteries **(44)** Late Date
MTV **(45)** Beach MTV (in Stroker) **(46)** Beach House Nights **(47)** Real World **(48)** Singled Out **(49)** Convention **(50)** And the Nonimmune Jury **(51)** V "The Sanction" **(52)**
SCIFI **(53)** V "The Sanction" **(54)** "Routlin 2" **(55)** (1991) Science Fiction **(56)** Twilight Zone Monsters **(57)** V "The Sanction" **(58)**
TLC **(59) Ultrascence** *World* **(60)** Seven Wonders of the World *Glass Jungle* (Part 3 of 3) *Ultrascence* *World* *Bewen Wonders of the World*
TNT **(61)** "Paint Your Wagon" **(62)** (1992) Lee Marvin, two proposals during California's gold rush share a wifi. **(63)** "On a Clear Day You Can See Forever" **(64)** USA **(65)** (6:30) U.S. Open Team: Men's Open and Women's Second Round (Live) **(66)** Silk Stallings "Star Signs" **(67)** Big Date **(68)** Love **(69)** WHI **(70)** big *80s* *Bandstand* *Archives* *BtTrack Flash* *Big *80s* *Bandstand* *Crossroads* *Sex Appeal* *Soil of VH* *Music Videos* *GWST *Sister, Sister* *Kick F雷* *Wanna Bayros, Jenie Fox* (*Nine*) *News* (R) *Simon* *Simon* *Hmoney* *WTBS* "The Living Daylights" (*187*) *James Bond battles villains among Russians in Afghanistan*. **(188)** "Licence to Kill" **(189)** (1992, Adventure) Timothy Dalton.
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO **(1)** "Murder in the Floor" **(1)** (1995, Doria) Christian Sisters, R **(1)** Artiles **(1)** Comedy Hall **(1)** Dolphin **(1)** (1998, Drama) Armand Assante. (In Stroker) **(1)**
MAX **(1)** "Campus 2" **(1)** (1994) John Savage, R **(1)** "Virtual Cambodia" (1995, Drama) R **(1)** "Double Happiness" **(1)** (1994) PG-13 *Undercover*
SHOW **(1)** "HelloBound" **(1)** (1993) Check Norris, R **(1)** "Human Timebomb" (1999) Bryan Gaerens. *(1994) (Kaenan Jawar Wavers)*
LOTTO
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3-9-14-16-27-35
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2-13-15-35-40 Powerball: 10 Jackpot: $5 million repeating Monday's numbers
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Wednesday, August 28, 1996
3A
Kansan to talk at convention
Judy Hancock to address crowd of democrats today in Chicago
By Ian Ritter
Kansan staff writer
At the Republican National Convention, a politician from Russell was in the spotlight. Another Kansas politician will be in the spotlight today at the Democratic National
but for a shorter time.
Judy Hancock, a Prairie Village attorney running for the 3rd District congressional seat this fall,
will address the convention for three minutes
POLICY DEFENSE OFFICE
Judy Hancock
at 4:30 p.m. today in Chicago
The speech will be televised live on C-SPAN this afternoon and later tonight by Sunflower Cable and by Kansas City news stations, said Jeremy Anderson, Hancock's press secretary.
Anderson said that Hancock planned on speaking about the Kansas values that were instilled in her.
"She's going to speak on her biography — why she is who she is," Anderson said. "She's a fifth-generation Kansan, and she's running on a common sense vote."
By common sense, Anderson said that Hancock took a more moderate stance than her Republican opponent, Vince Snowbarger.
Anderson said that Hancock wasn't nervous about speaking at one of her party's biggest events because of the pride she had in her campaign.
"She's really more honored and excited about it," he said.
Forrest Swall, chairman of the Democratic Party of Douglas County and assistant professor of social welfare, said he thought the national committee had made a great choice in inviting Hancock to speak.
"She's done her homework, she's articulate, she's just good," Swall said.
But Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, said that Hancock's appearance wasn't a substantial event for Kansans because she was not speaking during a key time in the convention schedule and because the speech would be televised only on C-Span.
"I just think that no one will really listen and it will have no impact back in Kansas at all." he said.
Loomis said that the speech would be more of a campaign tool for Hancock than a contribution to the convention.
"For Judy Hancock it's much more that she impress the delegates and people who are important in the party," he said.
Hancock was chosen to speak by the national committee, which has ranked her as one of the top 20 congressional challengers.
Hancock ran two years ago for the 3rd District seat but lost to Republican Jan Myers after receiving 43 percent of the vote.
Swall said that because citizens were dissatisfied with the Republican extremism in Congress, Hancock has a better chance for victory this year.
"I think she has a very good chance of winning," Swall said. "If it hadn't been for that huge Newt Gingrich Contract for America kind of stuff, she would've won last time."
Secondhand craze cuts costs
Students are recycling their personal items in Lawrence, but not by throwing them into recycling bins.
By Dave Breltenstein
Kansan staff writer
Secondhand stores are flourishing in Lawrence partly because students are trying to make a quick buck by selling used compact discs, baseball gloves and blue jeans. But students aren't the only ones benefiting from secondhand stores. Some think the stores are a key piece in the recycling puzzle.
"We're certainly not the leader in the environmental movement, but every little bit helps," said Kory Willis, manager of Love Garden Sounds, 936 1/2 Massachusetts St. Love Garden resells compact discs and records at a discount.
"Reselling CDs helps out the environment tremendously," he said. "Not so much in a physical way, but in a spiritual way. Customers know that it is better to come here than to throw it in a land-fill."
John Coachman, floor manager at Play It Again Sports, 1029 Massachusetts St., said students liked the atmosphere of the used sporting goods store.
"Our mission is to make playing sports affordable for everyone," he said. "A lot of students cannot afford new equipment, so they come here."
Coachman said buying and selling sports equipment not only eased students' financial worries.
Victoria Silva, KU environmental specialist, said that there was a recycling loop and that conservation occurred through trading, reprocessing and reselling. She said the rates of consumption of natural resources were an environmental concern.
but it also helped the environment.
"When we as a society choose to reuse durable goods, such as clothing, furniture and even cars, we conserve a percentage of the resources that would be used to produce them as new items," she said.
"It's investing in a sustainable future for generations to come." Silva said.
Mike Markley, Derby junior, said he recycled compact discs he no longer played and clothing that no longer fit to earn a few extra dollars.
"I don't really want to throw anything away that can still be used, so I may as well get some money for it," he said. "I see reselling as a means of lessening the cost of the initial purchase, because I know I can always get some of my money back."
Although Markley frequently sells his belongings, not all students use these Lawrence outlets.
Katie Hoffman, Overland Park freshman, said she did not bring anything to KU that she knew she would not use.
"I've never really thought about selling my stuff," she said. "I'm not in dire need of cash yet, but I would definitely think about selling some CDs if I needed the money."
Muse
Educating Blues
Sara Brooks / KANSAM
Tamara Christensen, Wichita junior, visits the Arizona Trading Co., 734 Massachusetts St.,
to sell her old clothes and make some money to buy new ones.
Listening stations give CD shoppers a preview
By Jeff Ruby
Kansan staff writer
The concept of buyer beware no longer needs to apply to the Lawrence CD consumer.
and White said he had found them to be helpful to both the buyer and the seller.
Some area record stores have found that their listening stations, which give the consumer a chance to sample music before paying $15 for it, are a crucial part of the music shopper's buying process.
"We have people who come in here and spend hours and hours listening," said Jim White, manager of The End Compact Discs and Tapes, 1000 Massachusetts St. "I would say 85 percent of the time, people actually buy the stuff they're listening to."
White said The End had changed its exchange policy because the buyer could listen to a CD before buying it. The End only allows exchanges of damaged goods.
Jason Arnett, an employee of Streetside Records, 1403 W.23rd St., said listening stations had bolstered business and reduced the number attempted returns and exchanges.
The End has 128 listening stations.
Listening stations are successful because people would rather buy a CD opened in the store than a used CD, Arnett said.
Listening stations are not a new trend, said Delana Lee, employee of
Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts St.
"Way back in the old days, there were listening booths for records," Lee said. "Now, since we're a used store and the disc is already opened, it would be silly to deny people a chance to listen to them."
Allen Sims, assistant store manager at Vibes Music, 911 Massachusetts St., said his store's home office decided against providing listening stations.
"We'd have to open products up off the shelves, then we'd have to repackage them," Sims said. "People sometimes question that."
Sims said listening booths would not necessarily increase sales.
But Eric Mater. employee at The
End, said listening booths enabled buyers to make better decisions.
"For instance, the Butthole Surfers have that song out, Pepper, and the rest of the album isn't necessarily anything like it," Mater said. "People can come in and say, 'I really like that song,' but listen to the rest of the album and not get off on it."
Kory Willis, manager of Love Garden Sounds, 936 1/2 Massachusetts St., whose store has had the stations for more than six years, said letting customers sample music was a natural extension for retail record stores.
"Rather than hear stuff over our stereo, people can listen to what they want," Willis said. "It makes sense."
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4A
Wednesday, August 28,1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Multicultural Center is a resource for all students
The Multicultural Resource Center staff wants international, minority and all other students to visit the center. Students should take advantage of
visit the center. Students should take advantage of the center's computers with Ethernet access when their school's computer labs are busy. But while students are there, they shouldn't limit themselves just to the computers.
The center, east of Murphy Hall and south of the Military Science Building, was created to revolve around KU students. From study rooms to a conference center, students have access to the center between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, with evening hours starting next week.
Students should realize the significant opportunities they are passing up by not going to the center at least once to look around and see what the center has to offer.
Evan Heimlich, program assistant for the Office of Minority Affairs, which is responsible for staffing the center, said the center housed books, videos and art from different cultures. Students also can get information about student organizations from brochures and literature at the center.
A common misconception that some students have about the center is that it was created for minority students only. But all students can benefit from the center if they give it a chance.
Heimlich also wants students to drop in on September 6, when the center celebrates its first anniversary. At the celebration, an art exhibits created by KU faculty will be unveiled.
One of the center's biggest lessons, Heimlich said, is that it can teach students to look at ideas from a different perspective.
DOUG WEINSTEIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
T-shirts are a futile incentive for students seeking 4.0 GPA
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences recently announced that it would award T-shirts to underclassmen who earned a 4.0 grade point average.
While earning A's in every class is certainly a commendable feat, the commitment to studying and working hard is not swayed by material rewards. Instead, this dedication stems from the individual's need to excel and view of education as a priority. Therefore, the time and money spent on these T-shirts could be more effective elsewhere.
Sally Frost-Mason, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the T-shirts would cost $5 to $10 each, depending on the complexity of the design and the size of the discount offered by the vendor that will print them. Frost-Mason estimated that a few hundred students would earn 4.0 GPAs this semester. Therefore, at the most conservative estimate, the cost of the program would be $1,000.
While this sum is small when compared to other University expenditures, the money could be better spent elsewhere. Frost-Mason said the money for the shirts would come from existing unrestricted endowment funds. This money could be used to honor 4.0 students in another manner. Even a new computer in a campus lab would be a more beneficial way to use the school's endowment funds.
Despite the admirable aim of honoring underclassmen who earn excellent grades, the proposed reward of a T-shirt borders on frivolous. Students will not change their work ethic or study habits for a T-shirt.
A thousand dollars could be spent in a more constructive way that would be more helpful to students and that would show support for students with perfect GPAs.
GERRY DOYLE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
AMANDA TRAUGHBER
Editor
CRAIG LANG
Managing editor
MATT HOOD
Associate managing editor for design
KIMBERLY CRABTREE
CHARITY JEFFRIES
News editors
DARCI L. McLAIN
Public Relations Director
Editors
KAREN GERSCH
Business manager
HEALY SMART
Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Campus Suananna Lóof
Jennast Strait
Amy McVeY
Editorial John Collar
Nicole Kennedy
Features Adam Wendt
Sports Bill Petelula
Associate sports Caryn Foster
On-line editor David L Teaska
Photo Rich Devinwd
Graphics Mitch Neiss
Andy Rohrbach
Special sections Amy McVeY
Wire Debbie Staine
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Mark Ozmek
Regional mgr ... Dennis Haupt
National Mall mgr ... Daniel Haupt
National Mall
Special Specles mgr ... Krista Nye
Production mgrs ... Heather Valier
Marketing mgrs ... Lisa Quebbennan
Marketing director ... Eric Johnson
Public Relations dir ... Sara Rose
Administration dir ... Seamond Meath
Classified dir ... Shelley Wachter
Jeff MacNelly/ The Chicago Tribune
NASHVILLE — When you can't win the debate, shift the argument.
That time-tested motto describes President Clinton's strategic response to reports that drug use among teens has surged upward during his four years in office.
CRACK HOUSE
AWRIGHT!
DROP THE
CIGARETTES!
WAR
ON
DRUGS
Politicians blow smoke on drug, tobacco issues
Use of illegal drugs by teen-agers has risen to almost 11 percent of those age 12 to 17 since 1992, when it was only 5.2 percent, the lowest point since 1980, according to the department of Health and Human Services' National Household Survey on Drug Abuse.
So it does not seem altogether coincidental that a day after the report's release, Clinton announced he would approve new federal regulations to crack down on the marketing and sales of another drug, cigarettes, to young people.
Predictably, tobacco-state Republicans viewed Clinton's statement with alarm. North Carolina Republican Sen. Jesse Helms asserted that Clinton was "declaring war" on tobacco farmers who depend on the crop for their livelihoods.
Another Republican, Elizabeth Dole, told reporters in her home state of North Carolina that the Clinton regulations were only a political stunt that would do little to curb teen smoking. And her husband, Bob Dole, clung to the tobacco industry's line that research linking tobacco to bad health is "inconclusive."
Who's kidding whom? I always find it amusing that the same social conservatives who want government to get into our lives on issues such as drugs, abortion or pornography suddenly claim government intrusion doesn't do any good at all in curbing teen smoking of tobacco.
As the young people say, let's get real. Almost all marijuana smokers started as cigarette smokers, according to the Food and Drug
Administration, and almost all cigarette smokers — more than 90 percent of them — started smoking in their teens.
CLARENCE PAGE
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
The percentage of children in grades 9 through 12 who smoke has grown from 20 percent in 1991 to a whopping 35 percent.
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Among young African-American males, the percentage who smoke has doubled to 28 percent from 14 percent just five years ago.
Just ask Bob Dole. "Where were you, Mr. President, while teen drug use was going up and up and up?" Dole taunted last week on the campaign trail. "Where were you?"
If Clinton is going to bask in the glow of the robust economy that just happens to be occurring on his watch, it is not going to be easy for him to wriggle out of some responsibility for the rise in drug use — especially after he reduced staff by 75 percent at the Office of National
Of course, one could just as easily ask, "Where was Bob Dole?"
Drug Control Policy three years ago.
But since perceptions are nineteenthsof politics, Clinton is vulnerable because drug use rose while he occupied the biggest bully pulpit in America.
"Since 25 percent of all adults smoke cigarettes, smoking actually is more of a problem among young people than among older people," says George Dessart, chairman of the American Cancer Society.
The answer would be, "Taking tobacco money." And lots of it.
Most of us don't need fancy studies to figure this out. Yet the tobacco lobby and its political minions continue to blow smoke over the obvious. Take, for example, the 124 House members and 32 senators who signed a letter in January objecting to the FDA's proposal to cut young people's access to cigarettes and reduce teen smoking an estimated 50 percent.
Why do kids use drugs? The answer is much too complex to pin on any one presidential administration. An upswing in marijuana use among youths began to appear in 1992, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Are we going to blame George Bush for that? How about the very appearance of crack in the early 1980s? Are we going to blame Ronald Reagan for that?
One expert, David F. Musto, Yale professor of child psychiatry and the history of medicine, thinks the upsurge in drug use by teens in the 1990s, just as the downsurge in the Reagan 1980s, follows the same long-term cycles of high and low consumption that have characterized alcohol and other drug use in America since at least the early 1800s.
It is too early to tell, Musto says, but the current upsurge may only be a short-term increase in a long-term cultural trend toward abstinence that began in the early '80s. Either way, each side in this political dispute should call a moratorium on blaming each other for a problem as complex as this one. Instead, Clinton and Dole should redouble their commitment to fight them.
But that's not likely in this election year. Instead, they'll probably just blow more smoke.
Clarence Page is a syndicated columnist for The Chicago Tribune.
Politicians should learn lessons from everyday life
As the general election draws closer, the political rhetoric has been turned up a notch. Candidates are promising to pass a balanced budget amendment, to lower taxes and to do a number of other things they think the American people want done.
These empty promises, along with the mudslinging that precedes every situation, have caused the people to
Guest columns: Should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
STAFF COLUMNIST
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become disillusioned with the government and its leaders.
might be photographed for the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject submissions. Questions can be directed to John Collar or Nicole Kennedy, editorial editors, at 864-4810.
DEANNA ENGEL
Decades ago, when candidates running for public office made a promise, the voters could believe they would do everything in their power to make it a reality. Today, the only voters can
believe is that a candidate will say whatever is necessary to get elected.
There also seems to be a general decline in the moral character of candidates running for office. One glaring example of this is the former governor of Louisiana, Edwin Edwards.
Although he was never convicted, he was twice tried for fraud and racketeering. He has been the subject of at least 20 other criminal investigations. After he pushed a bill through the Louisiana legislature that legalized riverboat gambling, he was accused of nepotism when four companies owned by his children landed lucrative contracts with the riverboat casinos.
According to articles published in 1994 in Time and New Republic magazines, Edwards ran up huge-gambling debts during his term as governor. Consequently, he was indicted on charges of accepting bribes to pay off his gambling debts.
The people of Louisiana knew of Edwards' questionable conduct and character and still elected him to four terms as governor. This seems to be a symptom of a larger issue—the american people have ceased to care about the moral character of their elected officials because it is no longer at a desirable level.
The problem seems to be that the men and women who would be the leaders of our country have forgotten the ideals it takes to make government run efficiently.
These are simple principles that our grandparents passed down to our parents' generation. The Vietnam War and free love of the '60s caused the baby boomers to lose respect for the government and the lessons their parents had taught them.
Our leaders need to be reminded of these principles. To help them, I decided to make a list of ideals about life that was passed down to me by my grandparents.
These are things that the candidates need to consider during the campaign and the terms they could serve:
When we all work together, the achievements that can be made are endless.
Lead by example.
Compromise is not a dirty word.
Win with honor.
Accept defeat graciously
- Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will always hurt me.
Admit your mistakes
Brevity speaks volumes.
OUT FROM THE CRACKS
TODAY CLASS,
WE'RE GOING TO
EXPLORE THE GREAT
FUNDAMENTALS OF
MATHEMATICS!
OH BOY.
Deanna Engel is a Liberal senior in Journalism.
TODAY CLASS,
WERE GOING TO
EXPLORE THE GREAT
FUNDAMENTALS OF
MATHEMATICS!
OH BOY.
LET'S REVIEW
THE HOMEWORK
YOU DID LAST
NIGHT...
WOULD YOU
LIKE ONE OR
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CAN ANYBODY
TELL ME THE ANSWER
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WOULD YOU LIKE ONE OR TWO BEERS?
By Jeremy Patnoi
CAN ANYBODY TELL ME THE ANSWER TO NUMBER 3B?
2!
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WHAT
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
5A
SenEx faces Regents' deadlines on restructuring, evaluations
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan staff writer
Two deadlines were the pressing subjects facing the University Senate Executive Committee yesterday.
SenEx must decide soon on department restructuring and faculty evaluations.
The committee discussed a report from the Academic Policy and Process subcommittee in the afternoon meeting.
The subcommittee is supposed to review recommendations from University of Kansas schools on how to restructure their departments under a Board of Regents mandate.
"A few departments should have given us recommendations on the changes they are going to make," said Bob Brown, subcommittee member. "So far we have only received a recommendation from
the School of Education."
Under direction from David Shulenburger, provost, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences must cut four departments, the School of Architecture must cut one department and the School of Education must cut two departments.
SenEx must review the recommendations by June 1997.
SenEx voted to wait until the recommendations were submitted before taking further action.
Grey Montgomery, student body president, asked Brown if all the recommendations would make the June deadline. Brown said that he was fairly certain that the deadline would have to be extended.
All 1,300 University faculty and 75 student senators have been invited to a meeting at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union to discuss the evaluations, which will be annual faculty performance studies.
The second deadline SenEx faces comes on Sept. 20 when the University is required to recommend to the Regents how it will approach faculty evaluations.
The evaluations will be conducted by the University and are different from the evaluations completed at the end of each semester by students.
SenEx committee member Larry Draper said he hoped the meeting would go smoothly.
If the University misses the deadline, the Regents will mandate an approach.
we want to give everyone the chance to express how they feel about the evaluations," Draper said. "We have very little time to approach this so we need to do it efficiently."
Commission hears development plan
By Liz Musser
Kansan staff writer
Downtown Lawrence has become a popular place for new businesses in recent years, but until last night the city had no plan for handling new development in that area of town.
The Downtown Steering Committee presented a draft of a comprehensive plan for downtown development at the city commission meeting last night. The plan included eight principles that set a framework for how future development should be handled.
The plan suggested that new buildings should be pedestrian-friendly and that Massachusetts Street remain the commercial center of downtown. It also said that development should follow an urban, not suburban, development pattern.
"We cannot move forward responsibly without the study"
Jo Anderson City Commissioner
existing fabric of downtown," she said. "It's missing a respect for the historic nature."
Nancy Shontz, a representative for the Lawrence Preservation Alliance, told the commission she was concerned about the plan's lack of provisions for the historic buildings located downtown.
"This plan neglects the value of the
Glen Leroy, representative for the steering committee's plan, said it was not a problem to add a principle addressing historic concerns. The new provision will be added to the plan, and the commission will review it again at their next meeting.
"We cannot move forward responsibly without the study," said Commissioner Jo Andersen.
City Manager Mike Wilden also suggested the city contract the Walker Parking Consultant Firm of Denver to conduct a study to determine how downtown should approach the parking problems caused by recent development.
The commission assigned the planning staff to outline the study to be performed by the Walker firm.
University Dance Company
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7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
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Robinson Center
No solo material required
For additional information, call 864-4264
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Burglarsransack8cars
By Andrea Albright Kansan staff writer
Lawrence police have no suspects in the eight automobile burglaries that occurred between Monday night and Tuesday morning in neighborhoods southeast of campus.
Residents in the 1700 and 1800 blocks of Illinois, Alabama and Maine streets reported six burglaries overnight. Two were reported in the 2000 blocks of Ohio and Tennessee streets.
Alejandro Lule, Guanajuato, Mexico, Applied English Center student, said he thought he had heard the gate in his back yard slam about 4:30 a.m.
Ten minutes later, police arrived at his door to tell him his truck had been burglarized.
"They took some money and all of my CDs," Lula said. "But I'm worried about the window — it's $200."
Vehicle break-ins
Police said they patrolled the area throughout the night. One officer investigated three of the incidents because of their proximity.
Lawrence Police Sgt. Susan Hadl said investigators were looking for one person or one group of people.
"Due to the similarity and general vicinity, it's safe to assume they were done on a spree by the same people." Hadl said.
Amy Pettle, 1983 KU graduate, said she always locked her car. Monday, however, when she returned from the airport, her hands were too full
Area of detail
A rash of burglaries struck eight cars Monday night and Tuesday morning, Lawrence police reported. All of the vehicles were parked in a neighborhood adjoining the KU campus. Police said the crimes may be related.
18th and Maine streets
1845 Maine St.
1700 block of Illinois St. *
1800 block of Alabama St.
2016 Ohio St.
1813 Alabama St.
2000 block of Tennessee St.
* location of two burglaries
Maine Street
Alabama Street
Illinois Street
Mississippi Street
Indiana Street
19th Street
Lawrence Tennis Center
Louisiana Street
21st Street
Ohio Street
Tennessee Street
Kentucky Street
Vermont Street
SOURCE: Lawrence Police Department
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
to lock the doors.
"I thought 'Why bother?'" Pettle said. "I'd never had any trouble before."
Because her car was unlocked, no windows were broken.
The burglarrs ransacked her car, took the cigarette lighter and burned some papers from the glove box, causing about $75 damage to the console area.
Hadl said cars parked on the street could be more vulnerable to burglaries.
"It's quicker because they have easier access," Hadl said. "If they have a vehicle right there, they can just drive away."
Hadl said that cars parked off the street also could be burglarized but that cars parked on a dark street were more enticing to criminals.
"If you can park in front of your house, attempt to have some lighting on your car," Hadl said. "Cars seem to be more vulnerable on the street."
Election
--the future for politics on the web looked bright.
Continued from Page 1.
as an advertising medium.
right now I'm on a couple of news groups," Swall said.
home pages will already have decided who to vote for."
While Loomis said that the Internet's effects on the election were uncertain, Forrest Swall, Douglas County Democratic chairman, said
Collier said that the Internet would be useful in the future to politicians
In the future, Swall said, more people would use the Internet to obtain political information just as they used it for other information today.
"True, it won't reach a lot of people and persuade them to change their minds," Collier said. "An ad that is supposed to change the minds of a large group of people won't work. But even if it persuades a few thousand at $20 a month, it's a bargain compared to TV. More candidates will use it for that reason."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
7A
Feminist group tries to survive
By Nicholas C. Charalambous
Kansan staff writer
For the Feminist Collective Force, there isn't a moment to lose in the fight for equality. But recently the focus has turned to a different fight — the group's survival.
On Monday the fight began when Doris Cordero, Lawrence senior, and Stephanie Harsin, Lawrence junior, wrote to more than 30 people on the group's mailing list asking if they wanted to be involved this semester. Harsin said she had received four responses.
Toward the end of the spring semester, only five core members were attending general meetings, some committees had been abandoned and personal problems had surfaced between members, said Regan Cowan, Topeka, junior, who has dropped out of the group.
"We all got so burned out,"Cowan
said. "By the end, we had a negative understanding of collective work."
The organization was established last fall as a collective, which meant that no member led the group and that decisions were reached by a consensus.
It took from 20 minutes to an hour to agree on a single issue, and as many as eight issues were presented at each general meeting, Cordero said.
Each week, members attended a general meeting for at least two hours and spent one or two hours more at committee meetings where plans were hammered out for the group's activities.
As the first women's activist group on campus in several years, members tried to do too much, she said.
That didn't include hanging fliers, making ribbons and organizing events, said Amy Turnbull, Fairway senior, who was also a student senator, a volunteer at the Center for Community Outreach and a volunteer at Jubilee Cafe.
"It was hellacious," she said, referring to her own commitments. "A real marathon every day."
Members said the challenge of reaching a consensus created personal differences not based on political disagreements.
The group has not registered with the Organizations and Activities Center.
Cordero said she thought the group could work as a collective and it had an excellent chance of surviving if the group's ambitions were scaled down. The group may have to do fewer things with more passion, she said.
"I don't know if I could deal with not having it around," she said. "Maybe a weekly meeting where we share ideas and our own personal work. Not organizing or fighting for other people, but for ourselves."
The Feminist Collective Force's process of reaching a consensus has several steps:
Making a consensus
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A member or a representative of a standing committee presents a proposal to the group for discussion.
A facilitator solicits questions about the proposal and encourages members to voice their opinions.
The facilitator offers the modified proposal to the group for discussion until the proposal is ready to be agreed upon by all members.
If members aren't happy with the proposal, a compromise is sought.
If a member dissents, the proposal is sent back to the committee and the process begins again.
Waking up is hard to do, students find
By Megan Jordan Kansan staff writer
By Megan Jordan
Beeeepeep. You awake to the sound of your alarm clock. Summer is truly over, the fifth day of school is starting and your body
Linda Keeler, psychiatrist at Counseling and Psychological Services, said being a night person or a morning person was not just
school is starting and your body cannot muster the strength to get out of bed. I'm not a morning person, you groan.
something in a person's head
No matter if you are a morning or a night person, plenty of sleep is important, Keeler said. Serotonin, which helps you rest, is produced during sleep.
"There are definitely some people who function better at different parts of the day," she said.
Scientists do not understand all the reasons for this, Keeler said, but they believe that serotonin, a chemical in the brain, plays a large role. Each person has a biological clock that functions differently, based partly on this chemical.
This explains why it is sometimes difficult for someone to sleep if his or her body is overtired. Too little sleep causes the serotonin level to drop, which makes it hard to sleep. Too much sleep can make you drowsy because the brain has more serotonin than normal.
Jim Carothers, associate dean for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said there were few
empty classrooms at those times. Even when students are eager to take a particular class, they often are reluctant to take it at 7:30 a.m.
Ryan Paget, Scott City sophomore, said he was jealous of morning people. Like many students, mornings are a struggle for Paget.
"I set my alarm and turn the volume up all the way," he said.
Paget said he placed his alarm clock across the room so he had to get up to turn it off.
KANSAS WOMEN'S SOCCER CLUB
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meet at Robinson Front Desk
Anyone interested in playing
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call 865-0898
KUWomen's Volleyball Club
If you desire to play fun, competitive volleyball then come find out more about us.
invites you to an informational meeting Wednesday, August 28th at 8:30 p.m. in the 2nd floor lobby at Robinson.
If you have any questions feel free to call Libby at 841-6376.
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QUESTION? 864-3710
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Page 8A
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
Bird's EveView
GH
Despite prevention programs and increased education, DRUG USE at college IS STILL...
Hi
High
g
Illustration by Greg Hardin
By Megan Jordan Kansan staff writer
h
Drug use is skyrocketing at the University of Kansas — at least, that is the perception of many students.
"Everybody I know does pot, except for me," said Zorinne Knapp, Lawrence freshman.
But studies have not shown this increase.
Julie Francis, public health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that students often thought many of their peers were using drugs but that these numbers were not reflected in national surveys.
Students interviewed estimated that between 75 and 90 percent regularly abuse illegal substances or have at least tried them.
Francis said the reported number was closer to about one in four students.
National studies on drug use usually focus on the high-school age group, she said. Students begin experimenting with substances at this point, and studying 12 to 17 year olds helps educators
gauge the success of anti-drug programs. But the findings of such studies also are important at the university level.
"There has to be some carryover from high school to the college population," Francis said.
" Everybody I know does pot, except for
A survey by Partnership for a Drug-Free America echoes Collier's sentiments.
Kate Cavanaugh, Kansas City, Kan., senior said that from her observations, drugs were more popular with freshman and sophomores. Students smoke pot in high school and assume college is the same way, she said.
A study released Aug. 20 by the Department of Health and Human Services reported that the number of high school seniors using drugs doubled between 1992 and 1995. Marijuana use rose 141 percent. And as Francis and Cavanah pointed out, high schoolers are not going to kick the habit once they hit college.
me."
Zorinne Knapp
Lawrence freshman
"I know people who smoke pot every day," Cavanaugh said.
So what happened to the generation raised on Nancy Reagan's Just Say No campaign? Did no one pay attention to the egg-in-the-frying-pan commercial?
Today's teens are less likely to consider drug use harmful and risky and are more likely to believe that drug use is widespread and tolerated, the study said.
Experts say today's students have not had the
The increasing attitude of acceptance also is apparent to professors.
"This group is not worried about messing up their lives with drugs," said Ken Collier, assistant professor of political science. "This group is more laid back than before. They think things will work out OK."
trends
opportunity to see peers suffer the consequences of heavy drug use. As a result, drugs do not seem dangerous. Other contributing factors include glamorization in the movies and less of a focus on prevention in schools and by the government, they say.
While Collier said some of these reasons had merit, he did not think the government significantly influenced drug
"It is not a matter of penalties," he said. "You don't tell people that drug use is illegal and then decide to stop using drugs."
Cavanaugh agreed with Collier.
"It's not legal, so it’s kind of an attraction," she said. "It’s like going to The Wheel when you are 18 just so you can sav you went to a bar."
Although the number of college students abusing drugs such as marijuana appears to have stabilized, the number abusing alcohol continues to increase.
Francis said 84 percent of students admitted to drinking during the school year. Forty-four percent are binge drinkers, which means five or more drinks consumed in an hour by males and four or more by females. Francis did not have specific numbers to compare these figures to, but she said they were higher than ever.
"Alcohol is the number one drug on campus," she said.
Collier said the university was not in a position to halt drug use.
"We can be ready with information," he said, "But I don't think we can actively do anything to dissuade them."
Critical Volume
Music reviews by Robert Moczydlowsky
rmoczudk@falcon.cc.ukans.edu.
In previous semesters, this column has appeared in the Features section of the Kansan in several forms and styles. This semester, it will appear every Wednesday in this space under the name Critical Volume.
Interviews and reviews for national, local and regional acts will be featured with concert information. If you have a local band, please submit your compact discs, cassettes or vinyl recordings, plus any promotional material to: Critical Volume, care of the Kansan, 111 Stuffer-Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
66045. All local submissions will be reviewed.
Mango Jam Flux (Shanachie Entertainment). Though this record was released almost four weeks ago, it deserves mention here for a couple of Lawrence-related reasons. Ever-popular with students on the Hill. Mango Jam is always good to bring its sort of rock, sort of reggae brand of party tunes to town once a semester.
Mango Jam contributed an
This fall will be no exception.
807X4326 ZAERTTE WINGEN
Mango Jam now is touring to promote its newest album for its new record company (a switch that supposedly afforded the band more studio and production time). They are scheduled to play on Sept. 20 at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
The big news, however, is where the band will play the next evening. According to their record company's promo sheet, the band has agreed to play a party at the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, 1942 Stewart Ave., Sept. 21. Factor in what ought to be a successful new album, and you get an equation that should make those men at Zeta Beta Tau popular for a while.
contributed an
Gorky's Zygotic Myncl
Enter Mercury Records and Gorky's Zygotic Myncl. GZM has been the darling of the United Kingdom's large independent rock scene for the past two years, releasing both a No.1 single and a No.1 album for the tiny Ankst label. Recently, Mercury signed the band to an American contract with hopes that its flowing, freeform harmonic rock would catch on in the United States.
Overall.5.
Gorky's Zygotic Mynci Introducing Gorky's Zygotic Mynci (Mercury Records and Ankst Records). When bands Blur and Oasis released their now multi-platinum albums for the first time in the United States two years ago, the mainstream music press invented the term "Brit-pop" for these catchy, British Invasion throwback bands. Unfortunately, a lot of other original bands without Lennon/McCartney-style guitar riffs have been largely ignored.
Introducing Gorky's Zygotic Mynci is a compilation of the band's most popular songs, including the former No.1 Miss Trudy. If you're a fan of The Chieftains, the Pogues, or even American jam rockers Phish, you may want to check out this album or call to request it on KJHK. Overall, 7.
Eels beautiful freak (Dreamworks Records). Nothing makes a critic more skeptical than a band with an immediately successful single that holds the lead-off spot on the band's debut recording. Too often the song is placed for immediate listening because the marketing executives know it will be easily forgotten when mixed with the lesser songs on the album.
Thankfully, this is definitely not the case with the Eels' debut record Beautiful Freak and their hit song Novacaine for the Soul.
This record, from start to finish,
is a wonderful tribute to the simple
It's a sure bet that the Lazer will play this record relentlessly, so if you plan to buy it, do so now — before you get too sick of the singles to enjoy a truly
great debut album from a promising new band. Overall, before MTV and the Lazer get a hold of it.8.
Supersexy Swingin' Sounds features remixes of nearly every track from White Zombie's last studio album and a couple of tracks released as B-sides for earlier singles.
White Zombie Supersexy Swingin' Sounds (Geffen Records). There are few bands that can release an entire compact disc of remix tracks, call it a new album and get away with it. White Zombie has done just that.
beauty of the piano and Wurlitzer organ. Soft hiphop beats and fuzz guitars complement the keyboard work, and the gentle, half-spoken harmony vocals seem to make each song melt into the next without harsh transition. The highlight of the album is the song Susan's House, which includes a beautiful sample of the piano line from Gladys Knight and the Pips' Love Finds its own Way. Other gems include Flower, Guest List and Rags to Rags.
contributed an Fols
Eels
contributed ar
eels
DREAMING ROOMS
The strange thing here though, is that with the exception of one track by P.M. Dawn and two from the Dust Brothers (of Beastie Boys 'Paul's Boutique fame) these songs have been redone by an impressive collection of no-names. Charlie Clouser contributes four of the mixes — including a total beat reconstruction of the hit More Human than Human — but none of the mixes other than those by the Dust Brothers are nearly as entertaining as the original.
White Zombie fans could of course care less. White Zombie is a band in the rare position of having a fervent fan base that will buy anything the band releases, regardless of quality. This is sure to be a fast-selling album — too bad it isn't a good one. Overall, 3.
CHIEFS UPDATE
S
The Chiefs yesterday SIGNED FIVE PLAYERS to their practice squad: rookie wide receiver Eric Smith, defensive back Adrian Robinson, defensive back and wide receiver Mike Senters, and defensive linemen Herb Coleman and Kerry
Hicks. The Chiefs had released Smith in their final roster cutout Sunday. He played only one season of major college football at LSU. Hicks was a two-time All Big Eight selection at Colorado.
SPORTS
Story on Page 3B
KANSAS SOFTBALL UPDATE
Kansas head softball coach Tracy Bunge announced yesterday that Marla Looper and Carla Marchetti have been added to the couching staff as assistants. Looper joins the staff
after working one year as an assistant at Iowa State. Marchetti comes to Kansas after working at Northern Illinois University in Dekalb, Ill. for three seasons as an assistant coach.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1996
TIGER GOING PRO
Just two days after winning an unprecedented third consecutive U.S. Amateur golf title, Tiger Woods announced vester-
day that he would play in this weekend's Greater Milwaukee Open as a professional.
"This is to confirm that as of now I am a professional goffer," Woods said in a statement released through the tournament. He declined to comment further until a press conference scheduled for today, Woods, 20, would have been a junior at Stanford this fall.
TIGER WOODS
I
SECTION 2
Fast BREAKS
Mother pleads to clear son as bombing suspect
ATLANTA — The mother of the security guard suspected in the Centennial Olympic Park bombing said yesterday she has not heard from the White House — the Justice Department regarding her
tearful plea that officials clear her son.
"So we're just at a standstill," Barbara Jewell told NBC's Today show.
OLYMPIC GAMES
Jewell made her request to President Clinton at a news conference Monday, her first public statement since investigators turned their attention toward her 33-year-old son, Richard Jewell, nearly a month
Atlanta1996
She followed that with two television appearances vesterday morning.
Although authorities have said there are other suspects, none have been named. Richard Jewell has not been arrested or charged.
Catanho was claimed off waivers from
Redskins get new linebacker and release previous one
ASHBURN, VA. — The Washington Redskins signed linebacker Alcides Catancho yesterday. To make room, linebacker Terry Crews was released.
Rams
the Redskins practice squad until the Patriots reclaimed him to their active roster on September 13th.
New England. Originally signed as a rookie free agent, he spent the 1995 training camp with the Patriots. He was waived on August 19th last year and signed to
The 230-pound Catanho played in 12 games with New England last season and totaled nine special team tackles.
Record-setting goalie signs with the Phoenix Coyotes
Khabibulin ranked 10th in save percentage at .908 among NHL goal-tenders and tied for 13th in wins. In the playoffs, he earned both Jets victories before the Detroit Red Wings knocked Winnipeg out in the first round
PHOENIX — The Phoenix Coyotes signed third-year goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin to a multi-year contract yesterday. No terms were disclosed.
Khabibulin, 23, joined the then-Winnipeg Jets in 1994, appearing in 26 games with an 8-9-4 record. Last season, he appeared in 53 games, was 26-20-3 and set franchise highs in games, victories and minutes.
Missing football player returns to practice at MU
Williams disappeared on Aug. 18, a day after he told coach Larry Smith he was unsure about his future on the team. His absence spurred rumors that he had quit.
COLUMBIA, MO. — Senior tailback Kenyetta Williams has returned to practice at Missouri with a promise to put his personal problems behind him.
On Thursday, Williams resurfaced from four days at home in St. Louis and asked Smith to reinstate him. A unanimous vote of the university's Players Unity Council returned Williams to the team.
Sore ankle had prevented Williams from practicing the day before he left on the last full day of practice at training camp in Lexington, Mo. He said he was confronting personal issues at the time.
Williams is the only senior in Missouri's tailback corps and one of the team's most experienced leaders.
The Associated Press
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
Coach doing swimmingly
His athletes succeed in pool and classroom
PARK CITY
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
Despite having one of the best coaching resumes of any coach in the NCAA, many people have not heard about the accomplishments of Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf. There is a good reason for that.
"I don't really like having the spotlight on myself," Kempf said. "I feel that the spotlight really belongs on the kids."
Despite his humble nature, Kempf has accomplished a great deal in his more than 20 seasons as a coach and also as a swimmer at Kansas.
As a member of the swimming team from 1972 to 1976, Kempf won eight individual Big Eight Conference titles.
His success continued when he began coaching the women's team in 1975 and the men's in 1980. He has been named conference coach of the year eight different times, and the men's team has placed second in the Big Eight for the last 10 years.
Kempf is also known for having some of the best academic teams in the country.
"That comes from (athletic director) Bob Frederick and filters all the way down to the Kansas coaches — the message that academics are number one." Kemf said.
"It's also very important because there really is no professional swimming unless you go into coaching. It's really a priority to make sure the athletes get out with a degree."
Frederick said, "Gary and his program have
See Swimming, Page 3.
Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf, who has coached Kansas swimmers for more than 20 years, is enthusiastic about this year's team and the new Big 12 Conference they will participate in.
Big 12 may prove strong
20
Chris Hamilton/KANSAN
Kansas senior running back June Henley (20) and freshman linebacker Greg Davis (32) run drills during practice last week in Memorial Stadium. The team kicks off its season 7 p.m. Thursday against Ball State in Memorial Stadium.
New conference faces tougher schedules
Rv Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
A look at the Big 12 Conference schedule shows that teams are going to have a tough time filling up on cupcakes this year.
The new conference has forced teams to rearrange their schedules to accommodate the new teams. Kansas has gone from four non-conference games last year to three this year.
Last year, Kansas opened its season against Cincinnati, a team that went 2-8-1 in 1995. Tomorrow the No. 25 Jayhawks play Ball State, who went 7-4 last year.
It seems that the days of building up the win total against weak non-conference teams are finished.
Overall, Kansas plays nine teams this season with a .500 record or better, four of which won 10 games each, while last season Kansas played six teams with a .500 record or better in 1995 with only two 10-win teams on the schedule.
See Football, Page 3.
Haase is ready for basketball after productive summer at home
He also spent the summer in the weight room and working on his shooting.
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
Orlich said South Lake Tahoe ran five main camps and organized separate camps three days a week for elementary school students.
"It seemed like we had about 10,000 camps." Base said.
For the past 12 years, Jerod Haase has been a part of South Lake Taheo. Calif. basketball.
Haase described his summer in one word:
"He was in our camps since he was about eight years old," said Tom Orlich, Haase's high school coach. "He's come through the ranks and served in all aspects."
The past summer, like several before, the Kansas senior guard worked for basketball camps at his former high school.
Haase's three-point shooting percentage fell from 37 percent in 1994-95 to 29 percent last season, and his overall field-goal percentage plummeted from 43 percent to 35 percent. Haase's points per game fell from 15 to 10.8.
But when the season begins in late November, scrutiny from fans and the media may again fall on Haase's perimeter shooting.
"Productive," he said. "This summer was valuable. I got a lot done."
Along with the shooting slump came pressure, which might have contributed to Haase's shooting woes.
"I'm not really objective because I'm so close to him, but I did get upset," Orlich said.
The criticism Haase faced a year ago also hit Orlich hard.
"It wasn't necessarily something anybody else put on me like the media or my peers," Haase said. "It was pressure that I put on myself."
But Hase improved his game in other areas. He increased his assists and steals and decreased his turnovers.
While remaining close to Haase, Orlich said his days of coaching Haase were over.
would be shaken.
"Really and truly, he's one of his own wrestling editions. Cobb said.
"The last thing he needs is 1,000 people giving him advice," Orlich said. "The best people to give him advice now are his coaches at Kansas."
No coach has known Haase longer than Orlich, and he worried that Haase's confidence
Summer at home has given Haase a positive outlook on the coming season.
"I feel refreshed and ready to go," Haase said. "I'm not really worried about last season. I'm anxious for this season."
...is Ron Powlus overhyped?
Not since Hugh Grant has someone done so little with his talent, yet received so much media attention.
Spring cleaning for the sporting mind
Heisman candidate? Please! Put your money on Tennessee's Peyton Manning.
Let me kick back today, pop in my new Pearl Jam CD and clean out my cluttered sports mind.
...does Emmitt Smith play with injuries every season? From groin pulls to knee sprains, he's injured just about everything. I'm certainly no fan of America's team, but they just don't come any more durable than Emmitt.
...is every Chiefs fan breathing a sigh of relief that they are opening against Houston? The Oilers almost moved to Nashville after last season, and the funny thing is, no one cared.
...is anyone else bummed out that Hulk Hogan is a bad guy in the world of professional wrestling? What are all those little Hulksters going to do now?
...does anyone else miss Craig Kilborn's dry humor on SportsCenter? These new guys, like Rece Davis and Brett Haber, should go back to doing the weather.
..did anyone else notice that the Chiefs' quarterback problem, which cost them dearly in the playoffs last season, has yet to be rectified? And you Chiefs diehairs still think that this year's squad is going to the Super Bowl with Steve Bono at the helm.
Is it just me or...
Sober up!
...does everybody hope that Jimmy Johnson and his Miami Dolphins fall flat on their face this season?
By the way, the Big 12 Conference inaugural game was to have featured K-State and Texas A&M. However, K-State coach Bill Snyder poured until the Big 12 awarded K-State with Texas Tech
...did anyone else catch the creampuffs that Kansas State will do battle with this season? Indiana State, Cincinnati and Rice head the list.
for its opener.
...does anyone else care that Missouri is fielding a football team again this season?
...was learning about the firing of Dallas Green from the Mets about as surprising as flapping on the TV at 2 a.m. and seeing Dionne Warwick's Psychic Friends Network or an Ab Roller infemical?
■...will hockey this season seem a bit empty without the enthusiastic play-by-play calling of Tom Mees?
...is it surprising to anyone else that the most popular sportswriter in the area has backed down from a
SPORTS EDITOR
BILL
PETULLA
challenge to defend his alma mater in a face-off column against a lowly college writer? Don't worry Mr. Whitlock, I'll give you and your Ball State Cardinals a warm welcoming tomorrow.
■ ...does anyone feel a bit leery about the
fact that, the goin to tomorrow's game, the Jayhawks starting quarterback — Matt Johner—has thrown only for 31 more college yards than I have?
...does everyone owe Jacque Vaughn thanks for unselfishly turning down millions to be the savior for men's basketball at Kansas this season? Hey Jacque, ya ever played quarterback?
Hum...maybe that's a little too much to ask.
...did Penn State make USC look like DeSoto High School on Sunday? Not since their conational championship season in 1994 (yes, co-national champion) has the Nittany Lion offense looked so potent.
...does anyone else wish the plans for West Campus would have included a well-groomed, nine-hole golf course?
274 6
2B
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
American League
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
PRO BASEBALL
W 5 L Pct. GL
New York 74 56 569 -
Baltimore 70 61 534 4½
Boston 67 65 508 8
Toronto 62 70 470 13
Detroit 47 85 356 28
Central Division
West Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cleveland | 79 | 53 | .598 | — |
| Chicago | 70 | 63 | .526 | 9½ |
| Minnesota | 65 | 66 | .496 | 13½ |
| Milwaukee | 63 | 69 | .477 | 16 |
| Kansas City | 59 | 73 | .447 | 20 |
Monday's Games
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Texas | 75 | 56 | .573 | — |
| Seattle | 67 | 63 | .515 | 7½ |
| Oakland | 63 | 72 | .467 | 14 |
| California | 61 | 70 | .467 | 14 |
Arizona 2, Detroit 1
Toronto 5, Minnesota 3
Milwaukee 3, Chicago 2
Baltimore 14, California 11, 10 inning
Boston 4, California 1
Seattle 2, New York 1
Only games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Late Games Not Included
Baltimore 3, Oakland 1
Cleveland 12, Detroit 2
Minnesota at Toronto (n)
Milwaukee at Chicago (n)
Texas at City (n)
Boston at California (n)
New York at Seattle (n)
Wednesday's Games
Cleveland Hershiser (13-7) at Detroit Sager (3-2)
12:15 p.m.
Minnesota Wildland (108) at Chicago Bears win 9-4, 105 p.m.
10.11.14 p.m. Mike McDonald (10-8) at Chicago Bald-
Milwaukee McDonald (10-8) at Chicago Baldwin 9-4) 1.05 p.m.
Oakland Wengert (6-9) at Baltimore Mussina
Oakland Weigel (6-9) at Baltimore Mussolina (17-8), 2:05 p.m.
Minnesota Aguilera (7-5) at Toronto Hentgen
(16-7), 6:35 p.m.
Texas Hill (14-7) at Kansas City Belcher (12-8),
7:05 p.m.
Boston Gordon (9-6) at California Boskle (12-6)
8:35 p.m.
Thursday's Games
New York Gooden (11-5) at Seattle Mulholland (1-1), 9:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 7:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled
New York at California, 9:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Seattle, 9:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Seattle, 9:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled
G AB R H Pct.
AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS
AORdrugEx Sea11 145 479 115 175 365
FTroma 60 81 116 156 167
NI No 124 144 157 165 134
RAlomar Bal 123 480 113 166 .346
EMartinez Sea 139 395 97 134 .339
Molitor Min 131 537 88 182 .339
Greer Tex 123 487 90 163 .335
Crilio Mill 128 488 103 150 .335
J Gonzalez Tex 104 413 75 137 .322
McGwire Oak 103 337 84 110 .326
Home Runs
McGwire, Oakland, 44; Belle, Cleveland, 41; Striffey Jr, Seattle, 40; Mvaughn, Boston, 38; Igonzalez, Texas, 38; ByAnderson, Baltimore, 38; Bulner, Seattle, 36.
Runs Batted In
Belle, Cleveland, 122; RPalmere, Baltimore, 119; MVaughn, Boston, 118; J Gonzalez, Texas, 118; Buhner, Seattle, 117; Griffey Jr, Seattle, 112; AROrigente, Seattle, 106; FThomas, Chicago, 106.
Pitching (15 Decisions)
Nagy, Cleveland, 13-7, 645; Pettitte, New
York, 18-7, 120; Hentgen, Toronto 16-7, 696;
Gooden, New York, 11-5, 697; Mussina, Balti-
more, 17-8, 680; Hitchcock, Seattle, 12-6,
657; Pavlik, Texas, 14-7, 657; Bosk, California,
12-6, 667; Alvarez, Chicago, 14-7, 667;
Khill, Texas, 14-7, 667.
National League
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Atlanta | 81 | 49 | .623 | — |
| Montreal | 70 | 60 | .538 | 11 |
| Florida | 62 | 70 | .470 | 20 |
| New York | 59 | 73 | .447 | 23 |
| Philadelphia | 59 | 74 | .406 | 28½ |
Central Division
| | w | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Houston | 71 | 62 | .534 | — |
| St. Louis | 69 | 63 | .523 | 1½ |
| Chicago | 64 | 65 | .496 | 1 |
| Cincinnati | 64 | 66 | .492 | 5½ |
| Pittsburgh | 56 | 75 | .427 | 1 |
W L Pct. GB
San Diego 73 60 .549 —
Los Angeles 71 60 .542 1
Colorado 69 63 .522 3½
San Francisco 56 74 .431 15½
St. Louis 3, Houston 2
Colorado 9, Cincinnati 5, 7 innings, rain
only games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Late Game Not Included
Philadelphia 5, San Francisco
Pittsburgh 3, Atlanta 2
Baltimore 1, Washington
Florida 6, St. Louis 3
Houston 6, Chicago 5
Los Angeles 5, Montreal 1
Cincinnati at Colorado. (n)
Wednesday's Games
TV
Cincinnati Carrara (1-0) at Colorado Ritz (13-10)
2:05 p.m.
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Wednesday, schedule subject to change and or blackouts);
SPORTS WATCH
10 a.m.
WEDNESDAY,AUGUST 28
USA — Tennis, U.S. Open Tennis Championships, men's opening and women's second rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
WGN — Major League Baseball, Milwaukee at Chicago White Sox
ESPN — Major League Baseball, Los Angeles at Montreal
ESPN2 — Roller Hockey international, playoffs, championship game No.1
USA — Tennis, U.S. Open Tennis Championships, men's opening and women's second rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
ESPN2 — USAC Auto Racing, midgets, at Winchester, Ind.
Los Angeles Astacio (8-7) at Montreal Leiter (7-1)
6:35 a.m.
Atlanta Wade (4-0) at Pittsburgh Loaiza (0-0),
*; 6:35 p.m.
ESPN — Major League Baseball.
N.Y. Yankees at Seattle or Boston at California
San Diego Valenzuela (11-7) at New York Clark (12-10). 6:40 a.m.
Florida Valdes (0-2) at St. Louis Osborne (11-
7:05 p.m.)
Chicago Trachele (11-7) at Houston Kile (10-8),
7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia Hunter (2-4) at San Francisco
Garden (10-5) 9:35 p.m.
Thursday's Games
San Diego at New York, 12:40 p.m.
Chicago at Houston, 1:35 p.m.
Cincinnati at Colorado, 2:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 2:05 p.
Los Angeles at Montreal, 6:35 p.
Florida at St. Louis, 7:05 p.
Only games scheduled
| | G | AB | R | H | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| EYoung Col | 113 | 461 | 99 | 159 | .341 |
| Piazza LA | 118 | 438 | 69 | 150 | .342 |
| Grace ChCol | 112 | 433 | 71 | 148 | .342 |
| Burks ChC | 112 | 512 | 124 | 175 | .342 |
| Ljohnson NYM | 130 | 553 | 96 | 177 | .320 |
| Gilkey NYM | 128 | 481 | 96 | 153 | .318 |
NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS
Sosa, Chicago, 40; Galarrago, Colorado, 39;
Hundley, New York, 38; Sheffield, Florida, 36;
Burks, Colorado, 36; Bonds, San Francisco,
35; Castilla, Colorado, 34.
Biclette Col 130 528 97 168 .318
Cp Jones Alt 126 491 97 154 .318
Bagwell Hou 133 465 89 146 .314
Sheffield Fla 131 443 99 139 .314
Home Runs
Galerragga, Colorado; 124; Bichette, Colorado
115; Burks, Colorado; 119; Bonds, San Fran
cisco; 107; Sheffield, Florida; 103; DBell, Hou
ston; 102; Gilkey, New York, 102.
Runs Batted In
Pitching(15 Decisions)
Smotz, Atlanta, 20-7, 741; Reynolds, Houston, 16-6, 727; Neagle, Pittsburgh, 14-6, 700; Gardner, San Francisco, 10-5, 667; Glavine, Atlanta, 13-7, 850; Hamilton, San Diego, 12-7, 832; RMartinez, Los Angeles, 10-6, 625.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Top 25 Football Schedule
All TimesCST
Thursday, Aug. 29
No.2 Tennessee vs. UNLV, 6 p.m.
No. 4 Florida vs. SW Louisiana, 5 p.m.
No. 5 Colorado vs. Washington, 2:30
No 8 Texas vs. Missouri 6 p.m.
No. 11 Miami at Memphis, 12:30 p.m.
No. 13 Alabama vs. Bowling Green at Birmingham. Ala. 2 p.m.
inghail, Aaf; 2:p1. p.
No. 16 Abum vs. Alabama-Birmingham, 5:30
No. 19 Brigham Young vs. Arkansas State, 8 p.m.
No. 21 Kansas State vs. Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m.
PRO TENNIS
U.S.Open Results
NEW YORK (AP) — Results Tuesday of the $10.89 million U.S. Open, at the National Tennis
$10.99 million U.S. Open at the National
Center in Flushing Meadow;
1. Theatsam (1), Tampa, FL; def, Jimy Szymanski, Venezuela, 8-2, 6-2, 1-4
Houston Muster (3), Austria, def. Javier Frana,
Argentina, 6-1, 7-7(7-2), 6-2
Jirn汪娜, Czech Republic, def. Ben Elwood,
Australia, 6-2, 4-6, 3-1
Men's First Round Singles
Bernard Karbacher, German, def. Jonathan Stark, Seattle, 7-5, 6-3, 5-7, 5-7.
Bondan Ulhirach, Czech Republic, def.
Bionda Costa (14), Spain, 2-6, 6-4, 7-6 (7-2)
[5]
well, Richmond, Va., 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5.
Alex Correira, Spain, def. Byron Black, Zimbabwe. 7-6(8-6), 3-6-2, 6-2.
Heman Gumy, Argentina, def. Martin Damm.
Czech Republic, 7-5, 6-4, 7-5.
Scott Draper, Australia, def. Galo Blanco,
Spain, 6-7, 7-5, 6-3.
Marcelo Rios (10), Chile, det. André Pavel, Romania, 4-6, 4-2, 6-4, 2-
Sielerd afdort, Swiden, Gef. Richard Krajicek
(5), Netherlands, 0-6, 3-6, 3-6
Petr Korda, Czech Republic, def. David Cald-
Tim Hemman, Britain, def. Roberto Jaball,
Brazil, 2-8, 6-3, 6-4.
Ruud, Norway, 1-6, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4.
Jakob Hasek, Switzerland, def. Nicklas Kutti
Sweden, 6-3, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4,
Pablo Campana, Ecuador, def. Todd Wood-
Thomas Enqvisit (13), Sweden, def. Stephane Simion, Franxe. 8-3-6, 1-6, 4.
Mark Knowles, Bahamas, def. Marcelo Filipi-
nol. Uruguay-6.3, 7.5, 6-1.
Roberto Carretero, Spain, def. Jordi Burillo,
6-3, 3-6, 4-6, 0-1, 10-tired.
Thomas Johansson, Sweden, def. Zenzo Furtan, italy, 4-2, 6-2, 7-6, 5-1, 7-5
Mikael Tillstrom, Sweden, def. Tamer Et
Sawy, Egypt, 1-6, 7-6-9, 7-6-1, 6-1, 3-6-4.
Daimer, Paimar, Tampa, Fla., def. Marc Rosset
(15) Switzerland, 6-7 (7-9), 6-4, 6-4, 6-3.
Czech Republic, 6-2, 7-6(7-0), 6-3.
Doug Flach, Atlanta, def. Gliancu Pozzi,
21.
Javier Sanchez, Spain, def. David Skoch,
Czech Republic, 6-2, 7-6 (7-0), 6-3.
Gedric Ploline (16), France, def. Francisco Clavet, Spain, 4-6, 7-6, 7-3; 6-4
Joug Fluch, Atlanta, def. Giancla Pozzi,
italy, 7-5, 7-6 (7-5), 2-6, 7-6 (8-6).
Hendrik Dreekman, Germany, def. Greg
Ruskiadk, Białek 6-2, 6-4-2.
Alexander Volkov, Russia, def. Magnus Lars
sconden. 6-7 (5-7), 6-4, 5-2 retired.
Ruseusk, Brian, b. 2, 6-4, 8-2.
Mark Philippidis, Australia, def. Marl
Doubles
First Route
Goran invanievic (4), Croatia, vs. Andre
Cheskovsko, Russia, 1-6, 8-2, 6-4, 8-4.
Jean-Philippe Fleurian and Guillaume Rueau,
def. Donald Johnson, Chapel Hill, N.C.
Henrik Jan Davids and Sjeng Schalken,
Netherlands, def. Jonathan Leach and Rick
Leach, Laguna Beach, Calif., 3-6, 7-6 (7-4), 6-
4,
Kelly Jones, San Diego, and Chris Woodruff,
Knoxville, Tenn., def. Mark Petchey and Danny
Sansford, Britain. 7-5, 6-2.
Olivier Delaire, France, and Jeff Tarango,
Manhattan Beach, Calif., def. Mark Merklein,
Coral Springs, Fl., and Bryan Shelton, Atlanta,
6-7 (9-1) 7-6 (7-5), 6-3.
Shelby Cannon, Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. and Roger Smith, Bahamas, def. Stefano Pescolosio and Vinconzo Santopadre, Italy.
6-4, 3-6, 6-4.
Women's First Round Singles
Rita Grande, Italy, def., Alexia Dechaume-
Ballet, France, 6-3, 6-0.
Miller, Midland, Mich., 6-0, 6-1
Bursa Suresu, Bursa, dal, Mariana
Monica Seles (2), Sarasota, Fla., def. Anne Miller, Milder, Mich. 6-0-1-6
Paola Suarez, Argentina, def. Marianne Werdel Willemeyer, San Diego, 6-4, 6-3.
Nathalia Tauziat, France, def. Angelica
Gavincko, Mexico, 7-6(4), 6-4.
Ann Grossman, Grove City, Ohio, def. Silvia
Farina, Italy, 6-4, 6-3.
Judith Wiesner, Austria, def. Iva Majoli (5),
Croatia, 2-8, 3-8, 1-7
Marlane de Swart, South Africa, def.
Dominique van Roos, Belgium, 1-6, 2-4, 6-2
Kristie Boogert, Netherlands, def. Joanne Nuger, South Africa 6-1, 6-0
Lindsay Davenport B), Newport Beach, Fla.,
del Adriana Sera-Zanarii Italy 6-2, 6-1
Fiorencia Labat, Argentina, def. Kathy Rinaldi Stunkel, Stuart, Flare, 6-2, 6-2.
def. Adriana Serena-Zaettan, Italy, 6-2, 6-1.
def. Kiera Boogert, Netherlands, def. Joannetta
Natasha Zvereva, Belauus, def. Virginia
Ruano-Pauscal, Spain, 6-2, 6-7(5), 6-2.
Elena Wagner, Germany, def. Gigil Fernandez, Aspen, Colo., 6-1, 6-4.
Kujowna Hassabuov (17), Slovakia, def. Radka
Johannes Habstuvo (17), Slovakia, def. Radka
Johannes Czech Republic, 6-4, 4-2
Nicole Arenté, Gainesville, Fla., def. Sandra Cacic, Bradenton, Fla.; 6-2, 7-6 (8-6).
ArantaX Sanchez Vicario 3), Spain, def. Laxmi Porurl, San Francisco, 6-2-1, 6
Sandrine Testud, France, def. Pam Shriver,
alttimore, 7-5, 8-2
Kleinova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4.
Annelie Ellwood, Australia, def. Jennifer
Karin Kschwend, Germany, det. Sandra
*Sova*, Czech Republic, 6:3, 4:3
Annabell Ellwood, Australia, def. Jennifer
apraït, Wiesel Chapley, Fla., 6-4, 6-4.
Capriati, Wesley Chapel, Fla., 6-4, 6-4.
Capriati, Wesley Chapel, Fla., 6-4, 6-4.
Adams, Mississippi City). yexas 6-4, 6-2-1
Elish Lihovitzeva, Russia. def. Kyoko Nagai
M.
Peta Lengatra, Czech Republic, def. Katrina Adams Missouri City, Tahoe 4-6-2
Elena Ibanezová, Havasa, Derko.kyo Nagasuka, Japan. 7-6 (7-5), 8-1.
Jana Novotna (7), Czech Republic, Francesc Labianli, Italy, 6-1, 7-5.
Kimberly Po, Incline Village, Nev., def. Kimiko Date (10), Japan, 6-2, 7-5
Amy Frazier, Rochester Hills, Mich., def. Lärsa Neiland, Latvia, 6-1, 6-3.
Stubbs, Australia, 6-4, 8-3
Lisa Raymon, Pa., del. Lori McNiel
Conchita Martinez (4), Spain, def. Ruxandra Dromagnia, Bomarica 6-2, 6-0
Miriam Oremans, Netherlands, def. Radja
Zubnakova, Slovakia, 2,4-6,1-7
*Radja Zubnakova*, Slovakia, 2,4-6,1-7
Sandra Foerder, Austria, def. Zina Garrison Jackson, Housen, 2.8-6, 7-5. T
NATURALWAY
Steffi Griff (1), Germany, def. Yayuk Basuki,
Indonesia, 6-7-7 (6-4).
Nanne Dahlman, Finland, def. Lindsay Lee,
Dunwoody, G., 6-3-6-4.
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NATURAL BODY CARE
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NATURAL WAY
• 820-822 MASS • 841-0100
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NEW! IMPROVED!
- The newly expanded Watkins Pharmacy has online claims processing for many insurance plans. As your prescription is filled, our computer gets immediate details on your eligibility and co-pay.
- Our new prescription counseling area allows more privacy for asking your medication questions.
- Your Watkins Pharmacists honor prescriptions from your home physician or your Watkins physician.
- Our prices are usually lower than off campus. Call us for price quotes at 864-9512.
Pharmacy Hours
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
3B
Recovered player adds size
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
Anne Kreimer wasn't surprised when she heard her English professor mispronounce her first name during roll call on the first day of class.
"It's kind of a pain, because people never get my name right." Kreimer said. "It used to bother me."
Last season, however, it was n't the mispronunciation of her name that bothered Kreimer but a torn anterior cruciate ligament in her right knee. In a blocking drill last September, Anné (prounced ah-nuh) Kreimer tore her ACL when she landed on junior outside hitter Leslie Purkvile's foot.
Kreimer already had red-shirted before the injury, but she still was allowed to practice and travel with the team. She planned to use last season to improve her game.
"I wanted to use that year to my advantage, to develop my skills," she said.
After surgery in October,
Kreimer had to wait until the middle of July to practice volleyball at full force.
Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise said that Kreimer moved well but that she needed to communicate more on the court.
"She's pretty active," Schonewise said. "She's still learning the game a lot. In a lot of ways she is still a true man even though she's been here a year."
Kreimer was an all-state selection her senior year at St. Mary's High School in Blue Springs, Mo.
Kreimer, a 6-foot-1 middle blocker, will put on her number 13 Jayhawk uniform for her first collegiate game this Saturday at the Oregon State Tournament in Corvallis, Ore.
Creighton, Wichita State and Northeast Missouri State tried to recruit her, but she decided to become a Jayhawk.
Schonewise said Kreimer brought the team needed size and that she had the potential to become a great blocker.
Kreimer, who has four years of eligibility left, said last year wasn't wasted, despite her inability to play.
"I think they're looking for me to step up because I have that year of experience," Kreimer said. "Not really playing experience, but learning experience from watching."
Now that Kreimer's knee is recovered, she will work in practice to reach another goal: to play in the starting lineup in the season opener.
"I would love to be able to play in the starting lineup, but even if I don't, it would be nice to get in the games," Kreimer said.
Kansas sophomore setter Laura Rohde said Kreimer was a hard worker who kept the team laughing.
Rohde said that teammates called Kreimer Anne Slash because of the spelling of Kreimer's first name.
NSI
Pam Dishman/KANSAN
Kreimer got the name from her father, Dave, who heard it in a bar in Germany when he was in the Air Force. He liked it
Kansas volleyball player Anné Kreimer prepares to bump the ball during Monday's practice. Kreimer will be playing her first match Aug. 30 at the Oregon State Tournament.
so much that he gave it to his daughter.
always been a model program in my mind. They place great emphasis on academics as well as athletics. I have the highest regard for what they have accomplished academically as well as athletically."
"Her name's one of a kind, and she's one of a kind," Rohde said.
Swimming
Continued from Page 1
Kempf said that his approach had changed as he gained experience.
"I was 21 when I first started coaching, and there were three girls on the team who were older than me," he said. "I had to be pretty hard-nosed to get their attention. That reputation has followed me, but I think now I exercise a milder form of discipline."
Kempf said he was looking forward to competing in the Big 12 against men's national champion Texas and top-20 Texas A&M.
"It's certainly going to be one of the best conferences, but I expect the best from our team as well," he said.
Kempf said that the team did not have to finish first in the conference to have a successful season.
"I really just want the kids to swim as close to their potential as they can and to challenge to be the best," he said.
Kempf said that swimming is not his top priority.
"When I was younger, swimming was the centerpiece," he said. "Now my priority is family first, then swimming. Those are the things that I live and die for."
Football
Continued from Page 1.
Kansas State also finds itself in a similar situation. The Wildcats open the season against conference foe Texas Tech. It's the first time the Wildcats season-opener is against a conference foe, not just under coach Bill Snyder's reign, but in the 101 year history of the school.
"We've tried in the past to stair-step our way into the conference," Snyder said. "Now we're trying to lean a mountain."
Though Ball State isn't a conference team, it plays in the Mid-America Conference.
"They're a good, solid well-coached football team," Kansas coach Glen Mason said. "It's a very good brand of football. It's made up of kids that weren't recruited by the Big Ten schools but figured they should have been. They play with a chip on their shoulder."
The game will be the first game for a team in the conference's northern division. Southern-division team Texas A&M lost the first Big 12 game ever, a 41-37 loss to Brigham Young University in Saturday's Pisskin Classic.
Don't expect Mason to get choked up about facing Ball State. He began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Ball State in 1972 and was the Cardinals defensive line coach in 1974.
1000
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INTRODUCTION DOG FOOD FISHWIES DOG FOOD 18 LB. & LARGER 1¢ PER POUND Over Invoice Cost
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Wednesday, August 28, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Sat-Sun
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Fri,Mon-Thursday
University of Kansas Women's RUGBY Football Club
Practice
Mon & Wed.
Shenk Sports Complex
23rd & Iowa Street
6 p.m.-8 p.m.
Organizational Meeting Wed. August 28th, 7 p.m.
Robinson Hall Room 156, KU
For more information call Stacey Stringfellow 749-3380
Mimi Doukas 843-4875
EVERYONE WELCOME!!!
Crown Cinema
BEFORE & PM ADULTS $3.00
LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
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Mercantile Bank of Lawrence is the
EVERY.
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16 Fingertip Banking ATMs
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"Playing in the Big 12 is going to make us recruit harder," Waugh said. "We have a lot of good players in our conference, and they can't all go to a Texas school, so in the future we'll expect to get some good players from within the conference."
Conference golf powers unite
New competition could strengthen Jayhawks' game
With collegiate sports heading into a new era of super-conferences, traditional powers from foreign conferences have become allies to ensure a wealth of success.
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
Waugh agreed. The process will be tough but worthwhile, he said.
New super-conferences, modeled after the expanded Southeastern Conference, continue to form as lucrative television deals increase. The Big 12 and the Western Athletic Conference, which expanded to a national high of 16 teams, could not only strengthen major sports, but
Last year the Big Eight Conference and the Western Athletic Conference were strong golf conferences, while the Southeastern and Southwest Conferences stood at center stage.
smaller ones such as golf as well.
What a difference a year makes. The Big 12 combined top-five teams Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Texas, as well as top-25 teams Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Kansas, and became one of golf's premier conferences. The addition of the Texas schools to an already strong conference cannot be overstated in the Big 12's lofty expectations, said women's golf head coach Jerry Waugh.
Unfortunately for the Big 12, assembling the teams will be difficult. Because each school invites whomever it wants to attend their invitational, not all conference schools will be granted an invitation by their Big 12 comrades.
What a difference a year makes.
As for the WAC, they accepted UNLV, San Jose State and former-SWC teams Texas Christian and Southern Methodist this year. They will compete with New Mexico and Brigham Young, making it a strong golf conference, much like the other two super-conferences in America; the Big 12 and the SEC.
"Playing against strong schools will do nothing but make you better," Waugh said. "Having to compete at a higher level is preferred over playing a lesser opponent, because you always want to
improve on the quality of your play."
Because these new super-conferences have all but diminished regional boundaries, coaches now have access to a larger recruiting base. Despite this, men's head coach Ross Randall believes that snagging a top recruit from another region will take some time.
Senior golfer Kit Grove said he was, prepared for the season's challenge.
"It will take a while before Texas kids will take a long, hard look at KU," Randall said. "For now our recruiting base is the same, but there will be more interconference competition (for recruits) somewhere in the future."
"The fall season will be an interesting one to say the least." Grove said. "Although we won't necessarily play, the southern schools all too much because of our schedules, we'll need to find out who can play for us when we play better competition."
New Hornet rips Knicks' logic
Mason says exchange was foolish decision
The Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Anthony Mason joined the Charlotte Hornets yesterday and wasted no time in delivering a blunt message to his employers, the New York Knicks: You've been had.
"I think the organization up there is really fooling themselves," Mason said after being introduced by the Hornets, who acquired him in a trade last month for Larry Johnson.
Besides unloading the remaining nine years of Johnson's 12-year, $84-million contract, the Hornets, Mason said, gave up a solid offensive player for one who is strong on both ends of the floor.
Mason said the Knicks' defense likely would suffer as a result.
"I think everybody — press, basketball people, coaches, fans — knows defense wins games," said the 6-foot-7, 250-pound Mason, who has built a reputation as one of the NBA's better defenders. "Any time that you start going the offensive
route and start fooling yourself into thinking that you made the team better because you think you got more scoring or whatever, I think you lost a little bit."
"Larry played good offense," Mason said. "That's what he was here to do: score. I'm not saying that his defense wasn't great or whatever. It's not a knock on Larry."
Mason, who averaged a careerhigh 14.6 points last season compared with Johnson's 20.5, said his remarks shouldn't be taken as criticism of Johnson.
Mason said he hoped the Knicks were happy with the trade because he was sure the Hornets would be pleased.
"God has blessed me with a lot of ability to be very versatile. And any time you can get a versatile player as opposed to somebody who can do one or two things, I don't think you really lose."
Mason would not comment on his
"Larry shot — what — 500, 600 more shots than I did and averaged five more points?" he said. "I bring defense, I bring the ability to pass, I bring the ability that a team can't trap us, because I can break a press.
"I think everybody press,basketball people,coaches,fans knows defense wins games."
Anthony Mason new Charlotte Hornets forward
Mason, who is fond of having messages shaved into his hair, showed up yesterday with a new one: rebirth of a star.
pending felony assault case in New York. Authorities have set an Oct. 11 court date — seven days after training camp opens — to discuss Mason's alleged role in an altercation with New York police. Mason's lawyers have said they were confident the charges would be reduced to misdemeanors and resolved.
"That was meant as a collective thing," he said. "Charlotte's always had a lot of talent but never reached where they wanted to get."
Running backs to play game on CD-ROM
The Associated Press
HUNT VALLEY, Md. — Hall of Fame running backs Walter Payton and Tony Dorsett will kick off a 15,000-mile Rowdy Friends bus tour of 14 Monday-night football sites when they play each other in an interactive CD-ROM game Saturday.
The video game, based on ABC's Monday night series, will take place at Payton's restaurant in Aurora, Ill. The opening Monday night game of the NFL season is Dallas at Chicago.
Each weekend throughout the season the bus tour will stop in Monday night football cities. The bus is equipped with 11 computers and two PC big screen stations.
The game itself features ABC's announcing team of Al Michaels, Frank Gifford and Dian Dierford as hosts.
NOW IS THE TIME!
KU
All-Sports Combo
Student Ticket Distribution
Please read before picking up your tickets
Your Assigned Picked-Up Date
Wescoe Beach
H - P
8:30 - 4:00
Q-Z
Make-Up Day
Monday, August 26
Tuesday, August 27
Wednesday, August 28
Thursday, August 29
You may pick up only your own ticket.
You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the men's basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your Sports Combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up.
You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1996 fee sticker to receive your tickets.
If you miss your assigned pick-up date and make-up day, you may pick up you tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East Lobby of Allen Fieldhouse beginning Friday, August 30, 1996.
KANSAS FOOTBALL 1996
Home Opener, this Thursday. Aug. 29, 7:00 pm --- Jayhawks vs. Ball State
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 28,1996
5B
Coach returns to Baltimore
Marchibroda leaves Colts then agrees to coach new Ravens
The Associated Press
BALTIMORE — Ted Marchibroda is proof that things are not always what they seem.
This gray-haired, soft-spoken man looks more like a guy who would take tickets at an NFL game than shout instructions from the sidelines. He doesn't have the distinctive jaw of Bill Cowher, the furrowed brow of Bill Parcells or even the fine coiffure of Jimmy Johnson.
Yet this unassuming, mild-mannered man has a reputation for coaching success.
Twice during his NFL coaching career, Marchibroda improved a team by eight victories in his first season. He converted a 2-12 Baltimore Colts team into a 10-4 squad in
1975, and in his second stint with the franchise he led Indianapolis to a 9-7 record in 1992 after inheriting a 1-15 team.
As an assistant coach he helped in the development of renowned quarterbacks Roman Gabriel, Sonny Jurgensen, Billy Kilmer and Jim Kelly. With Marchibroda as a head coach, quarterbacks Bert Jones and Jim Harbaugh became stars.
Marchibroda led the Baltimore Colts to three AFC East titles in the 1970s, and last season he took Indianapolis within one play of the Super Bowl. When the Colts balked at giving him a raise after the 1995 season, Marchibroda walked.
He figured his 25-year association with the NFL might be finished.
"I didn't have much time to think about what might happen, but that's the way you want to go out," he said. "You'd like to win the Super Bowl, but if you come that close you have no regrets."
Marchibroda had heard that Art Modell was talking with former Miami Dolphins coach Don Shula about the coaching job for his newly named Baltimore Ravens.
"That's why I didn't give Baltimore much thought," Marchibroda said. "I wasn't comparing myself to Shula."
But Modell was. When Shula
"Ted Marchibroda is the most underrated coach in the history of the NFL."
owner,BaltimoreRavens
Art Modell
turned down the opportunity to coach the team, Modell acted quickly. Marchibroda hadn't finished clearing out his office when Modell called and set up a meeting.
"It didn't take more than 24 hours for me to hire Ted Marchibroda," Modell said. "Ted Marchibroda is the most underrated coach in the history of the NFL."
And so, at age 65, Marchibroda again has been put in charge of turning around a franchise following a disappointing year. This time it's the Baltimore Ravens, who went 5-11 as the Cleveland Browns last season under Bill Belichick.
The Browns had a mediocre defense, a harmful quarterback controversy and an inept running game. The players had a hard time coping with the pending move from Cleveland, winning only two of the final 12 games.
Marchibrochda looked beyond that and saw a team that made the playoffs in 1994. "I expect us to win right away," he said.
Ravens running back Earnest Byner likened Marchibroda to former Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs, who gained entry to the NHL Hall of Fame this year. Byner played under Gibbs from 1989 to 1992.
Marchibroda would enjoy hearing that. He has no desire to grab the media acclaim heaped upon many of his more eye-catching peers.
"Coach Marchibroda doesn't mind putting the hammer down if he has to, just like Gibbs," Byner said. "I think some of the fire comes out when things aren't going right. But he's always trying to build us up, make us better and help us grow."
"The respect you care about comes from your players," Marchibroda said. "What the others think about you is wonderful, but the important thing is what your players think."
Tigers to open season with Big 12 foe
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri coach Larry Smith would have preferred to open the season against North Texas, like the Tigers did in 1995, instead of against eighthranked Texas.
That's the price of life in the Big 12.
"Every coach would like to not start off with one of the toughest opponents in the conference." Smith said yesterday. "You always like to start off with the non-conference opponents.
"But this season doesn't afford us that opportunity, so we take that and go with it."
Missouri, which plays at Texas Saturday, has endured 12 consecutive losing seasons. Last year the Tigers tried jump-starting the schedule with early season games against North Texas, Bowling Green and Northeast Louisiana, winning two of the three.
"You always like to start off with the non conference opponents."
Larry Smith
Missouri football coach
This season it's going to be tougher to make a quick start. Texas was 10-2-1 and played in the Sugar Bowl. Clemson, the team's third opponent. Sept. 21, was 8-4 and played in the Gator Bowl.
"It makes it tougher, no question," Smith said. "It also gives you something to shoot for."
On the positive side, Smith said the new conference has spurred Missouri to upgrade its facilities and also should help in recruiting.
A. S. BINCHER
"It's really
going to help in the state of Texas,
Smith said. "That is a real hotbed
of recruiting talent. It gives us a
shot at some of those people."
Larry Smith
He is far from conceding a 0-1 start, and he said that the game, the opener for both teams, might help Missouri.
"I don't care which side you're on, you've got new chemistry, and I think that can be an advantage," Smith said. "I don't care if you're the favorite or the underdog, anything can happen."
Smith also said Missouri, which
"We know what we're doing," Smith said. "It comes down to what we do each game. If we get some momentum and they get to feeling confident about themselves, I think this is the kind of team that can have a winning season."
has had five consecutive three-win seasons, had a shot at ending the program's long slide.
Jones started five games last year and rushed for 368 yards with a 4.7-yard average and four touchdowns. But he completed only one-third of his passes with four interceptions and no touchdowns.
Smith will start sophomore Corby Jones at quarterback, but he said junior Kent Skornia also would play.
"I don't think you can expect him to execute the offense flawlessly, because he won't," Smith said. "But he's a guy who's going to make plays. His passing has improved tremendously."
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
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SLAB
Student Legislative Awareness Board
...working to provide to the students of the University of Kansas the means to be active participants in the political life of their community.
Applications are now being accepted for the following coordinator positions:
Education/Forums Publications Voter Participation Issue Research Jayhawk Network Treasurer Lobby Coordinator
- Applications are available in the Student Senate Office, 410 Kansas Union.
- Application deadline:
5:00 PM, Friday,
August 30, 1996.
- For more information call 864-7337/864-3710
-SLAB is a division of the University of Kansas Student Senate
VANDERBILLS & TOPEKA PERFORMING ARTS ASSOCIATION present
Alison Krauss
& Union Station
1995 CMA Female Vocalist of the Year
Three-time Grammy Award Winner
September 5 • 8 p.m.
Georgia Nease Gray Performance Hall
All Seats • $22.50
With Special
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To order tickets, stop by the TPAC Box Office, located at
8th & Quincy, or call 297-9000 or 1-800-949-6722
97
COUNTRY
Can you draw better than this?
Dive
The Hill, a monthly magazine published by The University Daily Kansan, is dedicating a section of each issue to KU's artistically inclined. All students interested in publishing artwork, photographs, poetry or comic strips on the pages of one of the country's best college newspapers should submit an entry. Chosen entries will appear in the Fall 1996 issues of The Hill.
Entries due by 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 3. First issue is Thursday, Sept. 12. For more information contact Amy McVey, Special Sections Editor at 864-4810.
The Hill
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
6B
Wednesdav. August 28. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Horoscopes:
Today's Birthday (Aug. 28): Team up with an imaginative partner this year to make necessary changes. With quick action in October, you can make or save a lot of money. Your home is disrupted in December and full of surprises. Go back to a favorite place with your sweetheart in January. An old method solves the problem in February. With your organizational skills, a shared dream comes true in March. Protect your valuables in April with a good insurance policy. A group get-together leads to romance in July.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is a 9. Look around you. Somebody's struggling with a job you could do easily. We all have different talents, so don't be critical. Lend a helping hand, and a true friendship will be your reward. Your luck is good with both romance and children this evening.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 5. You might be anxious for action, but it is not quite time. Wait until Friday. Instead, draw up the blueprints of your dreams. Get a clear picture of what you want to happen. Tonight, make up a list of jobs to be done and set priorities.
**Scorpio** (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is a 9. You're a very intense person and get a lot done when you're working. If you devote that kind of concentration to relaxation today, you'll be in good shape to face the coming challenges. You may run into a few problems Friday, so it won't hurt to have energy in reserve.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Today is a 6. Confusion runs rampant today. If there is not enough money to do everything, consider taking out a loan. You don't like entanglements, so keep the terms of your agreement simple. Make sure you know exactly what each side will contribute to and get from the relationship.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 9. Prepare yourself. Things are going to be moving quickly for a while. Study the situation. It's not cheating to ask your partner to help; you can't be expected to think of everything. You'll have a lucky break this evening. Be in the right place with the right person.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 3. Focus on finances — balance the checkbook, pay the bills, etc. You'd rather be doing just about anything else, but the time is right. Later, if there's anything left, you can go shopping, but don't bother to buy any lottery tickets.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) - Today is a 9. Yours is the sign of gifts, and today you ought to give yourself one. You have been good lately. You have worked hard and taken care of other people, sometimes without being asked. You deserve to have something you've always wanted. Go and get it.
Aries (March 21-April 19) - Today is a 6. Ever thought of owning your own business? That might be the best way to utilize your talents. If you like the ides, find somebody with more experience and ask how to begin. In romance, take it easy. Be the perfect lady or gentleman and you'll be more successful.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is a 4. Keep your comments to yourself. Pay attention to what other people feel, not what they say or even what they do. Hearing moods might be the most difficult thing in the world for you to learn, but the skill will come in handy.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is a 9. All the careful planning and patient work you've been doing is starting to pay off. You may be tempted to blow your sizable nest egg on clothes or a trip. Be sensible. Figure out how you can travel and have fun at a profit.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 6. Make a little time for quiet contemplation today. Clear your mind, meditate, and you could get an idea that will make you rich. Tonight, finish a job a loved one has been nagging you about. It's not much fun now, but it'll be even less fun later.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
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What steps can you take to help a friend change their eating habits?
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I will use a standard text rendering system for this image.
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When is thin too thin?
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NATURALWAY
Rachel Le, Graduate Student, Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Beth Nelson, Graduate Student, Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Facilitators
Sponsored by The Entity Taylor Women's Resource Center. Contact Janet Kammers, for more information. Contact Rachel Hadde at 844-602-3521.
Prior Service Veterans For the Kansas National Guard Try Us For a Year!
Wanted
Serve 2 days a month and 2 weeks a year
Weekend Drill Pay effect. 1 Jan. 1996
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Possible to enter at last rank held up to E-6. $200,000 Life Insurance, PX & Commissary Privileges,Retirement Benefits.Work a weekend not a week! Call today! 842-0759 / 842-9293
All student accounts established before August 21,1996 must be renewed by October 1,1996.
Accounts not renewed by October 1, 1996 will be deactivated.
Existing dial-in accounts may be renewed from any computer with a World Wide Web browser by filling out a form on a Web page at: http://www.cc.ukans.edu/renew.htm
All faculty and staff with a current appointment and who have existing dial-in accounts will have their accounts automatically renewed and a bill will be mailed.
If you renew your account you will be billed an amount that will be based on 2 components:
· a basic service charge,and
· a monthly usage charge
DIALINACCOUNTBILLING
There are two basic service charge options:
- $20 for service from 9-1-96 through 12-31-96
• $50 for service from 9-1-96 through 7-31-97
Monthly usage in excess of 50 hours per month will be billed by the University of Kansas at $0.50 per hour There is no limit to the number of hours of use. Bills will not be generated for less than $10.00 per month. (No charge for amounts below $10.00 in any month will carry forward.) No user will be charged more than $30 in any month. Currently there are no provisions for notifying customers of cumulative hours during the month.
Academic Computing Services (913)864-0100
100s Announcements
WTCS volunteer training information session Sept. 12.
www.wtcsvs.org. Public Library. For more information
843-935-8337
200s Employment
男 女
105 Personals
101 Business Personals
120 Announcements
140 Lost and Found
Classified Directory
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
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, national
300s Merchandise
X
Classified Policy
***FREE***
LOSE WEIGHT FOR FREE!!
CALL NOW913-841-7416
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
---
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
ity or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such prefer-ence, limitation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Y
100s Announcements
105 Personals
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Poster Sale. Biggest and best selection. Choose from over 2000 different images. ROCK, FINE ART, METAL, CINEMAS, TOTAL STAR WARS, SCENIC LANDSCAPES, PERSONAL ALLIES (Brad Pitt. Sandra Bullock, Einstein, Val Klimmer, Pam Anderson, the movie makers, and many bet, Ansel Adams, and others). MOST MAGES $6, 7, and 8 each see us at KS UNION GALLERY- LEVEL 4 on MON AUG. 19TH THIRU FRIGA. 30TH. The hours are 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday thru Friday, Satur-
day, and Sunday 12 noon-4 saturday. Sponsored by SUA
110 Business Personals
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU CENTER
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
New Hours
Monday - Friday 8-8
Saturday8-4:30
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120 Announcements
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New metallab breakthrough **Lose 5-10 lbs guaranteed. Cost:** C84. Call (800) 776-9593.
NEED A RIDER/REDER? Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
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NEED TO TYPE A FORM? A PAPER? Good old-fashioned, electronic (typerswers available for student use) forms.
WTCS special volunteer training for battered and formerly battered women. Information session Sept. 3, 7-9 p.m. at the Lawrence Public Library. For more information: Call 843-3333.
FREE FINANCIAL AID. Over $4 Billion in public and private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or financial need. Students Financial Student
1-800-263-6495 f. ST7525
YOUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS, III PREPARING FOR EXAMS
Caring People Needed Headquarters Counseling Center looking for volunteers. Interested? Informal meeting Wed. Aug. 28, 7:56 p.m. Lawrence County Vermont Question 814-235
Using your notes to review, predicting exam questions, deciding for exam questions of test
Wed, August 28, 7:08 to 30 pm
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120 Announcements
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140 Lost & Found
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205 Help Wanted
Male, approx. 1 yr old. Long black fur with white chest and no collar. No wear, last seen mid-September in 18th and 19th century.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
Lost Cat
Long John Silver's Help wanted. All shiita available Call 841-2900.
care time help needed in busy doctor's office. Morning
preferred. Call 749-1309.
Child care, part-time, 11:30-1:00 M-F. Call Sunshine Acres Preschool at 842-2232.
200s Employment
Gymnastics teacher needed at Starstruck Dance Center,
845-305-500.
Now hire cooks, utilizes hot and cold prep. No experience necessary will train. Apply in person. Sarinio
Energetic, responsible person to care for our 4-year-old in our home. MWF 9-12 am, $60/ hour. Call Joe or Barb at 832-8615.
Christian Daycare needs enthusiastic employees for MWP or T, Th. Must be highly reliable and stable. Good pay. 842-2088.
Cleaning: Part-time openings mornings or early evening. 16-20 weekdays. Above wage.
Babysitter needed Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5.
Car a must. Pay negotitable.
865-2870 evenings.
Auto Plana Carwash now accepting applications for all positions. Cashier, designer, service order writer, cashier, associate, supervisor.
Golf course work, best lunch, FREE GOLF. Apply at
Airbnb Country Club -
400 Corydon Drive,
Tampa, FL 33612
Male or female receptionist wanted.
Must be avail. MWF all day. No phone calls please.
Apply in person at Stitzors 910 Kentucky.
Hiring all notional A M / P M - flexible he
Hiring all position! A.M.P.M. flexible hours.
Friday through Saturday, 8:00 AM-12:00 PM.
Mati G.atti, 3914 Clinton Parkway, Suite 1.
Lawn care company seeking hard working individual for mowing crew. PT/wafebable hours 843-5320
Mr. Gatti's, 3514 Clinton Parkway - Suite I.
205 Help Wanted
Teacher aides needed: 7-2 or 1-M-F. Apply at Children's Learning Center 305 N. Michigan. EACH
*auto/housekeeper for 3 kids, 2:30-5:30 M-F. Must *
*have a van with free roof and board extra *
*benefits. Call 860-732-3194.*
Now hiring cooks, utilizes hot and cold food. No experience necessary, will train. App in person. Sirirolini Sirirolini
Part time office help needed and professional attitude and appearance. Call University Photography at 843-6279.
PT Liquor Store-Clerk & Stock. County close to 40% & Quivira. Good pay for right person (913)650-2837.
Sunrise Garden Center is looking for full or part time landcaping job. Apply on person, 10th & New York University
Classroom Assistant needed at Raintree Montessori School. Montessori exp. pref. Will train. $1250/mo Late afternoon assistant. 3:15-5:30 M-F $6.25/hr.
Transp. req. Call 843-6800
Adams Alumun Center/Learned Club has openings for parttime banquet servers. Some daytime and weekend availability preferred. Apply in person at the Adams Alumun Center 1206 Reed Ave.
Adams Alumna Center/Learn Club has openings for PT dishwashers. Above min. wage, meals & uniforms provided. Apply in person at the Adams Alumna Center 1266 Oread Ave.
Adamane Daima Center/Leah Club has openings for full tauhua banque prep, cook, includes benefite Apply in all locations. 670-289-4000. www.adamane.daima.com
Artist Model-needed(female) 18 or older, level-headed, good work for the right person, serious calls only please. 843-6527 after, for details.interview.
Before and after school teachers now being hired to work 7.9 am or 11:30 noon p.m. M-F. Great experience for education majors. $5.75/hour. Apply at Stepping Stones, 110 Wakayama.
Couple seek person #i for daycare of our 2-year-old daughter in our home. On bus route, 23rd and Kasold area. All hours available. Prefer KU students. 749-0045.
Evenings
First Savings Bank seeking a part time branch teller. Hours are Monday through Friday 11 a.m.-2 p.m. and Saturday 9 a.m. to Noon. Apply in person at 2710 Iowa.
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center now accepting applications for morning and afternoon teacher's aides. Experience with children required. Apply 2104 West 16th Street.
Needed: Reliable, Non-Smoking Sitter with car and referrences to baby's two girls, 8 and 11, on most Mondays 5-6pm and Wednesdays 4-10pm. $5 per hour. Call between 4-8pm at 865-5963.
part time farm hand needed. Experience with live stock and/or farm machinery preferred. Must be reliable. Flexible hrs. 887-6126 or 887-6605 evenings only. Ask for Brenna or leave message.
SPRING BREAK 97 EARN CASH!
Part-time help needed for weekends beginning immediately
at 9:30 a.m and Sun 11:30 a.m. Must be responsible
for food, cleaning, transportation and laundry.
INCREASE 97 EARN CASH
BOOK PAST HIGHEST COMMISSIONS TRAVEL
FREE ONLY 13 SALESA! CALL FOR FREE
INFOUNSPILLSHIP 8-104-267-710
The Dance Gallery has immediate openings for a baby sitter, MWF 9-10 am & for tulling instructors weekday evenings. Call Karen at 841-0215.
205 Help Wanted
Lawrence Bus Co. is hiring SAFERI drivers for the following positions: we have clean drive record contact Cathryn at 844-0444
Adams Alumni Center/Leaseal Club has openings for fine dining, lake sunset cook. Some exp. need, 5 day full-time pot, with benefits, both AM & PM shifts. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1266 Oread Ave
Therapeutic Horseside Instruction of Lawrence needs volunteers to work with people with disabilities and other special needs.
ATTENTION STUDENTS - Local Branch of Nat. Cal.
36 PT/PT entry level openings in Lawrence & JOCO.
flex. schedules. All majors accepted, up to
*9.25. office*
(JOCO) (813)-867-867, (1:30-6:30 m., only).
SPRING BREAK '97- SELL TRIFS, EANN CASH,
& GO FREE. SEE in *campus INCAMP RESGROUP*
ORGANIZERS to promote trips to Cancun, Jamaica,
London, New York or other locations on Jolien-
g #18 Student Tour Operator.
Part-time courier position available. M-F 8-12
Call Heather Joahwing at the KU Endowment Association, 832-7365.
48. 86 he, requires valid driver license & go driving record, car provided. Ability to do moderate/heavy lift duties.
Part-time time for general office work plus showing apartments and answering phonies. 10-20 weekday hours available. Must be Kansei resident enrolled in KU at least halftime, have a GPA of at least 2.0 and major in business, accounting, or related field. $6.00/hour. 841-5797.
Phone Center Reps wanted for growing inbound/outbound call center. PT & FT shift 6-12mimidate. Have nice phone voice, be detail oriented, responsible, knowledgeable. Call center at 200 Lakeview Vrd. or call 865-3625 for directions at 200 Lakeview Rd. or call 865-3625 for directions
GRAPHIC ARTS
Customer Service. Need one self-motivated, sharp-dressing, energetic individual with good communication skills and an ability to manual trans- experience, knowledge of KC, Topkha metroroa in Your Face Graphics 2325 Metrorosa.
FOR QUICKCASH- WEEKLY SCHOLARSHIPS
INTERNS WANTED
(http://www.takame.com)
NEED CREATIVE, INNOVATIVE
INDIVIDUALS
GRAPHIC GURUS, INSPIRED WRITERS, HUMAN NET BROWERS.
JON'S NOTES
Part Time or Full Time Retail
Notakenkens need for Econ 140, B14, Geol 101, Geol 302, & Airtl 101. Must have completed this class or equivalent to earn the award in a lecture fall semester. Apply at Kansas University Book store, 2nd floor, Kansas Student Union.
Must have upbeat personality to become part of our
group. Must be able to work in a team environment.
Flexible. Will work around you college hours or
children or school. Great for retired individuals
Room Room. Call The Best of Kansas at (816) 393-0614
205 Help Wanted
Retail Sales/ Small-Business
Looking for person for internship in our company, The Best of Kansas City. Communication skills/Outgoing personality wanted/ No prior experience needed. Flexible work hours/ weekends & evenings available. Room for Growth. Call The Best of Kansas City at (816) 336-9614.
Shipping position open. Starting ASAP 64 per hour, 20 min per week. AfternoMs MH. Must have own transportation. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and/or resume w/ references and copy of class schedule to: EEI, PO Box 1304, Lawrence KS 69044
Immediate Opening for Conference Assistant with Work-Study eligibility. MS Word and Excel 6.0 knowledge along with strong oral and written communication skills are required to design. Flexible work schedule not to exceed workweek hour maximum. Fax or send resume to ASK Association, 3885 Lawrence, KS 60046. Fax 91-8451-3688. EOS
CARING PEOPLE NEEDED
Headquarters
Campaign Center
looking for partners.
Interested? Info Meeting
Wed Aug 28, 7:00 pm
Theatre on the Square
Questions? Call 841-234-921
Kitchen staff needed at Mass St. Dell or Buffalo Bob's smokehouse Food prep and line cooking. Some day-time hours are helpful. Starts at $5.00 an hour up to $7.44 an hour after 8 months which includes profit-sharing and service of bounty Apply at Schumm Food Supply. Applies to three, then four at 179 Mass (Uptown above smokehouse)
KU Athletic Sales Clerk, The Kusas and Burge Union, part, time, 6/20. Would work 2 hours prior to KU football game and 1-2 hours after game - Aug.29 (evening game), Oct 12, 19. Nov. 19. Will pay in cash Monday following employment. Must have retail sales experience, verifiable record of cash handling, able to stand for long periods. Apply Kansas and Burge personnel Office, Level 5, 19th and Great. AVE/ZE
Student Hourly/Office Assistant, Research & Training Center on Independent Living, University of Kansas. Must be enrolled at KU minimum of 8 years. Compete in a variety of activities including Bldg, KU campus. Application deadline: 9/30/06. For questions contact Debbie McAerty or Lyne Le Fieh or affirmative action employer.
MICROSOFT, NETSCAPE, YAHOO THE COACH'S EDGE
Only one of these nationally known companies is still operating out of the basement. Only one is located in Lawrence. Only one is looking for interns seeking at huge opportunity. The Coach's Edice was on CSB (Campus Scribner's Programmes, graphics, PR marketing), HTML Enthusiasts only requirement. Call George or Brendan at 843-1793.
TUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT I. Deadline: 8/9/04.
$4.75 per hour; M.F. 2:00-10:00; T & TH 8:00-
9:30am. Duties include typing, filing, and performing
all assigned clerical duties within Office Services; per-
form receptionist duties on a fill-in basis; process all
复印copy requests from Computer Center Staff; take
records from the computer, etc. To apply, con-
firm an application available at the Computer Cent-
ern 202 EOE/AEAEMPLOYER
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 28, 1996
STUDENT RECEPTIONIST
West campus book publisher seeks student to answer phones, process mail, handle mail-in sales, etc. Must be able to work 3-5 h/day, mornings in sales, and be enrolled in 6 credit hours. $4.50-5.00 per M. Come by 2 p.m. W. 15th h/. (ph. 865-4154), to complete application. Deadline for application is 5 p.m., Wed. / 9/26. An EEO/AA
Brookcreek Learning Center is hiring part-time teaching assistants. Opportunities include experience in model early intervention program, teaching in an inclusive classroom setting, and working with a special population of children who are at-risk for developmental issues. Applicants should be developing children. Complete applications at 200 Mr. Hope Court. For more information call 855-0022, AVA/EO.
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS
$$$Work from home$$$
Eliminate your long distance phone bill and earn a substantial income!
Only $100 to get started.
For more information, call 1-800-370-1451.
**Tips:** In order to complete application, describe for application in ftp. West, Wetford. An ECOOA expm. by employer.
"CASH IS KING"
Flyer Distribution on/near KU campus.
$6/hour.
Contact Bob 816-561-9099.
Yacht Club Now hiring Cooks Day/Weekend Shifts Apply at 930 Wisconsin
Cottwood, Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their Restful Care Center. You may be required 24 hours end hours. Some positions may require sleep overs. College coursework or related experience is helpful but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Excellent benefits. Starts hourly pay $40.00 to apply. Please at cottwoodInc, 2901 W. 31st, E.O.E.
**Student Hourly:** Duties include data entry and analysis, filing & org. of data, copying, carrying, arranging; library research; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Familiarity w/Macintosh computers and network management. Prior experience: 10-15 hwk/ organizational and filing skills. KU student; ability to work independently and efficiently. Deadline: 60/29/28. Salary: $45.28r. Pick up application on Learning on, MIDL Center. EOEAA employer.
Tutors needed for HPPL, Math, Plux, Chen, Bubo, Bio upper level pacy and soc, for the fall semester of 96. Interested applicants must have at least 15 hours of course work in subject areas in which they will tutor, supervise or teach. Visit www.kuac.hs.edu/KUAC's Hale Achievement Center, 232 Athletic Complex expansion Monday then Friday Friday A to M.P. For more information call: 864-7027. The University of Utah an equal opportunity affirmative action employer.
KU INFO (UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER) hiring for Fall 1998. You are bright, interesting, creative, and willing to take initiative? A clever problem solver who really knows KU and the Lawrence community! You're the one. Need highly motivated student instructors. You know a lot of great communicators, interested in helping others, and have unique sense of humor. Pick up application at KU Info, 420 Kansas University. Work study preferred. Need students who can make KU_info their primary work commitment. Deadline 5 pm, Wednesday, August 28, 1998.
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB welcomes KU students back to town. Alvamar is THE place to work in Lawrence. Now hiring for:
Day Dining Room Server
AM Block Bar Server
AM Line Cook
PM Dish Washer
AM Pro Shop Cart Help
Golf Course Maintenance
Instructor/Teacher
For more information contact Malinda at 842-2764 or complete application at 4120 Clinton Prary. EOE.
- SYSTEM TESTING INTERN Deadline: 8/30/96
* Salary $6.50/5.40h, 20hrs per week. Duties include
install, configure & customize software products. Parti-
tials must be submitted by January 15th.
nance. Required qualifications partial listing, experience in designing and writing programs in at least 2 programming languages, experience in software test automation, experience in complete job description available. To apply, submit a cover letter and current resume and a proof of work to the Center Center, University of Kansas, EOOA/EMPLOYEE
PART-TIME POSITIONS
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Complete application by 09/06 at Admin. Services, City Hath, 2nd floor & 8th & Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS
METER READER-Reading water meters & accurate records of amounts of water consumed. HS Grad.GED. Possess valid driver licenses & provide own vehicle. 8.17$ 18.12hr., 20 hrs.wk. flexible
*TELEPHONE OPERATOR-HS GRAD/GED and some*
*general office experience.* $7.05-$10.40/hr., Noon-5pm
Monday-Friday.
MICROCOMPUTER SOFTWARE SUPPORT - Student position: $7.39 per hour; 20 hours per week. Deadline: September 13th. Required Qualifications: Enrollment in at least six credit hours at KU; working with microcomputer applications, excellent oral and written communication skills; and ability to complete assigned tasks with a minimum of supervision. Preferred Qualifications: Course work in computer science or relational database. Experience required. Complete two or more years of Course work remaining at KU. To apply, contact Carol Daniel (864-3066). Contributor's Office, Room 257, Carruth O'Leary between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., The University of Kansas is an EOA Employer.
Student Computer Specialist and Student Computer Programmer
positions available in the College of LAAS Systems Analysis Office, beginning ASP after August 30. Duties for both positions include installation and configuration of microcomputer systems, programming microcomputer problems; and coding, testing & documenting of programs (particularly HTML documents). Required qualifications: Experience with installation of boards in microcomputers, ability to communicate effectively with students. Knowledge of dbase, FOax Pro & HTML programming, fluency in "C" programming on MS-DOS microcomputers, familiarity with Windows 3.1, TELP-FETP, Microsoft Word, Access, Excel, PowerPoint & spring $7,000 or greater. Complete application form in 210 Strong Hall. Application deadline August 30, 1996.
Earn cash on the spot
$20 Today new donors
Up to $40 this week
Walk-ins welcome!
Walk-ins welcome!
Journalism Student! Great part time job opportunity. Internationally known news agency needs a Journalism student to work in New York.
205 Help Wanted
The University of Kansas Natural History Museum is looking for undergraduate and graduate students to fill two temporary positions assisting with the PEET workshop in September. Both positions begin immediately and will correspond approximately Sept. 20, 1968. Salary will be $1000 depending on experience and qualifications.
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
Technical Assistant;Assist with technical set-up of workshop to include; hardware/software set-up, testing and maintenance user support. Required qualifications include working knowledge of common hardware set-up; be familiar with both PC and Mac products; be proficient in programming; be offered qualified qualifications include background in biology, experience with user support. Must provide completed application, resume.
Clerical Assistant: Assist with workshop implementation and logistics to include: word processing, filing, receptionist duties, running errands. Required qualification: Bachelor's degree or equivalent in word processing software; valid driver's license, experience with common office functions. Preferred qualifications: Master's degree in administration. Meet provide commuted anilization, resume.
Please contact the Natural History Museum-PETE Workshop, Amanda Mistaes, 602 Dyche Hall, 844-3830.
EVENING SUPERVISOR
BPI Building Services is looking for a dependable self-starter to supervise our evening and weekend custodial teams.
Qualified applicants should posses leadership, training, and motivational skills along with an eye for detail.
Approx. 25-30 hours per week, Sunday - Thursday, start times vary.
Starting wage of $7.00 per hour, on-site transportation provided.
Interested applicants should contact Mo at 842-6264.
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
$8~$/hour depending on ability to produce
Evenings~approx $6~/hours/day On-Fri-Week
Ad Pagination
The University Daily Kansas is looking for Macintosh proficient people capable of working on Quark XPress in a fast-paced, progressive newspaper setting.
You'll use a Macintosh computer to build pages and individual ads for the Daily Kansan by using pre-formatted Quark templates.
Accuracy and dependability are crucial qualifications. We're looking for capable people with problem solving abilities who can take responsibility while gaining expertise on cutting-edge technology. QuarkXPress experience is a must. Additional experience with Adobe PhotoShop is a plus.
The Kansan is an award-willing newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation.
You will become familiar with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that is common in professional advertising, publishing, promotional and design agency environments.
Call Justin Knupp at 864-7665 between 1 and 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
Required Qualifications: At least one year of residential group living Enrolment at KU as a graduate student or upperclassmen in good standing
We are currently searching for an Academic Program Coordinator to develop and implement an academic program for the students at Naisimh Hall, a private student residence hall housing Kansas University students since 1967. The Academic Program Coordinator (APC) will work with a residence unit of 450+ students to facilitate academic progress, encourage good study skills, and promote an environment of intellectual inquiry.
Preferred Qualifications: Residence hall living experience. Supervisory experience. Working knowledge of educational programming. Knowledge of commercially-available computer applications.
Compensation: This is a half-time (20 hours per week) position which runs until the end of the academic year. All candidates must be able to commit three evenings working with hall programs per week to the position. Hourly rate is $7.65. Meals are also provided when our Cafe is open and serving.
How to Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; and a resume to Academic Programming Coordinator, c/o Naismith Hall. 1800 Naismith Drive, Naismith Hall Front Desk, description will be available at the Naismith Hall Front Desk for interested applicants.
Application Deadline: Applications will be accepted effective August 26, 1996 until position is filled. EDE/AA/MFH
205Help Wanted
Shop Kansas Classiffeds
Local Branch of National Co.
filling 36 Entry level positions
in Lawrence and JCOO.
FALL SEMESTER OPENINGS
Part, full time flexible schedules
A. A.S.P. scholarships-cond. apply
Up to $9.25
To apply call JOCO. office
MAD. and Assoc. and equal opportunity Co.
(913) 381-9676
BPI Building Services has immediate openings for the following custodial positions:
CUSTODIANS
- Mon-Fri. 8p.m-11p.m.
* Sun. 9a.m-12noon
& Mon.-Thurs. 5:30p.m-8:30p.m.
* Sun. 9a.m-12noon
& Mon.-Thurs. 7p.m-10p.m.
* Sat. 7a.m-11a.m.
* Mon-Fri. 6a.m-8a.m.
Custodial positions are perfect part-time jobs for students and those looking for supplemental income. Approx. 15 hours per week in an independent working environment. Self-motivators should call 842-6264 or come in to apply.
bpi
A DIVISION OF BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
BUILDING SERVICES
959 Iowa (Hillcrest Shopping Center/Behind Appliance Plus)
225 Professional Services
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center, 2104 West 15th Street is now accepting enrollment applications for the fall session. Openings are available for toddlers and preschoolers and Scholarship availability. Call 842-8131 for information.
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Herbert C. Hodes, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake DUI's divorce, criminal & civil matters Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-5116
305 For Sale
X
235 Typing Services
**Call Jacki** 823-8444 for applications, term papers, thesis assessments, transcriptions, et. Satisfaction forms.
(01) 607-579-6300
1900 Yahama Radian 600 cc. Low mileage. Supreme condition $2000. Call 864-4126.
Beds, desks, lamps, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
For affordable typing call Kyle at 749-1404
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
KU1 预定 pentium 100 for $800 Pentium 60 $650 1-913:
41-923 12ec calls accepted.
Gottstein's Anuction. Perry, KS 507-5169 Sale every Sat. 9 am. 1/12 m. E. of Perry on Hwy. 24. Lumber, poultry, rabbits, eggs, KB ties, vehicles, household goods, furniture, tods, etc.
Drafting Table, T-square, pearl. All the good stuff for sale. Make offer. 842-1293 after 6pm.
Sewihra top model road bike. Recently rebuilt.
$950 inc. book fee offer 11/41/11 $415 bonus.
From Boston.
Macintosh classic $100, Apple personal Laptop LRS
$200, New 6x CD-ROM 880, call 743-113.
1000 Honda Accord EX-2door, 5 speed, 102,000 miles,
loaded with sunroof. Excellent condition. 78,000
called.
1865 Honda accord L2, door hatchback, has A/C
automatic, very Blue, well maintained 6200, 1656, 1605.
340 Auto Sales
1922 Ford Escort CIT, Power steering, brakes, crank,
a/c automatic, 6000 or will negotiate, B32-0025.
1987 Honda CRX SL excellent condition. Low highway miles. $4,000 a.d.o.b. Call Sean B41-7074.
Neon Bud bowtie $75
queen waterbed $50.
843-7087
360 Miscellaneous
We're open! 8gal per customer. Your container.
As low as 20 cents per gallon with voucher.
Water Wheel Cottage, at the north end of
Must St. Bridge. Mon-Fri, Noon-6PM. 841-1968.
193 MAZDA 6 M GT Turbo, 5-ped, 50,000 pw, MR
AG, aircruise, cruise, AMFM case, spiller, nags, locks,
alarm, 1-owner, main records. Excellent课 . 8500
OBO. 1000 records.
Beautiful old rectangular dining room table with four Mission-style chairs. In good condition. 430-841-2852.
H
Pander Squier Electric Guitar $800
in the USA, Sqaier Amp $1000,
$375 for both.
Schwin top model road bike like recondition $250 or best offer. Call 841-9047 5pm-8pm
Two rooms for rent. Close to campus. $200 per month each. Contact.Joyce at 842-2328.
MTN BIKES! '94 Rockhopper, Shocks, Bar Ends, 22"
TALL $875 92 TREER 800 GOOD Condition,$175 Offer.
Call Terry 331-2765.
Bose 901 Series 6 with equalizer pedestals. New in box, transferable warranty. $150 value. ONLY $180. Call 911-345-3064 at 6pm.
FREE BOTTLED WATER
for sale. Gibson wd electric, excellent condition #250
pr call (913) 835-612-1, leave msg, or (913) 831-3185.
One Bedroom Dorm Units in great locations 749-4276 or 841-5255.
400s Real Estate
Compact Refrigerator great condition, 2.5 cu. ft. capacity 806 331-3188
2 Room Kitchen share kitchen and bath, $25 incl illu at 1318 Vermont. Call 849-1451. Ask for Libby:
One BR. Dorm units in great locations. 749-4226 or 841-
5255
3 and 4 bapt. kit, 2 bath, new carpet, bus route, cave,
laudry facility, large closet, no pets please; $630, $750
and $900.
3 bedroom, 2 bath, at Bradford Square. On KU Bus
route, cats allowed. Private deck or patio. Call 814-8468.
Available immediately completely remodeled studio
1200 sq. ft., Heat, water are paid.
8500/mo, Room: 841-312-900.
5 seconds from KU. Barn of house. 2 big room plus
3 kitchen. **828/month** 17 utilities. **481-8427**
**481-8427**
Nice 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus "bouplex"
fairly nice appliances and carpets. #410 call 611-8544
Room for rent, utilities divided by six. A/C,
washer/dryer $200 a month, mower $200 deposit 1201
sales tax $200 per month.
Studio Apartment Near KU
2 Bedroom Mobil Home
841-6254
Utilities平板 rooms for non-smoking females. 2 blocks South onrium Library WD use. Off street parking.
CLASSE SECURE 1-3 barm now available on East side of beautiful downtown Eudorm, just minutes form RU Call Charles Gruber at 766-5400 for appt. $875-$560 res & ref deposit.
Spacious, affordable furnished 2 bedroom apartment w/
fireplace and dressing room, some utilities paid, 2
blocks to KT off-street parking, no pets, 841-5500
3 bedroom 2 bath apartment with 2 balconies. Close to campus on bus route. Dishwasher, cable, laundry & pool facilities. $630 per month plus electricity. Call 832-0085.
105 For Rent
A large, quiet, netzw remodeled 2 bedroom bannet.
apt. No smoking, WD wook-ups, AO. on bus route.
$835 a month. ALL UTILITIES PAID.
1603 West 2nd Terrace. Call 824-822-537.
Quiet, spacious, affordable, furnished rooms and 1 bedroom apartments. 2 blocks to KL. Some outpatient facilities. 1 bedroom. $750/mo.
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
QISKINGBIRD
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old-fashioned personalized service."
Managed & maintained by Professionals
MASTERCRAFT
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
with you in mind.
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Orchard Corners
16th & Kasold • 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-5255
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
OnKUBusRoute
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am 4pm
At some locations
1&2Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
ExerciseRoom
Mastercraft
842-4455
- NEW CARPETS
* NEW APPLIANCES
* NEW LIGHTING FIXTURES
* NEWLY PAINTED WHITE CABNETS
ASK ABOUT FREE RENT AT TRAILRIDGE
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Get all this with the same great location on the KU bus line.
2, 3 & 4 BR Townhouses
& airport laundry &
airport services
843-7383 or stop by
2500 W 8th today!
TRAILRIDGE
SouthPoint Apartment
Pets Welcome No Sublease Fee
Equal Housing Opportunity
Excellent studio,1,2,or 3 BR apts. gas & water paid.
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Sand volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Ample Private Parking
* Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 Temp.
* student honoring alternative, Open & diverse member-
ship, non-profit organization, democratic control. $180-240.
* faculty based, open enrollment. Close to campus &
Mans. Call or stop by 814-0434.
AVAILABLE FOR FALL
NEW 4 BR apes at 1712 Ohio. 2 full baths, vanity (sinik) in each BR, all appliances. in dwM & microwave. No pets. $90 per room. Owner/ Manager 851-5333. George Waters Management.
GRAYSTONE
Apartments that fit your lifestyle
130 Roommate Wanted
AUGUST RENT FREE
3 BR TOWNHOMES
2512 W.6th St.
749-1102
FREE USE FOR ONE YEAR OF WASHER & DRYER
Gay male has room to rest in East Lawrence home. $250 includes utilities. B4 727-7411. Non-smoker only.
Professional seeking Faculty or Graduate student to
share 2800 sqft. Dt. Homeo台 Non-Smoking, Clean,
Responsible. $400 per month, utilities included. Call
913-583-3456.
2 guys, girl, and a dog looking for a roommate. Rent would be $180 a month plus utilities. Near bus route. Call 843-8314 for an interview.
Female roommate wanted. Great apartment one block from Kansas Union. A serious college student, please. Call 843-9835 for more info.
Renter wanted. Quiet, non-smoking. New home, near campus. Own bedroom & bathroom w/washroom. 8350 + split phone and utilities. Call James after 5 at 217-222-4024
Grad student wanted, 5-min. walk to KU, 1743 LA, $250 per month, plus $45 utilities, beautiful spacious house w/ washer & wdierer plus AC, 832-0785
Roommate to share three bedroom duplex. $450
permo, plus 12 utilities and trash paint. Pool.
Gym. Bathroom. Kitchen. Office.
Need a home? Two females request one roommate for
needs. Walk distance to campus: call (415) 2875.
Walking distance to campus: call (415) 2875.
Looking for a female roommate for a 3 bedroom apart-
ment on a furnished porch. $210 per month. Call Lindsay
(950) 687-1491.
Need F to share nice 2 bromm ASAP. WD, int, new.
Central Air Heat, quiet area. Must love cats! Prefer 24 yrs. + NS. B22 $50/month + 1/2 unit. + dep. Lease thru May. Heather 841-5038.
Need M F to share nice 2 BR house with female roommate. Lg床, PF, garage, w/d, dishwasher, big yard. Np please. Location in W. Lawrence near Harvard & Columbia University. Units. No utilities. Sepi tent. Call Lana B82-2535.
By Mail: 19 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60445
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
a Bushey 824 4358
*step up the Kansan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or cheque charged on MasterCard or VISA.
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until made.
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Reference:
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Dinner bill numbers:
The advertisement may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions:
Rates
t per line per day
Cost per unit per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-20X 30+X
2.30 1.60 1.20 1.00 0.85 0.60
2.15 1.40 0.90 0.80 0.75 0.55
2.10 1.25 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.50
2.00 1.10 0.80 0.70 0.65 0.45
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$18.00 (4 lines X 90s ad line X 5 days).
Classifications
105 personal
118 business personas
129 announcements
130 interstatalnet
148 lost & found 305 for sale
269 hotly wanted 340 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 broken cardboard
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
Please print your ad one word per box:
___ Classification:
Phone:
Account number;
Address:
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper:
Tuesday
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard
(Please make checks payable to the University Dalyan Kanan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad.
Signature:
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
The University Dalvik Kansan. 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
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Advertised prices good Wednesday, August 28 through Tuesday, September 3, 1996.
1
Football Kansas opens its 101st season against Ball State tonight. Page 1B
Sick Authorities don't know why three people became ill near Oliver Hall. Page 3A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
[7]
SECTION A VOL. 103, NO. 1
THURSDAY. AUGUST 29,1996
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS650-640)
Quick LOOK
Ruling to allow forced leasing to U.S. military
TOKYO — Japan's highest court ruled yesterday that Tokyo can force landowners to lease property to the U.S. military, upholding a government policy that roused angry protest on the southern island of Okinawa.
The 15-judge supreme court said forced leasing was Japan's "duty" under its security accord with the United States.
Okinawa Gov. Masahide Ota had appealed a court decision by a lower court which said 35 landowners must renew their leases with the U.S. military.
Ota had refused to begin proceedings against the defiant landowners, saying forced leasing violated the owners' property rights and the constitution. A total of 3,000 Okinawans oppose renewing their property leases.
Ota refused to say whether he would comply with yesterday's ruling and cooperate with Tokyo.
Fires rage across west; Marines on alert to help
GRANTS PASS, ORE. — Nearly 20,000 firefighters battled wildfires across the West yesterday as federal authorities promised more Army reinforcements and tens of millions of dollars in emergency funds.
A short stretch of cooler and sometimes rainy weather helped firefighters make progress on the 490,188 acres burning across Oregon, California, Idaho, Nevada and Montana, said Don Smuthwaite, representative for the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.
In a motion filed Tuesday in Denver U.S., District Court, attorney Stephen Jones said the government had reports, including some from foreign governments, and was withholding information.
More than 37,000 lightning strikes since Monday across Montana, Idaho and Wyoming had crews racing to put out new fires before they grew.
DENVER — An attorney for Oklahoma City bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh accused government agencies that investigated the case of stalling on requests for information on other possible suspects.
Among the information are reports that Iraq may have sponsored the bomb, Jones said. He also said Israel and Kuwait might have provided intelligence information on possible terrorist acts expected about April 19, 1995, the day a bomb destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, killing 168 people and injuring more than 500.
CLAS professors cash in
Professors in College received 12 of 16 awards
By Eric Weslander Kansan staff writer
McVeigh's attorney asks for more reports
With firefighting forces stretched thin, a battalion of Marines from Camp Pendleton, Calif., was on alert for mobilization as an extra firefighting crew.
Of the 16 KU recipients of the William T. Kemper Fellowship for Teaching Excellence, 12 are professors in the college.
Sally Frost-Mason, dean of the college, said these awards were especially noteworthy because of the size of the departments.
Of the 25,000 students at the Lawrence campus, more than 12,000 are in the college.
"These are departments that deal with a large number of students, teach large classes and do an excellent job at it," Frost-Mason said. "It's probably no accident that so many students choose these as their maiors."
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt told the NBC-TV Today show that he intended to recommend that President Clinton seek additional emergency firefighting funds from Congress amounting to tens of millions of dollars.
Ronald Francisco, chairman of the department of political science, said the key to receiving awards was to have strong candidates.
For instance, recipient Burdett Loomis has been involved with a very successful internship program in Washington, D.C., Francisco said
He also credited the efforts of Beverly Davenport Sypher, associate dean of the college. Sypher, who oversees the social sciences, also received a Kemper award for her work as a professor of communication studies.
Although the distribution of the Lawrence campus awards is complete, four more Kemper awards will be given at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
The complete list of Lawrence campus 1906 Kemper Fellowship award recipients includes: Marilyn J. Amy, associate professor of educational policy and leadership; Christine M. Arguello, associate professor of law; Paul J. D'Anieri, assistant professor of political science; Amy J. Devitt, associate professor of
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 12 awards
School of Education 2 awards
School of Law 1 award
School of Engineering 1 award
English; Stanley F. Lombardo, professor of classics; Burdett A. Loomis, professor of political science; Da-Hsiang Donald Lien, professor of economics; Craig E. Martin, professor of botany; Joane P. Nagel, professor of sociology; Mehrangiz Najafidazeh, associate professor of sociology; Bozenna Pasik-Duncan, professor of mathematics; Nancy L. Peterson, professor of special education; Robert C. Rowland, associate professor of communication studies; Greg Shepherd, associate professor of communication studies; Marylee Z. Southard, associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering; and Beverly Davenport Sypher, professor of communication studies.
The majority of the W.T. Kemper Fellowship for Teaching Excellence Awards went to teachers in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Sixteen awards of $5,000 each were given.
Kemper Awards
- The Associated Press
No awards
Architecture, Art & Design, Business,
Fine Arts, Journalism, Social Welfare
Soaring into sunset
Tvler Wirken/KANSAN
Ben Smith, 14, of Lawrence, launches himself and his bike off of a ledge behind Wescoe Hall. Smith and some friends were performing tricks on their bikes at various locations around campus last night.
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
Evaluation changes
1. The proposed faculty evaluation calls for annual evaluations by a department head or school dean, who are called unit administrators. Each department sets up its own standards for evaluation. Multiple sources, including peer and student input, will be used to evaluate teaching.
2. If a faculty member's performance is continually under par, the unit administrator and faculty member will create a plan for development, arrange for counseling or a change in teaching assignments. A faculty member can reject such recommendations, but continued failure to meet academic responsibilities can lead to dismissal.
4. After review by the provost, the recommendation will go to the chancellor. If the chancellor agrees, the motion will be presented to the faculty committee on tenure and related problems, which could dismiss the instructor.
3. If the instructor still fails to meet academic responsibilities, the unit administrator can recommend dismissal to the provost, even if the instructor has tenure.
Regents force University to alter faculty evaluation
By Lindsey Henry Kansan staff writer
Answering critics who say tenured faculty don't have to work as hard as other staff, the Board of Regents requested that each of the six Kansas college institutions detail their process of
In compliance with the Regents, Provost David Shulen-burger worked with faculty, University Council and Univer-
faculty evaluation.
sity Senate Executive Committee members to fine-tune the University's policy on faculty evaluations this summer. The policy now says that tenured faculty members can be dismissed if they fail to teach at an acceptable level.
SenEx and the council will hold an open meeting at 3:30 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union to discuss questions and concerns of faculty members, said Laurence Draper,
president of the council.
Student views of evaluation changes on 8A
All faculty members are invited to attend and make suggestions.
The committees have until Sept. 20 to submit their revised evaluation policy with faculty input. If this version is not accepted, the Regents will take immediate action.
"The board is serious about having a policy," Shulenburger said. "If this policy is not accepted, they will write one for us."
Shulenburger said the policies were sent back because they lacked definition. "The original policy did not include
In its May meeting, the Regents initially asked to review each university's faculty evaluation policy. Each of the six policies were rejected and sent back to the universities with a report card suggesting ways to improve.
See Evaluations, Page 8A.
Students catch Macarena fever in clubs, bars
By Erin Rooney
Kansan staff writer
A few couples were scattered across the dance floor on Saturday night as the slow country song came to a close. Suddenly, the Bayside Boys' mix version of the Macarena sounded over the speakers, and people flooded onto the dance floor at Cadillac Ranch.
Cadillac Ranch, 2515 W. Sixth St., is not the only place people are line dancing and doing the Macarena.
KU students are line dancing at clubs, bars and parties.
"Last weekend I went to a party at an apartment and that song came on, and everybody there started doing the Macarena," said Tani Rembolt, Lincoln, Neb., junior. "People were doing it on the stairs. There was no room in the apartment left to dance. It was crazy," she said.
KU dancers are not alone. A line-dancing craze has taken the nation by storm.
To the sounds of pop and country music, people are doing different line dances, including the Macarena, Slap Leather, the Cowboy Stomp, the Electric Slide and the Tush Push. Yesterday the hosts of Live With Regis and Kathie Lee introduced the newest line dance, the Train. Dancers doing the Train move their arms to mimic a train conductor blowing a steam whistle.
Tina Rome, Hutchinson senior, said, "Everyone is doing the same thing, so you can't look too stu-
See Dancing. Page 8A.
M
Tiffany Derrickson, Lenexa junior, and Jamie Wolktamp, Olathe sophomore, spend their Saturday night line dancing at Coyote's.
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
UDKI
THE UNIVERSITY DALYX
KANSAN
Visit It Sent 1!
www.kansan.com
No more parking freebies
Visit it Sept. 1!
The parking department announced that it would begin ticketing in yellow and resident hall lots after Labor Day.
TODAY
Story on 3A
The other Ball State game...
The Kansas women's volleyball team begins its season against the Ball State Cardinals in Porvallis, Ore.
1 4
Story on 1B
Weather: Page 2A.
CLOUDY High 82° Low 60°
o Ⅱ
INDEX
TV ... 2A
Lottery Numbers ... 2A
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 7A
World News ... 7A
Scoreboard ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 6B
.
PLEASE READ THESE BEFORE YOU USE THIS PHOTO.
2A
Thursday, August 29, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
QuickINFO CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER LOTTO NUMBERS
WEATHER
TODAY
82
60
CAMPUS EVENTS
Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain.
FRIDAY
80
63
SATURDAY
Mostly sunny with little or no chance of rain.
80
61
Continuing sun.
ON CAMPUS
Ithuc will sponsor a pregame barbecue at 5 p.m. today at 1340 Tennessee St. For more information, call Scott Nissen at 838-9719.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor "Interactions on the Quest: Exploring Hard Questions In a Safe Place" at 5 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
Recreation Services will sponsor fencing at 5:30 p.m. today at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 832-9963.
KU Champions will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Kansas Union parlors. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4586.
KU Ki Aikido Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jill Woodworth at 864-1798.
AIESEC will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 865-5575.
Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the
Kansas Union. For more information, call Jason Brown at 749-2408.
KU Queers & Allies, formerly LesBiGay Services of Kansas, will meet at 8 tonight at the Jayahawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3091.
The hockey team will have an informal meeting at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nils Jergensen at 865-2518.
Recreation Services will sponsor a jugging club meeting at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow in front of Strong Hall. For more information, call Mark Allner at 841-4203.
- The Study Abroad Club and the Office of Study Abroad will sponsor the Lawrence Garage Sale Adventure from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday at the Jayhawker Towers A&B parking lot. For more information, call Tel Norawal at 864-3742.
The KU Ballroom Dancing Club's dance lessons scheduled for Sunday are canceled because of Labor Day. For more information, call Shane Haas at 864-6597.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's car was damaged and her spare-tire cover was stolen between 9 p.m. Aug. 21 and 8 a.m. Aug. 24 from the 1100 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $100.
A KU student's sweaters, tennis racket and miscellaneous items were stolen from the 1000 block of Emery Road, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $2,438.
A money bag was stolen from the
Replay Lunge, 946 Massachusetts St., at 12:30 a.m. yesterday, Lawrence police said.
The bag contained $150.
A KU student's spotlight, truck box lock and miscellaneous items were stolen from the 900 block of Arkansas Street, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $138.
TV TONIGHT
KU police were called to a parking lot in Stouffer Place apartments at 5:30 a.m. Sunday to assist a woman who had been struck in the face. No arrests were made.
THURSDAY PRIMETIME AUGUST 29, 1996
© TVDVs 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO ❶ Major League Baseball: Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers. Flipster "Submitable!" Cops ❷ "Flashback" **(1990) Dennis Hopper.
WOFA Living Single ❸ New York Undercover ❸ News ❹ News H. Patrol Cheers ❹ Baywatch
KCTV Candid Camera's 50th CBS News Special: "Democratic National Convention" ❹ News Late Show (R) in Strore ❹ Beirield
KS06 Forcecasts News Plus News College Football Ball State at Kansas
KCPT National Political Convention (Live) ❹ News Business Rpt. Buckle Charlie Rose (in Strore)
KSNT Friends (R) Single Guy Sheffield NBC News Special: Democratic Conv. News Today Show (R) Late Night
KMBC High Incident (in Strore) ABC News Special: Democratic National Convention News Golden Girls MA*H'S
KTUW National Political Convention (Live) Business Mag. Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Strore)
WBWB Candid Camera's 90th CBS News Special: Democratic National Convention News Late Show (R) in Strore U.S. Open
KTKA High Incident (in Strore) ABC News Special: Democratic National Convention News Seifeld Coach Nightline
CABLE STATIONS
ABE ❷ Biography "Bruce Lee: The Curse of the Dragon" (R) Target: Malia Law & Order "House Counsel" Biography; Bruce Lee-Curse
CHBN Politics (Live) Equal Time Rivera Live Charles Grodin America After Hours Rivera Live (R)
CHNB Convention Coverage (Live) Convention Recepion Larry King Showbiz
COM ❹ Brian Regan Gallager Women of the Night II (R) Louise Liz Brian Regan Politically Incorrect Live Daily Show Dream On (R)
COURT Prime Time Justice Justice News Trial Story Divorce Prime Time Justice (R) Justice News
CSPAN (6:00) Campaign '96 Democrat National Convention Campaign '96 Convention Travel Mag.
DISC Discovery Island Myster, World Market Movie Magic Traveler Next Step (Beyond 2000 Wild Discovery; Sea
ESPN Football Kickoff Up Close Track and Field Baseball Baseball Running
HST Churchill and War Rooms "The Last Command" % (1955, Westem) Starring Hayden Year by Year Churchill and War Rooms
LIFE Unwolved mysteries "Clar's Heart" *** (1984, Drama) Whoo Goldberg, Nel Patrick Harris Living Mysteries Late Date
MTV Beach MTV (in Strore) Beach House Nighties Yel (in Strore) Singled Out Convention Alternative Nation (in Strore)
SCIFI V Valiant's Choice "E.V.E. of Mara" (1994, Science Fiction) Darkside Twilight Zone Monsters V "Valiant's Choice" (R)
TLC History Archaeology W seven Wonders of the World History Archaeology Seven Wonders of the World
INT "White Lightning" % (1973, Adventure) But Raymonds, Jennifer Billingsey "Gate" *** (1970) Agents an ex-co to help arabic policeman.
USA ❹ U.S. Open Sports Round (Second Layer) History Silk Stalkings "Game of Love" Big Date Love
WHI Best of Times (R) Best of Times (R) fashionTV Bandstand Blues Sex Appeal SOH VIII Hourless WGN "The Brink's Job" *** (1988) Computer Patter News (in Strore) Nightcap Simson & Simon "Ham's Way" Hmonner
WTS "Firewalter" % (1986) Two soldiers of loraux seek hidden Aztec treasure "A Force of One" *** (1979, Jameson) Jennifer O'Neil "E Eye for Eye"
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO ❺ "Breaking Point" % (1994) Gary Busey, R" Sinbad's Summer Janit : "Toe Slou Music Festival" (R) Inside the NFL: The 20th Anniversary
MAX ❻ "Goodness" An account of a hood's tween in a mob crime family, Jade *J% (1995, Suspensions David Casuto (in Strore) NR" Skull Killer
SHOW ❽ "Dangerous Mind's" *** (1995, Drama) Extras Bedtime Sherman Latino Full Frontal "Losing Chase" (1996)
KS LAWRENCE/DAILY KANSAN/UNIV. OF KANSAS AUGUST 29, 1996 - SEPTEMBER 4, 1996
AUGUST 29, 1996
© TVData
7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
**KSMO 5** Major League Baseball: Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers. **Flipper "Subsolver" (R)** *Cope* **H. Patrol** "Flashback" wk (1990) Dennis Hopper.
**WOFA 5** Living Single **New York Undercover** News **News** News H. Patrol Cheers Boywatch
**KCTV 5** Candid Camera's 50th CBS News Special: "Democratic National Convention" Late Show (R) In Studio Seinfeld
**KS06** Forcecasts News Plus News College Football Ball State of Kansas.
**KCPT 7** Political National Convention (Live) **News** Business Rpt. Ruckus Charlie Rose (In Studio)
**KSNT 7** Friends (R) Single Guy Selfdefeat NBC News Special: Democratic Conv. Tonight Show (Late Night
**MKBC 7** High Incident (in Strooe) Democratic National Convention **News** Roseanne Golden Girl M*A*S*H
**KTUW 7** National Political Convention (Live) Travel Mag. Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Studio)
**WBW 1** National Politician's 90th Travel Mag. Late Show (R) In Studio J.S. Open
**KTKA 7** High Incident (in Strooe) Democratic National Convention **News** Seinfeld Coach Nighttime
LOTTO
ABE 12 Biography *Bruce Lee: The Curse of the Dragon* (R) Target: Malia Law & Order "House Counsel" Biography; Bruce Lee-Curse CBN 12 Politics (Live) Equal Time Everna Live Charles Grodin America After Hours Riversa Live (R) CNN 12 Convention Coverage (Live) ⊕ Convention Recap King R Showbills COM 12 Brian Reagan Gallagher Women of the Night II (R) Lounge Lite. Brian Reagan Politically Incorrect (Live) Dally Show Dream On (R) COURT 1 Prime Time Justice Justice News Trial Story: Divorce Prime Time Justice (R) Justice News CSPN 1.60 Campaign "96 Democrat National Convention" Campaign "96 Convention Campaign "96 Convention Wrap-Up DISC 12 Wild Discovery: Sea Myster. World Movie Magic Tim Treaver Next Step (R) Beyond 2000 Wild Discovery: Sea ESPN 12 Football Kickoff Up Close Track and Field Baseball Sportscenter ⊕ Baseball Running HST 1 Churchill and War Rooms "The Last Command" *** % (1955, Westem) Staying Hayden. Year by Year Churchill and War Rooms LIFE 1 Unsolved Mysteries "Clair's Heart" *** (1988, Drama) Wheol Goldberg, Nell Patrick Harris Living mysteries Late Date BEACH MT 19M Beach House Kids Woolen (In Stereo) In Silent腔 Singled Out Convention Alternative Nation (In Stereo) SCFI 1 V. Wallah's Choice "E.Y.E.S. of Mars" (1994, Science Fiction) Darkside Twilight Zone Monsters V. Wallah's Choice "TLC 1 History Archaeology Seven Wonders of the World Human Animal: A View History Monstera Seven Wonders of the World TNT 1 "White Lightning" *** % (1973, Adventure) But Reynolds, Jennifer Bellingly "Gator" *** (1978) Agents force an ex-con to help a compulsive politician. USA 1.60 U.S. Open乒球 Second Round (Live) ⊕ Silk Stalkings "Crime of Love" big Date Love VHI 1 Best of Times (R) Best of Times (R) fashion TV Bandstand Blues Sex Appeal Vol of H1Y After Hours WGN 1 The Job's Rule *** (1978, Comedy) Pete Fall. News (In Stereo) Night Court Simon & Simon "Harns Way" Hmonaor WITBS 1 Firewalker*** (1986) Two soldiers of fortune seek hidden Aftreasure. "A Force of One" *** (1979, Drama) Jennifer O'Neill. "Eye for Eyes"
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 1 "Breaking Point" *** % (1994) Gary Busy, R'. Simbada's Summer II: 70 "Soul Music Festival" (R) Inside the NFL: The 20th Anniversary MAX 1 "Good Felts" An account of a hooded woman in a mob crime family J '.Jade' *** (1995, Suspense) David Civilau (In Stereo) NR ** "Serial Killer" SHOW 1 "Dangerous Mind" *** (1965, Drama) R'. Extras Bedtime Sherman Latino Frontcula "Losing Cards" *** (1996)
PICK 3
8-2-0
KANSAS CASH
2-3-10-19-24-25
Jackpot: $550,000
LOTTO
2-14-16-35-40 Powerball: 10 Jackpot: $5 million
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions of $1.68 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,August 29,1996
3A
Senators practice jobs
A mock meeting helps students learn procedures
By Spencer Duncan Kansan staff writer
Hoping to make things run smoothly this year at University Student Senate meetings, senators held a mock meeting last night.
In the Jayhawk room of the Kansas Union, student senators ran through a fake agenda to learn how meetings shouldrun.
Then senators debated two mock bills.
One dealt with providing money to a fan club of the television series Saved By The Bell, and the other bill asked senators to approve funding for the purchase of nine Harley Davidson motorcycles for the senators to use.
None of the proposals were meant to be taken seriously but gave senators an idea of how a meeting should operate. Sixty of the 75 senators attended.
“This is an informal meeting,” said Jamie Johnson, student body vice president. "We want everyone to try to get an idea of the process and get a feel for how everything works."
Although the mock legislation was for laughs, the procedures were real.
"Hopefully this will help senators so that we don't start out the year with a lot of problems," said Johnson, who leads the meetings.
To help new senators understand the process, Kevin Lafferty, a returning senator, paired new senators with returning senators.
"There are 17 returning senators," Lafferty said. "We are paring up three new senators with each returning senator to help the new members out. For the first few meetings hopefully these people will work together."
After debating the mock bills, the senators discussed more procedural motions.
The first real senate meeting will be held in two weeks.
Lafferty said he thought the mock meeting would benefit the senators when the real meetings started.
"This meeting should work in everyone's favor," Johnson said. "This is a good way to start out the year ahead."
I will do my best to ensure the accuracy of the information provided in this section. I will use the most accurate and reliable sources available to me to obtain the information.
Please refrain from asking questions that are too vague or require excessive detail. The instructions state "Maintain the original document structure." Any questions that are not related to the content of the document should be asked under the appropriate heading.
If you have any other questions, please feel free to ask. Thank you for your understanding!
Tyler Wirken/KANSAN
Kevin D. Lafferty, Student Senate member, begins a mock Student Senate meeting. Student Senators gathered last night in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union to practice procedures for regular senate meetings.
Free parking on campus won't last forever
Parking police residence hall lots, on Tuesday
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan staff writer
Students parking in certain areas won't find pink parking tickets stuffed under their windshield wipers for the rest of the week, courtesy of the University of Kansas parking department.
department. "We have not been ticketing the yellow zones or dorm lots," said Don Kearns, director of the department. "We are giving students time to buy the permits."
free parking, however, will not last forever. On Tuesday, people who park in yellow or residence hall lots without the appropriate permits will be fined $10.
That's a steep price for students like Alvin Mora. Longer junior.
"That's a lot of money for one ticket," Merz
said. "I think it could be a little lower. I guess I'll just have to buy a permit."
The $10 fine was created by the University parking board, which is comprised of faculty and students. The fine was passed by Student Senate.
To avoid tickets, students must buy permits from the parking department. Permits valid from August 1996 to August 1997 are $53 for yellow lots and $50 for residence hall lots.
The department started selling permits during enrollment. Kearns said he did not know exactly how many permits had been sold.
"We have not started putting any of that information into the computer yet because we don't have enough manpower to enter the information," he said.
Profits from permit sales go into the parking fee account, which helps finance maintenance, lighting, everyday operations and other costs.
sold than spaces available. There is no limit on how many permits the department will sell.
Because the information is not in the computers, Kearns was also unsure how much revenue would come from permit sales.
Of the 11,400 parking spaces on campus. 7.632 are for students.
Kearns would not release the number of permits sold last year. He did not want people to see the large disparity because, he said, they would读 it the wrong way.
"I won't give that information because it is erroneous," Kearns said. "It's a large number that shows we oversell. But what people need to realize is that not everyone is on campus all the time. Some people are only here for a few hours, so of course we are going to oversell. People use different spaces at different times."
The fact that the number of student parking permits is larger than the number of available spaces angers students like Amy Evers, San Diego senior. She said she spent at least 15 minutes a day searching for a parking spot.
Kearns did say that there were more permits
"They are selling too many permits," Evers said. "It's frustrating to search for a spot every day that anyone on campus has a permit for."
Cars without permits got tickets at Fest, ranger says
Kansan staff report
Clinton Lake State Park officials reported that the 125 cars that received $9 tickets at the Jayhawk Music Festival on Sunday night were not ticketed for failure to park in designated areas but for failing to purchase a $5 parking permit.
"There were 4-by-8-foot signs on the way into the park that said, '$5 parking,'" said Jerry Schecher, Clinton Park ranger. "Everybody knew they were supposed to pay," he said.
About 2,700 cars carried concertgoers to the park on Sunday. The number of ticketed vehicles was a small percentage.
Schecher said the event ran smoothly for the number of vehicles that were in the park.
Money from the tickets goes to a fund to operate state parks. It is divided among all of the parks in Kansas.
Although some park patrons would prefer the Jayhawk Music Festival were held elsewhere, it benefited the park financially.
More than 8,500 tickets were sold at $15 and $18.
Schecher said half the money went to MTV's Rock the Vote and half went to Clinton State Park.
Men treated for dizziness after unloading truck near Oliver Hall
By Andrea Albright Kansan staff writer
Authorities don't know what made three men sick yesterday afternoon near a loading dock at Oliver Hall.
Douglas County Ambulance Service transported two delivery drivers and a kitchen supervisor after the three men complained of dizziness and throat irritation.
KU police said a driver for Lady Baltimore Food Company was emptying his truck when he began feeling ill. A second driver, called to help finish the job, also became sick.
KU police and the Lawrence Fire Department responded to the call at 1:20 p.m. with a hazardous materials truck.
Authorities investigated inside, outside and around the truck but could not find the source of the irritant.
Don Newsom, the second delivery driver, had no explanation for his illness.
While authorities were on the scene, Richard Schian, a food service supervisor in Oliver, also became ill.
"All I know is I was light headed and got bad real fast," Newsom said. "I felt like I was going to pass out."
All I know is I was light headed and got bad real fast. I felt like I was going to pass out."
Newsm, Schian and the first driver, Richard Thompson, were transported to
Don Newson delivery driver who became ill
Thornton, were transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital
Lawrence Memorial Hospital. A hospital representative said the men had been treated and had left the hospital in good condition.
Paul Roth, driver supervisor at Lady Baltimore, said both drivers were back at the plant last night and seemed fine.
Roth said he hadn't heard of many incidents similar to this in the 50 years that the company had been in business.
because no one found the cause, he said. "I didn't like laying on the hot sidewalk next to a dumpster," Newsom said. "Especially on a day like that."
"They inspected the truck and can't find anything wrong with it." Roth said.
Fred McElhenie, associate director of student housing, said he could not remember a similar emergency. Newcomer
similar emergency.
Newsmot was afraid people would think he was crazy the cause he said
Students participate in exchange program between Haskell, KU
By Liz Musser
Kansan staff writer
Although Haskell Indian Nations University is only about a mile away, it is a campus completely unfamiliar to many KU students. But this may be about to change.
A joint initiative between Haskell Indian Nations University and the University of Kansas now gives KU students the chance to attend classes at Haskell, and Haskell students the chance to attend KU classes.
The program, now in its second semester, is called the Haskell/KU student exchange program.
This semester, there are only two KU students enrolled in Haskell classes. One Haskell student is taking a KU class.
"We've been disadvantaged this year by the fact that classes don't have a common starting date," said Carol Prentice, assistant to the provost. (Classes at Harvard.)
Classes at Haskell start today.
Haskell has set aside 48 credit hours for KU students, which means that up to 16 KU students could each take a 3-hour class at Haskell.
Prentice said KU students could still enroll for this semester's Haskell classes. Malekis Daniel, instructor of
Melanie Daniel, instructor of
"Many KU students may not think of Haskell as a university." Daniel said. "But when they come here they realize we are doing a lot of the same things as them."
Indian legislation and law at Haskell, said the exchange was helpful in eliminating some of the misunderstandings between the schools.
Daniel said the exposure to KU classes was also good for Haskell students.
Deborah Wetsit, dean of instruction at Haskell, said that she hoped to have next semester's schedule ready for KU students by late September.
"It its rid of a bit of the mysticism of what goes on up on the Hill," she said.
Although the program is still very small, organizers said they hoped it would grow in coming semesters.
"Ideally we'll have it out early," she said. "But this program is new enough that we're being a bit hesitant until we work out all the bugs."
KU students must be in good standing and receive permission from the Provost to participate in the exchange. Participating students pay KU tuition and receive KU credit. Anyone interested may pick up course descriptions at 132 Strong Hall.
Haskell classes open to KU students
Cherokee language I
Cherokee language II
Contemporary Issues: American Indian
Ethnobiology
History of Native-American Tribes
Chemical Dependence and the Native American
Indian Law and Legislation
Tribal and Federal Relations
RENEW YOUR DIAL-IN ACCOUNT!
All student dial-in accounts established before August 21,1996 must be renewed by October 1,1996.
Accounts not renewed by October 1, 1996 will be deactivated.
All faculty and staff with a current appointment and who have existing dial-in accounts will have their accounts automatically renewed and a bill will be mailed.
Existing dial-in accounts may be renewed from any computer with a World Wide Web browser by filling out form on a Web page at:
If you renew your account you will be billed an amount that will be based on 2 components:
• a basic service charge, and
• a monthly usage charge
http://www.cc.ukans.edu/renew.htm
DIAL-IN ACCOUNT BILLING
There are two basic service charge options:
- usage options:
• $20 for service from 9-1-96 through 12-31-96
• $50 for service from 9-1-96 through 7-31-97
Monthly usage in excess of 50 hours per month will be billed by the University of Kansas at $0.50 per hour There is no limit to the number of hours of use. Bills will not be generated for less than $10.00 per month. (No charge for amounts below $10.00 in any month will carry forward.) No user will be charged more than $30 in any month. Currently there are no provisions for notifying customers of cumulative hours during the month.
Academic Computing Services (913)864-0100
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Valid through 11/30/99.
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Lunch Buffet
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11:00 am-2:00 pm
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Please present coupon when ordering. Diners will wait for up to four people.
All meals are free.
Volunteer at participating locations. Bates tax, if any.
Valid through 1/30/96.
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Flood field through 11/10/96.
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4A
Thursday, August 29, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Indifference impedes successful recycling
Recycling instills the vigor to make a difference in some people and indifference in others. The importance of a coordinated recycling effort at the University has been brought to the fore by a select few, among them the newly appointed campus environmental specialist, Victoria Silva. In a recent article in the Kansan, Silva conveyed an eagerness to strengthen campuswide recycling programs, namely paper and aluminum cans. She stated that the entire student body needs to act as a unified group in its recycling programs.
However, some students have grown tired of the played-out save-the-earth theme and complain that recycling is an inconvenience. In part, this may be true. Students may lack transportation to Wal-Mart or to any of the recycling centers in Lawrence. Students also may lack the extra change needed for Conservation Resources Recycling to pick up their recyclable materials. But does the cry of inconvenience exonerate students who blanket the Kansas Union lobby with newspapers, aluminum cans and other articles of trash while four aluminum can receptacles and six newspaper recycling bins go unnoticed? The same is true for other buildings on campus where aluminum cans are thrown on the floor or in trash containers while recycling bins are nearby.
Conscientious efforts now are being put forth to create a coherent, more efficient means of recycling, but the student body must show its support both vocally, by voicing desires to have more on-campus recycling centers, and physically, by using the recycling facilities that now are available across campus. The problems that are plaguing recycling efforts are being addressed. Franklin Roosevelt once said that government cannot close its eyes to pollution but that the people cannot be blinded by indifference.
NICK ZALLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
New recycling agreement not the same old garbage
The recent agreement between the University of Kansas and Dickerson Recycling to collect office paper and green-bar computer paper for recycling is a positive step toward establishing a comprehensive waste-reduction program at the University.
Victoria Silva, KU environmental specialist, said the contract had been drafted by the facilities operations department and would be effective for one year. Before the new contract, the University had to find recycling companies willing to agree to a monthly contract to collect office and green-bar paper.
The agreement will allow the University to expand the new program to include other items such as aluminum cans and newspapers. The cautious advancement by Silva and facilities operations attests to their commitment to bring a respectable program to the University Rather than quickly involving the University in yet another monthly recycling venture, the new agreement responsibly expands the University's current recycling efforts.
Even while operating with monthly contracts, nearly 64,469 pounds of white office paper and 23,261 pounds of computer paper were diverted from the University's waste stream in the last fiscal year, Silva said. Students and faculty may be assured that the increased commitment to recycling by the University will help make these figures grow. With any recycling program, however, its success depends on the committed efforts of students and faculty to a cleaner campus and a healthier environment.
JEREMY LIND FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
AMANDA TRAUGHBER
Editor
CRAIG LANG
Managing editor
MATT HOOD
Associate managing editor for
design
KIMBERLY CRABTREE
CHARTY JEFFRIES
News editors
DARCI L. McLAIN
Public Relations Director
KAREN GERCH
Business manager
HEALY SMART
Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Campus ... Susanna Lloh
Jason Bratt
Editorial ... Amy McVey
John Colter
Nicole Kennedy
Features ... Adam Wirt
Bill Perlilla
Associate sports ... Carly Foster
On-line editor ... David L. Teaks
Photo ... Rich Devkivi
Graphics ... Nosh Museus
Andrew Robinson
Special sections ... Amy McVey
Wire ... Debbie Stame
Business Staff
Campus mgr .. Mark Odkmek
Regional mgr .. Dennie Haupt
Assistant Retail mgr .. Dana Gentono
National mgr .. Krista Nye
Special Sections mgr .. Heather Valler
Production mgrs .. Don Kopec
Marketing director .. Lisa Quebsemban
Public Relations dir .. Sara Roe
Gree 've director .. Desmond Lavelle
Classified mgr .. Shelly Wecker
Shawn Trimble / KANSAN
IT DOESNT TAKE A VILLAGE TO RAISE SOMEONE
DON'T REMEMBER HIM SAYING THAT AFTER THE WAR...
RUSSELL, KS FOR DOLE
WELCOME, BOB!
DOLE '96
RUSSELL IF YOU BOB!
Language is degenerating into lexicon of the ludicrous
A grave Kansas City TV correspondent looked into the camera this summer and reported, "What we have here is a murder-suicide gone bad." The goal, of course, was to shock us, to lure our attention with the macabre.
Unfortunately, he didn't say quite what he meant. A murder-suicide gone bad sounds like rather a good thing. A murder-suicide pulled off without a hitch would yield a decidedly worse result, wouldn't it?
The problem here is that you and I have to take the time to think through such comments. It seems our society has lost control of our language. Snappy words are elbowing the humble-but-clear words out of the way.
Phrasing used for effect is clouding and sometimes distorting the message. From reporters to corporate types, people are increasingly compelled to eliminate good sentences or use confusing phrases for sound ideas.
Words like "empowerment" and "proactive" percolate in our everyday language. They somehow survive in the defenders' of the language teeth.
What would happen if everyone on this campus were asked to drop everything and just get proactive? Would we instantly give new life to the nickname "Harvard on the Kaw," or would we collectively scratch our chins?
If you had a business-related internship this summer, you probably were asked to think outside the box, or you had serious discussions about how to implement change.
STAFF COLUMNIST
SCOTT
WORTHINGTON
You may have caused a traffic jam on your radar screen because you were too busy trying to align yourself with the corporate culture or inject value-
added input during face time with the vice president. Or maybe you just sat around and read Dilbert.
Either way, I'll bet you felt a little uneasy in the first week while your co-workers fired off buzzwords as fast as a Tommy gun. And I'll bet that feeling persisted until the next week, when you could volley them back with equal abandon.
The media have a well-publicized history of such offenses. But for every murder-suicide gone bad there are several subtle offenses.
How often do reporters use "literally" when they mean figuratively? Why do we find classified ads containing "pre-owned" items instead of used ones?
Perhaps there is a new practice of buying things, not using them, and then selling them at a reduced price.
"Hip" is used so often that it has no clear meaning anymore. Hip is supposed to be an elite club. If everything becomes hip, then nothing is hip.
Tom Junod wrote in a GQ story this summer that hip "now stands for a culture so elephantine and greedily inclusive that writers have given up trying to define it at all, and now just use it, hoping that we, their readers, will stumble upon a definition of our own, through inference."
Most would agree that language is naturally symbolic and therefore open to interpretation. But why not save us some time and use "poor" instead of "economically disadvantaged?"
It's difficult to think of a solution to this problem because the problem infects nearly every section of society. You can't just blame the media because the media largely are describing what they hear from government and business leaders. I doubt the problem stems from the pump of academe because buzzwords are anathema to every professor I have known.
That leaves a few of us informed, many of us confused, and the rest of us just happy to report we're still the victims of murder-suicides gone bad.
Maybe it's time for language constables to start cracking down, to get a little red in the tooth and claw because increasingly less of our language is easy to understand.
Scott Worthington is a Kansas City, Mo. graduate student.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Computer Center fee increase unreasonable
The Computer Center will be raising the price of terminal server accounts yet again.
During the past academic year, the center charged $30 per year for a terminal server account to pay for new telephone lines and equipment. Service was substantially better because more users could dial in at the same time. That situation lasted for two years, and now the center wants to raise the price to $50 per year. I find this increase particularly unfair.
I believe there are two reasons the center wants to charge more for the accounts: to control network traffic and to get more
monev to pay for upgrades.
money to pay upgrades.
Thirty dollars is very different from $50 in the minds of most. Some people would like to try dial-in services but are unsure of the benefits. They may be more willing to try something they are unsure of for $30 but not $50. Therefore, the center limits traffic by deterring indecisive users.
I understand that network traffic must be controlled so that the system does not become overloaded. I understand that the center would like to generate revenue for server upgrades to serve the campus better. What I do not understand is the need to raise everyone's fees. Some users stay logged on for 10 or more hours at a time. If the center would like to control traffic, it should differentiate between normal users, those who log in for up to 50 hours per month, and mega users, those who log in for more than 50 hours per month. The center has tried to address the usage issue by charging 50 cents per hour for each hour more than 50 per month. This assumes that most users will use 50 hours per month. Personally, I would be lucky to use 50 hours in two months.
If the computer center wants to decrease network traffic and offset prices of upgrades, there are many alternatives to dipping into students' already well-picked pockets.
- Timothy Baroni
Plattesmouth, Neb.
graduate student
Cultural icons provide guide for world view
Hello. And welcome to 15 Inches, which is what I have decided to name this column. I considered Please Love Me, Don't Walk on the Grass and Finals Are Stressful! just to establish these points up front so we wouldn't have to endure the perennial bumper crop of Kansan columns that reach these conclusions.
After deciding on a name, I was determined that instead of swallowing my neuroses and anxieties about becoming member of the
STAFF COLUMNIST
public forum and a voice of my generation (which would involve writing an actual column), I would bleed openly for a little while.
MICHAEL MARTIN
I confess that this is new to me. I fear change. Not all change, just bad change. Well, actually, most change. Just as when they switched den mothers on *The*
Facts of Life, I was at sea for months. I found Beverly Ann to be nowhere near as jolly as Mrs. Garrett, and I thought Kim Fields' portraits of Tootie — whether by influence, coincidence or design — became even more stilted.
Does subject remember actively experiencing either?
Having answered no to both questions, I suppose that I am sufficiently not 20 enough to write this column. So now I suppose I should get to it. How about a brief list of what I will and won't do?
I will write a column that will have some relevance, importance and resonance to your life.
Does subject remember which came first: *Tron* the movie or *Tron* the video game?
I will not pretend to be Dave Barry. I will do my best not to be excruciatingly lame. I will not preach unless I'm right. I will not use this column as therapy unless it provides entertainment.
I will refer to Charlie's Angels and Rhoda from time to time and explain their function as blueprints for social change.
This is what I wonder: Will you dislike me less than the last columnist? Will I be Beverly Ann or Mrs. Garrett to you? What if I have the power to transmit the Tootie Syndrome?
And I will tell you about my dating and social life, if I ever get one. I average one date per year, and if it happens to fall within this semester, well, you'll get the details. You might hear about last year's date, who spent the entire evening at the Granada dancing with a speaker.
I also am worried that I won't have the time for this column because I'm enrolled in Math 105 (same as Getting it Over With 104 and Topics in: Impeded Graduation). It's a math appreciation course, which might lead me to appreciate certain uncontrolled substances. So if this column suddenly declines or improves, just know that it's the cracktalking.
You know, I'm sensing a definite comfort level being established here. That is good and a goal. I thank you for your 45 seconds of attention and look forward to the other fractions of a minute we will spend together.
HUBIE
And I really hope you're not walking on the grass right now. If you are, I'm afraid we haven't accomplished anything this time.
I also worry about being 20, which is the first year of the decade in which you careen toward becoming irrelevant. I worry that my 20s have set in prematurely. What if I have nothing to say? So I took my How 20 Are You? test, which has two criteria:
MR. SANDMAN,
BRING ME A
DREAM
Snap!
Michael Martin is a Lenoxa sophomore in English and theater and film.
OF LAWRENCE TRAFFIC LIKE THE L.A. SCENE
WITH GUNS A-WAYIN' TO WASTE THE SLOW DRIVERS
By Greg Hardin
SO
PEACE OF MIND
WOULD COME TO
THE SURVIVORS !!
green...
light...
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 29, 1996
5A
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
Watkins expansion will improve service
The 90-year-old Watkins Health Center has been undergoing major renovations. The 20,000 square foot addition includes 25 new exam rooms and private check-in areas.
Project includes new exam rooms, check-in areas
By Ashleigh Roberts Kansan staff writer
Watkins Memorial Health Center is undergoing structural surgery to provide students with better care and increased services.
The 90-year-old, 60,000-square-foot building is already the largest student health care center in the country, said James Strobl, director of health care services. Watkins will become even larger with a 20,000 square-foot addition, which is scheduled to open next semester.
Strobl said when he became director of Watkins in 1983, 15,000 students visited the center each year. Now that number has grown to 45,000.
"That is a 300 percent patient increase and we are continuing to grow," Strobl said.
Eighty-two percent of the student body used the health center at least once last year, Strobl said, but only 25 percent of the visits were done by appointment.
"We're hoping to increase the number of scheduled appointments to 80 percent after the addition," Strobl said. "It will really cut the time students spend in the waiting room."
Students will also benefit from 25 new patient exam rooms.
"All of our rooms will come equipped with a sink and medical cabinets so they can be used for exams or offices." Strobli said.
Five new beds will be added to the urgent care section that handles minor accidents and specialized procedures, he said.
Watkins is called an early-care facility instead of a hospital, because strict legal terms require that hospitals have specialized medical equipment the health center doesn't need.
Strobl said the gynecology department would take up most of the second floor of the addition.
The health center is also installing separate check-in booths that will speed up the process while offering students more privacy, Strobl said. Other additions include a new X-ray machine, 19 bathrooms with wheelchair accessibility, more computer hook-ups, back-up generator outlets, pharmacy counseling booths,
and a doctor's library for meetings, recruiting and official functions.
recruiting and official functions. Strobi said plans for the addition began in 1991 and were presented to Student Senate in March of 1993.
"That is a 300 percent patient increase and we are continuing to "
grow."
James Strob
director of health-care services
The health center originally asked for a yearly $11 student fee for 25 years, but the finance committee raised the fee to $15 for 15 years. However, the contracting bid was $11 million dollars cheaper than expected.
"As a result, the bond will be done in 11 years and it saves students a lot of money," Strobl said. "Every cent the health center gets is from the students. We don't receive a single penny from the state. That's why it is the students' health center."
Students support the addition despite the hassle of construction. Kelly Watson, Wichita sophomore, said it was worth the wait.
"It's kind of an inconvenience, but the changes had to take place," she said. "The parts that are done look really good."
Ragweed and pollen invasion signals onslaught of allergies
Harsh hay fever season descends upon the area; Watkins informs students, others to take cover
By Ashleigh Roberts
Kansan staff writer
Icthy eyes, runny noses and sinus pressure are about to reach an all-time high as allergy sufferers head into one of the worst allergy seasons in years, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Health Center.
"The pollen count has been doubling every day for the last week," he said. "Rain, wind velocity and humidity affect the level of pollen. Because of all the rain and humidity we've had over the last six weeks, we can expect this allergy season to be pretty bad."
Yockey said he thought half of Watkins' patients this Labor Day weekend would be there because of allergies.
Ragweed, a common weed in the Midwest that causes many allergies, matures in mid-August. It peaks over Labor Day weekend and disappears after the first major freeze. Yockey said.
"It should start tapering off around Sept. 15, but it will be bad during the next few weeks as farmers harvest their fields," he said. "The combines strip the pollen out of the crops and deposit it in the air."
Allergic rhinitis, commonly called hay fever, is medically defined as an inflammation of the nose, which can extend to the eyes, throat and lungs. But the name has nothing to do with hay or fever.
The word originates from a German physician who in the late 1800s noticed that farmers developed infections when they bailed hay. Yockey said.
Many people think a fever can be a sign of an allergy, but that's not the case, Yockey said. Fevers and discolored mucus signal a bacterial sinus infection. Allergies, however, can develop into a sinus infection.
The nose operates like a car muffler, he said. The hairs and the crevices in the nose filter pollen, dust, dirt and other particles by trapping them in a layer of moisture that becomes mucus. Some particles get past that lining and the body sees them as foreign and retaliates.
Over-the-counter products bring cheap relief from minor allergy symptoms without requiring a visit to the doctor, but they can have side effects, Yockey said.
"There is a tremendous danger with over-the-counter nasal sprays," he said. "Students can become addicted in less than a week, and it can turn into a real disaster very quickly. But they are great for one-time use."
Yockey said spending more time inside air-conditioned buildings, lots of rest and abstaining from alcohol and cigarettes helped lower allergy symptoms.
Prescription drugs and weekly shots can help people with more-serious allergy symptoms. Watkins offers such services.
Renee Greenberg, Northbrook, Ill., junior, has received shots once a week since seventh grade. She said it was worth the trouble.
The cost of your health
Office visits to Watkins' allergy clinic are free for students, and the pharmacy accepts insurance for prescriptions. The clinic is open Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. For appointments, call 864-9507.
The truth is out there for students asking tough questions about sex
By Megan Jordan Kansan staff writer
Sex and college are like peanut butter and jelly — it is difficult to think of one and not the other. And with more than half of college students engaging in sexual activity, there are plenty of questions.
The University of Kansas and Lawrence offer information sources.
Sondra Speer, graduate assistant for the University Information Center, said the service received questions about sex all the time. The questions range from inquiries about ovulation and sexually transmitted diseases to offensive remarks.
"If it's really a legitimate question, I'll answer it," Speer said. "If I think they're being really gross or trying to offend me I won't."
Speer said KU Info often could answer basic questions with a medical dictionary. KU Info also refers students to Planned Parenthood, 1420 Kasold Drive, or Watkins Memorial Health Center. Speer also said she would not hesitate to tell students to visit a doctor or hospital if she thought they had a problem.
The Department of Health Promotion and Education at Watkins informs individuals, couples and large groups about health-related topics. Students can pick up written information or talk one-to-one with a health expert.
Janine Gracy, health educator, said the department liked to focus on freshman and sophomores because they were more vulnerable than older students.
Gracy said she sees students of all ages and an equal number of men and women in her office.
"There are students who come in here and can't believe I would say sex in front of them, or condom for that matter," she said. "Some know quite a bit, but others just got the plumbing lecture in biology, which doesn't help much."
Besides answering questions, Counseling and Psychological Services, also in Watkins, discusses more personal concerns with students.
Frank Desalvo, director of Counseling and Psychological Services, said advice about sex was not what most students asked for. Instead, students often seek help in dealing with the consequences of their actions.
Desalvo said he did not think young people were reluctant about seeking advice or educating themselves, but they often turned to non-professional sources.
"We have lots of students who have done reading on subjects they are interested in or talked to their friends or someone they trust," he said.
The Lawrence Douglas County Health Department, 336 Missouri St., offers another option for students. All services are confidential and are either free or can be paid on a sliding-fee scale.
"Many of our services are exactly like Watkins," said Barbara Schnitker, director of nurses. "We encourage students to go there because their fees are actually paying for the services. Plus, it is probably more convenient for students since it is right on campus."
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The GRE is on Oct. 12th. Are You Prepared?
Test 1 Sun, Aug. 25 9am-1pm
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[1] Sun, Aug. 25 9am-5pm
[Class 1] Tues, Aug. 27 5pm-8pm
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6A
Thursday, August 29, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Late-night eateries draw student crowds
By Erin Rooney Kansan staff writer
The moon is high and darkness has covered the land. Most of the city is asleep, but a voice penetrates into the night, "Welcome to Taco Bell. May I take your order?"
Several KU students go to late night restaurants after the bars have closed, kegs have run dry at parties or studying has led them into a hunter frenzy.
"You don't want your last memory of the night to be being kicked out of a bar at last call," said Chelsea Kapfer, Lawrence sophomore.
The trend of late-night eating has taken the fast out of fast food.
Lawrence late-night eats
Burrito King, 900 Illinois St., open until 3 a.m.
Java Break, 17 E. 7th St., open 24
Pizza Shuttle, 1601 W. 23rd St.,
*Perkins, 1711 W. 23rd St., open 24 hours.*
Pizza Shuttle, 1601 W. 23rd St., open weeknights until 2 a.m. and weekends until 3 a.m.
Taco Bell, 1408 W. 23rd St., open weeknights until 3 a.m. and weekends until 4 a.m.
Vehicles have to wait in for an hour at drive-thru while waiting lists form at sit-down restaurants.
Burrito King, 900 Illinois St.; Perkins, 1711 W. 23rd St. and Total Mart, 501 W. 9th St., are Kapfer's favorite late-night stops.
Taco Bell, 1220 W. 6th St., open weeknights until 3 a.m. and weekends until 4 a.m.
"It's always fun to sneak airplane-sized bottles of liquor into Perkins," she said. "So as you'e eating your biscuits and gravvy you can also have a little rum and Coke."
Village Inn, 821 Iowa St., open 24 hours
The Taco Bells which are located at 1408 W. 23rd and 1220 W. 6th St, which is open until 4 a.m. on weekends and 3 a.m. during the week are favorite stops for many students. Masoud Jalali, a Taco Bell manager, said that sometimes things became a little crazy during the wee hours of the morning. "Our main problem seems to be when customers place their order," he said. "If they've had a few drinks it's hard to understand them and what they order isn't really what they wanted."
But incorrect orders aren't the only thing late-night Taco Bell employees have had to deal with.
A few months ago a small fight broke out in the Taco Bell parking lot on 23rd Street. A police officer stopped. The fight wasn't enough for the officer to take any action, but he did scare a driver in the drive-thru, Jalali said.
The driver has ordered his food and was pretty close to the pick-up window when, after spotting the police officer, he got out of his car and just walked off.
Jalali said he had not found out what happened to the driver but assumed the driver was afraid of getting a ticket for drunk driving.
Nadine Peaches, a manager at Perkins, said that she had seen her share of drunk customers.
"Once there was a guy who was so drunk he sat at the wrong table and ate with the wrong people." she said.
Peaches said drunk customers became a problem when they tried to sneak out without paying their bills. Perkins now prosecutes every violator because of this problem.
DRIVE-THRU
OPEN
LATE
Jeremy Jersvig gives a customer his order at Taco Bell, 1408 23rd Street. Taco Bell is open until 4 a.m. on weekends.
Task force highlights problem of worn out, mutilated library books
By Kimberly Crabtree
Kansan staff writer
Highlighting in a library book may make studying easier for students, but it makes keeping library collections in usable condition more difficult for library staff.
A study by the Preservation Task Force found that nearly half of the books in the KU libraries that have been circulated six or more times in the last 10 years have been mutilated in some way. The study, released this summer, identified pencil, ink and highlighter marks, as well as remaining paper clips, bookmarks and dog-eared pages as forms of damage.
The task force recommended educating staff and patrons about the problem.
members and patrons about the problem.
"That's the most important thing we can do."
said Bair Bian, preservation librarian and chairman of the task force.
A display in Watson Library illustrates the problem, and pamphlets and fliers that offer tips for using materials are available.
"I think it's just a long, gradual process." Baird said.
A coordinating committee of faculty members plans to discuss the problem soon to decide how to educate staff members and library users, he said.
The task force also recommended hiring a conservator and building a conservation laboratory to help restore old materials. Baird said he expected a full-time conservator to be hired by mid-September and the lab to be built within six months.
Laboratory drawings are completed. Baird
"I've had books that are trashed. Sometimes they're very highlighted."
Nathan Richardson
Nathan Richardson
Fountain Valley, Calif., graduate student
said, and staff members are working on getting a contractor bid to build it, which is planned to be housed in Watson.
The task force also suggested increasing preservation financing from $318,000 to $530,000 a year. Preservation financing includes repairing damaged books, binding books and reformatting materials.
Baird said outside fundraising would likely
be a source for the additional money.
But librarians must preserve the collection while still keeping it accessible to users, he said.
William Crowe, vice chancellor for information services and dean of libraries, agreed.
"We want all comers to have maximum access to information, so what you read today will be open and interpretable 50 years from now when
it's the only conv." Crowe said.
Students, however, usually aren't surprised to find pencil or ink markings in library books.
Nathan Richardson, Fountain Valley, Calif. graduate student, said most library books he found were marked in.
"I'm reading one right now," Richardson said. "I've had books that are trashed. Sometimes they're very highlighted."
Shannon Adamson, Bonner Springs senior, said damaged library books bothered her.
"It's very distracting trying to read a book that has blue and pink highlighter or pen marks all over it," she said. "Books are expensive, and it's not fair to other users."
Although many materials were mutilated, Baird said he did not believe much of the damage was malicious.
---
Regrettably, all sections are full this semester for
Remedial Thermodynamics
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 29, 1996
7A
Democratic delegates evaluate Clinton's skills
By Mike Feinsilber Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO — The devotion that Democratic delegates express for the president seems genuine. They like Bill Clinton. But they see weaknesses in him, too — a tendency to vacillate, to incope in too soon, to see all sides.
"When he says, 'I feel your pain,' I think he does," said Carol Donovan, 59, a delegate from Massachusetts to the Democratic National Convention. "I see it as a real plus." But some people, she concedes, "think that's phony."
"He's gotten something of a reputation of being a flip-flopper," said state Democratic chairman Dan Hannaker of Fargo, N.D.
Clinton has turned out to be a divisive personality.
Some Americans dislike him as intensely as some hated Richard Nixon and Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Others find him warm, honest,
open, not presumptive.
"Bill Clinton is my generation's J.F.K.," said James McGuigan, 31, a delegate from Brown Dean. Wis.
But some delegates refused to discuss Clinton's weaknesses or admit that any could exist.
Others sprinted party-line boilerplate when asked about his strengths, citing the economy or his stand against tobacco.
Clinton's vacillating tendencies came up often.
And some tried to give a candid evaluation — if it could be done without hurting the Democratic cause.
"He does like to have people approve of him a little more than I would prefer," said George Krumem, an oilman from Bristow, Okla. "That is a weakness. I would prefer him to stand on principle."
Joseph Perry of Searsport, Maine,
said, "Too damn nice. He tries to
satisfy everyone."
But even this view is two-sided. Some see Clinton's empathizing as a plus.
Wilfred Caraballo, 49, of Newark, N.J., said, "He does agonize over things. I think his strength is that he is real. But at the same time that's his weakness. To the extent that he winds up taking a position and not explaining the metamorphosis, it's a valid criticism."
From Andrew Romanoff of Denver: "He can empathize with all sides, which can make him seem indecisive. But in some ways, it's the source of his greatest strength." Clinton's other strengths?
"He is a people person," said Sharon Barrett, of Piedmont Mo.
Sharon Bearden, of Piedmont, Mo. Susie Jablinske, a teacher from Annapolis, Md., said, "I think that he genuinely cares about the children of America."
Whitewater and Clinton's character were mentioned by some delegates talking about Clinton's weaknesses. "I know people take shots at his character, but he's human," said Frank Prevedel of Rock Springs, Colo.
The Associated Press
Dole expects Clinton to agree
Candidate claims that president is stealing Republican stances
VENTURA, Calif. — In advance of President Clinton's arrival yesterday at the Democratic convention, Republican Bob Dole said he expected Clinton to endorse Dole's call for tax cuts and stiffer drug control.
"If they agree with me on everything, why shouldn't I be the president?" Dole asked at a campaign appearance meant to score Clinton for surrendering the fight against drugs.
Addressing a school-yard crowd perched on picnic tables, Dole appeared to lump drugs and cigarettes together: "You shouldn't use drugs, you shouldn't smoke cigarettes, let's just throw them all out at the same time."
Asked later whether he was suggesting a ban on tobacco, Dole said, "Oh, no, come on. You know better than that."
Of the Democrats' convention
proceedings, Dole said: "Last night was liberal night. ... That was just to satisfy the liberals. Tonight they'll bash Republicans, and tomorrow night the president will sound for everybody, 'If you're for
"If they agree with me on everything, why shouldn't I be president?"
Bob Dole
Republicanpresidentialcandidate
it, it'm for it. If Bob Dole's for it, it'm for it. ... I don't have any commitment, I just want to be-elected because I like it here."
Amid reports that Clinton would announce a tax-cuts package, including a reduction in capital gains taxes on home sales, Dole said, "Well, welcome to the club.
We've had it out there for weeks and weeks and weeks."
In a written statement directed at Clinton, Dole added: "Please let me know in your acceptance speech Thursday if you are willing to endorse my proposal to give homeowners much-needed tax relief. And please accept my best wishes on the occasion of your becoming your party's nominee."
Dole went to a small Christian school playground to upbraid Clinton for nationwide statistics that indicated a doubling of adolescent drug use since he took office.
"I know when President Clinton speaks tomorrow, he's going to mention kids 55 times if he talks for 10 minutes . . . and he'll probably mention his war on drugs, which he's going to start next year.
"It's too late, Mr. President," Dole said.
Democrats, in turn, point out that Dole voted when he was a senator to cut back funds for anti-drug education and treatment programs.
Princess Diana's role is unclear after royal divorce is completed
Dole has proposed deployment of the military, CIA and National Guard to help fight the drug problem.
After split with Charles she starts her new life retaining some perks
The Associated Press
LONDON — No more royal husband, no more Her Royal Highness — no more role for Diana?
Officially divorced yesterday from Prince Charles, the newly styled Diana, Princess of Wales, is rich, beautiful, independent and effectively jobless.
The 15-year marriage ended yesterday when a legal clerk issued a decree that their divorce was now "absolute." Buckingham Palace said.
a long-standing date to attend the Endlish National Ballet.
Neither Charles nor Diana appeared in court, but Diana later glared at photographers as she kept
The divorce does not affect Charles' position as heir to the throne, but the lengthy and very public decline of the marriage — and his admission of adultery — has deeply damaged his standing with the public.
In British newspapers, attention already has turned to whether Charles should marry Camilla Parker Bowles, who was blamed by Diana for breaking up the marriage.
The verdict of statistically meaningless phone-in polls organized by some tabloids is that Charles should stay single. Or, as The Sun put it: "Bed Her Don't Wed Her."
papers, the princess was at her apartment in Kensington Palace, and the
The end of the marriage came six weeks after Charles was granted a preliminary decree of divorce.
As the clerk stamped the final
"I think
everyone is very sad at the end of the marriage."
Prime Minister John Major
end of the marriage," Prime Minister John Major told reporters.
prince was secluded at Balmoral Castle in Scotland with their sons, Prince William, 14, and Prince Harry, 11.
"It has ended. People think that was the right thing to happen."
"I think everyone is very sad at the
With the divorce, Diana lost her chance of becoming queen and will no longer be called "her royal highness." But there is no precedent for her new role — there never has been an ex-wife of a Prince of Wales.
Buckingham Palace has promised to invite her to the odd state or national event.
There will be outings with her sons and a dinner here and a ball there for the few charities she still represents. But the dizzying whirl of public royal duties is gone, and a person can spend only so much time in glitzy restaurants or honing her muscles in the gym.
so what will she do?
Since her declaration in a television
So what will she do?
interview last year that she aspired to be "a queen in people's hearts," Diana has said little about her plans. Many people have theories.
"What she wants is to travel abroad for Britain, highlighting children's issues," said Dame Barbara Cartland, the romantic novelist whose daughter Raine was Diana's stepmother.
"But the queen is being very difficult about it. She has said no," Cartland said.
Diana needs the OK from Queen Elizabeth II for any new public role. So far, it appears, this is lacking.
Her financial settlement from Charles has not been revealed, but news reports put her lump-sum payment at $26.35 million.
Charles reportedly also will provide $620,000 a year to run her office at Kensington Palace.
Di'ssettlement
Limited and supervised role in the public.
Joint custody of her sons, Prince Harr, 11, and Prince William, 14.
Lump-sum payment of $26.35 million.
Her Kensington apartment and $620,000 a year to run her office.
■ Flights on royal airplanes at taxpayers' expense.
Occasional invitations to the Royal family's functions.
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Thursday, August 29, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Student senators are watching intently for the results of a meeting today concerning faculty evaluations.
Kansan staff writer
At 3:30 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union, student senators, faculty and members of the University Senate Executive Committee will discuss plans for faculty evaluations at the University of Kansas.
"This is an opportunity to get our voices heard on this issue," said
Evaluations bring Senate response
The evaluations being discussed are not those filled out by students at the end of each semester. The proposed evaluations would be filled out annually by deans or department heads. Evaluations would incorporate information from various sources, including peers and students.
The Board of Regents has mandated that the University establish a structured evaluation policy by
T
Meeting draws attention
Convenient, Confidential, Economical
Today's meeting will allow faculty and student senators to respond to the proposed faculty evaluation plan.
Rachel Schwartz, Nunemaker senator, wanted to see the University establish an effective evaluation policy. Schwartz said such evaluations would benefit students.
Jeff Stowell, SenEx member, said today's results would have ramifications on students.
"I think it is nice for Chancellor Hemenway to go around and recognize good professors," Schwartz said. "But I think there ought to be an equal opportunity to recognize not-so-outstanding professors."
Kathy Guth
Kathy Guth Nurse Practitioner Gynecology
By Spencer Duncan
At Watkins, students receive comprehensive, confidential gynecologic care. We have a board certified gynecologist and a certified gynecologic nurse practitioner. And our prices are lower than many off-campus facilities.
Cook said he supported faculty evaluations and that the meeting would be important in deciding how the final process would work.
Sept. 20. If the University does not establish its own plan, the Regents will impose a plan.
"What happens at this meeting will not affect students right away," he said. "But a faculty evaluation policy will eventually affect students."
Services include: ● contraceptives and contraceptive counseling (walk-in basis) ● annual exams and Pap smears including evaluation and treatment after abnormal Pap smears ● treatment for acute gynecologic problems ● treatment of STDs for females and males ● infertility counseling and treatment.
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Continued from Page 1A
pid."
And everyone is doing the same thing. Line-dancing participants gather in a group on the dance floor and perform several steps to complete a routine. The routine usually is repeated throughout the song.
The Macarena gained national attention when 37,576 Seattle Mariners fans did the dance during a game this month. This week, the dance received more attention when 4,320 delegates at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago came onto the floor dancing.
Louis Orlando, disc jockey at Coyote's night club, 1003 E. 23rd St., said line dancing was done mostly by women.
"A lot of the reason is because you don't have to have a partner," Orlando said. "Ladies have a hard time getting guys to dance."
Evaluations
Continued from Page 1A.
anything specific to the area of performing specific duties," Shulenburger said. "The board wants an explicit declaration with plans for faculty development."
Shulenburger said current revisions of the existing policies were designed to keep teaching at an acceptable level.
"The controversy is the lessening of protection against arbitrary actions taken against tenured faculty," he said.
"The point of tenure is academic freedom," Genova said. "While I agree incompetent faculty should be cut, I believe the present policy already addresses that problem."
"We need to make sure what we are doing in no way compromises the freedom of tenure. It appears external forces, maybe not consciously, are in the first phase of threatening tenure."
YOUNG JERRY BROWN
Draper said faculty dismissal was
Shulenburger
Draper
not at the heart of the Regents' requests.
"We are dealing with a minuscule number of faculty that this would apply to," Draper said. "Faculty development is just one of a number of directives for the board, and the section that deals with dismissal is just one small part of a much broader plan."
Bruce Twarog, professor of physics and astronomy, was one of 12 faculty members to send comments.
"This is a nice thing if there is a long-term problem," Twarog said. "It does not address short-term problems. This is a tedious process that doesn't deal with someone that chooses to coast for a year or two. There have to be immediate answers."
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TRIAL POSTPONED
A PRETRIAL HEARING FOR St. Louis Rams rookie running back Lawrence Phillips, charged with misdemeanor drunk driving, was postponed yesterday until Sept. 30. Phillips, who is free on his own recognizance, was arrested on June 15 in Los Angeles County after police allegedly saw him speeding in a gold Mercedes Benz with a flat tire. His blood alcohol content was about twice California's legal limit.
DONALD ROBERTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SPORTS
Lawrence Phillips
KANSAS FOOTBALL UPDATE
Kansas football opens its 101st season tonight against the Ball State Cardinals at Memorial Stadium. Kickoff is slated for 7 p.m. Gates will open one hour before gametime.
This game will not be televised in Lawrence. With this game, head coach Glen Mason will have coached more games than any other Kansas football coach.
THURSDAY. AUGUST 29.1996
SING ALONG
PACKERS RECEIVE ROBERT BROOKS has recorded a song that celebrates his practice of leaping into the stands after opening to downbeat. On
scoring a touchdown. On
Jump in the Stands,
Brooks raps: "The Bay owns the best
fans in the land/So, my man,
won't you jump as high as you can...
/Anyway, fans hate when we jump in the
stands/But every man can't
G
stands/But every man can't be a Packer fan." The single has been No.
1 in requests since WIXX-FM in Green Bay, Wis., began playing it three weeks ago.
10
SECTION B
Fast BREAKS
Chamberlain says Jordan isn't best player in history
NEW YORK — Wilt Chamberlain is willing to debate who is the greatest player in NBA history. He doesn't think it's Michael Jordan.
"I heard Michael Jordan once say that he thought he was the greatest player of all time," Chamberlain said in a television interview to be aired Friday night.
"I say to Michael, until they start changing the game because you are so great, then I don't think you should be giving yourself such accolades. In fact, your game, Michael, has been enhanced by some of the things the NBA has done.
Chamberlain made the comments in an interview for a Classic Sports Network special called Those Who Changed The Game.
"My game, it went the other way. They (the NBA) tried to stop me."
The Associated Press
The special, which also includes interviews with Joe Namath, Bobby Orr and Lou Brock, will be televised at 8 p.m. tomorrow.
Pitcher to lead softball team
What do you see when you see a soft ball?
Most people see a smooth, white, stitched object, but a softball player may have a different perspective.
"When I see a softball, it's an adrenaline rush," said pitcher Sarah Workman,
orlando, Fla.
sophomore." It reminds me of flashbacks of my whole entire life."
"I am really expecting Sarah to be the work.
The Kansas softball team will depend on Workman to lead the squad with dominant pitching.
M. E. SMITH
Sarah Workman
horse," said Tracy Bunge, Kansas soft ball coach.
During the Fall 1995 season, Workman was 11-0 and earned team records for 10 complete games, 74.7 innings pitched, 45 strikeouts and five shutouts.
She remained strong through the first half of the spring season this year, starting with a 9-4 record. However, she slipped to 5-8 during the second half.
"We were a roller coaster team," Workman said. "You never knew what was going to happen. I think mainly we weren't a team. We were just nine individuals trying to play, and it doesn't work that way. That's not what sports are about."
Workman got back to the basics this summer. She worked on her mechanics with Jim Webb, a softball coach at Lake City Community College in Florida.
— Kansan staff report
KU player on national team scores in win against Cuba
Kansas freshman basketball player Lynn Pride scored 13 points and grabbed seven rebounds for the USA Basketball
Women's Junior
— Kansan staff report
BASKETBALL
Pride, a 6-foot-1 guard/forward, played high school basketball at Sam Houston High School in Arlington, Texas.
National Teach
Tuesday, with a
49-68 win
against Cuba in
Chetumal, Mexico.
Pride was one of five U.S. players to score double figures en route to the team's first win in the Confederation of Pan American Basketball Associations (COPAAB) Women's Junior World Championship Qualifying Tournament. The team features the country's top women basketball players who are younger than 19.
10
Football ready for contest
Season opener pits Jayhawks against Ball State Cardinals
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
In four years, a lot has changed between the football programs of Kansas and Ball State.
It's been four years since Kansas defeated the Cardinals 62-10 in Lawrence in the only series meeting of the teams.
That year Kansas would go on to win the Aloha Bowl, while Ball State won just five games.
Since then Kansas has won another Aloha Bowl, but Ball State has become one of the top teams in the Mid-America Conference. A Las Vegas球 appearance came in 1993, and last year the Cardinals went 7-4 under
first-vear coach Bill Lynch.
"We're anxious to play a football game," he said. "We've had a good camp, a tough camp. The last couple of days we've worked exclusively on Ball State."
Kansas coach Glen Mason said the No. 25 Jayhawks are ready for Ball State in the season opener at 7 tonight at Memorial Stadium.
Kansas senior wide receiver Isaac Byrd said the Jayhawks' best chance at winning was to exploit the defense.
Ball State returns 17 starters with nine on offense and eight on defense.
"Their defensive backs kind of play soft," Byrd said. "They don't like to give up that home run. On offense we've got to try and take what they give us and not try to force anything."
But Ball State yielded just 132.4 passing yards a game last season, good enough for first in the MAC.
That doesn't appear to be a good sign for Kansas junior quarterback Matt Johner, who has seen limited playing time in his career
and has thrown for just 31 yards.
cardinal senior safety Cory Gillard and his 100 tackles earned him a first-team all-conference selection while junior linebacker Howard Simms racked up 82 tackles and was a second-season selection.
Mason said he noticed Gillard immediately while watching game films.
Ball State senior quarterback Brent Baldwin started all 11 games last year, going 119-202 in pass attempts with five touchdowns and eight interceptions for 1,192 vards.
While the Cardinals quarterback situation is settled, the Jayhawks situation is far from finished.
"We've got competition, not controversy, which is healthy," Mason said.
Johrer gets his first career start because senior Ben Rutz has not fully recovered from off-season knee surgery.
Rutz could play if needed and will back up Johner.
A 10-2 season in 1995 has caused expectations to run higher than in previous years.
Kansas junior defensive back Maurice Gaddie said team members realized a lot was expected of them.
"People are talking about us, and that's good," he said. "But I don't think we feel any pressure. We have to play like we did last year."
Mason began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Ball State in 1972 and was the Cardinals' defensive line coach in 1974.
Junior defensive back Charles Davis will redshirt this season. Running backs Julius Bruce and Mark Sanders will not play tonight because of injury but should be ready for the next game.
Kansas is 64-54-7 all-time in season openers. Mason is 5-3 is season openers. Kansas has won five consecutive home openers.
Kansas' next home game is Oct. 12, leaving a 43-day gap between home games that is the largest in school history.
Setting the stage for Kansas
Gordon Ross / KANSAN
25 Kansas football team will face off against the Ball State Cardinals. The Jayhawks were 10-2 last year, and the Cardinals went 7-4 in 1995 under first-year coach Bill Lynch. Please see story above.
Kansas: Don't worry about Whitlock
Gary Gordon (left) and Greg Gilley, employees of Mussco Lighting, set up lights on top of Memorial Stadium. The lights were put up yesterday afternoon for the Jayhawks' first home football game at 7 p.m. tonight at Memorial Stadium. The No.
Welcome to Lawrence, Ball State. And let me extend the warmest of greetings to Ball State alumnus, two-time Cardinal football letterman and Kansas City celebrity sports columnist Jason Whitlock.
That's right, Jason Whitlock. Unless you've been living in a cave for the last year, you know that the exulted Mr. Whitlock has had plenty to say about Kansas football and tonight's game in particular.
As a faithful Jayhawk, I took exception to the distinguished Jason Whitlock and felt it was my duty to defend Kansas football. So, in written
form. I challenged the sublime Whitlock to a face-off column to appear in this very publication. However, the aforementioned letter, dated July 6, went unanswered. Realizing that I was dealing with a celebrity, a second, more venomous letter ensued — but to no avail.
SPORTS
EDITOR
After my failure to get the written word across, I flooded omnipotent Jason's phone lines with a barrage of voice mail messages.
course of action would have been to cut my losses and move on.
But sorry, I'm not going to let the divine Whitlock get off that easy.
The mighty Jason has said that "Ball State's victory over Kansas... is now just a formality."
At this point, the polite and courteous
Yet again, I had no success.
Wait a minute. This expert sports prognosticator Jason Whitlock, who is so famous that he refuses to answer mail or phone calls, couldn't be the same guy who said that last season's Kansas football squad — which had a 10-2 record and finished No. 9 in America — "... isn't very good — a step or two below last year's 6-5 club."
There you have it, prophet Whitlock has spoken!
This couldn't be the same person that predicted, "... it's going to be a long year" for the eventual Aloha Bowl winners.
In fact, this same fellow, who ironically shares the same name as the enormously popular sports genius Jason Whitlock, has put his foot in his mouth before. But I'm convinced these two have no affiliation.
After all, this couldn't be the same sporting wizard who once said that "Mark Williams . . . isn't a throwing QB. Or least not a straight throwing one." By the way, Williams threw for 1,957 yards last season. Looks to me like Williams must have thrown a curve ball with more accuracy than John Smoltz.
It occurs to me that a gentleman named Whitlock also predicted that Missouri would win the Big Eight Conference in men's basketball over Kansas. Sorry. Not only did Mizzou stink it up in the Big Eight, but come tourney time, these Whitlock preseason conference favorites were driving greens rather than driving to the hoo.
Before the Final Four, Whitlock called Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim "a joke." Boeheim took a cast of average ballers and one star to the national championship game and almost beyond. I bet every school wishes its coach was deemed "a joke" by Whitlock.
Jason Whitlock. The fellow who said, "I never thought CBS was right for firing Jimmy 'The Greek' Snyder." Good point. Every station needs a racist giving commentary for its broadcasting team.
So sit tight, Jayhawk fans, with all of these dead wrong predictions and ridiculous commentary; only if Whitlock would have said Kansas would wipe the floor up against Ball State would there be reason to be concerned.
This Whitlock guy advocated that the Chiefs sign former Nebraska sexual assaulter Christian Peter. Maybe the Chiefs should snatch up Peter before the penitentiary league grabs him.
Enough of the personal, let's talk football.
See BILL Page 6B.
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
Volleyball will open 1996 season in Oregon
Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said she wanted
The Jayhawks lost to Ball State last year.
Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said she wanted to see the team work hard in transition, communication and team movement.
The Kansas football team will not be the only team opening its season against Ball State.
At the Oregon State Tournament this weekend, the Kansas volleyball team also will begin its season against the Cardinals. The Jayhawks leave today for Corvallis, Ore., where they'll play twice tomorrow and Saturday. Purdue, Weber State and Oregon State also will participate in the tournament.
"We're just looking forward to see where we are at this point," Schonewise said. "A lack of communication on the court would be devastating for us. Our expectation is that the team is successful in the areas we've worked in."
This weekend's tournament will be the first of four tournaments for the Jayhawks before opening its Big 12 Conference
Mary Jane Lau
Karen Schonewise
schedule Sept. 27 against defending national champion Nebraska in Lincoln.
Along with the loss of seniors Jenny Larson and Tracie Walt, the Jayhawks lost junior outside hitter Leslie Purkepley for the season after she injured her right knee in a water skiing accident.
The juniors, which include right side hitter Kendra Kahler, middle blocker Maggie Mohrfeld and setter Tiffany Sennett, will have to share leadership responsibilities.
"I think we have really good leadership in our junior class," Schonewil said.
Sohonewise has set the Jayhawks' starting lineup for this weekend's tournament. Sophomore Laura Rohde will start at setter. She started last season at outside hitter.
Kahler will start at right side hitter for the third consecutive year. The left side hitters will be sophomore Moira Donovan and freshman Mary Beth Albrecht. Mohrfield will start at middle blocker. The sixth and last starting position will feature either junior defensive specialist Stephanie Blackwell or redshirt freshman middle blocker Anne Kreimer.
Schonewise said Kreimer and Blackwell would be automatic substitutions for each other.
"A lot will depend on the teams they're playing." Schonewise said.
Schonewise said the Jayhawks were lacking experienced depth on this year's team, but she wouldn't hesitate to use her bench. This year's starters, however, would be looked upon heavily.
"The players who are out there are going to need to take care of business," Schonewise said. "We're just really excited to get started and find out where we are at this point and where we need to go from here."
Coming off the bench for Kansas will be Sennett and freshman middle blockers Kristi LaRosh and Amanda Feeves.
"It's just going to take time working the kinks out," Kreimer said. "It's definitely going to be a building year," she said. "We've got nothing to lose."
2B
Thursday, August 29, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PRO BASEBALL
American League
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 74 | 57 | .565 | — |
| Baltimore | 70 | 62 | .530 | 4½ |
| Boston | 68 | 65 | .511 | 7 |
| Toronto | 63 | 71 | .470 | 12½ |
| Detroit | 47 | 86 | .353 | 28 |
Central Division
W L Pct. GB
Cleveland 80 53 .601 —
Chicago 71 64 .526 10
Minnesota 66 67 .496 14
Milwaukee 64 70 .478 16½
Kansas City 60 73 .451 20
Tuesday's Games
W L Pct. GB
Texas 75 57 .568
Savannah 65 57 .419 6/4
Oakland 64 72 .471 13
California 61 71 .462 14
Baltimore 3, Oakland 1
Cleveland 12, Detroit 1
Minneapolis 6, Toronto 4, 11 innings
Minnesota 2, Toronto 2
Kansas City 4, Texas 8, 10 innings
Boston 2, California 1
Seattle 7, New York 4
Wednesday's Games
Late Games Not Included
Cleveland 9, Detroit 3
Chicago 2, Milwaukee 0
Oakland 3, Baltimore 0
Toronto 6, Minnesota 1
Texas at Kansas City (n)
Boston at California (n)
New York at Seattle (n)
Thursday's Games
Kansas City Applier (11-9) at Detroit Olivares
(7-9), 6:05 p.m.
Minnesota Rodriguez (12-10) at Milwaukee Karl (10-6), 7:05 p.m.
New York Whitehurst (1-0) at California Harris (0-0), 8:05 p.m.
Baltimore Erickson (8-11) at Seattle Wells (11-6), 9:05 p.m.
Friday's Games
Chicago at Toronto, 8:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 7:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Texas, 7:35 p.m.
Boston at Oakland, 8:05 p.m.
New York at California, 9:05 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS
A尔德rugee Sea 116 117 117 165 .345
FThomas ChW 116 482 430 89 150 .345
RAlomar Bal 125 487 114 169 .347
Knoblauch Min 126 485 117 168 .346
Moltor Min 133 545 88 187 .343
Emartinez Sea 110 398 89 135 .343
Greer TeX 125 495 91 166 .335
Cirillo Mill 130 453 82 150 .331
JGonzalez Tec 106 423 76 139 .329
Thome Cle 127 413 103 139 .327
Home Runs
McGwire, Oakland, 44; Bellie, Cleveland, 43;
Griffey Jr. Seattle, 40; J Gonzalez, Texas, 39;
Mvaughn, Boston, 38; ByAnderson, Baltimore,
38; Bulner, Seattle, 36.
Runs Rattled In
Pitching (15 Declisions)
Belle, Cleveland, 128; JGonzalez, Texas, 119;
RPalmeine, Baltimore, 119; MVaughan, Boston,
118; Buhner, Seattle, 118; Griffey Jr, Seattle,
113; A Rodriguez, Seattle, 106; FThomas,
Chicago, 106.
Nagy, Cleveland, 13-4, 765; Pettitle, New
York, 18-7, 720; Hiengen, Toronto, 17-7, 708;
Gooden, New York, 11-5, 687; Hitchcock,
Seattle, 12-6, 667; Pavlik, Texas, 14-7, 667;
Boskie, California, 12-6, 667; Alvarez,
Chicago, 14-7, 667; KHill, Texas, 14-7, 667;
Hershei, Chicago, 14-7, 667.
National League
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Atlanta | 82 | 49 | .626 | — |
| Montreal | 71 | 60 | .542 | 11 |
| Florida | 63 | 70 | .424 | 20 |
| New York | 59 | 74 | .444 | 24 |
| Philadelphia | 54 | 79 | .406 | 29 |
Central Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Houston | 72 | 62 | .537 | — |
| St. Louis | 69 | 64 | .519 | 2½ |
| Chicago | 64 | 66 | .492 | 6 |
| Cincinnati | 65 | 67 | .492 | 6 |
| Pittsburgh | 56 | 76 | .424 | 15 |
West Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Diego | 74 | 60 | .552 | — |
| Los Angeles | 71 | 61 | .538 | 2 |
| Colorado | 70 | 64 | .522 | 4 |
| San Francisco | 56 | 74 | .431 | 16 |
Philadelphia 3, San Francisco 2
Pittsburgh 3, Atlanta 2
San Diego 4, New York 3
Florida 6, St. Louis 3
Houston 6, Chicago 5
Los Angeles 5, Montreal 1
Cincinnati 4, Colorado 3
Wednesday's Games
Late Game Not Included
Colorado 10, Cincinnati 9
Atlanta 9, Pittsburgh 4
Montreal 6, Los Angeles 5
Houston 5, Chicago 4
San Diego 3, New York 2, 12 innings
Florida 3, St. Louis 2, 10 innings
Philadelphia at San Francisco (n)
Thursday's Games
San Diego Hamilton (12-7) at New York Wilson (4-10), 12:40 p.m.
Chicago Navarro (12-9) at Houston Reynolds
TV
Chicago Navarro (12-9) at Houston Reynolds
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Thursday. (Schedule subject to change and or blackouts.)
SPORTS WATCH
Thursday, August 29
10 a.m.
USA—Tennis, U.S. Open Championships, men's and women's second
USA - Tennis, U.S. Open Championships, men's and women's second rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
WGN — Major League Baseball. Chicago Cubs at Houston.
2pm
TBS Major League Baseball, Atlanta at Pittsburgh
ESPN—Golf, Greater Milwaukee Open.
KSMO—Major League Baseball,
Kansas City at Detroit.
USA — Tennis, U.S. Open Tennis Championships, men's and women's second rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
6:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — Major League Soccer, D.C. at Colorado
7:30pm
ESPN — Track, Memorial Van Damme.
(16-6). 1:35 p.m.
Cincinnati Burra (7-13) at Colorado Thompson
(7-8) 2:05 p.m.
(7-8) 2,05 p.m.
Atlanta Maddox (12-10) at Pittsburgh Lieber (6-4) 2,05 p.m.
Los Angeles R.Martínez (11-6) at Montreal P.Martínez (11-8) 6:35 p.m.
Florida A.Letter (13-11) at St. Louis Stottlemyre (11-9) 7:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled
Friday's Games
Atlanta at Chicago, 2;105 p.m.
San Diego at Montreal, 6:35 p.m.
Los Angeles at Philadelphia, 6:35 p.m.
Houston at Pittsburgh, 6:35 p.m.
San Francisco at New York, 6:40 p.m.
Florida at Cincinnati, 6:35 p.m.
Colorado at St. Louis, 7:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS
| | G | AB | R | H | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Grace ChC | 113 | 438 | 73 | 150 | 341 |
| Pliaza LA | 119 | 443 | 69 | 151 | 341 |
| EYoung Col | 115 | 470 | 99 | 160 | 340 |
| Burks Col | 129 | 521 | 126 | 177 | 340 |
| Ljohnson NYM | 130 | 553 | 96 | 177 | 320 |
| GLikey NYM | 128 | 481 | 96 | 173 | 318 |
Sosa, Chicago, 40; Galarraga, Colorado, 40;
Hundley, New York, 38; Sheffield, Florida, 38;
Burks, Colorado, 36; Castilla, Colorado, 35;
Bonds, San Francisco, 35.
Home Runs
Bichette Col 132 533 100 169 .317
Cp Jones At 132 494 194 155 .317
Sheffield Fla 131 443 99 139 .314
Bagwell Hou 134 469 89 146 .314
Galarrago, Colorado, 127; Bichette, Colorado,
116; Burks, Colorado, 111; Bonds, San Francisco,
107; DBell, Houston, 103; Sheffield,
Florida, 103; Castilla, Colorado, 102; Gilkey,
New York, 102.
Runs Ratted In
Pitching(15 Declares)
Smoitz, Atlanta, 20-7, 741; Reynolds, Houston, 16-6, 727; Neagle, Pittsburgh, 14-6, 700; Gardner, San Francisco, 10-5, 667; Glavine, Atlanta, 13-7, 850; Hamilton, San Diego, 12-7, 632; MRMartinez, Los Angeles, 10-6, 625.
Major League Soccer
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
PRO SOCCER
Eastern Conference
W L SOW Pts GF GA
x-Tampa Bay 14 12 0 9 52 67
D.C. 12 14 1 1 37 53 48
NY-NJ 9 13 3 1 30 36 35
Columbus 8 16 4 28 51 58
New England 7 13 6 27 55 46
Western Conference
| | W | L | SOW | Pts | GF | GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Dallas | 12 | 11 | 4 | 35 | 68 | 38 |
| Kansas City | 12 | 13 | 4 | 39 | 58 | 56 |
| Los Angeles | 12 | 11 | 3 | 39 | 49 | 41 |
| San Jose | 11 | 13 | 2 | 35 | 41 | 41 |
| Colorado | 9 | 18 | 1 | 28 | 41 | 51 |
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for
shootout win and zero points for loss.
Wednesday's Game
Wednesday's Game
Columbus 2, Los Angeles 0
Thursday's Game
D. C. at Colorado, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday's Game
New England at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m.
PRO TENNIS
David Rikil, Czech Republic, def. Hicham
Arazi, Morocco, 6-4,7-5,6-2.
Philippe Fleurian, France, 6-2, 6-0, 6-1
U.S.Open Results
NEW YORK Results Wednesday of the
$10.89 million U.S. Open at the National Tennis
Club in New York, N.Y.
David Nainkhin, South Africa, def. Wayne Ferreira 9), South Africa, 6-4, 6-4, 2-6, 7-5.
Men Singles First Round
Andrea Gaudenzi, Italy, def. Shuzo Matsuoka,
Japan, 7-6 (7-4), 6-2, 6-3.
Andrei Medvedev, Ukraine. def. Jean-
Felix Mannia 17, Spain, def. Fernando Meliengi, Brazil. 1, 6, 7-(2-7), 7- (7-5), 8-3.
Jan Kroslak, Stvakla, def. Chris Woodruff,
Knoville, Tenn, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-2-7 (7-1).
Jonas Bjorkman, Sweden, def. karol Kucera,
Slovakia, 6-5, 7-7, 6-7(3), 7-5.
f1. (Fil).
Jseng Schalken, Netherlands, def. Gilbert Schauller, Austria, 8-3, 6-4, 7-6/8-3, 6-4.
Michael Tebbt, Australia, def. Richey
Bronxham, Minnesota 8.6, 1.8, 1.6, 5.0
Todd Martin (12), Ponta Vedra Beach, Fla.,
def. Younes El Ayaouil, Morocco, 6-3, 6-2, 4-6,
6-4.
Paul Haarhuis, Netherlands, def. Michael Joyce, Santa Monica, Calif., 6-7 (5-7), 7-6 (8-6), 1-6, 6-2, 6-2.
Guy Forget, France, def. Grant Stafford,
South Africa, 3-6, 2-6, 6-4, 7-6(7-2), 6-3.
Second Round
Vince Spadea, Boca Raton, Fla., def. David
Prinolis, Germany, 6-2, 1-6, 6-2, 6-4.
Doubles First Round
Michael Chang 2) Henderson, New, vs.
Neville Godwin, South Africa, 6-1, 6-3, 6-1
Jose Antonio Conde and Alex Corretja, Spain,
def. Marius Barnard, South Africa, and Greg
Van Emburgh, Nlas, Florida, 6-4, 1-6, 7-6-7-11.
Stephen Noteboom, Sweden, and Farnon Wibier, Netherlands, def. Byron Black, Zimbabwe, and Grant Connell, Canada (2), 2-6, 6-4, 6-3.
-Karel Novack, Czech Republic, and Nicolas Pereira, Venezuela, def. Scott Draper, Australia, and Kenneth Thorne Atlanta 6-2, 4-1
Leonard Lavalle, Mexico, and Maurice Ruah,
Venezuela, def. Patrik Kuhnen, Germany, and
Gary Muller, South Africa, 6-4, 6-4.
Sebastian Lareau, Canada, and Alex O'Brien,
Amarillo, Texas (7), def. Clinton Ferreira, South
Africa, and André Pavel, Romania, 6-4, 6-3.
Luis Lobo, Argentina, and Javier Sanchez,
Spain (12), def. Joshua Eagle and Andrew Florent,
Australia 8-6, 3-1
Jared Palmer, taff, Fla., and Jonathan
Stark, Seattle, def. Cha Clark, Longview
Texas, and Saij Seizenstein, Englewood, Colo',
6-4, 6-2
Patrick Galbainh, Seattle, and Tim Hennman,
Britain, def. Jim Gistelmub, Whippany, N.J.
and Srdan Muskatirovic, Yugoslavia, 7-6 (7-3),
7-5.
Mark Philippoussis and Patrick Rafter, Australia 13), def. Kent Kinnear, Greenwood, Ind.
Sasa Hirson, Yugoslavia, and Goran Vani-
sevic, Croatia, def. Scott Davis, Newport
Beach, Calif., and David Ekeroth, Sweden, 6-3,
3-6, 6-3.
and Dave Randal, Birmingham, Ala., 7-5, 8-3
Mark Keil, Tampa, Fla., and Matt,
Cox, Calif., def. Brett Harden-Dent, Newport
Beach, Calif., and J. T. Middleton, Atlantic, 6-4.
Women Singles
Women Singles Second Round
Gabriela Sabatiin (15), Argentina, def. Ann Grosman, Grove City, Ohio, 6-2, 6-3.
Sandrine Testud, France, def. Cristina Torrens-Talero, Spain, 6-1, 6-2.
grossman, Grove City, Ohio. 8-2-3. Lindsey Davenport (9), Newport Beach, Calif.,
Irina Spirita, Romania, def. Maria Jose
Gaidano, Argentina, 6-2, 6-1.
Anne-Gaelle Sidot, France, def. Shi-Ting Wano, Taiwan, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3
*Affanda Coetzer, South Africa, def. Mariaao
de Swardt, South Africa, 6-2,7-5
Helena Sukova, Czech Republic, def. Paola Suarez, Argentina, 6-4,7-6 (7-2).
Riseen, Riseen, Riseen,
Boogert, Netherlands, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3,
Jelena Ručańska, Crown, Romania, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2, Roja
Aleksandra Dlazza, Poland; 6-1, 8-1.
Mila Bazyzi, Poland; 7-1, 9-1.
Kimberly Po, Incline Village, Nev. def.
Kristina Brandi, Bradenston, Fla. 6-1, 6-4.
Meredith Mulligan, Duncanville, Tex.
Monica Seles (2), Sarasota, Fla., def. Laurence Courtsol, Belgium, walkover.
Barbara Rittner, Germany, def. Brenda
Daily Randriantley, Madagascar, def. Jane
Chile, Meridian, Idaho, 6-3, 6-1.
Barbara Rittner, Germany, def. Brenda Schultz-McCarthy (13), Netherlands, 6-2,6-1.
Lisa Raymond, Wayne, Pa., def. Sarah Pitkowski, France, 6-2,6-0.
Asa Carlsson, Sweden, def. Barbara Schett,
Austria, 6-3, 3-1, retired.
Conchita Martinez (4), Spain, def. Nathalie Tauatier, France, 6-1, 6-3
Doubles Second Round
Debbie Graham, Newport Beach, Calif., and Kristine Radford, Australia (16), def. Alexandra Fusal, France, and Mercedes Paz, Argentina, 4-6,7-5, 6-7(5).
Sung-hee Park, South Korea, and Shi-Ting Wang, Taiwan, def. Amy Frazier, Rochester Hills, Mich., and Kimberly Po, Incline Village, New. 4,6-1,3,6-2.
Ruxandra Dragomir, Romania, and Tatyana
Jecmenica, Yugloslavia, def. Maja Muric, Croatia,
and Paola Saurez, Argentina, 6-3-6-4.
Sonya Jeyasseelan and Rene Simpson,
Canada, def. Anke Huber, Germany, and Iva
Majoli, 6-4, 6-4.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Mr. Gatti's
The Best Pizza In Town... Honest! Welcome Back Students!
Pizza * Pasta * Salad Bar * All Day Buffet
Lunch Buffet Prices:
Buffet Hours: 11:00 am - 9:00 pm
Adults (Above 10 years) $3.99
Children (3 - 10 years) $1.99
Children (Under 3 years) Free
Adults (Above 10 years) $4.99
Children (3 - 10 years) $1.99
Children (Under 3 years) Free
K. U. Students receive $1.00 off anytime with a valid Student I.D.
We also offer private rooms for meetings and parties, plus a large gameroom for all ages!
Dinner Buffet Prices:
****Don't forget our take out also features great prices and the best pizza in town...honest!
Mr. Gatti's Pizza and FunCenter 3514 Clinton Parkway, Suite I Lawrence, Kansas 66047 (Next to Hy-Vee at Kasold and Clinton Parkway) 838-9900
JW³
Journal-World Web Works
The Lawrence Journal-World Web Works Our URL is: http://www.ljworld.com
Our Services Include:
The Daily News
Every morning at 6:00 a.m.
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Including all your Jayhawk hoops news with scores, stories, player profiles, photos, opinion page, chat rooms and more!
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Check out the electronic community including e-mail directories, community links and demographics.
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JOURNAL-WORLD
LAWRENCE
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0
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 29,1996
3B
Player returns with new position
Athletic department hires former 'Hawk to be softball coach
By Cameron Heeg Kansan staff reporter
The Kansas softball team got a gift in the off-season with Jayhawk Hall of Fame all over it.
The present: a new head coach,
Tracy Bunge. She was hired June 19
after coaching for three years at Ohio
University in Athens, Ohio.
As a former KU player, Bunge brings with her the credentials of a 1986 first-team NCAA All-American award, four All-Big Eight Conference selections and an induction into the Jayhawk Athletics Hall of Fame in 1987.
Her power in pitching can be seen her freshman year in the 1983 Kansas Softball Media Guide. The guide quoted former softball coach
Bob Stancliff saying: "Tracy has stepped in and done a fine job for us. She is adjusting to college competition very quickly. Tracy is very coachable and a hard worker. She will be a tremendous asset to our team."
Bob Frederick, athletic director, agreed with Stanclift when he hired Burge last summer.
"She is a product of the Kansas softball tradition, and we look forward to her continuing that success as our head coach," he said.
In her senior year at Kansas, Bunge set the school ERA record at 0.55, pitched 202.3 innings with 15 shoutouts and set a team record of nine home runs. Bunge still holds the school record for home runs at 15.
The transition from playing to coaching came naturally to Bunge. In 1993, her first year as head coach at Ohio in the Western Athletic Conference, she turned around a slumping team.
"I inherited a program that some people said you are crazy for going there," Bunge said. "I thought in my
"She (Bunge) is going to get us all focused in the right direction. We will be a lot more confident."
Kristina Johnson
Lawrencejunior
mind I had a four- or five-year plan that we could possibly challenge and win the conference title. To win the conference and get the first NCAA regional bid in school history in the second year I was there took me by surprise"
Bunge inherited a more talented
team in Kansas. The Jayhawks finished last season with a record of 31-25, a performance Bunge said she felt could be improved.
"We are going to play a very, very tough schedule next spring, but I think it is possible if the players stay focused," she said.
Focus was lacking last season when Kalum Haack resigned as head coach on Dec. 26. Gayle Luedke was appointed to the position as an interim coach for the remainder of the season.
The players feel confident that Bunge will come in and help the team focus.
"She is going to get us all focused and going in the right direction. We will be a lot more confident", said Kristina Johnson, Lawrence junior.
Johnson is not the only one with confidence in the squad.
"They have said to me they think we can win," Bunge said. "I want them to focus not only on what our goals and their goals are, I want them to get focused on what makes those goals happen."
Seattle to do without star pitcher Johnson
Cy Young winner needs back surgery; won't finish season
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — The Seattle Mariners won't have Randy Johnson around as they try to make the playoffs.
The Mariners, six and a half games behind Texas in the American League West and two games back in the wild-card race, found out Tuesday what they had suspected all along — Johnson needs back surgery to be able to pitch again.
"Everybody takes it hard when you lose your No. 1 pitcher," said Jeff Manto, Mariners third baseman. "We're just going to have to have somebody else come through for us."
The 6-foot-10 left-hander has been bothered by his back all season.
Last season's AL Cy Young Award winner and the best power pitcher in baseball will have back surgery next month because of a bulging disc. He should be recovered by next spring training.
On Monday Johnson flew to Anaheim, Calif., for a second examination by back specialist Robert Watkins, and Watkins recommended surgery.
"It's a loss. It's a big loss," manager Lou Piniella said. "But we sort of expected it. Now that the uncer-
tunity of it is over, we can go on and go forward." At his peak, Johnson has a 98 mph fastball. The Mariners' ace, who will be 33 on Sept. 10, has been the major league strike-out king the past four season
S
past four seasons.
Randv Johnson
"Randy has an extruded disc herniation," Watkins said in a statement released by the Mariners. "His back is stronger now than when I examined him on July 19, but the pain and discomfort still
exist. If he were to continue to pitch, there is a risk of damaging the nerve or some other area from trying to compensate for the injury."
Larry Pedegana, a team physician, said an inch-long incision would be made in Johnson's back and a small piece of the bulging disc would be removed. He compared it to arthroscopic knee surgery.
"It certainly has been painful for Randy," Pedegana said of Johnson's recent appearances. "Randy has had pain after every one of his pitching performances."
Barry Meister, Johnson's Chicago-based agent, said Johnson kept pitching in pain this month despite Watkins' advice to quit. Meister said Johnson had been bothered by sciatica, an irritation of the sciatic nerve resulting in pain running down the inside of the leg, as well as by the protruding disc.
Johnson, who made 30 starts in compiling an 18-2 record with an AL-best 2.48 ERA last season, was
Johnson was not at the Kingdome before Tuesday night's game.
5-0 with a 3.67 ERA with 85 strikeouts in 61 1/3 innings and 14 games, including eight starts, this season.
He was on the 60-day disabled list from May 12 until Aug. 6, missing 73 games. Doctors initially thought rest would solve his back problems.
He pitched nine scoreless innings in his first three relief outings, allowing six hits and striking out 15, but was ineffective in his last three outings.
In a Saturday loss at Boston, Johnson surrendered a home run to former teammate Darren Bragg, only the sixth home run Johnson had allowed to a left-handed hitter and the first since 1992.
Johnson had refused Piniella's requests to return to the starting rotation, saying he wasn't yet ready to pitch that many innings.
Meister said Johnson considered Piniella a friend but didn't like fan and media criticism in Seattle that Johnson should have tried to start.
"He's a little frustrated and hurt by that," Meister said. "He did everything to get back on the field. It just turned out to be a physical impossibility."
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Tiger Woods to swing from amateur to pro
20-year-old golfer should try to follow Nicklaus' example
By Jim Litke The Associated Press
He had better be about winning, about winning right away, about winning often, and little else.
Once the hoopla dies down, that's what Tiger Woods will still have to do. Win. Or learn a bitter lesson. The world doesn't need another fair-to-middling golf pro. Even an unusually young and marketable one.
For all the can't-miss signs hung on him all these years, a 20-year-old kid doing anything is still a gamble. If Woods or his game is not ready, pressing them into duty looks unseemly.
Tiger Woods
FREDSON
He says it's all about getting better.
"I did this because I wanted my final round as an amateur to be in the U.S. Amateur," he said yesterday. "I knew after I won, there's not much more to achieve in amateur golf. I felt like it was time."
If his heart isn't in it for the long haul, golf will find out and make him pay. If he and his brain trust picked the wrong moment to turn pro, there will be regrets. And more than enough time to suffer them.
Woods should keep this in mind as he sets out this weekend to conquer the Professional Golfer's Association Tour, first in Milwaukee and then beyond: The world lives with phenoms only so long. Golf's
minor-league tours are crawling with them. And in truth, the big tour doesn't need any more Ben Crenshaws, Tom Kites or Curtis Stranges, either.
Not that they aren't wonderful players; just that there are plenty more like them in the pipeline already.
Now that golf pays more than selling insurance, there will never be a shortage of players who burst from the amateur ranks like comets, yet manage only a few memorable sparks before they flame out. The ones like Woods, who can light the entire curve of a career, come along maybe once in a lifetime.
The only thing professional golf really needs right now is the same thing it's needed for more than a decade, ever since Jack Nicklaus turned gray at the temples and became an exhilarating bet instead of a sure thing.
It needs what Tom Watson and Seve Ballesteros provided for a brief time after Nicklaus' reign. What Nick Faldo, Greg Norman and Nick Price have taken turns — in musical-chairs fashion — providing ever since. What Phil Mickelson and Justin Leonard are beating each other's brains out trying to provide for the foreseeable future.
What pro golf needs is somebody to throw a lingering shadow on the final Sunday afternoon of every major each season. Somebody whose game doesn't blow hot and cold, whose name pops up on the leaderboard during the back nine and makes the hair on everybody else's neck stand up. Some guys can do it some of the time.
What golf needs is somebody stalking the leaders the way Nicklaus did, all the time, so that when Steve Jones or Mark Brooks hoists a U.S., British or PGA Championship trophy over his head, his sweat-encrusted polo shirt tells us he honestly beat the best — not simply outlasted the rest.
In short, it needs Tiger Woods to do what he did for amateur golf these last few years. Which is asking quite a lot from a kid whose game is suspect from 100 yards in, whose best finish in a major was 22nd at the most recent British Open, and who has made the cut only seven times in the 17 pro events he's played. As it is, Woods will need a half-dozen great years just to catch Mickelson, who at 26 has won nine tournaments but still gets called an underachiever.
And so let's hope Woods really is coming out because there is only one place left where he can get better. And not because Titleist piled $3 million on top of that to have him play their ball. Or even because he has sponsors' exemptions for seven PGA events against weak fields and could win enough money to earn his 1997 PGA Tour card without a trip to the fall Qualifying School.
Those aren't bad reasons. But they better not be the only ones. Because without winning, none of the endorsements last.
After an amateur career that paralleled Woods', Nicklaus won $33.33 in his first professional tournament. That was the Los Angeles Open in 1962, and he walked away scared to death. Years later, he recalled, "the first thing I learned ... was that by play-for-pay standards I couldn't chip worth a darn, nor pitch the ball a whole lot better. Also my sand play left a lot to be desired. ... I couldn't keep the ball low in the wind, couldn't move it left to right."
Nicklaus' game wasn't actually as bad as he made it sound. Later that summer, he beat Arnold Palmer in a playoff for the U.S. Open, then won twice more before the season was out.
Of course, Nicklaus was always a quick study. For Woods' benefit, let's hope the same is true about him.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 29, 1996
5B
Top-ranked Sampras advances at U.S. Open
By Bob Greene
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Lindsay Davenport's magical summer tour has vet to end.
- East, west, north, south; it hasn't mattered for the 6-foot-2.1/right-hander.
It began with a gold-medal performance at the Atlanta Olympics, where she beat Spain's Arantxa Sanchez Vicario in the title match. It continued in Manhattan Beach, Calif, where Davenport surprised Steffi Graf en route to winning that WTA Tour tournament.
In the second round of the U.S. Open yesterday, the eighth-seeded Davenport beat Henrieta Nagyova of Slovakia 6-0, 6-4, taking just 16 minutes to complete the opening set.
Earlier, 15th seed Gabriela Sabati advanced to the third round by defeating Ann Grossman 6-2, 6-3.
Davenport pounded out 21 winners, compared to seven by Nagyova. The American won 56 of the 91 points and broke Nagyova's serve six times.
Still a crowd favorite, Sabatiwn won this tournament in 1990 with a penetrating all-court game. Against Grossman, she preferred to stay on the baseline, hitting her looping.
Pete Sampras
topspin groundstrokes, waiting for her opponent to make errors. Grossman, a right-hander from Grove City, Ohio, did just that.
Because of an injured stomach muscle, Sabatini was forced to skip the last two Grand Slam tournaments.
"It felt very strange not to be at Wimbledon and the French Open," she said. "Now at the U.S. Open, I'm here, I am not watching it on TV."
"It feels good. I love New York. I love to come here. It feels good to be playing on center court, very special."
In early second-round matches, Romania's Irena
Spirila defeated Maria Jose Gaidano of Argentina 6-1, 6-2; Sandrine Testud of France beat Spain's Cristina Torre-n Valero 6-2, 6-1, and Anne-Gaelle Sidot of France defeated Taiwan's Wang Shi-Ting 6-4, 3-6, 3-1.
In first-round men's matches, ninth-seeded Wayne Ferreira lost to fellow South African David Nainkin 6-4, 6-4, 2-6, 7-5; No. 12 Todd Martin defeated Younai El Amour of Morocco 6-3, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4; Andrei Medvedev of the Ukraine defeated Frenchman Jean-Philip Fleurian 6-2, 6-0, 6-1; David Rikd of the Czech Republic beat Morocco's Hicham Arazi 6-4, 7-5, 6-2; and Italy's Andrea Gaudenzi eliminated Japan's Shuzo Matsuoka 6-7/4, 6-2, 6-1.
After being involved in a controversy about the seedings for a week, the players now just want to play tennis.
"At this point in time, we just have to go out and play," defending champion Pete Sampras said Tuesday after earning his way into the second round with a 6-2, 6-2, 6-1 victory against Jimy Szymanski.
"It's a past issue," said Thomas Muster, whose comments about the way the players were seeded helped spark the confrontation between the ATP Tour and the U.S. Tennis Association. "I think the tournament should go on now."
For the top four women's seeds, it did. No. 1 Steffi Graf, No. 2 Monica Seles, No. 3 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario and No. 4 Conchita Martinez all won in straight sets.
Grabbing second-round spots in the men's draw were the top-seeded Sampras, No. 3 Muster and No. 4 Goran Ivanisevic.
Say good-bye, though, to both No. 5 seeds.
Stefan Edberg, a two-time U.S. Open champion playing in his final Grand Slam tournament before retirement, beat fifth-seeded Richard Krajicek, the reigning Wimbledon champion, 6-3, 6-3, 6-3, and Austrian Judith Wiesner shocked the women's No. 5 seed, Iva Majoli of Croatia, 2-6, 6-3, 6-1.
Also ousted on the hardcourts of the National Tennis Center were No. 14 Alberto Costa of Spain and No. 15 Marc Rosset of Switzerland, along with Japan's Kimiko Date, the women's No. 10 seed.
Jets' No.1 choice feels confident
The Associated Press
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. — The No. 1 pick in the NFL draft is ready to become the No. 1 receiver for the New York Jets. And Keyshawn Johnson seems to think that's just the first step toward stardom.
Johnson won't be in the starting lineup Sunday when the Jets open their season at Denver, but that hardly matters to the rookie from Southern California — for now.
"I won't start, but I'll play most of the game," Johnson said yesterday. "I will be on the field a lot. Starting is important, and eventually it will become more important, when I get used to the entire offensive unit."
Johnson said that he understands why he was not placed on the starting lineup in the first game of his first professional season.
At the beginning of the season, Johnson asked for more money than the team was prepared to pay. He held out for more than half of training camp and missed the first two exhibition games.
"I came in late," he said. "Had I been here on time, it may have presented a problem. I expect to start in the future. My talents will allow me to do that."
Those talents made the 6-foot-3, 215-pound Johnson an All-America receiver and the Jets' clear choice as the best pro prospect in the nation.
Johnson said that he was already close to mastering the offensive system.
"I think I'm pretty far. I know the offense well," he said. "I struggled a little to get some things down in practices, but it's not like it's the real season. I expect to do well and to win. Confident? That's just me. I don't worry about those things."
Nor is Johnson concerned about the pressure of being the top draft pick and a projected savior for a franchise that hasn't known glory since the 1960s with Joe Namath. After five receptions for 69 yards and one touchdown in exhibition games, Johnson feels prepared for life in the NFL, he said.
"Regardless if I'm the No. 1 pick, there are a lot of expectations on me," he said. "I know I won't carry the load on my shoulders, but we'll do it as a group."
Johnson said that a lot of those expectations came from himself and his peers.
"It's not so much I have to set a tone, but one of the reasons I was picked is to show some leadership here. It's about time for me to do that," he said.
Johnson said that when he first started working with his teammates,he did not feel comfortable. But now he has adjusted.
"Now I feel I belong in this situation," he said. "When you're new, you lay back to get a feel for what's going on."
Not that Johnson lays back very far or too long. He's simply too outgoing, too fun-loving, or too relaxed.
Coach Rich Kotite said that he thought his teammates were very comfortable with him.
"He is a football player, he loves football, takes a lot of pride, and they know he is going to help the team," Kotite said. "He is a hard worker, jumps in there when we need somebody."
That's the kind of life Johnson dreamed about as a kid in California and as a standout at USC.
"I should know at this point in time what to do and what the job is," he said. "My time has come."
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78
2015 Help Wanted
Shipping position open. Starting ASAP-64 hour per 20 hrs per week. Afternoons M-F. Must have own transportation. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and/or resume w references and copy of class schedule to: EEL PO Box 1804, Lawrence, KS 69044.
Kitchen staff need at Mass St. Delt, Buffalo Bob's Smokehole Food prep and line cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. Starts at $5.00 am up to $7.44 an hour after 8 months which includes profit sharing and service of bovenite Applet at Scalumn Farm (Upstairs) and service of fraternity food, Thursday at 719 Mass (Upstairs above Smokehole).
Student Hourly/Office Assistant, Research & Training Center on Independent Living, University of Kansas. Must be enrolled at KI minimum of 6 hours. Complete Bachelor's degree in Social Work or related field. KI, BUC, KU campus. Application deadline: 8/30/14. For questions contact Debbie McAfferty or Lyme Le Fils. Please refer to the job description for an equal opportunity affirmative action employer.
**STUDENT CLIENTIAL ASSISTANT I Delineate 829066, Salary: $47.5 per hour, M/F 3:00-5:00 PM, T & T 8:00-10:30 AM. Duties include typing, filing, and performing all assigned clerical duties within Office Services; performs receptionist duties on a fill-in basis; processes all photocopy requests from Computer Center Staff; takes phone messages, sets up meetings, etc. To apply, contact the Computer Center Rm. 202 EOE/AAA EMPLOYER
Yacht Club Now hiring Cooks Day/Weekend Shifts Apply at 930 Wisconsin
"CASH IS KING"
Flyer Distribution
on/near KU campus.
$6/hour.
Contact B1 861-564-9099.
PART-TIME POSITIONS CITY OF LAWRENCE
METER READER-Reading water meters & accurate recording of amounts of water consumed. HS Graded BG. Possess valid driver licenses & provide own vehicle. G87.14*12.12*hr, 20 wk. wfx. reliable.
TELEPHONE OPERATOR HGV Grad/GED and some general office equipment. $7.05/14.40/hour, Noon-6pm.
Complete application by M0M at Admin, Services City,
Hall 2nd floor. 00h & Macatchestian, Lawrence, ES
17530.
MICROCOMPUTER SOFTWARE SUPPORT - Student position: $7.30 per hour; 20 hours per week. Deadline: September 13th. Required Qualifications: Enrollment in at least six credit hours at KU, working on a computer application using microcomputer applications; excellent oral and written communication skills; and ability to complete assigned tasks with a minimum of supervision. Preferred Qualification: Bachelor's degree field; some experience with training or tutoring; and at least two or more years of Course work remaining at KU. To apply, contact Carol Daniels (864-369-4006), campus phone number: 8:00 am and 5:00 pm Monday through Friday. The University of Kansas is an EO/A Employer.
STUDENT HOURLY ASSISTANT FOR ENGINEERING MAINTENANCE. $82 /5 hour, 20-hour/week. Deadline: 6:00 p.m SEPTEMBER 16, 1996. Duties: 1) Microcomputer repair (Macintosh and PC compatible); 2) Patch and deliver equipment on campus sites; 3) Develop maintenance procedures; 4) Data entry; 6) Assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair. Required Qualifications: 1) Currently enrolled in 6 hours as a student at the University; 2) Have completed 6 courses for customers; 3) Good oral and written communication skills; 4) Six months previous hardware experience; 5) Available to work 16-20 hours per week; in 3-4 hour increments. Required Qualification: Complete an application form from the Networking and Telecommunications Service reception desk. Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services, University of Kansas, Ellsworth Annex, 1736 Eriksen Road, Kansas City, 64107. Phone: 918-634-8128. Contact: Annel Engel OVAA
$20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week Walk-ins welcome!
Earn cash on the spot
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
The University of Kansas Natural History Museum is looking for undergraduate and graduate students to fill two temporary positions assisting with the PEET work in September. Both positions begin immediately and will conclude approximately September 30, 1986, or $10 per week on experience and qualifications.
Technical Assistant: Assist with technical set-up of workshop to include: hardware/software set-up, testing and maintenance user support. Required qualifications include working knowledge of common hardware set-up; be familiar with both PC and Mac products; know how to perform software setup; ferred qualifications include background in biology; experience with user support. Must provide completed application, resume.
Clerical Assistant: Assist with workshop implementation and logistics to logistic. word processing, filing, receptionist duties, running errands. Required qualifications: Master's degree in computer science or word processing software; valid driver's license; experience with common office functions. Preferred qualifications: experience with scientific meetings. Must have a bachelor's degree in computer science or scientific meetings.
Please contact the Natural History Museum-PEET Workshop, Amanda Sittas, 029 Dicehe Bay, 844-3833.
FALL SEMESTER OPENINGS
- Local Branch of National Corp filling 36 Entry level positions in Lawrence and JOCO.
- Part full time flexible.
Part, full time flexible schedules. No exp nec. training
◆ Up to $9.25
A.A.S.P. scholarships
cond. apply
205 Help Wanted
(913)381-9676
(from 1:30-6 p.m. only)
M.A.D. and Assoc. and equal
opportunity Co.
Phone Center Reps was needed for growing inbound/bound call center. PT & PT shafts, 6mm-12mideit. Must have nice phone voice, be detail oriented, responsible, friendly. Please visit us at 250 Lakeview Ave, or call 805-3603 for directions.
Naismith Hall is looking for tutors in all subjects.
TUTORS WANTED!
If you are interested in being a Naismith tutor give Crystal Johnson a call at 843-8559 between the hours of 10:00a.m. and 6:00p.m., also feel free to stop by. Our address is 1800 Naismith Drive.
BPI Building Services is looking for a dependable self-starter to supervise our evening and weekend custodial teams.
EVENING SUPERVISOR
Qualified applicants should posses leadership, training, and motivational skills along with an eye for detail.
Approx. 25-30 hours per week, Sunday - Thursday start times vary.
Starting wage of $7.00 per hour, on-site transportation provided.
Interested applicants should contact Mo at 842-6264.
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
We are currently searching for an Academic Program Coordinator to develop and implement an academic program for the students at Naismith Hall, a private student residence hall housing Kansas University students since 1967. The Academic Program Coordinator (APC) will work with a residence unit of 450+ students to facilitate academic progress, encourage good study skills, and promote an environment of intellectual inquiry.
Required Qualifications: At least one year of residential group living experience. Enrollment at KU as a student or upperclassmen in good standing.
Preferred Qualifications: Residence hall living experience. Supervisory experience. Working knowledge of educational programming. Knowledge of commercially-available computer applications.
Compensation: This is a half-time (20 hours per week) position which runs until the end of the academic year. All candidates must be able to commit three evenings working with hall programs per week to the position. Hourly rate is $7.65. Meals are also provided when our Cafe is open and serving.
How to Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; and a resume to Academic Programming Coordinator, c/o Naimsm Hall. 1800 Naismith Drive, Naimsm Hall Front Desk. A description will be available at the Naimsm Hall Front Desk for interested applicants.
Application Deadline: Applications will be accepted effective August 26, 1996 until position is filled. EOE/AA/MFH
CUSTODIANS
BPI Building Services has immediate openings for the following custodial positions:
&Mon.-Thurs. 5:30p.m.-8:30p.m.
Sun. 9a.m. 13noon
Custodial positions are perfect part-time jobs for students and those looking for supplemental income. Approx. 15 hours per week in an independent working environment. Self-motivators should call 842-6264 or come in to apply.
- Mon.-Fri. 8p.m.-11p.m.
& Mon.-Thurs. 7p.m.-10p.m
& Mon-Thurs. 7p.m.-10p.m.
* Sat. 7a.m.-11a.m.
- Mon.-Fri. 6a.m.-8a.m.
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
205Help Wanted
A DIVISION OF
BUCKINGHAM
PALACE.
The University Daily Kansan is looking for Macintosh proficient people capable of working on Quark XPress in a fast-paced, progressive newspaper setting.
930 Iowa (Hillcrest Shopping Center/Behind Appliance Plus)
Ad Pagination
$8-8-hour depending on ability to produce
hourly-approx 5 hours/day Mon-Fri.
You'll use a Macintosh computer to build pages and individual ads for the Daily Kansan by using pre-formatted Quark templates.
Accuracy and dependability are crucial qualifications. We're looking for capable people with problem solving abilities who can take responsibility while gaining expertise on cutting-edge technology. QuarkXPress experience is a must. Additional experience with Adobe PhotoShop is a plus.
You will become familiar with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that is common in professional advertising, publishing, promotional and design agency environments.
The Kansan is an award-willing newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation.
Call Justin Knupp at 864-7665 between 1 and 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.
225 Professional Services
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake D.I.E. & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 Ease 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
16-5116
Call Today!
图示飞机模型
for
Thanksgiving
Christmas Tickets Home
Lawrence's Travel Agent since 1951
831 Massachusetts
749-0700
RAVELLERS
235 Typing Services
For affordable typing call Kyle at 749-1404
Call Jack1 at 833-8444 for applications, term papers, dissertations, transcriptions, et al. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
RESUMES
X
- Professional Writing
• Cover Letters
• Consultation
• Student Discounts
Linda Morton, Certified
Professional Resume Writer
TRANSCRIPTIONS
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
A Master of
Professional Association of
Artists and Teachers
Beds, desks, lamps, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
300s Merchandise
FOR SALE: TI-82 calculator. Exactly like new, perfect for statistics! $ 80.841-3090
305 For Sale
Macintosh class $1100, Apple personal LWReser LW
$200. New xd CD-ROM 80, call 749-131.
305 For Sale
K1 Special pennium 100 for $890 Pentium 60 4500 1-913-1-
921-1-923 collect calls accepted.
Schwimt top model road bike recently recondition $250
or best offer. Call 841-9047 8pm-9pm
1900 Yahama Radian 620 cc. Low mileage. Supreme condition $2000. Call 864-4102.
1922 Ford Escort GT, Power steering, brakes, cruse,
a/c, automatic $4000 or will negotiate. B32-0025.
For sale, Gibson wd electric, excellent condition, #250
pr. call (913) 833-8131, leave msg., or (913) 833-3165.
Fender Bassier Electric Guitar 8200 Made in the USA, Sibling Edition 3875 for use with all cultured guitars. Call {817} 845-8414
Neon Bud bowtie $75
queen waterbed $50.
843-7087
Schwina top model road bike. Recently recorded,
'R' gift offer, BAL 8417M-01, from BMW.
Mountain bike 62cm Bridgestone w/ Manitou shock New tires, many extra. $199,000 invested. $758 Orca clips. New tires, many extra. $239,000 invested. $758 Orca clips.
tioned. $250 or best offer. Call 814-9047 5pm-9pm.
Brightline GT停机 GE Power bank, socket
Bose 901 Series 6 with equalizer pedestals. New in box. Inventory warranty. $150 value. Only L11800 Call 0131-5454-3656 after 6pm.
Gottstein's Auction. Perry, KS-507-5169. Sale every 3m.
am 1. 1/2月. e, E. of Perry on Way 24. Lumber, poultry,
rabbits, eggs, RT ties, vehicles, household goods,
furniture, tools, etc.
Beautiful old rectangular dining room table with
four Mission-style chairs. In good condition. $300.
480 DX, 8 MB RAM, 600 MB hard drive, full page Genius B/W monitor, great for desktop publishing, 250 MO colorado tape bcpch, Win 3.1, Dos 6.2, $500, call 841-0947 0pm or 848-0945
1867 Honda CRX SRX excellent condition. Low highway miles. $4,000.o b. Call Sem 841-7974.
340 Auto Sales
in box, transferable warranty. $1000 value.
ONLY $1000. Call 913-584-3656 after 6 pm.
1985 Honda Accord L2, 2-door hatchback, has AC,
automatic, blue. Very well maintained 600, 655-1663.
105 For Rent
BANANA HOUSE
400s Real Estate
Two rooms for rent. Close to campus. $200 per month each. Contact Joyce at 842-2238.
One Bedroom Dorm Units in great locations 749-4276 or 841-5255.
2 Room床房 share kitchen and bath. $225 itil incld.
at 1312 Vermont. Call 841-1511. Ask for Labyrinth.
5 seconds from KU. Bremit of house. 2 big room plus
a kitchen. $80/month. 1 usual. Utilities.
641-8127
3 bedroom, 2 bath, at Bradford架房. On KU Bus route, cata privilege. Allowed deck or patio. Call 814-8468.
Available immediately completely remodeled studio
Heat, water are paid.
800mw, No. 845-3125.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus "couples"
Two upstairs and appliances. #410 call 811-544-544
Knots
Studio Apartment Near KU
2 Bedroom Mobil Home
841-6254
Room for rent, utilities divided by six. A/C,
master bedroom, master bath, preschool
enfermer, non-smoker 642-3248 or 642-7270
225 Professional Services
Studio Sub-Lease $350 m.o., included:
Balcony, wood floors, 2 blocks from campus. Cats
want to share the space.
Utilities paid rooms for non-smoking females. 2 blocks
from library, atrium, WD use. Off street park.
$250-$300 per room.
CLASSY SECURE 1-3 beams now available on East side of beautiful downtown, Eutoria, just minutes form RU Call Charles Gruber at 765-3400 for app. $375-$550 refs & deposit.
Spacious, affordable furnished 2 bedroom apartment w/
fireplace and dressing room, some utilities paid, 2
blocks to KU off-street parking, no pets, 841-5600
Berkeley Flats Apartments
Call & ask about FREE RENT
843-2116
11th & Mississippi EHO
on a 2 BR. Apt.
COLONY WOODS
1301 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
1&2Bedrooms
- NEW CARPETS
* *NEW APPLIANCES
* *NEW LIGHTING FIXTURES
* NEWLY PAINTED WHITE CABINETS
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Exercise Room
ASK ABOUT FREE RENT AT TRAILRIDGE
Excellent studio,1,2,or3 BR apts,gas & water paid.
Get all this with the same great location on the KU bus line.
545 Minnesota
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
2, 2. 4 BIT Townhouses with BP, carpenter & carpet
building 943.783 or stop by 2500 W. 6th today!
On KU Bus Route
1 bedroom 2 bth apartment with 2 balconies. Close to
ampus on bus route. Dishwasher, cable, laundry &
ool facilities. $630 per month plus electricity. Call 832.
805.
A large, quiet, newly remodeled 2 bedroom busum.
No smoking. W/D work-ups, AC. On bus route.
8438 a month. ALL UTILITIES PAID.
1600 West 2nd Terrace. Call 8438-8337.
TRAILRIDGE
105KgfHeu
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
BIRD
Quiet, spacious, affordable, furnished roooms and 1 bedroom apartments. 2 blocks to KU. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No peds. Bai 414-5000.
MASTERCRAFT
WALK TO CAMPUS
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old-fashioned personalized service."
Managed & maintained by Professionals
Beaul's Import Auto Service
Quality car maintenance & repair
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
Manover Place 14th & Mass •841-1212
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass * 749-5255
SAAB·VOLVO·Toyota and other fine imports
Orchard Corners 16th & Kasold • 749-4226
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am - 4pm
At some locations
Off of 6th st.
next to The Yacht Club
Mastercraft
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
VISA
DIMCOVER
Monterey
105 For Ken
One BR, Dorm units in great locations. 740-4265 or 841-
6256
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406-Tem,
a student housing alternative. Open & diverse member-
hip, non-profit operation, docente controlled. 4189-380
Broadway, Brooklyn, New York. Cleared to campus or
Mall. Call or stop by 514-814-9844.
AVAILABLE FOR PALL
NEW 4BAP at a172 Ohio. IIh ref.
baths, vanity (slink) in each BB, all appliances. incl DW & microphone. No. 480, permo owner / Manager 841-5333. Georges Water Management.
GRAYSTONE
or
AUGUST RENT FREE on our 3 BR TOWNHOMES
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1102
FREE USE FOR ONE YEAR OF WASHER & DRYER
130 Roommate Ward
Gay male has room to rent in East Lawrence home. #826 includes utilities. Call 872-741. Non smokers only.
Female roommate wanted. Great apartment one block
from the university college student, please.
Call 843-5035 for move in.
Broomstair needed to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath furnished apartment. If interested, call 749-0851.
Gay male has room to rent in East Lawrence home. $250
2 girls, gug, and a dog looking for a roommate. Best bus service to campus. Utilities. Near bus route: Call 643-8410 for an interim phone number.
Grad student wanted, 5-min. walk to KI1.743 LA8 $350
aposite house w/ dryer and dryer plan AC6.829786
w/house w/ dryer and dryer plan AC6.829786
Roommate to share three bedroom duplex. 8350
Roommate to share three bedroom duplex. 8350
Ireland, central call; 642-8672
Need F to share nice 2 dbr house ASP, WD, int, new.
Central Air Condition, heat quiet. must Love cushion! Prefer 24 ym, NS. $222.50/mo, + 1/2 unit, + dep. Leave thru May.
Heather 841-508-3601
2 roommates needed for beautiful 5 bedroom new home in live with male good student. Wife only home on weekends (med student). $275 and I/3 utilities. Call Joe 841-1347.
How to schedule an ad:
Professional seeking Faculty or Graduate student to share 2800 sq. ft. DeSoto Home, Non-Smoking, Clean,
Responsible. $400 per month, utilities included. Call 913-883-3456.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
Renter wanted. Quite, non-smoking. New home, near campus. Own bedrooms bathroom with $850 + split phone and utilities. Call James after at 217-222-4024.
Need M/F to share rice 2 BR house with female roommate. Need M/F, garage, ppg, dishwash, big yard. No pets please. Location of Lawn. Warehouse near Harvard & Columbia University. No allotments. No job费. Sept. rent. Call Lana 825-253-6.
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flat
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xampl: a 4 line ad, running 5 days>-$18.88 [4 lines X 98s per Line X 5 days].
105 personnel
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235列车服务
370 want to buy
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The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stafford Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 80045
8B
Thursday, August 29, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
California basketball coach quits
Todd Bozeman resigns amid NCAA investigation
The Associated Press
BERKELEY, Calif. — California basketball coach Todd Bozeman resigned after a meeting yesterday with athletic director John Kasser and other university officials, the San Francisco Examiner reported.
The newspaper, quoting anonymous sources close to the athletic department, said Bozeman, 32, was forced out after 31/2 years in the wake of a series of NCAA investigations and a pending civil action.
On Aug. 14 an Alameda County Superior Court judge issued a temporary restraining order against him after a former student said he had threatened her and harassed her sexually.
Also cited was Bozeman's involvement in a gift club that might be considered a pyramid scheme, the Examiner said.
A hearing was scheduled for tomorrow on the former student's allegations.
Bozeman's basketball program is under NCAA investigation for major rules violations and faces penalties that could be announced as early as next month.
California was investigated twice last year, and forward Tremaine Fowlkes was suspended for 14 games.
The program also received a minor sanction in its recruitment of Shareef Abdur-Rahim.
After Lou Campanelli was fired during the 1993 season, Bozeman, then an assistant, was named interim coach.
The Bears had an 11-2 record the rest of the season and made it to the final 16.
Bozeman compiled a 63-35 record as head coach, taking the Bears to three NCAA Tournament appearances.
Cornerback comes back running
Defenseman at Georgia finds success in offense
The Associated Press
ATHENS, Ga. — No one had a clue.
Robert Edwards was a defensive star in high school. He spent his first two years at Georgia knocking down passes and trying to keep up with other teams' receivers. He heading into his junior year, he had all the makings of an all-star. An all-star cornerback, that is.
There were no clues, not even a hint, that Edwards was about to become the most intriguing Georgia running back since Herschel Walker, a man voted to the All-Southeastern Conference team before he even played two full games at that position.
"It was the last week of spring ball, we were doing some goal-line situations, and they threw him back there," said offensive tackle Adam Meadows, remembering that landmark day in the spring of 1995 when the Bulldogs asked Edwards to carry the ball for the first time. "I thought they were just toying around with him."
Edwards didn't know what to expect, either. He played a little running back in high school, but that was more than two years earlier. He had not played a lick of offense since he arrived in Athens.
"I had no thoughts in the world that I would play run
But the Bulldogs were desperate to find a runner, so they moved Edwards to the backfield for the final week of spring practice. That was all it took for him to earn the starting job.
ning back," said Edwards, an 11-game starter at cornerback in 1994, who ranked second on the team with four interceptions. "I was a defensive back ... I thought that was where I was going to stay until I left."
"I just go out there and run," he said nonchanty,
"find the open hole and try to run through it."
He ran right through South Carolina and Tennessee in the first two games of the 1995 season. In the most dynamic debut for a Georgia runner since Walker in 1980, Edwards rushed for nation-leading 325 yards — 7.2 yards every time he touched the ball — and scored seven touchdowns.
And just like that he was gone. A fractured left foot, suffered in the third quarter of a tie game against Tennessee, ended his season — and Georgia's hopes along with it. The Bulldogs lost to Tennessee on a last-second field goal, finished the season 6-6 and fired coach Ray Goff.
"It was very tough to sit and watch your team play, and you can't be out there," Edwards recalled. "I dwelled on that for about two weeks, then I finally got over it. I took it in and knew there was nothing I could do to change it. I decided to see if my rehab could work toward this point where I'm at now."
What he is now is an enigma.
Even though he has played less than two full games at running back, Edwards was voted to the preseason All-SEC team. Even though he was held out of most of the heavy contact work in practice as a precaution, Edwards is being counted on to transform the Bulldogs from also-ran to SEC power — just like Herschel did 16 years ago.
"Robert Edwards is ready to rock 'n' roll," said new coach Jim Doman. "As I've mentioned on numerous occasions, though, I think before we give him too many accolades, we've got to make sure he does it week after week."
Edwards' teammates are ready to climb on the bandwagon.
"There's no doubt in my mind that if he didn't get hurt last year, he possibly could have rushed for around 2,000 yards," Meadows said. "I really believe that. He's a big strong kid who's got a lot of ability, a lot of speed. A lot of running just comes natural to him."
Said quarterback Mike Bobo, "There is no doubt in my mind, either. Robert Edwards still amazes me every day when we go out there. We can just be throwing the ball around, and you still see the athleticism he has. He's by far the best athlete on the team."
If he can inspire those kinds of words after six-plus quarters, imagine what he could do with a whole season. All-American? Heisman Trophy?
Rice's new contract saves 49ers from losing another star
"I'm not really worried about all that," Edwards said. "I'm just worried about staying healthy and trying to help my team win as many games as possible."
Seven-year deal promises $32 million, signing bonus
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Jerry Rice, the NFL's career leader in touchdowns, receptions and receiving yardage, now has security, peace of mind and a heftier contract to go with the lofty numbers he's put up on the field.
The seven-year pact, worth $32 million, runs through 2002 and replaces a contract due to expire following the 1997 season.
The deal included a $4 million signing bonus.
Rice said coming to terms on the new deal frees him to concentrate on football.
"This is the position I wanted to be in a long time ago. Now it's just football."
Asked how much longer he plans to play, Rice said, "My goal is to finish this contract."
"I don't have to worry about my contract any more. That's behind me," Rice said during a news conference.
Club president Carmen Policy said the contract was designed to keep Rice in a 49ers uniform for the rest of his career. San Francisco has seen such superstars as Joe Montana and Ronnie Lott finish their careers elsewhere and Policy said the organization didn't want to lose Rice in the same way it had lost these others.
Policy made it perfectly clear to Rice and his agent, Jim Steiner, that the
"Whatever happened in the past, whatever the circumstances may have been, however difficult the situation may have developed, we weren't going to allow that to happen with Jerry," he said.
"I don't have to worry about my contract any more. That's behind me."
Jerry Rice San Francisco 49ers
organization did not want to even run the risk of having Rice consider the possibility of the free agent market, he said.
Rice said he wanted the same thing. "I can't see myself going anywhere else and putting on a different uniform, and trying to start all over again," he said.
Steiner said the new deal makes Rice one of the top 10-12 paid players in the league.
The 49ers cleared room under the salary cap by reworking the contracts of linebacker Lee Woodall and cornerback Marquez Pope.
Rice, who turns 34 in October, is coming off a record-breaking season in which he caught 122 passes for an NFL-record 1,848 vards.
He enters 1996 with career records for most touchdowns (156), most TD receptions (146) most receiving yards (15,123), most past receptions (942) and most 100-yard receiving games (58) among others.
Rice said the money won't change the way he plays the game.
"I don't think my play is going to decrease," he said. "If anything I think it's going to get better."
7
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The revolutionary TI-83 handles a host of functions for a variety of college subjects. And if you're familiar with the popular TI-82, picking up the TI-83 will be a snap. The new TI-83. In a multi-function world, there simply is no equal.
Check it out at your campus bookstore or favorite retailer where TI calculators are sold.
Math. Split screen allows you to trace the graph and scroll the table simultaneously.
Statistics. Display results of hypothesis tests graphically and numerically.
Finance. Financial functions: Time-Value-of-Money, cash flows, and amortization.
e-mail: ti-cares@ti.com or call 1-860-TI-CANES (U.S. & Canada).
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Y1=H2-2
X
0.2625
1.93
1.735
1.84
0.189
0.189
0.189
0.189
0.189
N=1.0896827
V=.8551778
O
2.625
1.93
1.735
1.84
0.189
0.189
0.189
0.189
N=1.0896827
V=.8551778
O
t=-1.2522 t=2.257
Coach: Marian Washington comments on her Olympic experience. Page 3B Travels: Chancellor Hemenway attempts to tour all 105 Kansas counties. Page 3A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1996
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.103,NO.8
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Sex scandal tarnishes final convention night
CHICAGO — President Clinton's chief political strategist and author of his family values agenda resigned in a sex scandal yesterday, sourcing Clinton's shining moment on the final night of the Democratic convention.
The exit of Dick Morris tite a gaping hole in Clinton's election team on the eve of the fall campaign and threw the White House into a frenzy of damage control.
Morris fled home to Connecticut after publication of intimate details of an alleged year-long affair with a $200-an-hour call girl, Sherry Rowlands.
Morris supposedly invited her to listen on on telephone conversations with the president and showed her copies of convention speeches to be given by Hillary Rodham Clinton and Vice President Al Gore.
As the news swept through the convention, Morris left a seven-paragraph resignation statement in Chicago before leaving.
Orangutans escape enjoy brief freedom
WICHITA — A hole in the steel wire mesh of a Wichita zoo orangutan exhibit allowed a 60-pound ape and her 30-pound younger brother to slip out for about a half-hour of freedom.
The orangutans escaped Wednes day afternoon, prompting zoo officials to implement code red procedures. They put the rest of the orangutans into their night quarters, cleared visitors from the area and closed the zoo temporary.
but the two younger orangutans returned to their cage voluntarily, almost as if they wanted to escape the sudden attention of zoo officials who were trying to herd them back into their home.
His sister ran around the enclosure, then entered through a door that zoo keepers opened. No one was injured.
"All these animals wanted to do was get back inside," said Mike Quick, the zoo's mammal curator. "As soon as the youngster saw the zoo keepsers gathering around, he went right back in to his mother."
All of the orangutans are being kept in their indoor exhibit while zoo officials determine how the steel mesh enclosure frared.
The exhibit, part of the Koch Orangutan and Chimpanzee Habitat, opened May 24. The naturalistic enclosure is made up of a steel mesh canopy held up by a 35-foot pole and draped over four wooden platforms.
Plane crash in Arctic kills all passengers
OSLO, Norway — A Russian plane carrying coal miners to work at a remote, desolate arctic island smashed into a snow-covered mountaintop yesterday, killing all of the more than 140 people aboard.
In what the prime minister called the worst air disaster on Norwegian soil, the Tupelov 154 from Moscow crashed six miles from its destination — the airport on Spitsbergen, the main island in the Svalbard archipelago about 400 miles north of Norway.
Most of the passengers were Ukrainian men and their families, returning after time off to jobs at a Russian-run coal mine on the island. Waiting at the airport for them were 120 other miners, whom the plane would have taken home. After hearing the news, those miners were taken to a local town hall, where they spoke quietly to each other or sat in stunned silence.
Initial reports said there were 141 people aboard, including 12 crew members, but Norwegian officials said later that the plane might have carried a crew of 14.
The Associated Press
Med Center fined $265,000
Money will pay for malpractice
By Stephanie Fite Kansan staff reporter
Attorney General Carla Stovall announced yesterday that the University of Kansas Medical Center will have to pay $265,000 as a result of its malpractice.
Fifteen heart transplant patients and their families will receive $11,000 each, and the center also has to pay $100,000 for investigative fees and expenses according to a settlement for violations.
future, because it faces additional charges from private counsel.
The attorney general's office started its investigation in May 1995. The investigation ended December 1995, and the settlement for the violations of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act was announced yesterday.
The center may face more fines in the
Chancellor Robert Hemenway said the University disputed Stovall's conclusions, but accepted responsibility for the transplant program.
"This agreement helps us continue to move ahead," he said.
"It is beyond my comprehension that a distinguished institution with the reputation and stature of the University of Kansas Medical Center could allow this kind of egregious behavior to take place," Stovall said. "This is a means to penalize KUMC and seek restitution for the patients for what we believe were extremely serious problems."
Stovall said she was stunned that the violations occurred in a program involving patients with severe, life threatening medical conditions.
The Med Center voluntarily suspended its heart transplant program in April 1995, in response to reports in the Kansas City Star that no transplants were performed from early May 1994 through late March
1995. The Med Center continued to take heart transplant patients during this period, but reportedly refused 38 hearts for nonmedical reasons.
In addition, the Med Center did not inform its patients that the qualified heart surgeon quit on Nov. 4, 1994, and that the replacement surgeon wasn't qualified to perform heart transplants.
The attorney general's office based its conclusions on a review of information provided by the Med Center's counsel, records and correspondence from the Midwest Organ Bank, and interviews with patients and relatives.
Stowall cited deficiencies including inadequate communication with patients and insufficient coordination between all departments involved.
Donald Hagen, who began his job as executive vice chancellor of the Med Center after the investigation started, said he agreed with the settlement.
"This settlement is simply the right thing to do for KU Medical Center staff, patients and the people of Kansas," he said.
Consumer Protection Act Laws
These are a few of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act laws the University of Kansas Medical Center, the University of Kansas Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery Foundation and the University of Kansas Internal Medicine Foundation allegedly violated.
They continued to promote the heart transplant program although it was in threat of cancellation.
They did not inform patients that donor heart offers were consistently refused for nonmedical reasons.
They did not inform patients that no surgeon was available to perform heart transplant for at least two months following Nov. 4, 1994
They told patients they had been added to a waiting list when they had not been. Patients were given false information about positions on the waiting list and false information about reasons for rejections of donor hearts.
Yield to traffic delays
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
EXIT
20
Officer Brad Bernhardt, Kansas Highway Patrol state trooper, directs traffic off of the Lawrence and I-70 exit before the football game last night.
Construction slows fans
By Cameron Heeg Kansan staff reporter
The drive to the KU football game last night turned out pretty well, at least for motorists who took K-10.
Construction on the I-70 Turnpike from both Topeka and Kansas City leading into Lawrence slowed down fans on their way to the Kansas football game last night.
"Getting to the games is tough, all the construction slows you down," said Bob Calvin, Denver resident. "Denver doesn't compare to this. There is lots of construction on the Turnpike."
There are three major construction
projects on the Turnpike, with the West Lawrence turnpike being the most recent. Construction stretches for about one half mile near Bonner Springs. Three miles between Lawrence and Topeka is reduced to single lane traffic flow in both directions.
"We will have the interchange done soon," said Tom Wurdeman, division engineer for the Kansas Turnpike Authority. "We are pushing the projects as hard as we can."
Lawrence resident. "You have to slow down three miles before the construction, and it takes 50 guys in orange to tell you. The Tumpike developed as a temporary funding resource for tolls, and now it has become a permanent funding hole."
Some of the fans in the Memorial Stadium parking disagreed with the pace of construction.
Road construction is a reality for motorists, but there are ways to combat the lills associated with it, such as leave early or taking K-10.
"It is the usual frustration of a constant traffic battle," said John Esau,
"Traffic wasn't as bad as I initially expected, but I left Kansas City at 4:45," said Kris Bruso, Kansas City, Mo., resident. "The single lane traffic was at 50 to 55 mph. Well, I guess that is the speed limit."
CHANCE OF RAIN
TODAY
High 83°
Low 60°
Weather; Page 2A.
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.
www.kansan.com
UDKI THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
INDEX
TV ...2A
Opinion ...4A
National News ...9A
Features ...10A
Scoreboard ...2B
Classifieds ...8B
Football on B1
40 40
Council approves revision in faculty evaluations policy
By Lindsey Henry
Kansan staff writer
Placing criticisms and concerns aside, the University Council voted last night to accept a revised policy on faculty evaluations that allows for the termination of tenured faculty members.
Following an hour of questions and comments from about 70 faculty members and student senators, the council voted 21-12 to accept the policy. The new policy includes detailed actions to evaluate, assist and possibly terminate faculty members that continually fail to prove their competence in the classroom.
The University's policy was redrafted in response to the Kansas Board of Regents demand last May that all state institutions establish an explicit policy on performance evaluation, Provost David Shulenburger said. All institutions have until Sept. 20 to reissue their policy to the board. If the Regents do not approve of the directives, they will issue a policy for the University.
The new version of the document says that dismissal policies will include a faculty member's chronic low performance despite all University assistance as an indicator of the employee's incompetence.
"This kind of stuff is too important to get stuck in protocol," Draper said.
To ease faculty frustrations, the council extended an open invitation to the faculty to attend the meeting in Alderson Auditorium, said Lawrence Draper, council president and professor of microbiology.
"I read this draft of the policy as explicit." Shulen-burger said. "The University will put forth full effort to make sure no one falls into this, but I don't believe the Regents want us dismissing faculty."
Despite the open forum to suggest improvements, the only proposition amended was one to modify certain wordings. Concerns about the policy's ambiguous time frame for evaluation were not addressed in the final vote.
Whereas the University's policy does not state the specific amount of time a faculty member has to improve after a negative evaluation, Kansas State University's policy has an exact time frame for dismissal.
Chris Hansen, student body president of Kansas State, said its policy explained that three negative evaluations in five years would be cause for dismissal.
"We have a three strikes and you're out policy," Hansen said. "We feel confident this will pass the board. We feel our plan is more specific and task-oriented."
Kansas State's decisive plan was one that had impressed the Board of Regents, Draper said.
"I am frightened, however, of a policy like Kansas State's," Draper said. "I felt a delineation of time was unwarranted."
Betty Banks, council member and associate professor of classics, said she thought allowing time to assist a faculty member improved the University.
"We are preserving academic freedom," Banks said. "I am proud of a document that is not buckling to a 1,2,3 strikes you're out policy. But if the Regents want to micromanage, they are going to micromanage."
61
2A
Friday, August 30, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
+
WEATHER
QuickINFO CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER LOTTO NUMBERS
TODAY
CAMPUS EVENTS
83
60
Partly cloudy, chance of rain in the morning.
SATURDAY
85
63
63
Mostly sunny with little or no chance of rain.
SUNDAY
86
61
61
Continuing sun.
Sun
Recreation Services will sponsor a KU Juggling Club meeting at 12:30 p.m. today in front of Strong Hall. For more information, call Mark Ellner at 841-4293.
ON CAMPUS
The hockey team will have an information meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nils Jergensen at 865-2518.
Study Abroad Club & Office of Study Abroad will sponsor the Lawrence Garage Sale Adventure at 9 a.m. tomorrow at the Jayhawk Tower A & B parking lot. For more information, call Ted Noravong at 864-3742.
Ku Ki Aikido Club will meet from 10 a.m. to noon on tomorrow at 207 Robinson. For more information, call Jill Woodworth at 864-1798.
The KU Ballroom Dancing Club's dance lessons scheduled for Sunday have been canceled because of Labor Day. For more information, call Shane Haas at 864-6597.
KU Women's Rugby Football Club will practice at 6 p.m. Monday at the Shenk Field, 23rd & Iowa streets. For more information, call Stacey Stringfellow at 794-3380.
Episcopal/Lutheran Campus Center will have worship at noon on Tuesday at the Danfort Chapel. For more information, call the Rev. Joe Alford at 843-8202.
Recreation Services will have KU Fencing from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at 215 Robinson. For more information, call John Hendrix at 832-9963.
KU Yoga Club will meet from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at room 310 (Daisy Hill Room) in the Burge Union. For more information, call Steve Willingham at 749-2401.
Kansas City Baptist Temple will have a question and answer Bible study at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call John Hepford at 841-1683.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's cologne and miscellaneous items were stolen between 11:30 p.m. Tuesday and 9:15 a.m. Wednesday in the 900 block of Arkansas, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $115.
A KU student's two bicycles were stolen between 8 p.m. Wednesday and 8:30 a.m. yesterday in the 1700 block of Ohio, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $203.
A KU student's car was damaged in the 1000 block of Emery Road, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $600.
A KU employee's bicycle was stolen between 3:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. Wednesday from the 900 block of Massachusetts, Lawrence police said. The bicycle was valued at $300.
A KU student's candle was stolen at 2 a.m. yesterday from the 1200 block of Ohio, Lawrence police said. The
candle was valued at $3.10 A KU student's CD rate
A KU student's CD player and CDs were stolen between 12 a.m. last Friday and 9 a.m. Sunday from Lot 300 at the Lied Center, KU police said. The items were valued at $300.
Two cases of fruit juice were stolen between 4 and 6 p.m. Tuesday from the Jaybowl in the Kansas Union, KU police said. The juice was valued at $22.
FRIDAY PRIMETIME
AUGUST 30,1996
7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
**KSMO ❶** Major League Baseball: Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers (R) Land's End (R) (in Stereo) Cops ☑ I'm Gonna Go. You Suicide ☑+! (1985)
**WDAF ❷** Stilders "Invasion" (in Stereo) X-File "Piper Man" (R) News ☑ News ☑ Tales-Crypt Tales-Crypt Baywatch
**KCTV ❸** "Twist of the Knife" (1993, Mystery) Dick Van Dyke (R) Nash Bridges (in Stereo) News Late Show (R) (in Stereo) Seinfeld ☑
**KS06 ❹ Home News Plus News News Plus
**KCPT ❺ Wash. Week Week-Review McLaughlin Wall St. Week Cleveland Plays the Proms Business Rpt. Signal to Noise: Life With TV Hidden
**KSNT ❻ Unresolved Mysteries (R) Dateline (in Stereo) Law & Order "Custody" (R) News Tonight Show (in Stereo) Late Night ☑
**KMBC ❽ Boy-World Step by Step Mr. Cooper Roseanne ☑ Golden Girls M'A'S H ☑
**KTWU ❾ Wash. Week Wall St. Week McLaughlin MotorWeek Third Choice (in Stereo) Travel Mag. Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
**WBWD ❿ A Twist of the Knife" (1993, Mystery) Dick Van Dyke (R) Nash Bridges (in Stereo) News ☑ Late Show (R) (in Stereo) U.S. Open ☑
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AEE 92 Biography: Burt Lancaster "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" ***1% (1962)
CNBC 62 Convention Special (Live) Rivera Live Charles Grodin America After Hours Riversa Live (R)
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COURT 94 Time Justice Justice Trial Story: Broken Trust Prime Time Justice (R) Justice News
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MTY 93 Burzkill (R) And the Nominees Are...(R) TBA Beavis-Butt, Beavis-But, Singled Out Sports YoI in Stares()
SCRI 94 Night Skill ("Sentry") She-Wolf of London So-HF Buzz In Space Twilight Zone SV ForteX (R) Night Skall ("Sentry")
TLC 92 Guided Missile/Hiroshima (R) Seven Wonders of the World Human Animal: A View Guided Missile/Hiroshima (R) Seven Wonders of the World
INT 92 "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" (1979) The Enterprise challenges a destructive alien iron. "Soviet Green" ***1% (1973) Science Fiction Chadston Heist
USA 92 U.S. Open Tennis: Men's Second and Women's Third Round. (Live) Big Eyes "Canine Coffella" ***1% (1968) Scam" ***1% (1968)
YHN 93 Best of Times (R) "Monterey Pop" ***1% (1969) Janis Joplin. Bandstand Crossroads Sex Appeal "Monterey Pop" ***1% (1969)
WGN 92 (M) Major League Baseball: Chicago White Sox at Toronto Blue Jays. News Night Court Simon & Simon H'mooner
WTBS 10 "Betsey's Wedding" ***1% (1990, Comedy) Alan Alda."Summer School" ***1% (1997) Comedy Mark Hamon."Into the Night" ***1% (1984)
HBO 10 "Congo" ***1% (1995, Adventure) Dylan Walsh. PG-13."Disclosure" Michael Douglas. R ☑ Comedy Half "Rambo II"
HBO **40** "Congen" **\*\*** (1995, Adventure) Dylan Walsh. PG-13 **13** "Dialecture" **\*\*\*** (1994, Drama) Michael Dougart. R **18** Comedy Hall "Rambo II" **18**
MAX **42** "Destiny Turns On the Radio" **\*\*** (1995) Dylan McDemcott. "French Kiss" **\*\*\*** (1995, Comedy) Meg Ryan. PG-13 **13** Hot Line "Mirror II" **18**
SHOW **32** "Pinhole" **\*\*\*** (1995, Drama) Kadeen Hardison. R **17** Politargest: The Legend Bedtime Latino "Jason's Lyric" **\*\*** (1994)
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions of $1.68 are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405.
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 30,1996
3A
Budig Hall renovations near completion
Budig Hall's new lecture halls have the ability to hold up to 500 students each. The new rooms will be used for chemistry lectures as well as other classes.
Teachers tour lecture halls
By Eric Weslander Kansan staff writer
Sally Frost-Mason liked what she saw
As the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences ducked under scaffolding and walked toward the front of what was once Hoch Auditorium, she realized she soon would be teaching in the same building.
"Oh, this is cool," she said.
Frost-Mason, who also is a professor of biology, joined three other professors Wednesday on a tour of the $22 million renovations to Budig Hall. The former Hoch Auditorium, which was destroyed by fire in 1991, has been undergoing renovations for two years. And although faculty have toured the inside of Budig Hall before, Wednesday's tour gave them a chance to see distinct improvements.
During the last tour, which took place six weeks ago, scaffolding filled the hall. This time, while the large, central auditorium was still under construction, the two 500-seat lecture halls on opposite sides of the auditorium were emptied of scaffolding and nearing completion.
"This is a room I want to teach in," Frost-Mason said as she gazed around one of the lecture halls. "These are things you don't get a feel for from looking at the plans."
The lecture halls and auditorium will feature rear-projection screens, audio-visual storage closets, and preparatory rooms for lectures. More than $1 million will be spent on audio visual equipment.
The touring faculty members agreed that both the smaller lecture halls and the larger auditorium would be convenient for students.
"Everyone will be able to get a good view," said Jack Landgrebe, professor of chemistry, after climbing to the back seats of a lecture hall. "You're not looking up; you're looking straight ahead."
Douglas Riat, associate director of design and construction management, gave the tour to faculty members with a vested interest in the building. In this case, he showed the building to professors who will be teaching classes there starting toward the end of the spring 1997 semester.
"I have an historical interest in this," Landgrebe said. "This is a place that I taught in before, and even then it was badly in need of improvement."
Landgrebe said professors were consulted throughout the designing and building process.
"It was clear that this was going to be a unique facility with a state-of-the art series of auditoriums," he said.
DiCarlo Construction provided the professors with hard-hats, a testament to the fact that there is still a lot of work to be done on Budig Hall.
Hemenway takes to the highway across Kansas
"I think I wore the wrong shoes for this," Frost-Mason said as she dodged patches of mud and wet cement.
Chancellor plans to visit all counties
By Lindsey Henry Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Robert Hemenway can't wait to get on the road again.
Fulfilling a promise he made at the beginning of his administration, Hemenway will attempt to visit every county in Kansas during the coming years.
So far, Hemenway has visited 44 of the 105 Kansas counties, and plans to make several more stops during this semester.
I am very grateful to you for your kindness and for the positive changes that have occurred in your life. I will continue to support you and your family in all ways possible. Your generosity and compassion have made a lasting impact on our lives. Thank you for your presence.
"Even before I went on the University payroll, I had decided this was the thing to do," Hemenway said. "I wanted to understand the way KU was thought of in the state and what
role people wanted KU to play in their lives."
Robert Hemenway
Tom Hutton, director of University Relations, said Hemenway proved his commitment with the immediacy of his actions.
"The chancellor took office June 1,
1995 and by June 6, he went to Liberal,
in the furthest corner of Kansas," Hutton said.
Hutton, who had accompanied Hemenway on 10 of his county visits, said residents of Kansas are generally curious to meet the man behind the University.
"They always want to know who is
the man in charge of a half a billion dollar operation," Hutton said. "These trips reinforce the University of Kansas as a state school, not just one for the eastern counties."
For overnight excursions Hemenway will occasionally stay in the spare bedroom of an alumnus' house or in a motel. Money to pay for these journeys is provided by private funding from the Kansas University Endowment Association or alumni donations. Hutton said.
"These are inexpensive lodgings," Hutton said. "There are no Ritz Carlts in Concordia, Kansas."
Hutton said Hemenway researches the particular county and its University alumni before he makes presentations to rotary clubs or alumni associations.
"He brings KU down to the level of the town. He'll ask what KU means to the particular town, and he will
mention the local pharmacist, for example, by name as a KU graduate."
Hemenway's commitment to visit all of Kansas extends beyond the time when classes are in session. This summer, Hemenway and his family visited Council Grove and Lindsborg as a part of a family vacation.
"These visits have made KU more of a presence in northwestern and southwestern Kansas," Hemenway said. "A lot of these places haven't seen the chancellor for a long time and as long as I am chancellor, I intend to visit often."
Though he has already made numerous trips, Hemenway said the culinary delights of Kansas have been a highlight of his travels.
He said, "I have had some good chicken fried steak along the way."
Places to go
KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway is about halfway through fulfilling his promise to visit every county in Kansas. He has been to 44 out of the state's 105 counties, but still must make a visit to 61 counties, including many in northeastern and southeastern Kansas.
Counties Hemenway has visited Counties Hemenway has yet to visit
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
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4A
Friday, August 30, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Wage increase will harm workers,small business
President Clinton calls his new wage bill "a cause for celebration for all Americans of all parties, all walks of life." However, average Americans working for minimum wage should be decrying the injustices done to them by the new bill.
The new minimum wage is a Faustian bargain that would give the average worker an immediate rush of financial power. In exchange, the overall financial wellbeing of an individual could be worse than before the wage increase because of inflationary pressures.
the principle underlying this pessimistic prediction, the law of supply and demand, is simple.
If an employer has a fixed payroll and is forced to raise salaries, he or she has difficulty paying everyone at the higher wage without reducing the number of jobs. This is especially true for small businesses. The cost of products and services will rise because more money is needed to produce and market a product. The quality of services will be reduced because fewer workers will be stretched too thinly among the same tasks.
Although concessions such as tax reductions, write offs, and pension plans were created to mitigate the effects of the wage increase on small businesses, they are minimal in comparison with the serious effects of the new wage bill.
Melody Smith, co-owner of Joe's Bakery, 616 W. Ninth St., agrees with these points and acknowledges that the wage increase is a political tool for re-election.
The eventual effects of the wage increase are not an issue that average college students think will affect them. However, students know the cost of textbooks, tuition, living expenses and the difficulty of finding a job. All of these costs could rise with the already burgeoning price of a college education. Students should be wary of the ramifications of such legislation and should exercise their vote accordingly.
The Citadel's ranks finally are open to female cadets
Four female cadets arrived on Saturday at The Citadel in Charleston, S.C., to begin drills with their male counterparts. Their admission into a state-supported institution of higher education is fair and overdue.
In June, the U.S. Supreme Court found the all-male policy at the Virginia Military Institute, a Southern military school much like The Citadel, unconstitutional. Faced with the choice of supporting the academy privately or admitting female cadets, The Citadel announced it would admit women.
Following the Supreme Court ruling against the Virginia Military Institute, the four new female cadets' integration has been more successful than the attempt to integrate Shannon Faulkner, the first female cadet in Citadel history.
Bryant Butler, the top-ranking student officer at the Citadel, said in an article in Monday's Lawrence Journal-World that he had noticed significant changes in cadet interaction one year after the arrival of Faulkner. Butler called those changes amazing.
Past refusal to admit women to public, state-supported schools worked against our nation's attempts to achieve gender equity. Moreover, it was not fair.
The merits of a single-sex education touted by students, faculty and alumni of The Citadel and the Virginia Military Institute are grounds for an entirely different debate. Private schools should be encouraged to continue policies that they find effective, including single-sex education. Schools supported with tax dollars, however, must benefit all who pay taxes, including women.
Many men have benefited from the state-supported Citadel in the last 153 years. This year four women will, too.
LEWIS GALLOWAY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
AMANDA TRAUGHBER
Editor
CRAIG LANG
Managing editor
MATT HOOD
Associate managing editor for design
KIMBERLY CRABTREE
CHARITY JEFFRIES
News editors
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Public relations director
Editors
KAREN GERSCH
Business manager
HEALY SMART
Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
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Campus ... Sueanna Lóel
... Jason Stratk
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Editorial ... John Collar
... Nicole Kennedy
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SO... YOU NEED YOUR KU ID' RE-MAGNETIZED... OK, FIRST GET YOUR ADVISER'S STAMP AT WESCOE, YOUR DEAN'S STAMP AT FRASER AND HAVE MS. PEARSON VERIFY THOSE STAMPS AT THE LIED CENTER. THEN, PICK UP THE APPROPRIATE PAPERS AT STRONG
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HALL AND THE
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THEN WE'LL
FIX YOUR I.D.
OKAY...?
VICTOR
©1996
Jeff Victor / KANSAN
Bob Dole certainly seems to think so. He pokes fun at her village homily every chance he gets.
But what is his solution? Declaring that the family is the primary unit for raising children is fine, but that doesn't say anything about the problem at hand.
Community involvement in child rearing is needed
Simply holding the family responsible is simplistic and laughable. While no one I know of is advocating mandatory state-run child raising facilities, the sad fact is that many people who have learned the steps to procreation haven't learned the first thing about raising the product.
Hillary Clinton has endured a lot of heat during the past four years from the Grand Old Party, the media and the general public. And some of it actually has been justified.
Her involvement in Whitewater and the Travelgate flasco begged for the open, public investigation that has haunted cable news for the past several years.
Ideally, every politician suspected of breaking the law or abusing his or her position should face the same scrutiny that was directed toward her.
In light of the cut-welfare-andproperty-gains fad sweeping the Republican Party, Clinton's stance on using the community to help curb rising teen violence and drug use seems an easy target for right-thinking conservatives.
But some people have criticized her for nothing more than daring to write a book calling for increased community responsibility for our nation's children.
TODD
HIATT
STAFF COLUMNIST
Demanding that families do better solves nothing, and trusting that the problem will go away with time and less govern-
ment intervention is foolish.
As a community, we have a responsibility to help children when their parents are abusive, neglectful or are unable to handle children with emotional or behavioral problems. If that means getting the adults into parenting classes, then that should be done immediately.
If it means taking the children away for a while to teach them the skills they need to be responsible adults, then that should be done immediately as well. Usually, it means both.
Unfortunately, we as a community are better at taking away children than preventing the necessity to do so. Again, it is a case of simple answers to complex problems.
Warehousing children in safe environments is a facet of this stunted mentality. Most adults who abuse or neglect their children aren't evil people. They simply don't know a better way to raise them.
But nobody is helping them to become better people or better parents. We simply take their kids and pat ourselves on the back.
This assumption that removal will fix everything is obviously false. Isolating kids in group homes and throwing money at facilities or programs will not make things better any more than if we simply wait for families to improve on their own. As moral citizens, we have a responsibility to become involved.
Luckily for us, getting involved is easy. One way is to learn about child welfare and how it is being handled by the government. Hold politicians accountable for their stupidity and insensitivity. Become loud and persistent in your criticism of moronic public policy and see-through politicians.
But don't stop there. It isn't enough. We must actively reach out to those who need our help.
By joining Big Brothers-Big Sisters of America Inc., volunteering at an area group home or by offering your services to Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center for a couple of hours a week is a great way to make a child's life better. And it will be a lot more effective than some stupid sound bite or campaign promise.
Todd Hiatts is a Lyndon senior in social welfare.
Lack of respect is responsible for conflicts in our daily lives
I have come to understand that there is one great problem with the world that, if solved, would solve all of the problems that seem much larger. We, as members of one common group known as humanity, have lost the ability to treat other people with respect.
I know that respect sounds too simple to solve all of the problems in war-ravaged Bosnia or Chechnya. After all, the conflicts among the peoples in these lands have been around for years.
However, I have come to believe that the lack of respect for other people and cultures is more than just a little to blame.
I came to this conclusion simultaneously with an understanding of how people can take a machine gun to their co-workers. I have discovered that it is not their co-workers that disgruntled workers are after; it just seems that way to a society that does not want to believe the truth. It is the customers they want to kill because many customers don't treat employees with respect.
Working at a local grocery store helped me reach this conclusion because I deal with customers every week. I have learned that some customers can be the rudest people in the world. Other customers can be the nicest. My mood often depends on how customers treat me.
STAFF COLUMNIST
SIACY
NAGY
Unfortunately,
many customers
see grocery
store workers as
punching bags,
not as people
who are just
doing the best
they can. They
lack the respect
for employees — whether it is at a grocery store, a restaurant or a gas station — as people. Hence the machine gun in my trunk.
The same type of logic applies to problems such as wars. One group of people is tired of being treated as punching bags by some other group of people and vice versa, so they pull machine guns on them in a manner similar to that of a disgruntled postal worker.
While war is perhaps more organized than the postal workers, and certainly much larger, it is nonetheless the same problem. The lack of respect for others has facilitated conflict in the past several decades, and the problem is
No one likes to be treated like a punching bag, yet it is a phenomenon that is sweeping the world. If, for just one split second, we could all step into our enemies' shoes, perhaps we would begin to understand the other point of view.
getting worse.
And if understanding is not achieved, at least people could learn to accept it as valid and respect it as different.
They could learn to compromise, find some common ground, talk with words instead of guns and get on with the happier parts of life. Plant flowers.
Of course, getting the word out about this radical new idea in solving all the world's problems will not work, mainly because there are too many people on this campus and in the world who will laugh and simply say no.
But perhaps someone who says "well, OK" will enter my little corner of the world and tell me to have a nice day or will understand that we are out of chocolate Pop Tarts.
Then perhaps I would be able to put my machine gun in the trash.
Stacy Nagy is a Topeka Junior in Russian and women's studies.
Dole grappling for office like sumo wrestler
Bob Dole will be the next president. I'm sure this is delightful news at the University of Kansas, where Bob Dole is slightly more popular than Kansas State University.
STAFF COLUMNIST
Only a month ago, Dole's chances of beating Clinton looked about as good as K-State's chances of defeating KU in basketball. But Dole surged to within five points of Clinton after the Republican convention. Now Dole's chances of
winning look
more like a K-
State vs. KU
football contest
JOHN HART
No, my confidence in a Dole victory is not influenced by second-hand pot pot smoke Clinton exhaled — but didn't inhale. My forecast is based on an understanding of sumo wrestling.
In sumo
wrestling and presidential politics, the combatant who gains leverage against his opponent and pushes him out of the ring wins.
(Given the widespread cynicism toward politics, I doubt that visualizing Dole and Clinton as 400-pound men grappling with one another while wearing thongs will require much of a stretch. Oh yeah, Ross Perot is running. Oh yeah.)
Although Dole is closer to being pushed out of the ring than Clinton
he continues to train in the polls
he has leverage against Clinton
on the most important issues in the
campaign - money and morals.
Presidential elections aren't decided by people who understand all of the issues, but by those who are persuaded that a candidate can deliver on his or her promises.
In politics, candidates earn leverage by creating the perception that they are more capable of producing positive change than their opponent. Because politics are about 80 percent perception and 20 percent reality, the details of a politician's plans aren't the most important variables to communicate.
Money Dole is perceived as the more serious candidate. It's true that the public doesn't necessarily believe that he can cut taxes by 15 percent and balance the budget, but that's not the point. Dole looks more serious about improving the economy than Clinton. Clinton isn't even talking about cutting taxes, and he broke a previous promise not to raise taxes. Both mistakes put Clinton on his heels.
Morals Again, Dole looks more serious about improving the state of the family than Clinton. The baggage Clinton has accrued in four years between Whitewater and Paula Jones will weigh him down and prevent him from catching his re-election plane on the other side of the airport.
The only way Clinton will win is if his post-Democratic convention boost in the polls is too great for Dole to overcome before November. If Dole trails by fewer than 15 points after the Democratic convention, he will win.
Dole has leverage, but if anyone could slither out of his grip, it would be Bill Clinton. But with attack-happy Bob Dole performing a sumo wrestler's squeeze, Clinton should be thrown out of the ring.
John Hart is a Shawnee graduate student in Journalism.
How to submit letters and guest columns Letters: Should be double-spaced, typed and fewer than 200 words. Student letters must include the author's signature, name, address, telephone number, class and hometown. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
Guest columns: Should be double spaced, typed and fewer than 700 words.
All letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hail, The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For more information, call John Coller or Nicole Kennedy, editorial page editors, at 864-4810.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 30, 1996
5A
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Friday, August 30, 1996
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Trainspotting: A movie with a message?
Viewers must decide on meaning of film
By Jeff Ruby Kansan staff writer
Heroin may be fun, but it's scary. Simple as that.
That's the message Danny Boyle's movie Trainspotting pounds into the viewer's head. Amidst the controversy surrounding the film, there is no deeper significance to the film.
The debate about whether the film glorifies heroin use centers on whether the viewer chooses to focus on the fun stuff or the scary stuff. And there's plenty of both in the alternately hilarious and disturbing Scottish motion picture.
The fun stuff includes Renton, the narrator and hero of sorts played by Ewan McGregor, and the members of his gang of junkies, going to a techno dance club. Every one of them ends up flinging their clothes off and having sex with someone.
The scary stuff includes a junkie's only reaction to witnessing death as putting a syringe in her vein and emptying a load of junk into her system.
The fact that *Trainspitting* blares a trendy soundtrack through vivid
REVIEW
scenes highlighting and lowlighting the life of drug addicts seems to be the source of confusion. If we see hip, young Scots seemingly having the time of their lives to the sounds of their hero, Iggy Pop, then the movie's message must be that heroin is just plain cool.
When Renton says, "Take the best sex you've ever had, multiply it by a thousand and you're still nowhere near it," we have to wonder about the filmmaker's intentions. Sounds like a flat-out endorsement for drugs, doesn't it? But every promotion for heroin's alluring rush is countered with a pathetic slice of Edinburgh street life.
Viewers must decide which makes more of an impression on the movie-goer, Renton's honest attempts to kick the habit and live a normal life or the euphoria of diving headfirst into the filthiest toilet in Scotland and swimming in a pain-free under-water nirvana searching for his onium suppositories.
the scenes in which we get to peek into the social lives of drug addicts, and those are the scenes we'll remember. That doesn't mean we walk out of the theater looking for the nearest heroin dealer.
And there's no way we'd choose to go through the same horrifying locked-in-the-bedroom withdrawal scene that Renton experiences as part of his caring parents' attempt to help him.
But there's something deep inside us that wants to try that thousand-fold orgasm thing just once to see if it's true. For some of the more impressionable viewers of the movie, such words are all that's needed to tip the scales in the wrong direction.
**Trainspotting** is an intelligent film. Unfortunately, moviegoers are notorious for taking the wrong message from a movie, or even worse, creating a message where there was none. In this case, we are shown both sides of the issue and allowed to choose for ourselves how we feel about the effects of heroin.
Tomorrow I'll come down from a high I’ve never been on.
By Erin Rooney
Kansan staff writer
Film gives reason to express need for drugs
When I crash, I'll have to decide if I want to choose life.
And choosing life doesn't mean I'll be refusing death.
"People think it's all about misery and desperation and death and all that (expletive) which is not to be ignored, but what they forget is the pleasure of it. Otherwise we wouldn't do it," proclaims the character Mark Renton in the first scene.
Trainspotting is more than a movie that makes you think about your life. It stops you in your upper-middle class college-educated tracks and asks if you want to go over the edge.
The movie kills the innocent and lets the twisted make off with the pot of gold. It's filled with users injecting their passions, hallucinations and soliloquies from junkies trying to explain why they need their heroin highs.
But through all this intensity,
REVIEW
through the MTV-like camera angles and the thick Scottish accents, it never takes you over the line. It stops short, just like Pulp Fiction and The Basketball Diaries.
Leaving the theater I had no idea why the characters corrupted their lives. I couldn't understand their lusting for heroin. A wall was still standing between their needle-infested apartments and my house with its white picket fence.
And this contradicts everything I've heard and read about the film. It was supposed to be the first real breakthrough into the minds of addicts. Trainspotting was going to tell me why I would want to take a needle and thrust it into my arm. Well, it didn't.
It was like every 'just say no' to drugs movie I've ever seen but with a better plot and some male frontal nudity.
The reason it didn't cross the line is because it's impossible to do so. A movie can't tell me what
it feels like to be high. It can't tell me what it's like to care about nothing in life but to get my hands on the heroin that will help me survive until my next dose.
Having conversations with users can't bring you closer to understanding either.
I have freaked out over a friend coming off of a day on acid. I didn't realize he could sleep so soundly that he couldn't hear the phone ringing, the doorbell clanging or the car alarm whining outside the window.
More importantly, I didn't realize he didn't care if he woke up the next morning or not.
He was not suicidal. He is just like all the characters in the movie. He is not alive, and he isn't seeking out death. He just wants more drugs to keep him high, to keep him further from reality.
I's stuck in a reality that has not laid out its arm to experience the ultimate high, and Trainspotting didn't make me want to.
Greed drives reunions of'70s rock bands
Rv Jeff Ruhv
By Jeff Ruby
Kansan staff writer
I can't decide who I despise more: ballplayers making $15 million a year or dilapidated "70s rockers returning to packed arenas and huge bank accounts.
At least Shaquille O'Neal scores 23 points a game. But Gene Simmons is 15 years past his fire-breathing, blood-spitting, tongue-waving prime. Watching him and his Kiss cronies strut around on stage in their platform shoes singing Lick It Up is like listening to your grandfather tell a dirty joke, pelvic thrusts and all.
Was Kiss this big the first time around? Maybe I was too young to rock 'n' roll all night and party every day back in the band's heyday, but now I'm just too old to wear leather unless it'd below my ardes.
OPINION
I missed the boat both times. But this time I'm watching from the shore, glad I'm not on board.
Thousands of rock-crazed kids and Volvo-driving yuppies with Led Zeppelin bumper stickers lately have been filling stadiums for bands reuniting to play songs that lost meaning years ago. How many times can we hear More Than a Feeling when we lost that feeling in 1979?
The list of bands cashing in is impressive. To name a few of the geezers, we've been exposed to Jethro Tull, Styx (with Kansas opening, of course) The Eagles ("What do you mean, $125 to hear Hotel California?"), the Steve Miller Band, Peter Frampton and Steele Dan.
The most offensive of all reunions,
however, has to be the Sex Pistols. Lead singer Johnny Rotten admits his band mates detest one another, but they just couldn't pass up a chance at so much money.
And kids who grew up listening to their older brothers' worn Pistols records aren't missing the opportunity to see the legends live. It's quite a racket; but at least the band is forthright about its motives. They are aware that they have nothing more to offer us that they have nostalgia.
I'm not saying these bands have no right to continue performing. My disgust for them is misplaced. It's our fault, every one of us. As long as we are willing to pay big bucks to stare down at Foreigner's balding heads from our seats in the bleachers, why shouldn't they make money off us?
I'm simply scolding us all for allowing them to do so.
The honor of the flag
leitendant Colonel Don Denmark (left), presents the colors to incoming Jayhawk Battalion commander Peter M. Sittenauer,
UNIVERSITY OF MIDLANDS
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 30, 1996
7A
Semester starts with a rush of pledges
Greek groups formally choose new members
By Ashlee Roll
Kansan staff writer
The number of students who participated in sorority and fraternity rush this year remained consistent with past years.
Although the number of men who took part in the formal fraternity rush declined, the total amount including informal rush is on pace with last year's total of about 500. Informal rush is a continuous recruitment of rushees throughout
the year.
Numbers have also remained consistent for sororites. Formal rush for sororites ended Saturday when the women received their bids.
Bids are invitations that each house gives to their rushees to join the house. Before bid day each rushee and each house fills out preference cards with their top choices for selection.
Eight hundred three women signed up for formal sorority rush this fall, and more than 600 were matched to chapters.
"It is a mutual selection," said Meg Strayer, Glen Ellyn, Ill., senior and vice president for membership for Alpha Delta Pi.
About 200 women withdrew from the activities last week.
"Rush is just a chance to see what it's all about." said Strayer. "If you want to join, it's OK, and if not it's
The sorority rush process begins with visits to all 14 chapters to help familiarize the women with each one.
OK."
As rush continues, the women narrow their choices from 10 to five, and finally to three chapters on the preference cards.
"Rush is very tiresome, and a lot of work," said Robin Wilkins, Wichita freshman and Kappa Delta pledge. "It's like each house puts on a big show, but you can still get a perspective of what each house is like."
Rush concluded with bid day on the Allen Field House lawn. Each woman received her bid, and boarded a bus that took to her to her new chapter house and sorority sisters.
"Even though I have made friends in the dorms, friends come and go,"
"Rush is just a chance to see what it's all about. If you want to join, it's OK,and if not it's OK."
Meg Strayer GlenEllum,Ill., senior
Wilkins said. "But I know that I will always have these girls to go back to."
County denies plan for rezoning church
Tie vote on housing plan forces it to return to city commission
By Liz Musser
Kansan staff writer
After trying to sell its church for more than six years, the congregation at First Southern Baptist Church finally has a prospective buyer. But the proposal to turn the church into apartments isn't going anywhere until the city can come to an agreement.
At Wednesday night's meeting, the Lawrence Douglas County Planning Commission denied a rezoning proposal for the second time that would allow the church at 1917 Naismith Dr. to be converted into a student apartment complex. The church is rebuilding on West Sixth Street.
River City Development hopes to buy the church, which is south of Oliver Hall, and convert it into 11 three-bedroom apartments. This conversion would require a rezoning of the lot from single-family dwellings, to multiple-family dwelling.
The vote on the proposal was 5-5 against the rezoning, and in the case of ties approval is denied. The issue will go back to the Lawrence City
Commission on Sept 10.
The rezoning conflict stems from concerns that neighbors of the church had voiced about the increased traffic and noise the proposed apartment complex could bring.
The Rev. Tom Stallworth, pastor of the church, said the church and developers had met with neighbors about the concerns and that the meeting had alleviated some of their worries.
Stallworth said he was unable to relay this to the commission at the meeting because no time was set aside for public comment.
Commissioner Max Entrikin, who voted against the proposal, said he wasn't against the proposed construction plan but was uneasy with a permanent rezoning.
"I think the proposed buyers are good and reasonable with their intentions," he said. "But the zoning goes with the land. If someone else buys that land after them, the new construction may not be so agreeable."
Commissioner Dennis Snodgrass said that although the decision was difficult, he voted in favor of the rezoning proposal.
"Uses for a church building are pretty slim," he said. "Because it is in good shape, it would be nice to do something with the existing building."
Israel's plans increase friction with Palestine
By Neal Shulenburger Kansan staff writer
Tensions are heating up between Israel and Palestine once again.
Yasir Arafat, chairman of the PLO, accused Israel on Wednesday of declaring war on Palestinians by planning to expand West Bank settlements. The Palestinian legislative council reacted to Israel's plans by calling for an end to contact with the Jewish state.
Both were responding to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's plans to build 900 new apartments in the Jewish West Bank settlement of Kiryat Sefer. These are the first new apartments to be built for Jewish settlers in four years.
David Cohavi, Rehovot, Israel, junior, said that Arafat was overreacting to the Israeli moves.
"He's a politician, too, and he's got to look tough to his people," Cohavi said. "I'm sure that Israel is not trying to attack the Palestinians. No one in Israel wants the violence to start again."
But Cohavi also said that Netanyahu was part of the cause of the tension between Israel and Palestine.
a bad feeling about Netanyahu being prime minister," he said. "The man who is prime minister is not made for peace with the Palestinians. He had promised the right wing that he would build more settlements in the West Bank. I am not happy about new settlements be put in. I don't think that it's good for the peace process."
"I was not the only one that had
Israel's refusal to withdraw troops from the West Bank city of Hebron has also further angered the Palestinian leadership. The withdrawal is required in the self-rule accords reached in May 1994 that gave the Palestinians an independent state.
"What Netanyahu risks doing by this is restarting the Palestinian uprising, called the Intifada," Francisco said. "However, once they are stopped, it is very difficult to start political uprises. So, whether there will be more violence and bloodshed or not, only time will tell."
Ron Francisco, chairman of the department of political science, said Israel took a big risk by not moving the troops.
Cohavi said that Israel's intentions were not to intimidate the Palestinians by keeping the troops in Hebron.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Advising center makes switch
School of Education moves counsel office
By Stephanie Fite
Kansan staff writer
Rachel Thurman seeks advice from Mary Merkowitz, graduate pre-education adviser, at the new advising office for the School of Education.
Brian Flink / KANSAN
The School of Education's pre-education counseling program is on the move.
With the cost of a little paint, carpet and blinds, the pre-education counseling program has relocated from 115 Bailey Hall to 105 Bailey, which is nearly twice as large. Pre-education counselors Mary Merkowitz and Keith Smith are enthusiastic about the change.
"By virtue of the fact that we have more space, it will allow for more creativity," said Smith, Kansas City, Kan., senior. "Now the program is more user-friendly because we have more room to do advising."
There are about 100 pre-education students every semester, and the move from the 6-by-12 room was necessary for pre-education advisers to provide individual and group advising.
The newly painted, mauve-carpeted converted classroom is complete with four tables, more than 13 plastic chairs, seven file cabinets and a computer that enables Merkwitz and Smith to surf the KU system to tell which classes are open and that will allow pre-education students easier access to information about their major. The center is a success with pre-education students and has received about 100 visitors since the beginning of the school year.
Although the pre-education advising program will remain the same, the School of Education has added another adviser to the staff to help the many students who flood the office each semester.
Chris Anderson, Overland Park junior, has used the pre-education advising center three times this semester.
"I have found the advisers to be very helpful, because they seem to care about your future," Anderson said.
In the past, pre-education advising infor
mation was not as accessible, and the old advising center created an environment that was intimidating to students, said Merkowitz, Lawrence doctoral candidate.
Jill Fisher, Salina sophomore and pre-education major in special education, said that she was not aware of the center but that she planned to use it in the future.
"I expect reassurance from the advising program and believe that is what I am going to get," Fisher said.
Smart choices can prevent weight gain
By Ashleigh Roberts
Kansan staff writer
Exercise and good judgment prevent calorie counting, fat-free groceries and dessert-less meals, said Ann Chapman, Watkins dietian.
Chapman cited increased consumption in fast food, beer drinking, and late-night eating combined with less physical activity as the reasons college freshmen gain weight.
"Students coming into college trying to avoid weight gain need to have a healthy diet and make sensible decisions. There is a world of food in the dorms, but it's up to you," Chapman said.
"Every night there are burgers, pizza and other high fat foods, but they also offer fruits, salads and healthy sandwiches. The dors have to plan their menus for a large diversity of people, but it doesn't mean you have to eat everything that's there," she said.
Chapman said to look at the menus in advance and choose a meal that is balanced. If you always get a hamburger and french fries, cut the fries and try a salad. It cuts the fat grams in half, she said.
Beer and binge drinking play a big role in college weight gain. Many students drink all night and around 1 a.m. they get hungry and go to Village Inn for breakfast, Chapman
said. The body doesn't need four meals a day, and eating at night is the worst time to eat, especially because students tend to eat the worst types of food, she said.
Weight gain does seem to be more prevalent for college women, but Chapman could not pinpoint the cause. However, she said the difference in the physical activity level is an important factor because college men tend to be more active and involved in more intramural activities.
"I don't exercise as much, because I don't have time," said Anne Porter, Ottawa freshman. "So I have to be more careful about what I eat."
The metabolism also begins to slow during college, Chapman said. The exact age varies and it is sooner for women, but everybody begins to lose lean muscle tissue every decade after age 20, she said. But Chapman recommended aerobics and resistance muscle mass loss exercise to maintain an active metabolism and slow the body's natural process.
Chapman did not recommend counting calories, eating fat-free foods or strict diets.
"They can have a place in your diet, but I don't think they're magical. It can be taken to extremes and you need some fat everyday. It's essential to your diet," she said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 30, 1996
9A
Fighters attack Mexico
Dip in economy incites violence
HUATULCO, Mexico — Camouflaged fighters from a leftist group attacked troops and police in nine cities in the most widespread wave of guerrilla attacks in decades. At least 13 people died yesterday in the raids.
Nine people in this Pacific resort were killed. The hotel area
widely frequented by U.S. tourists, was spared.
Almost 200 miles away, in Tlaxacio, blood stained the walls of city hall, and bullet holes pocked the doors and nearby trees.
The coordinated raids on a dozen federal targets occurred in four states — Oaxaca, Guerrero, Chiapas and Mexico — on Wednesday night and yesterday morning. At least 28 people were wounded.
The attacks appeared aimed at defying political leaders, who earlier had suggested that the Popular Revolutionary Army, known by its
Spanish initials EPR, was a barely significant pantomime mounted by leftist dissidents or criminals.
Mexico's Interior Undersecretary Arturo Nunez said the government would prosecute the law with all rigor.
The group has called for a new constitution and broad economic changes. It outlined those goals in a meeting with journalists, including two from The Associated Press, in central Mexico this month.
No tourists were among the casualties, and some Americans appeared calm, despite the uproar.
Clinton accepts nomination
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Thousands of cheering Democrats thundered, "Four more years! Four more years!" as President Clinton offered himself as the engineer of change for the next century. "We are on the right track," he declared last night, "but our work is not finished."
Fresh from a triumphant four-day train ride through the Midwest, Clinton boasted of accomplishments achieved by changing the politics of Washington.
Clinton said his administration had made college more affordable, streets safer, water and land less polluted, tax rates lower for the middle-class, and jobs more plentiful. He said he would not insult or criticize his rival, Bob Dole, yet he took a swipe at Dole's offer to be a bridge to the past.
*With all due respect, we do not
"We are on the right track, but our work is not finished."
President Clinton
need to build a bridge to the past," Clinton said. "We need to build a bridge to the future."
With polls indicating that Americans crave civility in government, Clinton swore off campaign attacks.
As he walked to the podium, a sea of pennants waved in the convention hall. Clinton struggled to calm the delegates so he could speak about his nomination for president by the Democrats.
said. smiling.
"This must be a campaign of ideas, not of insults," he said.
"I don't know if I can find a fancy way to say this, but ... I accept," he
He saluted Dole and his running mate, Jack Kemp, for their years of service to the country, but drew sharp difference on their tax and budget plans.
He argued — if only by inference — that Dole's $548 billion tax cut plan would balloon the deficit and increase interest rates and said his own balanced budget would pay for his more modest tax cut plan.
The speech was a highly thematic, mostly nonpartisan outline of his vision for America in the next century. It included a lineup of new plans, making the argument that he is a can-do president with a fresh vision for a new optimism.
Mutts and matches don't mix
Dog starts house fire after chewing into a box of matches
The Associated Press
Gould, 22, was awakened by a
KELSO, Wash. — Officially, the cause of fire at Matthew Gould's home is listed as dog playing with matches.
smoke alarm early yesterday and saw flames in a bedroom. He said he called firefighters, doused the fire and discovered that Sadie, his 5-month-old German shepherd mix, had gnawed into a cardboard box containing matches.
to ignite and didn't slobber enough to extinguish the flame. Gould was relieved when fire-fighters believed his story.
"This is a first," said fire Capt. Mark Maker. "The cause of the fire officially is a dog playing with matches." Maker said the dog somehow chewed on the matches just the right way to cause them
"I was afraid those guys thought I was playing with matches or something," he said.
Sadie may have chewed her way right out of a home.
"We've been talking about getting rid of her for a while now and this kind of put it over the top," Gould said.
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Page 10A
Bird's EyeView
Friday, August 30,1996
Embracing the people of the
SUSAN
ALEXANDRA
AMAZON
TARRY
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
A
Bart Dean, assistant professor of anthropology, and his wife Michelle McKinley, assistant research professor at the Anthropology Museum, have shaped their lives around studying and helping the indigenous peoples of the Amazon.
professor of anthropology, and his wife Michelle McKinley have also decorated their North Lawrence home with hand-crafted pots and woven rugs.
Story by Eric Weslander
tribal blow-gun hangs above Bart Dean's desk. Dean, assistant
Although they have just returned from a six-month trip to the Chambira region of Peru, they want to make it clear that they were not tourists.
They have spent the past nine years working with the Urarina people, a tribal group numbering fewer than 5,000 who are scattered in isolated villages throughout the Chambira Basin.
they were not courts. McKinley and Dean are the directors of the Amazonian Peoples Resources Initiative, an organization dedicated to protecting the indigenous peoples of the Amazon from disease, ignorance and exploitation.
And whenever the subject of their personal involvement comes up, the conversation always returns to the Urarina people.
"WE'VE DONE FAR TOO LITTLE."
"People like the Urarina exist, and they can exist very hidden from society," said McKinley, assistant research professor at the Anthropology Museum. "They experience a lot of abuses, because people just don't know."
Bart Dean, assistant professor of anthropology
THE KU CONNECTION
Dean received his doctoral degree from Harvard in May 1995. Shortly after, he accepted a job in the department of anthropology at the University of Kansas.
McKinley resigned as the director of Cultural Survival, founded Amazonian Peoples Resources Initiative, and accepted a position at University of Kansas' Anthropology Museum.
Since coming to the University, Dean and McKinley have received support from various departments, which include grants from the department of anthropology, the Hall Center for the Humanities, and the department of Latin-American studies.
McKinley received a juris doctorate from Harvard and was the former director of Cultural Survival, a human rights organization.
At the invitation of the KU department of Latin American studies, McKinley gave a lecture on the rights of indigenous peoples and received an enthusiastic response.
Dean said that in addition to the grants, they have benefited from the expertise of many faculty members and students.
"We felt it was imperative that we organize and garner support for our cause in this country," she said. "This is possible at such a large university where there is a lot of interest, sympathy, and willingness to participate."
"There is a wealth at this university, from the department of geography to the
school of nursing, that we have been able to tan into," said Dean.
For example, Jennifer Hunter, graduate student, with a background in nursing, joined Dean and McKinley in the Chambra Basin for one month this summer.
Hunter studied the nutrition and growth of Urarina and helped develop a health survey of the area.
"You can read about it, but no matter how much you've intellectually prepared, there is nothing like actually going," said Hunter.
When Dean and McKinley returned from the Chambira Basin, they brought back many Urarina artifacts to be displayed throughout the year.
The Urarina are hunters and gatherers who are isolated in the Chambira Basin. The only way to reach their villages is by taking a boat along the Amazon river. This trip can take up to 8 weeks.
The goal of the collection and planned exhibits is to raise awareness of the plight of the Urarina people.
THE PLIGHT OF THE URARINA
Today, the Urarina people face three main threats:
A deadly form of cerebral malaria, a disease which the Urarina do not have the resources to fight, is spreading through their villages.
wo professors have dedicated their lives to helping the Urarina tribe in Peru.
CONTRIBUTED AR
The few schools that exist in the Chambira are Spanish-speaking schools. The Urarina, however,
Since they do not read or write, they are routinely exploited by loggers who float down from Iquitos, the closest city to their villages. The loggers give them
have their own language which is not written and is not related to any known languages.
chain saws, and tell them to produce a set amount of lumber. Because the Urarina have no monetary system, they receive things like cloth, bullets, and moonshine for their services. Often the Urarinate receive $100 worth of goods for more than $1000 worth of lumber, Dean
1985
The photo above and at top were taken by Bart Dean. They depict the people of the Ugarita tribe of Peru.
said.
What it comes down to is blatant exploitation," he said.
FROM RESEARCH TO ADVOCACY
What began as research for Dean and McKinley gradually evolved into advocacy.
In January 1900, Dean was diagnosed with a severe case of malaria, which he contracted from an August 1989 visit to Peru. He had been living among the Urarina people and studying their way of life for several months.
When the doctor who treated him at the Harvard infirmary became interested in his research, Dean realized that it was possible to do more than just observe the Urarina.
"We go there as students of their culture and their society, but also realize that we are in a position of power," Dean said. "It would be immoral to just be students without somehow passing on opportunities to them."
The doctor and Dean began to distribute antibiotics and other modern medicines to the Urarina, and found their health was only one of many things that needed outside attention in the village.
To help the Urarina fight the cerebral malaria and other health problems, APRI has begun a sustained health care program among the Urarina. In addition to teaching tribal workers various preventative health techniques, APRI has made antibiotics available to many of the villages.
APRI is trying to establish schools that are taught in the native Urarina language as well as in Spanish.
"We have hired an Urarina teacher and have a school going, but to really make it effective we would need at least 30 schools," Dean said. "We hope to do this over the next five to 10 years."
The Urarina have a legal title to their homelands, but their inability to read and write has left them unable to take advantage of their position.
For example, loggers could come in, clear out large portions of the rain forest and leave before anyone would say anything. Dean said.
"TO TURN OUR BACKS WOULD BE TREACHEROUS."
Michelle McKinley, assistant research professor at the Anthropology Museum
CONTINUING WORK
Through the years, however, Dean and McKinley have established trust with the Urarina people.
"They are suspicious of anyone from the outside," McKinley said. "Anyone from the outside has only brought them misery."
defend the Chambira Basin.
"I was willing to be the village idiot," he said. "That's why the people gave me a nickname which means 'white howler monkey."
Dean said that having a sense of humor was important. Dean and the Urarina people realized that, although their cultures were extremely different, they all could laugh at a good loke.
Although Dean and McKinley have gained the confidence of the Urarina people and have taken several significant steps toward empowering the Urarina, they do not see themselves as heroes.
"We've done far too little," he said. "The only real way it will work is when they can do these things for themselves."
Dean knows his personal experiences fascinate many people, but he doesn't like to dramatize the details.
"I feel much more comfortable talking about the Urarina people than I do talking about myself in a boat," he said. "I don't want to make people think I was fending off anacondas."
McKinley said that although many of her colleagues from Harvard were making buckets of money, her job satisfaction could not be quantified.
1
"I don't think I could do anything else," she said. "To turn our backs would be treacherous."
1
FOOTBALL
FCA
Kansas 35 Ball State 10
SECTION B
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1996
Fast FACTS
Ball State Kansas
Ball State Kendall
Score 10 38
First Downs 12 28
Rushes Yardage 84 290
Passing Yardage 151 198
Total Offense Yards 235 488
Punts (No./ Yards) 8 for 44.8 0 for 0
Fumbles Loat 2—2 1—1
Penalties/ Yards 6 for 29 11 for 70
Time of Possession 26:29 33:31
Kansas 35 Ball State 10
Kansas Game Notes
The game was Glen Mason's 92nd as Kansas' football coach. He passes Jack Mitchell (1958-66) for most games coached in Jayhawk history.
The win was Mason's 44th at Kansas, which ties him with Jack Mitchell for second all-time in Kansas career wins.
Tonight's win against Ball State was the sixth consecutive home opening win for Kansas.
Senior June Henley's 187 rushing yards is second on his personal list and the ninth 100-yard rushing game of his career.
EVAN BLACKWELL
secure appointee
Henley moved up to third on the Kansas career rushing chart with his 2,679 career yards. He passed Gayle Sayers who has 2,675 rushing yards.
Henley's three touchdowns against Ball State ties him with Tony Sands (28) for first on the all-time Kansas charts.
KANSAS CITY 17 HOUSTON 7
Pigskin Picks
MICHIGAN 33 ILLINOIS 9
BILL PETULA
MICHIGAN 21 ILLINOIS 3
CARLYN FOSTER
KANSAS CITY 27 HOUSTON 3
MICHIGAN 33 ILLINOIS 9
KANSAS CITY 17 HOUSTON 7
ROBERT HEMENWAY
10
7
MICHIGAN 24 ILLINOIS 10
KANSAS CITY 17 HOUSTON 7
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
INSIDE
SPORTS INDEX
Marian Washington ...3B
Scoreboard ...2B
Horoscopes ...10B
NFL this week ...6B
U.S. Open ...7B
A running start
55 7 89 0 24 52
LEFT, the 1996 Kansas Jayhawk football team enters Memorial Stadium last night for the first game of the 10th season of Kansas football. Kansas beat the Ball State Cardinals 35-10.
BELOW, Kansas linebacker Jason Thoren tackles Ball State running back Michael Blair. The Jayhawk defense held Ball State to only 84 yards on the ground and 1.38 yards passing.
Kathy Driscoll / KANSAN
Cardinals fall to 'Hawks
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
New quarterback Matt Johner and newly featured receiver Andre Carter made strong appearances in Kansas' season-opener against Ball State.
But don't forget about the veteran.
Senior running back June Henley made a return to prominence as the Jayhawk's featured back when he rushed for 187 yards with three touchdowns in a 35-10 Jayhawk win against Ball State last night before 36,200 people at Memorial Stadium.
Junior quarterback Matt Johner, making his first career start, answered some questions early about his ability to be a starter and leader of the offense.
The Cardinal defense defending the run, left itself open for the big plays in the Kansas arsenal and Johner took advantage of it.
He was four for eight with 68 passing yards in the first quarter, including a touchdown pass to senior Andre Carter, the first career touchdown for both players.
47
On the sixth play of the ensuing drive, Johner threw a strike to Carter with 2:46
Kansas took advantage of Maurice Gaddie's fumble recovery of Cardinal quarterback Brent Baldwin's fumble late in the first quarter.
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
left in the quarter for the first score of the game.
That was the beginning of a big game for Carter. The seldom-used senior caught only 14 passes for 171 yards with no touchdowns in his first three seasons.
But he exploded last night with five receptions for 66 yards and a touchdown.
"I just had to take what the defense gave me," Carter said. "They were thinking about the run and kind of left us to ourselves."
Kansas held a 7-3 lead in the second quarter when Henley scammered
He scored again a little more than four minutes into the third quarter on a three-yard run.
Rutz relieved Johner with 6:13 left in the third.
for a two-yard touchdown with 3:47 remaining.
Johrer completed 14 of 20 passes for 147 vards and one touchdown.
"I feel I did well," he said. "I did everything
the coaches told me to do."
Rutz came in and threw a 31-yard touchdown pass to John Gordon to increase the Kansas lead to 28-3.
He finished three-for-six for 51 yards.
He finished three-for-six for 51 yards. Although both Kansas quarterbacks played exceptionally well last night, Rutz felt that their competition could only improve the team's play.
"I don't think there'll be a lot of negative controversy on." Rutz said. "Matt and
I are friends and have gone through this together. We're getting used to this."
"For the most part, the decisions they made were pretty good," Kansas coach Glen Mason said. "There's definitely room for improvement."
After rushing more than 1,000 yards his freshman season, Henley shared the running load with L.T. Levine the past two seasons
But last night, Henley continued his assault on the Kansas rushing records.
His one-yard touchdown run with 12:35 left in the game tied him with Tony Sands on the all-time touchdown mark with 28. His 187 yards put him third on the list, surpassing John Riggins and Gayle Sayers.
"It was hot out there tonight," Henley said. "I was getting kind of tired, but this was the first game, and I was ready to play."
Cardinal coach Bill Lynch said Kansas was dominating.
"They beat us everywhere possible tonight," he said. "They stuffed us and they controlled the ball. Their receivers made some nice catches and they used some play action."
Despite the win, Mason wasn't entirely pleased with Kansas' performance.
"We made more mistakes than I can believe we did," he said. "We made way too many mistakes."
Henley sets the score in football home opener
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
For the first time since his freshman year, Kansas senior running back June Henley was a solo act last night.
Judging by his performance in the No.25 Jayhawks 35-10 season-opening victory against Ball State. Henley enjoys the spotlight.
Several milestones fell at Henley's feet last night. His three touchdowns gave him 28 career rushing touchdowns, tying him with Tony Sands for the all-time lead. Henley also moved to third on the Kansas all-time rushing list, passing both John Riggins and Gale Sayers, with 2,679 career yards.
Henley stole the offensive show with 184 vards on 28 carries and three touchdowns.
"I wasn't aware of it until I was two yards away from it. I was just playing." Henley said.
Kansas football coach Glen Mason said Henley's performance shouldn't be surprising to anyone who's watched Kansas football for the past three years.
"Someone asked me coming out here, 'What did you find out about June Henley?' Mason said. "June Henley's been here a long time, I know he's a good back."
Indeed, Henley's performance was reminiscent of his freshman season, in which he
rushed for 1,127 yards. However, Henley said
he's a different player now.
Henley made a favorable impression on his Ball State opponents.
"My legs are a lot stronger, and my vision's a lot better." Henley said.
"I have a lot of respect for him. He's a good back." said Ball State safety Cory Gillard.
After a slow start in the first quarter and a second-quarter fumble that led to a Ball State field goal, Henley kicked things into gear late in the first half.
A 28-yard run helped set up Henley's first touchdown, a two yard run with 3:47 left in the first half that gave Kansas a 14-3 lead at the break.
l
Henley got the Jayhawks scored again on their first possession of the second half with a three-yard touchdown run with 8:41 left in the third.
Henley got his third touchdown of the night in the fourth quarter, after senior linebacker Ronnie Ward recovered a fumble deep in Cardinal territory. The one-yard plunge came with 12:35 left and gave Kansas a 35-3 lead.
While Henley was pleased with his record-setting night, he said the win was just the start.
"I'm happy about the record, but we have a long season ahead of us," Henley said.
Steve Punne / KANSAN
26
Kansas running back June Henley slips by Ball State linebacker Aaron Garlak. Henley rushed for 187 yards and three touchdowns. His three touchdowns gave him 28 career rushing touchdowns, tying Tony Sands for the all-time Kansas record.
Y
1
2B
Friday, August 30,1996
SCORES & MORE
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
PRO BASEBALL
American League Glance,
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 74 | 58 | .561 | - |
| Baltimore | 70 | 62 | .530 | 4 |
| Boston | 69 | 65 | .515 | 6 |
| Toronto | 63 | 71 | .470 | 12 |
| Detroit | 48 | 86 | .358 | 27 |
Central Division
West Division
| | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cleveland | 80 | 53 | .601 | — |
| Chicago | 71 | 64 | .526 | 10 |
| Minnesota | 67 | 67 | .500 | 13½ |
| Milwaukee | 64 | 71 | .474 | 17 |
| Kansas City | 61 | 74 | .452 | 20 |
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Texas | 75 | 58 | .564 | — |
| Seattle | 69 | 63 | .523 | 5½ |
| Oakland | 64 | 72 | .471 | 12½ |
| California | 61 | 72 | .459 | 14 |
Wednesday's Games
Cleveland 9, Detroit 3
Chicago 2, Mjwawee 0
Oakland 3, Baltimore 0
Toronto 6, Minnesota 1
Kansas City 4, Texas 3, 12 innings
Boston 7, California 4
Seattle 10, New York 2
Thursday's Games
Late Games Not Included Detroit 4, Kansas City 1
New York at California, 10:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled
Kansas City Rosado 5-3) at Detroit Van Popel
2-6). 6:05 p.m.
Chicago Tapani 11-8) at Toronto Williams 2-1).
Cape Town
Minnesota Miller 0-1) at Milwaukee D'Amico 4-5),
7.05 p.m.
New York Petitte 18-7) at California D. Springer
4-2) 8.50 p.m.
Boston Maddux 2-1) at Oakland Telgheder 1-
5, 9:05 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Baltimore Coppinger 7-5) at Seattle Hitchcock
12-6) 9:05 n.m
Kansas City at Detroit, 12:15 p.m.
Chicago at Toronto, 3:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Seattle, 3:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 7:05 p.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago at Toledo, 3:00 p.m.
Baltimore at Seattle, 3:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Texas, 7:35 p.m.
Boston at Oakland. 8:15 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Boston at Oakland, 8:15 p.m.
New York at California. 9:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Toronto, 12:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Detroit, 12:15 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 1:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Texas, 3:05 p.m.
Boston at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.
New York at California, 3:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Seattle, 7:05 p.m.
National League Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
East Division
W L Pct GB
Atlanta 83 49 .629 —
Montreal 71 61 .538 12
Florida 63 70 .474 20½
New York 59 75 .440 25
Philadelphia 54 80 .403 30
Central Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Houston | 72 | 63 | .533 | — |
| St. Louis | 69 | 64 | .519 | 2 |
| Cincinnati | 66 | 67 | .496 | 5 |
| Chicago | 65 | 66 | .496 | 5 |
| Pittsburgh | 56 | 77 | .421 | 15 |
West Division
W 7 L Pct. GB
San Diego 72 60 .556
Los Angeles 72 61 .542
Colorado 70 61 .518
San Francisco 70 57 .435
57 61 .435
Colorado 10, Cincinnati 9
Atlanta 9, Pittsburgh 4
Montreal 6, Los Angeles 5
Houston 5, Chicago 4
San Diego 3, New York 2, 12 innings
Florida 3, St. Louis 2, 10 innings
San Francisco 7, Philadelphia 6
Thursday's Games
Lets Game Not Included
go 3. New York 2
Chicago 4, Houston 3
Atlanta 5, Pittsburgh 1
Cincinnati 18, Colorado 7
Los Angeles 2, Montreal 1
Florida at St. Louis n)
Only names scholared
Attlanta Glavine 13-7 and Bielecki 4-2) at Chicago Foster 5-2 and Bullinger 5-1) 2, 0.
San Diego Sanders 7-4) at Montreal Paniagua
1-1, 1-2, 3:5 p.m.
Los Angeles Candiotti 8-9) at Philadelphia Beech 12(2); 6-35 m.
Houston Wall 8-4) at Pittsburgh Peters 1-3)
6:25 p.m.
San Francisco Estes 2-4) at New York Hamisch
8-9) 6:00 p.m.
Florida Brown 13-10) at Cincinnati Remlinger 0-
6; 35 p.m.
Colorado Wright 3-1) at St. Louis Alan Benes
11-61, 7:05 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Houston at Pittsburgh, 12:05 p.m.
San Francisco at New York, 3:05 p.m.
Los Angeles at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.
Florida at Cincinnati, 6:05 p.m.
San Diego at Montreal, 6:35 p.m.
Colorado at St. Louis, 7:05 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Houston at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m.
San Diego at Montreal, 12:35 p.m.
San Francisco at New York, 12:40 p.m.
Colorado at St. Louis, 1:15 p.m.
Atlanta at Chicago, 1:20 p.m.
Los Angeles at Philadelphia, 7:00 p.m.
TV
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackout.)
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30
10 a.m.
USA — Tennis, U.S. Open Tennis Championships, men's second and women's third rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
ESPN — PGA Golf, Greater Milwaukee Open, second round, at Milwaukee
12 p.m.
ESPN2 — NASCAR Auto Racing,
qualifying for Southern 500, at Darlington,
S.C.
TBS --- Major League Baseball, Atlanta at Chicago Cubs
6:30 p.m.
WGN — Major League Baseball,
Atlanta at Chicago Cubs
PRIME — A-League Soccer, New York at Montreal
USA — Tennis, U.S. Open Tennis Championships, men's second and women's third rounds, at Flushing Meadow, N.Y.
WGN — Major League Baseball.
WWOR — Major League Baseball, San Francisco at N.Y. Metls
Bradley 24-0-0) vs. Simon Brown 45-5-0) for WBO middleweight champi-
New England at Miami, 3 p.m.
Midnight
onship, at Reading, Pa
ESPN — Boxing, champion Lonnie
ESPN — Roller Hockey International, Championship Game, Game One, Orlando at Anaheim same-day tape).
PRO. FOOTBALL
National Football League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Sunday's Games
Arizona at Indianapolis, 12 p.m.
Atlanta at Carolina, 12 p.m.
Cincinnati at St. Louis, 12 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 12 p.m.
Kansas City at Houston, 12 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore, 12 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 12 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 12 p.m.
Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 3 p.m.
New England at Miami, 3 p.m.
New Orleans at San Francisco, 3 p.m.
Washington DC at San Francisco, 3 p.m.
Seattle at San Diego, 3 p.m.
Buffalo at New York Giants, 7 p.m.
Dallas at Chicago, 8 p.m.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Saturday, Aug. 31
EAST
College Football Schedule
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
Friday, Aug. 30
MIDWEST
at Cincinnati; 6:30 m.
American Intl. at Rhode Island, 2 p.m.
Villanova at Rutgers, 5 p.m.
West Virginia at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.
SOUTH
Bowling at Memphis, 12:30 p.m.
Bowling Green at Alabama, 2 p.m.
Clemson at North Carolina, 2:30 p.m.
Southern Miss, at Georgia, 3 p.m.
N. Carolina A&T vs. N.C. Central, at Raleigh,
MIDWEST
Iroy St. at Alcorn St., 4 p.m.
SW Louisiana at Florida, 5 p.m.
Georgia Southern at S. Carolina St., 5 p.m.
Alia-Birmingham at Auburn, 5:30 p.m.
Louisville at Kentucky, 5:30 p.m.
Morehouse at Bethune-Cookman, 6 p.m.
N. Illinois at Maryland, 6 p.
Idaho St. at Mississippi, 6 p.
UNLV at Tennessee, 6 p.
Florida AM at Tennessee St., 6 p.
Middle Tenn. at Louisiana Tech, 7 p.
Purdue at Michigan St., 11:30 a.m.
Purdue at Michigan St., 11:30 a.m.
Kent at Miami, Ohio, 12:30 p.m.
Morgan St. vs. Cent. St., Ohio at Columbus,
Texas Arkansas at S. Illinois 1:30 p.m.
Cem Texas Tech at Kansas St. 2:30 p.m.
Illinois at Michigan 2:30 p.m.
Temple at E, Michigan 6 p.m.
SOUTHWEST
SW Missouri St. at Oklahoma St., 6 p.m.
Missouri at Texas, 6 p.m.
Sam Houston St. at Houston, 7 p.m.
Grand Valley St. at SW Texas St., 7 p.m.
Tulsa at Southern Meth., 7 p.m.
Valle view vs. Texas Southern at Houston,
2024.
Hampton U. at Clark Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Miss. Valley St. at Morris Brown, 6 p.m.
Jackson St. vs. Alabama St. at Birmingham,
Ala., 7 p.m.
FAR WEST
SOUTH
Idaho at Wyoming, 2 p.m.
Washington St. at Colorado, 2:30 p.m.
Tn.-Chattanooga at Colorado, 2:30 p.m.
Cent. Michigan at Boise St., 8 p.m.
Arkansas St. at Brigham Young, 8 p.m.
N. Iowa at S. Utah, 8 p.m.
Utah at Utah St., 8 p.m.
Boston College at Hawaii, 8:30 p.m.
Texas-El Paso at Arizona, 9 p.m.
Oregon at Fresno St., 9 p.m.
Thursday Night's College football scores
MIDWEST
E. Illinois 28, W. Michigan 20
Ferris St. 26, Ashland O
Hilldale站 20, St. Francis, III. 19
Indiana St. 48, Mars Hill I
Kansas 35, Ball St. 10
Ohio U. 44, Akron 14
W. Illinois 44, NW Oklahoma 21
Youngstown St. 28, Wofford O
U.S. Open Seeds Fared
NEW YORK (AP) — How the seeded players played Thursday at the $10.89 million U.S. Open at the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadow:
Men Second Round
Thomas Muster (3), Austria, def. Dirk Dier, Germany, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4.
Sunday, Sept.1
Andre Agugi (6) . Las Vegas, def. Leander Paes, India, 3-6, 4-1, 6-1, 0-1.
Jeff Tarango, Manhattan Beach, Calif., def. Marcelo Rios (10), Chile, 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (7-5), 6-2.
MailVai Washington (11), Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., vs. Alex O'Brien, Amarillo, Texas
Thomas Enqvist (13), Sweden, def.
Guillaume Roux, France; 6-3, 6-2, 6-3
Aranta Sanchez Vicario (3), Spain, def.
Nicole Adore, Gainesville, Fla. 6-2, 6-1
Steffi Graf (1), Germany, def. Karin Kschwend, Austria, 6-2, 6-1.
jana Novotna (7), Czech Republic, def.
Florencia Labat, Argentina, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2
Barbares Paulus (14), Austria, def. elena Wagner, Germany, 7-5, 7-6 7-5).
Karina Habsudova (17), Slovakia, def.
Natalie Dalech (27), France, 6-4, 6-2.
Martina Hingis (16), Switzerland, def.
Miriam Oream, Netherlands, 6-4, 6-4
PRO BASKETBALL
NBA Free Agent Signings By The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Dikembe Mutombo, c Denver); Steve Smith, g; Donnie Boyce, g; Jon Barry, g Golden State).
BOSTON — Frank Brickowski, c Seattle);
Greer Minor, g. Alton Lister, c.
CHICAGO — Michael Jordan, g; Dennis Rodman, f.
DALLAS — Chris Gattling, f. Miami); Derek Harper, g. New York).
CLEVELAND — Antonio Lang, f; Donny Marshall, f.
DENVER — Dale Ellis, g; Ervin Johnson, c
Seattle); Brant Stilhout, g.
*'DETROIT' - Michael Curry, g: Don REid,
Rick Mahom, I New Jersey; Olson Thurp,
Olson
GOLDEN STATE — Mark Price, g Washington). Lattore Srellweil. g.
HOUSTON — Brent Price, g Washington); Mario Elie, g-f; Kevin Willis, f-c Golden State).
INDIANA — Dale Davis, f; Antonio Davis, f;
Fred Holberg, g; Jerome Allen, g Minnesota.
L. A. LAKERS — Sean Rooks, c Atlanta); Shaquille O'Neal, c Orlando), Elden Camp-bell, f; Jerome Kersey, I Golden Ball.
MIAMI — P.J. Brown, f New Jersey); Tim Hardaway, g Alonzo Mourning, c; Gary Grant, g New York); Dan Majleer, g-f Cleveland).
MILWAUKEE — Armon Gilliam, f New Jersey.
NEW JERSEY — Robert Pack, g Washington); Vincent Askew, g-f Seattle); David Benoit, f Utah).
NEW YORK — Chris Childs, g New Jersey); Allan Houston, g Detroit); Buck Williams, f Portland).
ORLANDO — Horace Grant, f; Gerald Wilkins, g Vancouver); Derek Strong L.A. Lakers).
PHILADELPHIA — Don MacLean, f Denver); Lucious Harris, g Dallas); Michael Cage, f-Cleveland).
PORTLAND — Kenny Anderson, g Charlotte,
Dontonio Wingfield, f.
SAN ANTONIO — Vernon Maxwell, g Philadelphia.
SEATTLE --- Gary Payton, g; Sam
Perkins, f; Tereshy Hawkins, g; Steve Schef-
ffer, c; Jim Mclvaine, c Washington); Craig.
Ehlo, q-f Atlanta).
TORONTO — Watt Williams, g-f Miami).
UTAH — Howard Eisley, g, Greg Foster, f-
c.
WASHINGTON — Tracy Murray, g
Toronto); Chris Whitney, g; Lorenzo
Williams, c Dallas); Juwan Howard, f.
VANCOUVER — Lee Mayberry, g Milwaukee).
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Road 843-3826
FINE ARTS
BRING THE BANDS...
PLAN THE MOVIES...
SEE THE SHOWS...
MEET THE STARS...
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LIVE MUSIC
FEATURE FILMS
RECREATIONS & TRAVEL
SPECTRUM FILMS
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PROMOTIONS
FORUMS
JOIN SUA!
THE STUDENT ORGANIZATION THAT ENTERTAINS!
INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS:
SEPT. 3 7:00 PM FRONTIER ROOM, BURGE UNION
SEPT. 4 8:45 PM ALDERSON AUD., KANSAS UNION
1
GREAT START...
Tiger Woods, one of the most heralded golfers ever to enter the pro ranks, shot a 4-under-par 67 in his first round in the Greater Milwaukee Open yesterday.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
"I thought I got off to a really good start." Woods said. "I think it was a perfect start." After winning his third consecutive U.S. Amateur title, Woods decided on Tuesday to forego his junior and senior years playing at Stanford.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1996
CALLING IT QUITS
Randall Cunningham, after spending 11 seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles and falling to get signed by another professional team, decided to retire from pro football.
"Although it saddens me to leave, I am looking forward to spending more time with my family and pursuing other interests that have been on the back burner for some time," Cunningham said.
See page 8B
10
Fast BREAKS
Brook Shields to wed Andre Agassi soon
'We haven't
NEW YORK — Brooke Shields said she and Andre Agassi would be married in the near future.
"We haven't set a date, but we will not be one of those perpetually engaged couples," Shields said in an interview for Sunday's Parade magazine.
PENGUIN
Agassi
Shields is a
fixture at her fiancee's matches
— although that could change
as she embarks on her new NBC
television series, Suddenly
Susan.
Colts player to sponsor stock car racing team
Huiker
LINCOLN, NEB. — Former Nebraska linebacker Trev Alberts hopes to put his beloved Cornhuskers on the racing circuit.
Alberts plans to sponsor two stock cars for the 1997 NASCAR Winston Cup racing season. The cars will be painted in Nebraska red.
"I guess the longer I've been out of the university, the more I've realized how much it has given to me and my future," said Alberts, now a linebacker for the Indianapolis Colts.
The proceeds will be divided between academic scholarships and the athletic department, said chancellor James Moeser.
Nebraska athletic director Bill Byme said the university would benefit from proceeds generated by the sale of racing merchandise. He said licensed NASCAR products generated more revenue than professional baseball or football items.
Marge Schott visits Denver's Coors Field
REDS
In an interview broadcast on KOA radio yesterday, Schott said authorities should concentrate on crack, dope, knives and guns.
DENVER — Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott thinks the federal government ought to be more concerned about teen drug abuse than teen smoking.
"If I had a child, not that you want kids to smoke, I think rather than drugs I'd rather see them smoke," she said. "We smoked a peace pipe with the Indians, right?"
Schott was in Denver Wednesday to examine Coors Field as a possible model for a new stadium in Cincinnati.
In June, Schott agreed to a mandate that she give up day-to-day control of the team for 21/2 years.
She said her Denver stadium visit was the first she had made out of Cincinnati in a long time.
GR Gordon-Ross / KANSAN
"We're supposed to be building a new stadium, and it's good to see what other people have done," she said. "You have to get ideas."
BROOKLYN
Washington comes home
The Associated Press
Women's head coach returns from Olympics with golden memories
Kansas women's basketball coach Marion Washington was an assistant coach for the U.S. Women's Olympic Basketball team, which won the gold
By Adam Herschman Kansan sports writer
Three-year-old Lauren Nicole McQuay from North Whales, Penn., has nicknames for some of her favorite members of the 1996 gold medal-winning USA women's Olympic basketball team.
She could be heard this summer at the women's games in Atlanta calling out to players such as four-time Olympian Teresa Edwards, whom she calls "T," and Katrina McClain, whom McQuav refers to as "Tree."
McQuay, however, could most often be heard calling for "Mum Mum," her favorite member of the team. "Mum Mum" is what McQuay calls her grandmother, USA women's assistant basketball coach Marian Washington.
"She is the cutest little thing, and she really loves her grandma," Kansas senior guard Angie Halbleib said. "Lauren is the, not to sound cliché, the apple of her eve."
Washington said that along with the gold medal game, which was the last event of the Olympics, having her family members in Atlanta with her was the best part of the experience.
medal. Last season, Washington coached the Jayhawks to a conference championship and a Sweet 16 appearance in the NCAA tournament.
"To have my family members be so happy and so proud of what you were doing, that made me feel really good," Washington said. "I'm so thankful."
After the Kansas women's basketball banquet on April 12, which celebrated the Jayhawks' Big Eight Conference title win and their trip to the Sweet 16 in the NCAA women's basketball tournament, Washington had only a couple of weeks to finish up recruiting and taking care of her responsibilities at Kansas before she left to join the women's Olympic team in Colorado.
Several days after meeting and working with the team, the entire squad flew to Australia for two weeks of exhibition games. The team then headed to Orlando, Fla., where members trained at the Disney Institute.
"That was one of the nicest parts of our entire three months," Washington said. "We stayed in villas and had golf cars to go back and forth to practice or to some of their commercial areas. Whenever we had a break, which was not often, we could go to visit some of their places, Epcot, MGM. They had a hostess for us so we didn't have to wait in line."
After one week in Orlando, the women's team met up with the USA men's basketball Olympic team for the first time in Indiana for
exhibition games. Following the games, both teams hopped on the Dallas Mavericks' private jet and flew back to Orlando.
"Every seat in there was first class. On the plane they had fresh shrimp waiting for us," Washington said. "The weird thing is, you're walking down the aisle, and you're walking past Shaq (O'Neal), Charles Barkley and David Robinson. They're just looking up, 'How you doing, coach?' It was great."
The women's team arrived July 17 in Atlanta and started their quest for a gold medal in their first game on July 21. The crowds were enormous, and the media and fans responded to the women's game.
She coached the USA women's basketball junior team to a 7-1 record in 1983, when it lost to a Canadian team in the finals of the Jones Cup in Taiwan. Prior to that tournament, Washington first coached a team in international competition at the Olympic Sports Festival in Syracuse in the early 1980s.
"To be a part of the Olympics that were held
here in this country was really an unbelievable opportunity," Washington said. "To see so many people, for me, respond to women's basketball, I will treasure for the rest of my life. We had over 30,000 people every game we played."
Washington went through a long selection process before she was picked for the assistant coaching job.
"Having coached at both those levels immediately puts you in a certain pool with other coaches who have done the same," Washington said.
Consequently, a staff selection committee presented a pool of eligible coaches to USA women's Olympic basketball coach Tara Van-Derveer.
"I was Tara's choice," Washington said. "In the past, coaches can just hand pick who they wanted, but the committees now are very involved."
VanDerveer first approached Washington at a July 1995 Sportfest in Denver and a second time at a meeting for coaches in California.
See Coach, Page 7B
Tennis star hunts success
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
When Kylie Hunt visited the University of Kansas in Spring 1995, she had no intention of enrolling.
Hunt, a sophomore at the time, already had decided that she would transfer from North Carolina State to Alabama before her junior year. In fact, she was so sure of her decision that she called women's head tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher to tell him that she would become a member of the Crimson Tide.
"We did the best we could in recruiting Kylie when she was going to transfer," Merzbacher said. "If they choose you, they choose you, but we weren't
CAROLYN BURTON
going to quit on getting Kylie he here because she said she was going to Alabama." At the time, Hunt was frustrated with
Kylie Hunt
"Ift in to a certain degree, but I wanted to concentrate on tennis a lot more than I did," Hunt said. "I wanted to go to a school that had players that cared about tennis, and Alabama was the best choice on paper."
conditions at N.C. State, especially in her role as a tennis player.
Hunt made a final trip to ensure that she had made the right decision. The visit did nothing to change her decision, although she also planned a stop in Kansas before returning to Raleigh, N.C.
What was supposed to be a cordial visit before becoming a member of the Crimson Tide soon set off a tidal wave of events for Hunt.
"I loved Lawrence the moment I got here," Hunt said. "I had a gut feeling about KU, forgot everything on paper that led me to Alabama and decided this was for我."
"It will be hard to repeat the success of last year," Hunt said. "I just want to have fun when I step onto the court because you have to enjoy what you're doing to succeed at it."
four college Grand Slam finals in singles competition as Kansas' No. 1 player. She won singles titles at the National Clay Court Championships and the National Indoor Championships and was runner-up in the NCAA singles championship game, in which she lost a three-set match to Jill Craybass from Florida.
What followed in Hunt's first year as a Jahyawk was a season that caught players, coaches and Hunt off guard.
Women's soccer team faces rematch
Expectations will be high this year for the senior, who ranked sixth in the country at the end of last season but is projected to move into the top three once the season begins.
She competed in three of the
By Brian A. Petrotta Kans an sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
It was the first game in the history of the University of Kansas women's soccer team. But the University of Evansville didn't care. The Aces handed the Jayhawks their first loss in a convincing 5-1 triumph.
That was in Evansville, Ind.
Tomorrow, the rematch will take place in Lawrence at 1 p.m. at the SuperTarget Field, just south of Allen Field House.
Despite their loss to Evansville, Coach Lori Walker and the team have not succumbed to revenge.
"We just want to compete with
Cook, midfielder, is serving a one game suspension for a red card she received during the final game of last season. Her replacement has yet to be decided.
them. Last year we didn't compete," she said.
With the loss of sophomore Denise Cook, last year's leading scorer, the women's soccer team may have a difficult time competing against the Aces.
"Whoever is healthy and ready to be in that position will start," Walker said.
That statement sums up the situation regarding the rest of the lineup as well. Various injuries to
returning starters and impressive practice sessions from the freshmen have left starting jobs up for grabs. Co-captains Amy Dyksterhuis, Omaha, Neb., junior, and Jackie Dowell, Germantown, Md., sophomore, are expected to lead the way for the second-year program.
"This year I'm looking for consistency, and that's difficult with a young team." Walker said.
Kansas sends 10 freshmen, nine sophomores and three juniors against Evansville's nine returning starters, 14 upperclassmen and 18 returning letter winners.
Although this may seem like a
mismatch, Walker does not want her squad to sit back and let the Aces attack.
Walker said she was impressed with the intensity the young players have shown and is happy with their overall training.
"We need to come out and be ready to play hard soccer," she said. "We need composure in the midfield, to play tough team defense and not be afraid to go after them."
"We're worlds apart from when we played the University of Evansville last year and from when we will play the University of Evansville this year," Walker said.
Texas, Missouri opener kicks off Big 12 conference
AUSTIN — The eight-ranked Texas Longhorns are still getting used to the idea that when they step on their new grass field Saturday night against the Missouri Tigers, it will be a conference game.
The Associated Press
It could take Texas a while to dislodge the teams normally associated with league play, such as Rice, Southern Methodist and Texas Christian. Call it Southwest Conference on the brain.
"It seems strange," said Texas linebacker Tyson King. "Texas vs. Missouri certainly doesn't conjure up a lot of images of tradition, but we're in the Big 12 Conference now."
The two teams have met 14 times, with Texas leading the series 10-4. The first meeting was in 1894. At the time of the last meeting — a 27-25 Longhorns victory at Columbia, Mo., in 1986 — the current players for both teams were still in grade school.
But this is the era of super conferences and megaback television deals, so everyone will be getting used to games like Missouri-Texas and Kansas State-Texas Tech, which is the first actual Big 12 game, kicking off Saturday afternoon.
texas coach John Mackovic was doing his best this week to get the Longhorns whipped into a frenzy over the game. Texas is considered the favorite to win the South Division of the Big 12 this year. Missouri is in the North Division.
"When you open with a conference game, you have to treat it like a championship game," Mackovic said.
Larry Smith, who begins his third year as coach at Missouri after records of 3-8-1 in 1994 and 3-8 in 1995, said an upset of Texas would be a huge boost for the Tigers' program. Texas is favored by three touchdowns.
"It's first most important to win the games that you figure you better win," Smith said. "Next, you figure a big upset would compel you to win more of those games you're supposed to win because it shoots your confidence up."
4B
Friday, August 30, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NATIONAL PANHELLENIC CONFERENCE
Welcome to the
Panhellenic Association
Welcome Home New Members
Stacy Abernethy Suzanne Gravely Andrea Mein
Emily Agan Christine Hagen Sarah Morris
Lisa Agnew Jennifer Harms Holly Porter
Amanda Brown Christine Harris Linday Putnam
Michelle Cadwalader Judith Harek Jenna Brownolds
Joan Campbell Julie Hausmann Niela Roset
Erin Cannon Caroline Marslake Jennifer Salman
Meghan Collier Sara Korb Ama Segura
Charlotte Crane Maryhare Khoury Michelle Shields
Kimisch Ellenberger Jannie Roci Carmany Southfield
Brooke Emery Kelly Kocker Sarah Turner
Shannon Ewing Tara Lake Courtney Varnau
Melinda Fogel Tracie Mann Audrey Voorhies
Allison Gard Emily Marsh
Julie Gorman Julie McGill
Jennifer Brownolds
Angela Rosei
Jennifer Salman
Ana Segura
Melissa Piazza
Ulrich Müller
Sarah Turner
AX - the actives
U D K
D
K
THE UNIVERSITY
THE UNIVERSITY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
would like to wish the best of times to all the new members of the greek community.
DAILY KANSAN
DAILY KANSAN
U
D
UDK
Kappa Kappa Gamma
would like to welcome their new members:
Summer Ayers
Whitney Black
Ashley Bowen
Laura Brady
Noel Brinkerhoff
Megan Brouillette
Sara Cameron
Sarah Carlson
Amy Clark
Elizabeth Clendening
Katie Coughenour
Sarah Denning
Heather Dillon
Mollie Divine
Danner Evans
Kelly Feuille
Brooke Fezler
Sarah Finlayson
Ellie Flowers
Kim Hassenstab
Sarah Heimovics
Megan Hovde
Megan Hunter
Benton Kelly
Amy Konrath
Lindsay Laricks
Amy Lynch
Jill Martini
Abby Noll
Christine Oxler
Katy Packard
Courtney Paul
Melissa Pepper
Gina Pernail
Megan Redmond
Megan Rhewark
Emily Howe
Katie Ryan
Molly Schimmels
Laurie Seward
Jordan Spack
Corey Sturgis
Mari-Ellyn Swims
Jean Taylor
Rory Welish
Julie Wood
Congratulations!
the Kappas
AΞΔ AΞΔ AΞΔ AΞΔ AΞΔ AΞΔ
Alpha Ki Delta
Would like to congratulate all of its new members.
Love,
Your Sisters,
TFF
Alpha Xi Delta
Your Sisters, TTFJ
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Congratulations to the new members of ΓΦB!
Emily Dalton
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The men of Alpha Tau Omega would like to welcome everyone back to KU and to extend a special welcome to our new members.
Pi
Beta
Phi
Congratulations to all our new members!
Denise Bollier
Angie Brennan
Robyn Brooks
Taryn Burgess
Kati Crouse
Erin Deboutey
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Linda Elkins
Kathryn Ferguson
Bridget Finnigan
Keely Flantigan
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Maggie Heck
Paige Kubly
ПВФ
in AOT, The Actives
Jenn Marx
Lindsay Murphy
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Jesse Oberkirsch
Cammie Osborn
Angie Packard
Laura S. Patterson
Laura S. Patterson
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Kari Peterson
Julie Posch
Brittney Rogers
Leslie Schoenle
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Jennifer Schultz
$\Pi B\Phi$
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Monday
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Stephanie Schumm
Tiffany Seeman
Catherine Sherfey
Dawn Sterens
Libby Smith
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Brenna Sweeney
Angie Vetter
Katie Vigna
Katie Wells
Carrie Williams
Emily Wilson
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Courtney Wood
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Margie Grabbs Treasey Owen Susan Wang
Martha Ruth Nagan Jennifer Owens Robin Wilkins
Love, The Actives.
The Sandbar
17 E. 8th.
Lawrence, KS
Welcome Kappa Delta Pledges!
P i B e t a P h
Pi Beta Phi
Welcome new Members of Alpha Gamma Delta
Linda Adamson
Amy Allen
Talena Ardery
Melissa Beckman
Danielle Bedell
Courtney Bledsoe
Kathy Bittinger
Jenny Bloomfield
Jennifer Boyer
Adrienne Dopf
Kristin Ehrich
Carrie Frederick
Melissa Gallett
Stephanie Gauthier
Erica Grover
Mary Henry
Stephanie Holman
Christina Kamm
Tracy Kemp
Sheila Lohmann
Jane Lee
Kim Lindsey
Tracy Lingo
Jeanice Long
Michelle McGarran
Amy Miller
Staci Miller
Carolyn Mollett
Kate Morehead
Holly Oglesbee
Beth Powell Jennifer Pottorf Amy Rose Sarah Russell Sarah Schreck Jennifer Smart Jessica Smith Sara Smith Jennie Stockwell Katie Stoven Trish Sulivan Kristi Thompson Kelly Treffer
Love, The Actives
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. August 30.1996
5B
Greek Community
Interfraternity Council
THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
UNIVERSITY OF WARD
WASHINGTON EXC. ISSUE
P
Congratulations to the pledge classes of Kappa Alpha Theta and Chi Omega.
"The Sky's the Limit"
Waverly, Hayden and Courtney and the whole Spectator's gang
Spectator's 710 Massachusetts 843-1771
AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ
A A A I A A A I A A A I A A A I A A A I A A A I
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Eden Anderson
Lisa Bainium
Kelly Borchardt
Ginger Brown
Kimberly Burke
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True Do
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Carolyn Gill
Jaime Goode
Courtney Hibbs
Haley Higgens
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$\Pi$ ♥.
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Lindsay Salomon
Allison Scott
Julie Seigel
Teresa Serrano
Kerri Shafer
Jen Silvers
Amy Stultz
Trista Tate
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Emily Vu
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Kim Windholz
Erica Young
Your Sisters
chi Omega
Congratulations to the new members of
Pattu Aenchbacher
Maralee Gardner
Atty Aenchbacher
Lindsay Annis
Emily Arnold
Rachel Asher
Christie Bertels
Anne Bloom
Becky Brueck
Holly Chappell
Allegra DeSavoie
Ann Deveaux
Jean Dykstra
Liz Eckert
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Shea Furtong
AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ AΔΠ
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Franny Goode
Allison Guttery
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Caroline James
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Casey Kelley
Lindsey Lang
Holly Lanyaofer
We love you quvs --
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Dede Selbel
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Becky Sutherland
London, Waltham
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The men of Delta Chi would like to congratulate the new men and women of the KU greek community.
WELCOME
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The Men of SIGMA PHI EPSILON would like to congratulate their new members and wish everyone the best of luck this year.
Congratulations
Julie Adam Erin Flanagan Tara Pagano
Arand Arand Stephanie Hennecke Andrea Page
Julie Baker Jill Hinrich Erin Pickernell
Jennifer Beaver Katherine Hiobik Christina Pollastrini
Jennifer Bishler Larry Hoelting Cassidy Richards
Dana Bowne Melissa James Elizabeth Scott
Erin Bradley Jeremy Johnny Sara Sieve
Erin Breng Shirley Dilupa Jill Sinkler
Susan Buc Shirley Kelly Lori Stiglic
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Ali Cutler Lindsay Moore Emily Twyman
Melissa Daugherty Melanie Morgan Rachel Walker
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Linda Korr
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Jodie Endling
Simone Fisher
Corie Geller
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Michelle Hammer
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Tami Weisson Amy Oziass Emily Plater Jenna Samorny Sharon Schwartzber
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Cheryl Sliskie
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Lymah Kashimba
Robyn Alger
Chrisy Banstetter
Kimberly Bieckerman
Erin Brockley
Laura Bross
Annabelle Buckner
Jessica Burge
Courtney Cotter
Mimi Dang
Elizabeth Davidson
Kristin Dwyer
Amanda Eggen
Ashlee Eils
Katherine
Angela Fitch Jennifer Miller
Emily Flowergarden Amande Moorehouse
Allison Foster Carrie Newsom
Suzanne George Erica Olsen
Rebecca Halstead Dominique Pierron
Andrea Hartman Kelly Reimer
Anne Hendricks Suzanne Saxton
Rachaelle Iest Morgan Shaw
Evan Jeter Mary Shields
Jennifer Kalereng Sharmila Singh
Lindsay Kinnan Courtney Sivewright
Codi Knott Kimberly Townsend
Tara Krannawitter Stephanie Vainiunas
Colleen Mathia Kelly Whittredge
Kendra McDowell Eric Zimmerman
Jennifer Miller
CONGRATULATIONS!
1
6B
Friday, August 30, 1996
NFL
NFL UPDATE
NFL season openers prove anything goes
By Dave Goldberg AP Football writer
The last official NFL game in Baltimore was Dec. 18, 1983, when the Baltimore Colts defeated the Houston Oilers 20-10 before 18,000 fans at Memorial Stadium. A couple months later, Bob Irsay lined up the Mayflower moving vans and took the Colts to Indianapolis.
There will be 47,000 more people in attendance Sunday, when Art Modell's transplanted Cleveland Browns make their debut as the Baltimore Ravens. The opponent is appropriate — the Raiders, sometimes Oakland, sometimes Los Angeles, now back on the east side of San Francisco Bay.
This is the Mayflower FFA Bowl (for franchise free agency), the perfect way to start the 1996 NFL season.
It is a vastly different league than it was two years ago. There are two expansion teams, three clubs that have relocated (the Ravens, Rams and Raiders), and the Houston Oilers are beginning a lame-duck season before moving to Tennessee.
Modell, who plays host to 500 of Maryland's elite at a black-tie function tomorrow night, finally is beginning to leave behind the bitterness that surrounded his move.
"It's past, it's history," the 71-year-old Modell said. "I'm in Baltimore now. I know it's hard for me to say this at my age, but I feel really invigorated by being here."
However, the team is the same one that finished 5-11 last season, with no significant free-agent additions and only offensive lineman Jonathan Ogden, the first-round draft choice, to make an immediate impact.
Vinny Testaverde is inconsistent at quarterback, and 34-year-old Earnest Byner is starting at running back.
The Raiders, as usual, are surrounded by turmoil.
A week ago, John Fox quit as the team's defensive coordinator. More likely, there was a shove from Al Davis.
More significant, quarterback Jeff Hostetler is hurt again, and Billy Joe Hobert will replace him — a backbeat to last season when Hostetler went down and the Raiders lost their last six to finish 8-8. Vince Evans isn't available this week, having finally retired at 41.
But if Hostetler stays down, stranger things have happened than an Evans re-sighting — like the Cleveland Brown's moving to Baltimore.
C
Sunday's other opening games are Arizona at Indianapolis; Atlanta at Carolina; Cincinnati at St. Louis; Detroit at Minnesota; Kansas City at Houston; Philadelphia at Washington; Pittsburgh at Jacksonville; Green Bay at Tampa Bay; New England at Miami; New Orleans at San Francisco; the New York Jets at Denver; Seattle at San Diego; and Buffalo at the New York Giants. Dallas begins its quest for a fourth Super Bowl title in five years at Chicago on Monday night.
G
DALLAS COWBOYS
Dallas [12-4] at Chicago (9-7)
The state of the Cowboys as defined by 330-pound philosopher Nate Newton:
"We've got to quit whining. It's time to start playing football and quit worrying about who is here.It's time to rock and get nasty and mean."
A lot of the whining comes from Barry Switzer, who calls Dallas the thinest team in the league because of the money it has spent to sign stars Emmitt Smith, Deion Sanders, Troy Aikman and Michael Irvin, who begins his five-game suspension.
Irvin is not the only one missing. Injuries have claimed the top three tight ends, Jay Novacek, Kendall Watkins and Eric Bjornson, and Smith has a sprained knee.
Smith seems ready, although maybe not at full speed, as does left tackle Mark Tuinei, who has a sprained knee. Defensive ends Tony Tolbert, Charles Haley and Sanders will play hurt.
But Dave Wannstedt, who was Jimmy Johnson's defensive coordinator in Dallas, has no sympathy. He lost defensive tackle Chris Zorich, the emotional heart of his defense, from a unit that wasn't much at the beginning.
TROJANS
New England (6-10)
at Miami (9-7)
Drew Bledsoe vs. Dan Marino isn't a bad show, but this one is about coaches — Jimmy Johnson, making his regular-season debut in Miami, and Bill Parcels, one of the few to whom Johnson gives his due.
Both Parcells and Johnson, of course, invented football, and Jimmy is reinventing the Dolphins. He has 24 new faces on the 53-man roster he inherited from Don Shula, and five rookies could start.
Remember this: Johnson was 1-15 his first year in Dallas.
Remember also that he didn't have Marino.
"Because of all the new players, we're going to have some bumps in the road early," he said. "The last half of the schedule we'll be playing outstanding football."
Parcells, meanwhile, has had his personnel responsibilities taken away, and he is not on the best of terms with owner Bob Kraft, who berated him this week for calling first-round pick Terry Glenn "she."
But if Bledsoe comes back from an injury-plagued 1995 ... one never knows.
PITTLEPOOL
CAROLINA
The Steelers break in quarterback Jim Miller now that Neil O'Donnell has run to the Jets for $25 million, so look for the Jaguars to throw a lot of blitzes at him; they came out blitzing even in their exhibition opener.
Pittsburgh (11-5) at Jacksonville (4-12)
Under Bill Cowher, the Steelers have survived change well at running back, from Tim Worley to Barry Foster to Bam Morris and now to Jerome Bettis and Erric Pegram. Playing Miller keeps Mike Tomczak in his career slot as a backup and allows Kordell Stewart to play his multiple "Slash" roles.
They also have managed to fill holes caused by injury, the latest a torn rotator cuff that will sideline defensive end Ray Seals all season. Brentson Buckner, the other end, also will be out on Sunday.
The Jaguars have upgraded their offense with tackle Leon Searcy from the Steelers, wide receivers Andre Rison and Keenan McCardell and running back Natrone Means, although Means won't play because of a torn thumb ligament.
KC
Kansas City (13-3)
at Houston (7-9)
This is the first of 16 road games for the Oilers, who will be playing before 30,000 or more empty seats.
That is a shame because Jeff Fisher has the makings of a good, young team, led by quarterback Steve McNair and running back Eddie George. Chris Chandler and Rodney Thomas may be the nominal starters, but not for long.
The Chiefs? Same old team, a rarity these days, except for the guy they could have used in last season's playoffs -- kicker Pete Stoyanovich, obtained last week in a trade with Miami. Look for Tamarick Vanover, primarily a kick returner last year, as a receiver.
Green Bay (11-5) at Tampa Bay (7-9)
GE
A new coach for the Bucs, Tony Dungy, and a lot of new players. But Trent Dilfer remains the quarterback
The referendum to provide money for a new stadium for Tampa will be on Tuesday. A win or good showing might produce a few more yes votes, a loss, the opposite.
in an offense that still is without holdout running back Erict Rhett.
This is the first regular-season game for Brett Favre since the
Green Bay quarterback spent 46 days in rehab overcoming a pankiller addiction. The Pack carries a heavy load as the preseason Super Bowl favorite of many, but it has the tools, including pass-rushing defensive tackle Santana Dotson, a former Buc.
RCS
New Orleans (7-9)
at San Francisco (11-5)
A tradition continues. This is the fourth time in nine years that these two have opened against each other, although the previous three times it was in New Orleans. The Niners won those by a total of four points.
The San Francisco offensive line is hurting. So is the New Orleans defensive line — so much so that Brady Smith, a third-round rookie pass rusher, may play full time at end.
GIANTS
Buffalo (10-6)
at New York Giants (5-11)
Just when everything seemed fine in Buffalo, Bruce Smith began to yell about not getting a contract extension. But that is just a blip on what could be a fifth trip to the Super Bowl in seven years — and perhaps the last shot for Smith, Jim Kelly, Thurman Thomas, Andre Reed, Steve Tasker and Kent Hull.
The Giants don't look as if they are going anywhere. They have 10 rookies on the roster, no starter older than 29, and coach Dan Reeves may be on his way out.
They started last year in prime time being blown out 35-0 by Dallas, and this Sunday night game could send them downhill quickly.
Eagles
Seattle (8-8)
at San Diego (9-7)
Well, at least the Seahawks are still in Seattle and will remain so if Paul Allen can find a place bigger than a microchip to build a stadium. A good team would help, and this could be one if quarterback Rick Mirer reverses last year's slide. He has Joey Galloway and Brian Blades to throw to and Chris Warren to run.
The Chargers are the tortoise in the tortoise-hare race. They won their last five to make the playoffs last year and, like most Bobby Beathard teams, remain largely anonymous, except for Stan Humphries and Junior Seau.
But Beathard's teams are pretty good. Who else would keep trading first-round picks for second-rounders and let go of Natrone Means to keep Aaron Hayden and Terrell Fletcher?
JETS
New York Jets (3-13) at Denver (8-8)
Both teams have high expectations that may be a bit unjustified — the Jets because of the spending spree that got them Neil O'Donnell, Jumbo Elliott and some lesser-priced free agents, the Broncos because they think six new starters finally mean a defense that can stop somebody.
John Mobley, the first-round draft choice, will start at outside linebacker and could be Denver's first defensive impact player in almost a decade. O'Donnell has some targets, notably Keyshawn Johnson, the first overall pick in the draft, but there is still a long way to go.
Atlanta (9-7)
at Carolina (7-9)
The Panthers open their new building. Their team, best in expansion history, is not bad, either. Carolina
almost opened with a win last year,
losing 23-20 in overtime in Atlanta.
The offense has improved. Tshimanga Biakabutuka looks like the running back Carolina needs, and Kerry Collins keeps learning at quarterback. But the Panthers live or die on defense, where only one starter, cornerback Tyrone Poole, is younger than 28.
Adanta is 38-42 since 1991 and gim-micky, with the last of the run-and-shoot offensives and an undersized defense that gambles a lot. The Falcons added Cornelius Bennett to the defense but had Chris Doleman and Darryl Talley before him, and they weren't the answer.
C
Arizona (4-12) at Indianapolis (9-7)
Vince Tobin makes his head coaching debut against an Indianapolis team whose defense he molded. He does it with a team that is either:
—Desperate, because it is starting rookies Simeon Rice at defensive end and Leeland McElroy at running back barely a week after they signed.
— So laden with talented rookies that Rice and McElroy are good enough to start barely a week after they signed.
The Colts have high expectations after almost getting to the Super
Bowl last year. Lindy Infante is the new coach and needs quarterback Jim Harbaugh to have another season like 1995.
CLEVELAND PACIFIC
Detroit (10-6)
at Minnesota (8-8)
The Lions won seven consecutive games last year, making the playoffs and saving Wayne Fontes' job. But the operative numbers are 58-37, the score of the wild-card game in which they lost to Philadelphia. They also beat Minnesota 44-38 last year, an indication of what these two teams are about.
Both teams are hurting at linebacker. Pepper Johnson was brought in to spell the injured Michael Brooks in the middle after Detroit let Chris Spielman leave as a free agent. The Vikings lost outside linebacker Ed McDaniel with a knee injury early in camp and brought in Dalrymple, who also is hurt.
V
Philadelphia [10-6]
at Washington (6-10)
Both have designs on playoff spots and could raise their sights if the Cowboys continue to fall.
The Eagles will have Rodney Petee at quarterback, bruised knee and all, and the Redskins will play Gus Frerote, leaving Heath Shuler on the bench with bruised feelings.
This begins a big season for Washington coach Norv Turner. He doubled the Redskins' wins from three to six last season but needs more progress to please the impatient Jack Kent Cooke. Ray Rhodes, on the other hand, was coach of the year last season just for getting the Eagles back above 500.
TIGERS
Cincinnati (7-9)
at St. Louis (7-9)
Two teams that hope they are on the way up. The Bengals have to be save Dave Shula's job.
This is the regular-season unveiling for the Bengals' Ki-Jana Carter, who missed all of last season with a knee injury. But more important to Cincinnati may be another No. 1 overall draft pick, defensive tackle Dan Wilkinson, who needs to play up to his potential.
The Rams started 4-0 last year, then fell apart, largely because of turnovers.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 30, 1996
7B
Graf advances in Open despite family worries
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Top-seeded Steffi Graf battered Austria's Karin Kschwendt 6-2, 6-1 yesterday in her rush toward the defense of her U.S. Open title.
With the 52-minute victory, Graf moved into the third round, where her next opponent will be Natasha Zvereva of Belarus, a 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 winner over Japan's Ai Sugiyama.
In an interview published in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung yesterday, Graf said she considered skipping the U.S. Open because it coincided with the beginning of her father's tax evasion trial in Germany.
Graf said a painful left calf muscle also made her consider withdrawing from the U.S. Open.
Peter Graf, who for years acted as his daughter's manager and has been in jail since August 1995, and family tax adviser Joachim Eckardt are accused of evading taxes on $28 million of Steffi Graf's income between 1989 and 1993. Both men face up to 10 years in prison if convicted.
In a battle of former Grand Slam tournament champions yesterday, Spain's Sergi Bruguera defeated Michael Stich of Germany, gaining a third-round berth.
Bruguera, who won the French Open in 1993 and 1994, ousted the 1991 Wimbledon winner 6-3, 6-2, 6-4.
kicking off Day 4 at the National Tennis Center.
Also winning second-round matches yesterday were third-seeded Thomas Muster of Austria, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 over Germany's Dirk Dier; No.13 Thomas Enqvist of Sweden, who downed France's Guillaume Raoux 6-3, 6-2, 6-3; Arnault Boetsch of France, 7-8-6-6, 6-3, 6-1 over Switzerland's Jakob Hlasek, 7-6, 7-5, 7-6, 9-7, 6-0 over Spain's Alberto Berasategui.
Capturing women's second-round matches were No. 7 Jana Novotna, No. 14 Barbara Paulus of Austria, No. 17 Karina Habsudova of Slovakia, Italy's Rita Grande, Austria's Sandra Dopfer, Petra Langrova of the Czech Republic, Belgium's Els Callens and Russia's Elena Likhovtseva and Anna Kourriukova.
Despite the big smile and the friendly banter with the crowd Wednesday night, Neville Godwin wasn't having fun. Michael Chang wouldn't let him.
"It's pretty tough to play against a wall, you know," Godwin said of his 6-1, 6-3, 6-1 second-round loss to Chang, the No. 2 seed in the year's final Grand Slam tournament. In another night match, Vince Spadea of Boca Raton, Fla., defeated Germany's David Prinosil 6-2, 1-6, 6-2, 6-4.
Emmitt Smith hopes to play against Bears despite injury
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — Emmitt Smith predicts he'll play Monday night against the Chicago Bears, and the Dallas Cowboys running back gets to test his tender knee today in his first practice since Aug. 17.
"I feel very good about my chances Monday night," Smith said Wednesday. "I'll know for sure in the next couple of days, but I believe I will be able to play."
"I think they are going to give me the ball as long as I can stand up."
Since Smith suffered a strained left knee ligament in the second quarter of a preseason game against Denver, Cowboys coaches have hoped that he would rebound as he always does from injury.
"He's a tough son-of-a-gun," said Joe Brodsky, running backs coach. "We always expect him to heal fast. But you always wonder if this is the one time he won't be able to play."
The Cowboys' offense is built around Smith and his ability to run between the tackles.
Quarterback Troy Aikman normally loosens up defenses with passes to wide receiver Michael Irvin and tight end Jay Novacek, then deals the ball to Smith. Irwin is suspended for five games, and Novacek has a bad back.
S Smith said
Bears coach
D a v e
Wanstedt, a former
Cowboys assistant,
probably
is planning his
entire defense
around stopping
Smith.
E.S.N.
Emmitt Smith
"I expect ol' Dave will have that line of scrimmage crowded trying to stop me," Smith said. "But he better look out. We still have Kevin Williams, and Deion Sanders can stretch a defense, believe me."
Smith didn't work out on Wednesday because of a soggy practice field but said he'd work today.
"I feel much better," Smith said.
"I'm much better than I was on Monday. If I think I can't do the job, I won't go on the field. But I believe I'll be there. You don't want to miss an opener, particularly when it's on a Monday night."
Last year, Smith dashed 60 yards for a touchdown on the third play of the game on Monday Night Football, and the Cowboys beat the Giants 35-0. Smith finished with four touchdowns and 163 yards on 21 carries.
Coach
Continued from Page 3A
Washington said VanDerveer talked to her about what would be necessary to develop the team and program. After the California meeting, VanDerveer telephoned Washington at home to give her the news.
"I remember I was just sitting up in bed, and when she was telling me I was thinking about, first of all, about how unbelievable God is, because when you least expect it, you can get an unbelievable blessing," Washington said. "I definitely was very honored, but I was spiritually moved."
Washington was later approved by the USA basketball staff selection
committee, and then the U.S. Olympic Committee. She said she didn't want to get her hopes up about being a part of the women's Dream Team.
"I didn't talk about it," Washington said. "I don't even think I mentioned it to my family or anyone early on."
Washington said that one of the worst experiences of the Olympics was the Centennial Park bombing. Washington said she slept through the explosion and was awakened afterward by her family.
"I was amazed," Washington said. "It was so disappointing because so many things were going well, and to have somebody try to tarnish it, it was really sad. It was senseless."
In the gold medal game, the USA team faced Brazil, the last team to
beat them in the final seconds of the 1995 World Championships.
"The last game was one of the greatest matchups that anyone could have put together," Washington said. "Everyone was going nuts about women's basketball. To me there's always been a specialness about the women's game; it's just that people would rarely give us a chance."
Kansas senior guard Tamecka Dixon said Washington was not just representing the U.S. team during the Olympics.
Although the coaches did not receive a gold medal, they did receive a ring representing their accomplishments. Besides the ring, Washington
"She was also representing us out there, so it was a great feeling to see her on the sidelines," Dixon said.
brought several valuable experiences to Kansas.
"I think that there's a mentality and a physical capability that I experienced with these athletes that I will look to push for from my own players more," Washington said. "There's an overall attitude that I will always have about what women are capable of doing. There are are no limits to where we can go and what we can achieve as skilled athletes if we're totally committed."
After coaching Kansas to one of its best seasons and her Olympic experience, Washington finally will get a well-deserved vacation.
"I think it's an honor for us players to play for such a great coach," Halbleib said. It's obvious we have one of the best coaches in the nation."
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We here at the University Daily Kansan are looking for eager little girls and boys to help us with our day to day activities. There are some openings for Account Executives that still haven't been filled. If you have some gaps in your schedule and some gaps in your resume, call Karen Gersch or Healy Smart at 864-4358.
8B
Friday, August 30, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Club soccer aims to build on past wins
By Kerry Hillard
Kansan sportswriter
A group of 26 women gathered in Robinson Center to learn about a club that will turn them into kicking and screaming balls of adrenaline.
"When you're playing soccer, the adrenaline gets pumping," Rojaf said. "You can be the quiestest person that never looks for trouble, but once you get the ball, you'll be taking it down."
Women's soccer club coach Carlos Rojaf said that soccer seemed to bring out the violent side in his players.
Women's club soccer held an informational meeting yesterday to discuss the coming season. The meeting not only was about getting pumped up and scoring goals, but also it was about having a good time.
Club president Kristin Fulford, Chicago senior, said that in club soccer, fun and friendship went hand-in-hand with competition.
"We're a group of friends who go out and have fun, but we're serious when we get out on the field," Fulford said. "We play to win."
The club's serious attitude toward competition is apparent in last season's record and accomplishments.
The team's only two losses came at the National Competition in Austin, Texas, where it finished second in the open division.
With strong leadership from the upperclassmen and a hard work ethic, the team plans to return to nationals. It also has six scheduled games and may attend tournaments in Colorado and Nebraska.
however, the team will have to do it without Bettendors, Iowa, sonhomore Rosi Mauch.
Mauch tore her anterior cruciate ligament in last season's Big Eight Conference tournament. Since then, she has undergone surgery and daily therapy workouts. Mauch will have to watch from the sideline this season.
In injury isn't the only thing eliminating players. Mauch said that the team had lost some players to other schools and to the Kansas varsity soccer team.
Unlike the club team, varsity soccer has tryouts and limited playing time. With club soccer, everybody stays, and everybody plays.
Even though club soccer is a more relaxed atmosphere, Fulford said that the team still deserved recognition.
Seeing an advertisement in the University Daily Kansan, Renee Low recognized the opportunities in club soccer. New to the team, the Tonganoxie sophomore is ready to get back into the game she loves.
"I played on the boy's team in high school because there was no girl's team," Low said. "I've always played soccer."
With its new and veteran players, the team hopes for a successful season.
Practice will be 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday. The team will practice at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa St., Tuesdays and Thursdays. The first game is scheduled for Sept. 21.
Club dues, which cover transportation, new uniforms and competition fees, are $40. For more information, call Kristin Fulford at 865-0898.
The Kansas softball team filled the holes in its coaching squad this week.
By Cameron Heeg
Kansan staff reporter
Florida State alum fills assistant post
Former Florida State standout pitcher Marla Looper started Monday as assistant coach, and Carla Marchetti will take the new secondassistant position.
Softball team rounds out coaching staff
the 1991 and 1992 seasons with Crowder, a junior college in Missouri. She led Crowder to the junior college nationals with an MVP performance.
Kansas originally tried to recruit Looper as a player, but she played
Looper transferred to Florida State in 1993 and played there her junior and senior years. In 1993, she went 20-1, picked up two wins in the regional championships and allowed four hits in a 2-1 defeat of Kansas, which advanced Florida State to a first team All-South Region selection.
After winning regional and conference titles in 1994, she helped lead the Lady Seminoles to a seventhplace finish in the College World Series.
Looper feels that her championship background at Florida State will add to the coaching staff.
"I knew of the winning tradition at Kansas," Looper said. "I love what is going to happen to the Big 12 Conference. It is great knowing that this fairly young staff can be molded and primed to compete at the ultimate level."
Before coming to Kansas, Looper was an assistant at Iowa State in 1995, where she specialized in pitching and catching. The Cyclones finished at 17-28, and Looper was forced out after the resignation of former Iowa State coach Deb Kuhn. She is sure Kansas will provide the
"I am really excited about the team," she said. "We are going to focus on being a team, winning as a team, losing as team, going through the ums and downs as a team."
The second assistant will have various duties on the field, said Tracy Bunge, Kansas softball head coach. The assistant also will be in charge of travel, clinics and meetings.
Carla Marchetti now holds the newly formed second-assistant position. She played at Illinois at Chicago and moved to Northern Illinois, where she was an assistant for the past three years.
Football fan plans suit in Giants snowball fight
The Associated Press
HACKENSACK, N.J. — While most people charged with throwing snowballs during a raucous football game last year pleaded guilty, paid their fines and left the incident behind them, Jeffrey Lange decided to fight.
The Readington, N.J., man, who was arrested after an Associated Press photo of him throwing a snowball made him a symbol of unruly fans, pleaded not guilty to the charge, hired a lawyer and sat through a trial in East Rutherford Municipal Court. He lost the trial and was ordered to pay $650 in fines and court fees.
Lange, 26, appealed the fine, but Bergen County Superior Court Judge Gerald C. Escala on Wednesday upheld the fine and Lange's April conviction on the charge of improper behavior.
Lange was one of thousands of fans involved in a sometimes vicious snowball fight that almost caused the New York Giants to forfeit their season-ending game against the San Diego Chargers on Dec. 23.
Giants officials and the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority offered a $1,000 reward for the first person to correctly identify Lange
from the AP photograph, which showed a man who apparently had just hurled a snowball from the stands.
Several people, including Lange's ex-wife, came forward and named Lange.
Lange's attorney, Robert Ballard, Jr., asked Escala to suppress Lange's admission to the state troopers who arrested him at his home on Dec. 27. Lange apologized to the troopers during the ride from his home to East Rutherford and, according to court testimony, said he did not realize throwing snow-balls was a big deal.
Ballard argued that without the confession, which he said was given'improperly, there was no proof that Lange threw a snowball.
Escala said there was no doubt in his mind about Lange's guilt.
Ballard said Lange still was prepared to proceed with his lawsuit against the sports authority because the agency held him up to public ridicule and ruined his life.
Fifteen people were arrested, and 175 people were ejected from Giants Stadium for throwing snow during the barrage that left 15 people injured. Chargers equipment manager Sid Brooks was knocked unconscious by a flying snowball.
Three-time Pro Bowl quarterback retires
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Randall Cunningham said yesterday that he will retire from pro football
The announcement was not unexpected.
Cunningham was released by the Philadelphia Eagles after 11 seasons and was not picked up by the St. Louis Rams.
The St. Louis Rams was the only team that Cunningham wanted to join. However, when he became a free agent, the St. Louis Rams did not seek to sign him.
The three-time Pro Bowl quarterback planned a news conference for Friday in Chicago.
"Although it saddens me to leave, I am looking forward to spending more time with my family and pursuing other interests that have been on the back burner for some time," Cunningham said.
He recently signed on as a studio analyst with TNT.
"I just don't have it in my heart to play anymore," he said last week. "I don't need to play football until I'm 38 years old — and I'm not criticizing anyone else for doing that. I just didn't need to do it."
"I just don't have it in my heart to play anymore."
randall Cunningham retiring quarterback
Cunningham, a second-round draft choice for the Eagles in 1985 out of Las Vegas, Nev., ended his career with the NFL record among quarterbacks for rushing with 3,632 yards on 677 carries. He also completed 1,874 of 3,362 passes (55.7 percent) for 22,877 yards, 150 touchdowns and 105 interceptions.
"Randall was one of the most exciting quarterbacks in NFL history," Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie said in a statement. "During his 11 years in Philadelphia, Randall was the cornerstone of the Eagles' franchise and brought many great moments to fans in Philadelphia, as well as across the NFL."
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Nap-room ales needed on Wednesdays 12:30 - 2:30 p.m.
Call 842-5155 for interview. EOE
200s Employment
Child care, part-time. 11:30-1:00 M-F. Call Sunshine Acres Preschool at 842-2232.
BabySitter, $4.00/hour, our home, very gentle.. todd.
MVP MWF or and, or TRF 814-8565
Long John Silver's. Help wanted. All shifts available:
Call 841-2900.
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
205 Help Wanted
Lost Car
Gymnastics teacher needed at Starstruck Dance Center.
845-365-503
Auto Plato Carwash now accepting applications for Auto Plato Carwash, service order writeup Apply at 2528 Four Wheel Drive
part-time help needed in busy doctor's office. Morning preferred. Call 749-1303
Herbert C. Hodes, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
Cleaning: Part-time openings mornings or early evening. 16:30-bear周夜. Above wage. wage.
I need a reliable serious-minded yet fun-loving person to care for my 2 year old girl. 3-3 days per week 1:30-11:30 p.m. call 749-2313
ence, limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper will be of equal opportunity basis.
Male or female receptionist wanted.
Must be a MWF able. No phone calls please
Apply in person online at www.mwf.com
Now hiring cooks, utilizes hot and cold prep. No experience necessary, will train. Apply in person. Sufian
Taco Grande is for lunch for 1hrs. Also prep cook.
Apply at 834 Frontier after 2 p.m.
Lake Quivira Country Club is now hiring for server positions. Call for an interview. 613-891-4821.
Experienced Painter needed for new, custom homes
Full-time preferred with own transportation, 814 0787
www.hardyscapes.com
400s Real Estate
samy/Kitchenkeeper for 3 kids, 2:30-3:00 M-F. Must
have a 40+hr plus free room and extra se-
cure furniture.
Now hire cooks, utilities hot and cold prep. No experience will train. Apply in person. Sirtino Job Number 1015. Warehouse 378.
Lawn care company help working individual for mowing crew. PT w/flexible hours. 843-6320
PT Lauger Store-Clear & Stockton County close to A&S Quiver. Good for right person (815) 603-9242
Part time office help needed and professional attitude and appearance. Call University Photography at 843-5279.
Sunrise Garden Center is looking for full or part time fall landscaping help. Apply in person, 15th & New York; Any questions call 843-2004
A
The Dance Gallery has immediate openings for a babysitter, MWF 10:30am and instructors in the early morning (10:21am) at 140219.
*Total Fitness Achelic Center hiring for morning child care position. Inquire at 832-0818. Ask for Charlene.*
United Child Development Center. Has opening for Rest Adele's. Hours are 10:30 a.m.-minimum wage. Call 842-543-2795.
United Child Development Center has openings for Firefighter positions. Call 843-8292 or stop by 843 Vermont St. 506.
Recycle the Kansan
205Help Wanted
Teacher aides needed 7:2-1 or 6:M-F. Apply at Children's Learning Center 205 N. Michigan EOE
Wanted: Motivated, reliable, outgoing photographers/rep sales. PT apply at Picture This 1119 Mass.
Classroom Assistant needed at Raintree Montessori School. Montessori exp. prof. W train. Will $1250/ml. Late afternoon assistant, 3:15-5:30 M-F $6.25/hr. Transp. req. Call 43-6800
Artist Model1-needed(female) 18 or older, levelheaded, good work for the right person, serious calls only please. 843-427 after f, for details interview.
Attention Art Students
I need an skilled experienced person to mount and frame rock rune and roll art. Will pay or trade art.
Before and after school teachers now being hired to work 7.9 a.m. or 11.0 to 6.0 p.m. M-F. Great experience for education majors. $5.75/hour. Apply at Stepping Stone, 1101 Wakaura.wa.
Couple seek person(s) for daycare of our 2-year-old daughter in our house. on bus route 821 and Kasold area. All hours available. Prefer KU students. 749-0045.
Evenings
Faculty couple w/zwwe teenager need helpPrepare meals Mo.Thurs., some light housekeeping, & run errands. Ten to 12 hw/kw. $6.50hr. Must have own transportation, #274-2788(events)
First Savings Bank seeking a part time branch teller,
Saturdays are Monday to Friday 11 a.m. 8 p.m. and
Saturdays are Sunday 10 a.m.
Looking for fun, energetic girl to babysit four children Friday nights and some Saturdays. Must have references and own book *Wonderful Pay, 749-3011*
part time farm hand needed. Experience with live stock and/or farm machinery preferred. Must be reliable. Flexible hrs. 887-6124 or 887-6605 evenings only. Ask for Brenna or leave message.
Part-time help needed for weekends beginning immediately
Sat 9:30 and 8:00 and Sat 11:30 and 8:00. Must be responsible
for cleaning office and organizing files.
SPRING BREAK 97 EAN CASH!
BOOK FAST! HIGHEST COMMISSIONS! TRAVEL
FREE ONLY. 13 SALES! CALL FOR FREE
NONUSPUNCH IASH 1-800-426-7710
Student Hourly Office Assistant with computer skills to manage office work. Pride Fridays 8:40 AM, Midweeks 12:40 AM, 1:40 PM at 113 West Harrow. Household responsibilities may include:
Journalism Student) Great part time job opportunity. Internationally known news agency needs
the following: *Analyze news stories* *Write articles* *Prepare content for website*
Attention Students
Attention students.
Students must be in hiring SAFERE drivers for the
someone. Must be having clean driving record
and must have 824-604-9245.
Cartoonist P.T. Looking for a highly creative, hard worker to assist professor in development of a daily cartoon in area newspaper. May possibly book to deal book. Great experience! Call T.I. before 8 p.m. to set up interview.
Cartoonist P-L Looking for a highly creative, hard worker to assist professor in development of a daily cartoon in area news paper. May possibly lead to book deal. Great experience! Call T.J. before 8pm, m. to set up interview.
FEMALE GRAD STUDENT room & board in exchange for housekeeping & child care for 12 yr. old girl. Must be honest, have integrity and good attitude about life. Contact phone 93-7577 to set up interview, need ASAP.
RIL
205 Help Wanted
Therapeutic Heronboarding of Lawrence needs volunteers to work with people with disabilities and other developmental needs.
SPRING BREAK '97- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH, & GO FREE. BACK IN HI SUPPLEMENT ORGANIZERS to promote trips to Cancun, Jamaica. Log in for updates on Journaling on America #1 & Student Tour Operator.
ATTENTION STUDENTS. Local Branch of Nat. Cat.
36 PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JOCO.
applied up to **99.25**.
AASP School, cond. apply only JOCO.
(913) - 381-676. (1-300) 6:30 mpm or up.
Part-time work for general office work plus showing apartments and answering phones. 10-20 weekday hours available. Must be Kausse resident enrolled in KU at least halfway, have a GPA at 2.0 and major in business, accounting, or related field. $6.00/hour. 841-5797.
Phone Center Reps wanted for growing inbound/outbound call center. PT & FT shafts, 6q-12milimeter. Must have nice phone voice, be detail oriented, responsible, reliable, and able to work as soon as 2000Lab hours. I call, or 850 calls for directions
GRAPHIC ARTS
Customer Service. Need one self-motivated, sharp-dressing, energetic individual with good communication skills. Good customer service manual training in KC. TCpa metro requirement In Your Face Graphics 325 Ponderosa Downtown
Part Time or Full Time Retail
Must have upbeat personality to become part of our BEST OF COLLEGE TEACHERS. Must be able to flexibly work to work around your college hours children or school. Great for retired individuals. Room for growth. Call The Best of Kansas City at (815) 633-2040.
Retail Sales/Small-Business
Looking for person for internship in our company. The Best of Kansas City. Communication skills/Outgoing ability/Working hours/weekends & evenings available. Room for Growth. Call The Best of Kansas City at (816) 274-3050.
Shipping position open. Starting ASAP 68 per hour, 20 hp per week. Afternoons M-F. Must have own transportation. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and/or resume w/3 references and copy of class schedule to: EEL PO Box 104, Lawrence, KS 69044.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
Bucky's Drive-In 9th & Iowa
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part-time employment. Flexible hours, half price on meals, above minimum wage. Openings on the noon, evening, above minimum wage. Apply in person between 10am-5pm. Thank You!
Immediate Opening for Conference Assistant with Work-Study eligibility. MS Word and Excel 6.0 knowledge along with strong oral and written course. skills required. Flexible work schedule is desired. Flexible work schedule not to exceed workstaff hour maximum. Fax or send resume to ASKAssociate PO Box 3858 Lawrence KS 69046. Fax 91-8341-8388
Brookside Learning Center in hiring part-time teaching assistants. Opportunities include experience in model early intervention program working with children who are at-risk for developmental delays, children who have disabilities, and children who are typically developing. Contact information: 856-0022-AAEOE. For more information, call 856-0022-AAEOE.
205 Help Wanted
Lookout self motivated person for part-time position at
Seaworks Airport. Fueling and parking aircraft with
them from the airport on weekdays, 10.15 hours per day.
Apply Hitchrick, Lawrence Airport Mon-Thur. 8 Am to 4 PM. No
charge.
Kitchen staff needed at Mass St. Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse food prep and line cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. Starts at $5.00 an hour up to $7.44 an hour after 8 months when includes profit sharing and commissions. Amounts from Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse office, 5am to 4pm, Ft. Pkwl 719 Mass (Upstairs above Smokehouse)
Student Hourly/Office Assistant, Research & Training Center on Independent Living, University of Kansas. Provide a KI minimum of 6 hours. Complete application and obtain job description in 4089 Dole Bldg. kU campus. Application deadline: 9/29/06 For questions contact Debbie McAfeery or Lyne LeFis. 864-4059. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.
STUDENT CLIENTIAL ASSISTANT I Deadline: 8.03000
Salary: $4.75 per hour, M/F 2-500.00, T & TH 8:00-
10:30am. Duties include typing, filing, and performing
all assigned clerical duties within Office Services,
perform receptionist duties on a fill-in basis processes all
photocopy requests, provide office staff with photo
sets, sets up meetings, etc. To apply, complete an application available at the Computer Center Rm. 202 EOE/AA EMPLOYER
"CASH IS KING"
Flyer Distribution
on near KU campus.
$6/hour.
Contact Bob 816-561-9099.
Student Hourly Position Available. Duties include: data entry, photocopying, filing, distributing mail and correspondence. Other duties as assigned. Must have worked as a clerical assistant in an office for at least one year. Must have good command of English language and knowledge of grammar, spelling and punctuation. Must be able to communicate effectively with students. Must be able to work 24 hour blocks of time, 20 hours per week. $5.50 an hour. Apply in person to Sandy, Provost Office, 2308 Strong Hall, 864-4944. Designation is September 3, 1996.
University of Kansas Parking Department has several openings for student field operation. Hours available are 7am to 6pm, Monday through Friday. Knowledge of the location of campus buildings, streets and parking facilities of the University of Kaskan, as well as knowl of the parking policies for students will train. Must be able to read, write and comprehend the english language. Must have accurate time piece and a valid driver license. Must be a current KU student in appropriate employment. DBL out an application at the parking office and set up interview. Call 844-7275.
PART-TIME POSITIONS CITY OF LAWRENCE
METER READER-Reading water meters & accurate recording of amounts of water consumed. HS GradedG. Possess valid driver license & provide own vehicle. $8.17*12/12hr, 20hr.wk. flexible.
TELEPHONE OPERATOR-HS Grad/Grad and some
experience. 87-65 119-4100, Noon-
Monday Friday.
Complete application by 09/06 at Admin. Services, City of Dearborn with Massachusetts, Lawrence 82601 EOE4M EOE4M
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 30, 1996
205 Help Wanted
MICROCOMPUTER SOFTWARE SUPPORT - Student position: 7.40 per hour; 20 hours per week, Deadline: September 13th. Required Qualifications: Enrollment in at least six credit hours at KU; working experience with microcomputer applications; excellent oral and written communication skills, and ability to complete assigned tasks with a minimum of supervision. Preferred Qualification: Master's degree in computer fields, some experience with training or tutoring, and at least two or more years of Course work remaining at KU. To apply, contact Carol Daniels (8644) 306-4995, course advisor, or Teresa Willems between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm through Friday. The University of Kansas is an EOA Employer.
$20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week Walk-ins welcome!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
TUTORS WANTED!
Naismith Hall is looking for tutors in all subjects.
If you are interested in being a Naismith tutor give Crystal Johnson a call at 843-8559 between the hours of 10:00a.m. and 6:00p.m., also feel free to stop. Our address is 1800 Naimth Drive.
Project Coordinator 75% Time
The Work Group on Health Promotion and Community Development, Institute for Life Span Studies, is seeking a 76% time program assistant to provide coordination of project activities for the Community Toolbox: An Information Database and Exchange Computer Network. The group will also conduct a contingent renewal予 upon grant funding. Salary range: $17,000 to $19,000yr based on experience. First consideration given to applications received by September 11, 1996. Complete position description available upon request. Please send letter of application, vita, and names, and phone numbers of three referral officers. Please contact University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 68045 (913) 864-4649. The University of Kansas is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.
The University of Kansas Natural History Museum is looking for undergraduate and graduate students to fill two temporary positions assisting with the PEET workshop in September. Both position begin immediately and will conclude approximately September 20, 1986 to April 4, 1986 depending on experience and qualifications.
Technical Assistant:Assist with technical set-up of workshop to include: hardware/software set-up, testing and maintenance user support. Required qualifications include working knowledge of common hardware set-up; be familiar with both PC and Mac products; experience with Windows, internet software. Prep yourself for a background in hotbed experience with user support. Must provide completed application resume.
Clerical Assistant: Assist with workbook implementation and logistics to include: word processing, filing, receptionist duties, running errands. Required qualification: Bachelor's degree in information technology or word processing software; valid driver's license; experience with common office functions. Preferred qualification: Master's degree with scientific meets. Must provide completed application for position.
Please contact the Natural History Museum-PEET Workshop, Amanda Sitzes, 602 Dye Hall, B484-321.
FALL SEMESTER OPENINGS
- Local Branch of National Corp filling 36 Entry level positions in Lawrence and JOCO.
- To apply call JOCO. office
Part, full time flexible schedules. No exp nec. training
(913) 381-9676
Up to $9.25
(from 1:30-6 p.m. only)
M. A.D. and Assoc.and equal opportunity Co.
◆ Up to $9.25
◆ A.A.S.P. scholarships-
cond. apply
EVENING SUPERVISOR
BPI Building Services is looking for a dependable self-starter to supervise our evening and weekend custodial teams.
Qualified applicants should posses leadership, training, and motivational skills along with an eye for detail.
Approx. 25-30 hours per week, Sunday - Thursday, start times vary.
Starting wage of $7.00 per hour, on-site transportation provided.
Interested applicants should contact Mo at 842-6264.
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
205 Help Wanted
Yacht Club Now hiring Cooks Day/Weekend Shifts Apply to 930 Wisconsin
Ad Pagination
$8-hour depending on ability to produce
hourly ~approx 5 hours/day Mon-Fri.
The University Daily Kansan is looking for Macintosh proficient people capable of working on Quark XPress in a fast-paced, progressive newspaper setting.
You'll use a Macintosh computer to build pages and individual ads for the Daily Kansas by using pre-formatted Quarktemplates.
Accuracy and dependability are crucial qualifications. We're looking for capable people with problem solving abilities who can take responsibility while gaining expertise on cutting-edge technology. QuarkXPress experience is a must. Additional experience with Adobe PhotoShop is a plus.
You will become familiar with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that is common in professional advertising, publishing, promotional and design agency environments.
The Kansan is an award-willing newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation.
Call Justin Knupp at 864-7665 between 1 and 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
We are currently searching for an Academic Program Coordinator to develop and implement an academic program for the students at Naismith Hall, a private student residence hall housing Kansas University students since 1967. The Academic Program Coordinator (APC) will work with a residence unit of 450+ students to facilitate academic progress, encourage good study skills, and promote an environment of intellectual inquiry.
Required Qualifications: At least one year of residential group living Enrollment at KU as a graduate student or upperclassmen in good standing.
Preferred Qualifications: Residence hall living experience. Supervisory experience. Working knowledge of educational programming. Knowledge of commercially-available computer applications.
Compensation: This is a half-time (20 hours per week) position which runs until the end of the academic year. All candidates must be able to commit three evening working with hall programs per week to the position. Hourly rate is $7.65. Meals are also provided when our Cafe is open and serving.
How to Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; and a resume to Academic Programming Coordinator, c/o Nalsmith Hall, 1800 Nalsmith Drive, CSU Santa Cruz, CA. Your description will be available at the Nalsmith Hall Front Desk for interested applicants.
Application Deadline: Applications will be accepted effective August 26, 1996 until position is filled.
EOE/AA/MFH
CUSTODIANS
BPI Building Services has immediate openings for the following custodial positions:
- Mon.-Fri. 8p.m.-11p.m.
&Mon.-Thurs. 5:30p.m.-8:30p.m.
& Mon.-Thurs. 7p.m.-10p.m.
- Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
- Sun. 9a.m.-12noon
- Sat. 7a.m.-11a.m.
- Mon.-Fri. 6a.m.-8a.m.
Custodial positions are perfect part-time jobs for students and those looking for supplemental income. Approx. 15 hours per week in an independent working environment. Self-motivators should call 842-6264 or come in to apply.
1
bpi
BUILDING SERVICES
A DIVISION OF BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
225 Professional Services
939 Iowa (Hillcrest Shopping Center/Behind Appliance Plus)
225 Professional Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake DUIS & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
-Free Consultation
235 Typing Services
ALLAN M. BELL A ASSOCIATED
IMMIGRATION LAW CLINIC
USA (819) 425-1400 USA
(819) 425-1400 Toll Free
USA (819) 365-2355 FAX (819) 421-1724
Workers Compensation, Personal Injury, Businesses Hole, Total
Move to Mexico Hole
Move to Mexico Hole
Call Jacki at 832-8444 for applications, term papers,
these dissertations, transcripts, etc. Satisfaction
will be given to any who is not able to send a
reply.
Immigration NOW!
New Law Benefits! Do You Quality?
* Transportation Work Vans • Permit Renewal
• Medical Clearance • Health Inspection
* Hawkeye • Helms • Adoption • Traits • Law
* GREEN CARTS • All Immigration Matters Workshops
Employees! 1 + HELP + EXEC. TRANSFER
For affordable typing call Kyle at 749-1404
X
305 For Sale
**Typing Services.** Rough drafts, proofreading, final drafts. Affordable rates. Muse Enterprise, ask for details.
The law of offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-5116
Beds, desks, lamps, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice 903 Mass.
For Sale Honda $80 Elite, white, runs excellent, $500,
o.b.o. B42-7249
300s Merchandise
1000 Yamaha Radian 600 rad. Low mileage. Superb condition
$2000; Call 804-412-102.
KU Special pentium 100 for $800 Pentium 60 $650 1-913-
941-3223 called calls accepted.
FOR SALE: TL-82 calculator. Exactly like new, perfect for $500 841-3090
Machos classic $100, Apple personal Laserwriter LS
8200, & new CD-ROM 748, ca713-183.
Schwimm top model road bike. Recently reconditioned, $250 or best offer. Bike 814-904-690, 8pm-pm.
Schwin top model road bike like reconditioned $250 or best offer
model 814-0947 5pm-9pm
for Sale: Gibson w/d electric, excellent condition. $250
p.r call (913) 835-3012, leave msg, or (913) 835-3105.
Beautiful old rectangular dining room table with 800 Mission-style chairs. In good condition. $800, 843-2863.
FLASHY 1980 Mazda RX-7: Low miles on rebuilt engine. New belts, plugs and breaks; $1100. Call for Josh at 331-3455.
Mountain bike $326 Bridgestone w/ Manitou shock
equipment. $149 Bridgestone 757. Cras clip
cledges. pledges $75. 749-0065.
Fonder Squier Electric Guitar $300
in the USA (975) 814-3454 for both
women. Call (集配) 911-845-3454
Gottstein's Auction. Perry, KS 507-5149 Sale every Sale am. 1.9 lt, 1.1 m². E of Perry on Hwy. 14. Lumber, poultry, rabbits, eggs, RT vehicles, household goods, furniture, tools, etc.
488 DX, 8 M RAM, 500 MB hard drive, full page Genius BW monitor, great for desktop publishing, 250 MB Colorado tape backup. bkup W1, 3 Dos 6.2, $500, call 841-0947 5pm-9pm or 864-4526
340 Auto Sales
1983 V. W C.G.T. MLE XLNT, Rura GREAT. $1700
O.B.O C.WALL 414-8620
1985 Honda Accord LX, 2-door hatchback, has AC,
1985 Honda Accord LX, 2-door hatchback, has AC,
blue. Very well maintained. 850, 1655, 805
1995 Ford Probe GT- Black, has all the extras-Cd player, sunroof, tinted windows, 5-speed, 22,000 highway miles, 816,800, 842-7875.
360 Miscellaneous
**OPEN BOTTLED WATER**
We're open 5 gal. per customer. Your container. As long as you are with vouchers in Water Wheel Cottage, an optional Water Mass St. Bridge, Mon-Fri, Noon-Quam 841-1096.
FREE BOTTLED WATER
100
400s Real Estate
Two rooms for rent. Close to campus. $200 per month each. Contact Vance J84-22238.
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
405 For Rent
405 For Rent
One Bedroom Dorm Units in great locations 748-926 or 84L-525
2 Room bedroom share kitchen and bath. $25 unless inlcd at 1312 Vermont. Call 845-1815. Ask for Libby.
One BR. Dorm units in great locations: 740-4225 or 841-
5255
3 bedroom, 2 bath, at Bradford Square. On KU Bus
route, cata lugs allowed. Private deck or patio. B411-8448.
205 Help Wanted
5 seconds from KU. Bannit of house. 2 big rooms plus own bath & kitchen. $280/month + 1/5 utilities. Call 841-8127.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. 3 spaces from campus "fourplex"
fairly new appliances and carpet. 410 call: 814-545-4
home office.
Study Sub-Lesse $550 am, all utile, included Balcony, floorboards, 2 floors from campus, Cats on balcony, desk, chair.
Available immediately completely remodeled studio apt. at Brady Apts. 1530 Tenn. Heat, water are paid $300/mo. no. Pets: 841-3192.
Studio Apartment Near KU
2 Bedroom Mobil Home
841-6254
Utilities paid room for non-smoking females. 2 blocks
Square. 800-260-9511. WD use. Off street parking.
800-260-9511. $441 a month.
CLASSPY SECURE 1-3 bdrms now available on East side of beautiful downtown Eudora, just minutes form KU. Call Charles Gruber at 766-3400 for appt. $375-$550 refs & deposit.
Spaces, affordable furnished 2 bedroom apartment w/
Bathroom and dressing room, some utilities paid;
Bathroom with tile flooring; laundry room;
Berkeley Flats Apartments
Call & ask about FREE RENT
on a 2 BR. Apt.
843-2116
11th & Mississippi EHO
1&2Bedrooms
COLONY WOODS
1301W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
On KU Bus Route
Exercise Room
Indoor/OutdoorPool
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• On bus route
• Ask about our rental bonus
9th & Avalon 842-3040
ASK ABOUT FREE RENT AT TRAILRIDGE
- NEW CARPETS
* *NEW APPLIANCES
* *NEW LIGHTING FIXTURES
* *NEWLY PAINTED WHITE CABINET?
Get all this with the same great location on the KU busline.
Excellent studio, 1,2,or3 BR ants, gas & water paid
2. 3, & 4 BR Townhomes with FP, carpent and laundry room.
843-7333 or stop by
2500 W. 6th today!
EHO
TRAILRIDGE
225 Professional Services
Flexible hours to build around your student needs.
205 Help Wanted
Earn the money you need and help a great cause too! Great jobs for college students calling on behalf of SADD (Students Against Driving Drunk)
Flexible hours to build around your student needs. $6 an hour plus possible commission. To apply come to 619 Massachusetts suite B on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3:30 to 9:30 pm or call 843-5101.
545
Minnesota
225 Professional Services
Beau's Import Auto Service Quality care maintenance & repair
SAAB·VOLVO·Toyota and other fine imports
Off of 6th st.
next to The Yacht Club
DUCCOVER
405 For Rent
842-4320
3 bedroom 2 bath apartment with 2 balconies. Close to campus on bus route. Dishwasher, cable, laundry & pool facilities. $630 per month plus electricity. Call 852-0085.
A large, quiet.netk remodeled 2 bedroom bbmmt,
no吸烟. WD hook-ups. AC. On bus pass.
8335 a month. ALL UTILITIES PAID.
603 West 2nd Terrace. CRIE 515 GW
4053 Windsor, ALL CITYS PAID.
1603 West 2nd Terrace, Call 842-5257.
MasterCard
Quiet, spacious, affordable furnished rooms and 1 bed room apartments. 2 blocks to KU. Some amenities, patio
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old-fashioned personalized service."
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
MASTERCRAFT
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
VISA
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
Orchard Corners 16th & Kasold • 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-5255
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood
tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am - 4pm
At some locations
Mastercraft
842-4455
4
Equal Housing Opportunity
405 For Rent
SUNFLOWER COOPERATIVE 100-Term. a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation; democratic control $199-249; online education; close to campus. Mass. Call by 814-348-1844.
AVAILABLE FOR FALL
WORKSHOPS on 17210 EAST
BAYS, nw. Washington, D.C.
All appliances, i.dw. & microwave.
No $190 per room. Owner Manage
workshop. Contact info:
GRAYSTONE
on our
or
Apartments that fit your lifestyle
AUGUST RENT FREE
3 BR TOWNHOMES
FREE USE FOR ONE YEAR OF WASHER & DRYER
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1102
430 Roommate Wanted
Gay male has room to rent in East Lawrence home. $250 includes utilities. Call 847-7741. Non-smokers can.
Grad student wanted, 5-min. walk to KU, 1743 LA, $250 per month, plus $45 utilities, beautiful spacious house w/洗衣 and dryer plus AC, 823.9785
Female roommate wanted. Great apartment one block from Kansas Union. A serious college student, please. Call 843-3035 for more info.
2 guys, girl, and a dog looking for a roommate. Rent would be $180 a month plus utilities. Near bus route. Call 843-8314 for an interview.
Roommates to share three bedroom duplex. $350 per room, plus 12 waterless.不用付费. Pool. Bathroom. Kitchen. Warehouse.
Roommate wanted to share 4 bedroom townhouse. One block from Kansas University $182 + ggs. Call 331-0494.
Need responsibility, NS female to share nice 4B/2 Bath
townhouse in N Lawrence. Downpayment. Aug & Sept.
paid. $200 utils W/D, on KU bus route. No pets. Call
838-310.
How to schedule an ad:
2 roommates needed for beautiful 5 bedroom new house, to live with male graduate. Wife only home on weekends (need student). $275 and 13 utilities. Call Joe 841-1347.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIIX KANSAN
Need F to share nine 21st room ASAP WT/id, new-
Central Air Condition, heat quiet. Must love Case! Prefer 24 yrs. + NS B22 $50/mo. + 12 uil + dep. Lease thru May. Heather 841-5038.
Housemate wanted. Great neighborhood. 2 clean, quiet, non-smoking grad. students looking for similar person to share spaces in new west Lawrence.
Set, 30, $250, 13 utilities. Call 865-3630
Need M/F to share nine 2 BHR house with female roommate Lg bath, FP, garage, dwt, dishwasher, big yard. Np pleases please. Location in W. Lawrence near Harvard & Kasson; 2400m² + 1/2 units. No deposit. Sept. ret
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The University Daliy Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
J
10B
Friday, August 30, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Baseball's wild card not such a wild idea
Leagues enter thrilling times
By Ben Walker
AP Baseball Writer
Just wondering, but what happened to those people who worried that the wild card idea would wreck baseball?
One month left to go, and what a month it should be. At least 16 teams are still in playoff contention — thanks to the once-dreaded wild card — plus the New York Yankees are trying to avoid one of the biggest collapses ever.
"A lot of people thought it was going to be like hockey, but it hasn't gotten to that," Los Angeles shortstop Greg Gagne said. "I think there are a lot of fans in a lot of cities that wouldn't be as interested in baseball if there wasn't the wild card."
"There's a lot of excitement about it in a lot of cities. Maybe that's what's quieted the critics," he said. "I was sort of a purist. Get the top two teams in the divisions, and let
them go at it. But it gives teams in a tough division a chance."
Along with the pennant races, the individual chases;
Albert Belle is aiming for 50 home runs again, which is what it will take to beat out Mark McGwire, Ken Griffey Jr., Andres Garraraga and others trying to win the homer title.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
SINCE 1906
NATIONAL
LEAGUE
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE
Alex Rodriguez is in line to become the youngest MVP ever at 21. Andy Pettitt and Pat Hentgen are dueling for the AL Cy Young Award, and debates about the managers of the year are wide open.
SINCE 1906
NATIONAL
LEAGUE
PROFESSIONAL NATIONAL LEAGUE
- Perhaps a couple of late moves, like the one this week in which the already pitching-rich Atlanta Braves outbid their World Series rival Cleveland Indians for starter Denny Neagle of Pittsburgh, and the possibility of a long-awaited labor settlement between players and owners.
All in all, it adds up to maybe one of the most thrilling months in recent memory. And much of it is because of the wild card races, which may give the likes of Frank Thomas, Roger Clemens and Henry Rodriguez — All-Stars whose teams might have dropped out of sight otherwise — a chance to play into October.
Not bad, considering how many people hated the concept of a wild card.
It will diminish what the regular season means, some claimed. It will drag out the playoffs forever, others said.
Well, considering last year's drama in the AL series between the wildcash Yankees and Seattle and this year's scramble in both leagues, there aren't too many complaints anymore, are there?
Rodriguez, who has set a Montreal
record with 33 home runs, is glad last year's wild-card experiment stuck around. The Expos went into the weekend trailing the Braves by more than 10 games in the NL East, but they were at the top of the wild-card pack.
"I don't know why people last year were crying about it and saying negative things," Rodriguez said. "Maybe they didn't understand it, didn't understand how the wild card race would work. This year I think everyone is comfortable with it, everybody understands it, and everybody likes it.
"We have a good team, but we've been competing for the wild card all year. We know Atlanta is going to be up there, and the wild card is our only chance. They're 11 games ahead of us, but we still have one of the best records."
The Dodgers are close in the races for the NL West title and for the wild card. Reliever Todd Worrell said having an extra playoff spot was good for the game.
"It's the same thing with anything that's new," he said. "The first time you have to make an adjustment and accept change, there's always going to be some resistance. But I think it proved out to be more positive than negative."
The Boston Red Sox know it. Once thought to be completely out of any contention, which led to speculation that they might trade Clemens, their comeback from a 17-game deficit in the AL East began when they took aim at the wild-card spot.
Helped by a surge in which they won 22 of 28 and with the Yankees' ongoing slump, the Red Sox closed within six games of New York for the division title and within two of Baltimore for the wild card.
"It makes it fun and makes it interesting," Red Sox outfielder Mike Greenwell said. "That's what you play for — a shot at either winning your division or making the playoffs, and we've got a shot right now. We couldn't have said that a month ago."
The Yankees, meanwhile, merely are trying to hang on and avoid a repeat of California's collapse in the AL West last year. The 12-game edge they once held against the Orioles was trimmed to four, and the Yankees are facing a week at home in mid-September in which they will play Baltimore three times and Boston four times.
New York is coming off a threegame sweep at the Kingdome that included a brawl in Wednesday night's 10-2 loss to Seattle. David Cone's return from surgery in May for an aneurysm in his right shoulder may even be pushed up a few days to this weekend.
"We'll find out if this club is together," Yankees manager Joe Torre said. "Right now, though, we're just not pitching through a game, and we're not hitting to our capability."
Gubicza rehabilitates prepares for season
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The last thing Mark Gubicza wants as he rehabilitates his broken leg is for anyone to say he won't be back next year in Kansas City's starting rotation.
if the Royals made the playoffs, he'd be in October.
"Everything will be normal," Gubicza said. "I'll do my normal work over the winter. I'll be ready to go. I'll pitch again."
When Paul Moliitor's line drive hit him in the leg on July 5, the 34-year-old right-hander was having the worst season of his career with a 4-12 record and a 5.13 ERA. Since then, he's had plenty of time to read, watch television and contemplate a career he's certain isn't over yet.
If the Royals re-sign Tim Belcher, that would probably mean four starters were already set — Belcher, Kevin Appier, Chris Haney and rookie sensation Jose Rosado. Gubicza could then be battling about four others, including up-and-coming
"I watched a lot of National League games on TV because we'll be playing them in interleague play next year. I wanted to get a feel for how to pitch to those guys," said Gubicza, a member of the Royals rotation since his rookie year in 1984 and the only member of the 1985 World Series champions still on the team. "I kept myself occupied."
prospect Jim Pittsley, for the fifth spot.
"I've never been scared to compete with anybody," said Gubicza, who became the Royals all-time strikeout leader earlier this year. "It will be an interesting spring. My family enjoyed having me around this summer. But they still want me to be out there pitching."
After Molitor's line drive broke the bone in his leg, Gubicza spent about three weeks not having any fun.
"At first, it wasn't all that painful. I still had the adrenaline of the game going," he said. "But the next day it was pretty bad. I wouldn't want to have to go through those first three weeks again."
Last week he had a walking cast put on the leg. He's almost well.
"Now I'm able to ride the bike, walk around without crutches and do a little body work," he said. "It feels good. I ride the bike 25 or 30 minutes a day, and exercise my shoulder and make sure it's in shape and ready to go. There's no pain at all."
When the Royals return from the 10-game road trip they start tonight in Detroit, Gubicza will be almost as good as new.
"I'll be throwing the ball and shagging around pretty soon," he said. "When the guys come back from the road trip, I'll be pretty much a normal ballplayer again.
"Ihope so anyhow."
Feeling groovy
RADIO FUNKY JAMS
George V. Nostrand, whose stage name is George by George, plays his guitar in front of Malott Hall. Nostrand is back from recording in Minneapolis and played outside yesterday in preparation to go back on the road soon.
Edmée Rodriguez / KAN3AN
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Focus on other people's money and you'll bring more into your pocket. Find something pretty to sell in September. Take out a loan to replace an old household item — or to fix up an old house — in December. Romantic dreams come true the old-fashioned way in January.
Virgin (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7. A friend may consult you about money problems, Suggest an opportunity, but don't fall for a sob story. A kick in the right direction may be all that's required. Your true love could teach you a valuable lesson. Save time for that.
Today is a 4. The pressure you've been under will ease soon. Meanwhile, you still have to color within the lines. Consider it a learning experience, which it is. If a loved one stubbornly insists, acquiesce. You have a better chance of winning that way.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8. If you get into a jam today, call reinforcements. A teammate may not want to follow your agenda. If enough of your friends back you, you may get what you want anyway. Take the offensive! You shouldn't have any trouble in romance. You're particularly compelling today.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 6. The pressure's still on,
but it's getting better. You may have finally proven you can do what you said you would, without supervision. If you haven't, that's the goal. Tonight, physical exercise is recommended. You've got energy to burn.
Today is a 7. You are sharp as a tack today. Although you still don't have as much money as you'd like, you should be able to get closer to a big goal.
Capricorn (Dec, 22-Jan, 19)
Capitolium (Dec. 22, 19)
Today is an 8. A problem at home demands your attention. If you don't know what it is, take care not to create one. Also, be careful of sharp objects and people with hot tempers.
A spontaneous trip might be a good way to avoid confrontation.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Write down your intentions with passion and irrefutable logic. But first, make sure your data's accurate.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6. Keep an eye on your valuables today. For example, don't walk away with your wallet on the counter. Spontaneous activity could be expensive! To increase your income, do something you were doing before. Use your experience and your old contacts.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
NO
Today is a 7. Instead of arguing with reality, use this extra shot of adrenaline to achieve a level of excellence you've only imagined. A stellar performance today will not be forgotten. Unfortunately, neither will an angry
outburst. Self control is the key.
**Taurus** (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8. If you're in retail, expect your customers to be in a hurry. Prepare so you'll be ready.
Also, be careful in traffic. Don't let another person's emergency become your problem. Your mate has plans for the evening. Go along quietly.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Today is an 8. A friend might try to talk you into doing something outrageous. If it doesn't conflict with work or school, and it's not too expensive, fine. Remember that a real friend would never ask you to do anything unethical. If in doubt, don't do it.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 7. Confusion in the workplace could be to your advantage. If there's information you need, ask a person who's under pressure. Use new skills to push through an awkward situation. Don't try to figure it out. Just do what you've been taught.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8. Travel is favored today but it may be difficult to accomplish. Finances are short, and responsibilities are heavy. Maybe travel planning is a better idea, unless you're lucky enough to be on vacation. Go along with your roommate's wishes to save time.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
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