Basketball: The men's team defeats Nebraska 85-65 in Lincoln. Page 1B
****************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
Beer: Lawrence drinkers participate in a toast raised 'round the world. Page 3A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
MONDAY, MARCH 3, 1997
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL. 103, NO. 109
Quick LOOK
Escaped cow shot, killed after tranquilizer fails
KU
Alum
A loose cow was lured into a small wooded area and killed behind an apartment building yesterday in the 1500 block of Lynch Court.
Lawrence police said the cow escaped from a trailer in the 1400 block of West Sixth Street, ran along the north side of the road and crossed to the south side of the street.
Two attempts were made to tranquilize the cow, Sgt. Mark Warren said, but both tries failed. The police then asked the cow's owner for permission to kill the cow before it did any damage or hurt someone.
Nathan Cameron, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said he was taking out the trash from his apartment on Lynch Court when the cow stepped between him and the dumpster.
Cameron said he went inside after watching the cow wander behind his apartment. He then heard two shots about 30 minutes later.
"It was walking slowly and drooling," Cameron said. "A cop came up behind me and told me to get out of the way."
"I looked out the window and saw a dead, brown lump." Cameron said.
Caught out the window and saw a dead, brown lump, "Cameron said. Police said the cow tore through a fence at Pinckney Elementary School, 810 W. Sixth St. The cow was killed about 5 p.m., about three hours after it escaped from its trailer.
Victim drops charges; police release suspect
Information received by Lawrence police helped close the investigation of a rape that occurred Feb. 24.
"It would not have been solved as quickly if it had not gone public," Sett. Susan Hadl said.
Police said they had identified and interviewed a suspect in a rape in which a man had worked his way into a 25-year-old Lawrence woman's apartment on the pretence of selling magazines.
Hadi said a suspect was interviewed after police had been contacted by several people who saw media reports of the incident. The suspect was released after questioning.
The victim declined to press charges, but she has two years to change her decision if she wishes.
Hadi said the case was closed, and she did not think the district attorney would prosecute.
The rape occurred about 6:30 p.m. Tuesday after the victim invited a man posing as a magazine salesman into her apartment in the 800 block of Michigan Street. They talked for about an hour, and the man alleged raped her and then left, Lawrence police said.
—Kansan staff reports
Rescuers hunt for missing after floods sweep Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Rescuers used helicopters, hovercrafts, boats and dogs yesterday to search for 11 people still missing in flash flooding that washed away cars and homes.
At least two bodies were found after Saturday's flood, which was caused by up to 1.0 inches of rain from the same huge lines of thunderstorms that devastated Arkansas.
The same storm system killed seven people in Kentucky, three in Tennessee and one in Mississippi, in addition to 24 killed by tornadoes in Arkansas.
Hundreds were forced from homes in Ohio and Kentucky, and more were evacuated in West Virginia. Kentucky National Guardmen were sent to 15 counties in that state, and armies were opened as shelters in 17 cities.
The water was flowing toward the Ohio River. Mike Cellahan, a National Weather Service hydrologist, said the river could have its worst flooding since 1964 along a stretch from Madison, Ind., to Tell City, Ind., which includes Louisville.
The Associated Press
THE Lure of Lawrence
(USPS 650-640)
Thousands of former KU students still call it home. Some don't know where else to go.Others just don't want to leave.
Story by Ashlee Roll Illustrations by Beth Moore
It's a Saturday night in Lawrence. The room is small but crowded in the house on Rhode Island Street. The combination of dirty Doc Martens and melted ice has coated the concrete floor with a slick brown slush. The smell of stale beer permeates the house.
As people gather around a red barrel, fighting for an opening to fill their plastic cups, the bass from the stereo upstairs pounds through the ceiling. The host of this party, Greg Renck, a 27-year-old bartender, winds his way through the guests with practiced ease.
"Great party," calls one bleary-eyed guest, who looks about 19.
This is a familiar scene for Renck, who has lived in Lawrence for nine years. He gradu-
lived in Lawrence rotaed from the University of Kansas in 1944 but still lives, works and plays in this small college town.
"This is a way of hanging on to youth," Renck says, changing the CD on the stereo. "I had so much fun in college that I associate these feelings with Lawrence."
KU grads and former students who did not graduate make up about 34 percent of Lawrence's population.
Renck is not alone
And there are lots of them.
Each year, men and women who should move or to careers, families and responsibility instead decide to stay in Lawrence and to keep reliving their college years long after they have walked down the Hill.
According to the University of Kansas Alumni Association, there are 9,082 KU graduates and 15,877 people who attended KU but did not graduate who continue to live in Lawrence.
These people make up about 34 percent of Lawrence's population of 71,721. Fold in the current KU enrollment of 23,230, consider the median age of Lawrence — 24.7 years old — and the dimensions of college culture in this Midwestern town get a little scary.
1
$$
\ggg \ggg \ggg
$$
years after he graduated from KU with a degree in English. Originally a resident of McPherson, population 13,000, Renck now calls Lawrence home.
Renck seems content waiting tables and bartending in a Lawrence restaurant — three
"When I graduated, I never considered moving home," Renck said. "I've been here nine years. Lawrence is my home. I've really fallen
in love with this town — especially after living in a smaller Midwestern town."
Sandra Wolf, a clinical social worker for Counseling and Psychological Services at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that
See LURE, Page5A
UMB
Women cap Senior Day with win
Team looking forward to post-season tourneys
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
Tears of joy and sorrow were shed on Saturday when the No. 11 Kansas women's basketball team celebrated Senior Day with a 92-69 victory against Oklahoma.
Shelly Canada, Angie Halbleib, Patience Grayer, Tamecka Dixon, and Jennifer Trapp say one last goodbye in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks defeated Nebraska in their last regular season game Saturday afternoon at the field house.
The celebration was much the same as the men's one week earlier. Before the game, fans showered the seniors with flowers. After the win, the north-end net was cut down. The seniors praised their coaches, teammates, family and fans, and the team was presented with the Big 12 Conference regular-season trophy.
"I love history, and I love firsts," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "For an institution to have both its men and women win the last Big Eight Conference and the first Big 12, that's part of history. I figure that there will be others after us, but there will never be another first."
Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
"In the beginning, our emotional level was very high from the ceremonies," Dixon said. "I felt that we did a good job of trying to remain focused throughout the game because it was really hard to do. I was the main one talking about not crying, and I couldn't even walk through the tunnel."
For the team's seniors — guards Tamecka Dixon and Angie Halbleib and forwards Shelly Canada, Patience Grayer and Jennifer Trapp the day was filled with emotion.
Grayer said she refused to cry because the team still had more to accomplish.
"I was the only one that said, 'I'm not going to cry,
I'm not going to cry,' before the game, and I
didn't cry," Grayer said. "I should've cried. It was a very emotional day for me and my teammates.
"We have to stay focused because looking ahead, there's a lot to be done. I'm excited because we're still going, and we've still got games to win or hopefully make this season even more special." Graver said.
but one game in her college career, thanked her parents during the postseason ceremonies for supporting her and the team for the past four years.
Trapp, a Lawrence native who has started all
"My parents have been to every home game and have been to all but two road games during my career," Trapp said in front of 4,025 fans. "I love my coach. I love my teammates, and I love my family. So let's go to the Final Four."
Fraternity suspended after hazing allegations
Freshman pledge unconscious, bruised
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
A 19-year-old freshman pledge of the fraternity was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital after he passed out in the fraternity's living room, Lawrence police said. The freshman arrived at the hospital unconscious and had several cuts and bruises.
Reports of hazing at Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, 2000 Stewart Ave., have prompted the University of Kansas to suspend the fraternity pending an investigation of incidents that occurred Wednesday night and early Thursday morning.
Pi Kappa Alpha president Todd Guerrieri, Lake Forest, Ill., junior, said the fraternity was celebrating Pledge Dad Night on Wednesday, which, according to Lawrence police, consisted of going from room to room drinking beer and shots of alcohol.
"The victim was reportedly drinking heavily throughout the night," Lawrence police Sgt. Susan Hadi said.
The 19-year-old fell down in the street outside the fraternity, police said. He then made it to the living room, where he passed out.
Police said that beginning at 10 p.m. on Wednesday, the pledges went from room to room singing songs and drinking. Later that night the pledges wrestled each other in the living room. Older members of the fraternity then took pledges outside and threw them in a mud volleyball pit, police said.
According to a statement from James Kitchen, dean of student life, the University will investigate inappropriate behavior by fraternity members and underage consumption of alcohol.
Police said that the fraternity provided the alcohol for pledge night and that several members described the night as tradition. They said the night's activities were participated in voluntarily.
Guerrerri, who was at the fraternity the night of the alleged incident, said the 19-year-old had been released from the hospital.
A hearing will be held next week to determine whether the suspension will be permanent. KU officials also are working with members of the fraternity to see if other disciplinary actions will be necessary.
"I haven't talked to him yet, but he's home, and he's OK," Guerrieri said. "He was kept longer than expected at the hospital to make sure he was all right."
Police said the 19-year-old could not remember some events of the night. Police said that the 19-year-old said he did not remember anything between wrestling in the living room and waking up in the hospital.
TODAY
INDEX
Television ... 2A
On campus ... 2A
Opinion ... 4A
Features ... 6A
Music review ... 6A
Basketball wrap ... 1B
At the game ... 2B, 6B
Classifieds ... 5B
PARTLY CLOUDY
High 55° Low 33°
Weather: Page 2A
2A
Monday, March 3, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
QuickINFO
WEATHER
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
55
33
CAMPUS EVENTS
Mostly sunny with highs in the mid-50s.
TUESDAY
52
27
Continuing warm tempera tures but partly cloudy.
WEDNESDAY
58 24
24
TOWER
Sunny with highs near 60. Nice day to be outside.
ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel. Contact: the Rev. Raymond May, 843-0357.
Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center will sponsor Investigating and Celebrating 16th Century Culture in 19th Century Antiwrap from 3 to 5 p.m. today at the Hall Center Conference Room. Call 864-4798
The department of physics and astronomy will sponsor a Physics Colloquium, which questions the validity of modern theories 3005 Malton Hall, Bell 844-3037.
*St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact: the Rev. Reymond May 843-0357
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet
from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center, Contact: Adam Cannon 842-912-81
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Contact: David Cohavi 841-1010.
KU Meditation Club will meet at p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. Call 864-7736.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus center will celebrate the foundations of Catholicism at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Center, 1631 Crescent Road, Call 843-0357.
Students in Communications Studies will sponsor Interview/Resume Workshop at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Contact: Jill Newport, 331-3460.
ON THE RECORD
A KU employee's cellular phone was stolen between 8 p.m. Tuesday and 2 p.m. Wednesday from a car in the 1600 block of Oxford Road, Lawrence police said. The phone was valued at $50.
A KU student's license plate was stolen between 7:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Thursday from a car in the 200 block of Michigan Street, Lawrence police said. The license plate was valued at $25.
A KU student's mountain bike was stolen between 2:30 p.m. Wednesday and 10 p.m. Thursday from the 1900 block of Emerald Drive, Lawrence police said. The bike was valued at $300.
■ A KU student's cellular phone, CD player and amplifier were stolen between 1:30 and 9 a.m. Wednesday from a car in the 1900 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $1,460.
■ A KU student's radar detector and cellular phone were stolen between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 9 a.m. Wednesday from the 1900 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $450.
■ The rear window of a KU student's car was broken between 7:20 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Thursday in Lot 59, near Memorial Stadium, KU police said. Damage was estimated at $300.
Teens overdose on muscle relaxant
The Associated Press
WOBURN, Mass. — Teen-agers, gobbling pills by the "hands-full," overdosed on prescription muscle relaxants at a dance meant to keep them off the streets. Thirteen were in hospitals Saturday. 1.0 in critical condition.
Most of the victims were teen-age girls, ages 13 to 16, celebrating their selection for the cheerleading squad, said Michael Shannon, a physician treating eight of the youths at Children's Hospital in Boston. He said that their prognosis was good.
The teens had taken handfuls of the prescription muscle relaxant Baclofen, washing them down with water, soft drinks and beer. Shannon said.
Authorities were called when two teen-agers were discovered passed out on a couch, witnesses said. Chaperones initially believed they were asleep.
The drug often is used for treating cerebral palsy and multiple sclerosis normally in doses of one or two pills, Shannon said. Slightly higher doses can lead to euphoria or intoxication, and large doses can shut down the lungs and cause death, he said.
Shannon said that a victim he spoke with had taken about seven pills and told him others had taken as many as 35.
At least two of the teens who went home from the dance would have died in their beds had their parents not been called by officials worried they had taken the drug, Middlesex County District Attorney Tom Reilly said. Their parents woke them up and took them to hospitals.
TV TONIGHT
MONDAY PRIMETIME MARCH 3, 1997
© 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 In the House Malcolm Xana: Warrior Princess (R) □ Mad Abo. You Bzzz! Copa LAPD
WDFA4 Miore Place (in Stereo) ☑ Married… Pauly ☐ News ☐ H Patrol Cheers Extra
KCIV 5 Cozyb Raymond Cybilb Ink (in Stereo) EZ Streets "A Tremible Beauty" News Late Show (in Stereo) Seinfeld Extra
KS66 News Plus News Plus News Plus
KCPT 7 Going Places American Experience "The Battle Over Citizen Kane" (R) Business Rpt. MotorWeek Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
KSNT 9 Foxworth "Lethal Weapon 2" ****1/1989, Drama Mel Gibson, (in Stereo) News Tonight Show (in Stereo) Late Night
KMBC 1 Attention Deficit Detail Game "The Apocalypse Watch" (1997, Suspense) Patrick Bergin; Roseanne罗素 M"A'SHAT
KTUW 1 Going Places America Experience "The Battle Over Citizen Kane" (R) People-Here Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
WIBW 1 Cozyb Raymond Cybilb Ink (in Stereo) EZ Streets "A Tremible Beauty" Late Show (in Stereo) Late Night
KTKA 1 Spy Game "Why Spy?" ☐ The Apocalypse Watch (1997, Suspense) Patrick Bergin; News Seinfeld Married... Nightline
CABLE STATIONS
AAE 9 Biography: Donald Trump Poitro Miss Marple (Part 1 of 2) Law & Order Biography: Donald Trump
CNBC 1Equal Time Hardball Rivera Live Late Night (in Stereo) Charles Grodd Rivera Live (R)
CNN 3New Press Burden-Proof Larry King Live World Today Sports Illus. moneyline NNewsShow biz
COM 1"Ferris Bueller's Day Off" ****1/1988, Matthew Broderick On Delivery Dream On Daily Show Comic Relief Tick Sat. Night
COURT 9 Prime Time Justice Trial Story Cochran & Grace Prime Time Justice Trial Story
CSPAN 1Prime Time Public Affairs Airpower Showdown Wild Discovery: World-Bats Science of Twins
DISC 9 Wild Discovery: World-Bats Science of Twins Wild Discovery: World-Bats Science of Twins
ESPN 1College篮球 College Basketball College Basketball MVC Championship – Teams TBA Sportscenter College Basketball (Live)
HIST 1Imperial War Museum Victory at See Battle Line Men in Crisis Perspectives Year by Year "1965" Imperial War Museum
LFE 1Unsolved Mysteries "Fatal Deception: Mrs. Lee Harvey Owald" (1933, Drama Intimate Portrait Unsolved Mysteries
MTV 1Prime Time (in Stereo) Road Rules Daria Singled Out Loveline (In Stereo) Altern. Nation
SCFI 9 Wild Palms: Everything Must Go" (in Stereo) V(R) (in Stereo) Wild Palms: Everything Must Go(R)
TLC 1Extreme Machines Bermuda Triangle Future Fantastic Extreme Machines Bermuda Triangle
TNT 1WCW Nitro (Live) Adventures of Robin Hood WCW Nitro(R)
USA 1(6/57)World Wrestling Federation Monday Night Raw La Femme Nikita "Escape" Wings Wings Silk Stalkings "Soul Kiss"
VH1 1VH to One Video Collect Show Me the Oscar(R) Private Parts(R) Escapes(R) Crossroads Soul of VH1
WSGN 1Bulls Eye NSA Ballpark: Milwaukee Balls at Chicago Bulls, (in Stereo) News H'mooner In Heat of the Mattheson
WTBS 1"Trapped" ***1980, Suspense) Kaitireen Quanin."" Buried Alive** ***1980, Suspense) Tim Matheson." "The Hunched Lady"" **1977)
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 1"Assassina" ***1995, Drama Sylvestre Stallone.R" The Jurior" ***1996, Suspense) Dami Moore.R" Sex Bytes 2.1 (in Stereo)
MAX 1"Pee-yes' Big Adventure" ***1985, PC" Digital Man" ***1995, Ken Clandr.I" Calling the Ghosts" ***1996 "First Degree" ***1995
SHOW 1"The Quick and the Dead" ***1995, PC" Machine Gun Blues" ***1996, Drama) On the Set "Fortunes of the Mattheon" ***1994
ET CETERA
www.kansan.com
UDKi THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
Did you ever want to send e-mail to the staff of the Kansan? Have you ever wanted to put a face to the name of a Kansan staff member? Well, now you can. The People page has just been updated. Click on the People button on the UDKi's home page to learn about the Kansan staff. Make your voice heard with a clever piece of e-mail. This service provided courtesy of your online newspaper, the UDKi.
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.
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.
OUTFITTING SINCE 1972
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR & BIKE
844 MASSACHUSETTS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
843-5000
The night of February 26 was a tragic one for us. We lost a cherished friend. Both this building and this business have a long history. The building was the first rebuilt after Quantrill raided Lawrence in 1863, and the business had just entered its Silver Anniversary year.
It was extremely touching for us to look around that night and see how the community shared in our grief. We've been moved by your support. We love being a part of downtown Lawrence and plan to continue serving our devoted customers.
If you had store credit, layaways, or a bike in for repair, we will take care of you as soon as possible. Our phone number remains the same (843-5000) and please come down to see our satellite shop at 844 Mass. We'd love to hear your memories of The 'Flower.
Sincerely,
Employees of Sunflower
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 3, 1997
3A
KU to get a speedy new supercomputer
By Gwen Olson Special to the Kansan
The University of Kansas' new supercomputer may help boost the University's image as a major research institution, administrators say.
Academic Computing Services, with the help of a grant from the National Science Foundation, has spent $550,000 on a new supercomputer that administrators say will improve research in science and mathematics.
The supercomputer is expected
to be operational on Friday. It now is being tested.
"The supercomputer was installed about a month ago," said Bill Crowe, vice chancellor for information services. "It's a large parallel processor that will allow a number of professors to do problem-solving."
The computer is the fastest in the state and will be available statewide for some researchers.
"It is among the 500 fastest in the world and will be used for scientific research, especially in areas that require intensive computation and visualization," said Jerry Niebaum, executive director of information technology services.
The supercomputer will allow users to perform research faster without even coming to Lawrence.
"Everything can be done remotely from their own graphics work stations," Niebaum said. "They just log on here."
Prospective users of the new supercomputer will apply to a steering committee that will determine which researchers need the technology.
Many Lawrence residents may not need a reason to go out for a beer, but they had a pretty good excuse on Friday.
By Mark McMaster Kansan staff writer
Local bars involved in making history
Beer lovers toast for record
At 10:50 p.m. Friday, beer lovers in Lawrence and around the world raised glasses of dark Irish beer as part of the Great Guinness Toast.
The idea behind the toast, which was sponsored by Guinness to promote its beer, was to secure a place in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest toast ever.
Incidentally, the name is the only relation between the book of records and the beer.
The toast attracted crowds at bars such as G. Willikers, 733 Massachu-
sci
setts St, in which 65 people participated, and it resulted in big sales.
Many who came for the toast said they had special respect for Guinness beer.
brian O'Riley, a Lawrence resident who participated in the toast at the Red Lyon Tavern, 944 Massachusetts St., said he preferred the beer to most American brews.
"It symbolizes real beer, compared to piss water," he said. "It has dark, rich flavor."
Either you love Guinness or you hate it, some say. The beer has its share of detractors as well.
"It's a bitter, evil taste," said Roxene Miller, a Gardner resident who also participated in the toast.
"I just did it because I was here," she said.
Those who toasted filled out forms with their addresses and the signatures of two witnesses to authenticate their participation.
"Whoever thought this idea up is probably getting a promotion."
"Whoever
Miko Huntington bartender at the Red Lyon
The number of participants worldwide has not yet been tabulated, but some already consider it a success.
"It seems to me that it's gotten a lot of good word-of-mouth," said Mike Huntington, a bartender at the Red Lyon. "Whoever thought this idea up is probably getting a promotion."
THE
total
look!
Make that first impression a lasting one this fall!
842-5921
9th & Mississippi
Are YOU Taco Crazy?? Then prove it!
Mondays 4 p.m.-10 p.m.
Take a break from the same old food,
and Go...
DOS
HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
Taco Crazy!!
815 New Hampshire 841-7286
AIAS American Institute of Architecture Students Elections Monday, March 3, 1997 - 9:00 pm Jury Room, Marvin Hall
President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Newsletter Calendar Publications Fundraising Computers
I am not a teacher. I can only offer information.
All members should attend, to be able to vote for next year's leaders.
Anyone interested in running should arrive at 8:45pm to learn about the election process
HOUSING AND CREDIT COUNSELING, INC 25TH ANNIVERSARY BENEFIT PRESENTS MARK RUSSELL
Of the top-rated "Mark Russell Comedy Specials" on PBS and weekly commentator on CNN's "Inside Politics Weekend."
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1997 AT 8:00 P.M.
Topeka Performing Arts Center
Mister
Tickets: $30.00 (floor)
$20.00 (balcony) $20.00 (reception)
Reception and Gala for Mark Russell following the performance in the Hills Festival Hall. Dance to Lee Barnett and E Z Pieces.
$20.00
Call TPAC Monday through Friday for reservations 1-800-949-8722, 8 a.m. - 5:15 p.m.
UNDERWRITTEN BY KAW VALLEY STATE BANK AND TRUST CO. AND THE SWOGGER FOUNDATION
Define Professional Development Opportunity
Paid Internship with Hands-On Experience. Columbia's new definition of opportunity is creating a network of people with exceptional abilities. 1997 graduating Seniors with Business, Finance or related majors are invited to learn more:
BUSINESS OFFICE INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
Information Session Thursday, March 6, 6pm-7pm University of Kansas Summerfield Hall, Room 505 On-campus Interviews to be scheduled
Columbia is expanding rapidly, and provides a challenging environment where bright, energetic professionals can enjoy professional growth and personal rewards.
For full details, visit the Business Placement Office, Room 125 Summerfield Hall. It's your opportunity to help define the future of healthcare, EOE.
COLUMBIA
Healthcare has never worked like this before.
dumpba's home page at http://www.columbia
Visit Columbia's home page at http://www.columbia.net
YOU DON'T
HAVE TO BE A JEDI KNIGHT TO "FEEL THE FORCE."
PLAY THE STAR WARS
"FEEL THE FORCE" GAME AT TACO BELL
AND WIN INSTANTLY.
SSS SS
screen, head to Taco Bell where everyone can feel the force and have a chance to win one of many have a chance. Just buy any
W
Izzo Bell Inc. a home THX
Theatre System Nintendo 64
or other great games One lucky
FORD
large drink or com meal at Taco Bell. then peel off the thermally activated
TACO BELL
stings, feel the force.
play the game. Only
in Tack Bell
restaurant-new opening in LAWRENCE
chili's GRILL & BAR
starts soon! Hurry in & join our opening team! Full & Part Time POSITIONS are still for:
COOKS BUSSERS DISHWASHERS
We can offer: Flexible Full & Part Time Scheduling Top Pay Potential, Paid Vacations, Tuition Assistance Program, and Quality Fun, Work Environment!
APPLY IN PERSON Mon-Fri 9am-6pm & Sat 9am-Noon 2319 Iowa in Lawrence
chili's GRILL & BAR
NO PLACE ELSE IS.. an equal opportunity employer
Helping you have more money to blow on stuff. Fridays in the Kansan
KANSAN COUPONS
1 out of 4 of your classmates will get an STD.
P
1 out of 4 people in the U.S. will contract an STD in their lifetime. Be Safe. Be prepared.
Planned Parenthood provides confidential & affordable health care including testing and treatment of STDs and HIV testing.
When you need us:
WE'RE HERE FOR YOU!
Planned Parenthood of Mid-Missouri and Eastern Kansas
(913) 832-0281 1420 Kasold Drive, Suite C, Lawrence, KS
"Is This Gonna Be on
the Test?":
Tuesday, March 4
7:00-9:00 pm.
Kansas Rm..
Kansas Union
Curriculum Issues at KU
Learning Through
DINROSSI
Multicultural Resource Center
UNIVERSITY
Multicultural Resource Center
STUDENT
SENATE
STUDENT
SENATE
Panelists Include:
Regina Grass, President, Native American Student Association, KU Moderator: Lisa Wolf, Assistant Professor, Educational Policy and Leadership, KU
Torrez Dawson, founding member, Diversity Peer Education Team of MHRA Ray Hiner, Professor, History, KU
Please also plan to attend the last Diversity Dialogue of this academic year.
Tuesday, April 1, 7:00-9:00 pm, Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union:
"Student Athletes and the Student Body"
Part of the Diversity Dialogue for Students, Faculty, and Staff.
Series for Students, Faculty, and Staff.
Please join us to challenge and discover.
Sponsored by the KU Coalition Against Racism and the Multicultural Resource Center, 864-4350
BLUTARSKY'S
- MONDAY: $1.00 Big Beers & 25¢ Draws
- TUESDAY: $2.00 Premium Draws & Bottles
- WEDNESDAY: $1.00 ANYTHING
- THURSDAY: $2.00 Big Draws & DJ Rich
- FRIDAY: $1.50 WELLS
- SATURDAY: $1.00 ANYTHING
- SUNDAY: $2.50 Domestic Pitchers
(21 and over)
Save money for Spring Break by taking Advantage of the Awsome Drink Specials at Lawrence's Newest Bar.
Blutarsky's
LOCATED AT 1115 MASS ST.
FIVE DOORS DOWN FROM THE PAN ALLEY (11" AND MASS)
PHONE # 841-8799
OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
7. (10 marks)
CRAIG LANG, Editor MARK OZIMEK, Business manager
SUSANNA LOOP, Managing editor DENNIS HAUPT, Retail sales manager
KIMBERLY CRABTREE, Editorial editor JUSTIN KNUPP, Technology coordinator
TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser JAY STEINER, Sales and marketing adviser
4A
Monday, March 3, 1997
I'M TIRED OF THE
LEGISLATURE WASTING
OUR MONEY WHEN WE
NEED IT!!
DON'T TELL ME...
WRITE YOUR
CONGRESSMAN...
SPORTING GOODS
SHOES
LOCAL PAPER
LEGISLATURE
GIVES SELF
RAISE!
LOCAL
PAPER
Amy Miller/ KANSAN
Editorials
Students need to take active role in lobbying their representatives
During this session, the Legislature will consider allocating $7.5 million for technological equipment upgrades at Regents institutions.
This decision will directly affect the ability of the University of Kansas to provide its students with updated and adequate technology. Therefore, KU students must stand up for their educational needs and take an active role in lobbying their representatives. Without such action, it may be easy for representatives and senators to cut this much-needed funding.
In the Feb. 25 University Daily Kansas, House Speaker Pro Tern Susan Wagle, R-Wichita, said that she was concerned that education spending would undermine efforts to reduce taxes.
Many legislators who want to cut taxes may not be inclined to increase
It will take students just a few minutes to write their legislators for funds.
funding for higher education. If students tell their representatives that there is a need for this funding, the chances of its passage could be greatly improved.
"The Legislature holds the purse-strings, and they decide if they can give us the money or not." she said.
Ashleigh de la Torre, legislative director for Student Senate, said it was important for students and their parents to contact their legislators soon, either by phone or in writing.
De la Torre said that students and their parents didn't need a perfect understanding of the budget process to
influence the issue but could simply express the importance of the funding to the University.
The need for student action is apparent in light of lawmakers' willingness to cut this funding. Already, Gov. Bill Graves has trimmed the Regents' original request for $12 million by $4.5 million. If students are unwilling to raise their voices, these funds could be cut further or eliminated altogether.
It only takes a few minutes to write or call your legislator. A student could easily spend more time waiting in line for a computer on this campus, and even more time complaining about waiting. Instead of being resolved to this situation, it is the responsibility of students to take action by contacting their representatives and expressing the need for this funding and their support of it.
KELLI RAYBERN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Large classes can still aid learning
Western Civilization is considered by some to be one of the corner-stones of the educational foundation at the University. But some students who are enrolled in large lecture classes feel that these classes do not adequately satiate their intellectual curiosity. Although large lecture classes are accompanied by smaller discussion sections, some students argue that this is not enough and that each lecture class should be the size of the discussion sections. However, larger classes are needed to accommodate all Western Civilization students. Instead of complaining, students should seize all opportunities to increase knowledge. Smaller classes are more conducive to discussing the philosophical and theological content that the Western Civilization program teaches. But the large lecture classes provide important
Larger Western Civilization classes are necessary to accommodate all students.
guidelines to fully understanding the material taught in Western Civilization classes.
There are smaller lecture classes open to students. Jim Woelfel, director of Western Civilization, said that ideally, he would like to see all of the large Western Civilization lecture classes shrink to more manageable sizes. However, the resources for hiring more professors to teach the course are not available. Woelfel said that the Western Civilization program wanted to have more experienced instructors teaching its classes. Teaching assistants are not allowed to teach their own
sections of Western Civilization without at least two years of experience.
The large lectures are designed to provide historical significance and to help guide students through the material assigned, Woelfel said. The discussion sections are designed to be forums where students can discuss the complexities and eclectic interpretations of this material. The lecture classes help students prepare for discussion classes.
Perhaps there is a symbiotic relationship between the two. Perhaps both large lectures and smaller discussion sections are useful in our pursuit of the perfect education. Ralph Waldo Emerson once said: "The things taught in schools and colleges are not education, but a means to education." Although large lectures coupled with smaller discussion sections may not be ideal, they are intended to provide this means.
NICK ZALLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
LA TATIA SULLIVAN . . . Associate Editorial
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
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How to submit letters and guest columns
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kim Crabtreat (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (lusillian@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Columns
Skywalker is out; Solo is the new hero
Everybody had a hero when they were a kid. It could have been anyone from a noble soul like Mother Teresa to kinetic fitness gurk Richard Simmons, and if the latter was the case, I'm really sorry. I guess it really all depended on the kind of person you were and the kind of things you cherished.
Me? I was of the belief that there was no one more deserving of idolization than young Luke Skywalker. He did, after all, fire the fateful laser torpedo that destroyed the diabolical Death Star.
ROBERT
BISHOP
So I was positively giddy when I got to go check out the Star Wars Special Edition the other week. Finally, my hero was back on the big screen where he belonged.
Plain and simple, the movie
rocked, as I'm sure you're probably well aware of by now. The effects were cool, and the Jawas still gave me the willies for reasons unexplained, but imagine my surprise when a major revelation occurred to me ... Luke is really kind of a pansy.
And not just kind of, either. The boy is a brat and a whiner. I don't know how anybody saw Jedi potential in this kid. Everything he says is "I wanted to do this" or "I wish that." Like when Luke and his uncle bought C3PO and R2-D2 from those creepy Jawas and his uncle told him he had to stay home and work on the droids that night. Rather than accepting his responsibilities as a member of his family, Luke whimpered and said, "But Uncle, I was going to go to the Talski Station to pick up some power converters." Look, I know the boy didn't realize yet that it was his destiny to save the galaxy from the tyrannical Empire, but still, how much fun can you really have with power converters?
Another example: After Obi-Wan Kenobi, or Ben to his closest friends, met his fate at the hands of the dastardly Darth Vader, Luke, Leia, Han Solo and Chewbacca sped off in the Millennium Falcon to rebel headquarters. Luke moped around what I guess was the lounge area of the ship and then, in the voice of a pre-pubesent 12-year-old boy said, "I wish Ben was here." Right then, there should have been digitally inserted footage of Leia showing the boy the back of her hand. I'm a firm believer that Jadis don't whine. Of course, traditionally they also don't kiss their sisters, but that's another story.
You would think that somewhere there had to be a better candidate for jedi knighthood. Luke can't possibly fit any of the qualifications. Let's see, we've already knocked out the clause against no whinners, but I'm sure there is a question concerning bravery, like whether or not you actually have any, on the application. Sadly, Luke would have to answer no, if only because of the garbage disposal incident on the Death Star. A single look at Luke's face once the walls start to close in, and you can tell he's shaking in his stolen stormtrooper boots.
But, perhaps I shouldn't be so hard on Luke. This was, I suppose, only the first movie, and I guess he did blow up the Death Star and all. I'm just a little disappointed in him. He wasn't nearly the man I remembered to be.
I will now take this opportunity to announce that I have picked a new hero, a new person to put all my faith in and idolize. It is Han Solo, for the sole reason that he got to hook up with Leia, and if you've seen her in the opening scenes of Return of the Jedi, dancing in Jabba the Hutt's palace, you know that Han is a man to envy, indeed.
Robert Bishop is a Wichita senior in English and Journalism.
Days of Our Lives is like an addictive drug
I have a secret. I've kept it to myself for almost two years now. I guess I was too ashamed to admit that it could ever happen to me.
Every day at noon I feel like I should utter the phrase, "Hi. My name is Mike, and...uhh. I watch Days of our Lives." This seemingly innocent television habit of mine has insidiously become an addiction. Furthermore, there is no 12-step program that I could attend to try to wean myself off of this crap.
How did this happen to me?
How did I become so intimate with the personal lives
MIKE COLE
Perhaps it's the show's campiness that eventually led to my compulsive watching. I was watching Days in my room, not only behind a closed door but also by myself when it happened—my epiphany. As I sat there eating lunch, Marlena, the good doctor, was suddenly hovering over a bed, possessed by Satan. With one swift twist of the plot, I was officially hooked.
t these people in Salem? It began with a friend, whose name shall remain anonymous, at least for now, who "offered" the me soap opera one afternoon, you know, just to see if I liked it. I thought I was in control. "I can stop whenever I want to," I kept reassuring myself. Out of all the soaps on daytime television, Days of our Lives is possibly one of the worst. These characters talk more to themselves than your average schizophrenic. And the acting? Vacant looks are for the supermodels, not for daytime actors to use as an attempt to mask the fact that they have forgotten their lines.
The possession of Marlene was like a narcotic for me. Each day I anxiously awaited Marlene's demon voice and her eyes to open with those green contact lenses. This was not unlike the same feeling I got whenever Diana, the lizard alien from that sci-fi classic V had her face ripped off to reveal her true reptilian skin and orange
experts say that the best drug dealers are those who don't partake of their own product. Is it coincidence that this friend who got me started on Days has now quit watching it, cold turkey? I think not.
I used to think I was alone out there. I watched Days, by myself, waiting for Marlena to expose Kristen's false pregnancy to John. I had been hesitant, until recently, to come out about this. When I stumbled upon the TV lounge of the Kansas Union one afternoon, however, I realized that the prevalence of Days junkies was widespread. Usually the lounge is spotted by a few people, sprawled out in one of those roomy chairs, slowly being lulled into unconsciousness. High noon, surprisingly, transforms the room into a forum of hard-core Days addicts.
A few minutes before the hour they begin to enter the room. Once all of the prime chairs have been taken, people quickly scramble for a piece of the floor with a good view of the big screen. Everyone in this room at noon shares a common bond, they watch Days. They eat, sleep and breathe it. At last, I thought, I've found my people.
This still does not solve my problem though. Going to this room is like waving a vial of crack under the nose of an addict. Each time I sit down in the TV lounge I'm reminded of an alcoholic character from a Woody Allen film who said, "You know I could never resist the taste of salt around the rim of a glass." Like an alcoholic, I cannot relinquish my hour of Days.
What will become of me? Will I start programming my VCR to record episodes I miss because of class — oh wait, bad example. Will I start rearranging my class schedule to accommodate watching both the Topeka and Kansas City broadcasts? Will I subscribe to Soap Opera Digest??? Stay tuned, and remember, "Like the sands through the hourglass..." You know the rest.
Mike Cole Is a Mission Hills Junior In Journalism.
Letter
SLT may do more harm than good to community
The opposition of the South Lawrence Trafficway has yet to hear a logical, convincing argument for the construction of the SLT along 31st Street. The sarcastic, flippant remarks of the not-so-sympathetic and not-so-informed Chris Gallaway in the Feb. 17 University Daily Kansan is typical of what we've heard thus far.
Instead of presenting a solid argument that demonstrates the necessity of the road, he made light of the whole issue through his sarcasm. Educating the students at the University was the purpose of the protest and merely one example of our dedication to this issue. We find it hard to believe that Gallaway focused on discouraging people from speaking out for
The 31st alignment would violate a presidential order on environmental justice, which states that no minority group may bear a disproportionate burden for any federally funded project. If the road is build, there will justifiably be animosity between Native Americans and the rest of the community.
There are alternatives and compromises. There is another route that goes south of the river that has continuously been overlooked. Also, there have been talks to extend the KU bus system around the whole city which would help alleviate traffic problems.
what they believe in by implying that it doesn't do any good. We will present the main reasons for moving the SLT off 31st Street alignment.
Two-thirds of the Lawrence community does not want this
road to be built on 31st Street. At public hearings, the voices heard are overwhelmingly in opposition to this alignment. Two out of the three county commissioners who gave the go ahead on Dec. 5 are associated with real estate developments in Lawrence. The commissioners are not representing the public interest.
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The environmental and educational value of the wetlands cannot be overlooked. It is home to many animals including threatened and endangered species; only 2 percent of the original wetlands remain in Lawrence.
We must ask ourselves: Is progress building a road that will do more harm than good?
Scott Headner
Shawnee junior
Katrina Justin
KU Alumna
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 3,1997
5A
Life associated with KU is all that some former students know. the Lure of Lawrence
Continued from Page 1A
some former students find a substitute hometown in Lawrence.
"There is going to be a comfort level of doing what they know," Wolf said. "They might feel as if they have found a home with their group of friends, and they don't want to leave that."
Tom Ruby, a Wichita psychologist, said that when students continued to live in the town where they had attended school, it was often to delay entering the post-college world.
"By staying in the cocoon of the university, this becomes the real world for those who graduate," Ruby said. "School defines the identity of the student for five or six years, and it's hard to give that up and go to a new environment with new places and people."
Ruby suspects that the former students who decide to stay here are not originally from Lawrence but from smaller towns.
"If a student went to a school like Boston College, it would be easier to leave because the school is in a big city," he said. "But it would be harder to leave a school in a smaller city because the community is smaller and warmer."
SSSSS
Back at the party, Renck makes his way to the beer kee and stops to speak to friends, many of whom are still in school. Renck reminisces about professors and tests and agrees that the comfort factor has played a large part in his decision to stay in Lawrence
"I've made enough friends and associations here that it is the only place that I really know," he says. "Lawrence is much more of a home than where my parents live."
3 3 3 3
But Lawrence can begin to feel like a trap after a while. Amy Irig, a 27-year-old 1994 KU graduate from Concordia, didn't want to leave. Her main
And she hasn't.
After spending seven years in Lawrence, Ihrig still shares a house with two roommates and works as an office assistant at Alvamar Country Club.
reason for staying in Lawrence after the pomp and circumstance was her friends. But she has begun to realize that perhaps staying wasn't the wisest decision.
"I can barely make little decisions, much less life-changing ones," she said. "And moving is a life-changing decision."
12
But continuing to live in Lawrence is a decision she now admits wasn't smart.
"I still wanted to hang on to the lifestyle I had in college," she said. "I'm not living like most 27-year-olds. I live like someone who is 22. I think if I had gone to K-State, I would have gotten off my ass long ago. I wouldn't want to stay in Manhattan after I graduated."
Ihrig has two degrees, one in journalism and one in psychology.
"School didn't teach me what to do after they shipped me out the door," she said, adding that her former student status was "definitely a stalling of adulthood."
Being part of a generation that has a reputation for slacking off doesn't help when it comes time to leave Lawrence.
"Society says it's OK to delay, and it's OK to postpone," Ruby said. "There are different expectations on this generation."
Wichita psychologist Tom Ruby says that students often return to a college town because they miss the familiarity.
"Staying in that lifestyle is just an extension of our childhood. It's like Peter Pan not wanting to grow up."
Ihrig admits that she wants to hang on to the lifestyle she had while attending KU. Knowing all the ins and outs of a town's night life has its advantages,
especially in a college town.
"It kept me in the college life socially by staying in Lawrence," Ihrig said. "In Kansas City, they still party, but they don't have the partyina that goes on in Lawrence."
The lack of maturity and motivation that plagues some former KU students is not unusual, Wolf said. However, she said that young people today weren't required to be as mature as past generations because they had been coddled by their parents.
"Yuppie parents are as indulgent as they can be," she said. "The family is more child-centered, where children used to be a side project."
The end of indulgence is something that Irig has had to face. As the years go by, she finds that her parents are becoming less patient with her situation.
"I don't think my parents expected me to be 27, with two degrees, making $5.50 an hour," Hrig said. "I look at a career and a job as something I'm too young to do. It wouldn't be any fun. It's real life, and I feel like I'm not ready to mature yet."
But Ihrig says that she is becoming embarrassed with her situation and thinks it might be time to move on.
"I don't want to be 30 and making $6 an hour," Irigr said, "Lawrence doesn't have what I need now. I feel really old here, and it's not fun going to bars anymore. I'd rather go somewhere I won't meet 18-year-old boys."
At the party, Renck sips his beer and talks about his misgivings with Lawrence. After watching friends graduate, leave and start families, he feels both fortunate and deprived. Married friends envy his lifestyle, and older adults disapprove of it.
"I will admit that my decision to stay here is based partly on my complete lack of motivation," Renck says. "I didn't look for a job when I left school because, honestly, I didn't know what I wanted to do, and I still don't know what I want to do. I definitely live the life of someone who is in college, probably more so than when I was in college."
$$
\ggg \ggg \ggg
$$
But Renck, too, is starting to feel the difference between himself and other Lawrence residents. Living in a house with six other people — some students, some not — he has begun to feel pangs of responsibility.
"I think this year I realized that I accept that this would be the last year of pretending I'm a kid," Renck said. "I knew that it would be hard for me to be responsible in the environment that I am in. When you are in your early 20s and don't have a lot of responsibility, Lawrence is fun. I've always known people who have had this kind of lifestyle. I'm not that different from other people."
In June, he and a friend will go to Europe, a trip he has long prepared for. He said that he may not come back, but if he does, he will definitely find a real job.
Renck has begun to look forward to the time when, financially, he can make his final exit from Lawrence.
"Somehow I'm going to figure out what I want to do." he said.
"In Kansas City, they still party, but they don't have the partying that goes on in Lawrence."
Amy Ihrig
Former KU student
and current Lawrence res-
ident
golden
drinking jar
Irig, on the other hand, doesn't know what the future has in store for her, and that doesn't seem to bother her.
"My job is going nowhere, and I work with college kids," she said. "And I finally myself as too old to be hanging out in bars with kids."
ssss
But for every Irrig or Renck who finally leaves Lawrence, there is another former student who is drawn back.
Eric Mater, who graduated in 1994 with a degree in journalism, left Lawrence to accept a teaching job in his hometown of Great Bend, Ind. After teaching at the community college there for three and a half semesters, he returned to Lawrence in August and has been a salesman on Massachusetts Street ever since.
"It's hard when you graduate, and you don't have a super, fantastic job like the TV promises. I just kind of freaked out," Mater said. "If I could make money writing things, I would. But I don't want to make $4.25 an hour writing obits for a paper. Besides, I like the night life."
Mater has decided to try his hand at graduate school.
"I don't want the Mom-and-Dad regular job and routine. I not ready," Mater said. "I'm avoiding growing up. I'm not interested in corporate America."
Neither are a lot of the young people in this town.
Ruby said that those students who leave a college town, only to return later, often lack the social networking and miss the traditions and the familiarity.
"The college town is the place where they've achieved notoriety and academic or social competence," Ruby said. "It's the place that's provided the most meaningfulness and purpose for a young adult."
What will be the future of a generation that prolongs childhood? If people take longer to finish school, don't leave the college culture once they have finished, take dead-end jobs, don't get married and don't have kids — how will that affect our collective future?
"It is rare to find a person who goes to college in four years, gets married six months after, and then has a kid 18 months after that," Ruby said. "We will just have to wait" and see how it comes out."
WANT A CAREER INSTEAD OF A JOB? WE ARE HIRING.
The Kansas City, Kansas Police Department will be recruiting at the Kansas Union on March 4th, from 10 to 3. ANY MAJOR WELCOME For more information call (913)596-1601.
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The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center & Commission on the Status of Women
Celebrate Women's History Month Public Law 101-6 Designating the Month of March as "Women's History Month"
This year's theme, "A Fine and Long Tradition of Community Leadership" gives us the opportunity to celebrate continued community leadership that has been articulated and actualized by women throughout time. These contributions are numerous and brilliant. The quality of women's activism has afforded new and exciting changes in local, state and federal government. Therefore, this celebration commemorates the long standing commitment that women hold to furthering of their personal goals, the goals of the community, and the goals of humanity.
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STUDENT
SENATE
Hilltopics
Page 6A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
March 3, 1997
With better techniques and higher acceptance more and more people aren't afraid to be
TATTOOED
Story by Steph Brewer
•
Photographs by Andrei Urasov
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动物标本展
在动物标本展中,我们可以看到各种各样的动物标本。这些标本通常由不同类型的材料制成,例如鳞片、骨骼、皮肤和肌肉等。通过观察这些标本,我们可以了解它们的形态特征、生活习性和历史背景。动物标本展不仅为研究动物提供了重要资料,也为公众了解动物世界提供了新的途径。
lamie Chisum, Hesson junior, and Chris Martin, Wichita State University
unior, browse through tattoo drawings.
In 1979, when Lawrence resident Tracy Koons was 14 years old and wanted a tattoo, she visited a Harley-Davidson motorcycle convention in Independence, Mo.
In 1996, when Kavita Jain, Lansing freshman, wanted a tattoo, she traveled no further than downtown Lawrence.
If Jain had walked into a tattoo parlor 15 or 20 years ago wanting the sun that now adorns her back, she may have received some funny looks.
"It's a fashion statement now and it wasn't then," Koons said. "It definitely wasn't the norm. Back then it was only bikers and military who got tattoos."
In fact, Koons, now a 32-year old office manager at the Douglas County American Red Cross, said she hadn't even told all of her employers about her tattoos because of the stigma that was previously attached.
Lance Tuck, tattooed and body piercer at Skin Illustrations, 740 Massachusetts Street, said tattoos had moved into the mainstream.
"We get bankers, doctors, lawyers, jobless types, fraternity and sorority members, bikers and truckers." Tuck said. "It's almost getting to the point where if you're not tattooed or pierced, you're part of the minority."
Tuck, who may overstate the fashion a bit, attributes tattoo acceptance to the rise in popularity of tattooed musicians and sports stars, such as Dennis Rodd
"I think tattoos are something really common to our generation," said Amanda Schick, Los Angeles, NM. 6
John Hoopes associate professor of anthropology, also cited Dennis Rodman as someone who had helped bring tattoos into the mainstream. He said people often got tattoos as a way of imitating their heroes.
most would consider shocking. Tuck said the most requested designs are suns and moons, clovers, roses, yin and yang symbols and tribal blackwork.
While such designs may not seem hard-core enough for tattoo enthusiasts, the recipients of these tattoos are perfectly happy.
"I didn't want something biker chic-esque," said Beth Melin, Olathe sophomore, who sports a blue, purple and black butterfly on her ankle. "I wanted something beautiful."
David White, Kansas City, Kan. freshman, who has a biomechanical design on his upper thigh, would dispute the beauty of the dolphins and butterflies that are
Alamos, N.M., freshman.
Still, the most popular tattoos at Skin Illustrations are not what
"It's almost getting to the point where if you're not tattooed or pierced,you're part of the minority."
"I think it's a more readily accepted form of expression," said Haynes, who has the eye of Ra, an Egyptian god, tattooed on his upper arm. "It's kind of lost its shock value."
Matthew Haynes, Maize sophomore, agreed.
However, Hoopes said tattoos still weren't completely accepted.
"My guess is there are a lot of political conservatives who would not consider tattoos acceptable." Hoopes said.
Lance Tuck
Tattooist and body piercer at Skin Illustrations
showing up on college girls across the nation
"I think it ruins the image," he said. "I see a lot of sorority girls who go to Skin Illustrations and get dolphins on their ankles, and they look terrible."
1991
a exien
However, Jessica Kueker,
DeSoto sophomore, said she thought the dolphin on her hip was feminine and she likes the fact
"If you come in with a big, old flame tattoo on your wrist, who's going to hire you for a serious iob?" she said.
that it is understated. She said tattoos that could not be hidden easily by clothing were tacky and could hurt a person's chances for employment.
Mercantile Bank is one business that will not hire someone with a flame tattoo on a wrist — or anywhere else that is visible. Camille Jones, senior vice president of human resources at the bank, said body tattooing, piercing, or jewelry that was not generally considered acceptable in a business environment was prohibited. While the bank has nothing against tattoos, Jones said customers had expectations that must be met.
"They have a certain image they feel is appropriate," Jones said.
The issue of employment is not the only one that one must consider when getting a tattoo. There are also questions of health and whether the design will be welcome in 20 years.
Randall Rock, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said he would advise patients not to get tattoos because of the risk of infection. The application of a tattoo involves the introduction of a foreign material to the body, which can cause problems. There is also the risk of infection from using dirty instruments.
"If instruments are shared with another or contaminated with the secretions of another, the recipient of the tattoo could receive more than the picture." Rock said.
Rock said a tattoo also could be a bad idea because of its permanence. He said methods of removal were difficult and costly.
Ginger Bartkoski, Lansing freshman and owner of two tattoos—a daisy on her thigh and a sun, moon and stars design on her back, said she thought many people who followed the trend would be unhappy with their decision later in life.
"My guess is that it's a trend where, 10 years from now, there will be a lot of cosmetic surgeons tattooing off," she said.
Schick said that while she may not still want the pink daisy on her back in 20 years, she would keep it anyway.
"Even if I don't like the tattoo, it'll be a good reminder of my college years and how I used to be young and carefree," she said.
since it is not alone in her philosophy. Hoopes said people often got tattoos as a way of creating identity — ethnic or otherwise.
"It's a way people create a personal history for themselves," he said.
5.1000
ABOVE: Mennen Speedstick will help the purple coloring transfer better onto the arm of Derek Reding, Kansas City, Mo. resident.
LEFT: Lance Tuck traces Calvin from the shoulder of Jeff Foster, Perry Lake resident, to tattoo another customer.
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BUTTERY CHUNKS MUSIC REVIEW
I remember when soundtracks were nothing to get excited about. The majority of them contained cheesy music from obscure artists and only once in a while did a soundtrack such as Foottoose race up the music charts. Well, the times definitely have changed. Lost Highway contains new
Various Artists — Lost Highway, Original Motion Picture Soundtrack: Interscope Records.
songs from Nine Inch Nails, Smashing Pumpkins and Martilyn Manson. The album provides the background for David Lynch's new movie and was produced by both Lynch and Trent Reznor. The result is a virtual cornucopia of techno/metal/pop and the occasional
THE DARKNESS
instrumental from Angelo B ad al a menti. Perhaps the best song on the album is Lou Reed's version of the golden oldie, This
Magic Moment. Although the album does have some lows, the majority is an enovable techno swirl pop.
L7 — Beauty Process/Triple Platinum; Slash/Reprise Records.
The grunge grrllrs return with their fourth album and a cleaner sound.
A lt hough they had a modest hit in the early '90s with Pretend We're Dead, they have maintained their rough style while progressing past the
L7
grunge fad. The Beauty Process boasts strong rock songs like Drama and even a guest appearance by Lionel Richie. Now that's an interesting combination. While the album travels along the same hard-core path, we can see a glimpse of a kinder, gentler L7.
White Town — Women in Technol;
oog; Chrysalis/EMI Records.
Morphine — Like Swimming;
Dreamworks Records.
If the '80s are back, White Town should be able to secure its place as the new OMD or Flock of Seagulls. The album consists entirely of slow English synthesizer pop. Listening to it is like having soda accidentally spurt out of your nose. At first it's kind of bubbly and fun, then it just burns. With song titles like *Function of the Orgasm*, and *The Death of My Desire*, one would expect an Enigma-esque sound, but instead it's just boring.
Wow. The new album from Morphine is a lot like swimming. It gives the listener the impression of floating underwater and grooving to slow, deep base-
are addicted, *Potion*, the first single sets the tone with its soulful bass and haunting horns. The band has success; fully merged their jazz/funk/soul style once more with their fantastic new CD.
lines. Morphine has a definite style and sound which has attracted many fans; and this new project will easily satisfy those who
— Ashlee Roll
Some CDs provided courtesy of Seventh Heaven.
INSIDE SPORTS
Kansas softball team battled the Arizona Wildcats yesterday in the Hillenbrand Invitational. Kansas lost to the Wildcats 11-1 and to LSU, 9-1. On Saturday, the Jayhawks won against DePaul, Colorado State and Florida. 3B
KANSAS
29-1, 15-1
RANKED NO. 1
85
NEBRASKA
16-13, 7-9
UNRANKED
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
JAYHAWK BASKETBALL
65
MONDAY, MARCH 3. 1997
KU vs. N
No.1 Kansas 85. Nebraska 65
KANASIS (29-1)
FG FT TP
Williams 1-1 0-1 1-2
7-13 5-14
LaFrenzt 9-14 5-6 1-3
Vaughn 4-8 1-3 9
Haase 2-9 3-4 7
Roberson 1-4 2-4 7
Romer 0-0 0-0 0
Thomas 0-3 0-0 0
Branstrom 1-1 0-0 0
Bradford 0-0 0-0 0
McGraw 0-0 0-0 0
Pollard 5-7 4-4 14
Pugh 1-1 1-3 9
Ransom 1-1 1-3 9
Tolmey 32-44 16-25
NBREAKSA (16-13) FG FT TP 3
Florence 1-4 1-2 1
Garner 3-6 2-6 2
Moore 2-6 1-2 5
Lue 5-15 4-7 18
Balcher 3-7 1-2 1
Hamilton 6-9 1-2 13
Mitchell 0-9 1-2 13
Platkowski 2-5 0-0 4
Markowski 2-5 0-0 4
Tomkiewicz 2-5 11-24 65
Nalltime: Kansas 41, Nebraska 28, 3-Point
Baskettie: Kansas 61, Nebraska 20, 3-Point
Baskettie: Omaha 1-0, New York 2-0, Thomas 2-0, Hasee 5,
Nebraska 4-12 (Luse 3-2, Bellerack 2-4; Garner 6-
4, Kirkman 7-1, Kelley 3-1; Rebounds: Kansas 62 (Polled 12), Nebraska 24 (Gamer 5); Assists: Kansas 18 (Hasee 6), Nebraska 18, Kansas 18, Hasee 18, Nebraska 22, Technician: Ackerman 4-1.
KU VS. Q
No.11 Kansas 92.Oklahoma 69
KANAS (23-4)
Canada FG FT TP
Apple 3-5 6-7 12
Haggle 2-2 1-2 16
Greyhawk 5-9 3-4 5
Dixon 11-19 3-4 25
Sanford 11-19 3-4 24
Pride 1-1 0-8 0
Scott 0-0 0-0 0
Reed 1-1 0-0 11
Ryman 2-3 0-0 0
Fletcher 0-1 0-0 0
Wiley 0-1 0-0 0
Halftime: Kansas 44, Oklahoma 29, 3-Point goal: Oklahoma 5-13 (Long 4-8, Whale 1-2, Taylor 0-1, M. Workman 0-2), Kansas 2-4 (Rayman 1-1, Tahlee 1-2, Dixon 0-1). Fouled out: None. Rebounds: Oklahoma 27 (Bramter 7), Kansas 27 (Bramter 6), Oklahoma 16 (Long, Bramer 3), Kansas 16 (Reed, Reed 4). Total fouls: Oklahoma 24, Kansas 19 Technician: Dixon, A: 4, 025.
OKLAHAMA (621) FG FT TB
M. Workman 0-8 2-2 2-2
Whaley 9-15 8-10 27
Taylor 7-12 3-15 17
Long 4-9 0-0 12
Bramer 2-5 2-2 2
Breedlove 2-3 2-2 5
K. Workman 0-1 0-0 0
Hailey 0-0 0-0 0
Stacy 0-3 0-0 0
Haley 0-3 0-0 0
Brown 0-2 0-0 0
Totals 24-61 16-21 69
Big 12 women's honors
The following are the coaches and players who received Big 12 Conference honors yesterday.
Player of the Year: Tamecka Dixon,
Kapsa
Coach of the Year: Marian Washington, Kansas
Newcomer of the Year: Nicole Palmer,
Baylor
Freshman of the Year: Julie Helm, Missouri
First Team All-Big 12
First Team All-Blg 12
Tamecka Dixon, Kansas
Alicia Thompson, Texas Tech
Anna DeForge, Nebraska
Andria Jones, Kansas State
Jayme Olson, Iowa State
Second Team All-Big 12
■ Raegan Scott, Colorado
■ Erin Scholz, Colorado
■ Angela Jackson, Texas
■ Renee Roberts, Oklahoma State
■ Amie Smith, Texas
Third Team All-Big 12
Danielle Vigilone, Texas
Rene Hanebutt, Texas Tech
LaToya Doage, Nebraska
Kacy Moffitt, Baylor
tie, Janel Grimm, Iowa State
tie, LaShena Graham, Colorado
Honorable Mention All-Big 12
Honorable Menton All-Big 12
- Angie Halible, Kansas
- Lynn Pride, Kansas
- Nakia Sanford, Kansas
- Jennifer Trapp, Kansas
- Tara Gunderson, Iowa State
- Missy Decker, Kansas State
- Julie Helm, Missouri
- Kesha Bonds, Missouri
- Tina Taylor, Oklahoma
- Phylesha Whale, Oklahoma
- Cheri Edwards, Oklahoma State
- Angie Jo Ogletree, Texas
- Vanessa Wallace, Texas
- Melissa Rollerson, Texas A&M
- Lana Tucker, Texas A&M
'Hawks trounce Nebraska
KU never trailed in final game of regular season
By Bill Petulia
Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
LINCOLN, Neb. — In its final regular season game, the No. 1 Kansas men's basketball team throttled Nebraska yesterday 86-65 at Devaney Center in Lincoln, Neb.
The Jayhawks never trailed, leaving the sellout Nebraska crowd of 14,759 little cause to cheer.
"It was an unusual game because the crowd never got to a fevery pitch," Kansas coach Roy Williams said.
The game got off to a blistering start. It took Kansas just four seconds to score its first basket as guard Jerod Haase floated an ally-oop pass to a dunking forward Raef LePronty.
"We just wanted to come out and jump on them right away," laFrentz said.
The Jayhawks leaped out to a 13-4 advantage. Nebraska, however, stormed back on a 15-8 run, cutting Kansas' lead to two points.
---
But two points was as close as the Corn-
Raef LaFrentz
huskers got, as Kansas countered the Huskers spurt with a 20-9 run of its own and closed out the first half 41-28.
After the sluggish first half, Williams thought Nebraska would come out ready to play in the second.
"In the second half we knew that they were going to make a run," Williams said.
As Williams predicted, the Cornhuskers cut into the Kansas lead, trailing only six points at the 12-minute mark. The Jayhawks, behind six consecutive points by LaFrentz, then busted out with a 9-0 run, leaving the Huskers' upset hopes in the dust.
LaFrentz finished the game with 23 points, 16 of which came in the first half.
Although Kansas had clinched the Big 12 Conference regular season title on Feb. 22.
LaFrentz said the Jayhawks couldn't afford a letdown in their final tuneup before postseason play.
LaFrentz and center Scott Pollard helped give Kansas a formidable edge in rebounding. The two combined for 22 rebounds as the Jawhaws outboarded Nebraska 52-24.
"It was Nebraska's senior night, and they had a lot to play for," LaFrentz said. "But I think we had a lot to play for."
Pollard, who was playing in his third game since returning from a foot injury, pulled down 12 rebounds. Pollard did not play in the first meeting between Kansas and Nebraska, an 82-77 overtime win for the Jayhawks. In that game the Cornhuskers outfured Kansas 46-33.
"Scot brings such an inside presence that teams have to concentrate on him," guard Billy Thomas said. "And that opens up a lot of things for us."
Nebraska was paced by guard Tyrom Lue's 18 points. Despite his output, Williams was pleased with guard Jacque Vaughn's defensive effort on the speedy Lue.
"He's quick to the basket, and he can shoot," Williams said of Lue. "But Jacque did a great job holding him to 6 of 15 shooting."
10
Williams said he was proud of the team's 29-1 record. But there are still a few chapters to write before the book can be closed on the season.
"That is a heck of an accomplishment," Williams said. "But we hope to play some more games."
Kansas' next game will be in the Big 12 Tournament at noon on Friday against the winner of the Baylor-Oklahoma State game in Kansas City, Mo. Baylor and Oklahoma State will play at noon on Thursday.
Kansas forward T. J. Pugh made a homecoming of sorts yesterday. Pugh, a native of Omaha, Neb., received a chorus of boos from the Nebraska crowd.
"I took it as if they were cheering'PUUU-UIGH."he said
Pugh said that he had five family members and many friends in attendance. He played 13 minutes and scored three points.
■ Center Scot Pollard opted to wear a turquoise(ish) shade of finger nail polish yesterday. Pollard, who finished the game with 14 points and 12 rebounds, said he had to scrap the unhucky blue polish.
"Today I wore more of a generic brand," Pollard said. "If something looks good, I keep it."
Guard Jacque Vaughn acrobatically takes the ball around Nebraska's Tyronn Lue for two points and was fouled on the play. Vaughn finished the game with nine points and kept Lue to 6 for 15 shooting from the field.
Jayhawks extend streak to 7 wins
Women's team hoping for high seeding in NCAAs
A.
Kansan sportswriter
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
1. 4.2.1.1.1.1.1
The No. 11 Kansas women's basketball team extended its longest winning streak of the season, seven games, when it defeated Oklahoma 92-69 on Saturday. The Jawahri scored their highest
point total this season in the victory.
PENGUIN
Marian Washington
"I think Oklahoma came out and played hard," Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said. "I thought it was very physical out there. Overall, with the changes I was trying to make to keep our seniors out there as much as possible, I thought we did fairly well."
Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon scraps for a loose ball during Senior Day. Dixon leads the Javahawks with 25 points. She also had nine rebounds, four assists and two steals.
The Sooners into the an 8-5 lead four minutes into the game before Kansas went on a 15-2 run. Seven Jayhawks contributed points during the run, and Kansas never trailed again.
During that run, Kansas guard Tamee Dicka Dixon was called for a technical foul after disputing a personal foul called against her. She sat on the bench a large part of the first half and finished with just seven points and three rebounds before halftime.
"I really wanted to focus on the second half because in the first half, that technical took me out of the game," Dixon said. "In the second half I wanted to get into somewhat of a flow, and I think I accomplished that."
Dixon had 18 points in the second half as Kansas maintained a comfortable
lead. She scored a team-high 25 points and added nine rebounds, four assists and two steals.
Guard Erim Reed came off the bench and scored all 11 of her points in the first half, including a 9-for-9 performance from the free-throw line.
In the first half, Kansas was 19 of 22 from the free throw line and had a 23-13 rebounding advantage. Overall, the Jayhawks were 26 of 31 from the free throw line and outrebounded Oklahoma 46 to 27.
With the victory, Kansas (23-4 overall, 14-2 in the Big 12) continues to play for national rankings and seedlings.
The Jayhawks are looking to crack the top 10 for the first time since Feb. 7, 1994. Washington said she would like to see Kansas make the NCAA Tournament as a No.2 seed or, at the very least, a No.3 seed.
The Sooners (5-21 overall, 1-15 in the Big 12) have lost 15 consecutive games since winning their first conference game on Jan.4.
Kansan staff report
Washington, Dixon receive Big 12 honors
Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon was named Big 12 Conference Player of the Year, and Kansas coach Marian Washington was named Big 12 Coach of the Year yesterday.
Last year Dixon won the Big Eight Conference Player of the Year award, and Washington earned the Big Eight Coach of the Year honor.
Dixon ranks 14th among NCAA scorers, averaging 21.8 points per game. She leads Kansas in points, assists and steals and has scored more than 20 points in each of 15 games this season. She also has scored more than 30 points in three games.
Dixon, along with former Jayhawk Lynette Woodard, are the only
Tamecka Dixon
PAMELA JAYSEN
women in Jayhawk history to record more than 1,600 points and 300 assists during their college careers.
"She has worked hard toward helping Kansas win the Big 12 title, and I feel she is very deserving of the honor," Washington said. "I'm just thrilled for her. She has played great basketball all year, and what she brings has really set us apart from the other teams."
Washington recorded her 450th career victory on Feb. 12 at Oklahoma State. She has a career record of 455-256, with a 137-75 record in conference games.
Kansas is 23-4 this season and posted a 14-2 conference record, winning the inaugural Big 12 title. The Jayhawks are ranked 11th in the country and could break the Top 10 for the first time since Feb. 7, 1994, when the Associated Press releases its poll today.
2B
Monday, March 3, 1997
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Kansas vs. Nebraska: At the game
35
BELCHER
30
MOORE
32
Guard Jerod Haase drives the lane against Mikki Moore for a shot. Haase finished with 7 points against Nebraska.
10
KANSAS
34
Loft: The Kansas bench celebrates as the game ends in an 85-65 victory for Kansas.
Basketball Wrap-Up Basketball Wrap-Up Basketball Wrap-Up Basketball Wrap-Up Basketball Wrap-Up Basketball Wrap-Up Basketball Wrap-Up
Above: Jacque Vaughn dives for a loose ball in last night's game in Lincoln. Behind him is Mikkel Moore of Nebraska.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 3, 1997
3B
Hot-hitting OSU wins series
Jayhawks claim one victory in three-game weekend matchup
BUTTON 7
Biy Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
After last weekend, the Kansas baseball team might want to consider moving the outfield fences just a little farther back.
Kansas outfielder Mike Dean looks up for the call after sliding into second base. Oklahoma State defeated Kansas in two games of a three-game series last weekend.
The losses dropped Kansas' record to 6-4 overall and 2-3 in the Big 12 Conference.
OSU won the first game of the series10-3 on Friday and split yesterday's double-header 8-9, 12-8.
With a three-game barrage of 10 home runs, the Oklahoma State Cowboys took two of three games from the Jayhawks at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
overall and 2-3 in the Big 12 Conference.
After falling behind early in Friday's game, the Jayhawks tied the score at 2-2 in the fourth inning.
Kansas failed to take the lead, and the inning ended when catcher Josh Dimmick was thrown out while trying to score on first baseman Nick Frank's double.
Oklahoma State regained the lead in the fifth innning when Cowboy second baseman Billy Gasparino hit a home run off Kansas starting pitcher Aric Peters' (1-1) first pitch of the inning.
'OSU scored two more runs in the fifth and never lost the lead, winning 10-3.
After rain and cold weather postponed Saturday's game, the Jayhawks responded to Friday's loss with a dramatic victory in the first game of yesterday's doubleheader. 'Although Kansas was out-homed 10-1 in the series, the team's only dinger couldn't haven't been more timely.
With the score tied 4-4 in the bottom of the fifth and the bases loaded, Kansas
pinch hitter Les Walrond crushed Cowboy pitcher Wakon Childers' inside slider over the right field wall. The Jayhawks added one more run in the inning, making the score 9-4.
Walrond, hitless in the first game, said he was just honing to get a ball in play.
"After going 0-4, I had to go home and regroup my hitting." Walrond said. "I had played against (Childers) in high school, and I was just trying to make solid contact."
Kansas coach Bobby Randall said Walrond's home run was the turning point in the game.
"That was the game," Randall said. "Les is really swinging the bat well. If any one guy is knocking in runs, it's Les."
OSU rallied in the ninth, but relief pitcher Josh Wingard (1-1) picked up his first victory of the season by closing out the Cowboys 9-8.
The final game of the series was a replay of game one. OSU built an early lead and pounded three home runs, winning 12-8.
"It would have been great to win two out of three," Randall said. "But they really beat us up with their ability to knock in runs when they were in scoring position."
Arizona Wildcats strike out Jayhawks
Kansan sportswriter
By Matt Woodruff
When you venture into the lair of the No. 1 Arizona Wildcats, you have two choices — run away with your tail between your legs or stand your ground and duke it out against a team with a 35-game winning streak.
On Saturday, however, the Jayhawks went 3-0 against DePaul, Colorado State and Florida.
The Kansas softball team chose the latter, losing 11-1 to the Wildcats and 9-1 to LSU yesterday in the Hillebrand Invitational.
"I am pleased with yesterday because we played rather consistently, pretty well and that we got great pitching performances," Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said on Saturday's games. "There were not too many good things to find out about today but lots of things to learn from. Today was the kind of day to make us better."
Despite his team's success, Wildcat coach Mike Candrea said the competition got tougher every year.
The weekend tournament was modified after rain forced the cancellation of Friday's games and delayed play on Saturday.
Swimmers break records at Big 12 championships
"I think there's a lot of parity in the country," Candrea said. "Administrations are doing what it takes to make programs competitive, and I think softball has a very bright future."
The Kansaks men and women's swimming and diving teams finished the inaugural Big 12 Conference championships with several standout performances.
By Kelly Cannon
Kansan sportswriter
The men's team finished fourth behind Texas, Nebraska and Texas A&M. The women finished third behind Nebraska and Texas.
Jayhawk swimmers broke six Kansas records.
championship meet. Painter also tipped the previous Kansas record, finishing in 4:22.17.
Day one of the meet featured the one-two finish of Erik Jorgensen and Tyler Painter in the 500 yard freestyle. Jorgensen finished with a time of 4:21.52, breaking the Kansas record of 4:23.43 set by him at the 1996 Big Eight
Day two saw two more Kansas records fall. Brandon Chestnut broke a 14-year-old record in the 100-yard breaststroke with his preliminary time of 54.83. His time qualified him for the NCAA championship meet. In the 200-yard freestyle preliminary, Trent Hard broke a 3-year-old record with a time of 138.04.
Painter's performances earned him the Male Newcomer of the Meet honor.
Three more records fell on the last day.
Painter broke the record in the 1,650-yard freestyle with a time of 15:03.35, more than nine seconds faster than the old record. Rebecca Eustice broke the record in the 200 backstroke, and Kristin Nilsen broke the 200 breaststroke record.
Big 12 Conference Championship Results
Men's team totals: 1. Texas, 920.50. 2. NU,
735.50. 3. A&M, 493.4. KU, 471. 5. ISU, 420.
6. MU, 237.
Women's team totals: 1. NU, 927. 2. Texas,
865. 50. 3. KU, 500. 4. A&M, 464. 50. 5. MU,
311. 6. IU, 172.
*Women's 1650 Free:* 1. Tracy Evans, A&M, 16:42.87, 2. Lime Jule, KU, 17:16.92.
*Men's 1650 Free:* 1. Tyler Painter, KU, 15:03.35, 2. Erik Jones, KEN, 15:11.89.
*Women's 200 Back:* 1. Darby Chang, Texas, 2:00.34, 2. Rebecca Eustice, KU, 2:01.60.
*Men's 200 back: 1. Neil Walker, Texas;*
*1.41.7.12, Kostaki Chiligur, KI; 1.50.40;*
*Women's 100 Free: 1. Helene Muller, NU;*
*50.02, 5.26, Andrew Reed, KU; 51.47,*
**Men's 100 Free:** 1. Brian Esway, Texas, 43.64
**Women's 200 Breast:** 1. Julia Russell, NU,
2:10.25, 5. Kristin Nilsen, KU, 2:16.69.
**Men's 200 Breast:** 1. Jeff Livingston, Texas,
*Women's 200 Fly; F1, Stace Karnes, A&M,
2:00.22.2, Adrienne Tumer, KU, 2:02.04.
Men's 200 Fly; F1, Paul Latimer, Texas,
1:46.98.
**Women's Platform Diving:** 1. Laura Wilkinson,
Texas, 698.65.
Men's Platform Diving; 1. Mark Naftanel, A&M,
688.65
*Women's 400 Relay Free: 1. NU, 3/20.19.3.*
*KU (Papham, West, Fox, Andrew), 3/26.27.*
*Men's 400 Relay Free: 1. Texas, 2/52.78.4.*
*KU (Peoples, Hart, Kyser, Chiligris), 3/00.04.*
*Women's 200 yard Medley Relay: 1. NU,*
*1:41.49.*
■Men's 200-Yard Medley Relay: 1. Texas,
1:27.35.5. KU (Baranyi, Chestnut, Dischinger,
People). 1:31.17.
*Women's 400 IM: 1. Laura Simon, NU*
*1:49.15, 3. Kristin Nistlen, KU*, *4:21.38*
*Men's 400 IM: 1. Michael Windisch, NU*
*3:52.42, 7. Erik Jorgensen, KU*, *3:58.12*
- Women's 100 Fly: 1. Danielle Strader, Texas 54.66. 4. Rebecca Andrew, KU, 55.95.
- Men's 100 Fly: 1. Adam Pine, NU, 47.02.
- Women's 200 Free: 1. Anna Windsor, NU, 1:48.49.
Men's 200 Free: 1. Chris Archer, Texas,
*136.14, 3. Trent Hart, KU, 138.04.
*Women's 100 Breast: J. Julia Russell, NU,*
1. 080.33. 8.73, *Quincy Adams, NU,* 1. 040.62.
*Men's 100 Breast: J. Jay Schindler, ISU,*
5. 44.10, *Principal Charter, US,* 5. 55.06.
*Women's 100 Back: 1. Darby Chang, Texas,
53, 52, 6.12 Nice Papham, KU, 56, 66*
Men's LUO 1bbk: 1 Neil Wailer, texas, 46.29
**Men's Three-Meter Diving:** 1 Mark Nautak, A&M, 574.60, 3 Brian Humphrey, KU, 528.80,
**Women's 800 Relay-Free:** 1. NU, 7:19.28, 4. KU (Phillips, McCalley, Fox, Lipe), 7:35.34.
**Men's 800 Relay-Free:** 1. Texas, 6:28.73, 4. KU (Jorgensen, Harty, Kiser, Chiligris), 6:36.39.
**Women's 200-Yard Freestyle Relay:** 1. NU, 1:31.30, 3. KU (Papham, Stauffer, West, Andrew), 1:33.99.
Men's 200-Yard Freestyle Relay: 1. Texas, 1:19.22. 5. KU (Chestnut, Peoples, Tejada, Kroli). 1:21.99.
*Women's 500-Yard Freestyle:* 1. Stacie Karnes,
A&M; A,4:50 M. 6. Tracey McCalley; K,49:58.
*Men's 500-Yard Freestyle:* 1. Erik Jorgensen,
KU; 41:25. 2. Tyler Painter, K; 42:21. 7
*Women's 200 Individual Medley: 1. Julia Russell, NU, 1:59.13. 5. Kristin Nilsen, KU, 2:02.75.*
*Men's 200 Individual Medley: 1. Chris Archer, Texas, 1:46.72. 5. Kostaki Chiligiris, KU, 1:49.95.
*Women's 50 Freestyle: 1. Helene Muller, NU, 22.98, 8. Rebecca Andrew, KU, 23.60*
Men's 50 Freestyle: 1. Neil Walker, Texas
19.75.
Women's 3-Meter Diving; 1. Vera Ilyina, Texas,
621 10
**Women's' 400 Medley Relay. 1. NU. 3:42.06.4.**
KU (Papham, Nilsen, Nielsen, West), 3:47.05.
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4B
Monday, March 3, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Shop Independent. Chain Stores Suck.
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North Carolina Tar Heels stomp Duke, finish second in Atlantic Coast Conference
No. 7 Blue Devils lose game despite trimming deficit to 4 points in final minutes
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Antawn Jamison scored 33 points and grabbed 11 rebounds yesterday, leading No. 8 North Carolina to a 91-85 victory over No. 7 Duke, the Tar Heels' eighth straight in the Atlantic Coast Conference after an 0-3 league start.
The Associated Press
The Tar Heels (21-6, 11-5) finished second in the conference and have not been lower than third in the ACC standings in 33 seasons.
The win also moved North Carolina coach Dean Smith within four of tying the career victory total of Kentucky's Adolph Rupp at 876.
The Blue Devils (23-7, 12-4), who had won the regular-season title when Florida State beat Wake Forest on Saturday, trailed by nine points at halftime but trimmed the deficit to three on a three-point play by Ricky Price with 11:18 left.
North Carolina used its superior size and inside muscle to push the lead back to 10 with 8:33 left and to 82-69 with 5:33 remaining.
Duke then mustered a 14-5 run, cutting the lead to 87-83 with 1.51 left, but the Tar Heels made four of six free throws in the final 39 seconds and sealed the win.
Steve Wojciechowski scored 18 points,
while Jeff Carnel added 15.
McNairy with Vince Carter and Ademola Oku-
itali
The Blue Devils built a 26-17 lead with 10:07 left in the half after a 3-point shot by Trajan Langdon.
Smith started Webb Tyndall, Charlie McNairy and Serge Zwikker — the three seniors playing in their final home game — along with Jamison and Shammond Williams.
After Duke scored the first five points, Smith replaced the seldom-used Tyndall and
But a putback by Carter and a layin by Zwikwer started a 26-6 run in the next five minutes. The Tar Heels' defense relegated the Blue Devils to perimeter shots during the run while their offense generated shots inside.
Ed Cota's putback with 5:41 left in the half tied the game at 29-29, and Jamison's breakaway layup at 5:24 gave the Tar Heels their first lead of the game. 31-29.
Track team fails to qualify, have indoor All-American
Kansan staff report
Duke's only baskets on the run were 3-point shots by Woiciechowski and Langdon.
The Kansas track and field team sent four team members to compete in the last-chance NCAA qualifying meet in Ames, Iowa, on Friday, but no one posted a qualifying mark.
North Carolina led 45-32 with 2:30 left in the half, but Wojciechowski and Capel hit 3-pointers to help Duke draw to within nine at halftime.
Marc Romito and Jon Colby Miller competed in the pole vault, and Jerry Pullins and Ricardo Amezcuza competed in the 5.000-meter run.
This will mark the first time that the Kansas track program won't have an indoor All-American since the 1972 season.
Duke has won the ACC title 12 times, including four this decade.
Sprinter Pierre Lisk was not able to compete because of a cold, and co-captain Nathan Prenger did not compete because of a sore hamstring.
Men's, women's golf teams to tee off in tournaments
Kansan staff report
The Kansas men's golf team kicks off the spring season today at the Bridges All-American Intercollegiate Invitational in St. Louis, Mississippi.
The tournament will be played at the par-72 Bridges Golf Course recently designed by professional golfer Arnold Palmer.
Chris Thompson, who led the team last semester in stroke average with a four-tournament average of 73.66, will lead Kansas into competition.
The women also will play today in the Bay Area Classic in Vallejo, Calif., their second tournament of the season. The tournament will be played at Hiddenbrooke Country Club, a par-72 course 45 minutes from Oakland, Calif.
The Jayhawks finished 10th in last week's Welsh Memorial classic in College Station, Texas.
Both tournaments are 36 holes.
Kansas victorious
22
Geoff Krdeger / KANSAN
Kansas women's soccer player Cynthia Dahle fights for the ball against a Missouri player. Kansas beat Missouri 5-1, advanced to the finals and again beat Missouri 5-2.
The games were part of Saturday's Jayhawk Indoor Classic at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Members of the Kansas soccer team formed a team and played in the event.
Teams in the tournament consisted of eight players. Four teams played. Each match had two 25-minute halves. The Jayhawks captured the tournament title and did not lose a game, finishing at 4-0.
In the first game, Kansas tied Park College of Kansas City, Mo., 3-3. In the second game, Kansas defeated Arkansas 3-2. The Jayhawks then played Missouri and won the final two games.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Concert Series presents the New York City Opera National Company in
LA
PUCCINI'S
BOHÈME
The tragic romance of the fiery poet Rodolphe, and Mimi, a gentle seasurest. *Rue 1*
March 7 & 8,1997 8:00 p.m.
The Lied Center of Kansas
THE LIFT CENTER
1927-1947
All tickets half-price for students.
Rodolpho's flat, Paris, 1830.
Rodolpho, one thing is certain. To be an artist is to be cold.
Marcello, I might as well feed my play to the flames! It will do more good there!
STUDENT
SENATE
3/18
AD
What fortune I have discovered!
I have a job to teach music to an
Englishman. I am to play and sing
at his piano until his neighbor's
bird drops dead!
Later... You go.
I must work.
The right is
young and
so are we!
Let's go for more
wine! Rodolpho,
come along!
tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (913) 864-ARTS and all Ticketmaster Ticket Centers or can
Ticketmaster at (913) 825-4545 or (816) 913-3300.
Illustrated by Melissa Debner
A knock.
Rodolpho answers
Can you light
my candle?
(cough - cough)
Watch this paper for Part II.
imaster Ticket Cart small
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 3, 1997
Kansan Classified
100s
Announcements
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
125 Travel
126 Future Plans
105 Personals
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
男 女
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
X
Employment
The Kansas will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising
205 Help Wanted
305 For Sale
400s Real Estate
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Micellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Classified Policy
901
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
is in residence or on university or national registration or time of birth. The House may decide that a person is entitled to the Federal Park Housing Act of 1960 which makes it eligible to advertise any preference, if applicable. In order to obtain permission from the House, an application
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
lat 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.
1
100s Announcements
KU Q4 A offers individual peer counseling to people who are lebanian, biexual, gay, transgender or unure. Please call KU info at 804-3506 or Headquarters at 824-2345 for more information.
105 Personals
SWM age 40's brown eyes & hair, country background, animal lover. Desires female for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P.O. Box 44215 Lawrence, KS 60944
Desiring to see La Boheme in dream seats. Offering 2 side aisle tickets and cash for youa. Call Eric 843-908-968.
110 Business Personals
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!
GRANTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE
FROM SPONSOR! NO REPAYMENT EVER!!
FOR MORE INFO ALWAYS: 1-800-232-2455
Sterling Silver Jewelry For Guys & Gals.
holo, naval rings with tazes, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc. Shop, 928 Mass.
HEALTHY Watkins Since 1906 Caring For KU BEAUTIFIED
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
Services for Students,
Professionals, Publishers
P.O.Box 1553
(913)539-4471
ADEDITING@aol.com
A&D Editing
25% Off manuscripts over 100 pages. 10% off manuscripts under 100 pages with presentation of valid college identification. Good through 3/31/97
Editing for Dissertations Theses, Manuscripts for Publication. Includes: spelling, grammar,punctuation, appearance,style, content,and context,for APA,MLA,and general fiction styles.
120 Announcements
Kemper Faculty Fellowship nominations are now being accepted. Acceptance may be obtained in writing to Kemper College, 216 N. Washington Blvd., Bellevue, WA 98023.
Don't forget Bucky's Drive-In Pepsi Hour
4-8 pmdaily
All softdrinks half price
Bucky's Drive-In 9th & Iowa
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or unsure? KU Q&A offers a confidential support group Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. Call KI Info at 864-350 or Headquarter# at 911-6243 for location.
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
841-2345 • 1419 Mass.
24 hrs. Free
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
120 Announcements
FAST FUNDAIRSHARE - RARE $200 IN DAYS
GREEKS, GROUPS, CLUBS, MOTIVATED
INDividuals, FAST, EASY. NO FINANCIAL
OBLIGATION (900) 1882-1882 EXT. 33
NUDE RECREATION
North American Nuclear Defense Institute 100% of the
NEED $$$$$$$$ ?
Men & Women needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research studies. Earn up to $1000/wk. 24 Hour info(2.5 hours) : 1-813-879-4771.
MANAGINGTEST ANXIETYWORKSHOP
Demonstrate confidence! FREE!
Multicultural Resource Center
Sponsored by the
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
PREPARING FOR EXAMS WORKSHOP
FREE!
Time management, memory tech niques, test-taking strategies
Mon. March 3,
7-8:30 pm
330 Strong
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
125 Travel
Spring-Break in Grand Canyon. Spend 6 days of adventure exploring the Grand Canyon. $800 value for only $380. Includes all equipment plus more. For info call 749-3277
AAA|Spring 97 '97. Cancun, Jamaica, & Bahamasi! 7 nights wair from $39. Enjoy
kink parties, No Cover @ Best Bars.
& Group discounts!! Endless Tours Tune-1
824-700-3477
FREE INFO 1-800-488-8828
WWW.SANDPIPERBEACON.COM
SPRING BREAK PANAMY CITY BEACH
FLORIDA AND SANDIPER-BEACON BEACH
RESORT 2 POOLS, 1 INDOOR POOL, HUGE
BEACHSIDE HOT TUB, SUITES UP TO
10 PEOPLE, TIKI BEACH BAR, HOME OF
THE WORLD'S LONGEST KEG PARTY
140 Lost & Found
Found: Female tabby cat young.
Found around 9th & Indiana Streets.
Call 841-4687.
Lost 3 mins, old_golden_retriever puppy. Wearing
a mask. Lost 6 mins, old_golden_retriever puppy. Wearing
a mask. If G found, call 825-3235 or 79-800.
200s Employment
男 女
205 Help Wanted
Part-time office assistant needed in the
MWF mornings 7:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m.
Call 748.0130
HTML TUTOR NEEDED to help me put together
a message that will know you stuff. Email
baitcare@cutey.com
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED! 6 wk university youth rec center. Lake Quivira
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center is accepting applications for afternoon teacher's aid. Experience with children required. Apply 2104 W. 15th St.
Nanny needed for Spring Break. kids, 11, 10, & 7
nanny needed for Spring Break. nanny substitute
offered, CAFE 693-3598 693-3599
Looking for motivated, dependable, team oriented people. Hiring all positions, apply in person.
Furrs Cafeteria
Wait staff positions available at Mass. St. Deli and Buffalo Bald's Smokehouse. Must have some daytime lunch availability during the week. Apply at usmass.org. Available 9-4 PM (usmass, (uaspria above smokehouse).
Seeking self-motivated person for part-time receptionist at lawrence airport. Phones, Uniicon, light bookkeeping, and cleaning. Evening call 425-893-7600 per wk. Call 425-893-7600 to schedule interview.
Highly organized female who is good with children, needed to be mother's helper. 10-20 hr. per week. Must be available monday through friday, morning and evening. Permitted, ferried, not charged. $5.50. Call 841-704-1947.
205 Help Wanted
215-887-9700 or e-mail: pinetree@pond.com
OCLR CO. MUNGS
Overnight camps in Pocono Mnus. of PA
Over 40 activities - Seeking general
Paisoano's Italian Ristorante is looking for heart of the house employees.
BabySister/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
own car, experience, and knowledge of child
development. Send letter, resume, schedule,
and reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Staircase Flint.
Experienced kitchen help needed.
Dishwashers, linecooks, and prep cooks
Competitive wages based on experience.
Apply in person 2112 W, 25th st.
Wanted 87 students. Lose 9-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough. Doctor recommended. Guaranteed. $20 cost. Free gift. 1-800-635-781.
Apply in person 2112 W, 25th st.
Immediate opening for Customer Service Associate to work dhime hours. Flexible scheduling, 20-30 hours per week. Send resume to Kerry Hart, M. Gattis, 3514 Clinton Pkwy, ST. 1, Lawrence, KS, 6047, fax to 838-3122 or in person at Mr. Gattis.
Do you surf the Net? Would you like to earn $2K,$5K or more a week, playing on the Net? Or on GO? User's name (INDEPENDENT) + password: (TRAVELER) Site opens 7/24/97
INTERNET SURFERS
"Seeking self motivated person for part-time position. Provide all needed equipment and aircraft with other general responsibilities. Evenings 4pm-8pm and weekends. 10-15 hours per day. Please apply at airport Mon.-Thur, 3am to 4pm. No calls."
STUDENT WORK. up to $10.25 | I'M a CO. l'ish
Lawrence & JOOCE. Flexible day, evening,
weekend schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP &
JOOCE office at (813) 381-WORK (10am-5pm)
JOOCE office at (813) 381-WORK (10am-5pm)
Kitchen staff position available at Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Food prep and lime cooking. Some day hours are helpful. Start $3.50/hr up to $8.50/hr, after 8 mo, plus profit. Apply at Schumann Food Company business offices 9-M-F at 719 Mass. (unairs above smokehouse.)
BPI Building Services has immediate opening for p/t crew leader to join our late evening commercial cleaning team. Hours are late Sun.-Thurs. 8:11; 3:09 p.m. qualified applicant will have a eye for detat and a solid work history. Amy at 842-765-6101 in person at 839 Iowa behind Appliance Plus.
Recreation Center Leaders City of Lawrence
Part-time evenings and weekends, supervising use of recreation centers. HS grad/GED and in education programs 3/6/7 at Admin. Serv., 2nd Floor Hall, 6 East 6th, Lawrence. KS 66044. EOE M/F/D
Credit Card fundraisers for fraternities, sororites & groups. Any campus organization can submit a credit card application for $5.00/VISA application. Call 1-800-932-0538 ext. 65. Qualified callers receive
FREE T-SHIRT
+ $1000
Computer: Need personnel for greater KC/Lawrence Area, on site computer consulting. Flex lrs. F or PT. Must have reliable trans- and be able to pass pre-employment drug test. Desired skills: strong customer serv-2; ability to process job assignments. Win 3.16 & DOS; ability to assess client needs. Send resume to: Geeks On Wheels, PO Box 688, Lawrence, KS 65049, Fax: 913-943-1922.
STUDENT HOURLY position in College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, 15-20 hours per week. Book training in process orders and payments, word processing; filing; producing reports; receptionist & general assistant positions in working with numbers; good communication skills. Prefer experience with dBase or Foxpro and Lotus 1-2-3 or Excel. Complete an application form on the deadline March 7, 1977. AA/ER Employer.
205 Help Wanted
Student Hourly - 15-20 hrs/week for Mac computer specialist. Must have knowledge in all facets of Mac computer skills, good oral and written communication skills, ability to work with minimal supervision. Responsible for management of the SMTTP gateway; day-to-day board and prefer student planning to remain at KU through 1998. Contact Wally Casquinio, #478, 3061 Delen Clementi, 3061 75.750, Deadline March ECHO AA/Employer
CNA/CNHA
Flexographic Electronic Prepres - Universal Products, Inc. is seeking applications for qualified individual who possesses a strong working knowledge of MAC and various graphics applications (Illustrator, Photoshop, QuarkXpress). Electronic prepress knowledge such as stepping/distorting for plan set-up, and trap and mold operations plus. Opening could be lst and valid position.
This is a full time position with benefits included. The position requires a Bachelor's degree or Qualified applicants should send resume or apply in person to: Universal Products, Inc., 321 W. 45th St., KS 76524. A Wichita屯州 eOE/M/F/Z.
Explore the possibilities of HOME CARE where you can enjoy the freedom of giving one on one attention to your client without interruption. VNA offers a variety of training programs for Private Home Care Aide Program with early A.M., late afternoon, and evening hours. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits include access to medical facilities, Visiting Nurses Association, 336 Missouri, Lower Level or call 841-6463 for Pat. EEOE
Design Artist - Universal Products, Inc. is seeking applications for design artists. Responsibilities will include developing conceptual sketches and illustrations of designs using finished drawings &/or proto-type for client approval, creating new &/or original designs and other artistic activities which support company branding efforts. A qualified applicant will have significant experience with Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, and Quark Express. A natural ability to use color effectively and previous experience in printing should be desired.
This is a full time position with benefit
fits included. Requires a Bachelor's in
education. Qualified applicants should send a resume
or apply in person to: Universal Products, Inc.
801 W. 75th St., KGD 7520, a Wichita
suburb, EOE/M/F
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
NAISMITH Hall
Walk-ins welcome!
Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
1800 Naismith Dr.
(at the corner of 19th and Naismith)
Database Coordinator
We are now accepting applications for Fall 1997 Resident Assistants. Weare looking for individuals with strong leadership skills, great enthusiasm, and personal empowerment. Come to our front skl for information and an application between 8a.m. and 11p.m., Mondays through Fridays.
Recycle Your
Knife
Oread a in drug development has an immediate full-time opening for a Database Coordinator.
Qualified candidate should have a very strong Win95 background, with exp. using Excel & Word or WordPerfect, FileMaker Pro, or similar database applications.
Duties & responsibilities will include; researching, maintaining, & using database of industry contacts for business intelligence & marketing purposes.
Individual needs to have strong oral & written interpersonal communication skills.
Kansan
For consideration please mail or fax resume along with salary requirements to:
DB-1
Oread
1501 Wakarusa Dr.
Lawrence, KS 66047-1803
fax (913) 749-1882
No calls please/ EOE
225 Professional Services
Radio Announcers part time for KLWN KMJR K21R onair exp. Prog. resume to program exp. Prog. 307 Layton
Radio Announcers part time for KLWN & KLZR,
on-air experience required. Tape and resume to
program director. PO Box 3007 Lawrence, KS64
8060 EOE.
Radio news, reporter weekends for KLWN/KLZR, Journalism training & broadcast experience needed. Tape & resume to news director P.O. Box 3007 Lawrence SK 65046 EOE
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800)-733-2404
Fake ID'S & alcohol offences divorce, criminal & civil matters The law office of DONA G. STROHL Donate G. Strohl Sally G. Kesley 16 East 13th B42-5116 Free Institution
235 Typing Services
X
TRAFFIC-DUIS
PERSONAL INJURY
divorces, criminal and civil matters
The law office of
Call Jacki at 832-8484 for applications, term papers, theses, dissertations, transcripts, etc.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Makin' the Grade.
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/ laser printer will create top quality paper for you. Call Deanna @ 843-2684.
340 Auto Sales
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
14ft. Glaston Bay sailboard, good condition. Buy now
@ 224-710-3911 for Spring Break. Lease message @ (913)
@ 224-710-3911
Killer Loop free style snowboard. Brand new.
9:00 p.m. $0.25 o.b. Ch31 331-331. Call after
8:00 p.m.
Oceanic SS 55 Aquarium, wet/dry filter, reef light
lamp, and pH control. About 100 lbs of barge rock, Sea
rock 855-386-980.
**Cameron Fire 2.0 V. VA**, A/C, AM/PM Class, S, midp.
**Cameron Fire 2.0 V. VA**, A/C, AM/PM Class, S, midp.
Must Buy. Best offer! Call 749-8268 or 964-1170.
84 Nissan Pulsar, light blue. 5-Speed,
A/C/M/FM Cass, sun roof.
$1250. $84-9812
www.upperluracra.com> Pictures of pre-owned
Cameras with UDL for sale. Call 1-800-874-CURA for more info. Ask for Pal.
B7 Mustang GT conv, black, leather, all power good cond. (913) 833-4270
340 Auto Sales
- Beautiful dark blue metallic
• 5-speed • Leather interior
• CD player
$16,800 842-5733
84 Chevrolet Camaro good condition, runs great,
very reliable can $200 must sell; call Matt at
917-652-3411.
1995 VW Cabrio convertible
400s Real Estate
B-2-Boom, 2 story townhouse, 1/2 bath, new
furnished, 38' x 40' with 16' ceilings,
April-July 14-July 85%, $46/mo. Call 331-2700
405 For Rent
2 Bedroom sublease 1.1/8 b/s from stadium.
Available March 1 and fall, KVM 614-8000
1 bedroom basement apartment, lots of space,
1 bedroom office facilities + cable.
8544. Available immediately.
3 br apartment sublease in May. May rent free. W/D, DW, AC, off street parking. Deck. Close to campus. 1133 Kentucky. Hickory. 685-2610.
A studio apartment in a house close to campus.
481-5434. Available immediate!
Going abroad F97 997 need a adhesive for Spring
call AOBASE AS41. To at 331-3498 or at 331-4698
or at 331-5098.
FURNISHED 3 BR APT. 2 BATH W/D, A/C
BALANCED 3 BR APT. 2 BATH W/D, A/C
Condo for Sale 33bm, 82ath,洗衣/dryer on
FARM LOM, 790,000 BOO. Lawrence, Assamblea
FAIM LOM, 790,000 BOO.
new leasing Bradford Square Apartments on
one of the 16 deck, cabs allowed for
more info. Call 841-9946.
Spacious 2 bedroom house, hardwood floors. Iota
Societie 2 bedroom house, K U. Available午月 18:00.
Call 79-3824.
Studio 1&2 Bedrooms.Available for summer & fall. Some locations close to campus, on bus route.
Studio w/ storage room. Sublease. New carpets. furnished. Walk to campus. On bus rt. cable & trash pd. Avail now. March free. 829-390. Must see
Two bedroom Apt. Hardwood floor. Footeat bath. No pets. $399/month plus deposit. Call 814-741-2500.
Sublease 2bdm,1 car garage,W/D hookups,central air,new carpet and new tile in kitchen and bathum $490/mo,Pets OK,Avail, April 1 or May 1. 838-973 or 841-5797
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MWF 39-6pm to work with children aged 18-50 yrs. A.M. & P.M. Substitutes neqed also-Call Rosemary 843-147.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
Teen, a student housing alternative. Open
& diverse membership, non profit operation,
democratic control. $180-240 wk. wd dinners, Util.
WAD, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 841-0484.
&
LCA
YORK MEMORIAL CENTER
PLS
Spacious Apartments for rent
"Convenient affordable housing"
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher Avail.
Central Air • Close to KU Campus
Studios 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedrooms
Call: LCA Apartments
331-2pls (757) am
after 4pm 749-3794
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury.
• 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms
• Washer/Dryer
• Built-in TV
• Alarm System
• 2 Pools & Hot tubs
• Fitness Center
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
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• Volleyball Court
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842-1455
Quail Creek Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive 843-4300 Call for Appt.
"In a busy, impersonal world,
Managed & maintained by Professionals
430 Roommate Wanted
Female Roomsmate need 2 bdrm 1/2 block from campus. Washer/Dryer.Dial 383-4702
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roommate needed for two bdm apt. $185/mo plus 1/utilities. If interested call 331-3461
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Great price $305+ bills call 749-8636 early
6B
Monday, March 3, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Women's tennis sweeps meet
Team prepares for road games
By Andy Rohrback Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's tennis team found a way to win.
Eric B. Howell / KANSAN
in their first meet at Alvamai Tennis Club this semester, the Jayhawks swept the Auburn Tigers 9-0 Saturday, winning their second consecutive home meet. Kansas beat Syracuse Feb. 16 at Wood Valley Racquet Club in Topeka.
"That's what I wanted," Kansas women's tennis coach Roland Thomqvist said. "It was good to get a 9-0, but I still think we could've played better."
The Tigers had to default the No. 3 doubles and No. 6 singles matches. Two Auburn players, Kristy Ogle and Lucy Altman, had transferred from Australia and their eligibility was in question, said Auburn coach Randy Holden. Auburn's other No. 3 doubles player, Tara Fitzmorris, suffered a nerve injury to her leg.
AUTHORITY PRESS
Brooke Chiller and Amy Trytek celebrate their No. 1 doubles victory. The Jayhawks swept the Auburn Tigers 9-0 Saturday at Alvamar Racquet Club.
Despite winning two matches by default, the Kansas team didn't let up. Holden said.
"Obviously, Kansas is a very good team," he said. "They definitely took it to us. They jumped on us and just never let us breathe, basically."
Kansas won four of five matches in straight sets. The No. 4 match stretched into three sets, but Kansas' Bianca Kirchhof picked up the match 6-7, 6-1, 6-2, defeating Auburn's Heidi Stewart.
Julia Sidorova made her presence felt as well. She won her match without giving up a game.
"I played well. I'm happy with my match," Sidorova said of her 6-0, 6-0 win. "You get more comfortable on the court the more you win."
"What happened the first set is I let her get to me mentally," Kirchhof said. "I started to tell myself, 'Let's get your stuff together and play tennis.'
Beginning March 8, the Jayhawks will play eight consecutive meets on the road, including Big 12 Conference meets at Baylor and Texas Tech. The road trip begins at Brigham
Young University, ranked No. 2 in Region V competition. Kansas holds the No.1 spot.
"That's a very big match for us,"Thornqvist said. "By the time we head into Big 12 competition, we've seen the best the country has to offer."
The Jayhawks will have to continue without Kylie Hunt. Hunt had surgery on her knee last week and will redshirt the 1997 season. Thorquist said he expected her to return next season to finish out her eligibility.
Tennis team wins,loses one
Abaroa, Avila defeated by Drake 8-3, Tulsa 8-4
By Andy Rohrback Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's tennis team picked up one win and one loss during the weekend, beating the Drake Bulldogs 5-2 but falling to the Tulsa Golden Hurricanes in a tight 4-3 meet.
The doubles team of Enrique Abaroa and Xavier Avila, ranked No. 6 nationally, fell to Drake 8-3 and to Tulsa 8-4.
Kansas, 5-3 overall, dropped both doubles points 2-1 by losing matches at the No.1 and No.3 positions.
"I expect more from our No. 1 team," Kansas coach Mark Riley said. "We're just not playing good doubles."
Only the No. 2 doubles team, Fernando Sierra and Luis Uribe, picked up their matches. Sierra and Uribe beat their Drake opponents 8-4 and won in Tulsa on a tie-breaker 9-7.
Losing the doubles point isn't something the Jayhawks are used to.
"We need to work a lot on doubles," Avila said. "Last year, we won a high percentage of the doubles points."
"For me, it was a surprise that we lost that point," Sierra said. "I think maybe they were just a little more prepared for us."
The Drake meet, at Alvamar Tennis Club,
4120 Clinton Parkway, seemed to favor the visiting Bulldogs as Abaroa, playing at the No. 1 singles spot, fell to Robert Novotny in straight sets, 6-2, 6-2. But Kansas won the last five singles matches, each in straight sets.
"It shows that we're a good team, that we can come back after losing the dou
bles point," said Riley, who is undefeated at home.
The meet was clinched when Tucker, 15-8 overall, defeated Drake's Stephen Doig at the No. 5, 6-2, 0-0.
Knowing that the meet was on the line bad an effect on Tucker.
"It's always on your mind," he said. "You have to turn it into a positive. It makes me pretty excited."
Drake coach Dave Paschal said he was satisfied with his team's performance.
"We wanted the doubles point," he said.
"Overall, I think we competed pretty well."
Riley was the former coach for Drake, and Paschal was coach at Southern Illinois. Drake's conference rival.
In Tulsa, Abaroa dropped the No.1 match, and Sierra and Uribe also caved to their opponents.
Avila and Tucker won their singles matches, as did Andrew Lumpkin.
Kansas vs. Oklahoma: At the game
KLAHON
Left:
Geoff Krieger
/KANSAN
/KANSAN
Shelly Canada blocks two Oklahoma players as the ball passes in front of them. Kansas played its final regular season game Saturday in Allen Field House.
Below:
Eric B. Howell/
Coach Washington consoles Angie Halbleib during Senior Day pregame ceremonies. Halbleib and the Jayhawks won their final home game against Oklahoma 92-69.
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INFO SESSION DATE: Monday, March 10 TIME: 7 pm
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Basketball: Women's NCAA tournament begins today. Page 1B
Parking: Ex-employees ask whether the department overstaffs events. Page 3A
****************************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1997
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.103,NO.110
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Sperm stream spotted by student in the stacks
A KU student said she saw a man masturbating in the Watson Library stacks Saturday when she was studying, KU police said.
Police said the woman reported seeing someone behind her in the reflection of a glass window. When she turned around and looked, she said she heard someone move back
She couldn't see anyone, police said, but she saw a stream of ejaculate coming from behind a book-shelf in the 3.1/2 west stack.
Police said the woman could not see the man, but she thought he was hiding behind the bookshelf behind her.
After the man ejaculated and the woman turned around, police said, the man ran down the stairway to the next level.
Officer Gayle Reece said she thought this was the first incident of this kind this semester.
—Kansan staff report
WASHINGTON — Vice President Al Gore, under fire for his aggressive role in campaign fundraising, acknowledged yesterday that he solicited donations from his White House office but insisted he did not do anything wrong. But he said he would never do it again.
Gore claims fund-raising practice was legal, fair
"Everything I did, I understood to be lawful," Gore said, adding that he made only a few calls in search of contributions from his office, around the corner from the Oval Office. It is illegal for federal employees to solicit money in federal buildings, but Gore said he was not subject to that restriction.
He defended his actions in a White House news conference, markedly different from his occasional appearances on behalf of administration initiatives. This time, Gore was trying to protect his political honor as he looks ahead to the presidential race in 2000.
Accusation of files theft latest in bombing saga
DENVER — Timothy McVeigh's lawyer demanded an investigation yesterday of The Dallas Morning News, accusing the newspaper of stealing hundreds of files from his computer, including a purported confession from McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bombing defendant
Stephen Jones, while denying that the statement was in fact a confession, said, "There is no justification whatever for this criminal act."
A Morning News lawyer said the newspaper had not broken the law and had nothing to fear from the investigation.
Jones said the newspaper had broken into the defense's computer files and had obtained hundreds of documents for McVeigh and co-defendant Terry Nichols, as well as 25,000 FBI files. Jones offered no proof that theft was committed, and said he was considering asking for a 90-day delay in the trial as a cooling off period.
High 49° Z
Low 36° CALENDAR
INDEX
PARTLY CLOUDY
—The Associated Press
TODAY
Opinion ... 4A
World News ... 5A
Scoreboard ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 4B
Classifieds ... 6B
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will not be participating in Rock Chalk Revue next weekend after an alleged hazing incident last week.
Weather: Page 2A
Z
COMPUTER LAB
By Ann Marchand Kansan staff writer
The fraternity has been placed on interim suspension by the office of Vice Chancellor David Ambler following allegations of excessive drinking that led to one freshman member being taken to the hospital.
Alpha Delta Pi left to find substitute
It is unclear at this time whether the members of Pi Kappa Alpha will receive recognition for the community service they performed for Rock Chalk Revue.
Pi Kappa Alpha out of Revue
"ADPI has come this far, and we've worked very hard," she said. "And we're not going to give up."
"It's a very serious offense," said James Kitchen, dean of student life.
Todd Guerrieri, Lake Forest, Ill. senior and president of Pl Kappa Alpha, said he was concerned mainly about the women of Alpha Delta Pl.
Judd thought the fraternity should receive credit for its hard work but that Rock Chalk Revue should stay within the confines of the interim suspension, Judd said.
"I think it's unfair to the women to be punished for actions that they did not commit," Guerrieri said. "ADPI is suffering for doing absolutely nothing wrong."
"It's something that, very easily, someone could have gotten seriously hurt. There will be a hearing, and we're going to investigate this."
Pi Kappa Alpha will remain on interim suspension until the hearing has concluded. Kitchen said the hearing date had not been set yet.
The decision to exclude Pi Kappa Alpha from Rock Chalk Revue was made by Revue advisers. Kitchen said the administration stood behind that decision.
"I don't believe that we can start deviating or making exceptions just because they're participating in Rock Chalk." he said.
Pi Kappa Alpha was paired with Alpha Delta Pi sorority for the Revue. The two groups had been practicing their skit *Digging for*
ROCK CHALK REVUE
Meg Strayer, Glen Ellyn, Ill., senior and Rock Chalk Revee dic
tor for Alpha Delta Pi, said although the situation was difficult, the show would go on.
Gold since early last fall.
Reagan Jadam, executive director of Rock Chalk Revue, said the skit would be performed without the men of Pi Kappa Alpha.
The cast members have been practicing about 10 hours each week. Pugh said.
"We are currently looking for alternative members to join Alpha Delta Pi on stage." Judd said.
"It would be extremely hard to catch up at this point," she said.
About 10 to 15 men are needed to perform in the skit. Any interested students may participate on a volunteer basis.
The volunteers do not have to be in a fraternity. Judd said that any student was eligible — except a member of Pi Kappa Alpha.
sophomore and member of Alpha Delta Pi, said she thought it would be difficult to perform without Pi Kappa Alpha.
But Catherine Pugh, Wamego
"If it was up to me, I want to give Pike all the credit they deserve, but we don't know how to approach that just yet," Judd said. "ADPI is obviously one of the victims here."
Sleeplessness saps students' spunk
Alcohol and caffeine may cause insomnia
By Emily Vrabac Kansan staff writer
The countdown to the 8 a.m. alarm is on, as it is every night. Roll over, look at the clock. It is 3 a.m. Five more hours. Those five hours become four hours, and so on until the alarm goes off at 8, and the day begins even though the night hasn't ended.
Insomnia is a common problem students experience occasionally, and there are many possible reasons for this.
"If you're getting enough sleep, you should be able to go to bed at night and wake up shortly before your alarm," said Linda Keeler, a psychiatrist with Counseling and Psychological Services.
If this is not the case, several possibilities should be examined.
"Caffeine, nicotine and alcohol are probably the big three substances that will affect sleep," Keeler said.
She said those and other recreational drugs had a direct effect on the brain, changing its biochemistry and leading to a disruption of sleep patterns.
Randall Rock, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said caffeine could take several hours to clear from the body's system, keeping the brain alert even when the body wants to sleep.
"If you are sensitive to caffeine, you need to cut that out early in the evening." Rock said.
Keeler said the key to sleep was a brain chemical called serotonin, which is produced with materials found in complex carbohydrate foods. Consequently, a change in diet that eliminates or reduces the number of complex carbohydrates can lead to difficulty sleeping.
"If you don't take in the building blocks, you can't get the raw materials for serotonin," Keeler said.
Sorotzonu also affects the transfer of information from short-term to long-term memory, she said. Because of this, it is better to go to bed early and wake up early to study instead of staying up late or studying all night.
Permanent or temporary anxiety can cause students to lie in bed awake at night.
Other sleep problems are not temporary. Rock said chronic sleep problems often could indicate
Why can't I sleep?
Insomnia
Change in activity level. Exercise should be at least three hours before bedtime.
Not consuming enough complex carbohydrates, such as breads and other starchy foods.
Alcohol, caffeine or nicotine use.
Anxiety about an event.
What can I do to fall asleep?
Exercise three times a week with a brisk walk or aerobic activity. Research shows that exercise leads to deeper and longer sleep. Exercise at least three hours before bedtime.
■ Include pasta and bread in meals or snacks on a regular basis
Avoid or at least limit use of alcoholic beverages, drinks containing caffeine and smoking.
- Wind down before bed, using soft music,
light reading or a warm bath or shower.
Make sure the bedroom is dark and quiet
physical problems such as hyperthyroidism, diabetes, urinary tract infections or depression.
"If people can't break that sleep pattern, they need to get help." he said.
Keeler and Rock suggested ways to establish good sleeping patterns.
Keeler said she recommended students create a regular routine at night, including setting a target bedtime and sticking to it.
Rock said students' weekend sleeping patterns should match the patterns they follow during the week. If they go to bed at midnight and wake up at 8 during the week, they should do the same on weekends.
"Maybe alter it by an hour or so, but beyond that, it makes you experience jet lag without leaving Douglas County," Rock said. "Your body really does like consistency."
Rock said using the weekend to catch up on sleen was not a good idea.
Rock and Keeler said students should take time to relax and clear their minds before they went to bed.
"They should plan not to get behind in the first place," he said.
"Try to really give your body a message to switch gears and wind down," Keeler said.
Light reading, soft music and a warm bath or shower are wares to relax at night before sleep.
March madness
Taking advantage of the pleasant weather, Ty Abrahamson, Olathe freshman, demonstrates his flexibility in front of Murphy Hall.
University won't give funds to Hilltop
By Dave Morantz
Kansan staff writer
But today, high demand for child care has made Hilltop inadequately small. The building across from the Kansas Union holds about 150 children, with200 children on a waiting list. Its tiny playground washes away in rain storms, and sewage comes up through toilets.
In the '70s, the administration had trouble turning a deaf ear to student demands. From the protests of KU women, the February Sisters, Hilltop Child Development Center was created to provide child care to children of University faculty and students.
"It's really hard when you're potty training someone, and this stuff comes up the toilet," said Nancy Golden, Lawrence resident and Hilltop employee.
Although a plan for a new center designed to hold 308 children has been drawn, the administration has responded to a Student Senate
request for funds by saying it cannot afford to partially pay for the center.
That decision has left Hilltop's directors desperate for a solution and Student Senate strapped to finance the new building. For the last two years, students have paid a $2 campus fee that goes toward a fund marked for the construction of a new child-care facility. As of last fall, about $250,000 had been collected.
Provost David Shulenburger said that after reviewing the costs of the proposed center, it was discovered that the $2 fee would not produce enough money.
Senate recognized that student fees may go up and responded by passing a resolution last fall asking the administration to fund at least 30 percent of the new facility.
After several negotiations between Hiltop's directors and the administration, David Amber, vice chancellor, told Senate two weeks ago that the University could not afford to finance the center because it was not able to find a private
donts and that same precautions.
Hilton was told about the decision last week.
donor and had other priorities.
Shulenburger said that although he believed the center was a good idea, higher priorities such as teaching and research facilities demanded the University's money.
"We are very disappointed that the University administration has chosen not to go forward with plans for the new child-care facility at this time," said Pat Pisani, Hilltop programming director, in a prepared statement yesterday. "A decision to go ahead with this project would be a much-needed sign that this University cares about its people and their families."
Grey Montgomery, student body president, favors a compromise. His plan would finance construction of a smaller, 200-child center by raising student fees to $4. This, he estimated, would pay for about 60 percent of the cost. The remaining money would come from a University contribution and a raise of faculty rates at Hilltop.
Andrel Urasov / KANSAN
THE LITTLE BOOK
Mill Burg, 5, Anthony Norfleet, 5, student aide Shannon Long, Wichita senior, and Regan Keller, 5, read a book at the Gold Room in Hilltop Child Development Center. KU administration has decided not to help finance Student Senate's plan for a new child-care center.
"I think the administration should be paying up right now," said Jason Angilan, graduate senator.
2A
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
G
WEATHER
QuickINFO
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
49
36
Not quite as mild.
WEDNESDAY
49 33
CAMPUS EVENTS
Seasonally cool
A A A
54 37
THURSDAY
Typical for early March.
37
٣
OAKS Non-Traditional Students Organization will have a brown bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at Alcev A in the Kansas Union. Contact: Janice Bock 843-6532.
Episcopal/Lutheran Campus Center will worship with Eucharist on noon today at Danforth Chapel. Contact: the Rev. Joseph S.T. Allard, 843-8202.
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Great Britain and Ireland study abreast at 4 p.m. today in 10SAL Liniottich Hall, Call #841-3742.
SL Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a health and science discussion group at 4 p.m. today at Alceo A in the Kansas Union. Contact: Mitchel, 843-0357.
ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact: the Rev. Raymond May, 843-0357.
KU Fencing Club will meet from 5 to 7 p.m. today at 212 Robinson Center. Contact: John Hendrix, 832-9963.
National Association for Anorexia and
Eating Disorders will sponsor a support group from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. today in 287 Fraser Hall. Contact: Alicia Cabrera, 865-5757.
KU KI-Akido Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. Contact: Jill Woolworth, 844-1798.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Rachel Avila, 864-8038.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Contact: Matt Caldwell, 838-3124.
Pre-law Society will meet and sponsor Kansas Supreme Court Justice Robert D. Davis at 6 p.m. today at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. Contact: Kelly Hansen. 841-7218.
Circle K will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Alceve G in the Kansas Union. Contact: April Lausing, 841-3083.
*Inspirational Gospel Volts will practice from 6:30 to 8:30 tonight at 328 Murphy Hall. Contact: Kimberly Evans, 864-8101.*
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor Her Story: Women Who Change the World from 7 to 9 tonight at the World from 7 to 9 tonight in the Kansas City BMI Room 841-265-3344.
KU Pro-Choice Coallition will meet at 7 tonight at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building at 1204 Oread Ave. Contact: Beacon Cowan, 823-1548
KU Yoga Club will meet from 7 to 8-30 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Old City Building.
Native-American Student Association will meet at 7 onight at the Sunflower Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Lori Huxwell, R41-8552.
AIESE will meet at 7:10 tonight at 2023
Haworth Hall, Contact: Jen Boatman, 804-655-2550
KU College Republicans will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. Contact: Heath D in 838-4082.
Department of Philosophy will sponsor Martha Nussbaum presenting The Feminist Critique of Liberalism at 8 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's car was broken into and the center armrest damaged between 11 p.m. Friday and 11 a.m. Saturday in the 1000 block of Emery Road, Lawrence police said. Damage was estimated at $100.
A KU student's purse was stolen between 11 a.m. and noon Feb. 25 from a car in the 1700 block of Ohio Street. Police said,警话,items were valued at $23.
A KU student's wallet was stolen between 6 p.m. Feb. 25 and 2 p.m. Wednesday in the 1600 block of Cambridge Road, Lawrence police said, items were valued at $543.67.
A KU student's left rear car window was broken between 3:30 and 8:30 a.m. Feb. 20 at 1500 Sigma Nu Place, Lawrence police said. Damage was estimated at $300.
A KU student's billiard, driver's license and other items were stolen from a car between 1 and 2:10 a.m. Wednesday in the 1600 block of Oxford Road, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $276.
A KU student's car battery, radar detector and money were stolen from a car between 5:30 p.m. Feb. 25 and 7:30 a.m. Wednesday in the 1200 block of East 23rd Street, Lawrence police said.
Items were valued at $360.
A KU student's car was broken into between 11:30 p.m. feb. 2 and 1:45 a.m. feb. 23 In the 800 block of New York City, Damage was entrained near Damenpe was entrained at $1,045.
A KU student's parking permit, CDs and other items were stolen from a car between 1:30 and 10 a.m. Feb. 22 in the 200 block of Lyon Street, Lawrence police said, Items were valued at $135.
A KU student's parking permit was stolen between 10:30 a.m. and 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Lot 57, south of Murphy Hall, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $55.
TUESDAY PRIMETIME
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO 8 Moseha (R) Goode Beh. Sparks (R) Sparks (R) Mercules: Legendary Jmys. Mad Abo, You Bzzzl Cops LAPD
WDAF 4 "Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit" ** (1933) Whoop Goldberg. News H. Patrol Cheers Extra
KCTV 5 Promised Land "Downsized" "When the Crade Fail" (1997, Drama) Linda Gray. News Late Show (In Stereo) Selffield
KSO6 (6:30) Lawrence City Commission Meeting (Live) Lawrence News Plus
KCPT 7 Nova (R) (in Stereo) Frontline (R) (in Stereo) In the Wild (R) (in Stereo) Business Rpt. Parenting Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
KSNT 8 Mad Abo, You Mad Abo, You Frasier Just Shoot Dateline (in Stereo) Tonight Show (in Stereo) Late Night
KMBC 8 Roseanne Ellen Home Imp. Spin City Practice "Pilot" News Roseanne Roseanne M*A*S*H
KTUW 9 Nova (R) (in Stereo) Frontline (R) (in Stereo) Signature: George C. Wolfe People-Here Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
WIBW 8 Billy Graham (in Stereo) "When the Crade Fail" (1997, Drama) Linda Gray Late Show (in Stereo) Late Late
KTKA 8 Roseanne Ellen Home Imp. Spin City Practice "Pilot" News Selffield Married... Nightlife
CABLE STATIONS
AAE 8 Biography: Conrad Hilton Touch of Frost "Penny for the Guy" Law & Order "Doubles" Biography: Conrad Hilton
CNBC 9 Equal Time Hardball Rivers Live Late Night (in Stereo) Charles Grodn Rivera Live (R)
CNN 9 Prime News Burden-Proof Larry King Live World Today Sports Illus. moneyline N NewsMow showbiz
COM 9 Sinbad: Brain Damaged (R) T. Davidson Bill Belamy Lizards Dream On Daily Show Comic Relief Tick Sat. Night
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CSPAN 8 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
DISC 9 Wild Discovery: two in Bush Mytern Un-World Airpower Showdown Wild Discovery: two in Bush Mytern Un-World
ESPN 9 College篮球: MCC Championship College basketball: Sun Belt Championship -- Teams TBA Sportscenter Golf Hawaii
HIST 9 Story of the Roman Arena Great Ships (R) History Undercover Year by Year "1983" (R) Story of the Roman Arena
LIFE 9 Unsolved Mysteries "Nazil Hunter: The Kearstake Bird" *** (1986, Drama) Living Mysteries Unsurvived Mysteries
MTV 9 Prime Time (in Stereo) Unplugged (in Stereo) Style World Tour Singled Out Loveville (in Stereo) Alternation
SCIFI 9 Wild Palms: "Rising Sons" (in Part 2 of 3) VR.5 "Simon's Choice" Wild Palms: "Rising Sones" (R)
TLC 9 Treasures America Secrets of the Pyramids Future Fantastic "Robot" Tressures America Secrets of the Pyramids
TNT 9 NBA Basketball: Orlando Magic at Seattle SuperSonics (Live) Inside-NBA "Airplane" *** (1986, Comedy Robert Hayes, Juice Huguen)
USA 9 Murder, She Wrote Boxing: Lonnie驾威is. Ots Grant. Live) Wings Wings Silk Strikes (in Stereo)
VH1 9 HYT one Video Collect Lift Xt-Top 10-Countdown INXS Concert (R) Sex Appeal Aspen Style (R) Crossroads Soul of VH1
WGN 9 7th Heaven "Hallowen" With Roger With Roger Newer (in Stereo) Dead Presidents' **** (1986, Drama) In Heat of the Night WTBS 9 "Benjil the Hunted" **%** (1987, Adventure Benji "Graylocks: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Ape" ***%** (1984) Christopher Lambert.
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 4 "Big Bully" *** (1996) Rick Moranis. PG" Comedy Hour: George Carlin "Profile for Murder" (1997) Lance Henkenis. Hookers at the Point (R)
MAX 8 "Desire" (1996, Suspense) Martin Kamp. P "Natural Born Killer" *** (1994) Woody Hamerson. "Animal Instincts II" %* (1994, Drama) NR"
SHOW 7 "Jason's Lynx" %* (1994) Allen Kamp. P "Dead President" **** (1994, Drama)兰塔雀 Lance Zatec Red Shoes Situations
TV TONIGHT
ET CETERA
www.kansan.com
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Emergency!
A. R. BORRER
William L. Brandenberger
M. D., University of Kansas, 1977 Coordinator of Urgent Care Board Certified in Family Practice Board Certified in Emergency Medicine
When you're in pain everything's an emergency. And whether it's a smashed thumb, a bad cut, or sudden sickness—we're here for you until 8 p.m. weekdays and 4:30 p.m. weekends.
NATURAL BODY CARE
but for the smaller, urgent
We have health care providers to give you the urgent medical care you need. Sometimes 911 is the best solution,
pains—we won't take your pocketbook for an ambulance ride.
//www.ukans.edu/home/watkins
HEALTH Since 1906 Watkins Caring For KU CENTER
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For more on our benefits, fellowship programs, and the kind of work we do,
see your career center or visit our web sites: www.hac.com and www.occ.com
Interested? We'll be on campus:
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
3A
Conference to offer worldly advice
Panelists, resources will be available at fair
By Umut Bayramoglu Kansan staff writer
But for those who want to discover the rest of the world, this weekend is an opportunity to find out about studying abroad, working overseas or volunteering for nonprofit organizations.
Many KU students have lived in Kansas all their lives, and some will choose to stay here.
The Office of International Programs will have more than 30 people with international careers in business, government agencies and humanitarian organizations for a conference Saturday in the Kansas Union.
The deadline for preregistration, including the luncheon and the keynote address, is 5 p.m. today at the International Programs office in 300 Strong Hall
Anne Merydith-Wolf, a secretary in the Applied English Center, said last year 45 KU students were
turned down on the day of the conference because of lack of space.
"I really encourage students to preregister because although this conference is open to high school teachers and students in the area, our main goal is to provide an opportunity for KU students," she said.
"We just want students to get a good picture of all the international opportunities," Merydith-Wolf said.
The conference starts at 8:15 a.m. and includes four panels that meet twice during the day.
Jeff Willis, a KU graduate and managing director of Asia/Pacific for Preco Industries Inc. of Kansas City, Kan., will be the keynote speaker at the luncheon.
Merydith-Wolf said the keynote speech would be about preparing for international job markets and different opportunities in international careers.
A resource room also will be available to participants.
Merydith-Wolf said participants could go to the resource room any time to look through books and brochures and make copies of information they
"We just want students to get a good picture of all the international
Anne Merydith-Wolf
opportunities."
Anne Merydith Wolf Applied English Center secretary
"Anybody thinking about careers should think internationally." she said.
need.
Throughout the day, Merydith-Wolf said, representatives from various organizations with international purposes will answer questions at the information fair.
"We will have some experienced panelists that are willing to share their experiences and help students find out what they need to do now for an international career later," she said.
The panelists helped me see what I need to do to focus on mv soals," she said.
Tesia Hosteler, Topeka sophomore, said she had attended the conference last year and thought it was helpful.
mar resner, Topeka senior, said the three conferences she had attended in the past helped her to pick a major.
Flesher said the conferences also provided her with a network of people in international careers.
"I was exposed to a lot of options at the previous conferences," she said. "Finally, I decided to add an international studies program to my political science major."
"It is the best way available to meet all the people that have experience in what I want to do in the future." she said.
Preregistration is $12 for KU students.
Late registration on Saturday is $10 and will be on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
KANSAI
ABOVE: Mackele Collier, Lawrence
season puts her feet on the bed
between calls at KU Info, in the Organizations and Activities Office in the Kansas Union. The service originally started as a rumor-control hot line on May 7, 1970. RIGHT: Armed with more than 200 reference manuals and thousands of files and Rolodex cards. Ku Info answers 500 to 600 calls each day. The office answers calls at 864-3506 from 7 a.m.to 2 a.m.daily
TUTORS
BIOLOGY
BASKETBALL
ATHLETICS
GOVERNMENT
TITUSO
James Grau / KANSAN
Tree totals and trivia no match for KU Info
By Mark McMaster Kansan staff writer
The University Information Center, more commonly known as KU Info, may not know the answer to every question students can think of, but most of the staffers have memorized one important fact:
There are 17,851 trees on campus.
KU Info staffer Gary Lazarus, New Orleans senior, said it was one of the most commonly asked questions the service answered.
It is not, however, the only bizarre question the staffers have dealt with.
"We get some pretty bad ones sometimes," said staffer Alana Jones, Tulsa, Okla., senior. "Someone called last night and asked if the moon was a planet."
And, of course, there are the drunken callers.
"You can tell from the first second whether someone is drunk or not," said Lazarus, who often works the late shift until KU Info closes at 2 a.m.
Some of the strangest calls he has received comes during those hours, he said.
It makes sense that KU Info should get some unusual questions, considering they receive hundreds of calls each day. On Wednesday, for example, staffers at the service answered 522 calls.
But KU Info's coordinator, Susan Elkins, doesn't want students to be shy about asking out-of-the-ordinary questions.
"People shouldn't be afraid to ask any sort of question," she said. "Most people don't know how much we can do."
The staffers turn to a variety of references on hand to answer questions, including a series of Rolodexes containing nearly 4,000 cards full of information.
KU Info staffers provide more than just information — occasionally they give personal advice.
Lazarus said he was asked out on a date on Valentine's Day. He had to decline, however, because KUInfo policy prevents
"I got asked about what this guy should pick as a Valentine's Day gift," Jones said.
KU Info
Things to ask KU Info:
Things to ask KU Info:
Information about events in Lawrence and throughout Kansas
Academic calendar dates, such as enrollment times and withdrawal deadlines
Information about KU policies and procedures
Topeka and Kansas City phone numbers (to avoid long-distance operator charges)
Things not to ask KU Info:
University and Lawrence phone numbers — Instead, use the University switchboard or local operators
Help with homework —but they do refer students to tutors
The hours of the Computer Center — just remember, it is open 24 hours a day, say staffers who are tired of answering this frequently asked question
Staffers provide many services for callers.
"One father called and asked us to tell his 3-year-old not to eat off the floor because his son wouldn't believe him," Elkins said.
Perhaps the most memorable calls, though, were new parents asking for advice in naming their children.
"We have a baby-naming book right here," Elkins said. "We've named two babies in the last couple of years."
These sorts of questions are very different than those the center answered when it opened in 1970 during a period of student unrest. It started out as a rumor control center to inform students about dangers around campus. As the campus grew peaceful once again, the center began to answer questions about policies and happenings around campus.
Today, KU Info can give information about events throughout Lawrence, Topeka and the Kansas City area. Students can seek answers by calling KU Info at 864-3506 or by looking on the KU Info web page, http://www.ukans.edu/~kuinfo
Some ask if parking overstaffs for events Ex-employees say game days were slow
By Dave Morantz Kansas staff writer
"I sat in my car for six hours one day without having to stop anyone," said Jeff Jeskie, Wichita senior and a former parking department employee. "We had a joke about how many employees it took to guard a parking lot."
It is early Saturday morning, hours before the basketball game. But the parking department already has set up barricades at lot entrances, and an attendant in a Day-Glo orange jacket tries to keep warm.
The department, which generates revenue from parking permits, meters and fines, claims it needs attendants hours before game time to keep people from illegally parking in areas such as Jayhawk Towers and Stouffer Place lots.
Former employees claim the department wastes money by paying employees to sit in cars.
Forty employees worked Saturday's game against Kansas State to guard 23 parking lots, said Don Kearns, parking department director.
For afternoon tipoops, employees begin working at 7 or 8 a.m. and stay during the game.
Employees guard lots early in the day because people try to drop off their cars in lots in the morning and then be picked up by someone, Kearns said.
Often employees double up at posts so one person can stand in the cold while the other warms up in the car, he said.
Despite this, Kearns said the department was understaffed.
But Erik Peltzan, San Francisco junior and former parking employee, said too many employees did a job that half as many people could do.
The department must use temporary employees from Manpower Temporary Services to guard lots on game days.
During one game, Peltzman said he sat behind Hoglund-Maupin Stadium, just south of Allen Field House, and checked cars that already had passed two checkpoints.
"I had no reason to be there," Peltzman said. "I basically sat in my car. I was just triple-checking."
Kearns said many employees were needed near the field house and stadium to secure parking areas for emergency equipment.
Jeskie said he had to sit behind the stadium during one game.
No one ever told him anything about guarding emergency parking areas, he said.
"Anyone with half a brain knows they can't park back there," he said.
The large number of employees on game days results from a high rate of employee turnover, said Rita Jordan, field supervisor for the department.
Because most of the employees are students, many leave after a few months or find a higher-paying job, she said.
"There is some downtime,but when you're hiring new employees, you have to give them some training on the job," she said.
"How do you train someone to sit at a lot and keep people from going in?" he said.
Jeskie disagreed.
Funeral services for former dean to be held today
By Mark McMaster Kansan staff writer
Services will be held today for Thomas Gorton, former dean of the School of Fine Arts, who died on Feb. 25 at 86.
Mr. Gorton's life revolved around music, which he composed, conducted, taught and performed on piano. He shared music not only with his students, but also with his family.
ate in music and Mr. Gorton's only child, said her father influenced her in many ways.
"When I was young, he was my hero," she said. "He was my first music teacher and my dean while I attended KU. His door was always open to me, no matter how busy he was."
Judith Parkinson, a KU gradu-
Mr. Gorton served as dean of the School of Fine Arts from 1950 to 1975, and during this time he also served an unprecedented four terms as president
of the National Association of Schools of Music.
The fine arts program doubled in size during these years, as Mr. Gorton founded and conducted the performing group the Little Symphony, established KU's opera program and served as the University's concert manager.
Mr. Gorton also founded the Symposium of Contemporary American Music, which drew leading composers from all across
the country to the University.
During his time at the University, Mr. Gorton composed many works, which have been performed at the University as well as by the San Antonio Symphony and the Oklahoma City Symphony.
Music seems to run in Mr. Gorton's family. He was born in Oneida, New York, on March 12, 1910, the son of Thomas and May Kelley Gorton.
"His dad wasn't a musician.
Mr. Gorton's granddaughter, Jennifer Parkinson, also fol-
His grandson, Scott Parkinson, is studying trombone there.
but he loved music dearly," Parkinson said, remembering the days when her father's family would gather to perform music for each other.
Mr. Gorton attended the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, where he earned bachelor's and master's degrees.
lowed in his footsteps but didn't choose music. Instead, she came to the University, where she now is a graduate teaching assistant in mathematics.
After Mr. Gorton retired, he pursued an interest in genealogy, publishing three books about his family and receiving national attention for his work.
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. today at Trinity Lutheran Church, 1245 New Hampshire St.
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
3A
Conference to offer worldly advice
Panelists,resources will be available at fair
By Umut Bayramoglu
Kansan staff writer
Many KU students have lived in Kansas all their lives, and some will choose to stay here.
But for those who want to discover the rest of the world, this weekend is an opportunity to find out about studying abroad, working overseas or volunteering for nonprofit organizations.
The Office of International Programs will have more than 30 people with international careers in business, government agencies and humanitarian organizations for a conference Saturday in the Kansas Union.
The deadline for preregistration, including the luncheon and the keynote address, is 5 p.m. today at the International Programs office in 300 Strong Hall.
Anne Merydith-Wolf, a secretary in the Applied English Center, said last year 45 KU students were
turned on the day of the conference because of lack of space.
"I really encourage students to preregister because although this conference is open to high school teachers and students in the area, our main goal is to provide an opportunity for KU students," she said.
The conference starts at 8:15 a.m. and includes four panels that meet twice during the day.
"We just want students to get a good picture of all the international opportunities," Merydith-Wolf said.
Jeff Willis, a KU graduate and managing director of Asia/Pacific for Preco Industries Inc. of Kansas City, Kan., will be the keynote speaker at the luncheon.
Merydith-Wolf said the keynote speech would be about preparing for international job markets and different opportunities in international careers.
A resource room also will be available to participants.
Merydith-Wolf said participants could go to the resource room any time to look through books and brochures and make copies of information they
"We just want students to get a good picture of all the international
opportunities."
Anne Merydith-Wolf
Applied English Center secretary
"Anybody thinking about careers should think internationally," she said.
need.
Throughout the day, Merydith-Wolf said, representatives from various organizations with international purposes will answer questions at the information fair.
"We will have some experienced panelists that are willing to share their experiences and help students find out what they need to do now for an international career later," she said.
"The panelists helped me see what I need to do to focus on my goals," she said.
Kia Flesher, Topeka senior, said the three conferences she had attended in the past helped her to pick a major.
Tesia Hostetler, Topeka sophomore, said she had attended the conference last year and thought it was helpful.
Riesher said the conferences also provided he with a network of people in international careers.
"I was exposed to a lot of options at the previous conferences," she said. "Finally, I decided to add an international studies program to my political science major."
"It's the best way available to meet all the people that have experience in what I want to do in the future." she said.
Preregistration is $12 for KU students.
Late registration on Saturday is $10 and will be on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
KANSAS
ABOVE: Machell Collier, Lawrence senior. puts her feet up on the bed
between calls at KU Info, in the Organizations and Activities Office in the Kansas Union. The service originally started as a rumor-control hot line on May 7,1970. RIGHT: Armed with more than 200
reference manuals and thousands of files and Rolodex cards, KU info answers 500 to 600 calls each day. The office answers calls
at 864-3506 from 7 a.m. to 2
a. m. daily.
TUTORS
SCHOOLING
BASKETBALL
ATHLETICS
GOVERNMENT
TVLISON
James Grau / KANSAN
Tree totals and trivia no match for KU Info
By Mark McMaster Kansan staff writer
The University Information Center, more commonly known as KU Info, may not know the answer to every question students can think of, but most of the staffers have memorized one important fact:
There are 17,851 trees on campus.
KU Info staffer Gary Lazarus, New Orleans senior, said it was one of the most commonly asked questions the service answered.
It is not, however, the only bizarre question the staffers have dealt with.
"We get some pretty bad ones sometimes," said staffer Alana Jones, Tulsa, Okla., senior. "Someone called last night and asked if the moon was a planet."
And, of course, there are the drunken callers.
"You can tell from the first second whether someone is drunk or not," said Lazarus, who often works the late shift until KU Info closes at 2 a.m.
Some of the strangest calls he has received comes during those hours,he said.
it makes sense that KU Info should get some unusual questions, considering they receive hundreds of calls each day. On Wednesday, for example, staffers at the service answered 522 calls.
But KU Info's coordinator Susan Elkins, doesn't want students to be shy about asking out-of-the-ordinary questions.
The staffers turn to a variety of references on hand to answer questions, including a series of Rolodexes containing nearly 4,000 cards full of information.
"People shouldn't be afraid to ask any sort of question," she said. "Most people don't know how much we can do."
KU Info staffers provide more than just information — occasionally they give personal advice.
Lazarus said he was asked out on a date on Valentine's Day. He had to decline, however, because KU Info policy prevents
"I got asked about what this guy should pick as a Valentine's Day gift." Jones said.
KU Info
Things to ask KU Info:
Things to ask ROI info:
Information about events in Lawrence and throughout Kansas
Academic calendar dates, such as enrollment times and withdrawal deadlines
Information about KU policies and procedures
- Topeka and Kansas City phone numbers (to avoid long-distance operator charges)
Things not to ask KU Info:
University and Lawrence phone numbers — instead, use the University switchboard or local operators
Help with homework -but they do refer students to tutors
The hours of the Computer Center — just remember, it is open 24 hours a day, say staffers who are tired of answering this frequently asked question
Staffers provide many services for callers.
"One father called and asked us to tell his 3-year-old not to eat off the floor because his son wouldn't believe him." Elkins said.
Perhaps the most memorable calls, though, were new parents asking for advice in naming their children.
"We have a baby-naming book right here," Elkins said. "We've named two babies in the last couple of years."
These sorts of questions are very different than those the center answered when it opened in 1970 during a period of student unrest. It started out as a rumor control center to inform students about dangers around campus. As the campus grew peaceful once again, the center began to answer questions about policies and happenings around campus.
Today, KU Info can give information about events throughout Lawrence, Topeka and the Kansas City area. Students can seek answers by calling KUInfo at 864-3506 or by looking on the KU Info web page, http://www.ukans.edu/~kuinfo
Some ask if parking overstaffs for events Ex-employees say game days were slow
By Dave Morantz Kansas staff writer
"I sat in my car for six hours one day without having to stop anyone," said Jeff Jeskie, Wichita senior and a former parking department employee. "We had a joke about how many employees it took to guard a parking lot."
It is early Saturday morning, hours before the basketball game. But the parking department already has set up barricades at lot entrances, and an attendant in a Day-Glo orange jacket tries to keep warm.
The department, which generates revenue from parking permits, meters and fines, claims it needs attendants hours before game time to keep people from illegally parking in areas such as Jayhawker Towers and Stouffer Place lots.
Former employees claim the department wastes money by paying employees to sit in cars.
Forty employees worked Saturday's game against Kansas State to guard 23 parking lots, said Don Kearns, parking department director.
For afternoon tipoffs, employees begin working at 7 or 8 a.m. and stay during the game.
Employee guard lots early in the day because people try to drop off their cars in lots in the morning and then be picked up by someone. Kearns said.
Often employees double up at posts so one person can stand in the cold while the other warms up in the car, he said.
Despite this, Kearns said the department was understaffed.
The department must use temporary employees from Manpower Temporary Services to guard lots on game days.
But Erik Peltzman, San Francisco junior and former parking employee, said too many employees did a job that half as many people could do.
During one game, Peltzman said he sat behind Hoglund-Maupin Stadium, just south of Allen Field House, and checked cars that already had passed two checkpoints.
"I had no reason to be there," Peltzman said. "I basically sat in my car. I was just triple-checking."
Kearns said many employees were needed near the field house and stadium to secure parking areas for emergency equipment.
Jeskie said he had to sit behind the stadium during one game.
No one ever told him anything about guarding emergency parking areas, he said.
"Anyone with half a brain knows they can't park back there," he said.
The large number of employees on game days results from a high rate of employee turnover, said Rita Jordan, field supervisor for the department.
Because most of the employees are students, many leave after a few months or find a higher-paying job, she said.
"There is some downtime, but when you're hiring new employees, you have to give them some training on the job," she said.
"How do you train someone to sit at a lot and keep people from going in?" he said.
Jeskie disagreed.
Funeral services for former dean to be held today
By Mark McMaster
Kansan staff writer
Services will be held today for Thomas Gorton, former dean of the School of Fine Arts, who died on Feb. 25 at 86.
Mr. Gorton's life revolved around music, which he composed, conducted, taught and performed on piano. He shared music not only with his students, but also with his family.
"When I was young, he was my hero," she said. "He was my first music teacher and my dean while I attended KU. His door was always open to me, no matter how busy he was."
ate in music and Mr. Gorton's only child, said her father influenced her in many ways.
Judith Parkinson, a KU gradu
Mr. Gorton served as dean of the School of Fine Arts from 1950 to 1975, and during this time he also served an unprecedented four terms as president
of the National Association of Schools of Music.
The fine arts program doubled in size during these years, as Mr. Gorton founded and conducted the performing group the Little Symphony, established KU's opera program and served as the University's concert manager.
Mr. Gorton also founded the Symposium of Contemporary American Music, which drew leading composers from all across
the country to the University.
During his time at the University, Mr. Gorton composed many works, which have been performed at the University as well as by the San Antonio Symphony and the Oklahoma City Symphony.
Music seems to run in Mr. Gorton's family. He was born in Oneida, New York, on March 12, 1910, the son of Thomas and May Kelley Gorton.
"His dad wasn't a musician,
Mr. Gorton's granddaughter,
Jennifer Parkinson, also fol-
His grandson, Scott Parkinson,
is studying trombone there.
Mr. Gorton attended the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, where he earned bachelor's and master's degrees.
but he loved music dearly," Parkinson said, remembering the days when her father's family would gather to perform music for each other.
lowed in his footsteps but didn't choose music. Instead, she came to the University, where she now is a graduate teaching assistant in mathematics.
After Mr. Gorton retired, he pursued an interest in genealogy, publishing three books about his family and receiving national attention for his work.
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. today at Trinity Lutheran Church, 1245 New Hampshire St.
40
OPINION
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CRAIG LANG, Editor
SUSANNA LOOF, Managing editor
KIMBELY CRRAFTEE, Editorial editor
TOM EBINLE, General manager, news adviser
MARK OZMEK, Business manager
DENNIS HAUPT, Retail sales manager
JUSTIN KNUP, Technology coordinator
JAY STEINER, Sales and marketing adviser
4A
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
MKNEILY Chicago Tribune.
macnelly.com
DNC
Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Editorials
Lazy smokers litter campus, squander all students' money
Cigarette butts litter the walks, steps and lawns of this beautiful campus. They make their way into sidewalk cracks, bushes and puddles. But the places they don't always seem to find their way into are ashtrays.
It is a fairly conservative estimate to say that a third of all KU students smoke. If all 25,000 students were on campus each day, that is more than 8,000 smokers a day. Assume that every smoker has only three cigarettes a day and then throws the butts wherever he or she pleases. That makes for more than 20,000 cigarette butts a day littering our campus.
The question is, why are there cigarette butts all over the lawns and walks of KU when every building on campus
Ashtrays are provided outside of most campus buildings. Use them.
has at least one ashtray outside its doors? It is nothing short of laziness and carelessness on the part of smoker who think that their one cigarette won't make a difference. That is, if they even think at all before tossing their trash into a bush or flower bed.
As KU students, part of the money we pay goes to keeping the campus clean and well-groomed. Littering not only takes away from the beauty of campus but, in the long run, it costs us. If the money we pay for campus maintenance
and landscaping goes to cleaning up our mess, that likely leaves less money for the University to spend on new shrubs, flowers and landscaping.
Solving this problem is not difficult. If you are smoking a cigarette between classes, walk the few extra feet to drop your cigarette butt in an ashtray rather than tossing it on the ground. If you can't find an ashtray, put out the cigarette on the bottom of your shoe and drop it in a trash can.
The University spends thousands of dollars every year to keep our campus beautiful. As smokers, we need to spend an extra minute and do our part to keep it that way by throwing our cigarette butts where they belong — in an ashtray.
BEN SHOCKEY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Students should be more proactive
So with all these dissatisfied students, a forum on advising, a forum for student complaints and suggestions, should draw a big crowd. right? Wrong.
Many students claim that advising is one of the biggest problems facing the University. After all, many undergraduates do not have a real adviser until the end of their sophomore year. In this case, a real adviser would be someone who does more than sign an Academic Record Tracking System form.
The town hall meeting sponsored by Student Senate last Tuesday at Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall had a whopping four students in attendance, all residents of GSP-Corbin. Some student senators were present, as well as the people responsible for putting together the meeting, but actual student participation was minimal.
When the University decides to address a problem, especially one that affects the student body, students
Town hall meetings are a way to get input,but few students are participating.
should stand up and be heard. Without student involvement, the University administration will be forced to assume that the issue is not important to students, and it may decide to disregard the issue until students are actually interested in getting involved in the decision-making process.
The University can spend time and money to rectify its woes. But unless students are involved, administrators may not be aware of all the problems students face on an issue. Student apathy should compel the University to disregard this and other problems for which students seem to have no opinion.
this campus. It does, however, affect about 12,000 students. When only four students attend a forum to discuss an issue that affects about half of the campus population, something is definitely wrong, and the fault lies with the 12,000 students who were unable to get off their couches for an hour to take an active role in helping themselves.
Granted, freshman and sophomore advising does not affect all students on
Apathetic students are a major problem with advising. Instead of sitting at home and whining about the University's inability to fulfill its responsibilities, students should actively seek career advice from faculty.
Any plan the University proposes is doomed to fail if students do not take an active role.
The whole point of a better advising system is to make it easier for students to choose a major and to look for potential career options. If students are unwilling to be involved in this process, maybe they should rethink why they attended college in the first place.
KANSAN STAFF
LA TINA SULLIVAN . . . Associate Editorial
KRISTIE BLASI . . . News
NOVELDA SOMMERS . . . News
LESLIE TAYLOR . . . News
AMANDA TRAUGHBER . . News
TARA TRENARY . . News
DAVID TESKA . . . Online
SPENCER DUNCAN . . Sports
GINA THORNBURG . Associate Sports
BRADLEY BROOKS . . Campus
LINDSHEY HENRY . . Campus
DAVE BRETTENSTEIN . Features
PAM DISIMAN . Photo
TYLER WIRKEN . Photo
BRYAN VOLK . Design
ANDY ROHRBACK . Graphics
ANDREA ALBIGHT . Wire
LIZ MUSSER . Special sections
AERICA VEAZEY . News clerk
NICOLE SKALLA FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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JULIE PEDLAR ... Campus
DANA CENTENO ... Regional
ANNETTE HOVER ... National
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DENA PISCOTTE ... Production
ALLISON PIERCE ... Special sections
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
How to submit letters and guest columns
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kimberly Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (sullivan@kansan.com) at 848-4810.
Oliver Hall resident ready for new home
Columns
Waking up at 3:30 a.m. to a fire alarm for the third time last week reaffirmed my joy at leaving the University housing system after this semester. Standing outside the residence hall on this subarctic February morning and watching fire engines make yet another useless trip down Nai-
nuch I will enjoy
smith drive reminded me how living in my own house with my own smoke detectors that will only sound when they detect smoke.
MARY CORCORAN
I've lived in the KU residence halls for two years. For the first year I even worked there as a desk assistant and security monitor. I know the complex director, the residence assistants and the cafeteria staff. I know what time the food service truck comes to drop off our meals. I know
out me cafeteria closes at 9 a.m. for breakfast.
But if you get there at 9:05, you can still get cereal and bagels, and they don't scan your card.
I know that the change machine does not give you four quarters for a dollar. Instead, it gives you three quarters, two dimes, and a nickel in the fervent hope that you will spend the odd change in the vending machines instead of the washing machines. I also know which vending machines give you back a quarter for two dimes and a nickel.
I know exactly how long it takes to walk to Wescoe starting from the 10th floor of Oliver Hall. I know that the mail gets to the residence hall at 2:30 p.m., but doesn't get to our boxes until 4:30 p.m. I know that it is not a dorm but a residence hall. I know that I cannot take a shower between 10:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. because our cleaning lady cleans the showers then. I know the cleaning lady's name is Norma.
I know that the elevator on the left opens and closes its doors twice when it gets to the 10th floor. I know that pizza and Chinese food delivery drivers cannot deliver the food to your door. I also know the pizza and Chinese places that will deliver to your door anyway. I know how to fit an entire jumbo Gumby's pizza box into a 3.5 cubic foot refrigerator, a microwave and a trash can. I know the shelf life of a jumbo Gumby's pizza when it's being stored in a 3.5 cubic foot refrigerator.
I know that you have to check guests in with a picture ID after 11 p.m. I also know that it doesn't really matter whose picture ID it is. I know why they moved the pool table into the lobby and out of the windowless, lockable room in the basement. I know my roommate. I know our fish. I know Oliver Hall.
I know dorm life. I know dorm life too well. It is definitely time for a change.
So, last semester I got together with three of my friends, and we started looking for houses. We called real estate agencies, talked to our friends who already had apartments, and finally narrowed our search to three or four places close to campus. We calculated the cost with food and utilities, and it was about $100 a month cheaper than the residence hall. We will be able to sign a lease in April.
I know that it is time for a change. I know that the house my friends and I want to live in will be much better than the residence hall. I know that it will be cheaper, bigger, nicer, quieter and cleaner than the residence hall. What I don't know is how to convince my dad to pay for it.
Mary Corcoran is an Overland Park sophomore in Journallam.
Life is a dance, so be sure you find the right music
The last time I was in Andover, I managed to catch a basketball game at my old high school. The home Trojans hammered the Maize Eagles 71-55, and I got to see some old friends.
But it wasn't so much the game as the halftime show that caught my attention. After the Trojanettes dance squad did its number, one of the squad's members came forward to perform a solo.
It's been two years since I left Andover High, and the folks that I knew are becoming fewer and farther between. This dancer was Bree David, and although I don't know her well enough
ANDY ROHRBACK
to talk about her personally, her act seemed to be an analogy for life. Bree was dancing to Michael Card's El Shaddai.
The moment I heard the song, I was surprised. While most high schoolers — and, I dare say, college students — would rather dance to the latest Seal or Babyface — or worse, the *Evita* dance mix — Bree was dancing to a patently religious song at a public school. And it was in front of hundreds of people.
As I watched her dance, I realized something. There are three ways to handle your beliefs. You can tiptoe through life, constantly afraid to upset
someone and avoiding conflict at every turn. You can march through life, throwing your world view in the face of everyone who disagrees with you.
There are thousands of people, even on this campus, who are frustrated because they don't understand how to dance through life. Most of them are marching, stomping on toes at every opportunity and insisting on abject compliance with their every wish. When they don't get their way, they overreact. Others are tiptoeing, and their spinelessness is their downfall.
The next time you're angry at the system or at those around you for rejecting your message, examine your own actions. Are you tiptoeing, marching, or are you dancing?
Dance onto the platform of life so people can see you. You may not receive a standing ovation, but your message will be heard.
When you dance, you live what you believe, and you aren't afraid to show the world who you are. Every note of the song is an element of your dance, and the entire number is one consistent work of art. You dance for yourself and for everyone around you. You dance without shouting or raising a fist. And people will watch.
Andry Rohback is an Andover junior in Journalism and political science. E-mail: arohback@tamsa.com
Or you can dance.
Kansan used statistics improperly in GPA story
Once again The University Daily Kansan has chosen to participate in the proliferation of junk journalism. In the Feb. 19 article, Greek houses excel in academics, it is implied that the KU fraternity and sorority members academically outperform the rest of the student body.
To support this, the average GPAs of all Greek students and all University students are quoted.
The problem lies in what seems to be a common ignorance, or worse, an indifference, on the part of journalists toward the proper use of statistics.
Letters
If a mean is presented as representative, in this case the GPA of a typical student either Greek or otherwise, it must be accompanied by its standard deviation.
For example, as an approximation, we took the standard deviation of the means presented for the various greek organizations.
Many foreign students are attending college on American tax money.
The result is a GPA of 2.904, plus or minus .253 for a typical Greek student.
Kelly Farrar, Ph. D.
Lawrence resident
Timothy Catterson
Kearney, Neb,
graduate student
Andrew Dunmer Lawrence graduate student
Patrick De Lurgio Shawnee senior
Considering that this is a place of higher learning, where many of us not only use statistics on a daily basis, but also endeavor to educate students in their proper use, we ask that in the future rather than impede, you assist in the University's mission to education by abstaining from such improper use of statistics.
Columnist can't be too displeased with the U.S.
This is statistically identical to the given value of 2.840 for all university students. This statement can be made without even considering the standard deviation of the GPA for University students. To do so would only improve the agreement.
In response to Namkyu Park's article on his views of Americans regarding discrimination
against the foreign students, his experiences cannot be too unpleasant if he has stayed in this country for six years.
One student in California complained because his welfare payment of $2,500 a month was being decreased by $200 because of the student grant money he was to receive.
Foreign residents by the thousands are rushing to become citizens because a law was passed to eliminate welfare and social security payments to non-citizens.
Guess why they are here.
People are still flooding into this country and very few are leaving.
Instead of going back to their own country to make it a better place for its citizens, many foreign students are finding ways to stay here.
If Park is so displeased, maybe he should find a place where he is more comfortable.
1
Clara Westphal
Lawrence resident
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
5A
Company finds pirate ship
At 20 feet under, vessel is thought to be Bluebeard's
RALEIGH, N.C. — Treasure hunters have discovered what they believe is Blackbeard's flagship nearly three centuries after the pirate ship went down.
The Associated Press
"We've not found the smoking blunderbuss yet, but we have found artifacts to make us think this may be Queen Anne's Revenge," said Jeffrey Crow, director of the state Division of Archives and History.
The wreck was found in November by Intersal Inc., a treasure-hunting
company, in just 20 feet of water in Beaufort Inlet.
"If you could have seen through that dirty water, it was right there," said Intersal's Mike Daniel.
Queen Anne's Revenge, flagship of the fearsome English buccaneer Edward "Blackbeard" Teach, sank in 1718 after running onto a sandbar. So did the Adventure, a sloop in Blackbeard's fleet that went to its aid.
The wreck site is dominated by a mound of cannons encrusted with coral. Queen Anne's Revenge is thought to have carried up to 40 cannons, and their position is consistent with a ship that ran aground and tipped to one side, Daniel said.
A blunderbuss barrel was brought up from the wreck, along with a bronze bell dated 1709, a 24-pound cannonball and a sounding weight.
Phil Masters, president of Intersal,
said the discovery ended a decade of
research he had done in American
and European archives.
Internal used hundreds of old nautical charts to find the wreck.
All of the artifacts will be kept by the state. Intensal expects to recoup its $300,000 in expenses by selling book and film rights. The site and an area 300 yards around it were declared off-limits to boats and divers yesterday.
"He created a menacing image," Masters said of Blackbeard. "He talked with everyone he met about being in league with the devil — that he was the devil's brother. Blackbeard, to me, was the first great practitioner of psychological warfare."
Records do not indicate he killed anyone until Nov. 22, 1718, when he
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
Raleigh
Atlantic Ocean
AREA OF DETAIL
was trapped off Ocracoke by British warships. During that battle, in which he killed some British soldiers, Blackbeard was shot, stabbed and his throat was slashed. His head was cut off and hung from the bowsprit of one of the British ships.
Certified? OK, you may kiss the bride
The Associated Press
That question could make the difference between receiving a marriage license or remaining single if some state lawmakers have their way.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — They have got the ring. They have set the date. But have they discussed their marriage plans with a counselor?
Hoping to stem the divorce rate, some states are considering legislation that would force couples to get premarital counseling before walking down the aisle.
Missouri, Michigan, Arizona and Florida all have legislation pending or in the works that would make marriage licenses more difficult — or even impossible — to get without proof that the couple has seen a counselor.
"If we stop one divorce, it would seem to me that it would be worth trying," said Missouri state Rep. Tom Hoppe, D-Kansas City.
The bills are aimed at protecting children's welfare and decreasing states' financial obligations in the aftermath of divorce.
Michael McManus, president of the Marriage Savers Institute in
Bethesda, Md., said about one-tenth of couples that took premarital compatibility tests discovered irreconcilable differences and broke up.
"The engagement process should be rigorous enough that weaker couples will break up on their own," he said.
Counseling makes them stop to look beyond just the romantic aspects of marriage, said the Rev. Reg Larson, a counselor and associate pastor at the Assemblies of God in Grandview, Mo.
Larson said counseling sessions addressed issues ranging from sex to managing household finances. Couples are taught how to communicate and disagree constructively.
"I don't think they should require you to get counseling before you get married," said Crystal Brown, 23, of Jefferson City as she stood for her final wedding-gown fitting at a bridal shop. She joked that if lawmakers really wanted to open couples' eyes, they would require the couples to live together before their wedding days.
Marsha Richeson, Missouri lobbyist for the American Civil Liberties Union, agreed the state government should not interfere in a couple's
decision to marry.
States, though, often shoulder the burden of supporting children or tracking down parents who don't pay child support after marriages break up, said Linda Kokas, an aide to Michigan Ren. Jessie Dalman.
Dalman, a Republican, offered a premarital counseling bill that passed in the state House last year. Couples that did not receive counseling would have been required to wait 60 days for a license. The legislation died in the Senate, but Dalman plans to reintroduce it this session.
Couples would pay for the counseling unless they could prove they were indigent.
Under Hoppe's bill in Missouri, county commissions would determine acceptable counseling programs. Counseling provided by a religious organization would qualify.
Hoppe said he would amend his legislation to waive the counseling requirement for couples that could not afford it.
Another Missouri representative, Republican Sam Gasik, has introduced legislation requiring a 30-day wait for a marriage license for cou
"The
engagement process should be rigorous enough that weaker couples will break up on their own."
Michael McManus
Marriage Savers Institute president
ples who don't want to go through counseling.
"All of us could use better guidance in marriage because your life sure changes after a divorce," Gaskill said. "It seems like this is a real simple approach to solve the problem."
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SHOWIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Regulators approve new style of radio
WASHINGTON — After five years of work, federal regulators approved a plan yesterday that would bring a new form of news and entertainment to people who spend a lot of time in their cars.
The Associated Press
The Federal Communications Commission's action creates two licenses for CD-quality digital radio that is transmitted nationally or regionally by satellite.
Like cable television, customers of the new service, at
least three years away, probably will have to pay to listen. The broadcasting industry opposes the action, saying it is a threat to local radio service.
To receive the service, a customer would need a special radio and a tiny disc-shaped antenna. Ideally, a single radio would receive both the new service and local broadcast signals.
The FCC will auction the licenses beginning April 1. The four companies expected to bid are CD Radio of Washington, American Mobile Satellite Corp. of Reston, Va., Digital Satellite Broadcasting of Seattle and Primosphere of New York.
Meter feeder gets fine
"I did nothing wrong. I stand on that," Stayton said after being sentenced for interfering with an officer. "I wouldn't offer an apology because, in my heart of hearts, I know I didn't do anything wrong."
Women who broke obscure ordinance ordered to pay $500
Her brief stay behind bars turned Stayton into something of a folk hero. Headlines called her the meter-feeding granny, she received $350 from people donating to her legal abuse fund and a church group that has been anonymously feeding parking meters for years printed up T-shirts that read: Sylvia Stayton ... guilty of kindness.
For the 63-year-old grandmother of 10, it was the final indignity after she was handcuffed and arrested on Oct. 24 for feeding change into two parking meters despite an officer's warning she was breaking an obscure city ordinance.
Prosecutors bristled at the attention and yesterday accused Stayton of grandstanding.
"Every time the cameras popped up, there she was," said prosecutor Ernest McAdams Jr. "She could have pled to a parking fine. This is what she wanted."
Stayton faced up to 90 days in jail and a $750 fine on her conviction of obstructing the official business of a police officer — that is, writing parking tickets. A jury acquitted her of disorderly conduct.
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Sylvia Stayton's random act of kindness will cost her more than the dime and nickel she plunked in other people's expired parking meters. She was fined $500 yesterday.
Municipal Judge John West rejected a final request to throw out the conviction and imposed his sentence without explanation.
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"Is This Gonna Be on the Test?":
Curriculum Issues at KU
Tuesday, March 4
7:00-9:00 pm,
Kansas Rm.
Kansas Union
Panelists Include:
Torrez Dawson, founding member, Diversity Peer Education Team of Mr.
Ray Hiner. Professor, History, KU
Learning Through
UNIROOT
Multicultural Resource Center
Regina Grass, President, Native American Student Association, KU Moderator: Lula Wolf, Assistant Professor, Educational Policy and Leadership, KU
Please also plan to attend the last Diversity Dialogue of this academic year:
Tuesday, April 1, 7:00-9:00 pm, Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union:
"Student Athletes and the Student Body"
Regina Grass, President, Native American Student Association, KU
Learning Through
UNIVERSITY
HUMANICURAL RESOURCE CENTER
STUDENT
SENATE
Part of the Diversity Dialogue Series for Students, Faculty, and Staff.
Please join us to challenge and discover.
Sponsored by the KU Coalition Against Racism and the Multicultural Resource Center, 864-4350
Mark your calendars on March 8 to Dance for Heart!
Dance for Heart will consist of six 20 minute sessions: Cardio, Step, Knock Out, Basic Training, Body Sculpting, and Yoga.
Dance for Heart is an aerobics seminar and a fundraiser for the American Heart Association.
The event will be from 1 am-9 pm in 216 Robinson Registration is at 10:30 am.
There is a $7 entry fee for individuals. A five person team will be charged $30. 10 member teams will be charged $50.
The event counts for 3 hours of Rock Chalk community service and drawings will be for prizes donated by local merchants.
American Heart Association.
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PENGUINS COACH
General manager Craig Patrick will take over the team, which is second to Buffalo in the Northeast Division.
Eddie Johnston was fired as coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins westerday.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
Penguins assistant coaches Bryan Trottier and Rick Kehoe coached at practice this morning.
NHL
and Mario Lemieux in 1984, is 232-224-60 in 61/2 seasons with the Penguins from 1980-83 and since 1993, when he replaced Scotty Bowman.
Patrick said Johnston would help him in the front office in a job that is yet to be determined.
The team is 31-26-5.
GERMANY. ENGLAND FIGHT FOR WORLD CUP
England is trying to outmaneuver Germany for the rights to the 2006 World Cup. English political officials were angered when UEFA said it was backing Germany's
bid. UEFA backed down and said it would look at both offers but recommend only one candidate to FIFA. Because of the fighting, both may lose their bids.
CAVALIERS COACH
There has been no discussion about whether Cleveland Cavaliers coach Mike Fratello will be let out of his contract after the season, team president Wave Embry said.
TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1997
Embry said he was concerned about reports published Friday in the New York Post that said Fratello might be allowed out of the last year of his deal with the Cavaliers.
CAVS
Post columnist Peter Vesccey predicted in his column Fratello would be allowed to pursue other options after the end of this season, his fourth in Cleveland.
Fratello has led the Cavaliers to the playoffs for three straight seasons. Cleveland (32-25) is in the seventh playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.
10
Men's AP Top 25
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press men's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through March 2.
SECTION B
rank team rec pts pvs
1. Kansas (69) 29-1 1,773 1
2. Minnesota (2) 26-2 1,706 2
3. Utah 23-3 1,577 4
4. South Carolina 23-6 1,564 6
5. North Carolina 21-6 1,466 8
6. Kentucky 27-4 1,453 3
7. Duke 23-7 1,297 7
8. Wake Forest 22-5 1,265 5
9. UCLA 19-7 1,243 10
10. Cincinnati 24-6 1,039 9
11. Xavier, Ohio 22-4 1,018 14
12. Arizona 19-7 927 15
13. Clemson 21-8 898 12
14. New Mexico 22-6 883 11
15. Illinois 20-8 607 21
16. Iowa St. 19-7 608 13
17. Col. of Charleston 28-2 544 20
18. Colorado 21-8 454 20
19. St. Joseph's 21-6 481 23
20. Louisville 22-7 456 17
21. Villanova 21-8 437 18
22. Maryland 20-9 354 16
23. Stanford 18-7 207 25
24. Georgia 21-7 139 —
25. Indiana 21-9 134 22
Other teams receiving votes: Tusa 119, Princeton 79, Iowa 59, Tulane 48, Georgetown 30, Texas Tech 21, Wisconsin 17, N.C. Charlotte 15, Mississippi 11, Massachusetts 10, New Orleans 11, Fresno St. 10, Pacific Ii 10, California 11, Sacramento 11, Rhode Island 7, California 5, Hawaii 5, Michigan 5, Syracuse 4, SW Missouri St. 3, Bowling Green 2, Purdue 2, Southern California 2, St. Mary's, C, Calil 2, Virginia 2, Long Island U, 1. Navy 1, Oklahoma 1, Vanderbilt 1.
Women's AP Top 25
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press news's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through March 2.
rank team rec pts pvs
1. Connecticut(38) 28-0 996 1
2. Old Dominion (1) 29-1 957 2
3. Stanford (1) 28-1 926 3
4. North Carolina 27-2 873 5
5. Louisiana Tech 26-3 833 6
6. Florida 23-3 760 10
7. Georgia 22-5 728 4
8. Alabama 23-6 708 7
9. Kansas 23-4 678 11
10. LSU 23-4 604 9
11. Tennessee 23-10 591 8
12. Texas 20-6 493 12
13. Notre Dame 26-5 471 4
14. Virginia 21-7 414 13
15. Texas Tech 19-7 412 15
16. Illinois 22-6 407 18
17. Stephen F. Austin 26-3 381 16
18. Geo. Washington 25-4 293 19
19. Auburn 20-9 293 —
20. Vanderbilt 18-10 220 17
21. Clemson 19-10 198 22
22. W. Kentucky 20-7 146 21
23. Michigan St. 21-7 138 20
24. Tulane 25-4 83 —
25. Duke 18-10 65 25
USA Today/CNN Top 25
Top 25 teams in USA Today/CNN men's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through March 2.
rank team rec pts prv
1. **Kansas (28)** 29-1 748 1
2. Minnesota (2) 26-2 695 2
3. Utah 23-3 672 4
4. South Carolina 23-6 658 4
5. Kentucky 27-4 619 3
6. North Carolina 21-6 591 3
7. Duke 23-7 543 7
8. UCLA 19-7 500 14
9. Wake Forest 22-5 495 5
10. Cincinnati 24-6 434 8
11. Arizona 19-7 417 13
12. New Mexico 22-6 415 11
13. Clemson 21-8 407 10
14. Xavier, Ohio 22-4 355 17
15. Iowa State 19-7 329 12
16. Colorado 21-8 372 19
17. Villanova 21-8 244 18
18. Coll, of Charleston 22-7 206 20
19. Louisville 20-9 199 15
20. Maryland 20-9 191 16
21. Illinois 20-8 156 23
22. Stanford 18-7 118 24
23. St. Joseph's 21-9 99 —
24. Indiana 21-9 51 22
25. Princeton 22-3 39 —
Raef and Roy: best in Big 12
LaFrentz, Williams garner top honors in new conference
By Spencer Duncan Kaplan sports editor
The Associated Press and Big 12 Conference coaches named Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz and Kansas coach Roy Williams conference player and coach of the year yesterday.
LaFrentz and Williams led the Jayhawks to a school-best 29-1 record and to the first Big 12 Conference title.
"I don't think Raef could ever exceed my expectations," Williams said. "I thought he was so good that I expected him to get 100 points and 100 rebounds every game. Knowing that was not realistic with the teams that we
C
Roy Williams
play and the conference that we are in,
I am pleased with how he's been playing.
He should be proud."
LaFrentz is averaging 21 points and nine rebounds a game.
Williams surpassed former North Carolina State coach Everett Case for the most victories in nine seasons as a head coach. Williams has 242 wins.
LaFrentz also was named to the All-Big 12 basketball team. He is joined on the team by Colorado guard Chauncey Billups, Texas Tech center Tony Battie, Iowa State guard Dedric Willoughby and Texas guard Reggie Freeman. LaFrentz and Billups were the only unanimous selections.
Colorado coach Ricardo Patton said LaFrentz and Billups deserved to be unanimous selections, and he further praised his point guard.
"He's quick enough and crafty enough with the basketball that, if you guard him too close, he can go by his man, penetrate and get his teammates the ball or pull up for an open jumper," Patton said. "He has played great."
Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn was named to the second team. He is joined by Texas Tech guard Cory Carr, Nebraska guard Tyronn Lue, Oklahoma guard Nate Erdmann and Baylor center Brian Skinner.
45 3 13
Raef LaFrentz maneuvers past Nebraska's Bernard Gamer. LaFrentz was named Big 12 player of the year Monday by the Associated Press as well as Big 12 coaches.
Steve Runne / KANSAN
Bottom team byes would equal more Big 12 in Big Dance
The Big 12 Conference has the postseason tournament all wrong.
Welcome to the Big 12, where few teams actually deserve a bid, which is why the Big 12 has it all wrong.
The Big 12 men's tournament begins Thursday. Twelve teams are looking for a conference title but, more importantly, they are looking for an NCAA Tournament bid.
Right now, the top four teams in the conference get a first-round bye. The Big 12 should change this and give the bottom four teams byes. That is right, the bottom four teams.
That is Kansas State, Missouri, Baylor and Texas A&M. Big 12 officials claim the four teams get byes to the brackets and reward
even the brackets and reward teams that excelled in the regular season.
But if the Big 12 gave the bottom four teams byes, the conference would have a better chance of getting more teams in the tournament.
If selections were made today, only three Big 12 teams would be guaranteed NCAA bids. Kansas (29-1), Colorado (21-8) and Iowa State (19-7) are locks. That is it. Only three teams from what was supposed to be a power conference are guaranteed spots. Win or lose in the conference tournament, these teams are in.
SPORTS EDITOR
SPENCER DUNCAN
Then there are the bubble teams.
Oklahoma (17-9) may need to win at least one more. Two would help. Baylor (18-11) could squeak in with two more wins, and Texas is close. Don't forget Texas Tech (18-8). The Red Raiders are the best bubble bet.
That leaves seven teams from the conference that could, emphasis on could, make the NCAA Tournament Realistically, we are talking four or five.
Let us not forget the teams that have to win the conference tournament to get in.
Some Big 12 officials are crying in their offices about what a disappointment this conference has been.
But officials soon will begin lobbying to get the most Big 12 teams possible into the NCAA Tournament. The more teams the Big 12 has in the Big Dance, the more money will be made. And it is all about money.
That is Oklahoma State (15-13), K-State (10-16), Missouri (13-16), Nebraska (16-13) and Texas A&M (9-17).
So I am here to tell the bigwigs how to get richer. Give the bottom four teams byes.
Think about it. Kansas, Iowa State and Colorado are in no matter what they do. It really doesn't matter if they win or lose the tournament.
The next tier of teams isn't in the top or bottom, so they aren't eligible for a bye anyway. They are going to have to get their wins against both top and bottom teams.
If the top four teams had to play in round one, then the bubble teams would have the opportunity to pull off upsets against the top teams in the early rounds. Oklahoma vs. Kansas, Nebraska vs. Iowa State and Colorado vs. Oklahoma State all could be good games. And if the bubble teams pulled out the upsets, they easily could jettison themselves into the tournament.
As for the bottom teams, only one has a chance of going to the NCAA Tournament, if that team can win the Big 12. Give these teams the bye and let them get their rest. Then throw them into the mix.
See if one of them can qualify by pulling off the great upset. In college basketball, anything can happen.
This system would give the Big 12 an opportunity to get more than half of the conference into the tournament.
Comments? E-mail Spencer at sports@kansan.com
Women's competition needs wins
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
With the Big 12 Conference Tournament starting today, the No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team will look to continue its regular-season dominance against teams that desperately need postseason victories.
The No. 1-seeded Jayhawks received a first-round bye and will play either Oklahoma State or Baylor in the second round at noon tomorrow. While the tournament is crucial for several teams in the Big 12, Kansas guard Angie Halbblel said she wished for a bye straight to the NCAA Tournament.
"I wouldn't mind skipping the Big 12 Conference Tournament," Halbleib said. "I think the tournament is more for the teams that didn't win the conference, and there's going to be 11 of those. We'll have to get up for this because, for a lot of them, it's their NCAA Tournament. They're going to play with that kind of emotion, because if they don't win, they don't get in the tournament."
JAYKAWKS
51
COPPSKINS
39
The top four seeds of the Big 12 Tournament — Kansas (23-4), No. 12 Texas (20-6),
No. 15 Texas Tech (19-7) and Colorado (18-8) — are considered locks for the NCAA Tournament.
Teams having to play for NCAA invitations
Nebraska women's basketball coach Angela Beck said a short week would hurt teams that have to play today, followed by a game tomorrow against a rested top-four seed.
"Our last regular-season game is on Saturday, then we'll have to turn around and maybe play Tuesday," Beck said. "Whoever wins has to have a lot of luck and a healthy bench willing to suffer through a lot of exhaustion."
are Nebraska (18-8), Kansas State (16-10),
and Iowa State (16-10). All three teams lost
their regular-season finales on Saturday.
Eric R. Howell / KANSAN
Nebraska has lost seven of its last nine games, while Iowa State has won seven of its last nine. The Wildcats have been winners in six of their last nine games.
Meanwhile, Kansas has won seven consecutive games and has cracked the top 10 for the first time in more than three years.
That season, the Jayhawks lost in the first round of the Big Eight Conference Tournament to Missouri. Kansas then lost to Penn State in the second round of the NCAA Tournament at University Park, Penn.
For Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington, whether the Jayhawks win or lose the Big 12 Tournament this week should have no effect on their NCAA seeding.
"Anything can happen because it's a new season for everybody," Washington said. "Everybody realizes that Kansas will be in the NCAA Tournament, but other teams will need to win the Big 12 Tournament to get an
NCAA bid. I would hope that we win the tournament, but certainly one loss along the way before we get to the NCAA Tournament shouldn't cost us a real good seed. I think we've earned it."
2B
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
SCORES & MORE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Conference Tournament Glances
Atlantic Coast Conference
At Greenbacks Coliseum
Greensboro, N.C.
First Round
Thursday, March 6
th Carolina State vs. Georgia Tech, 3
Quarterfinals
Wake Forest vs. Florida State, 6 p.m.
North Carolina vs. Virginia, 8:30 p.m.
Cleimson vs. Maynaily, 11'4" at
Duke vs. N.C. State-Georgia Tech winner,
winning by 6 points.
Semifinals Saturday, March 8
Clemson-Maryland winner vs. Duke—N.C.
State-Georgia Tech winner, 12:30 p.m.
Wake Forest-Florida St. winner vs. North Carolina-Virginia winner, 3 p.m.
Semifinal winners, noon
Atlantic 10 Conference
At Core States Spectrum
Philadelphia
First Round
Washington
Virginia Tech v. Fortran, 1:1:4.
Dayton v. St. Bonaventure, 1:30.pm.
Massachusetts v. La Salle, 6.pm.
Temple v. Duquesne, 8:30.pm.
Quarterfinals Thursday, March 6
St. Joseph's vs. Dayton St. Bonaventure win
Rhode岛 vs. Va.Tech-Fordham winner,
1:30 p.m.
Xavier, Ohio vs. Temple-Duquesne winner, 6
George Washington vs. UMass-La Salle win-
er 8:30 p.m.
Semifinals Friday, March 7
St. Joseph's—Dayton-St. Bonaventure winner vs.GWU—Mass-Ma LaSalle winner, 6 p.m.
URI—Va.Tech Fordham winner vs.Xavier—Temple-Dauguere winner, 8:30 p.m.
Big East Conference
At Madison Square Garden
New York
First Round
Quarterfinals Thursday, March 6
Wednesday, March 5
ave Notre Dame 10 a.m.
Providence v. Rutgers; noon
West Virginia v. Satellon, 2:30 p.m.
Miami v. St. John's, 6:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh v. Connectix, 8:30 p.m.
Villanova *vs.* Syracuse-Notre Dame winner,
Semifinals
Providence-Rutgers winner vs. West Virginia-
Seton Hall winner, 1 p.m.
Georgetown vs. Miami-St. John's winner, 6
9-8
Friday, March 7
Boston College vs. Pittsburgh-Connecticut winner 8 p.m.
Championship Saturday, March 8
Georgetown—Miami-St. John's winner vs.
Boston College—Pitt-UConn opponent, b.p.m.
Villanova - Syracuse-Net Dem warrior vs.
West Va.-Rutgers - Providence Hall
Son
Big 12 Conference
At Kemper Arena
Kansas City, Mo.
First Round
Baylor vs. Oklahoma State, noon
Kansas State vs. Texas Tech, 2:20 p.m.
Missouri vs. Nebraska, 6 p.m.
Texas AM vs. Oklahoma, 8:20 p.m.
Quarterfinals Friday, March 7
Kansas vs. Baylor-Oklahoma winner, noo
lowe State vs. Kansas State-Texas tech-
noid win
Texas vs. Missouri-Nebraka winner, 6 p.m.
Colorado vs. Texas AAA-Oldahoma winner
Semifinals Saturday, March 8
Kansas—Baylor-Oklahoma winner vs. Iowa
State—Kansas State Texas Tech winner, 1 p.m.
Texas—Missouri-Nebraska winner vs. Colorado
Texas—Arizona Oklahoma winner; 3-20 p.m.
Championship
Conference USA
At The Kiel Center
St. Louis
First Round
Louisville vs. South Florida, norton
Alabama-Birmingham vs. Houston, 2:30 p.m.
Southern Mississippi vs. Saint Louis, 6 p.m.
Marrueche vs. DePaul, 8:30 p.m.
Quarterfinals Thursday, March 6
North Carolina Charlotte vs. Louisville-South
Tulane vs. UAB-Houston winner, 2:30 p.m.
Cincinnati vs. Southern Miss.-St. Louis winner,
6 p.m.
Memphis vs. Marquette-DePaul winner, 8:30
P.M.
Semifinals Friday, March 7
N.C. Charlotte — Louisville-South Florida winner vs. Tulane — AHU-Boston Houston, 6 p.m.
Cincinnati — Southern Miss. St., Louis winner vs. Memphis — Marquette-DePaul Award, 8:30
Championship
Semifinal winners, 1 p.m.
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
At Marine Midland Arena
Buffalo, N.Y.
First Round
Saturday, March 1
Semifinals Sunday, March 2
Missouri Valley Conference
At The Kirk Center
Monday, March 3
Fairfield 78, Canisius 72
At The Kiel Center
St. Louis
First Round
Friday, Feb. 28
Illinois State 72, Indiana State 58
Northern Iowa 73, Evansville 65
Bradley 60, Dart 47
Bradley 68, Bradley 67
Southwest Missouri State 77, Creighton 58
Illinois State 69, Northern Iowa 65 Southwest Missouri State 60, Bradley
Illinois State 75, Southwest Missouri State
Southeastern Conference
At The Pyramid
Memphis, Tenn.
First Round
Thursday, March 6
Quarterfinals Friday, March 7
Mississippi vs. Vanderbilt-Mississippi State
South Carolina vs. Alabama-Florida winner, 2:15 p.m.
Arkansas vs. Georgia-LSU winner, 8:45 p.m.
Saturday, March 8
Mississippi - Vanderbilt-Mississippi St. winner vs. Kentucky - Auburn-Tennessee winner
South Carolina-Carolina-Flaorida winner vs.
Arkansas-Georgia-LSU winner, 2:15 p.m.
Semifinals Friday, Feb. 28
Trans America Athletic Conference
At John Kresse Arena
Charleston, S.C.
First Round
College of Charleston 93, Southeastern Louisiana 63
College of Charleston 83, Florida International 73
"Laborers since 199
Florida International 70, Georgia State 57
Championship Saturday, March 1
International 90, Samford 62
CATERING LUNCH TOWELS
---
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Tuesday (schedule subject to change and or blackouts)
SPORTS WATCH
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Midwestern College Conference Tournament Championship, Butter vs. Ill.-Chicago, at Donton, Ohio
nament Championship, Sonare vs. Chicago, at Dayton, Chico ESPN2 — Woman's NCAA Basketball, Big East Woman's Conference Championship, Miami/Connecticut winner vs. Notre Dame/Georgetown winner, at Stors, Conn.
(All times Central)
TUESDAY, MARCH 4
8:30 p.m.
PRIME — Women's ABL Basketball, playoffs, championship game No.2, teams and sita TBA
7 p.m.
TNT — NBA Basketball, Orlando at Seattle
USA — Boxing, champion Lonnie Bradley (20-5) vs. Oisai Grant (28-1-0) for WBO middleweight championship; Steve Martinle (33-1-1) for Warren Williams (13-1-7) for vacant NABF Jr. middleweight championship, at Las Vegas
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Sun Belt Conference Tournament Championship, South Alabama vs. Louisiana Tech, at Little Rock, Ark.
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball, Mid-continent Conference Tournament Championship, ValparaisoNE Illinois winner vs. BuffaloW, Illinois winner, at Quatic Town, Iowa (game-day tape)
Western Athletic Conference
8:30 p.m.
At The Thomas & Mack Center
Las Vegas
First Round
Texas Christian vs. Wyoming, 5 p.m.
Colorado State vs. Southern Methodist, 8
New Mexico vs. San Jose State, 10:30 p.m.
Thursday, March 6
UNI V. Rice winner 2:30 p.m
Fresno State vs. Texas Christian-Wyoming
Hawaii vs. New Mexico-San Jose St. winner,
Utah vs. Colorado St.-Southern Methodist
winner, 8.p.m.
Seminials
Friday, March 7
/ Pine winner us
Semifinals
Friday, March 7
Tulsa—UNLV-Rice winner vs. Fresno St.—
Oranl - OutoMato - S-Jimbo
Hawaii - New Mexico-San Jose St. winner, 11
Championship
Women's Conference Tournament Glances
Saturday, matter 9
Semifinal winners, 9 p.m.
All Times CST Atlantic Coast Conference At Independence Arena
Quarterfinals
Charlotte, N.C.
First Round
Thursday,
Semifinals
Sunday, March 2
Atlantic 10 Conference
At Campus Sites
First Round
Tuesday, Feb 25
George Washington 78, Temple 35
Massachusetts 75, Duquesne 60
Quarterfinals
Second Floor
Semifinals Saturday, March 1
Championship Sunday, March 21na 62, Clemson 58
Fordmanno, payoff 6
Virginia Tech 83, St. Bonaventure 87
Temple 74, Xavier, Ohio 69, OT
Duquesne 77, Rhode Island 62
North Carolina 56, Duke 55 Clemson 77, Virginia 75 OT
Big East Conference
At Gampel Pavilion
Stora, Conn.
First Round
Thursday, Feb. 27
St. Joseph's 65, Fordham 43
La Salle 81, Virginia Tech 66
Sunday, March 2 North Carolina 62, Clemson 58
St. Joseph's 61, La Salle 51
George Washington 80, Massachusetts 39
St. Joseph's 59, George Washington 56
Saturday, March 1
Miami 64, Pittsburgh 58
Boston College 65, St. John's 58
Duquesne 62, Syracuse 61
West Virginia 73, San Diego 68
Rutgers 68, Syracuse 67
Quarterfinals Sunday, March 2
Miami 83, Boston College 4b
Connecticut 63, Villanova 45
Georgetown 79, West Virginia 60
Notre Dame 86, Rutgers 58
Semifinals Monday, March 3
Connecticut 98, Miami 71
Notre Dame 83, Georgetown 43
Championship
Tuesday, March 4
Big Ten Conference
At RCA Dome
First Round
Friday, Feb. 28
Indiana 72, Michigan 54
Ohio State 80, Penn State 79
Minnesota 80, Wisconsin 75
Quarterfinals Saturday, March 1
Semifinals Sunday, March 2
Big 12 Conference
At Kansas City
Tuesday, March 4
First Round
Oklahoa State vs. Baylor, noon
Oklahoa vs. Kansas State, 2:20 p.m.
Missouri vs. Nebraska, 6 p.m.
Texas A&M vs. Iowa State, 8:20 p.m.
Wednesday, March 5
Quarterfinals
Kansas vs. Oklahoma State-Baylor winner.
Texas Tech vs. Oklahoma-Kansas State win-
er, 2-20 o.m.
Colorado vs. Texas A&M- Iowa State winner,
Corrado vs. Mississippi Vikings.
Kansas/Oklahoma State-Baylor win. vs.
Texas Tech/Oklahoma-Kansas State win. 5
Texas/Missouri-Nebraska winner 7.5. Colorado/Texas A&M-low State, winner 7.1.
Saturday's Game Championship
Southeastern Conference
Southeastern Conference
At Chattanooga, Tenn.
First Round
Friday, Feb. 28
Quarterfinals Saturday, March 1
Semifinals
Sunday. March 2
Auburn 75, Georgia 47
Alabama 85, Arkansas 63
Tennessee 100, LSU 99, OT
Florida 84, Vanderbilt 54
Auburn 72, Mississippi 64
Arkansas 71, Kentucky 60
Tennessee 75, South Carolina 48
Vanderbilt 70, Mississippi State 42
TRANSACTIONS
图示
BOSTON RED SOX—Renewed the contracts of SS Nomar Garciaparra and RHP Jeff Suppan. Agreed to terms with P John Wasdin, P Vaughn Eshelman, P Mark Brandenburg, P Rich Gares, P Kerry Lacy, C Scott Hattelberg, and INF Arquimedez Pozo on one-year contracts.
Sunday's Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League
BALTMORE ORIOLES—Assigned INF Francisco Matos, INF Angle Ojeda, INF Juan Bautista and 1B Drew Denson to their minor-league camp.
CHICAGO CUBS — Agreed to terms with RHP Turk Wendell and C Tyler Houston on one-year contracts. Renewed the contract of RHP Kent Bottenfield.
TEXAS RANGERS—Sent P R.A. Dickey, C Frank Charles and INF Warren Morris to their minor-league camp.
CINCINNATI REDS—Reassigned C Justin Towle, G Cullermo Garcia, P Kirk Ojala, Pedro Martinez, and P John Roper to their minor-league camp.
FLORIDA MARLINS — Agreed to terms with C Charles Johnson, RHP Kurt Miller, B3 Josh Booty, RHP Jay Powell, SS Edger Renteria and RHP Rick Helling.
National League
PITSUBBUR PIRATES—Agreed to terms with 18 Mark Johnson and 88 Joe Randa on
BASKETBALL
HOUSTON ROCKETS—Signed F Eddie Johnson for the remainder of the season.
Placed G Brenn Price on the injured list. Activated G Dlyce Draxler from the injured list.
SAN ANTONIO SPURS—Signed F Joe Courtney to a 10-day contract
National Football League
TLANTA FALCNS --Re-sign DE Lester
Archaebe to a three-year contract. Signed
BUFFALO BILLS—Named Jim Miller vice president of administration.
JACKSONVILLE JAUGARS—Re-signed G Ben Coleman and CB Dave Thomas.
NEW YORK JETS—Signed LB Pepper Johnson to a two-year contract. Signed DE Jeff Cummins and G Lonnie Palecie. Terminated the contract of OB Frank Reich.
Canadian Football League
EDMONTON ESKIMOS—Signed RB Frank
EDMONTON
Arena Football League
ALBANY FIREBIRDS—Named Earl Hoffman quarterback coach, Ed Ross defensive line and linebackers coach, and Ed Hodgkiss wide receivers coach. Announced the resignation of Jim Jensen, offensive coordinator.
World League of American Football
LONDON ARCHS—Named Allen Byrd
general manager.
ARIZONA RATTLES—Named Bruce Hardy
seek and coach
regional Football League
EDMONTON OILERS—Recalled LW Joe
HOCKEY National Hockey League
PHOENIX COYOTES—Assigned D Kevin
DEHNIL Vegas of the IHL
PITTSBURGH PENGUIN—Fired Eddie Johnston, coach. Named Craig Patrick coach. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS—Agreed to terms with C Alvin McCauley.
Troy Crowder to Syracuse of the AHL
International Hockey League
FORT WAYNE KOMETS—Traded F Shawn Evans and F Craig Duncan to the Cincinnati Cyclones for D Marc Laniel and LW Jeff McLean.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
NEW ENGLAND REVOLUTION—Waived M
Greg Aumers and M Mark Wetson
CISL—Named Tim Sullivan director of public relations.
A-League
HERSHEY WILDCATS—Signed D Michael
Collins and M Mark Waite to new year contracts
ROCHESTER RAGING RHINOS—Signed S Kevin Kotters, D Nate Houser and M Novica Marlevic.
COLLEGE
MID-CONTINENT CONFERENCE
Announced that the conference tournament will be held at The Mark of the Quad Cities through 2001.
CENTRAL MICHIGAN—Fired Len Drake,
men's basketball coach.
DENVER—Announced the resignation of Dirk Kirk, men's basketball coach.
NORTH CENTRAL—Announced the retirement of Bill Warden, men's basketball coach. Named Bob Braymen's basketball coach.
ROSE-HULMAN—Fired Wanda Schwartz,
women's basketball coach.Named Brenda
Davis women's basketball coach.
TEXAS ABM—Named Steve Marsh offensive coordinator and offensive line coach.
944 Mass.832-8228
PRO HOCKEY
W L T Pts GF GA 156
Buffalo 33 20 10 76 104 156
Pittsburgh 31 26 5 67 220 205
Montreal 24 30 11 59 202 229
Hartford 24 30 9 57 178 200
Ottawa 21 29 13 55 178 187
Boston 21 34 9 51 186 127
| | W L | T L | Pta | GF | GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Philadelphia | 37 17 17 | 37 17 17 | 62 16 | 164 | 164 |
| New Jersey | 32 18 12 | 32 18 12 | 76 171 | 175 | 149 |
| Florida | 29 20 15 | 29 20 15 | 73 146 | 149 | 149 |
| N.Y. Rangers | 29 27 9 | 29 27 9 | 67 209 | 183 | 191 |
| Tampa Bay | 25 30 7 | 25 30 7 | 57 172 | 191 | 191 |
| Washington | 24 32 7 | 24 32 7 | 55 158 | 178 | 186 |
| N.Y. Islanders | 21 32 10 | 21 32 10 | 52 168 | 186 | 186 |
NATURALWAY
National Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
Northeast Division
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division
W L T Pts GF GA
Colorado 40 16 8 8 Pts 614 152
Edmonton 29 29 7 65 203 198
Calgary 27 31 7 61 176 189
Anaheim 26 30 8 60 184 189
Vancouver 28 34 2 58 102 221
Los Angeles 24 33 8 65 175 120
San Jose 22 35 7 51 166 214
| | W L | T L | Pts | GF GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Dallas | 38 23 | 4 | 80 | 197 159 |
| Detroit | 31 19 | 13 | 75 | 199 145 |
| St. Louis | 28 29 | 8 | 64 | 192 199 |
| Chicago | 28 30 | 9 | 61 | 171 165 |
| Phoenix | 28 32 | 4 | 60 | 181 201 |
| Toronto | 28 32 | 5 | 22 | 188 223 |
Monday's Games
New Jersey at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Islands, 6:30 p.m.
Calgary at Washington, 6:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Edmonton, 8:30 p.m.
Toronto 4, Boston 2
N.Y. Rangers 5, San Jose 4, OT
Colorado 5, Vancouver 1
PRO BASKETBALL
Chicago 51 7 .879 —
Detroit 43 14 .754 1/2
Atlanta 38 19 .667 12/14
Charlotte 37 22 .627 14/14
Cleveland 32 25 .561 18/18
Indiana 28 29 .491 22/12
Milwaukee 25 33 .431 26
Toronto 20 38 .345 31
NBA Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times EST
EASTER CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Miami | 43 | 15 | .741 | — |
| New York | 43 | 16 | .729 | ½ |
| Orlando | 30 | 16 | .536 | 12 |
| Washington | 26 | 11 | .456 | 16½ |
| New Jersey | 17 | 31 | .394 | 25 |
| Philadelphia | 15 | 42 | .283 | 27½ |
| Boston | 12 | 46 | .207 | 21 |
Central Division
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Utah | 41 | 16 | .719 | — |
| Houston | 38 | 20 | .655 | 3½ |
| Minnesota | 28 | 28 | .509 | 12 |
| Dallas | 19 | 37 | .339 | 21½ |
| Denver | 18 | 41 | .305 | 24 |
| San Antonio | 13 | 44 | .228 | 28 |
| Vancouver | 11 | 50 | .180 | 32 |
Seattle 41 16 7,191 —
L.A. Lakers 39 19 6,722 1/2
Portland 31 28 5,251 11
L.A. Clippers 30 30 4,551 15
Sacramento 26 32 4,448 15 1/2
Phoenix 22 36 3,797 19 1/2
Golden State 21 35 3,795 19 1/2
Monday's Games
Boston 107, Toronto 103
Chicago 108, Milwaukee 90
Utah at Golden State, (n)
New Jersey at Sacramento, (n)
Tuesday's Games
Milwaukee at New York, 6:30 p.m.
Washington at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.
San Antonia at Charlotte, 6:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m.
Miami at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.
Boston at Indiana, 6:30 p.m.
Orlando at Seattle, 7 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Portland, 9 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
● NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
● NATURAL BODY CARE
• 820-822 MASS. • 841-0100
www.cjnetworks.com\naturalway\
Compiled from The Associated Press.
PHI ALPHA DELTA WELCOME
THE HONORABLE ROBERT E. DAVIS JUSTICE, KANSAS SUPREME COURT TODAY AT 6 IN CENTENNIAL RM. KANSAS UNION
PRE-LAW
QUESTIONS - CALL, KEVIN YODER AT 331-2948
The University of Kansas The University Theatre Presents the Robust Comedy
8:00 p.m.
March 7, 8, 13, 14*, 15, 1997
2:30 p.m.
Sunday, March 9, 1997
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
by William Shakespeare
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in the KU box office: Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Died Center, 864-ARTS, SUA Office, 864-3477; public $12, KU students $6, other students and senior citizens $11, both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee *The Friday, March 14, performance will be signed for the deaf and hard of hearing
THEATRE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
3B
oSu
BU
@
G
ZN
Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Saturday Women's
Tournament
OKLAHOMA STATE
15-11 overall
Seeded No. 9
BAYLOR
14-12 overall
Seeded No. 8
OKLAHOMA
5-21 overall
Seeded No. 12
KANSAS STATE
16-10 overall
Seeded No. 5
MISSOURI
10-19 overall
Seeded No. 10
NEBRASKA
18-8 overall
Seeded No. 7
TEXAS A&M
9-17 overall
Seeded No. 11
IOWA STATE
16-10 overall
Seeded No. 6
Games will be played at Kansas City Municipal Auditorium.
All times p.m.
ROUND ONE
Thursday ROUND TWO Friday SEMIFINALS Saturday FINALS Sunday Men's
BAYLOR
18-11 overall
Seeded No. 9
OKLAHOMA STATE
15-13 overall
Seeded No. 8
KANSAS STATE
10-16 overall
Seeded No. 12
TEXAS TECH
18-8 overall
Seeded No. 5
MISSOURI
13-16 overall
Seeded No. 10
NEBRASKA
16-13 overall
Seeded No. 7
TEXAS A&M
9-17 overall
Seeded No. 11
KAHOMA
overall
No. 6
Round One, Round Two and Semifinal games televised on Jayhawk TV, channels 5 and 13.
Finals on CBS, channel 9.
Games will be played at Kemper Arena.
All times p.m.
ROUND TWO
Wednesday
SEMIFINALS
Thursday
FINALS
Saturday
Women's
Tournament
NOON
NOON
KANSAS
23-4 overall
Seeded No. 1
2:20
2:20
TEXAS TECH
19-7 overall
Seeded No. 4
6:00
6:00
TEXAS
20-6 overall
Seeded No. 2
8:20
8:20
COLORADO
18-8 overall
Seeded No. 3
7:00
7:30
CHAMPION
Games will be played at Kansas City
Municipal Auditorium.
All times p.m.
ATM
BU
نس
T
สร้างตัวอย่าง
N
ATM
@
Infelder Sparky Wilhelm puts the tag on an Oklahoma State player at third base. Kansas wins Wichita State at 7 tonight at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Jayhawks face tough stretch
Kansas will begin with Wichita State tonight in Lawrence
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
For the Kansas baseball team, the road ahead doesn't get any easier.
The Jayhawks (6-4, 2-2), fresh off the first conference series of the season, will begin one of their most grueling and important stretches.
Starting with tonight's game against the Wichita State Shockers, Kansas will play six consecutive home games.
After playing the Shockers, the Jayhawks will play a three-game conference series with Nebraska and will finish up this weekend with a series against the St. Cloud State Huskies in Minnesota.
Despite the rigorous slate of games facing the Jayhawks, Kansas head coach Bobby Randall said his team was more than ready for the challenge.
"There is no question that your home schedule is important," Randall said. "But it comes at a good time for us. We would rather play these games sooner than later."
Only two days after their series with No. 21 Oklahoma State, The Jayhawks face another highly ranked opponent in Wichita State (3-2).
Kansas' in-state rival comes to Hoglund-Maupin Stadium ranked 13th in the nation and with a reputation for baseball excellence.
But despite the high ranking, Wichita State head coach Gene Stephenson said his perennial baseball powerhouse was not as talented as in years past.
The Shockers opened the season by pounding Arkansas-Little Rock and Friends University.
But after the 3-0 start, Wichita State dropped two consecutive games to Houston.
Stephenson said he was not sure about his team's chances against the Javhawks.
"We lost two games to a team that wasn't that good," Stephenson said. "We may be ranked in
"I'm not worried about his (Good's) inexperience, and either is he. Jake is a kid who has been well-schooled."
Bobby Randall Kansas baseball coach
the top 20, but right now we're not a top-200 team. We could very well get run-ruled in Lawrence."
Despite Stephenson's assessment, Randall said facing Wichita State meant playing one of the best programs in the nation.
He said his team would have to be prepared both mentally and physically.
"Any time you face Wichita State, it is going to be a tough draw," Randall said. "The hard thing is going to be sustaining a competitive level of play. That was something we didn't do very well against OSU."
Although his pitching staff surrendered 10 home runs in three games to Oklahoma State, Randall isn't concerned.
He said despite the number of games, this stretch would give his pitchers the chance to get some high-quality innings.
"OSU was one of the best hitting teams in college baseball," Randall said. "Our guys learned how important it is to compete on every pitch. Good teams will capitalize on your mistakes."
Freshman pitcher Jake Good has been given the responsibility of tackling the Wichita State hitters.
While Good (1-0) will be making the first start of his young career, Randall is confident his pitcher has the ability get the job done.
"Jake has been out against some good teams," Randall said. "I'm not worried about his inexperience, and neither is he. Jake is a kid who has been well-schooled."
KU SPORTS CALENDAR CORNER
KANSAS BASEBALL
KU
TONIGHT!
vs.
7:00 pm
THE SHOCKERS
HOGLUND-MAUPIN STADIUM
N
Hawks
7 Wichita St.
STADIUM
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY First pitch @ 3pm The JOHNNY'S 500 and Molly McGee's Line Score Special
First pitch @ 3pm KLWN Name That Tune Contest
KU
FRIDAY
First pitch @ 3pm
QUARTER DOG DAY!
vs.
SATURDAY
ST. CLOUD STATE
1 Universal wring 1990
First pitch at 12pm • Doubleheader
KLWN Name That Tune Contest
First pitch @ 1pm
KLWN Name That Tune Contest
SUNDAY
KU Students... Join the Jayhawk Bullpen Get FREE seeds & a FREE t-shirt!
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4B
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Baylor coach praises team for improving this season
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Harry Miller figures his Baylor Bears have much to be proud of regardless of what happens this week in the Big 12 tournament.
Left for dead a couple of years ago
after a stiff NCAA probation, the Bears head into Thursday's first round against Oklahoma State with an 18-11 record, hopeful of winning a bid to the NITE.
BU
- Throughout Baylor's history, the
* Bears have had only four NCAA and
* two NIT appearances.
"That would be very significant."
said Miller, who is in his third year at Baylor. "There's already been definitive evidence we have gone way down the road toward recovery. But Baylor hasn't had too many postseason bids."
Miller said a postseason appearance would be huge for his players.
"I feel we deserve it," he said. "I feel we've done enough to be strongly considered. I do know this — it would signal we had made a giant leap in the right direction."
Norm Stewart, winding down his 30th year as Missouri's head coach, may be about as frustrated as he ever has felt in early March. The Tigers finished only 5-11 in the conference. But perhaps Stewart's biggest frustration stems from the way his controversial senior guard Jason Sutherland is viewed.
Sutherland drew three fouls in a critical stretch in Missouri's loss at
Kansas State on Saturday. A lot of Missouri fans, including Stewart, believe Sutherland has had a bull'seye painted on his back all year.
"First of all, we're not in a position to make any comments," Stewart said. "If you make comments and you're losing and you have an incident happen, everybody zeros in on that. It's been very difficult for us to get an unbiased view. I think that's been true most of the year in regard to Jason.
"I really have some deep feelings about our ball club and about the individuals who have represented us over the years and the group that represents us now. It doesn't mean you have to be winning before you can speak. But it doesn't sound very good when you're losing and you say something. But I think it's been mishandled. It's been mishandled by officials. I think it's been mishandled by
some of the coaches. And certainly, I think the press has had their share of it, too.
"And certainly, we haven't done a good job." Stewart said.
Texas Tech coach James Dickey said coaching and athletic ability were not alone in carrying No. 1 Kansas through a 29-1 regular season.
"I think Kansas has been and is the best team in the country all year for a lot of reasons," Dickey said. "One that stuck out in my mind is this team has been on a mission since last year."
A year ago, the highly ranked Jayhawks lost to Syracuse, missing a Final Four trip.
"They felt like they should have been in," Dickey said. "They have tremendous confidence that somebody's going to make plays to help them win."
Survey shows Kansas in sync with Title IX
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Va. — Although most college students are women, most Division I athletes are men, despite the efforts of Title IX sponsors to even the score, according to a survey by USA Today.
Kansas was among 28 schools with women athletes within 5 percent of total female enrollment.
But the survey said more than half the undergraduate students in Division I schools were women, but two-thirds of the athletes were men.
The survey was commissioned to study the effects of 25 years of Title IX, the legislation passed to bring equality to women in college athletics. The newspaper surveyed 303 NCAA Division I schools.
A goal of Title IX was to bring the percentage of women athletes up to the percentage of women undergraduates. But the survey showed that at only 28 Division I schools, about 9 percent of the total, does the total number of women athletes fall within 5 percent of total enrollment.
Navy and Army ranked No. 2 and 3, followed by Georgia Tech, Washington State, Virginia Tech, Kansas, Utah and Washington, all with passing scores.
The top three schools in proportion of women athletes are the three major service academies, all of which have total female populations of under 20 percent. At Air Force, 15 percent of the undergraduate population is female, for example, and 26 percent of the athletes are female.
The worst offenders were, in order, Arkansas State, Southern Mississippi, Southwestern Louisiana, Texas Christian and Northeast Louisiana.
Leonard blames injury for loss to Camacho
Boxer had not revealed muscle tear before fight
The Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Sugar Ray Leonard and his trainers are defending their decision to keep secret a calf injury that hobbled the Hall of Fame fighter in his comeback bout against Hector "Macho" Camposo
"I gave 100 percent," Leonard said. "I gave more than most people (give) when they're in shape. I don't feel bad. I don't think the customers feelbad."
Leonard, 40, suffered a second-degree tear in his right calf Jan. 31. But he lied when people asked about it, instead saying it was his son who was hospitalized because of a thumb injury suffered playing football.
T. H.
Sugar Rav Leonard
He ignored the advice of his doctor, Scott Steingard, who said the fight should be postponed to give him time to heal.
Leonard laid off sparring for two weeks. When he did resume, he quickly reinjured the leg. So his camp closed his workouts to the public and press so they wouldn't see how hobbled he was.
"It was something we camouflaged because we thought it was going to heal," corner man J.D. Brown said.
When fight night came Saturday, Leonard had his doctor inject him with painkiller two
hours before the 12-round bout at Convention Hall. It was a temporary fix. Lurching, missing punches and falling down, Leonard was beaten soundly by Camacho before referee Joe Cortez stopped the fight at 1:08 of the fifth round.
But Leonard said the injury, which clearly limited his mobility and balance in the ring, was not to blame for his ill-fated comeback. Time was.
"Inactivity is a sin in boxing. Trying to come back and defy the odds is one thing. There comes a point when you realize you don't have it." Leonard said.
It was Leonard's first fight since a 1991 dismantling at the hands of Terry Norris.
He held his own in the first two rounds in front of 10,324 fans. The left-handed Camacho, who applied pressure from the opening bell, scored well with head blows in the third round. He continued to score well in the fourth round and ripped a cut over Leonard's right eye.
About 50 seconds into the fifth round, Camacho, 158 and three-fourths pounds, knocked down Leonard with a right and two left upper cuts. Leonard struggled up but was unable to ward off Camacho, who landed 10 punches to the head before referee Joe Cortez stopped the fight at 1:08 of the round.
Camacho, who retained the fringe IBC midweight title, also has held the WBC super featherweight and lightweight title and the WBO junior welterweight title.
As for Leonard, the former undisputed welterweight champion and holder of shares of world titles in four other weight classes will be inducted in June to the International Boxing Hall of Fame, to which he was elected in January.
"I'm through," Leonard said of any more comeback attempts.
Today's Birthday (March 4)
Friends are the key to your success this year. Ask for a raise in April. If you need a better job, tell a friend. Schedule a romantic interlude for July. Watch your money carefully in October. Be on the lookout for a lucky career break in December. Join a team to do something wonderful in January. An unusual development works in your favor in February. A conversation about fantasies in March could lead to the love of your life.
HOROSCOPES
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 6.
A private matter could come to a joyous conclusion today. Making one phone call could resolve many problems. Stay tuned to the information channels, the grapevine and the Internet. An older person wants your loyalty and your attention. You might as well go along with the program. Your paycheck may depend on it.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 10.
Begin a world cruise or enroll in college. If you are not quite ready to accept either of those opportunities, at least you can start preparing. A foreign friend would love to put you up. Start calling in some of those favors you have done in years gone by.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is a 5.
You know that old line that goes, "If you're so smart, why aren't you rich?" Well, this is one day when your natural intelligence could really come through for you. You are smart, and you can be rich. This isn't going to come about by accident, though. Make it happen.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)Today is a 9.
Neither you nor your partner will let the other get away with a thing. That is good, because both of you will certainly try. Call and ask a dear but distant friend if you can come for a visit this weekend. It will be a great time to travel.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 4.
Have you ever considered being in business for yourself? The harder you work, the richer you become—after the first couple of years. And since you are working hard anyway, you might as well become fabulously wealthy. Think about it.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 9.
This would be a pretty good day for you to get married. What if
it is a Tuesday? You can have your wedding any time you feel like it. Next weekend, for example. Besides, if you get married now, you will be more relaxed at the party. If you already are married, reaffirm your vows.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is a 4.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) — Today is a 9.
You will have to face something repugnant, but it will turn out OK. You will be a stronger person for it. For instance, how long has it been since you cleaned out the refrigerator? Finish the job tonight, and you will feel like a million bucks.
People want to obey you a little more than usual today. You might as well take advantage of the situation. What is it you want to have happen in your life? Scroll down your mental list, and do as many things on it as possible, starting with the easiest.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) —
Todav is a 5.
it is time to buy something you need for your home. If you don't know what, just look around. Whatever you need most will become obvious. Maybe what you need is a new place. The perfect thing would be a portable environment. Shop for one tonight.
Capricorn (Dec, 22-Jan, 19) — Today is a 9.
You are a very practical person,
for good reason. You have to be.
You have learned the hard way.
Today you can learn the easy
way, too. Most Capricorns
become immensely successful.
If you are not there yet, you will be.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5.
You are stuck between a rock and a hard place. There is something that must be done (for legal reasons), and you don't want to do it. The good news is this could bring more money into your account. OK, you are doing it for the money. Stop stalling.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9.
You choose your friends for their personalities. You don't care about age, weight, race or nationality. You care about love, kindness, compassion and understanding. That is why you throw such wonderful parties. Set up another one for this weekend.
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
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Kansan Classified
Office of International Programs • 11th Annual Conference
100s Announcements
1015 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
120 Travel
130 Entertainment
105 Personals
200s Employment
140 Lost and Found
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305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
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Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Y
100s Announcements
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any "prey interest" discrimination based on race, color or national origin or status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such appearance, limitation or discrimination.
105 Personals
Desiring to see La Bohème in dream shoes. Offer-
ment a ticker lices and cash for yours. Call
843-890-3650.
KU U & A offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unsexed. Please call KU Info @ 864-3096 or Headquarters at 861-2345 for more information.
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110 Business Personals
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The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against a person with disabilities, sex on race, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nativity or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept that in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
110 Business Personals
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
5B
120 Announcements
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Gay, leibian, bixuel, transgender or unuse? KU Q & A offers a confidential support group Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. call KU info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2845 for contact.
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140 Lost & Found
Found: Female tabby cat young.
Found around 8th & Indiana Streets.
Call 641-4667.
LOOKING FOR SWF, who is blonde, beautiful, around 5'6" and interested in a fun, loving relationship. Call Joe at 842-2467.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
HTML TUTOR NEEDED to help me put together a web page, $7.hr. Must know you stuff. Email
hss@microsoft.com
Nanny needed for Spring Break. 3 Kids, 10, 11 & 7.
Nanny needed to substitute work offered.
Call 895-3839 ASAP.
Email nancy@nannyschool.com
Looking for motivated, dependable, team oriented people. Hiring all positions, apply in person.
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. 6 wkummath reqnstration program. Lake Quilva, RI.
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center is accepting applications for afternoon teacher's aid Experience with children required. Apply 2104 W. 15th St.
Wanted 87 students. Lose 8-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough. Doctor recommended. Guaranteed. $30 cost. Free gift. 1-800-455-7500.
Saint John School seeks responsible individual who has experience w/children for its after school program $5.50/hr. To apply, contact Natalie Painsh 843-9611 (days) or 843-3834 (evenings)
CAMP COUNSELORS Overnight camps in Pocono Mtns. of PA Over 40 activities - Seeking general and specialist counselors
Highly organized female who is good with children, needed to be mother's helper. 10-20 hr. per week. Museum is available monay through friday, through Saturday and Sunday. Entrance fenced, but not required. $5.50 hr. Call 841-10747
Seeking self-motivated person for part-time receptionist at lawrence airport. Phones, Unicom, light bookkeeping, and cleaning. Evening hours from 7:30 to 10:00 hours per wk. Call 842-2900 to schedule interview.
Paisano's Italian Ristorante is looking for heart of the house employees.
Experienced kitchen help needed.
Dishwashers, linecooks, and prep cooks
Competitive wages based on experience.
Apply in person 2112 W, 25th st.
BabySister/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
own car, experience, and knowledge of child
development. Send letter, resume, schedule, and
reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Stuaffer Flint.
Immediate opening for Customer Service Associate to work daytime hours. Flexible scheduling. 20-30 hours per week. Send resume to Kerry Hart, Mr. Gattis, 3514 Clinton Pkwy, ST, 1, Lawrence, KS, 60047, fax to 838-322 or in person at Mr. Gattis.
INTERNET SURFERS
Do you surf the Net? Would you like to earn $25K,
$50K or more a month, playing on the Net? Then go to:
WWW.ARCOONDEN.COM then go to ON (GA)
WWW.ARCOONDEN.GA then go to PENDEN (password:
TRAVELER). Site opens 2/34/97
Kitchen staff position available at Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Food prep and line cooking. Some days hours are helpful. Start $5.50/hr up to $6.50/hr, after $8 mo. plus profit sharing. Apply at Schumm Food Company business offices 9-M-F at 719 Mass. (unstairs above smokehouse.)
STUDENT WORK- up to $12.50 ! Nat' I CO, has immediate PT/ FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCOC. Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. Co-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Apply call our JCOC office at 931-831-WORK (10am -5pm)
BPI Building Services has immediate opening for b/pT crew leader to join our late evening commercial cleaning team. Hours are late Sun.-Thurs. 8:11:30 p.m. qualified applicant will have a eye for detail and a solid work history. Call Amt at 862-754-9838 in person at 939 lowe奔布 Appliance Plus.
205 Help Wanted
Summer Jobs for the Environment
Carr $2500-$4000/Summer
Protect for cleanliness
Protect endangered species. Offices in 33 states
Call Campaign To Save the Environment
Computer: need personnel for greater KC/Lawrence Area, for on site computer consulting. Flex hrs, F or PT. Must have reliable trans- and be able to pass pre-employment drug test.
Desired skills: strong customer serv; HW/SW/OSys config, troubleshooting mac;
Mobility; Facilities management.
Send resume to: Geeks On Wheels, PO Box 888,
Lawrence, KS 65042, Fax 931-843-1922.
CNA/CNHA
Explore the possibilities of HOME CARE where you can enjoy the freedom of giving one on one attention to your client without interruption. VNA provides two programs: Private Home Care Aide Program with early A.M., late afternoon, and evening hours. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Dauglas County Adult Center, Lower Level or call 841-4636 for EAT.OOE
**STUDENT HOURLY POSITIONS AVAILABLE**
(2). Duties: Receptionist; filing; duplicating;
running errands; typing (at least 45 wpm);
reading; data entry; boarding boards; other duties
(3). Attendance at noon hour. First position available Mar 20,
through Dec 31, 1997. Opportunity for renewal for Mar
20, Dec 31, 1997. Job number: B44-75/hour. Applications available at the Student
Assistance Center, 22 Strong, 864-604. Deadline
Mar 12, 1997; 5:00 P.M. Preference given to per-
form summer and through the 1997-98 academic year.
Flexographic Electronic Prepress - Universal Products, Inc. is seeking applications for qualified individual who possesses a strong working knowledge of MAC and various graphics applications (Illustrator, Photoshop, QuarkXpress). Electronic prepress knowledge such as step-distorting for plate set-up, and trap and bleed application a plus. Opening can be 1st and 2nd floor.
This is a full time position with benefits including: insurance, profit sharing, & retirement. Qualified applicants should send a resume or apply in person to: Universal Products, Inc., 321 Industrial St., Goddard, KS 67052 A Wichita suburb. EOE/M/F.
Design Artist - Universal Products. Inc. is seeking applications for design artists. Responsibilities will include developing conceptual sketches with an emphasis of free flowing design, generation of visual concepts, and approval, creating new & original designs and other artistic activities which support company operations. Openings could be t1 or t8. Experience with Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, and Quark Express. A natural ability to use color extensively and previous experience in printing will be required.
This is a full time position with benefit titla include: insurance, profit sharing & retirement. Qualification: Master's degree or apply in person to: Universal Products, Inc., c/o Innerwood GK, KS7502, a Wichita suburb. EOE/M/F
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: The Rock Springs 4-H Center is looking for applicants for 46-50 summer staff jobs. Job lengths vary from 2 to 3 months. There are jobs available in recreation, custodial, maintenance and food service. Possible internships available in all the listed areas. Mail resume to Rock Springs Health, Katy, TX 75719, or contact other benefits. Applicants must be 17 by June 1 of this year.
For more information write:
Or Call: (913) 257-3221
SUMMER JOBS
ROCK SPRINGS 4-H CENTER
5405 W. Highway k-157
JUNCTION CITY, KS 66441
FEMALE AND MALE CAMP COUNSELORS needed for outstanding Maine camps! CAMP VEGA for girls and CAMP CEDAR for boys. Each located on magnificent lakefront setting with exceptional facilities. Over 100 positions at camp, baseball, ball, basketball, volleyball, lacrosse, golf field, hockey, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, canoeing, scuba, water-skiing, archery, weight training, athletic trainer, journalism, photography, ballet, balloon sculpture, ballet, nature study, backpacking, horseback riding, ropes course, trip leaders, mountain biking, rifler, general (w/ youngest campers). Also looking for secure rooms 21-18th. Top Salary, room, board, laundry, clothing, and travel allowance. MEN-CAMP CEDAR for boys, 178 Beacon Street, Brookline, MA 02146, CAMP VEGA, PO BOX 1771, Duxbury, MA 02332, jobs@campvea.com. http://campvea.com. 800-838-VEGA WE WILL BE ON THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA STATIONS on Wednesday, March 3 in Kansas University from 10AM to 4PM. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY.
NAISMITH Hall
We are now accepting applications for Fall 1997 Resident Assistants. Weare looking for individuals with strong leadership skills, great enthusiasm, and personal empowerment. Come to our front dsk for information and an application between 8a.m. and 11p.m., Mondays through Fridays.
1800 Naismith Dr.
at the corner of 19th and Naismith)
Database Coordinator
Qualified candidate should have a very strong Win95 background, with exp. using Excel & Word or WordPerfect, FileMaker Pro, or similar database applications.
Duties & responsibilities will include: researching, maintaining, & using database of industry contacts for business intelligence & marketing purposes.
Oread a in drug development has an immediate full-time opening for a Database Coordination.
Individual needs to have strong oral & written interpersonal communication skills.
For consideration please mail or fax resume along with salary requirements to:
Oread
1501 Wakarusa, Dr.
Lawrence, KS 66047-1803
fax (913) 749-1882
No calls please/EOE
DB-1
Oread
Wait staff positions available at Mast. Deli and Buffalo Baldo's Smokehouse. Must have some daytime work. Apply at mastfoodmast.com or office 847-MF 302. Mass (upstairs above smokhouse).
205 Help Wanted
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
Radio Announceers part time for KLWN & KL2R on radio experience. In 1975, they program to run at the Radio Center in West Texas.
Professional Ethical Massage
Certified Massage Therapist
Student Pricing
331-0242
Radio Announcers part time for KLWN & KLZR,
on-air experience required. Tape and use
to program director. PO Box 3007 Lawrence, KS
6046 EOE.
Radio news, reporter weekends for KLW/KLZR. Training training & broadcast experience needed. Tape & resume to news director P.O. Box 3007 Lawrence KS 60460 EOE
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800) - 733-2404
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
235 Typing Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law of DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
Call Jacki at 823-8484 for applications, term
Satisfaction guaranteed. Makin' the Grade.
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/ laser printer will create top quality paper for you. Call Deanna @ 843-2864.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
14 gl. Ftastron Sailbait, good condition. Buy now, have it Spring Break. Leave message @ (033) 759-8262.
Killer Loop Killer style skin snowboard. Brand new.
Only $250 o. bach 311-333-333. Call after 8:00am
@:09pm
Oceanic 55 Aquarium, wet/dry filter, reef light
heater. Approximate size. About 100 lbs of base
rock. Cases 65-850.
87 Mustang GT conv. black, leather, all power,
good cond. (913) 833-4270.
84 Chevrolet Camaro good condition, runt great,
marshland car, $2,000 must sell, call Matt at
617-539-1030.
1990 Geo Metro, 5 sp. 2 p., hatchback, great gas
rust and bumper and bumper $1400
800-084-1416
www.superloraurea.com Pictures of pre-owned vehicles on the web. Various makes and models.
Call 1-800-8784-ACURA for more info. Ask for Pat.
96 Camara Ircs 5.0 V8. AC, AM/FAN Caps, 5 spd.
97 Camara Ircs 5.0 V8. AC, AM/FAN Caps, 5 spd.
Must Sell. Best offer! Call 189-4170.
405 For Rent
360 Miscellaneous
- Beautiful dark blue metallic
- 5-speed - Leather interior
--br apartment sublease in May. May rent free.
Close to campus. 1132 Kentucky Court - 805-269-7603.
campus. 1132 Kentucky Court - 805-269-7603.
W
$16,800 842-5733
Going abroad Fall '97. Need a subleave for Spring '98 Call ASAP叫 Tat al三百46 or Jenny at 99
1995 VW Cabrio convertible
Now leasing Bradford Square Apartments on K.U. bus route, private deck, cats allowed, for $490/mo.
2 Edm Sublease available 5/1, quiet area, pool,
central air and heat. $45 per month call 865-3692.
Available now -3 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer/Flyer.
Fully equipped kitchen. On KU bus route. Call 841-
8468.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
THE CHAPMAN
USED & CURIOUS GOODS
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6.00 Tues - Sat.
BUY • SELL • TRADE
Two bedroom Apt. Hardwood floor. Foot bath
noa. Pets. $399/month plus deposit. Call 841-741-
0047.
Spacious 2 bedroom house, hardwood floors, lots of
extras. K. U. Available May 15, No Pets.
Call 749-2819
2 B-Room, 2 story townhome. 1/2 bath, newclean. Back patio, W/D included. Renewable sublease April 1-July 31. $445/month. Call 331-2790.
Studie/w storage room. Subleave, new carpets,
walk to campus. On has it: Crash & trash
furnished.
Mackenzie Place, 1135 Kentucky, Newlan for Aug. 1. Great Location! Luxury apart., close to campus. All BIR, Microwave, washer/ dryer, all appliances. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-186.
Condo for $3 bdm. 2 bath, washer/dryer, on
FLOOR. 15' x 9' x 7'. FHA LOAN. $79,000 OBO. Call us 823-201
FHA LOAN. $79,000 OBO. Call us 823-201
SubLEASE 2bdrm,1car garage,DW/hookups,
central air,new carpet and new tile in kitchen
&bathfurn. $490/mo.Pets OK. Avail. April or
May. 1.838-9273 or 841-5747
Studio & 1 2 Bedrooms. Available for summer & fall. Some location可选 on campus, on bus route. Call (800) 536-7924.
FURNISHED 3 BR APT-2 2 BATH W/D/A C/
BALA BATHTU 4 BR APT-1 2 BATH W/D/A
$500/no. Cull evening: 704/148-1486
LCA
PINNACLE WOODS
1*2*3 br. luxury apt. homes
5000 Clinton Pkwy.
1/4 mi. west of Wakarusa
All new - 865-5454
Spacious Apartments for rent.
"Convenient affordable housing"
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher Avail.
Central Air • Close to KU Campus
Studios 1, 2, 3, & 4 bedrooms
Call: LCA Apartmentes
381-2plst (757) am
after 4pm 749-3794
- Designer Interior
- 3 Bed, 2 Full Bath
- On Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- No Pets
PLS
South Point Park VILLAS
Built in '95
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
- 1, 2, 3, 4 Bedroom
• On Bus Route
• Pool & Volleyball Court
• Pets Welcome
• Hot Water & Trash Paid
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MWF 3pm-6pm to work with children age 18-50 yrs. A.M. & P.M. Substitutes needed also-Call Rosemary 843-4197.
405 For Rent
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
MOVE IN NOW...
One Month Free Rent
water paid
call or stop by today
841-7726
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
Shannon Plaza Apartments
Lorimar and Leannamar Townhomes
No one lives ab
"No one lives above or below you"
or below you or your townhomes are two levels
Leasing for Summer/Fall '97
1, 2, 3 bdm/2 bath, 4 bdm/3 bath
*Waher/Dryer*
*Dishwasher*
*Microwave*
*Fireplace*
*Ceiling Fans in every room*
*Cable in every room*
*Walk-in closets*
*cable paid*
Lorimar-3801 Clinton Pkwy
Leannamr-4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Call 841-7809 Office hrs. 9-5 M-F
--w.24th & Naismith
842-5111
Apartments
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
10-Month Leases Available
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
- Volleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route
- OK to Bus Route
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
Move In Now...
NOW LEASING Call First Management
Move In Now...
One Month Free Rent
On lease through July 31
1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment
Call or stop by today
FLATS
843-2116
11th and Miss
Berkeley Flats (E)
841-8468
HIGHPOINTE APARTMENT HOMES
405 For Rent
ExerciseRoom
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406 Tenn. a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership, non profit operation, demand control. 183-240 incl. wk dym dinners, Uil, W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 841-0484.
3 Hot Tubs
Washer/Dryer Alarm System Clubhouse & Swimming Pool Workout Facility Basketball Court
1,2 & 3 Bedrooms
Hawthorn Place
Townhomes and Residential Home
On KU Bus Route
Residential Homes
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th N.A.
M-F10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Visit the following locations
Fireplace, one-car garage
1&2Bedrooms
♦ Private Courtyard 331-2332
WALK TO CAMPUS
Completely Furnished
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
MASTERCRAFT
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Roommate needed to share 2xR&C and Massachusetts
hire $17/mo/+ 1/- of utilities. Call 865-296-86
Equal Housing Opportunity
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
Female Roommate needed. 2 bdmr 1/2 block from campus. Washer/Dryer.Dryer.638-4702
Roommate needed for two bdmrt apt. $180/mei+
plus 1/2 utilities. If interested call 331-346]
2 Females to share 5 bedroom luxurious home,
$250/mo. + 1/5 unit, plus all amenities, 1/2 mile from
Campus, no pets, W/D, A/C, Call 865-8425
Roommate needed. Apt. close to K.U. Good call. Call 841-4688
430 Roommate Wanted
Female bedroom furniture to be furnished 3 bedroom kitchen on KU bus route. $230 per month + £15 per room.
Reemote students wanted-Mar1, Share spiffy 2hr, bw资粗, graduate. Student located at 1325 Tenn.
Broadway.
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAIIX KANSAN
By Mail: 11S Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68045
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or cheque,
charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Classified Information and order form
Please place your estimate 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 rotund 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 gaps lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Reliance on cancelled ads that were not pre-baid by check or with cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
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.
Cups per litre per day
Num. of insertions:
1X 1.2
3 lines 2.30
4 lines 2.15
5-7 lines 2.10
8+ lines 2.00
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$18.00 (4 lines X 90¢ per line X 5 days).
105 personal
110 business personals
129 announcements
130 entertainers
140 lost & found 360 for sale
285 helped want 340 sales calls
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 routine services
370 want to buy
465 for rent
438 resemble wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSBAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
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Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper,
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper
Total ad cost: ___ Classification:
Name: Phname:
Address:
Phone;
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas)
Firmish the if you are charging your ad:
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Print exact name appearing on credit card:
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MasterCard
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
6B
Tuesday. March 4. 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kemper dusting off for tournament
Workers hurrying to revamp arena for Big 12 games
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kemper Arena was a dusty mess yesterday as workers raced to install new seats, upgrade concession stands and add lighting in time for the first Big 12 Conference men's basketball tournament.
City officials said renovations of the building's interior should be completed when teams begin practicing tomorrow and when fans
arrive Thursday for the start of the tournament.
"When the doors open, the workers will be out of there," said Tom Bean, city architect.
Dirt and dust coated many of the surfaces yesterday afternoon. Crews were painting hand railings, and a few seats still were being installed.
The men's tournament is expected to draw about 19,500 people. 75 percent of them from out of town.
Kemper has played host to the Big Eight tournament since 1977 and kept the tournament when the conference became the Big 12 this season.
Kansas City has a contract to be
the tournament site for three more years before other cities can bid to be hosts.
The construction budget for Kemper's interior and exterior improvements was about $18.1 million, Bean said.
The first improvement fans will notice is increased lighting, he said. The next obvious change will be the additional 2,000 seats.
A new row of about 400 seats was created where a wide walkway once went around the top of the arena. Another 400 seats were installed in the corner of the arena. The remaining new seats are on the lower level.
Spectators who have endured past tournaments sitting in unadded, gold-colored fiberglass seats in the
"The best location in the house used to have the worst seats in the house," he said.
lower level will appreciate new upholstered seats, Bean said.
Tim Allen, associate commissioner of the Big 12, said crews had told him the project was on time and the arena would be ready.
One change female fans should notice is the addition of four new women's restrooms. Kemper, built in the early 1970s, was designed for a predominantly male crowd.
"We have not been concerned." Allen said. "We've been assured all along everything would be ready. And we're right."
Kemper's history contains both highlights and lowlights.
It was the site of the 1976 Republican Convention, and it won a design award in 1975 from the Chicago Chapter of the American Institute of Architects. $
The low point in the building's history was in June 1979, when its roof collapsed as severe winds ripped through the city. The damage was estimated at $5 million.
Kemper was the source of embarrassment when a clock malfunctioned in 1986 at the NCAA Midwest Region semifinal game between Kansas and Michigan State, giving the Jayhawks more time to win the game. At the time, an NCAA official called the malfunction the most blatant timing error he had seen in 20 years.
Citing overtolerance, umpires vow to get tougher
The Associated Press
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Don't look for many arguments at the ballpark this year. Managers and players may get tossed before they finish their first sentences.
"Tolerance in baseball is leading to total anarchy," umpires Jerry Crawford and Don Denkinger said. "The rules of the game will be rigidly enforced."
Umpires still are angry about last year's Roberto Alomar incident.
Baltimore's All-Star second baseman received a five-game suspension for spitting at ampire John Hirschbeck last September and will serve it this April — with pay. Umpires wanted a longer suspension, wanted it to be without pay and wanted Alomar to serve it during the postseason.
"Umpires will no longer bend over backwards to keep players in the game," Umpires Union representative Richie Phillips said. "The umpires, who have been off-criticized for being too confrontational, will engage in less arguments on the field. Players who engage in aberrant behavior can expect an immediate ejection and little conversation."
Baseball officials were angered by Phillips' threats.
"We expect they will not make a travesty of the game," acting commissioner Bud Selig said. "If they do, appropriate action will be taken. This is not a time for divisive statements. Rather, it is a time for umpires and players to come
together in the best interests of the game."
Phillips said umpires decided in a meeting 10 days ago at Palm Springs, Calif., that players would be elected for even minor violations.
"There are many rules that while they do not require ejection, allow ejection for even the slightest violation," Phillips said. "The umpires feel they've been too tolerant."
As an example, Phillips said the rules on the speed of the game would be rigidly enforced. Pitchers
are required to throw a pitch within 20 seconds when no runners are on base, but the rule hasn't been followed for many years.
Umpires called for a code of conduct to be developed at a meeting last month, but the players' association will not agree to specific penalties for specific infractions.
"They will tell players to get in the box," Phillips said. "If the player doesn't get in the box, they'll call for the pitch. If the player objects, he will be eiected."
Cal Ripken misses game with injury
The Associated Press
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — If it happened during the regular season, the news would have been shocking: Cal Ripken was scratched from the Baltimore Orioles' starting lineup yesterday because of an injury.
Ripken strained his left groin hours before the Baltimore Orioles' exhibition game against the Atlanta Braves.
He then aggravated the injury during infield practice and was removed from the starting lineup and replaced at third base by Willis Otanez.
Ripken, who has played in a major-league record 2,316 consecutive regular-season games, also is expected to sit out the Orioles' exhibition game against the Los Angeles Dodgers today.
But he said the injury was not serious.
Ripken, 36, said he would have been in the lineup if the injury would have occurred during the regular season.
@
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If you are:
a non-smoking male, age 21-45, in good health able to stay with us for 3 nights and 4 days able to spring in for 8 follow-up visits able to miss just 2 days of classes.
you can earn up to $850
Call (913) 894-5533 for additional information.
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Daily Kansan
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Basketball: Women's team to play Baylor in quaterfinals of Big 12 tournament. Page 18
Music: Lawrence bands dream of making it big. Page 8A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
*******************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 9
PO BOX 3585
TOPEAK, KS 66601-3585
NEWS 864-4810
WEDNESDAY. MARCH 5. 1997
SECTION A VOL. 103, NO. 111
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Stouffer Place chase ends with man caught
A man led KU police on a 20-minute foot chase through the Stouffier Place apartment complex Monday afternoon.
A KU student called police on Monday to report that her boyfriend, Charles M. Canp, had struck and threatened her the previous evening. At 12:30 p.m. Monday a KU police officer recognized a man the officer suspected to be Camp near No. 23 Stouffer Place. The officer ordered the man to stop, but he ran south toward 19th Street.
Police officials said an officer ran through the Stouffer Place complex in pursuit. The officer called for assistance and the suspect later was caught in the 1900 block of 19th Terrace.
KU police Sgt. Chris Keary said that at least two Lawrence police officers helped in capturing Camp, who was charged with battery, criminal threat and obstruction of a police officer. Camp is now in the Douglas County Jail on $1,000 bond.
Pot plants in window lead to student's arrest
A KU student living in Oliver Hall was arrested Monday on charges of marijuana cultivation and possession, possession of drug paraphernalia and not having a drug tax stamp.
KU police received a call from someone who said they could see marijuana plants being grown on the windowsill in the room of Scott R. Jacobsen, Littleton, Colo., sophomore. When police arrived, Sgt. Chris Keary said two pots, holding 46 marijuana plants, were found in Jacobsen's room.
Jacobsen was then taken to the Douglas County jail and released yesterday evening on $1,000 bond.
—Kansan staff reports
Human Resource's new leader a conservative
RALEIGH, N.C. — A state lawmaker who once insisted that rape victims can't get pregnant because "the juices don't flow" has been appointed co-chairman of a committee on abortion and other social issues.
Rep. Henry Aldridge's appointment to the leadership post on the House Committee on Human Resources sends a disturbing message, said Chris Fitzsimon, executive director of the liberal Common Sense Foundation.
The 73-year-old Republican, appointed by GOP House Speaker Harold Brubaker, caused an uprоar in 1995 when he said state funds for abortions on rape victims were unnecessary.
"The facts show that people who are raped, who are truly raped, the juices don't flow, the body functions don't work, and they don't get pregnant." Aldridge said.
Aldridge later said the comments were stupid.
The committee deals with such matters as abortion funding, day care and services for the poor.
The Associated Press
TODAY
INDEX
National News ... 6A
World News ... 7A
Horoscopes ... 6B
Classifieds ... 7B
High 50° Low 26°
SUNNY
Weather: Page 2A
Special education ranks No.1
By Stephanie McDuff Kansan staff writer
School programs nationally ranked
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas basketball teams are not the only nationally ranked programs on campus.
Three University schools were recognized this week by U.S. News and World Report for their graduate programs.
The University's special education graduate program was ranked No. 1 in the country in the magazine's March 10 issue.
"We're very pleased getting this ranking of No.1 in the country," said Nancy Peterson, chairwoman of special education.
Peterson said that the ranking was appreciated because it was one of many national honors the program had received.
Since 1978, the special education program has been recognized in national studies numerous times.
Last year the program was named second in the country by U.S. News and World Report.
Peterson said that the program's consistent high rankings reaffirmed the high quality of students and faculty working in special education.
John Poggio, associate dean for graduate studies and research in the School of Education, said that the competitive nature of the field made the ranking an amazing feat.
The School of Education also was recognized by U.S. News and World Report, ranking 27th in national graduate education programs.
The School of Fine Art's master of music program ranked 21st in the country. The ranking was determined by a survey on the department's reputation completed by deans, administrators and senior faculty.
The magazine evaluated 191 education
programs based on their faculty resources, research activity, student selectivity and reputation from other academics and local school superintendents.
"Needless to say, we're delighted to be in the top 10 to 20 percent," Poggio said of the school's overall ranking.
The guide also rated the School of Education 10th in the nation for research productivity because it had raised $10.9 million in research funds for the University in 1996.
Poggio said that such a recognition helped the school get word out about its programs to prospective graduate students around the country.
"These rankings are looked at not only by prospective students, but also prospective employers," Poggio said.
Although the special education program received the highest ranking, Poggio said that the ranking exposed the quality of all
of the programs taught within the School of Education.
Two other schools at the University were recognized by the magazine as well.
Peter Thompson, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said that the recognition was important for the school because the recommendation came from faculty around the country. He said that this ranking showed that the quality of education in the University's graduate music program was recognized.
U. S. News and World Report also recognized the School of Social Welfare's master of social work program. The program tied with five other universities for the ranking of 21st in the country.
MORRISAN 100
Geoff Krleger / KANSAN
Dan Grohn. Derby junior. grimaces while practicing his lines during a rehearsal for Rock Chalk Revue.
Alpha Delta Pi rocks on in Revue
Sorority finds 15 volunteer fill-ins
By Ann Marchand
The sorority's skit partner, Pi Kappa Alpha, was excluded from participating in Rock Chalk Revue following a hazing incident last week.
Kansan staff writer
About 20 volunteers showed up last night to audition for about 15 available parts.
The show must go on, according to the women of Alpha Delta Pi.
All the parts were filled last night. The volunteers said they were excited about participating in the skit.
"We're going to have a lot more hours of practice because we're basically learning a new show in a week and a half," said Chris Corley, Wichita sophomore and a new lead in the skit, *Digging for Gold*. "It's going to be really tense, but it's also going to be a lot of fun."
Corley, a member of Delta Chi fraternity, was a director for Delta Chi's skit, which was not accepted for Rock Chalk Revue this year. He said he was glad to participate in the show but was sorry it had to be at the expense of Pi Kappa Alpha.
Meg Strayer, Glen Ellyn, Ill., senior and a director for Alpha Delta Pi, said that the women were still upbeat about the production despite the limited time to prepare.
"It's one of the things I've always wanted to do, but I'm sorry it had to happen like this. I'd rather see Pike in it," he said.
Todd Guerrieri, Lake Forest, Ill., senior and president of Pi Kappa Alpha, said the fraternity members were trying to help out any way they could. The sets and costumes the fraternity helped manufacture will be used in the show.
"I was very impressed that under a crisis situation, the greek system really pulled together and showed their support," she said.
"Those girls never give up. They're diehands, and you've got to admire that," he said. "As of right now, we'll do anything we can to help ADPi and the
Ann Eversole, Rock Chalk adviser, said she was impressed with Alpha Delta Pi's efforts under the circumstances. She said she could not remember the last time Rock Chalk Revue faced a similar situation.
new cast."
"It's very unusual," she said.
Volunteer Cody Simms, Wichita sophomore, said the skit's directors came to his fraternity Monday night to announce the open auditions.
He said he was excited and willing to help.
"It was almost gut-wrenching to hear them say, 'Please come,' and I just felt awful for them," Simms said. "I know that they've been working on the show for forever. I was in it last year, so I know all the work that goes into it. But the rehearsal last night went really well. They have that polished."
Strayer echoed Simms's enthusiasm about the practice and said that although the practice schedule would become rigorous, she was optimistic.
"It was fantastic," she said. "We're going to do this. We're going to do great."
Kansas State plans center for research by Lawrence
By Dave Morantz
Kansan staff writer
Kansas State University is coming to a field near you.
Kansas State University is coming to a field near you. On the grounds of the dormant Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant, about 20 miles east of Lawrence, Kansas State has plans to open a forestry and horticulture research center next year. The center would be open to students interested in forestry and horticulture from K-State, Haskell Indian Nations University and Johnson County College.
"We ought to be about making people better in this state and that means working with other higher education institutions," said Tom Warner, head of forestry and horticulture at K-State. "There's a lot of people in this state who regard themselves as the end-all, be-all of education and won't work with other institutions."
George Godfrey, chairman of the department of natural and social sciences at Haskell, said the opportunity to study at the new research center was exciting.
"Through interactions with K-State, Haskell students would gain exposure and see the opportunities, and then could possibly consider transferring to K-State," Godfrey said.
K-State chose the site because of its close location to farmers in the Kansas River Basin, Warner said. The opportunity to lease land at a low price from the federal government also influenced the decision.
Students will study forest growth and management, the growth of fruit vegetables, trees, shrubs, floral crops and turf grass.
Kansas State has had a similar facility in Wichita for about 20 years, but Warner said the growing conditions of the Wichita region and Kansas River region differed greatly.
High demand for turf grass and ornamental shrubbery in Johnson County also influenced K-State's decision. Warner said.
Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant was built at the beginning of World War II. The plant lies on a 9,000- acre plot of fields and forests. Kansas State will lease 260 of the acres.
Tom Stutz, commander's representative at Sunflower, said the plant had been in operation four times since it was built. During World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War, the plant supplied the army with propellants for ammunition.
in the late '70s and early '80s additions to the plant allowed it to produce a propellant called nitroguanidine. Production stopped in 1992, but the centers remain ready to produce the propellant if need be.
K-State Property
Lawrence
Douglas County
Johnson County
Rebecca Sutherland/KANSAN
2A
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
QuickINFO
WEATHER
AMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
50
26
Mostly sunny.
THURSDAY
Sunny weather continuing.
58
33
FRIDAY
CAMPUS EVENTS
61 36
Partly cloudy with a chance for rain.
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Western Civilization Study Abroad at 11:30 a.m. today at 105A Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Allison Lusk at 864-7810.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will present the University Forum from noon to 1 p.m. today at the ECM Center at 1204 Christina Church, call the Shadrach call at 843-8933.
Ninth Street Baptist Church will have a prayer service and Bible study at noon and 7 tonight at 841 Ohio. For more information, call the Rev. Rena Brown at 833-8288.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at the Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the Rev. Raymond May at 843-0357.
Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center will sponsor a gender seminar entitled "Subjectivity and Creativity in Feminist Literary Biography" from 3:30 to 5 p.m. today at the Hall Center Conference Room. More information, call 864-4798.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate麦礼 at 4:30 p.m. today at
ON CAMPUS
the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call the Rev. Raymond May at 843-0357.
KU KTea Tawen Do Club will meet from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson.
For more information, call Adam Capron at 849-9112
Student Assistance Center will sponsor a "Managing Test Anxiety Workshop" from 6 to 7:30 p.m. today at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call SAC at 864-4064.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 6:15 p.m. today at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Alberto McMinn at 864-1255
*Pal Chi and the Psychology Club will sponsor Annette Stanton speaking about Health Psychology at 6:30 p.m. today at 547 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Kerry Gulley at 848-2099.
Amnesty International will meet at 7 tonight at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andrew Humphrey at 864-1730.
■ KU Queers and Allies, the support group for LesBiGayTrans, will meet at 7 tonight. Call KU Info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for location
and more information.
Rail Sailing Club will meet at 7 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Chris at 864-1125.
Proponents of Animal Liberation will meet at 7 onight at the candy counter in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Laura Ford at 864-6560.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have scripture study at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Center at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Karen at 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a Human Services Committee Meeting at 7 onight at the St. Lawrence Center at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Jenny at 843-0357.
Jayhawk Campus Ministries will meet at 8 tonight at the Morning Star Christian Church at 19th and Nalshim. For more information, call Rebecca Hudd at 749-263-1011.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8:30 afton to the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Chris Wisell at 864-6408.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's CD player, CDS and other items were stolen were valued at $1,250. A couple of them were stolen were valued at 1:47 a.m. Monday block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police said. In the items, lot 41, KU police said. Damage was estimated at $300.
were valued at $1,250.
McCollum vandalism hearing postponed for second time
Kansan staff report
The preliminary hearing of Steven Hipp, the former KU student charged with breaking in and vandalizing McCollum Hall during winter break, was postponed again.
Hipp's attorney, David Brown, filed a second motion for continuance, which was signed yesterday
by Judge Robert Fairchild in the Douglas County Courthouse.
This was the second time Hipp's preliminary hearing has been postponed. The new hearing date was set for 1:45 p.m. April 15.
Hipp was charged Jan. 16 with felony criminal damage, felony burglary, misdemeanor theft and pulling a false fire alarm.
Hipp had worked as a desk assistant and security monitor in McColum Hall before his arrest on Jan 15. The arrest report said that during questioning Hipp confessed to flooding the McColum Hall basement, damaging an elevator and writing two letters implying that rooms in McColum had been burglarized.
WEDNESDAY PRIMETIME
MARCH 5, 1997
© 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 **Sentinel "Ice Man" (In Stereo)** Star Trek: Voyager (R) ☑ Babylion 5 (R) (In Stereo) ☑ Mad Abo, You ☑ Bzzzl ☐ Cops ☐ LAPD
**WDAF** 4 Beverly Hills, 90210 ☑ Party of Five "Lap of Faith" ☑ News ☑ H. Patrol ☐ Cheers ☐ Extra ☑
**KCTV** 5 Nanny ☐ Temporarily ☐ Feds "Crasch and Burn" ☐ EZ Streets (in Stereo) ☐ News ☐ Late Show (in Stereo) ☐ Selinfeld ☐
**KS06** 6 Health Check News Plus ☑ News ☑ Silhouettes ☐ News Plus
**KCPT** 7 New Explorers (in Stereo) ☑ First Person Singular: I.M. Pei (R) ☑ Firefighters ☐ Business Rpt. ☐ Trailside ☐ Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
**KSNT** 8 Fraser (R) ☑ Chicago Scoops ☐ Wings ☐ Just Shoot ☐ Dateline (in Stereo) ☐ News ☐ Tonight Show (in Stereo) ☐ Late Night ☐
**KBMC** 9 Grace Under ☐ Coach (R) ☑ Drew Carey ☐ Arsenio ☐ Primetime Live ☐ News ☐ Rosanne ☐ Roseanne ☐ MA "A'SH" ☐
**KTUW** 11 New Explorers (in Stereo) ☑ First Person Singular: I.M. Pei (R) ☐ Gershwin ☐ People-Here ☐ Business Rpt. ☐ Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
**WIBW** 18 Billy Graham (in Stereo) ☑ Feds "Crasch and Burn" ☐ EZ Streets (in Stereo) ☐ News ☐ Late Show (in Stereo) ☐ Late Night ☐
**KTKA** 19 Grace Under ☐ Coach (R) ☑ Drew Carey ☐ Arsenio ☐ Primetime Live ☐ News ☐ Seinfeld ☐ Married... ☐ Nightline ☐
CABLE STATIONS
**A&E** 32 Biography: Dow and Jones American Justice (R) ☑ 20th Century "Gun Control" ☐ Law & Order "Kids" ☐ Biography: Dow and Jones
**CNBC** 12 Biography: Dow and Jones Rivera Live ☐ Late Night (R) ☐ Charles Grodn ☐ Rivera Live (R)
**CNN** 14 Prime News Burden-Proof Larry King Live ☐ World Today ☐ Sports Illus. ☐ Moneyline ☐ NewsNight ☐ Showbiz
**COM** 16 Comic Relief Comic Relief Comic Relief Comic Relief Dream On ☐ Daily Show Comic Relief Tick ☐ Sat. Night
**COURT** 17 Prime Time Justice Trial Story Cochran & Grace ☐ Prime Time Justice Trial ☐ Trial Story ☐
**CSPAN** 21 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
**DISC** 15 Wild Discovery: Orangutans Discover Magazine "Fear" Airpower Showdown Wild Discovery: Orangutans Discover Magazine "Fear" (R)
**ESPN** 16 (630) College basketball: Penn State at Iowa College basketball: Patriot League Championship Sportscenter ☐ Wheelcr
**HIST** 16 Mission: Northwest Passage True Action Adventures Weapon at War "Fighters" Year by Year "1936" (R) Mission: Northwest Passage
**LIFE** 13 Unsolved Mysteries "David's Mother" ★★ 1/94 (Drama) Kirstie Alley. Living Mysteries Unsolved Mysteries
**MTV** 15 Prime Time Howard Storm Private Parts Premiere J. McCarthy Jenny M. Singled Out Lovely In (Stereo) Altern. Nation
**SCIFI** 15 Wild Palms: Hungry Ghosts Hello! Must Be Going! (Stereo) Part 3 of 3 (Stereo) Wild Palms: Hungry Ghosts Hello!
**TLC** 12 SeaTeK Pop Science Mystery of the Sphinx (R) Future Fantastic SeaTeK (R) Pop Science Mystery of the Sphinx (R)
**TNT** 16 "Saturday Night Fever" ★★★ (1977), Drama) John Travolta ★Stripes" ★★★ (1981) A joy ride takes two Army recruits across enemy lines.
**USA** 14 Murder, She Wrote ★Any Place but Home! (1997), Drama) Joe Lando. Wings ★Wings ★Silk Stalkings "Dead Weight"
**VH1** 15 VH1 to One Video Collect Archives Video Collect Archives (R) Bandstand Sex Appeal Crossroads Soul of VH1
**WGN** 12 Sister, Sister, Sister Jamie Foxx Jamie Foxx News 1-3 (News) Wiseguy "Table Stakes" In the Heat of the Night
**WTBS** 10 NBA篮球赛 San Antonio Spurs at Chicago Bulls (Live) Inside-NBA "Come in Peace" ★★★ (1990) Dolph Lundgren.
PREMIUM STATIONS
**HBO** 10 "Necessary" "White Man's Burden" ★★★ (1996, Drama) R Tracey Takes Larry Sanders "Poison Iv lt Lily" ★★★ (1996, Drama) Alyssa Milano. R ☑
**MAX** 13 "Friday the 13th" ★★★ (1980) Belly Palm R. "Screamers" ★★★ (1995, Science Fiction) Pater Welter. R "The Official Story" ★★★ (1985) NR
**SHOW** 14 "Jefferson in Paris" ★★★ (1986) Nickle Mae (In Stereo) (In Stereo) Mandela and Derek Kirk "Wiigley Poloter." Sidney Poloter. Rob Roy R
ET CETERA
www.kansan.com
UDKi THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
Did you ever want to send e-mail to the staff of the Kansan? Have you ever wanted to put a face to the name of a Kansan staff member? Well, now you can. The People page has just been updated. Click on the People button on the UDKi's home page to learn about the Kansan staff. Make your voice heard with a clever piece of e-mail. This service provided courtesy of your online newspaper, the UDKi.
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.
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. 60444. 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.
What's New This Month in THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES?
- Library Workshops
The Libraries' Instruction Program is offering a workshop series throughout the Spring 1997 semester. Workshops in February are:
- Exploring Multicultural Resources
Thursday, March 20
- Finding Information on the World Wide Web
Saturday, April 5
1:00-3:00 Watson Reference
10:00-12:00 Clark Lab
- An Introduction to Electronic Resources for the Study of Music
- An Introduction to Electronic Resources for the Study of Music Friday, March 14 1:00-3:00 Clark Lab
- KU UnCover
Tuesday, Mar. 11
3:30-5:00 Clark Lab
Workshops to be offered later in the semester are also taking reservations: Collections of the Clendening History of Medicine Library; Maps: Paper and Electronic; Finding Information on the World Wide Web, and Electronic Access to Government Information.* Those marked with an asterisk will have waiting lists to further accommodate those unable to obtain a space immediately.
To register, call 864-3601, or E-mail workshop@ukans.edu. Please inquire about location when registering for the workshops. Brochures listing all workshops are available at most library service desks.
The Snyder Book Collecting Contest Entries are now being accepted. Prizes of $200 for first place and $100 for second place in both graduate and undergraduate divisions will be awarded. A short paper on the collection and a bibliography must be turned in to the Spencer Research Library's Department of Special Collections by April 8. All currently enrolled students are eligible. The contest is sponsored by Mrs. Elizabeth Snyder and the Mt. Oread Book Shop. For further information contact Jill Girardo, Watson Library; Lin Fredericksen, Kansas Collection; or Richard Clement, Special Collections.
41 $^{\text{st}}$ Annual Snyder Book Collecting Contest
New Edition to the Internet Business Library
The Internet Business Library has been updated to include many more links to Internet resources in business and economics. The URL for the site is: http://www.bschool.ukans.edu/inthuslib/virtual.htm
Exhibits
Watson Library: The Asian American Experience
*University Archives: Buttons
*Special Collections: Ancient Places of the World
*Kansas Collection: Happy Landin' With Landon
Gorton Music Library: Franz Schubert: A Bicentennial Celebration
*Located on the $4^{\text{th}}$, $3^{\text{rd}}$, and $2^{\text{nd}}$ floors, respectively, of Spencer Research
The University of Kansas Libraries Publications Office • 350 Watson Library • To Comment, Call 864-3378.
The University of Kansas Libraries
THE
EVENT
OF THE YEAR!
THIS SATURDAY.
CHECK FRI. UDK
FOR MORE DETAILS.
THE SHARKMIESTER.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
3A
Prints capture old London
By Nicole French Special to the Kansan
The works of England's world-
renowned 18th century printmaker
and the great artist initiated some
right law for printmakers in England are on display at the Spencer Museum of Art.
William Hogarth captured the essence of 18th century life in London's streets in his highly popular satirical prints. The subjects of these prints range from lighthearted images of happy Londoners to tougher themes, such as drinking and harlotry.
The exhibit, Hogarth and the Shows of London, contains 52 of Hogarth's highly detailed black-and-white etched prints. Some of the prints stand alone, while others were drawn in a series of six to eight pieces, giving extended narratives.
Gogarth, who lived from 1696 to 1764, based his work on events he saw in the streets of London. "He saw theater, spectacle, plays, everything that was happening around him, as a way to present English contemporary culture and the English people to themselves," said Michelle Robinson, a research assistant at the museum.
She said Hogarth wanted to make art more contemporary and accessible to the masses.
Dean Dixon, a tour guide at the museum, said the prints cast a sarcastic judgment on society.
"This is very similar to what Gary Trudeau does in *Doonesbury*, and he won the Pulitzer Prize," Dixon said. "This medium of making fun of the way we live is pretty deep within us."
Stephen Goddard is the curator of prints and drawings at the museum.
"His prints were so popular that they were pirated right and left," Goddard said. "He was faced with a very difficult situation. People would copy his engrappings and then sell them for less."
To solve this problem, Hogarth worked to pass a copyright law for images. Passed in 1735, the law became known as "Hogarth's Law" and was the first copyright protection for images in England.
Like a dollar bill, Hogarth's work is very detailed and takes a careful eye. Dave Hiebert, Lawrence resident, brought a magnifying glass to the exhibit.
"I was here a week ago when the exhibit was already up," Hiebert said. "I'm fascinated by the detail and the satirical content, and I just don't want to miss any little bit of what Horgath was trying to say."
The exhibit is located in the White Gallery of the museum and runs through March 30.
METROPOLITAN CONFERENCE
CONTRIBUTED ART
The Laughing Audience is part of an exhibit of William Hogarth's engravings. The exhibit is being displayed at the Spencer Museum of Art in the White Gallery until March 30.
Med Center practices form of cloning
By Emily Vrabac
Kansan staff writer
Research of mice important to the future of medical field
The recent cloning of Dolly the sheep in Scotland has brought attention to genetic research throughout the world.
The University of Kansas Medical Center has its own genetic laboratories that perform genetic manipulation on a daily basis using mice.
The two laboratories perform what is called transgenic research, which involves transferring a foreign gene into a fertilized egg and studying the effects of the gene.
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"We look for the expression of that gene and the sequence that controls its expression," said Wenhao Xu, associate director of the Transgenic Institutional Facility laboratory at the Med Center.
Xu said that his transgenic research methods
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"The main thing is that you can overexpress or underexpress a particular gene through trans-
When the embryo develops into a mouse, Dey then monitors how the mouse demonstrates the traits associated with the particular gene.
"All modern science uses transgenic technologies," Dey said. "It is a very powerful approach to understand cell-to-cell interaction to work in disease research."
"You can make animal disease models by doing this," he said. "The animal gets the disease using transgenics, then you can make a drug and treat it."
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Xu said that he hoped to attract doctors' interest in his research because it could help the future of medicine.
Dey said that his research focused on how genes worked once they were implanted into the uterus of a female mouse.
S. K. Dey, director of the other transgenic lab at the Med Center, said that these experiments are common.
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were a basic form of the cloning process that created Dolly.
Gene therapy involves removing bad genes and replacing them with good genes in order to manipulate characteristics, Dey said.
genics," Dey said. "What's called gene therapy is kind of a future dream."
He said an application of gene therapy in larger animals would be used to manufacture drugs and nutrients in the animals.
Xu said that his work with mice was an early stage of gene therapy, but to develop it researchers need to use larger animals like the sheep used by the researchers in Scotland.
"It has exploded now," Dey said. "Almost every university is involved in doing this kind of research."
"You can introduce a gene into the milk of a cow or lamb," Xu said. "The drug will be in the milk, and you can purify it to use for therapeutic purposes. The pharmaceutical industry is very interested in this."
Xu and Dey said that transgenic research started in the early 1980s and has become more common in the 1990s with technological advances.
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
4A
CRAIG LANG, Editor MARK OZIMEK, Business manager
SUSANNA LOOF, Managing editor DENNIS HAUPT, Retail sales manager
KIMBERLY CRABTREE, Editorial editor JUSTIN KNUPE, Technology coordinator
TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser JAY STEINER, Sales and marketing adviser
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
WE'RE GONNA TRASH
JAYHAWKER TOWERS!!
YOU SHOULD
SERIOUSLY
GROW UP...
Amy Miller / KANSAN
Editorials
Immaturity level of some comes to light during acts of vandalism
Is a little respect too much to ask for?
The actions of certain students in Jaya-hawker Tower D have led some to think that the answer is yes.
Recently, vandals have been removing light bulbs from the fifth and sixth floors of Tower D and dropping them down the stairs. This has not been a one-time occurrence — the damages are $200 to $300 each week, tower officials say.
As college students, have we not learned enough about respect for each other to stop stupid, trivial actions like this?
Hopefully, the vandals are random people not associated with the University of Kansas. Unfortunately, this is probably not the case.
It seems likely that it is a few Tower D residents who continually entertain themselves by unscrewing light bulbs and performing gravity experiments.
If you know who is behind the acts of vandalism,you should let officials know.
These could be students who complain about the quality of University housing, yet they cause about $1,000 in damage each month.
To make matters worse, it is possible that some Tower D residents know who is causing the problems, but they do not take actions to prevent them from occurring.
Matt Aschenbrenner, complex director for the towers and Stouffer Place, said that 12 security monitors patrol the buildings at night, but it is up to the students to monitor problems themselves during the day.
When Aschenbrener and other staff
members talked to residents about the vandalism, no one divided information
Could it be that the University is dealing with supercriminals who are capable of this vandalism during the patrolled security times? This is doubtful.
Maybe everyone in Tower D is involved in a large-scale revolt and is using the vandalism to throw University officials off their track. This idea also is ridiculous.
The truth seems to be that no matter how mature we claim to be or how long we have lived away from home, there are still those among us who have not matured. Grow up and give it a rest.
If you know who is responsible for this mess, let someone know.
A pseudo-secret police state is not what this University needs, but we should not have to put up with this kind of ludicrous behavior.
CODY SIMMS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KU should rethink linear tuition
Recently, the University of Kansas was forced to ask for an increase in state funds to compensate for a drop in credit-hour enrollments. Despite the fact that the drop in revenue and enrollment was expected, this shows that the decision to switch to linear tuition was a bad idea that hurts both students and education in general.
The switch to linear tuition was made to create a more equitable way for students to pay for their classes. Under linear tuition, students pay for every hour in which they are enrolled, rather than a blanket fee which they can take as many hours as desired.
Although this reduces education costs for those taking 12 to 14 hours, students taking 16 or more hours are hurt by the increase in tuition. Out-of-state students are hit particularly hard, paying $265 per hour or $795 for each
The switch to linear tuition was a bad idea that hurt the educational process.
three-hour class. Students with double majors and others who must take more than 15 hours a semester to graduate in four years are punished for taking heavy course loads.
Because taking fewer hours is now less expensive, students are letting their wallets decide how many credit hours they can afford to take. Thus the University has experienced a drop in tuition revenue. Although the drop in revenue may be rectified by the increase in state funds, it never should have occurred.
Clearly, KU and all the other Board of Regents schools should return to a flatrate tuition system. Ray Hauke, director of budgets and planning for the Regents, said that this could be done if all the Regents schools made a request for reversal to the Board of Regents.
inclined to take classes that interest them — after all, if there is no reason to take a class other than interest, why spend the money? Instead of learning as much as they can, students are learning only as much as they need to graduate.
Education suffers as a result of linear tuition. Outstanding students are less
This action would once again allow students to learn as much as they can at fine institutions like KU and would give the University the tuition money it needs to function. Until this step is taken, education will have suffered yet another setback at the hand of the dollar.
KANSAN STAFF
GERRY DOYLE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
LA TINA SULLWAN . . . Associate Editorial
KRISTA BLASI . . . News
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LESLEY TAYLOR . . . News
AMANDA TRAUGHBER . . . News
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall. The Kansar reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call KIM Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (islullman@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Columns
Cloning emphasizes need for originality
Sometimes, seemingly revolutionary innovations only bring more of the same.
Researchers in Scotland and the United States have managed to clone sheep and monkeys by removing genetic information from another animal and artificially inducing cellular reproduction.
MICHAEL
MARTIN
The net result: a new organism and a freshly birthed controversy.
Many regard this development as though it will take us over the edge, provide science fiction with an air of truth.
Some dread the day when fetuses will arrive by Federal Express, complete with a free gift and a money-back guarantee. Others anticipate an era in which bionic virtual ubermen will walk the earth, complete with stainless-steel opposable thumbs and self-cleaning technology.
Last week, I was sitting in class, shut out of the discussion as usual. Cloning was the topic at hand. Those who were visibly conscious thought the whole thing was "whack" and "evil."
I'm not waiting for Microsoft Sapiens 2.0 or Suddenly Humans.
I find it hard to believe that our world will change irrevocably. The only issue that I find surprising is that people are surprised at all. The only element that I find disturbing is that people are disturbed for all the wrong reasons.
Others tried to place the issue in perspective by citing Star Trek and the episode of The Jetsons in which two Georges showing up for dinner caused Jane no end of constatation.
It was there that a case study unfolded before my eyes, provided by two guys in the row of seats in front of me. Dressed in Timberland boots, pleated khakis and mirroring flannel shirts, they looked like a perfectly symmetrical Rorschach inkblot — in plaid.
"What crap," said the other.
The development of cloning should come as no surprise, particularly to those who walk this campus. Humans have always had an obsession with sameness. We have always been intent on replicating things much less complex than DNA.
From the Rachel haircut to religious beliefs, most of our personal characteristics have been duplicated from other people. We rely on others to determine everything from the most superficial to the most significant. About 99 percent of what we do, say or think has already been done, said or thought by other people. Instead of creating, we reconfigure.
The problem is that technological advancement doesn't really advance us to realms outside the physical. Put us on wheels, put us on the moon — technology has given us the ability to gather information from many varied sources, but it has left most of us unable to think for ourselves.
Worst of all, science still refuses to search for the elusive Stupid gene that is responsible for intolerance, jealousy, immaturity and the miniseries Asteroid.
Cloning is an issue awash in contradictions. It is a completely different method of reproductive technology that results in sameness. It is a complex procedure that involves the simplest building blocks of living things.
The biggest contradiction is that all this hue and cry about the inevitable production of artificial humans disguises the fact that the urge to copy is fundamental to being human. It begins when our first strand of DNA replicates itself and doesn't end until our cells stop dividing at death.
I am reminded of something my mother used to tell me when I was younger (with Bactine and protein milkshake in hand, ready to patch me up from some sort of inflicted physical or mental damage): If everyone in the world were the same, it would all be pretty boring.
A decade later, I think that if everyone in the world were the same, it would be pretty much the same as now.
So I wait for the precise location of the Stupid gene and prescriptions for its removal. I anticipate the news that they have determined how to make children resistant to the removal of their originality. I wait for news that they have created a new organism that is completely original and independent — a sheep that doesn't follow the herd.
Michael Martin is a Lenexa sophomore In English and Journalism.
Parking department plans to strike again
monster has its hand in your back pocket.
I pay to go to school, so let me park here!
All right. Here's something worth reading. I know it's weird. Calm down and progress. Here's the scoop: The University parking department monster has its hand in your
The lot across from Murphy Hall is open after 5 p.m. to anyone who cares to park there.
Now that I have out of my system, it seems pertinent to write about a new parking proposal that would kill arts patronage in Murphy Hall.
Throughout the year, patrons can see hundreds of artistic events there. Senior
CARSON
ELROD
voice majors give recitals, KU Opera puts on several shows in Swarthout Recital Hall and the University Theatre offers more than 60 nights of performances in its two theaters. Patrons typically park across the street.
But the parking department wants to turn the lot into a 24-hour restricted zone. Unlimited parking access would cost more than $300 a year, and evening access would cost $100 a year. So in an effort to raise more money, the department would force arts patrons to park at the Lied Center and shuttle to the events at Murphy Hall.
I have a few responses. The first is this: Sweet God! What do you want from us? Our blood? Leave us alone, parking department! When will your reign of terror be lifted from the fiscally broken backs of the impoverished college students who pay good money to come to this school? Please. No more. We've had enough. Mercy already! You know what? Revolutions start this way.
The second response deals specifically with the arts in Murphy Hall. I recently spoke with Laura
Zabel, box office assistant manager, who told me that the consequences of this parking plan would mean a sharp decline in arts patronage. "We've told people before that because of games or whatever that we would have to shuttle them in the Lied Center, and they just cancel their tickets," she said. "They don't reschedule; they just cancel. They don't want to deal with the hassle."
Watch out, kids, you never know where you won't be able to park tomorrow.
The productions at Murphy Hall would become sparsely populated with friends, family and a few people who care enough about the arts to park a mile away.
Save the arts at KU. Stop the parking department monster. Write a letter, ride a bike, do something.
And finally, the money from the new parking plan would not be funneled back into Murphy Hall. It would go to the parking department.
The arts of Murphy Hall rely on the financial support of the Lawrence and campus communities to present high-quality productions. If patronage shrinks because of a regressive parking policy, the budgets of the programs in Murphy Hall will shrink, too.
Carson Elrod is a Topea senior in U.S. history and Journalism
There is an obligation for the University to look out for the education and enlightenment of students before it looks out for the needs of the parking department.
The result will be a noticeable decline in the quality of resources available to students that use the building and its programs for their education. So in one move, the parking department robs audiences of convenience, performers of audiences, and students and faculty of resources that are integral to a high-quality arts education.
Letter
Athletes not only ones who deserve attention
First, I would like to congratulate the men's basketball team on its record. It takes a lot of discipline, dedication, practice and talent to do as well. But I am unable to identify myself as a fan, superfan or even genuinely interested. Yet everywhere I go, I hear about these guys. You may be saying, "So don't watch the games." I don't. Or you may be say, "So don't listen to the radio show." I don't. You may even say, "So don't read the Kansan, which spends more time valorizing and fawning over these guys and this sport than it does covering any other activity or issue on campus." I don't, at least not the sports section. But why is there so much attention paid to these guys
The Kansan has a responsibility to reflect the environment of the campus, and the amount of coverage it gives to the basketball team is disproportionate to any other topic that deserves to be covered.
who, though talented, are no more special than any other person on this campus? Why don't we hear about other people who are doing extraordinary things on this campus or in this town?
Some may say that I'm just jealous. No. I respect the basketball players so far as they are people who have talents that are in comprehensively glorified in our society. Fine. But the image of these people that we get from the media is often only one-dimensional. My good friend works at a local airport and once when he was merely trying to be helpful by assisting the basketball players with their luggage,
he overheard one of the guys making fun of him because he must have somehow been less of a man than they were. My response to him was that obviously privilege, prestige and pampering don't make a man.
I see hundreds, if not thousands, of dedicated, persevering and talented people doing great things in this community and on this campus and not even getting a nod from the Kansan.
I know it takes a lot to run a university newspaper. I appreciate the Kansan's efforts. I also know that although it may take some work, the stories of other people are out there. I hope the Kansan will take its responsibility seriously and maybe even set a trend.
Dan Griffin Fort Washington, Md. graduate student
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday. March 5, 1997
5A
123456789012
Fire cannot stop Sunflower
People furnish money,support for new location
By Paul Eakins Kansan staff writer
A burnt building and destroyed merchandise aren't enough to keep the Sunflower Outdoor and Bike Shop down.
Tyler Wirken/KANSAN
Less than a week after a fire destroyed the store at 804 Massachusetts St. and surrounding buildings, causing more than $1 million in damages, Sunflower has reopened at a temporary location less than a block away.
SUNFLOWER
Sunnellie Shops
The store was bustling with activity when it reopened at 844 Massachusetts St. yesterday morning, offering a sparse collection of camping gear, clothing and other goods.
Sunflower does not yet know when it will be able to salvage the merchandise at the old store, or how much insurance money will be received. The owners, Susan and David Millstein, are still waiting for the insurance company ruling, said Lee Collard, assistant manager.
After Sunflower Outdoor and Bike Shop was damaged by a fire last Wednesday night, the business has opened a satellite shop at 844 Massachusetts Street.
Dan Hughes, Bike Shop manager,
said that the store was slowly making
progress with the help of employees,
local businesses and individuals.
"I don't think anyone wants to see the Sunflower institution fail," Hughes said.
"They didn't say anything, but
he'd hand us a flower." he said.
Regular customers of Sunflower said they intended to give their support by patronizing the new store.
Community members have offered financial and moral support to Sunflower during its rebuilding. Weavers Department Store, 901 Massachusetts St., donated counters to Sunflower, and individuals stopped by the store anonymously to donate money and support, Collard said.
Jethrol Quenmoeen, Minneapolis, Minn., senior, said he would buy accessories from the store even if they didn't fit his specifications.
"If I need something, even if it's not the exact brand, I'll still go with it," Quenemoen said.
Hughes said that Sunflower's suppliers had been sympathetic to the situation. He said the suppliers had given Sunflower more time to make its payments and sent goods by free overnight delivery.
still has a lot to acquire, Hughes said
sull has a lot to acquire, Hughes said. Hughes said it was fortunate that Sunflower had made many large orders prior to the fire in preparation for the spring and summer seasons when business increases.
Yesterday, Sunflower received a large shipment of bike accessories and clothing, and Hughes said he hoped to receive a shipment of bicycles in a week.
In the meantime, employees have worked to make the new, smaller
location more like the Sunflower they remember.
Scot Trettel, Wildwood, Mo., junior, used scrap metal to build clothing stands. Another employee painted a wall to resemble one in the old shop
Trettel said he had enjoyed the eight months that he had worked at the store and wanted to help out.
"We're making it our home rapidly,"
The Daily Kansan gives you more of what you read a paper for
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6A
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Storms hit home with Clinton
President visits tornado victims in Arkadelphia
The Associated Press
ARKADELPHIA, Ark. — His black cowboy boots kicking up bits of glass and wood, President Clinton surveyed the damage yesterday and comforted victims of the tornadoes that swept through his home state.
"I wish there were more I could say and do," he said.
Shaking his head in dismay because of the devastation that
surrounded him, Clinton said, "I've been down every one of these streets before. I've been in every one of these stores."
Bill Clinton
10
Clinton has toured countless disaster sites as president but never before has it cut this close to home.
Arkadelphia, situated squarely between his two hometowns, Hope and Hot Springs, was a frequent stop for politics and policy during his 12-year tenure as governor.
At least 25 were killed in the weekend storms.
the people and you know the community." he said.
"It is different when you know
While visiting Arkansas, Clinton declared Ohio and Kentucky disaster areas because of floods there.
Arkadelphia looked like a war zone yesterday.
Piles of brick and mortar replaced homes and businesses.
He announced that Vice President Al Gore and James Lee Witt, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, would visit those states today.
Cars were flipped upside down or left crushed in a destroyed shop.
People now jobless and homeless are wondering what to do next.
Tapestra
Kansas City
St. Louis
Wichita
Arkadelphia
Little Rock
AREA OF DETAIL
Jackson
Karen Kirkpatrick was standing on a stark white cement slab that used to be the county tax office, her eyes watering. Clinton put his right hand on her shoulder, then embraced her and said, "Don't worry. We're going to go forward."
Obesity rates weigh heavily in U.S. cities
Kansas City,Mo., fourth in list of 33
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Can a city make you fat? The possibility is posed by a new study that ranks the nation's big cities by the weight of their residents. It attempts to draw conclusions about why fat flourishes more in some cities and less in others.
The 33-city study, issued by the Coalition for Excess Weight Risk Education, found overall that cities with high unemployment rates, low per capita income, high annual precipitation rates and a high number of food stores per capita tend to have higher rates of obesity.
Called the National Weight Report, the study found that restaurant-rich
Five Fattest Cities
1. New Orleans: 37.55 percent
2. Norfolk, Va.: 33.94 percent
3. San Antonio: 32.96 percent
4. Kansas City, Mo.: 31.66 percent
5. Cleveland: 31.50 percent
New Orleans has the nation's highest obesity rate at 37.5 percent of adult residents while outdoor-living Denver has the lowest at 22.1 percent.
Why the differences?
Ethnic food may be a fat builder in Cleveland, the survey said. And it said many people blamed the harsh winters for prompting them to eat meat, buttermilk and biscuits, and French fries to help them fuel up.
The National Weight Report is based on a list created by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Casting of Jesus role brings threats to actor
The Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. — Desi Arnaz Giles said he was starring in the role of his life, but the Black actor's portrayal of Jesus Christ came at the expense of ticket cancellations and death threats.
"I have led a very complete life," Giles said yesterday. "Should somebody clip me during a performance, don't cry for me. Just rejoice because I'm ready to go home."
The controversy began Sunday after his first performance in the Park Theater Performing Arts Center's annual production of Passion Play, a story that focuses on the last days of Jesus' life.
The popular play attracts bus groups from the region, and word
spread quickly that a Black man was sharing the role with a white actor at the Union City theater.
"The first call that I got, the woman asked me, 'When is the white actor playing because I don't want to see the Black thing," said artistic director Eric Hafen, who cast Giles in the role.
"I was expecting calls but not that kind of blatant racism," Hafen said.
Officials said they have not taken the death threats seriously, but said they were troubled that the casting evoked such a response. At least two groups have canceled and another rescheduled for a day Giles is not working.
As it happens, Giles is portraying the devil this weekend in a musi-
Army lowers its standards
Fewer recruits need diplomas
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Army officials said yesterday that the Army has begun accepting more recruits who have not finished high school, a concession to an enlistment market that has tightened even as the number of inductees the Army needs has grown.
Besides lowering the standard on high school graduates, the Army is offering a range of new financial and other incentives to attract recruits, said Lt. Gen. Frederick Vollrath, the Army's chief personnel officer.
Vollrath said publicity about a rash of sexual harassment allegations in the Army, combined with controversy about a mysterious Gulf War illness syndrome, has
hurt recruiting.
More importantly, in the Army's view, are the difficulties that recruiters face in luring young people away from opportunities in business and higher education.
Vollrath said that the quality had slipped a little bit as recruiting had gotten harder. By historic standards, the quality of the force remains high, he added.
Defense Secretary William Cohen referred to the drop-off in recruit quality when he testified in Congress last week. He placed the blame on negative publicity.
"Every time you have a bad headline, it impacts recruiting," Cohen said.
Preliminary figures for the first four months of the 1997 federal budget year (October 1996-January 1997) show that the Army has scored lowest among the services on two of the three major yard-sticks by which recruit quality is measured.
Bill overcharges found
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas regulators have discovered another problem in the calculation of natural gas bills by KPL and KGE, utilities owned by Western Resources Inc.
The error probably will affect far more than the 3,800 customers of the utilities who recently discovered they had been overcharged.
The regulators said they discovered both companies had been charging customers a cost of gas figure before it was approved by the Kansas Corporation Commission.
Regulators said that the error may have been occurring for years.
The KCC and the Customer Council — Western Resources, the state regulatory agency and the Citizens Utility Ratepayer Board — have started investigating the number of bills that were miscalculated.
Previous overcharges were attributed to delays in reading meters.
The latest revelations come after Friday's disclosure by Missouri Gas Energy that it had miscalculated 135,000 bills. Missouri regulators were in Kansas City Monday to begin reviewing the company.
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BOHÈME
The tragic romance of the
fiery poet Rodolpho, and
Mimi, a gentle seamstress.
• Part II •
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What is she?
(eough-cough)
Mignets: a fickle
tempest, an insatiable
bird of prey who feeds
on human hearts, my.
Watch this paper for Part III.
Marcello's soulmate for better or worse, just as you are mine
Watch this paper for Part III.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
7A
Albanians fear government
Soldiers may shoot resisters
The Associated Press
TIRANA, Albania — The Albanian government ordered cewfurs, roadblocks and newspaper censorship under its new emergency powers Monday and gave security forces the right to fire without warning at armed resisters.
Despite weeks of protests demanding that the government be sacked — protests which the government is trying to squash with the tough new orders — parliament easily re-elected President Sali Berisha to a five-year term.
"Today is the day of open dictatorship in Albania," said Neritan Ceka, the head of the opposition Democratic Alliance. "Only a dica-ta
tor could be elected under such conditions, with martial law."
A few shots were heard in Tirana just after the 8 p.m. curfew took effect. It was not clear where they came from. Officers with rifles slung over their shoulders patrolled the capital; police stopped cars at checkpoints.
Under the state of emergency regulations, which were broadcast on state television early Monday, people cannot walk in groups of more than four, newspapers must submit stories to the government's Defense Council before publication and police may shoot anyone who throws objects at them.
Foreigners were ordered out of southern Albania, and an Italian military helicopter evacuated 36 people, including 15 journalists, from Vlora across the Adriatic Sea to Brindisi, Italy.
to Albania on Monday, and Greece increased patrols along its northern frontiers. Italy dreads a repeat of a 1991 refugee flotilla, when tents of thousands of Albanians fled across the Adriatic on overcrowded ferries and homemade rafts.
Fearing an influx of Albanians, Greece and Italy cut ferry service
The curfew is in effect from 8 p.m.-7 a.m. Under the regulations, anyone without identification will be accompanied to a police station; in case of resistance, police will fire a warning shot, then shoot to kill.
The state of emergency was declared Sunday in an attempt to quash violence growing out of public rage over the collapse of high-risk investment schemes in which nearly every Albanian family lost money.
However, government authority appeared to have dissolved across much of southern Albania, where civilians have seized arms. At least three people died in clashes Sunday and Monday in the southern towns
Rebecca Sutherland/KANSAN
MIDDLE EAST MIDDLEWEST ROMANIA NORTHWEST BULGARIA ADRIATIC Sea MONTENEGRO ITALY MASSACHUZIN Tirana ALBANIA WESTERN AGRAN Sea AREA OF DETAIL
of Fieri, Saranda and Gjirokastra,
state radio reported.
Berisha and his Democrats blame the unrest on political foes, including the Socialists - successors to the communists who kept Albania isolated and impoverished for decades. Berisha's foes charge that the Democrats were at least negligent in not warning people of the investment schemes.
Iran cries for help after deadly quake
The Associated Press
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's isolated government made a rare appeal for help to cope with an earthquake that may have killed more than 3,000 people and left tens of thousands homeless.
United Nations officials said yesterday that Iran's appeal came while snow, cold and wild wolves continued to hamper workers pulling bodies from collapsed houses in dozens of towns and villages in northwestern Iran's Ardabil province.
On Monday, an airplane carrying aid to survivors crashed in bad weather, killing its four crew members, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported.
Ardabil
Tehran
IRAN
AREA OF DETAIL
Brecca Sutherland/KANSAN
The official death toll from Friday's quake is 965. About 2,600 reportedly were injured, but aid workers and officials who visited the villages said it is expected to surpass 3,000.
Germans stop waste
Tractors cemented to road in attempt to stop shipment
The Associated Press
DANNENBERG, Germany — Anti-nuclear protesters hurled stones and Molotov cocktails at police yesterday and tried to seize control of a road that could be used for the last leg of an atomic waste transport.
Hundreds of protesters rushed riot police who were trying to secure the road that links this northern German town to Gorleben, the site of a nuclear waste storage facility.
The main road between Dannenberg and Gorleben has been practically disabled by scores of tractors
— some cemented to the surface
—and deep holes that protesters
tunneled to make the road unusable for heavy trucks.
At Dannenberg, the focal point of the protests, the nuclear waste was unloaded from a freight train yesterday and loaded onto flatbed trucks for the 10-mile final run to Gorleben. About 10,000 demonstrators camped around the transfer site. The road trip was to begin today.
In the biggest and costliest security operation in postwar Germany, 30,000 police officers have been deployed to protect the shipment and to keep protesters from blocking it.
More than 200 officers were on board and police helicopters flew overhead Monday as the train began its 420-mile journey before dawn from a temporary holding site at Walheim, just north of Stuttgart.
Arafat opposes housing plans
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Yassir Arafat proposed yesterday that Jerusalem's future be modeled after Rome and the Vatican - with the city serving as a capital for both the island and the Palestinian state.
"If there is a will, there is a way," the Palestinian leader said.
While objecting to the Jewish housing plan in eastern Jerusalem, Arafat reaffirmed his support for negotiations with Israel, and called Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu his partner in peace.
"We have no other choice but to keep on with the peace process," Arafat said.
Yet he described Israel's decision to construct a new Jewish neighborhood in Jerusalem as a unique challenge to peace efforts and contended that it violated Israeli-Palestinian agreements.
"It is a settlement, no doubt, and it is illegal," Arafat said.
A rafat stated that the late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin sald that there would be no deo- graphic changes.
(1)
Yasslr Arafat
"Is it necessary to challenge the peace process and put it in a corner to build a new settlement? This is unfair." Arafat said.
President Clinton said that the decision to construct 6,500 apartments for Jews in the Har Homa neighborhood built mistrust.
Clinton and other administration officials did not say whether they considered the project illegal or whether Israel should have sovereignty throughout all of the city. Arafat wants to use as the capital for a Palestinian state.
Town captured in Zaire, Rwandan refugees flee
The Associated Press
TINGI-TINGI, Zaire — Rebels reported capturing a key mining town in southern Zaire yesterday, and their advances in the northeast have tens of thousands of Rwandan refugees on the move again.
The refugees scattered in all directions after rebels captured the huge Tingi-Tingi camp during the week-end.
The Tingi-Tingi camp was one more step in the rebels' advance toward Kisangani, the last government stronghold in eastern Zaire, 145 miles to the northwest.
Some appeared ready to go home to Rwanda after nearly three years in exile.
Rebel commander Jonathan Ndirosonga called on the United Nations to help repatriate all of the 170,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees who had been living in the Tingi-Tingi camp.
The Hutus fled to Zaire to avoid retribution for the 1994 slaughter of a half million minority Tutsis in Rwanda.
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HILL topics
Page 8A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
March 5, 1997
Numerous local bands play at small Lawrence venues; some do it for the music, and some dream of MAKING IT BIG TIME
Story by Paul Eakins
The Pipe Dream
Setting: A hole-in-the-wall bar, filled with sweaty rockers and smells of beer and smoke.
The band is on stage, playing like madmen as the masses move in time to the music. Sitting at a table is a powerful record company representative, coolly observing the action.
The show ends, and the band walks off stage. The representative approaches the band members with a check in one hand and a contract in the other.
"Boys," says the man, "I'm with Big Time Records, and I'm going to make you famous."
And then they wake up
Not as Easy as It Looks
Band members practicing in their basement or garage may dream of such events on their road to fame, glory and money, but the reality can be much different.
Lawrence provides outlets for up-and-coming bands to be heard. However, as many local bands have learned, it takes hard work to become established, even in a local scene. Many bands don't care about money and fame — they're just
playing for the music.
"One out of every 1,000 bands comes even close to making money doing it," said Doug "Skinny D" Richards, singer for Girl Drink Drunk and booking agent for The Bottleneck. 737 New Hampshire St.
Richards has been involved in the local music scene for several years. He said that he had seen it go through several changes and that it had improved recently.
Kelly Corcoran, a Topkea senior who books bands for the Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St., said that there were fewer big-name bands but that smaller bands were gaining in popularity.
"There's no Stick and no Paw," he said. "There are a lot of bands that can play a medium-sized crowd of around 200."
Matt Dunehoo, Shawne freshman and guitarist for Proudentall, said there was something for everybody.
"There are a lot of cool bands — country-fried sounding bands, punk-like bands," he said. "Anyone coming to town could see a band of almost any genre they wanted to see."
Tom Humphrey, a Kearney, III., senior who books bands for Open Mike Night on Mondays at The Bottleneck, agreed that local music was improving.
Melody
Jim David plays bass guitar with Halftrack. Halftrack is one of many bands taking advantage of Lawrence's local music scene.
Joey Bloom/ KANSAN
"The scene is on the upswing. There are a lot of good, young bands," Humphrey said.
Where to Play
Open mike has become an opportunity for many local bands to get their first taste of playing at a real venue and to get public exposure.
"It used to be that mostly Kansas City and Topeka metal bands came to play," he said. "Anyone could sign up. It was a joke."
As a result, the bands that played often were ones that few people liked, Humphrey said.
Humphrey is more selective in choosing the bands that play on Open Mike Night. He will give most bands a chance, but usually he needs some sort of reference, he said.
Humphrey chooses many of the bands that play Open Mike Night from the albums he plays on his KJHK radio show, Plow the Fields, which airs Friday from 4 to 7 p.m.
"If there's a band that I respect, and they recommend another band to me, I'll book them," he said.
"If I play it on my show, I definitely want them to play at Open Mike," he said.
Bands can send him tapes either to play on KJHK or for Open Mike Night, but Humphrey said that it was not absolutely necessary.
If a band that Humphrey doesn't know wants to play, he said that the way they described themselves when they applied might influence his decision.
"I understand that not all new bands have demo tapes," he said.
"If I just see alternative rock, I definitely won't book them right away," he said.
Corcoran said Humphrey had made Open Mike Night a credible and important show to play.
"I can't praise him enough for what he's done," Corcoran said. "It's a good place for bands to play because people that go to Open Mike are often influential in the music scene."
Corcoran said the Replay Lounge was another good place for beginning bands to play.
"It provides a venue for bands that aren't quite ready to play The Bottleneck." he said.
The Replay Lounge is a small bar that puts the band face-to-face with the audience because there is no stage.
JKHK, the University's student radio station, is now accepting tapes until April 1 for eight spots at the Farmers Ball competition to be held at The Bottleneck. The winner of the Farmers Ball will perform as an opening band at Day on the Hill.
Local bands will soon have another opportunity to not only play a local show, but to play in front of a crowd of thousands at Day on the Hill May 3.
"The band is part of the crowd," Corocan said. "They're right next to you, watching from three feet away."
Unsigned bands need to send a recording, which can be on anything from compact disc to a 7" record, to KJHK.
Joey Bloom / KANSAN
A panel of KJHK members will choose the eight bands who will be randomly selected to play on either April 22 or 23. The audience will then vote on the best band for each night, and the two finalists will play on April 25. The audience will vote again, and the winner will play at Day on the Hill.
So You Want a Gig?
Bands new to the music scene may not know the best way to get gigs or to perform on stage, but experienced bookers and band members know the dos and don'ts of music.
Humphrey said that one of the most important things he looked for in bands was integrity.
Tom Hegeman plays guitar with Halftrack, a local band. Half track performed Friday night at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
"It's not necessarily who's the best guitar player or singer," he said.
Humphrey said bands should be willing to play with other bands, regardless of the other's popularity or musical style.
If a band is choosy, it is minding. he said.
"Itit sets a bad tone for people who book
the shows," he said. "They think, 'They're
stuck up.'"
Corcoran agreed that being humble was important.
"Once a band gets established, that attitude can run up," he said.
If band members have an attitude when they are just starting out, that's a problem, he said.
New bands also need to play at any venue they can, said Andy Graham, Overland Park senior and guitarist for the dot.dot.commies.
"A band starting out should have no pretensions about playing," Graham said. "They should play parties, Open mike and any chance they get."
Dunehoo agreed.
"A band can't start without places to play. A party can be a great alternative to a bar gig." Dunehue said.
Graham said persistence was important in getting gigs.
"If you solicit the places you want to play, bug them enough, then you'll get a chance to play," he said.
Corcoran said he watched the crowd's reaction when a band played to decide if he should book them again.
"You want to see if people like the band," he said. "It may not be exactly what you like, but you look to see if people dig it."
On the Road
Many bands start playing locally and hope either to get signed or to go on the road.
Boys Life, a band that originated in the Kansas City area, did things a little differently. The band has played very little in Lawrence or Kansas City but has been touring the country for three years, playing increasingly larger venues and crowds across the country.
John Anderson, Boys Life drummer and Lawrence resident, said the band worked very hard to establish themselves.
"It's as much work, booking a tour and promoting a record, as going to school full time," he said.
To get shows, the band talked to other bands to obtain names of clubs, booking agents or anyone who wanted to let Boys Life play.
"There are hundreds of thousands of kids who like to hear new music and give bands shows," he said.
The shows that Boys Life first found often were in basements and warehouses, and the band was unsure what would happen, Anderson said.
"The first two or three times, I thought, I wonder if anyone's going to come. I wonder if anyone knows about the show," he said.
Anderson said that the band now is well known in many clubs around the country, and it will be leaving soon for its third or fourth tour of the East Coast. Boys Life then will return for the fifth time to the West Coast.
Despite this success, finding gigs was hard for the band before people recognized the name, Anderson said. It took much practice to perfect the ability to bookshows.
"It's like trying to build a house and not knowing how to use a hammer," he said. "It's a hit-and-miss process."
NIGHT と life
WEDNESDAY
Groov-a-licious with The Band That Saved the World, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $2
THURSDAY
The Reverend Horton Heat and NY Loose, 9:30 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $10 advance tickets.
FRIDAY
and $13.50 students, $32 and $27 public.
La Boheme, 8 p.m. at the Lied Center. Cost: $16
■ Funky Stuff (formerly Justin Case) 10 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $5 and $6.
SATURDAY
University Theatre Series: The Merry Wives of
Windsor, 8 p.m. at Murphy Hall. Cost: $12 public.
$11 senior citizens and $6 students.
■ La Boheme, 8 p.m. at the Lied Center. Cost: $16 and $13, 10 students. $23 and $27 public.
University Theatre Series: The Merry Wives of Windsor, 8 p.m. at Murphy Hall. Cost: $12 public. $11 senior citizens and $6 students.
The Bloodhound Gang and Nerf Herder. 5:30
p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
Cost: $8 advance tickets available.
- Jane Jensen and Smoking Popes, 10 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $1.05.
SUNDAY
*Alumni Recital Series: Carla Edwards, organ; 2:30 p.m. at Bales Recital Hall. Free.*
Swing Set, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Free.
University Theatre Series: The Merry Wives of Windsor, 2:30 p.m. at Murphy Hall. Cost: $12 public, $11 senior citizens and $6 students.
MONDAY
Music History Lecture: Franz Schubert; 3:30 m,
s at Swarthout Recital Hall, Free.
4
Visiting Artists Series: Schubertiade with Penelope Jensen, soprano, and Michael Zenge, piano: 7:30 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall. Free
Open Mike, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Free.
TUESDAY
Six Finger Satellite, Zen Gorilla and Hydrogen Terrors, 8:30 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $5 and $6.
1
---
REDSKINS COACH
NORV TURNER got additional job security as coach of the Washington Redskins yesterday after he signed a three-year contract extension. Turner, 44, had signed a 5-year, $3 million deal in 1994. The extension, for an undisclosed amount, takes Turner through the 2001 season.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SPORTS
Cooke, the team's owner, needed less than
hourly storage to concentrate the
contract. He reiterated yesterday in a statement that as long as he is the owner, Turner will be the Redskins coach. Turner's teams have improved from 3-13 in 1994 to 6-10 in 1995 and 9-7 last season.
2
AL CAMPANIS CHECKS INTO HOSPITAL
AL CAMPANIS, 80, the former Los Angeles Dodgers executive who was fired 10 years ago after his negative comments on African-American baseball players, was hospitalized Monday for an undisclosed condition.
Campani was removed shortly after his 1987 interview on ABC TV's Nightline, in which he said African Americans lacked the necessities to become managers and executives.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1997
YANKEES DEAL
In a union of pinstripes and three stripes, the NEW YORK YANKEES and adidats are joining in a marketing deal.
The sponsorship deal will be worth about $95 million for 10 years, giving adidas the right to put its name and logo throughout Yankee Stadium.
Yankees
Details were not released, and it is not yet clear if it violates the Yankees' agreements with Major League Baseball Properties Inc., the licensing wing of the sport. The deal does not cover the actual uniforms or shoes, one adidas official said.
SECTION B
Fast BREAKS
Coaching roster complete after final announcements
Kansas football coach Terry Allen completed his coaching staff yesterday by adding Walt Klinker and Todd Middleton.
Klinker and Middleton will join a staff that learned its coaching assignments westerday.
Allen's offensive staff will include Bill Salmon (offensive coordinator/tight ends), Del Wight (offensive line), Klinker (offensive line), Michael Garrison (running backs) and Darrell Wyatt (wide receivers).
The defensive staff will include Ardell Wiegand (defensive coordinator/defensive line), Mark Farley (inside linebackers), Middleton (outside linebackers) and Mark Moseley (secondary coach).
Klinker joins the Kansas football staff after working as the offensive line coach at Hawaii. He had previously worked at Northern Iowa for 13 years, where he served as offensive coordinator and offensive line coach.
Klinker also has been an assistant coach at Wyoming, New Mexico, Fresno State and Colorado.
Middleton was the defensive ends coach at Northern Illinois last season, and was the defensive line coach in 1995 at Princeton. He also has worked as an assistant coach at Army, West Virginia Wesleyan, Arizona and Chowan (N.C.) Junior College.
Kansan staff report
Referee back to normal after severe chest pains
ST.LOUIS A referee who was taken by ambulance to a St. Louis hospital because he complained of severe chest pains after Monday night's Missouri Valley Conference tournament final was back in his hotel room about three hours after the game.
Janssen barely made it to the referee's dressing room after the game, and was taken by stretcher to an ambulance from the Kiel Center and then to St. Mary's Hospital. Hospital officials said a heart monitor reading and X-rays were normal, showing only inflammation of the chest wall.
Paul Janssen, of Orange City, Iowa, plans to return to work later this week. Jim Bain, director of officiating for the Missouri Valley Conference, said Janssen was elbowed in the chest about a week ago and was in pain most of the game.
Innovative sailor crashes experimental plane, dies
WAUCHULA, FLA. — Lars Bergstrom, 62, an innovator of worldwide sailing, was killed when his experimental plane crashed Sunday.
Bergstrom was well known for his sailing designs and inventions. Eight years ago, he designed the 60-foot yacht that broke a 135-year-old record for the journey from New York to San Francisco.
"He got outside the parameters," said longtime friend Charles Ball. "He looked at everything with a new and innocent eve."
Bergstrom invented the Windex, a wind indicator that is mounted on the mast and looks like an arrow perched on a pencil, said John Burnham, editor of Sailing World magazine.
"The pilot had taken it up," Hendrix said. "He was trying to practice some stalling techniques. When it stalled, it didn't start again.
"Darn near every sailboat in the world has one of those," said yacht designer Bruce Kirby. "It must have made them millions and millions of dollars. It's the standard for any racing boat and the many cruising boats."
Bergstrom was flying an experimental aircraft with his partner, Sven Ridder, said Hardee County Sheriff's Capt. Edward Hendrix.
—The Associated Press
Women to play Baylor
Jayhawks commence Big 12 tournament
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
The No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team will look to continue its winning ways when it battles Baylor in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 tournament at noon today.
Eighth-seeded Baylor advanced to the quarterfinals with a 68-62 victory against ninth-seeded Oklahoma State yesterday. The Bears have won four consecutive games heading into today's match-up.
The top-seeded Jayhawks got a bye in the first round. They have won seven consecutive games since Feb. 8. They defeated Baylor 79-49 on Jan. 11 at Allen Field House in the only regular-season meeting between the two teams.
Kansas center Nakia Sanford said she expected the Bears to be much more competitive this time around
"I don't think they were focused when they came in last time, and that was a surprise," Sanford said. "Nobody's going to remember that they lost to us by 30 if they win. Now that it's tournament time, you've got to forget what happened in the regular season because everyone's gunning for that Big 12 championship this week."
In the first meeting, Baylor shot 34.7 percent from the floor and missed all six attempts from behind the three-point line.
Kansas outbounded the Bears 53 to 31, and Baylor had just eight assists, compared with 28 turnovers.
Forward Amanda Mooney had a team-high 10 points and was the only Bear to reach double digits in any category. Forward Tasia Wright had no points but had a team-high four rebounds.
Kansas forward Jennifer Trapp had a game-high 15 points as five Jayhawks scored in double digits. Forward Suzi Raymant recorded nine points and nine rebounds, and Sanford had 11 points, six rebounds, three steals and two assists.
Kansas produced loftier numbers than its Texas opponents in the first meeting.
"During the regular season, there are some games where you have high emotion," Sanford said. "In the tournament, you know that your next game could be your last."
For Sanford, the difference between a regular-season and postseason game is enormous.
Kansas coach Marian Washington
said that the team couldn't be satisfied with just jump shots if it wanted to remain successful.
"I think we're going to take the outside shot when it's there, so I don't think we'll have any problems with that," Washington said. "I'm more concerned with our aggressiveness and our ability to take the ball to the basket.
"We have to get the ball in the paint, whether it's one or two passes inside to the post, or with perimeter players having confidence in their ability to take the ball to the basket. That aspect will be key when it comes time for tournament play." Washington said.
Kansas vs. Baylor
Kansas (23-4 overall, 14-2 in the Big 12) Starters
Big 12, Florida
G Tamecka Dixon, 5-9, Sr.
G Angle Halibieb, 5-10, Sr.
F Lynn Pride, 6-2, Fr.
F Jennifer Trapp, 6-1, Sr.
C Nakia Sanford, 6-3, So.
Baylor (15-12 overall, 7-9 in
Big 12) Probable Starters
G Amy Alcala, 5-9, So.
G Ella Toya, 5-5, So.
F Amanda Mooney, 5-10, Jr.
F Tasia Wright, 6-1, Jr.
C Kacy Moffitt, 6-4, So.
Time: Noon today
Time: Noon today
Place: Municipal Auditorium
Radio: KJHK-FM, 90.7.
24
Forward Jennifer Trapp squeezes between two Oklahoma players last Saturday. The Javahawks start Big 12 tournament play today in Kansas City.
Wichita shocks Kansas
Gaylord
Right fielder Les Walrond races back to first base, avoiding getting tagged by Wichita State's first baseman, Matt Patrick. The Jayhawks were defeated 7-1 last night in Hogland-Maupin Stadium. The men will play today at 3 p.m.
Jayhawks get three basehits in 7-1 defeat
Harley V. Ratliff
Kansas sportswriter
A combination of bonechilling weather and overpowering pitching put the Kansas baseball team in a deep-freeze.
By allowing the Jayhawk offense just one run off three hits, the Wichita State Shockers beat Kansas 7-1 last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
GR Gordon-Ross/KANSAN
The loss puts the Jayhawks overall record at 6-5
hawks overall record at 8-5. The Shockers jumped on Kansas starting pitcher Jake Good early, getting two runs in the first inning and adding two more in the fourth.
The early lead was more than enough support for Shocker pitcher Jason Krafft, who held the Jayhawk batters hitless through five innings.
Kansas head coach Bobb Randall said that his team simply wasn't ready to face that caliber of pitching
"Their guys that pitched tonight just overmatched us," Randall said. "The way that Kraft was throwing—seven runs was too much to overcome."
In the fourth inning, the Jayhawks let a Wichita State pop fly fall between three Kansas defenders, five feet in front of home plate. Later that inning, a wild pitch slipped by catcher Josh Dimmick which allowed a Shocker base runner to score from second base.
While the freshman Good (1-1) took his first lost of the season, many of the Shocker runs did not result from poor pitching.
"Defensivley we've got to get better," Randall said. "If your defense is going to give up runs, pitching is going to whip your tail. And we got our tail whipped tonight."
The lone Jayhawk bright spot came in the sixth iming when centerfielder Justin Headley hammered Shocker pitcher Nate Robertsonts two-out pitch over the right-field fence. The homer was Headley second of the season and accounted for the Jayhawks only run of the
Although they were credited with just one error, Randall said that this team had too many defensive breakdowns to keep the score close.
game.
While Headley was able to connect, Randall was concerned with the productivity of his offense.
"We had way too many easy strikeouts," Randall said. "Headley was the one guy who was swinging the bat well for us."
With Big 12 Conference rival Nebraska rolling into town tomorrow, Randall said that his team didn't have much time to correct its mistakes. However, he said he thought his team has the potential to make the necessary improvements.
"The only solution I have ever known is to correct
"We had way too many easy strikeouts."
Bobby Randall Kansas baseball coach
your mistakes in practice." Randall said. "I don't think that this is the baseball we expect to play or will accept."
The Jayhawks begin their two game series against the Nebraska Cornhuskers at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
'Hawks ready for final leg to Final Four
By BILL Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
many, in that three of the five starters have had torn ligaments and broken bones. Guard Jacque Vaughn tore a ligament in his wrist, center Scot Pollard suffered $p$
The Kansas men's basketball season has been jam-packed with injury and spotlight.
The spotlight comes from 14 consecutive weeks of being ranked the No. 1 team in the land. As a result, they've been under the unblinking eye of the public and the media.
But Kansas has persevered.
stress fracture of his foot and guard Jerod Haase fractured his wrist. Vaughn and Pollard combined missed 18 games due to injury.
"They've really accomplished a great deal this year," Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams said
BARRY M. HUBBARD
about his 29-1 Jayhawks. "In 99 years of Kansas basketball no team has ever gone 29-1."
But with the Big 12 Conference Tournament beginning for Kansas Friday and the NCAA tournament eight days away, the pressure is building for the No. 1 Jayhawks.
Kansas' first post-season game will be in the Big 12 Tournament at noon on Friday in sold-out Kemper Arena, in Kansas City, Mo. The Jayhawks will play the winner of the Oklahoma State-Baylor game, which is tomorrow at noon.
A feeling of urgency from fans desperate for a Final Four birth or beyond is being felt by the team.
“It’s the way the team’s going to be remembered,” Williams said. “At the same time, I’ve tried to express this to the team and the fans, let’s enjoy the journey. I’ve seen the reactions. Last year I felt I had to do some apologizing and we were only one step to the Final Four.”
However, as Kansas gears up for post-season competition some feel that the Jawhaws are hitting their stride.
Pollard netted 12 points and pulled down 14 rebounds against Nebraska Sunday. The newly-crowned Big 12 Player of the Year, forward Raef LaFrentz is averaging 19 points and nine rebounds a game.
Vaughn is averaging 7.3 assists in the last five games. Despite his offensive numbers steadily improving, Williams said defense was where Vaughn shined.
"He's been even better than excellent," Williams said.
"He's the best defensive point guard I've ever coached."
Although Kansas' 29-1 record has only one blemish, a double-overtime 96-94 loss to Missouri on Feb. 4, guard Billy Thomas still contemplates the one that got away.
"It's human nature when you're 29-1 to think, 'Dang we should have won that one game,'" Thomas said. "But we haven't lost a game since then, and we don't have to lose to learn a lesson."
A.
2B
Tuesday, January 21, 1997
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Women's Conference Tournament Glances All Times EST
All Times EST
America East Conference
At Campus Sites
First Round
Thursday, Feb. 27
Thursday, Feb. 27
Delaware 76, Boston University 65
Penn State 62, Northeastern 49
SCORES & MORE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Quarterfinals Sunday, March 2
Maine 99, Towne State 57
Vermont 72, Delaware 40
New Hampshire 74, Hofstaff 62
Drexel 75, Hartford 69
Semifinals Wednesday, March 5
Broker at Maine, TBA
New Hampshire at Vermont, TBA
Championship
Saturday, March 8
Atlantic Coast Conference
At independence Arena
Charlotte, N.C.
First Round
Thursday, Feb. 27 Wake Forest 70, Florida State 59
Quarterfinals Friday Feb 28
Semifinals Saturday, March 1
Duke 60, Maryland 52 OT
North Carolina 86, Wake Forest 60
Virginia 77, Georgia Tech 63
Clemson 87, North Carolina State 75
Saturday, March 1
North Carolina 56, Duke 55
Clemson 77, Virginia 75 OT
Atlantic 10 Conference
At Campus Sites
First Round
Tuesday, Feb. 25
Fordham 68, Dayton 65
Virginia Tech 83, St. Bonaventure 78
Temple 74, Xavier, Ohio 69, OT
Duquesne 77, Rhode Island 62
7. Rhode Island 62
Quarterfinals
Thursday Feb 7
St. Joseph's 65, Fordham 43
La Salle Built 81, Virginia Tech 66
George Washington 78, Temple 35
Massachusetts 75, Duquesne 60
Semifinals
Sunday, March 2
51 Colleen 51
Championship Monday, March 3
St. Joseph's 5, La Salle 5
George Washington 60, Boston usesetts 39
St. Joseph's 59, George Washington 56
Big East Conference
East Conference
At Gampel Pavilion
Storrs, Conn.
First Round
First Round
Miami 64, Pittsburgh 50
Boston College 65, St. John's 58
Villanova 66, Providence 54
West Virginia 73, Seton Hall 66
Rutgers 68, Syracuse 67
Quarterfinals Sunday, March 2
Miami 63, Boston College 48
Connecticut 61, Villanova 45
Georgetown 79, West Virginia 60
Notre Dame 86, Rutgers 8
Semifinals Monday, March
Connecticut 98, Miami 71
Notre Dame 83, Georgetown 43
Idaho State vs. CS Sacramento-Montana St.
winner 8 in
Montana vs. N.Arizona-Weber St.winner, 10
Connecticut 86, Notre Dame 77
Big Sky Conference
Big Sky Conference
At Dehlibrg Arena
Missoula, Mont.
First Round
Thursday, March 6
Semifinals
Friday, March 7
Championship
Saturday, March 8 Semifinal winners, 10 p.m.
Montana State vs. Cal State Sacramento, 8
Norterm & Arizonan vls. Wber Stater 10 p.m.
Norterm & Arizona vls. Wber Stater 10 p.m.
Big South Conference
North Carolina-Greensboro 68, Maryland-Bal-
Wintropth 70, North Carolina-Ashley 80
Liberty 71, Carolina Coastal 61
At The Vines Center Lynchburg, Va. First Round
North Carolina-Greensboro 83, Radford 70
Liberty 63, Winthrop 50
Big Ten Conference
At RCA Dome
First Round
Friday, Feb. 28
Saturday, March 8 Liberty 89, North Carolina-Greensboro 82
Indiana 72, Michigan 54
Ohio State 80, Penn State 79
Minnesota 80, Wisconsin 75
Championship Saturday, March 1
birthday celebration
Quarterfinals Saturday, March 1
Semifinals Sunday, March 2
Indiana 61, Purdue 54
lowa 73, Northwestern 63
Michigan St. 85, Ohio St. 79
illinois 98, Minnesota 76
lowa 87, Indiana 53
illinois 77, Michigan St. 66
Championship
Monday, March 3
Big 12 Conference
At Kansas City
Tuesday, March 4
First Round
iowa 63, Illinois 56
Kansas vs. Baylor, 1 p.m.
Kansas Tech vs. Kansas State, 3:20 p.m.
Texas vs. Nebraska, 7 p.m.
Thursday, March 6 Semifinals
Wednesday, March Quarterfinals
Baylor 68, Oklahoma State 62
Kansas State 81, Oklahoma 56
Nebraska 62, Missouri 58
Texas A&M vs. Iowa State 9:20 p.m.
Colorado vs. Texas A&M-lowa State winner
Kansas-Baylor winner vs. Texas Tech
Texas-Nebraska winner vs. Colorado/Texas AAA Iowa State winner B-30 m
Semifinal winners, 8 p.m.
Colonial Athletic Association
Colonial Athletic Association
At Richmond Coliseum
Richmond, Va.
Washington, Fla.
Wednesday, Feb. 16
Wednesday; Feb. 20
William & Mary 78, N.C.-Wilmington 63
Quarterfinals
Thursdav. Feb. 27
James Mahon 101, William & Mary 35
Old Dominion 101, William & Mary 35
Va. Commonwealth 71, American U. 65
East Carolina 76, Richmond 68 Seminifinals
Friday, Feb.28
Championship
Sunday, March 2
3. East Carolina 46
Old Dominion 86, James Madison 48
East Carolina 67, Va. Commonwealth 56
Conference USA At Alumni Hall Chicago
Cincinnati 63, N.C. Charlte 64
St. Louis 71, Southern Mississippi 64
Ala.-Birmingham 65, South Florida 40
DePaul 100, Houston 75
Louisville 84, Bincinnati 61
Tulane 75, St Louis 51
Memphis 68, Ala -Birmingham 58
Marmorte 80, DePaul 65
Semifinals Sunday, March 2
Quarterfinals Saturday, March 1
Tulane 76, Marquette 53
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conferen-
At Marine Midland Arena
Buffalo, N.Y.
First Round
Friday, Feb. 28
Niaqara 79, Fairfield 70
Tulane 76, Louisville 74
Marquette 83, Memphis 77
Championship
Niagara 81, Iona 64
St. Peter's 74, Loyola, Md. 63, OT
Siena 66, Iona 62
St. Peter's 76, Manhattan
Lovola, Md. 74, Canisius 56
St. Peter's 66, Niagara 38
Mid-American Conference
First Round
Tuesday, March 4
Group B-1,Belize St. OT
Semifinals Saturday, March 1
Bowling Green 81, Battalion 70, U.Miha, Miami 81, Ohio 0, U.52
Toledo 86, Eastern Michigan 74
Kent 106, Central Michigan 63
Semifinals
Thursday, March 6
SatGate Centre
At Sea Garden Centre, Toledo
Toledo vs. Bowling Green 7 or 8 p.m.
Miami, Ohio vs. Kent, 7 or 9 p.m.
Championship
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
First Round
Monday, March 1
Delaware State 87, South Carolina State 70 Hampton 59, Bethune-Cookman 52
At Echois Hall
Norfolk, Va.
Quarterfinals
Wednesday, March
Thursday, March 6
Morgan State vs. Coppin State, 1 p.m.
Maryland-Eastern Shore. 1 p.m.
North Carolina
Semifinals Friday, March 7
Howard-Hampton winner vs. UMES-N Car-
Morgan St.-Coppin St. winner vs. Florida &
A&M-DelaWarner St. winner, 3 p.m.
Saturday, March 8 Semifinal winners, 1 p.m.
Midwestern Collegiate Conference
At Phoenix Sports Center
At Green Bay, Wis.
Quarterfinals
Thursday, March 6
Detroit vs. Winston St., 2.pim.
Wisconsin-Wilmington vs. Cleveland St., 4.
Butler vs. Northern Illinois, 6:30 p.m.
Wisconsin-Green Bay vs. Illinois-Chicago,
9:20am
Semifinals Friday, March 7
Detroit-Wright St. winner vs. Wisconsin-Mil-
Championship Saturday, March 8
Northeast Conference First Round Thursday, Feb. 27
Robert Morris 82, Marist 74
St. Francis, N.Y. 82, Fairleigh Dickinson 54
Quarterfinals Saturday, March 1 Times TBA
St. Francis, Pa., 78, Robert Morris 65
Mommouth 64, St. Francis, N.Y. 50
Mount St. Mary's, Md. 60, Rider 54
Wagner 71, Long Island U. 55
Semifinals
At Higher Seeds
Wednesday, March
Mount St. Mary's, Md. at St. Francis, Pta., TBA
Wannenee, Moormouth, N.J. TRA
Championship At Higher seed Saturday March 8
St. Franchi, Pa-Mount St. Mary's, Md winner
w, Wagner-Monmouth winner, TBA.
Ohio Valley Conference
First Round
At Campus Sites
Tuesday, Feb. 25
Eastern Kentucky 69, Tennessee State 60
Morehead St. 72, Eastern Illinois 67
Tennessee Tech 72, Murray State 61
Midtria Tennessee State 60, Austin Peay 59
At Nashville Arena
Semifinals
Friday, Feb. 28
Eastern Kentucky 67, Morehead State 47
Tennessee Tech 59, Middle Tennessee State
10
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and or blackouts)
(All times Central)
WEDNESDAY, March 5
10 a.m.
10.a.m.
■ ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball,
Syracuse vs. Notre Dame
noon NOAA
ESPN — NCAA Basketball,
Providence vs. Rutgers
2:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, West Virginia vs. Seton Hall
6:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Bucknell vs. Navv
8:30 p.m.
6:50 p.m.
■ ESPN2, ESPN — NCAA
Basketball, Penn State vs. Iowa
■ ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball,
Pittsburgh vs, UConn
8:30 p.m.
Championship Saturday, March 1 only 60 Tennessee
Eastern Kentucky 69, Tennessee Tech 65
Southland Conference
At Hirch Collisseum
Shreveport, La.
Wednesday, March 5
Texas-Arlington vs. Texas-San Antonio, 2
Semifinals Thursday, March 6
Sam Houston State vs. McNeese State, 4 p.m.
Stephen F. Austin vs. Sam Houston St.
Missouri St. Browns 9-8
Southwest Texas State vs. UTA-UTSA win-
Championship Saturday, March 8mers, 3 p.m.
Saturday, March 8 Semifinal winners, 3 p.m.
Mississippi Valley State vs. Southern Univer-
3rd Floor Burge Union
Dallas First Round Wednesday, March 5
Southwestern Athletic Conference At Loos Fieldhouse
ACCKSDD State vs. Prairie View AAM, 5 p.m.
Grambling State v. Texas Southern, 7 p.m.
Jackson St. Alabama St. winner, vs. Alcorn St. Prairie winner, 1 p.m.
Grandma to the stars, vs. Grambino-
MVVS-Southern U. winner vs. Grambling-
ness Southern winner, 7 o.p.
Semifinals Friday, March 7
Championship
Semifinal winners, 3 p.m.
Sun Belt Conference
At Bowling Green, Ky.
First Round
Sun Belt Conference
New Orleans vs. Texas-Pan American, Noon
Daily Rate 9-8:00, Tuesdays 10-9:00
Southwestern Louisiana vs. Western Kentucky
6 p.m.
South Alabama vs. Arkansas State, 8:30 p.m.
Semifinals Thursday, March 6
New Orleans.Texas-Pan American winner vs.
Southwestern Louisiana-Western Kentucky
winner vs. Sout Alabama-Akansas St. 8:30
Championship
Semifinal winners, Noon
PARKS
SKIING
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Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
3B
Road wins suit team
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
When people say there is no place like home, the Kansas softball team will have to take their word for it.
By going 3-2 last weekend at the Hillenbrand Invitational in Arizona, the Kansas softball team improved their record to 7-4 with all 11 games on the road.
Success on the road will be vital to the team's chances this season, because the team has only six home games, all double-headers, this season. The first of those home games will be played April 2.
"It's unusual to have only six home games; it's not unusual to not have one until April," Kansas softball assistant coach Marla Looper said. "We're planning on changing that next year."
Looper and assistant coach Carla Marchetti said because the coaches are all new to the staff, the schedule was set for them before they arrived.
"It makes it kind of tough," Marchetti said. "But teams that are in the colder states will not have the advantage of playing at home as much as teams like Oklahoma and Texas."
Looper said all of the traveling made it hard for the players to keep up with academics.
"It is very tough on the kids when they miss classes," Looper said. "They have to keep up with their homework, make sure they get enough rest and stay healthy. It's hard for them to keep up with everything, but it's one of those things you have to deal with."
Despite the jet lag, the coaches are pleased with how the season has started.
"We've had some very good outings and have seen good things from the kids," Marchetti said. "I think that each day we have improved."
The team will be on the road again this weekend when they travel to Oklahoma City to play in the Hall of Fame Tournament.
It is nearing the end of the basketball season and Kansas Jayhawk fans are saying goodbye to the seniors and the teams until next season.
Can we see one more game?
Fans will never get a chance to see the seniors play in Allen Field House again before they leave for the NBA, the CBA, the WNBA, the ABL or their chosen professions after graduation.
My question is, why not let the devoted fans see them play one more time?
Of course, with the season coming to a close and the Big 12 Conference tournaments underway, it does not seem conceivable that the fans would get a chance to see the seniors play again before they graduate in May.
But, I think there still could be a chance.
Why not let the men's and women's basketball teams play together in a scrimmage for a final farewell in Allen Field House?
It seems so simple.
ASSOCIATE
SPORTS
EDITOR
Put both No. 1 Big 12 teams on the floor and let them show the fans
GINA
THORNBURG
what it means to be a Jayhawk, with teamwork and fun.
The field house could be filled with fans for both the men's and women's teams.
Admission could be free for the first 16,300 fans who arrive, similar to Late Night with Roy Williams at the beginning of the season. Or the money that is raised could go to a charity, such as Coaches vs. Cancer, which men's basketball coach Roy Williams actively is involved with.
No matter how the Jayhawks end their respective NCAA tournaments, the true, die-hard fans always will be behind the teams. I think these are the people who need to see the players on the field house court one more time to celebrate the tremendous seasons that both teams had this year.
Fans already said their goodbyes to the seniors with flowers and cheers.
the seniors, both the men and women Jayhawks, in the field house to put an ultimate finale to such fantastic seasons.
As a senior myself, I would like to have the chance to see Scot Pollard, Jerod Haase, Jacque Vaughn, Tamecka Dixon, Angie Hableib and the rest of the crew play again. They would not have to play for a ranking or a title; they would play for the fans, the people who have been the biggest supporters of the teams for more than just the last four years.
It may be a fantasy to think the Jayhawks could play one more time for the fans before they finish another season, but as Jiminy Cricket taught me as a child, dreams can come true.
Site selection for 2004 Olympics becoming nasty
Comments? E-mail Gina at sports@kansan.com
The Associated Press
LAUSANNE, Switzerland — Three days before the selection of the finalists, the contest for the right to hold the 2004 Summer Olympics turned nasty yesterday.
Russia
A 14-member International Olympic Committee panel will trim the record field of 11 candidates to four or five cities on Friday. The full IOC will select the winner on Sept. 5.
Rome and Athens appear certain to make the short list. Competing for the other spots are Stockholm, Sweden; Cape Town, South Africa; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; and St. Petersburg,
The other candidates are Lille, France; Seville, Spain; and San Juan, Puerto Rico.
The IOC adopted the cutoff procedure to reduce the bidding costs. But the system only has raised the stakes for cities desperate to avoid the humiliation of failing to qualify for the final round.
Yesterday, Turkish officials assailed the IOC technical report about the Istanbul bid as flawed and unfair. They accused the IOC of looking for excuses to eliminate Istanbul and other candidates.
Russian government leaders reiterated their criticism of the report
and continued to exert heavy political pressure on the IOC to make sure St. Petersburg made the cut.
Istanbul sent a five-page written rebuttal addressing the factual mistakes, discrepancies and omissions contained in the IOC evaluation report, which cited transportation problems and other drawbacks to the bid.
"This was an injustice," bid chief Yalcin Aksoy said. "The strength of the bid is not reflected in the report."
Sinan Erdem, president of the Turkish Olympic Committee and an IOC member, added, "The problem is that the system is wrong. You can not expect a good result from a
wrong system. It is acceptable to be the loser with a working system. But it is not acceptable that a group of people can say you are in or you are out."
Istanbul's bid was further hurt by newspaper headlines this week citing fears of a possible coup in Turkey following disputes between the pro-Islamic governing coalition and the military.
"There are differences of opinion, but they are trying to solve their problems in parliament with democracy." Aksov said.
Istanbul has brought a delegation of 75 people to Lausanne, including three-time Olympic champion
weightlifter Naim Suleymanoglu,
known as Pocket Hercules.
But Aksoy said Turkey, making its second consecutive Olympic bid, may turn its back on the games if it does not make the cut Friday.
The same might apply to Russia, which has put its political prestige on the line by backing St. Petersburg. The IOC report cited financial and other deficiencies.
Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin made a telephone call this week to IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch to complain about mistakes and inadequacies in the report.
and Buenos Aires heated up this week when soccer legend Pele, Brazil's sports minister, said that the Argentine capital — which received a very favorable IOC evaluation — doesn't deserve to make the final round.
The rivalry between Rio de Janeiro
"If we look at what happened during the 1995 Pan American Games in Argentina, it's clear the Olympics shouldn't be there," Pele said in an unusual attack against a rival bid. "The organization was awful. And the IOC knows that."
Lawrence Apartment Guide 1997
The leader of the Cape Town bid accused Rome officials of raising South Africa's high crime rate as an issue in the contest.
(1)
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th and Eddingham Dr. OFFERING LUXURY 2 BDRM APARTMENTS AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- Fireplace
- Exercise weight room
- Laundry room
- Energy Efficient
- On site management
- Daily 4:00-5:30
Professionally managed by
(2)
841-6080
808 W.24th
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury.
KVM
1, 2, & 3 bedroom luxury apartments featuring:
featuring:
Full size washer & dryer
Built-in television
Fireplace
Monitored alarm system
Gated entry
Pools and hot tubs
YOU MUST SEE FOR YOURSELF!!
(3)
Near KU Bus Route
2600 West 6th Street 838-3377
LCA Apartments, Inc.
Spacious Apartments For Rent "Convient affordable Housing"
- Washer/Dryer,
- Washer/Dryer, Diswasher available
- Central Air
- Close to KU campus
- Studios 1,2,3,& 4 bedrooms
1307 Ohio·1301 Ohio
1224 Ohio
PLS
Call: LCA Apartments 331-2pls (757) am after 4pm 749-3794
Search, Locate, & Lease from our office apartments homes, & business offices.
Pinnacle Woods
APARTMENTS
Come Visit Our New Luxury Apartments! FIRST MONTH FREE! CALL FOR DETAILS.
Clubhouse Features:
- Fitness Facility
- Private Balconies • Fireplaces*
• Full-size washer & dryers* • Microwaves
• Covered parking • Garages* • Vaulted ceilings*
• Exercise & Walking Trail to Clinton Lake
• Convenient location near new S/W I-70 exit
Available Options
- Computer Center for resident use
- Great room area with Fireplace & Big Screen TV
865-5454
- Computer Center for resident use
We offer FREE Assistance to you in
We offer FREE Assistance to you in finding your new home away from home. We have excellent locations throughout Lawrence with studio, 1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apartments, duplexes homes & condominiums. Call us today and let us be your home finders.
1/4 mi. West of Wakarusa on Clinton Parkway
- Alabama Place 2400 Alabama
(5a)
(5b)
- Pin Oak
- Eddingham Place 24th & Eddingham
(1)
2406 Alabama
(5c)
- Red Oak
KVM
2408 Alabama
Kaw Valley Management, Inc.
MWF 9-5 TTH 2:30-5
808 W.24th
841-6080
(6a)
(6b)
Lorimar and Leannamar Townhomes
"No one lives above or below you"
(our townhomes are two levels) Leasing for Summer/Foll 97
Leasing for Summer/Fall '97
1,2,3 bdrm/2 bath,4 bdrm/3 bath
*Dishwasher
*Fireplace
*Ceiling Fans in every room
*Cable in every room
*Walk-in closets
*cable paid
(6a) Lorimar-3801 Clinton Pkwy
(6b) Leannamar-4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Call 841-7849 Office hrs. 9-5 M-F
---
)
4B
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Mon-Fri 9am - 5pm Saturday 10am-4pm Sunday 1pm - 4pm
MASTERCRAFT
MODELS OPEN DAILY So many choices...
Please stop by for your personal tour today!
Studios,1,2,3,&4 Bedroom Apartments & Townhomes
QUALITY SERVICE
*Custom Furnishings
*Designed for Privacy
*Many Built-ins
*Private Parking
*Locally Owned
*Central.A/C
*Outdoor Pool*
*Washers/Dryers*
*available at some locations
- Close to Campus
* Energy Efficient
* Affordable Rates
* Close to Shopping
* Locally Managed
* On-Site Managers*
* Laundry Facilities*
* Microwaves*
(7a)
SUNDANCE
7TH & Florida
841-5255
(7b) HANOVER PLACE 14TH & Mass 841-1212
(7c) REGENTS COURT 19TH & Mass 749-0445
(7d) TANGLEWOOD 10TH & Arkansas 749-2415
(7e) ORCHARD CORNERS 15TH& Kasold 749-4226
(7f) CAMPUS PLACE 12TH & Louisiana 841-1429
Reserve YOUR Apartment Home with MASTERCRAFT 913-842-4455
Quail Creek Townhouses
(8)
(adjacent to Hy-Vee & Alvamar Golf Course)
- Studios
- 1,2,or3 Bedroom Apartments
- Duplexes
- Townhouses
- Washer/Dryer Hookups
- Cable Paid
Berkeley Flats Move in now...
- Swimming Pool
- 10 Month Lease Available
2111 Kasold Dr.
843-4300
Managed & Maintained by Professionals
Berkeley Flats
Move in now...
• Close to campus
• 1&2 bedroom apartments
• studio apartments
• super studios
• private parking
• full maintenance service
Call or stop by today
843-2116
11* & Mississippi
(13)
Morning Star Management
For rooms & apartments in well kept older homes. Some houses also available.
THE HOME OF THE JOHNSONS.
917 Tennessee
841-STAR (7827)
(16)
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- 1,2,3,4BEDROOM
- ON BUS ROUTE
- POOL & VOLLEYBALL COURT
- PETS WELCOME
- HOTWATER & TRASH PAID
2166W26TH
843-6446
15th St.
7e 20 19
Kasold Dr.
4 6b 8 10
6a
12 16 17
(19)
You can prepare now for your new home for SUMMER or FALL 1997 Just 4 easy steps:
1) Call 842-4200
2) Visit our peaceful countrylike atmosphere
3) Reserve an apartment
4) Relax . . . soon you can be:
Swimming playing tennis, volleyball or basketball, walking on our 40 acres or unwinding on your balcony or patio surrounded by trees and green grass . . .
- 3 convenient bus stops
- Carports & Garages available
- Laundry facilities in apt. buildings
- Free basic cable
- Water, sanitation & sewer paid in apts.
*EXPERIENCED,PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE AND OFFICETEAM
842-4200
842-4200
15th & Crestline
8-5:30 Mon.-Fri.
10-4 Sat.& 1-4 Sun.
meadowbrook
(20)
Aspen West
Now Leasing for Fall!
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- Laundry on Site
- No Pets
- Reasonable Rates
- Dishwashers
- On Bus Route
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS66049 865-2500
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
5B
(10)
Shannon Plaza apartments
*1 bedroom- all appliances including washer and dryer
- townhouses-
2(with loft) and 3 bedroom
fireplace
garage w/ opener
- pets allowed
* on K.U. bus route
Call or stop by today 841-7726 2100 Heatherwood A2
Atmosphere
A Quiet, Relaxed
(11)
VILLAGE SQUARE
apartments
We offer spacious apartments close to campus with laundry facilities & an enticing swimming pool. On the bus route.
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Park25
Currently Leasing For Fall '97 10-Month Leases Available!
Apartments
(12)
- 2 Pools/ 2 Laundry Rooms
- Volleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
6th St.
7a
11
9th St.
14
13
18
7d
9
7f
KU
3
3
7b
14th St.
Mass St.
19th St.
7c
23rd St.
21
1
5a
23
5b
5c
15
31st St.
(14)
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
The Only Referral Service
In Lawrence Sick of reading through all of those classifieds? We Provide You With Information On Availability Of:
- Apartments
- Houses
Free Referral Service
13 1/2 East 8th St.
(Downtown Lawrence)
- Duplexes
841-5454
- Townhomes
(17)
(15)
Spanish Crest Apartments
- Low monthly rent
- Quiet, Spacious 2 BR Apartments
1 year leases starting May, June, July, and August!
(One half block east of Iowa on 27th street)
- Central Air/Gas Heat
- All appliances
- On Bus Route
843-6446
- SWIMMING POOL
BUILT IN '95
- Pool
South Pointe
PARK VILLAS
- NOPETS
2166W26TH
- Low Utilities!
DESIGNER INTERIOR
- No Pets
- ON BUS ROUTE
- 3 BED,2 FULL BATH
(18)
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Road
841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall '97
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Summer and Fall '97
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
Neal Campus (no pets, please)
OPEN HOUSE
12:30-4:30
No appointment needed
(21)
PARKWAY TERRACE
- Studio, 1 & 2 Bedrooms
Other Locations Available! Louisiana Place, Red Oak, Sea Gull and Avalon Apartments
Other Locations Available:
- Central Heat & Air
- Pool
- Some locations close to campus
- Now Leasing Summer & Fall
- All on bus route
2340 Murphy Drive
841-1155
(22)
TRAILRIDGE
YOU'LL LOVE THE FRIENDLY, STUDENT ORIENTED ENVIRONMENT WE PROVIDE.
- 2,3 and 4 bedroom townhouses available
- Near shopping areas
- Bus Stop
- Small pets welcome w/ deposit
- Walking distance to New Life Fitness Center
- Swimming pool
- Swimming pool
CALL 843-7333 FOR MORE INFORMATION OR STOP BY 2500 W.6TH ST.
TRAILRIDGE
(23)
Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS
Now Leasing For Spring & Summer.
SCOOTER
- Gas Heat & Air Cond.
- Low Utilities
- Newly Redecorated Units
- Close to Mall
- 1 Block from KU Bus Route
- Studios
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
- Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom)
Call Pat today 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave
6B
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Etc. Shop
orbs
928 Mass. Downtown
843-0611
BAGEL & BAGEL
The Bagel, Coffee & People Place
Massachusetts 23rd& Kasold
1026 Massachusetts 3914 Clinton Parkway
913-838-9494 913-838-3600
--could lead to breakthroughs.
Over 40 Toppings to choose from!!!
.357 Special
Wednesday carry out only
$3 small 1 topping
$5 medium 1 topping
$7 large 1 topping
Open 7 days a week
Dine-In or Carry-Out Only
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
704 Mass.
--could lead to breakthroughs.
Wearing nothing
wearing nothing but a smile...
New Girls New Girls Forti
Juccers Showgirls
Free Admission on your birthday
Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS $2 admission with student ID Open everyday at 7:30 to 2 am 913 N. Second
Kansan Classified
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
112 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
300s
Merchandise
100s
Announcements
200s Employment
235 Typing Services
140 Lost and Found
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Servi-
ces
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
---
1
Classified Policy
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
All real estate news in this newsletter is addressed to the Federal Funds Association, which advises not to advertise any 'preference' limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin or status of national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation
The Karsan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex, age, race, color, creed, religion, orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Karsan will not knowingly accept that in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law
100s Announcements
105 Personals
Desiring to La Boseme in dream seats, Offer-
ers let tickets and cash for yours. Call
Eric 845-999-6000
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
SWM age 40's brown eyes & hair, country background, animal lover. Desires female for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P.O. Box 4215 Lawrence, KS 6044
KUQ & A offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unsure. Please call KUF info 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
110 Business Personals
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!
GRANTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE
FROM SPONSOR!! NO REPAYMENT EVER!!
FOR MORE INFO CALL: 1-800-234-2455
Sterling Silver Jewelry For Guys & Gals.
Hoops, naval rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc. Shoe, 828 Mass.
Don't forget Bucky 'Dr. In-Pepsi Hour
3-4 pm daily
All soft drinks half price
Bucky 'Dr. In-9b & Iowa
120 Announcements
864-9500
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
CENTER
20 Announcements
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or unsex?
KU QA? offers a confidential support group
Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. call KU Info at 864-3506
or Headquarters at 841-2843 for location
FAST DUNBRAIRER- RAISE $250 IN 1 DAYS
GREEKS, GROUP CULTUS MOTIVATION,
MASSAGE, SPA
Tried of the same old professions? Interested in being an information manager or broker? Stop by the Kansas Union on Friday March 7 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. to visit out more. Supposeded by the Stu-
per Center, a nonprofit organization.
Used Book Sale. March 7 & 8, 9 am-pm; March 9
11:30 am-3:00 at Metcalf South Shopping Center,
level lower near Oso Drug; Bargain! Shawnee
Woman; American Association of University
Women.
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
North American Nudist directory lattes 100% of moke beaches, clubs, & resorts in area and near beachfront.
Men & Women needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research studies. Earn up to $1000/wk. 24 Wear Infot2.5 minutes! :1:61-879-4777.
MANAGINGTEST ANXIETYWORKSHOP
Wed, March 5
6-7:30 pm
Multicultural Resource Center
Demonstrate confidence!
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
125 Travel
FREE!
A HOUSE IN BREKENKNIDGE AVAILABLE
and reservation needed. Call Steve at 301-628-5749.
Spring Break in Grand Canyon. Spend 6 days of adventure exploring the Grand Canyon. $800 value for only $380. Includes all equipment plus more. For info call 799-2377
AAA1Spring '97. "Cancun, Jamaica, & Bahamas!" 7 nights w/air from $99. Enjoy Daily Free Drink Parties, No Cover @ Best Bars, Free Drinks! !!Endless Summer Tours 1-843-260-797
Today's Birthday (March 5)
You and your team make things happen in March. Money is tight in April. Help your sweetheart through a tough time in July. Complete a task in September, and take familiar action in October.
Face a confrontation in December; it'll be good for you. A group effort leads to the development of a new technology in February. This isn't in your area of expertise, but it benefits you anyway.
Arles (March 21-April 19) - Today is a 6.
You suspect you're being led in the wrong direction. Continue to gather information. Tonight could be your last chance to fix a broken relationship. The more you know, the better chance you have of making the right decision.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) - Today is an 8.
Things you don't even know about are going your way this morning. To find out what they are, call a distant friend or business associate. Later, double-check work that's already done. The idea is to catch a mistake before it happens.
Keep most of your opinions to yourself until about noon. Listening is how you'll learn. An active exchange of ideas this evening
HOROSCOPES
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is a 9.
Be the one who takes care of a major financial transaction. You're excellent at getting the best deal. Let your associate pick up money that's owed to you.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 5
Instead of just being the best yourself, you get to inspire somebody else to work up to your standards. This is contributing to your increasing health, wealth and happiness. If you get good at delegating, you'll have more time to play.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is an 8.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is an 8.
Come to a new understanding with your sweetheart this morning.
Then buy something you've been wanting. You may have to make a big mess in order to get things the way you want them.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 7.
A hassle at home may make you late for work this morning. Don't take it too seriously. The effects will become easier to find as the day progresses.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is an 8.
If you work hard,you could have a
You're in a domestic phase right now, it's perfectly normal to spend more time than usual thinking about your house. Instead of going out with friends, have them visit.
breakthrough. Your sweetheart is eager to do whatever you want.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -
Today is an 8.
Sagittarius (Nov, 22-Dec, 21) -
Today is a 7.
You're luckiest early this morning,
so you don't have a moment to
lose! Find a new source of money
this afternoon. An unusual product
is an excellent investment.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 7.
You may feel as though your head's full of mud this morning. By midday you'll be your old self. You want to get your sweetheart something you can't quite afford. Together, you can make it happen.
A friend can help you achieve a long-held objective. Call and remind him or her of an agreement made long ago. Patience and a sense of humor are required.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -
Today is an 8.
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
He should surpass John Havlicek and Oscar Robertson by the end of the season, ascend to third if he returns for 1997-98, and could catch Wilt Chamberlain for No. 2 if he stays around for two more years. Only Kareem Abdul-Jabbar seems out of Jordan's reach.
One by one, the NBA's big-time scorers are being overstepped by Michael Jordan. The Chicago Bulls' star is seventh and climbing after racing past Dominique Wilkins on Monday.
"With Michael, just about anything's possible," coach Phil Jackson said.
Air Jordan shooting for record
Gunning for an unprecedented ninth league scoring title, Jordan obviously isn't slowing at age 34. He's scoring 30.8 points a game in his 12th season, down only slightly from his NBA-record 31.9 career average.
He put in 31 Monday against Milwaukee to give him 26,277 points — 19 more than Wilkins.
"That's a lot," Jordan said with a shrug and a smile. "I feel old. Some of the things I've done over the years are starting to add up."
Within two weeks, Jordan should pass Harlicek, who has 118 more points. Robertson, 433 points ahead, should fall behind Jordan next month.
CRISP ICEBURG HEAD LETTUCE
Penrith
Dewar Cream
FISKRES
Bottlers
Malt Brewery
DOG
FOOD
18 LB. & IARGER
Over Invoice
Cost
1¢ PER POUND
ALL 12QT. TUB
ICE CREAM
Over Invoice
LARGE 24 CT SIZE
cost
1 PER QT
---
1/2¢ PER EGG
ALL GRADE
"AA" EGGS
DOZEN PACK
COST
HUGGIES
DIAPERS
RUGGY BACK TO THE FUTURE
LIVING
THE WORLD
FORTUNES
FOR
19-26 JULY 30
9:00 AM
AT
45TH STREET
NEW YORK, NY
NATIONAL BRAND POP
12 & 24 PACK
12 OZ. CANS
Spore
COST
1
C
Darkwave
BUSCH
Over Invoice
DAILY SPECIAL
Beijing Thurs, Mar 6, Tue & Fri, Feb 7, Tue
BANANAS 19¢ LR
Sprite
78¢ EA
NATIONAL BREED BEER
24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS
SURGE, SPRITE
DIET COKE
OR COKE
4178-971
50¢
---
OREO
OREO
TAYSTEE
AUTUMN GRAIN
BREAD
20 OZ. LOAF
119
24 CT 139
BAG EA.
MICKEY BAG 24 CT
DONUTS BAG 1 39
FA.
PREMIUM SALTINE 1LB BOX 159 LA.
CRACKERS
Over Invoice
UNION PARK
TOSTITOS TORTILLA CHIPS 14.5 TO 15.5 OZ BAG 228
NABISCO
OREO COOKIES
20 OZ. PAC.
259
EA.
BELFONTE NONFAT
LITE 100
YOGURT
8 OZ. CUP
2 FOR $1
TONYS ITALIAN PIZZA FOR $6
Sony Video Tape
SONY PREMIUM
SONY PREMIUM VHS TAPE
2
WE ACCEPT
FOOD STAMPS,
WELCOME CHERS,
VISION CARD &
MANUACHERS
COUPONS
BUSCH
MAJ. 24
Ben of New England
Retrieved May
8
BUSCH OR BUSCH LIGHT
BEER
10 65
24 PACK
1 FLOSS CAN
LIMIT 1
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
BUSCH BEER
24 P.M. 1022 CARS
$11 15
WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY RED DELICIOUS APPLES 39¢ LB.
FRESH CRISP FLORIDA CARROTS
99¢
RED RISE FRESH FLORIDA
STRAWBERRIES
1/2 FLAT
APPROX. 3 LBS.
488
---
RED RIPE FRESH FLORIDA
STRAWBRIES
1 YEAR
APPROX. 5 LBS.
488
OPEN
24
HOURS
EVERY DAY
THIS CAKE IS FOR YOU
FROM THE BAKERY GOURMET CARROT CAKE
70% LEAN
FRESH
GROUND
BEEF
ECONOMY PAK
1234567890
488 EA.
79¢ LB.
BONELESS BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
88
POUBLEREN
FRYER LEG QUARTERS 10 LB. BAG 39¢ LB.
LONDON MUSEUM OF FASHION
MUSEUM OF FASHION
MICHAEL COOPER
BONELESS BEEF
K.C. STRIP
STEAK
ECONOMY PAK
388
LB
Edys
EDY'S GRAND OR GRAND LIGHT ICE CREAM 1/2 GAL 298
FLORIDA
RUBY RED
GRAPEFRUIT
+
19¢ FA
U.S. NO. 1
RUSSET
POTATOES
10 LB. BAG
We reserve the right to limit quantities, while supplies last
88¢
MILD MEDIUM
YELLOW
ONIONS
14¢
LB.
100
38¢ EA
FROM THE DEJI Sliced OR SHARED
TURKEY
BREAST
198 LB.
ECONOMY MACK
BREADED RAW
CATFISH NUGGETS $1 88
LB.
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES
hecl
SENECA
APPLE JUICE
1800 CAF
SENEGA
APPEAR JUICE
APPLE JUICE
88¢
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
POTATOES
BONELESS BEEF
RUMP
ROAST
BONELESS BEEF
RUMP
ROAST
ECONOMY PAK
118
LB.
118
COUNTRY STYLE
SPARE
RIBS
CUT FROM THE PORK BUTT
ECONOMY PAK
18
FIRST LOVE HEARTS DESIGN
SPLIT FRYER BREASTS ECONOMY PAK WITH RIB BONE 98 LB
Pizza
MOOSE BROTHERS
SUPREME PIZZA
LARGE 12 SIZE
450
MOOSE BROTHERS
SUPREME PIZZA
LARGE 12" SIZE
450
EA
88
FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED
HAMBURGER OR
CONEY BUNS
9
PREPAID
PHONE
CARDS
55 US MINUTES
$10.00
107 USA MINUTES
$20.00
PRICES EFFECTIVE MARCH '97
BUS BOM BUS NO BUS WEEK WEB WEEK PR PR BAS
9 10 11 5 6 7 8
9 10 11
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 5, 1997
7B
125 Travel
140 Lost & Found
SPRING BREAK PANAMA CTY BEACH
FLORIDA SANDIPIPE-BEACON BEACH
BEACHIDE HOT TUB, SUITES UP TO 18
PEOPLE, TIKI BEACH BAR, HOUSE OF THE
WORLDLS LONGEST KEG PARTY
FREE INFO 1-400-885-8228
WWW.BEACONBATH.COM
Found Puppy: German Shepherd mix, around 10 wks old. If you know anything about him or know of a good home for him, please call 331-3555(found on 9th and Main st.)
200s Employment
LOOKING FOR SWF, who is blonde, beautiful, around 5"6" and interested in a fun, loving relationship. Call Joe at 842-2467.
LOOKING FOR
男士卫生间
女士卫生间
205 Help Wanted
Nanny needed for Spring Break. 3 kids, 11, 10, & 7
am to 3:30 pm. Additional nanny substitute
charge applies.
Part-time office assistant needed in the MWF mornings 7:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m.
Call 749-0130
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED... 8 wk summer youth recreation program. Lake Quivira, KS. Questions? Call 388-4875.
Furra Cafeteria
Looking for motivated, dependable, team oriented people. Hiring all positions, apply in person.
Immaman Lutheran Childhood Center is accepting applications for afternoon teacher's aid. Experience with children required. Apply 2104 W. 15th St.
Local landscape company accepting applications from motivated individuals. Irrigation, lawn care, and general experience helpful, but not essential. Call 493-8443 from 8-5.
Saferide is currently hiring drivers for the remainder of the Spring Semester. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. If interested contact Robert at the Lawrence Bus Co. 842-0544.
Saint John School seeks responsible individual who has experience w/children for its after school program $5.50/hour. To apply, contact Natalie Pahns 843-6814(days) or 843-3884(evenings)
SWM in fourth grade needs spectacular watchmate with wheels to guide him through safe, fun summer at our southern Overland Park house. Call Barbie at (913) 498-2560 in evenings.
Wanted 87 students. Lose 9-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough. Doctor recommended. Guaranteed. $30 cost. Free gift. 1-800-435-7591.
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in Pocosin Mines, of PA
Over 40 activities - Seeking general
and specialist counselors
215-887-3222
www.campcounselors.com
Headstart needs an assistant cook/delivery person to help with food preparation and transport. * 9:30-1:4 F.W. Will consider MWF/TWR split. Apply at 25 Vermont. Equal Opportunity Employer.
JON'S NOTES
Highly organized female who is good with child care, needed to be mother's helper. 10-20 hr per day. Carrying baby from high place to bed, 3pm-7pm. Must have carer. Experience pre-training, not required. $5.50 hr. Call 841-1074.
Note taker needed for Chem. 188, MWF, 8.30-9.20.
Must have completed this or higher w/ an A. Earn
$10-815 per lecture. Call Nancy at
843-3485.
Paisoano's Italian Ristorante is looking for heart of the house employees.
Wait staff positions available at Mass. St. Dell and Buffalo Baldo's Smokehouse. Must have some daytime lunch availability during the week. Apply at Mass in the 9-4-M-7F Mass. (upstairs above smokebase).
house employees.
Experienced kitchen help needed.
Dishwashers, linecooks, and prep cooks
and kitchen staff. Experience.
Apply in person 2112 W, 25th st.
BabySister/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
own car, experience, and knowledge of child development. Send letter, resume, schedule, and
reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Staffer Flint.
INTERNET SURFERS
Immediate opening for Customer Service Associate to work daytime hours. Flexible scheduling. 20-30 hours per week. Send resume to Kerry Hart, Mr. Gattis, 3141 Clinton Pkwy, ST. 1, Lawrence, KS, 6047, fax to 838-3122 or in person at Mr. Gattis.
Do you surf the Net? Would you like to earn $2K,
$50k or more a month, playing on the Net? Then
go to www.monetricks.com on GO (a
user's name (INDEPENDENT) password:
(TRAVELER) Site opens 2/24/97
Kitchen staff position available at Buffalo Bake's Smokehouse. Food prep and line cooking. Some days hours are helpful. Start $5.50/hr up to $6.50/hr, after 8 mo, plus profit sharing. Apply at Schumm Food Company business offices 9-4 M-F at 719 Mass. (upstairs above smokehouse.)
Work time help needed calling on behalf of SADD.
Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/h plus commission,
schedule your own hours. Come join our friendly
atmosphere! Call 843-5110 evening and weekends only. Come to 1619 Mass Suite 1B-M TH 4pm-
10p and fill out an application. EOE
**STUDENT WORK - up to $10.25 ! Nat! CO, has immediate PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCOO. Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Apply call our JCOO office at 931-8581 (10am - 5pm)
Summer Jobs for the Environment
Job location: Los Angeles
Campaign for clean air and water
Protect endangered species. Offices in 31 states.
Call Campaign for the Environment
Job location: Los Angeles
Use code 12-EA98
p/tf Building Services has immediate opening for p/t crew leader to join our late evening commercial cleaning team. Hours are late Sun.-Thurs. 8:11:30 p.m. qualified applicant will have a eye for detail and a solid work history. Call Amy at 862-754-2290 in person at 839 Iowa behind Appliance Plus.
Computer: Need personnel for greater KC/Lawrence Area, on site computer consulting. Flex hrs, F or PT. Must have reliable trans- and be able to pass pre-employment drug test. Desired skills: strong customer serv; Wins 1/9 & DOS; ability to assess client needs. Send resume to: Geeks On Wheels, PO Box 688, Lawrence, KS 65042, Fax: 934-143-922.
STUDENT HOURLY POSITIONS AVAILABLE
(2). Duties: Receptionist; filing; duplicating;
running errands; typing (at least 45 wpm); proof-
of work; meeting deadlines as assigned. Must be available to work 12:00 to 1:00 (noon hour). First position available Mar 20, through Dec 31, 1998. Opportunity for renewal by May 1, 1998. Availability required. 4.75/hour. Applications available at the Student
Assistance Center, 22 Str., 864-0044. Deadline Mar 12, 1998. 5.00/hour. Preference given to per-
sonnel with 5.00/hour summer and through the 1997-98 academic year.
205 Help Wanted
Explore the possibilities of HOME CARE where you can enjoy the freedom of giving one on one attention to your client without interruption. VNA is seeking qualified CNA/$CHA's to work in our facility, providing care and education for A.M. late afternoon, and evening hours. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Downtown County and visit www.downtowncounty.com. Lower Level or call 841-4634 for Pat. EEOE
CNA/CNHA
Flexible Graphic Electronic Prepress - Universal Products. Inc. is seeking applications for qualified individual who possesses a strong working knowledge of MAC and various graphics applications (Illustrator, Photoshop, QuarkXpress). Electronic prepress knowledge such as stepping/distorting for plate set-up, and trap and bleeding application a plus. Opening could be 1st and 2nd floor.
This is a full time position with benefits including insurance, profit sharing, & retirement benefits. Please apply to: Universal Products, Inc., 231 Brownhill Drive, KS 67548, Wichita City, EOE/M/F.
Design Artist - Universal Products, Inc. is seeking applications for design artists. Responsibilities will include developing conceptual sketches for digital art projects and finished drawings &/or prototype for client approval, creating new w/ or original designs and other artistic activities which support company goals. Experience in qualified applicant will have significant experience with Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, and Quark Express. A natural ability to use color, texture, and previous experience in printing are preferred.
This is a full time position with benefit includes, insurance, profit sharing & retirement. Qualified. Full-time or apply in person to: Universal Products, Inc., or apply in person to: Universal Products, KG 7584, a Wichita suburb. EOB/M/F
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: The Rock Springs 4-6H center is looking for applicants for 46-50 summer staff jobs. Job lengths vary from 2 to 3 months. There are jobs available in recreation, custodial, maintenance and food service. Possible internships available in all the listed areas. Work on monthly salary, room and board, and other benefits. Applicants must be 17 by June 1 of this year.
For more information write:
SUMMER JOBS
ROCK SPRINGS 4-H CENTER
5405 W. Highway k-157
JUNCTION CITY, KS. 66441
SUMMER JOBS
Or Call: (913) 257-3221
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
FEMALE AND MALE CAMP COUNSELORS needed for outstanding Maine camp! CAMP VEGA for girls and MALE CEDAR for boys. Each located on magnificent lakefront setting with a stunning view of the Great Camp for heads and assistants in tennis, basketball, baseball, volleyball, soccer, lacrosse, golf, field hockey, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, canoeing, scuba, water-skiing, archery, weight training, gymnastics, ceramics, crafts, drama, jazz, tap, ballet), nature study, backpacking, horseback riding, ropes course, trip leaders, mountain biking, rifle, general (w/youngest students). Also Camp dates approve. June 21-August 21. Top Salary, room, board, laundry, clothing and allowance. MEN-CAMP CEDAR for boys, 1758 Beacon Street, Brookline MA 02146, 800-321-9100. MEN-CAMP CEDAR for girls, 1758Camp VEGA, PO BOX 1771, Duxbury, MA 02323, jobs.com营坡VGA. http://营坡VGA.1, 800-323-VEGA. WE WILL BE ON THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CAMPUS on Wednesday, 6th in Kansas Union Oread Room from 10AM to 4PM. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY.
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith Dr.
(at the corner of 19th and Naismith)
We are now accepting applications for Fall 1997 Resident Assistants. Weare looking for individuals with strong leadership skills, great enthusiasm, and personal empowerment. Come to our front dsk for information and an application between 8a.m. and 11p.m., Mondays through Fridays.
Database Coordinator
Duties & responsibilities will include; researching, maintaining, & using database of industry contacts for business intelligence & marketing purposes.
Oread a in drug development has an immediate full-time opening for a Database Coordinator.
Individual needs to have strong oral & written interpersonal communication skills
Qualified candidate should have a very strong Win95 background, with exp. using Excel & Word or WordPerfect, FileMaker Pro, or similar database applications.
DB-1
Oread
1501 Wakarusa Dr.
Lawrence, KS 66047-1803
fax (913) 749-1882
No calls please/EOE
For consideration please mail or fax resume along with salary requirements to:
Professional Ethical Massage
Certified Massage Therapist
Student Pricing
331-0942
225 Professional Services
Radio news, reporter weekends for KLWN/KLZR. Training journalism & broadcast experience needed. Tape & resume to news director. P.O. Box 3007 Lawrence KS 60406 EOE
225 Professional Services
Radio Announcers part time for KLWNKLEZR,
on-air experience required. Tape and report to
program director. PO Box 3007 Lawrence, KS
68406 EOE.
Radio Anounleurs part time for KLWN & KLZR on
radio experience required. Trap to resume on
programming.
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800) -733-2404
JOUSIS
PERSONAL INVEYMENT
Falsely Al's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
the law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
235 Typing Services
Call Jack1 at 832-6544 for applications, term paper calls, diessentations, transcription, etc. E-mail: jack1@us.unc.edu
X
305 For Sale
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/ her
talent to quality top paper for you. Call Donna @ 943-267-5811
300s Merchandise
87 Mustang GT conv. black, leather, all power,
good cond. (913) 833-4270.
14 ft. Glatton Sailboat, good condition. Buy now.
for Spring Break. Lease message at (913)
482-7414.
FINAL FOUR TICKETS Two seats/six games.
(602) 729-6887 Leave message
(602) 729-6885 Enter message
Oceanic 85 Aquarium, wet/dry filter, reef light
60 lbs. base rock, About 100 lbs. of base rock, 85
base rock, 85-390.900
340 Auto Sales
www.superloracura.com Pictures of pre-owned vehicles on the Web. Varies makes and models. See for Palm Beach, FL for details.
1990 Geo Metro, 5 sp, 2 dr. hatchback, great gas mileage. Some fire and bumper damage GMP
84 Chevrolet Camaro good condition, runs great,
very relable car, $2000 must sell, call Matt at
(718) 655-9325.
89 Camara Iroc 5.0 V8 AC, AM/FM Cass, 5 pdu,
15 pdu. Must Sell. Call [749-736] or 848-1170
Must Sell. Bundle call [749-736] or 848-1170
1005 VW Cabrio convertible
- Beautiful dark blue metallic
- Beautiful dark blue metallic
• Forward and softer
- CD player
- 5-speed - Leather interior
- CD player
$16,800 842-5733
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Available now-3 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer/Dryer,
equipped kitchen. On KU bus route. Call 8411-
6250.
B-Room, 2 story townhouse 1.1/2 bath, new
furniture, high ceilings, $75/mo. June-
April 191- July 31 $45/mo. Call 331-270-
8655
br a 3рm apartment sublease in May. May rent free.
Close to campan. 1133 Kentucky,宅656-2610
Condo for Sale 3 Drmn, 2 bath, washer/dryer, on
PHA 151, 980 Sq Ft. CHOICE OF POINTS:
PHA 151, 980 Sq Ft. CHOICE OF POINTS:
833-206-7000, CHOICE OF POINTS:
833-206-7000
405 For Rent
FURNISHED 3 BR APT-2 2 BATH W/DAC,I/C
BALSAM 1BR APT-2 2 BATH W/DAC
/bmo/no Call evening; (704) 1825-4980
Studio 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Available for summer & fall. Some locations close to campus, have our route. Call (800) 576-4000 or visit us at www.studio1and2.com
Nonmoking Man to sublease apartment from mid May first July. One block from city center; 822-932-9093.
Need to Sublease? Move in April 1st, 3rd apt. on KU Bus route. A/C, dishwasher, walk-in closet space. $365/ month. Assume lease August 1st if you want to stay put. Cat 749-7462.
Mackenzie Place. 1134 Kentucky. Now leasing for Aug. 1. Great Location! Luxury lamps, close to hotel. Microwave, washer/dryer, all kitchen appl. 2 devices, 2 detergent well. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-186-
Two bedroom Apt. Hardwood floor. Footbath
家价 $399/month plus deposit Call 841-
1074
Spathacites 2 bedroom house, harboured for lorries, lots of winterhouses 2 bedroom house, harboured May frost, lots of summerhouses 2 bedroom house, harboured May frost.
Studio w/ storage room. Sublease. New carpets. furnished. Walk to campus. On bus tic bt & trash prd.
M. Mar & Apr. Freet. 1BR sublease. $720/mo.
Roomy, AC, Ch, cats 4B. Roomy-Apts
Roomy, AC, Ch, cats 4B.
Going behind Fall 797 "Need a sublease for Spring
going around Fall 841" Tail at al 314 or Jenny at al
2469
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1408
Tenn. a student housing alternative. Open
& diverse membership, non profit operation,
dress control. $180-240 incl. wk dy dinners, Utl.
W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 841-0484.
LCA
- Designer Interior
- 3 Bed, 2 Full Bath
- On Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- No Pets
B2 Sublease available 5/11, quiet area,
central air and heat. $48 per month at
360-392.
South Point Park Villas
Now leasing Bradford Square Apartments on K.U. bus route, private deck, cats allowed, for $14,000 a year.
1 Bdm basement $235 + utilities. CALL 749-0619
PINNACLE WOODS
1*2*3 br. luxury apt. homes
5000 Clinton Pkwy.
1 / 4 mi. west of Wakarusa
All new -685-5454
st Month book -685-5454 for detai
Spacious Apartments for rent
"Convenient affordable housing"
Washer/Dryer, Dishwashers Avail.
Central Air • Close to KU Campus
Studios 1, 2, 3, & 4 bedrooms
Call: LCA Apartments
381-215 (757) am
after 4pm 748-3794
1 yr. lease wood floors / off street parking, no pets,
quiet no smoke. 1 month security deposit.
3 Bdmr $640 + utilities. Also avail. June & July.
2 Bdmr $460 + utilities.
Tuckaway
Built in '95
PL8
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
- 1, 2, 3, 4 Bedroom
• Bus On Route
• Pool & Volleyball Court
• Pets Welcome
• Hot Water & Trash Paid
South Pointe APARTMENTS
Live in Luxury.
Avail 8/1 @ 1037 Tennessee.
- 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
• Washon/Davis
- 2166 W. 26th 843-6446
- Built-in TV
- Washer/Dryer
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
PINNACLE WOODS
- Alarm System
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
Hawthorn Place
Townhomes and
Residential Homes Fireplace one-car
- Fireplace, one-car garage
Private Courtyard
1st Month Free — Call for details
331-2332
405 For Rent
Sublease 2bdm, ien garage, W/D hookups, air clear, new carpet and new tile in kitchen &athorn; $480/mo. Pets OK. Avail. April or May 1. 838-927 or 641-5797
MOVE IN NOW...
One Month Free Rent
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
water paid
call or stop by today 841-7726
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
- Stadium View
Shannon Plaza Apartments
Chamberlain Court
Carson Place Stadium View
"Apartments Designed for Your Lifestyle"
*Oread Apartments*
1425 Kentucky
Bradford Square
1425 Kentucky
Abbotts Center
Call for an appointment
Chamberlain Court
Great Apartment
Heritage Place
Highpointe
Hawthorn Place
841-8468
TREE
Apartments
Part25
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
- Volleyball Court
Currently Leasing For Fall '97 10-Month Lenses Available!
3 Hot Tubs
- Some Washer/Drver Hookups
1&2Bedrooms
COLONY WOODS
1301 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
843-2116
11th and Miss
Berkeley Flats (EHO)
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
OnKUBus Route
Move In Now...
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
One Month Free Rent On lease through July 31 1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment Call or stop by today
ExerciseRoom
1,2&3 Bedrooms
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
FLATS
--roommate needed for two barm apt. $185/mo plus 1/2 utilities. If interested call 331-3461
HIGHPOINTE AFFARTMENT HOMES
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher
30wm 3pm-6pm to work with children age 12moys. A.M. & P.M. Substitute needed also Call
osmeyer 934-417.
405 For Rent
NOW LEASING Call First Management 841-8468
Washer/Dryer Alarm System Clubhouse & Swimming Pool Workout Facility Basketball Court
"No one lives above or below you"
Lorimar & Leannamar Townhomes
Our townhomes are 2 levels
Call 841-7849
Leasing for Sum/Fall 97
1, 2, 3 bdmr/2 bath
4 bdmr/3 bath
West Hill APARTMENTS
No Appointment needed
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall '97
Office hrs 9am-5pm M-F
Female roommate wanted to share furnished 3 bedroom apt on KU bus route $230.00 month + roommate fee of $149.00
Roommate needed. Apt. close to K.U. Good deal.
Call 841-4688
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Female Roommate needed. 2 bdmr 1/2 block from campus. Washer/Dryer. Call 388-4702
2 Fermates to share 3 bedroom luxurious home,
$500/mo. + $100/mo. + williams, A/cs/1.5 mile from
the beach.
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
(no pets, please)
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30-4:30
NON-SMOKING FEMALE ROOMMATE
$200/MO. 1/2 UTILITIES
748-2947
430 Roommate Wanted
3-rooms for rent. Nice house. Good price. Please call 749-2886.
Roommate wanted Mar+1, Share spiff 2br. w/
Luxury Suite in West Village.
Great price $200+bill call 749-9883 www.roommate.com
- Byphone: 864-4358
Ads aired in may be bi.
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Stop by the Kansan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
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.
When cancelling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agen nme. 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.
Bafunde:
and can be treated for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled acts that were pre-paid by check or will cash are not available. No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Blood Test Numbers
The advertise may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Packages
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Rates
Cost per line per day
Cost per mile per day
Num. of insertions: 1X 2-3X 4-7X 9-14X 15-20X 30+X
3 lines 2.30 1.80 1.20 1.00 0.85 0.60
4 lines 2.15 1.40 1.00 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)
140 lst & band 350 for sale
225 help wanted 340 sale or mail
225 professional services 380 microlitous
225 ltying services
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
120 entertainment
370 want to buy
405 for rent
438 recommend wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Please print your ad one word per box:
Address:_
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper ___
Total ad cost: ___ Classification: ___
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
VISA
Account number:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dally Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Signature:
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Expiration Date:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence. KS. 68045
1.38 lb
1.38 lb.
85% Lean Ground Beef
58¢
Dole Iceberg Lettuce
100%
2.98 lb.
Fresh Sliced Hudson Smoked Turkey
SuperDeli
Great COMPANIONS
Jack's
Jack's
Original
CATALOGUE STYLE DARK
PICK-UP ON 4 WESTMASON PIZZA
2/$5
Jack's Original or Great Combinations Pizza Assorted Varieties, 15 to 21.45-oz.
Banquet
Family Size
Banquet
Family Size
Homemade
Fruit Ace
Sheet
Turkey
2/$4
2/$4
Banquet Family Entrees
Assorted Varieties, 28-oz.
Lay's
Potato Chips
Lay's
Potato Chips
2/$5
Frito Lay Chips
Take a crack at it.
SuperTarget combines the best of both worlds a jumbo-sized, upscale discount store with a family-sized grocery. It's one big convenient way to shop - from golf clubs to egg cartons.
HUDSON.
All Natural
Young
Chicken
58¢ lb.
Hudson Whole Chicken Fryer
58¢ lb.
Fuji Apples
1.88 lb.
Fresh Krab Salad
Seafood Dept.
Hormel
1.38 lb.
Hormel Pork Butt Roast
1.48
1. 48 Fresh Baked Cinnamon Rolls 6-pack
Downyflake
Hungry Jack
2 MORE WHITES
2 Downy
Hungry
2 Downyflake
Hungry Jack
MORE WHITES
MORE WHITES
BETTER
2/$4 Downy Flake Waffles, Assorted Varieties 19 to 20-oz.
SuperTARGET
LAWRENCE SUPERTARGET IOWA STREET AND 33RD STREET 1-800-800-8800 Open seven days a week 7 am till midnight
Advertised prices good Sunday, March 2 through Saturday, March 8, 1997.
Admiration: T.J. Pugh Fan Club founded by his former math teacher. Page 8 Viewpoint: Cloning could provide entertainment interesting situations Page
****************************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 9
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
HE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
THURSDAY, MARCH 6.1997
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.103,NO.112
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
1234567890
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
Art sent to KU police mistaken for bomb
KU police received a suspicious looking package in the mail yesterday. Set, Chris Keary said.
Anna Lunaria massages a client at the Lunaria Center, 1000 New York St. Lunaria said that massage could reduce the body's physical stress.
The box, addressed to the University of Kansas in care of the Lawrence Police Department, looked suspicious because of unusual packaging, writing and items that were taped to the box, Keary said. KU police said they thought it might have been a bomb
Keary said that KU police took the package to a field in west campus where the bomb unit of the Overland Park Police Department opened it. The package contained small, homemade artwork.
Keary said the box was mailed from another state, but he would not say which one. KU police still have the box and plan to investigate why the sender packaged the artwork in a strange manner.
Keary said that anyone receiving a package in the mail that looked unusual should treat it cautiously. He said skeptical packages could have too much postage, no return address, substances leaking from the package, sound coming from the package or unusual addressing, such as the wrong title or name.
Caller silently harasses student with daily dials
A KU student has been receiving harassing phone calls for almost a month, KU police said.
The student told the police Monday that for more than 3 1/2 weeks she had received calls during which all she heard was silence. She said the caller had never said anything, but she thought the caller stayed on the line and listened.
The woman told police that the harassment occurred once a day and that the calls were coming from off campus.
—Kansan staff reports
Officer Gayle Reece said that police did not have a suspect. Reece said that phone calls like this were common when a victim had recently broken up with a boyfriend or girlfriend, but she said that did not apply in this case.
Nonconformist writer sought after bombings
ATLANTA - One angry man - not a group - probably wrote the letter claiming responsibility for the bombings of an abortion clinic and a gay and lesbian nightclub, handwriting experts said.
The writer is a racist and is against feminists, gays and law enforcement, said Michael Rustigan, a criminalology professor at San Francisco State University.
The letter, sent to various news outlets in Atlanta in February, was rumored to be from the Army of God, a name associated with an underground manual on terrorizing abortion clinics.
However, investigators have questioned the authenticity of the letter's claim of responsibility for twin blasts at the clinic in January and the Feb. 21 bombing of the nightclub, which injured a total of 12 people.
It probably was written by one methodical and systematic person, a rural or suburban type with spotty employment, Rustigan said.
"The war here is not specifically against gays or abortion facilities," he said. "It's a general militia theme of hatred of a government."
"He doesn't want to follow society's rules." Lane said.
theme of her career/government work
Catherine Lane, a certified hand-
writing examiner with a specialty in
behavior profiling, said the letter's
large block print shows someone
with poor concentration skills, but
an extroverted personality with a
desire to be heard.
The Associated Press
Rubbing you the right way
Massage therapy can reduce stress by distributing harmful hormones throughout body
By Emily Vrabac Kansan staff writer
Mid-term stress can take its toll with long hours of studying and worrying. Students have an easy, relaxing solution to their tension. They can have their stress literally rubbed away by a professional massage therapist.s
Massage therapy is quickly becoming a popular stress relief technique for people of all ages. Besides various massage methods, massage therapists are trained in basic anatomy and physiology, so they understand how the body functions and will respond to touch.
Anna Lunaria, massage therapist and owner of the Lunaria Center, 1000 New York St. said that clients wanted messages for a variety of reasons.
"A fair amount of people are coming because it's part of their stress management program," she said. "Others just come because it feels good."
Lunaria said that massage actually reduced the body's physical stress mechanisms while relaxing the client.
"When the body is under stress, it releases hormones that can do damage to the body over time," she said.
Lymph nodes are stimulated by the massage and absorb any metabolic waste that is loosened from the muscles. Massage can circulate those stress hormones to be eventually expelled through the lymph system.
"Circulation in the lymph can lead to production of white blood cells, which improves the immune system," Lunaria said.
Sandy Bowman, a physical therapist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said she often used massages to treat injuries.
"When they receive a massage here.
10
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
Some students are looking to massage for stress relief. The average cost of a massage in Lawrence is $40 an hour.
it's usually to an isolated area rather than a general massage," Bowman said. "We use massage as another form of treatment."
Bowman said that massages could help muscle spasms and strained muscles by bringing blood to the affected area to help the injury heal. Some students have problems that can benefit from more frequent massage, she said.
"A lot of times we'll suggest that they get a massage periodically from a masseuse in town." Bowman said.
"Unfortunately, in Lawrence there are no laws that require a certain number of hours of training to do massage," she said. "The most important thing is finding out what kind of training people have."
Students should be careful about where they get a massage because not all massage practitioners are certified or experienced, Lunaria said. She said she had 700 hours of experience, but that many massage therapists in the area have far less.
"When you are getting a massage, you really shouldn't look for a bargain because it's you body," she said.
Because of that, Lunaria said that comparing prices might not be the best way to choose a massage therapist.
Lunaria said that the average price for a massage in Lawrence was about $40 for an hour.
She said that when calling for massage appointments, students might not
"A fair amount of people are coming because it's part of their stress management program. Others just come because it feels good."
Anna Lunarla massage therapist
"Good massage therapists are usually busy, so be patient," she said.
be able to get in right away.
Lunaria said that massage had a basic premise that all people should consider in their daily lives.
"Touch is a universal language that communicates love and caring," she said. "For some reason, touch is missing from our society. If you can't afford a professional massage, start trading with your partner or your roommate."
Alumni may be limited on Board of Regents
Bill would equalize school representation
By Ann Marchand Kansan staff writer
Representation of the University of Kansas on the Board of Regents soon may be in jeopardy if a bill by Sen. Barbara Lawrence, R-Wichita, passes the Kansas Legislature.
The bill would mandate that no institution could have more than two alumni members on the Board at any one time. Until every institution was represented, members could not be appointed or reappointed if they were alumni of an institution already represented.
"I feel that in many ways the representation on the Board has not been equal," Lawrence said. "It is very heavily weighted toward KU, and some of the other institutions have been fairly well
tions have been fairly well left out in recent years."
Out in recent years.
Five of the nine Regents are graduates of the University of Kansas. Two Regents graduated from Kansas State University, one graduated from Fort Hays State University, and one graduated from Wichita State University.
Regent Sylvia Robinson holds one degree from the University of Kansas and one degree from K-State.
Regent Phyllis Nolan did not graduate from a Regents institution. She holds degrees from the University of Nebraska and Rockhurst College.
Two Regents institutions, Emporia State University and Pittsburg State University, are not represented by alumni.
Board of Regents
Current board members:
William R. Docking Term expires:1998
Thomas E. Hammond Term expires: 1998
Term expires: 1998
Kenneth C. Havner
Term expires: 1998
John Hiebert
Term expires: 1996 Murray Lull
Sylvia Robinson
Phyllis Noran
Term expires: 1997
Sulvia Robinson
Term expires: 1998
Phyllis Nolan
Term expires: 2000
Robert Talkington
Term expires: 1998
■ Sidney Warner
Term expires: 1996
source: Kansas Board of Regents
But Stephen Jordan, executive director of the Board of Regents, said that changing the membership requirements to provide institutional representation would not be the best solution.
"When Regents are appointed now, it's not because of their relationship to a university," he said. "The Regents who come onto the Board right now have an approach—their position is that they are responsible to all six universities. If we start appointing people from all six, they may view it as a much different role."
Jordan said that if such a bill passed, Regents may become more territorial and fight for their alma maters instead of working to improve all Regents institutions.
Rep. Troy Findley, D-Lawrence, said such a change may not be justified and that the Regents would face reorganization when the Legislature tackled the issue of overall higher education governance.
"I can understand the desires of the individual institutions, that there needs to be a balance and change the way their needs are heard," he said. "But I definitely think there needs to be a reason before you make a substantive change."
Two Regents, John Hiebert and Sidney Warner, are serving on the Board even though their terms expired in December. They will serve until Gov. Bill Graves reappoints them or appoints others to the Board.
Mike Matson, press secretary for Graves, said that the appointments would be made before the end of the legislative session. But Matson gave no indication whether Graves would reapoint the two current members.
"He wants there to be a good gender mix, a good ethnic mix," Matson said. "He wants the Board to reflect the state of Kansas as a whole."
Owner of The Wheel dead at age 57
John Wooden dies while playing golf
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
The owner of The Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W.14th St., a popular bar for many KU students and Lawrence residents, died Tuesday in Palm Springs, Calif.
John Wooden, 57, died while he was playing golf on vacation.
Carter Voekel, manager of the bar, said he thought Wooden had died from a heart attack. He said he and Wooden had talked in person or on
"He made a lot of people's college careers possible by just giving them a job," Voekel said. "He taught me a lot about responsibility. He was more than just a boss."
the phone every dav.
Tim Hommertzheim, Pratt senior and bartender at the bar, said he had heard Tuesday about Wooden's death. He said he had been shocked but was glad to have known him, if even for a short time.
"I've only worked since the beginning of January, so I didn't get to know him as well as some other people," Hommertzheim said. "But I'm lucky I got to know him when I did. He was the best employer I've ever had."
"He really tried to get to know you," he said. "He would try to throw me off by asking me a new question each day. The last time I saw him he asked me how much I thought I had changed since high school. I told him I was still working on it."
Wooden tried to develop good relationships with his employees, Hormertzheim said.
A wreath was placed yesterday near the corner booth above the seat Wooden always sat in when he played cards with his friends during the lunch hour.
"That's when most people would come in to see him," he said. "Everyone couldn't help but love the guy."
A.
---
"He was the best employer I've ever had." Tim Hommertzheim Prattsenior
A service will be held for Wooden at 10 a.m. Saturday in Murphy Hall.
"It was a happening place," said Kirk Peters, a 1995 graduate and former patron. "I'd usually go with a bunch of the same friends. We all liked the atmosphere it had."
TODAY
INDEX
Television ... 2
Opinion ... 4
World News ... 6
Horoscopes ... 7
Classifieds ... 9
Basketball ... 10
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Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Great Britain and Ireland study abound at 11 a.m. today at 10S4 Lippincott. For more information, visit www.officeofstudyabroad.com.
KU Environs will hold a veggie lunch from noon to p.m. today at the ECM
ON CAMPUS
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Australia and New Zealand study abroad at 2:45 p.m. today at 105A Lippincott. For more information, call the office at 864-3742.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call the Rev. Raymond May at 843-0357.
KU Fencing Club will meet from 5 to 7 p.m. today at 212 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 832-998.
Baptist Student Union will have Bible study at 6:30 p.m. today at the Baptist Center at 1629 W. 19th, St.
**KU Champions Club will meet from 6:30 to 10:45 p.m. tonight at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindalev at 841-4585.**
Christian Science Organization will meet at 7 onight at Alcee B in the
International Student Services will sponsor an income tax workshop for international students at 7 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For
more information, call Daphne Johnston at 864-3617.
KU German Club will have Flight Night at 6 tonight at 209 Wescohe Hall. For more information, call Lindsey Schultz at 864-1398.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will have an informational meeting for alternative spring break in New Mexico at 7:15 tonight at the ECM building at 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thead Holcombe at 843-4933.
Icthus will sponsor "What's a Christian" at 7:30 tonight at the Burge Union. For more information, call Kelly at 331-020.
ON THE RECORD
KU Jugging Club will meet at 9:30 am on
at 207 Robinson Center; Call Scott Mellon-
se at 749-7540 for information.
The doorjamb of a KU student's apartment was damaged between 5:30 and 9 p.m. Tuesday in the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police said. Estimated damage was $100.
Two KU students' CDs were stolen between 4 p.m. Feb. 23 and 8 a.m. Tuesday from 126 Strong Hall, KU police said. Items were valued at $225.
A KU student's parking permit was stolen between 3 p.m. Feb. 19 and 2:30 p.m. Feb. 26 from a car in Lot 109 at Jayhawker Towers, KU police said. Items were valued at $60.
Handgun bill shoots into state Legislature
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A legislative committee yesterday approved a measure that would allow Kansans to carry concealed handguns, setting the stage for a major debate sometime next week.
"It's a very restrictive bill," said Rep. Gary Hayzlett, R-Lakin, the bill's principal sponsor.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee endorsed the measure on a voice vote. It now goes to the full
House. Five of the committee members asked to have their no votes recorded.
Supporters say allowing law-abiding citizens who have undergone training and have received gun permit would deter crime. Opponents say arming more people would do nothing for public safety and could result in more accidental shootings.
Another bill allowing people to carry concealed firearms is before the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee.
Kansas law generally allows individuals to carry concealed weapons only on their own property or at their own businesses. Thirty-one states allow the general public to carry concealed weapons if they meet certain requirements.
Gov. Bill Graves has repeatedly said he has heard little in the way of support for such a measure among voters.
He has stopped short of saying he would veto it, however.
"I guess you would say I'm concerned," Hayzlett said. "I've heard he is not enthusiastic."
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Everybody knows it's getting harder to graduate from college in four years. A missed class, a change of major-and all of a sudden, you're on the five-year plan. The extra semester or year in school can cost your folks a bundle in tuition and delay you from getting started with that great new job.
So, play it smart. Pick up a course this summer at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
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UIC is a 4-year research university with world class faculty and is located in the heart of Chicago. Our summer session offers over 400 courses in 55 departments-lots of chances to catch up, get ahead or concentrate on a particularly important course. It's easy to apply, tuition is a great value and the semester is over in just eight short weeks.
GO TO SCHOOL THIS SUMMER.
GIVE YOUR PARENTS ONE MORE REASON TO LOVE YOU.
For information about the UIC Summer Session, call 800-625-2013 or, in Chicago, (312)996-9099. Or, send us e-mail at: summer@uic.edu.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 6, 1997
3
Merry Wives, busy actors on stage
Play's focus is flabby Falstaff
Amanda Arbuckle
Kansan Staff Reporter
Some of the 21 students performing in the University of Kansas production of The Merry Wives of Windsor will have to be as versatile as they are talented. As there are more characters than actors, some will be playing as many as four roles.
The Merry Wives of Windsor will be performed this weekend and next weekend at the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
and food by taking advantage of others.
Written by Shakespeare and set in Windsor, England, the play is about Falstaff, an enormous, gross, unscrupulous retired soldier. Falstaff gets money, lodging
After misleading two men to believe that he is having affairs with their wives, the two wives plot their revenge against Falstaff.
Ron Popenhagen, assistant professor of theater and film, directed the play with his wife, Ludvika, also an assistant professor of theater and film. Popenhagen said he had chosen the play because of its strong folk elements and amusing story.
Steven Timoner, Chicago graduate student who plays Falstaff, said the play placed him in unfamiliar territory.
"It has a world-turned-upside-down feel to it," Ron Popenhagen said. "It is theater that is meant to be performed, rather than a play to be read. It's a fast-moving, colorful, action play."
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
other plays, I've been able to rely on my singing."
Timoner said he also struggled with the timing of Shakespeare's writing.
"I am an opera singer, and Wives was a different direction for me," Timoner said. "This is the first straight play I have been in. In
"There's a rhythm that is meant to be followed through the words, and that was difficult to find sometimes," he said. "But keeping and changing the rhythm is important for the audience."
1
Juliette Humphrey, a Shrewsbury, England, junior, never has been in a production as big as The Merry Wives of Windsor.
"This play is the highlight of my trip," said Humphrey, who is a study abroad student from the University of Wales. "It's a rare opportunity for me to get to perform on a stage as big as the Crafton-Prever."
Timoner said that rehearsals for the play had begun in late January and the process had been rushed.
"We only had one month to put it together, and we're still working some details out," he said.
Popenhagen said he enjoyed
Students take part a dress rehearsal for Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor. The play will be performed at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
watching the play, knowing the work that had gone into it.
"There are so many eccentric
characters, and it's a pleasure watching the actors find their characters," he said.
Cloning makes for bright future
By Jeff Ruby
Kansan staff writer
I don't care what they say. Cloning is the answer to all of our problems, or at least all of mine.
A few ambitious scientists announced last week perhaps the biggest biological breakthrough of the century. Taking DNA from the mammary glands of a Scottish sheep, they managed to clone an exact replica.
Lots of folks are up in arms, quick to point out the ethical responsibility scientists now face. We're told it soon will be possible to clone human beings. The implications, scientists say, could be disastrous. Biologists could create a master race, a group of people so genetically similar that a single virus could wipe them all out. We're continually reminded that human cloning is not only immoral, it also will be illegal.
COMMENTARY
What a shame.
Our quality of life would improve tenfold if the brilliant Scots allowed me to clone the following people:
■ Gary Larson, the guy who drew The Far Side. Maybe his duplicate wouldn't mind continuing the original's brilliant comic strip. This action alone would
harmoniously bring together all walks of life worldwide.
Five Wilt Chamberlains and five Michael Jordans. They could play the best basketball game of all time. We'd find out if Wilt, as he says, is really the greatest ever. Chamberlain's replicas could improve the economy, causing staggering effects on the stock market by lifting the Trojan company to its best quarterly earnings ever.
Countless George Lucases.
This way, we wouldn't have to wait until 1999 to see the next Star Wars movie. Hell, if we make enough Lucases, they could crank out one of those bad boys every couple of weeks.
Chewbacca could have his own film.
U2. I'd love to see if the group's unnatural offspring could make more great albums on par with The Joshua Tree, or if the new Bono and the boys would jump straight to their crappy, techno, Kmart, rock star posing.
- The entire nation of Canada.
I'm not sure why. Maybe to see if they'd still pronounce "sorry" as "sorey" and "out" as "oot."
to fix Courtney Love's DNA to make her disintegrate or something.
Mike Tyson. I'd fork out $49.95 for pay-per-view to watch the two of them beat the (explative) out of each other. Then we could clone Riddick Bowe to see if a pre-millionaire Bowe could cut it in the Marines, or if he was just a spoiled brat to begin with.
Hey, as long as we're cloning,
maybe we could figure out a way
Jason Sutherland, Missouri Tigers' infamous hoopster. A pack of wolves could raise the little tyke, and we could see if his demeanor improves.
The hit-and-run drunk driver whose car rear-ended mine last summer on 23rd Street. Maybe the two of them could have a head-on collision, leaving them to suffer in adjoining rooms at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
George Burns. But let's take away his cigars and see if he still lives to be 100. While we're at it, let's place him in a recording studio 24 hours a day with our clones of The Spice Girls and see how long he lasts.
So you see, a lot of interesting experiments and potentially satisfying situations would arise if we legalized cloning. Ethics, schmethics. Give me the zany exploits of 43 Joe Pescis and let the fun begin.
Residence hall laundry machines to be replaced
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
One thousand students in University residence halls have complained that washing machines and driers did not work well.
Randy Timm, assistant director for the department of student housing, said that since the Association of University Residence Halls distributed a petition to all residence halls Feb. 21, about 1,000 signatures had been collected.
Timm said the petition from students would be passed along to the housing department, the state purchasing office and Jetz Service Company Inc. in Topeka.
Many students complained that driers did not dry clothes completely, and that clothes often had to be out through two or three cycles.
"I think the machines are junk," said Lindsay Yantzi, Kemmerer, Wyo., freshman. "I heard a rumor that they would change washing machines and driers during Christmas break. It's really disappointing that they didn't."
The housing department planned to change laundry facilities last year and submitted the request to the University's Purchasing Office, Timm sad.
Diane Goddard, director of the
Purchasing Office, said that the state and University's purchasing offices both approved the request from the housing department last year and placed a bid.
Goddard said that the bid had been closed when a vendor protested that the specification was too restrictive because it required the vendor to replace all machines and to include smart-card features, which allow students to prepay for laundry services.
"We recognize those machines need to be replaced," Goddard said. "But this is a huge capital outlet. We decided we need to pull back for six months or so until we can provide more information about equipment."
The Purchasing Office is in the process of revising the specification, Goddard said. It will be rebidding again this month and a new vendor will be supplying new machines by the beginning of the summer semester.
Timm said that, even though the Purchasing Office is scheduled to rebid, he hoped the petition would be helpful because it showed that a large number of students were displeased with the service.
"If 1000 students said there was a problem with the service, I think it is very significant," Timm said.
Scholarship to be given for activism
By Amy Rush
Special to the Kansan
The scholarship is the first of its kind in the University's history.
A University of Kansas student who demonstrates activism and supports the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community will be awarded a $500 scholarship next fall.
The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Community Leader Scholarship began in December 1991 with a letter and a check for $500. Chris Caldwell, Los Angeles resident and 1979 KU graduate, donated the money to the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
In the letter, Caldwell told of friend and fellow KU graduate, Don Green, who had died of AIDS-related complications earlier that year.
Caldwell and Green met at KU in 1979 but did not come out to each other until they met again in 1989
"I would like to think that this would have happened sooner if gay and lesbian students had been more visible when we were at KU," Caldwell wrote. "I hope that the enclosed check will help further your mission."
A minimum of $10,000 is required by the Kansas University Endowment Association to officially endow a scholarship. Since the letter was received, funds for the scholarship have been raised by the Gay and Lesbian Alumni Association, Gay and Lesbian Academics and Staff Advocates, Straight Allies, the graduate assistants of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Concerns, members of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, LesBiGay Services of Kansas and KU Queers and Allies.
Former Olympic diver Greg Louganis, who spoke at KU during the 1995 Awareness Week, donated his $5,000 honorarium to the scholarship fund. KU alumnus Kenneth George donated enough money to meet the final $10,000 goal so the scholarship could be available for fall.
Applications can be picked up in front of the scholarship office at 33 Strong Hall, in the KU Queers and Allies office at 423 Kansas Union and in the Student Assistance Center at 22 Strong Hall. Any student enrolling for fall can apply. The application is due March 14.
Sexual orientation does not have to be disclosed and will not be a factor in determining the recipient.
The winner will be announced in April during Pride Week, an event sponsored by KU Queers and Allies.
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Thursday, March 6, 1997
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Editorials
Of-age smokers may get burned with ID requests, but it's worth it
The Food and Drug Administration's recent decision to make ID checks more stringent on people buying tobacco products is a good one. Although young-looking adults will experience some inconveniences and indignities, the aim
— to curb smoking among minors — superers these problems.
The implementation of this program is a simple way to achieve a reduction in the number of minors who begin smoking at an early age. No amount of TV advertisements, posters or high school programs can stop minors from buying cigarettes.
Thus, this simpler, more effective measure has been adopted to help combat the problem of underage smoking. The new policy states that individuals who appear 27 years old or younger must have their IDs checked by the retailer. Understandably, some people who are legally old enough to buy
tobacco are upset when they are carded. An ID such as a driver's license might not be carried by someone who expects to be sold tobacco with no ID check.
Carrying a driver's license isn't too much to ask of people buying tobacco.
But carrying a driver's license is not a great burden, nor is it asking anything unreasonable of smokers. Minors need to be kept from illegally buying tobacco, and this goal is far more important than a few individuals' inconvenience.
Additionally, measure like this have been implemented with other controlled substances, such as alcohol, with similar results. Although at some stores it is relatively easy for minors to buy alcohol, ID checks, or at least the threat of one, do keep some minorns
from purchasing alcohol. Likewise, before the Food and Drug Administration took this action, it was far easier for minors to buy tobacco products. The ID checks will make buying tobacco as a minor comparable to buying alcohol as a minor. Both are illegal, and both are limited by ID checks.
Despite the inconveniences inflicted on people buying tobacco, a change needed to be made to curb underage smoking. This decision is best and easily executed by the act of checking identification.
Identifying people who are not allowed by law to buy tobacco is made easier, albeit at the expense of some legitimate smokers. Although some may complain of the injustice of being forced to carry a driver's license to buy cigarettes, the well-being of youth overrides a customer's desire for a quick smoke.
GERRY DOYLE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Morning-after pills give second chance
American women have just been given a new way to prevent pregnancy, but most of them don't know it. The Food and Drug Administration recently announced that large doses of certain birth control pills can safely and effectively prevent pregnancy if taken within the first 72 hours after unprotected sex. The approval of emergency contraception, sometimes referred to as morning-after pills, will give women a new freedom from the burden of an unplanned pregnancy, but only if women are informed about their options.
Emergency contraception is important. For women who were raped, whose contraception failed, or who neglected to use birth control, emergency contraception is a second chance at preventing pregnancy. Although it is only about 75 percent effective, it could still prevent as many as 2.3 million unplanned pregnancies each year, said
Emergency contraception should be made more available to women.
James Truffel, a researcher at Princeton University who has studied the pills. Normally, about one million of those unplanned pregnancies end in abortion.
According to an article by The Associated Press, large doses of birth control pills act to prevent a fertilized egg from even implanting in the uterus, thus preventing the pregnancy from occurring in the first place. This is unlike the abortion pill RU-486, which causes a growing fetus to be expelled from the womb.
but few doctors in the United States have known the proper doses to give women, so it was rarely suggested as an option. So although emergency contraception was not illegal in the United States, it might as well have been since so few were able to use it. The FDA's announcement will give doctors the knowledge needed to offer this choice to women, but unless women know the option is out there, they won't be able to take advantage of it.
Now that this important step in allowing the pills has been taken, we must not fail at the next step: educating women about their options. Emergency contraception has been common in Europe for years,
Of course, there are still many reasons to practice safe sex, and women should not be misled into thinking emergency contraception is a foolproof method for preventing pregnancy. However, even if emergency contraception can prevent 75 percent of unplanned pregnancies and the fear and heartache that goes along with them, it will be a great service to women and families. Let's get the word out.
KAREN CHANDLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
The University offers you a chance to interact with about 1,700 international students from more than 100 different countries. Let me explain how fun it is to meet people from different cultures and how you can enrich your future by taking advantage
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kimberly Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (isulivan@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Welcome to the University of Kansas. Here, at the home of the Kansas Jayhawks, you can sample more than 100 different cultures of the world.
What if I told you that you could experience faraway cultures, exotic people and unique customs, and that you could have all of this and more without leaving the comfort of Lawrence?
+
Columns
University can offer taste of others' culture
nature by taking advantage of the cultural diversity of the University.
NAMKYU
PARK
Andy Rohrback / KANSAN
You will probably be pleasantly surprised to find both dramatic differences and unbelievable similarities between your culture and others.
By making friends with international students, you have a special opportunity to gain insight into different culture, an experience you could never get just from reading a textbook.
One obvious difference between yourself and students from another culture is the languages. You probably worry about language barriers, which
I wish I had more space to elaborate all the fun things those Americans and I shared together. We were really different from one another, but at least one thing we had in common was that we were willing to understand, tolerate and eventually appreciate our differences. Those days we had immeasurable fun together would, no doubt, remain as some of the best moments of my life.
Those of you who still worry about language barriers might be encouraged to know that research shows that the average American speaks for only 10 to 11 minutes a day, and that more than 65 percent of the social meaning of a
typical two-person exchange comes from non-verbal cues. What power our body language has. Any way you choose to communicate, verbal or non-verbal, you surely would have tons of fun interacting with international friends.
could make you feel uncomfortable around international students. Misunderstandings between you and someone from another culture are bound to happen. But misunderstandings can be part of the fun of meeting international students. When I first came to the United States, some fabulous American friends of mine and I had a hilariously fun time with the misunderstandings caused by my foreign accent.
And having international friends means not only having fun but enriching your own life. By taking advantage of the diversity of the University population, your empathetic ability could be richer.
One day, my American friends asked me where in Korea I would recommend that they see. I began to answer that there are a lot of beaches there. My friends burst into laughter, and, being the guys that they were, they mistook my pronunciation of beaches as a referral to women. Then they just stared at me in amazement.
Then they helped me realize it was my misprunciation that made their day. From that time
Your ability to tolerate, understand and appreciate cross-cultural differences would definitely be
At first, I didn't know why those rascales were turning into drooling beasts.
Experience worlds of fun, and enrich your life at the same time.
Do not pass up this golden opportunity to make friends with international students, because after you leave the University, it will likely be much harder to find such a diverse cultural population in one place.
a valuable asset to you in the course of your life. The empathetic ability that results from sincere effort to accommodate and enjoy differences would surely enable you to better handle other things related to human interactions. Without this ability, your efforts to sustain an interpersonal relationship will be hindered.
Take advantage of this opportunity not only for the sake of befriending international students, but for your own sake. To experience is to believe.
on, those guys tenaciously begged me to entertain them with my fabulous Korean accent. As a master of Konglish, which is Korean-like English, I was always generous enough to accommodate them.
Namikyu Park la Chonglu, S. Korea, Ph.D., candidate specializing in teaching English as a second language.
Letters
Med Center causes much confusion
I was pleased to see a story in the Feb. 18 University Daily Kansasan about the University of Kansas Medical Center that was about the school rather than the hospital. I was even more pleasantly surprised to note that the story was about programs in the School of Allied Health, although it was not mentioned by name.
For example, it is even more difficult to get advising for Allied Health majors than for the schools based in Lawrence. Also, advanced placement credit can cause great confusion.
I feel, however, that it is only fair to issue a warning to all of those who may be interested in pursuing a major at the Med Center. It is not always as easy as the article makes it sound.
In my situation, I had tested out of six credit hours of English, which was enough for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, but not enough for occupational therapy. I had talked to at least two advisers and had called the Kansas City office several times to figure out how I needed to take care of it. Finally, after being accepted into the program, I was told that I was no longer eligible to receive the National Merit Scholarship that I had in Lawrence, because I was attending a totally different institution. I appealed that particular decision, but it wasn't until a full eight, and a half months after I started school at the Med Center that I finally received my money.
Julina Lambson Columbia, Mo., junior
I almost gagged on my Wesco chuckwagon ham when, after reading further, I found the reasons he gave were totally invalid.
I am writing in response to Namkyu Park's column in which he claimed that his client was arrested because of a limited proficiency in English.
Clay Kaufman Chesterfield, Mo., senior
Park, please, next time you feel the urge to cry out in discrimination, just relax, take a deep breath, count to 10, and try to look at the situation objectively before jumping to paranoida-based conclusions.
First of all, didn't his client's dad call the police because "he was mentally ill, and one day he was having a fit?" Obviously, the situation was out of control to the point where the dad was fearful enough to call police. Sure, an interpreter would have helped police deal with the situation more effectively, but perhaps one was not available soon enough to allow them to do so. Also, I do not claim to be an expert on law, but I've seen enough COPS episodes to know that in cases of domestic disturbances, one or both parties involved are sometimes taken into custody to prevent any ensuing squabbles.
This brings me to my next point, which is to remind Park that he was not there to witness the encounter with the police and that he assessed the situation through his client's eyes. I'm sure that if he talked to any others in police custody, they too would consider themselves innocent.
Jedi facts were wrong in Bishop's column
In response to Robert Bishop's column on March 3, it is not Princess Leia dancing in the open scenes of The Return of the Jedi. It is the green woman with the horn-type things. And she gets eaten. Princess Leia enters as a bounty hunter and ends up chained to Jabba, which is how he meets his end — she chokes him with his chain.
Stefanie Moore Lawrence senior
Alpha Delta Pi women handling challenge well
As a former executive director of Rock Chalk Revue, I can appreciate the challenges that the cast and advisory board of the Revue face each year. However, this year's cast and board were confronted with an extra challenge when Pike was pulled from the Revue. So far, I think the cast, especially the women of Alpha Delta Pi, and the advisory board have met this challenge with great spirit.
At Monday night's rehearsal, there were so many volunteers that some had to be turned away after tryouts. Being there to see the support and enthusiasm from the men volunteering to act was truly heart-warming. These men deserve the deepest thanks and praise.
An almost unimaginable amount of work is in store for Alpha Delta Pi and the volunteers, but the show will go on. I have no doubt that it will be a huge success. With such a great show of support, it is already a success. It is my hope that the KU community will show their support by attending this history-making Revue. Break a leg!
Tom Field Olathe graduate student
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 6, 1997
5
Brasco defies mob genre
Audience can relate to film's characters
TED BRENNAN
By Jeff Ruby
Kansan staff writer
Donnie Brasco (Johnny Depp) walks in Brooklyn, N.Y., with his Mafioso,
Lefty (Al Pacino), in the Mfa film, *Donnie Brasco*.
CONTRIBUTED ART
In the dubious distinction of most overdone cinema genres, mobster movies place second only to war films. Do we really need another movie about street-tough wise guys?
Apparently so. Donnie Brasco, which examines the concept of betrayal, proves that there are endless themes to explore in any genre, no matter how treaded the terrain.
Try to block out of your mind the images of Mafa glamour and excess that classics such as The Godfather beat into you like a lead pipe in the kneecaps. Mike Newell's Donnie Brasco shows gangsters who are struggling to make ends meet. These likable, small-time thugs are so desperate for moolah that they break into parking meters for change to pay off their boss.
Johnny Depp stars as Joe Pistone, an FBI agent who adopts the persona of Donnie Brasco. As Brasco, he pretends to be a small-time jewel thief to infiltrate a segment of the Brooklyn Mafia. He immediately gets noticed by Lefty (Al Pacino), a pathetic Mafioso with a heart of gold.
Lefty, who has no respect for his own son, takes Brasco under his wing. By vouching for the newcomer, the overly trusting Lefty ties his own destiny to Donnie's. If the mob finds out that the old-timer's new protege is a Fed, Lefty's life wouldn't be worth a nickel.
Next thing we know, Brasco is knee deep in the bloody exploits of Lefty's group of New York hoodlums. Meanwhile, Brasco grows attached to his mentor and is tortured at the thought of eventually turning against him.
REVIEW
Pistone's new life as Brasco forces him to be absent from his home for weeks at a time, and his caring family isn't too thrilled — particularly when Brasco's harsh disposition seems to overpower Pistone's personality.
The main strength of Donnie Brasco comes from the fact that the audience should have no trouble relating to its characters. We couldn't possibly imagine waking up with a horse's head in our bed, a la The Godfather. But this film shows regular guys goofing around on the tennis court and impishly burying each other in the sand on the beach.
Depp delivers his best performance to date. He always has been an underrated actor in offbeat roles, from What's Eating Gilbert Grape? to Ed Wood. But now he enters the big leagues with a striking bit of acting.
But Pacino steals the show, as he
always seems to do, and the veteran actor shows he can play low-key roles. We've grown accustomed to seeing him in flashy, over-the-top roles in recent films such as Heat and Scent of a Woman. The sadness and frustration of his character have a way of jumping right off the screen into our hearts. We can tell Left doesn't like bloodshed and we genuinely worry about him in every scene.
Donnie Brasco's 1978 Brooklyn and South Florida settings are authentic right down to the discos, wide collars and huge glasses no 1997 wise guy would be caught dead in.
Director Mike Newell has added an interesting character study to the overflowing mob movie genre. After 1990's Goodfellas, Martin Scorsese's quintessential Mafia film, audiences were certain that there was no reason to make another movie about the often-explored Mafia themes.
Donnie Brusco proved us all wrong.
Semiautomatic weapon use on rise
By Sean Demory Kansan staff reporter
Last week's bank-robbery-turned shootout in Los Angeles, involving military-style semiautomatic weapons, illustrates a rising trend; the use of semiautomatic weapons in crime.
According to a Los Angeles Times article, the two robbers were carrying either AK-47 or SKS assault rifles.
The 1994 Assault Weapons Ban,
which made it illegal to import or transfer 19 types of assault weapons has not proven as effective as hoped.
Legislation before the Kansas Legislature that will allow citizens to carry concealed firearms has been presented as a defensive measure against armed crime.
Bill Arnold, associate professor of sociology, said, "I'm just afraid that the number of accidents that happen will offset the number of people who
successfully defend themselves." Arnold said.
Larry Scott, public information officer for the Kansas City field division of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, said, "The civilian version of the SKS assault rifle, for instance, is available through sporting goods stores or even through the newspaper," Scott said, noting an classified advertisement in Tuesday's Kansas City Star.
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Abortion bill revived
Republicans push for late-term ban after lie admitted
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Emboldened by the admitted lie of a key abortion rights supporter, congressional Republicans renewed the push yesterday for legislation banning a certain late-term abortion procedure.
A principal GOP leader in the anti-abortion movement said President Bill Clinton, who vetoed the bill last year, should have a chance to get it right now that activist Ron Fitzsimmons said that he lied.
Abortion rights supporters pledged to keep fighting the bill.
"The facts have not changed; they've just been discovered by the media and now the general public," said Rep. Charles Canady, R-Fla., the prime House sponsor. "And the outrage about partial-birth abortion which began as a strong current is
Fitzsimmons, executive director of the National Coalition of Abortion Providers in Alexandria, Va., said last week he had lied in 1995 when he said that just a few hundred of the abortions were performed annually — and then only to save the mother's life or abort deformed fetuses.
now at flood stage."
Now, congressional Republicans are calling on Clinton, who supports a woman's right to an abortion, to reverse course and agree to the ban.
He now says that several thousand are performed yearly, and not only in the third trimester, but on some healthy women in the middle of pregnancy.
"I think we ought to give the president another chance to get it right," said Rep. Henry Hye, R-ill, a long-time abortion opponent.
Clinton said he vetoed the bill because it didn't make an exception for the mother's health. But the ban's sponsors said there was no health reason to perform the procedure, in which the fetus is partially delivered through the birth canal and killed when a doctor removes its brain.
"I think we ought to give the president another chance to get it right."
Henry Hyde Illinois State Representative
The new bill, which is identical to what Congress had passed, does permit use of the procedure if there is no other way to spare the mother's life.
White House representative Mike McCurry said Clinton had insisted that the bill safeguard a woman's health and life. He recalled that Clinton issued the veto in the presence of women who said the procedure saved them and said that those memories were still fresh in Clinton's mind.
Kansas City portly but proud
Cow Town ranked as fourth-fattest city in United States
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — There's the Scarsdale diet and the Beverly Hills diet — but how about the Kansas City diet?
It appears to contain more fat than most, since a recent study placed the Cow Town, known for its red meat, fourth on a national list of cities with the highest percentage of obese adults.
It's no wonder, says Kansas City Star food critic John Martellaro, whose column yesterday extolled the richness — and fattiness — of the Kansas City victuals.
"Why is Kansas City the fourth-fattest city in the country? Two words: Stroud's, Gates," said Martellaro, referring to two of the city's most famous eateries — one known for fried chicken, the other for barbecue.
"Sure, Los Angeles and San Francisco have terrific restaurants. But they're 25th and 26th on the list because their
specialties depend heavily on healthful, low-fat foods such as seafood and vegetables," he said. "In Kansas City, cauliflower is something you deep fry to serve as an appetizer."
The National Weight Report classified 32 percent of Kansas City adults, ages 20 to 74, as obese. New Orleans ranked first with 38 percent. Denver had the lowest percentage of the 33 cities surveyed with 22 percent.
The heaviest cities tended to have higher unemployment rates, a larger proportion of African Americans, lower per-capita incomes, more rain and snow, and more food stores and restaurants. That doesn't describe Kansas City, so other factors may be involved.
"Kansas City suffers from the Midwestern complex," said Karen Miller-Kovach, general manager of program development for Weight Watchers. "Just good, hardy farmer food in a time when most people don't live on the farm anymore—and it shows."
Many of the low-fat cities were in areas known for active, body-conscious lifestyles, such as Los Angeles and Miami.
But Kansas Citians might not be as active as residents of slimmer cities.
"Six months out of the year, I have people telling me it's too cold for them to exercise," said Carrie Lehr, a physician with the Medical Weight Management program at Research Medical Center.
"Maybe they're out shoveling snow," Lehr said.
But what about residents of Minneapolis, Minn., the second-thinnest city on the list?
"It could be that it's not as important to the self-image of Midwesterners to be fit and trim," said Loy Edge, owner of two restaurants. "Wherever you can find the haute couture and the Mercedes-Benzes and a location near the ocean and mountains, you're going to find slim waistlines."
Local restaurateurs who specialize in high-calorie, fat-laden menus said that they were just catering to Kansas City's tastes.
"It's trendy on the coasts to eat roots and bark and run around," said Gary Cooper, general manager of Gates Bar-B-Q. "Here, people just want to eat a good meal."
Transplant makes chickens like quail
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — When is a chicken not a chicken? When it sings and bobs its head like a quail, thanks to an experimental brain-cell transplant.
In what sounds like something out of a B horror movie, Evan Balaban, an experimental neurobiologist at the Neurosciences Institute in San Diego, carried out the switch.
"The larger implications are what this will teach us about the development of brain circuits that produce
behavior," Balaban said yesterday. "It could eventually help people who have brain damage or mental illness or even brain diseases."
His research on Plymouth Rock chickens and Japanese quail was published Tuesday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Although different from cloning, his work is adding to the furor over genetic experimentation.
Balaban does not see his work as opening the way for people with socially unacceptable behavior being forced to undergo brain surgery.
"There's no good reason to do this in humans," Balaban said. "It's not technically possible to do this in mammals anyway. There are some enormous obstacles that would have to be overcome."
Balaban incubated fertilized quail and chicken eggs for 48 hours and then cut tiny windows in the shells. Cells in the chicken embryo were removed and substituted with corresponding quail brain cells.
The chickens were killed after 14 days to further document the results with brain examinations.
Albanian revolts lead to bombing
The Associated Press
SARANDA, Albania — Government jets bombed a southern town yesterday, and anti-government militants commandeered tanks and fired anti-aircraft guns as weeks of unrest erupted into an armed revolt in southern Albania.
The two sides fired at each other across a river east of Vlora, the city at the center of the conflict. Albania's foreign minister, meanwhile, said that the situation in Vlora, Saranda and Delvina was out of control.
Yesterday's bombing and a major security operation launched by the government reflected President Sali Berisha's determination to quickly end the growing insurrection.
In Rome, Italian Foreign Minister Lamberto Dini said his Albanian counterpart, Tritan Shehu, had told him the insurgents had captured three tanks and many other weapons and aimed to seize Tirana, the capital.
Southerners warned the government not to provoke them.
Ilias Sideris, an armed protester, said, "If they move into Saranda, Albania will see the worst bloodshed ever."
Two months of protests by Albanians who lost savings in shady investment schemes culminated in anti-government violence, which led Berisha to declare a state of emergency Sundav.
U. S. Secretary of Defense William Cohen said there was no need yet to evacuate Americans
AUSTRIA HUNGARY ROMANIA BELGRADE DONNA SEBRA BULGARIA Adriatic Sea MONTENEGRO MACEDONA ALBANIA Saranda ITALY GREECE Aegean Sea AREA OF DETAIL
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in washington, D.C., White House spokesman Mike McCurry said President Clinton was concerned about the situation in Albania and viewed with some alarm Berisha's re-election earlier this week by parliament.
British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind said Berisa must respect the rule of law if he wanted to get crucial financial aid from other European nations.
"We are not prepared to give support when he acts in an authoritarian and dictatorial way and that, sadly, has been an increasing feature of his regime," Riffkind said yesterday.
The air attack came early yesterday, when MIG-15 warplanes dropped a bomb next to two houses in the village of Delvina near Saranda. Journalists witnessed the bombing and saw smoke from two bombs dropped on nearby mountains.
About 400 families, mostly ethnic Greeks, live in Delvina. It was not clear if anyone was hurt. Anti-aircraft guns overlooking Saranda fired at the jets that flew over the port.
The Associated Press
Breast implants riskier for cancer patients with mastectomies
Women who get breast implants after mastectomies for cancer are nearly three times more likely to have surgical complications than those who get implants for cosmetic reasons, a Mayo Clinic study found.
Dr. Sherine E. Gabriel, the lead researcher, said that the findings were no surprise.
"Women with breast cancer ... have a serious underlying condition. They would have more problems with any kind of surgery," she said.
In addition, because of the cancer surgery, the implants cannot always be put in the best place; they have to be put where the breast tissue was cut out, Gabriel said.
In the latest research, Mayo Clinic researchers looked at women who had breast implants from 1964 to
1991: 532 for cosmetic reasons, 125 after breast cancer surgery and 92 after breast removal to prevent cancer. They published the results in today's New England Journal of Medicine.
Overall, 24 percent of the women had at least one complication requiring further surgery. Scar tissue formation that deformed or hardened the implant was by far the most common problem, affecting 18 percent of the women.
Implants ruptured in 6 percent of the women and leaked in 2 percent, while fewer than 1 percent had a malfunction in an inflatable implant.
After five years, about 12 percent of women with cosmetic implants had a complication requiring further surgery. Women who had implants after breast cancer surgery had a 34 percent risk of complications, while those who had a preventive mastectomy had a 30 percent risk.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 6, 1997
7
Kansas should be proud
Campus can boast two winning teams
March Madness is officially six days old. There should be no talk of anything but college basketball from now until March 31, especially at the University of Kansas.
We have the Big 12 men's player of the year, Raef LaFrentz; the Big 12 women's player of the year, Tamecka Dixon; the Big 12 men's coach of the year, Roy Williams; and the Big 12 women's coach of the year, Marian Washington. Both teams won their respective Big 12 championships this season, and both have a legitimate shot at winning their respective conference tournaments.
The men are guaranteed a No.1 seed and the women should get a No.2 seed.
No other school comes close to this long list of basketball accolades. The University and its basketball programs are truly in a class by themselves.
With that in mind, let me get you ready with some preliminary thoughts about the tournament, selection guidelines and tips:
SPORTS COLUMNIST
The team with the No. 1 overall seed (Kansas) in the tournament will go one of two places, either the first round site that is closest to the school's home (Memphis, Tenn., is 300 miles closer to Lawrence than Auburn Hills, Mich.) or the
JOHN ERCK
region with the most advantageous final location.
Two teams from the same conference cannot be among the top four seeds in the same region. North Carolina, Duke and Wake Forest all will have to be sent to different regionals.
The best team in the tournament plays the worst team. Kansas, no matter what region it is in, will play Fairfield, winner of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference tournament. Fairfield has a losing record.
The Kansas women, although ranked ninth, should get a No. 2 seed in the tournament if they do well in the Big 12 tournament. Three Southeastern Conference teams are ahead of the Jayhawks in the polls. Chances are one of them will get knocked off.
The No.1 seeds for the men's basketball tournament will be Kansas, Minnesota, the winner of the SEC Tournament (either Kentucky or South Carolina) and the winner of the ACC Tournament (North Carolina, Wake Forest or Duke).
The Big 12 will get five men's teams in the tournament — Kansas, Colorado, Iowa State, Texas and Texas Tech. The women should get the same five teams into the NCAA (should is the operative word). There will be no Cinderellas in either the men's or women's conference tournament. The top teams are far better than the second tier.
The SEC has seven teams ranked in the top 25 women's basketball poll, and as many as eight could make the NCAA Tournament. Can the whole conference really be that good? Only the tournament will tell.
The connection between Kansas and North Carolina basketball continues. The two schools are the only ones distinguished enough to have both their men's and women's basketball teams ranked in the top 10.
Aries (March 21-April 19) "Today is a 6."
Does it be harsh to one who means well but doesn't seem to understand what's going on. He or she may know more than you realize. An assertive person offers good advice, but it's a contemplative one who will lead you to the path with heart.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) - Today is a 7.
Old person asks everything done according to the book. You know ways to cut costs, but you might as well keep them to yourself. If you naked, offer your opinion. Otherwise, don't bother. The boss is more concerned about other things.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)-Today is a 6
HOROSCOPES
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is a 6.
If you've got a business deal pending, the decision's already been made. All you have to do is follow through. That's a good feature for the entire day, actually. Exercise caution when dealing with older people, authority figures and women.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is a 7.
This isn't a good day to start on your world
cruise. But it's not bad for paying bills and
fine-tuning your budget. You know you want
to get away. The question is how and when?
How is a variable, but when is this weekend.
Make it happen.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 6.
our (Q2) 19-A3-Ann-22] 'toy' is a
you're good at most things, but some leave you
people with disabilities, and you leave people
already from your yorks. Abandon your footlash
pride and ask for help. Meanwhile, is here
something we promised to do? Don't forget
that you need the cash.
Virgo (Aug, 23-Sep, 22) - Today is a 7.
Virgil (Argus 2-3-Sap 2-) today? First, make a date for later tonight. Second, get into your hotel room and let them do it. Don't get into a tougher spot than the one you're in already. One who seems slightly dorky knows more than you think. Be nice and you'll be more successful.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is an 8,
you're so much in love you can't stand to
be parted from your sweetheart for a minute.
Unfortunately, you have an agreement to be
somewhere else. After that obligation has
been met, you can retire to the privacy of your
own little nest. Do that.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)- Today is a 6.
Dig around in the archives and you may find something that's been hidden for years. A hunch could lead you to pay dirt. Speaking of intuition, your sweetheart's pretty good at that right now. If you have any roommates, listen to them, too.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Today is an 8.
Buy something you've researched and thought about extensively, items purchased on a whim won't work out nearly as well. A female friend can help you get what you want with out hurting a sensitive person's feelings. Talk about an action you're contemplating.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 7.
Although youll learn and good looking, you shouldn't start new projects. You're safe if you do pretty much what you've done before.
Stick to the routine. Buy things that are on your list and pass up the frills.
Pieces (Feb. 19-March 20) - Today is an 8.
You're incredibly powerful - and getting even stronger.
This weekend you'll be a vertable dynamo. Get ready. Finish up everything on all of your lists. You are always imaginative and creative, but starting tomorrow afternoon you'll be awesome.
the world is getting smaller
smell better.
don't imitate
INNOVATE
check it out at your
campus bookstore.
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Thursday, March 6, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Poster prompts T.J. Pugh Fan Club
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
Something unexpected happened to Marian Hulke last spring when she was tucking her daughter into bed.
After the graduate teaching assistant gave her daughter a good night kiss, she saw a familiar face.
"Right as I lifted my head, I was staring right at T.J.'s face on a poster going, 'I know that guy, he's in my class,' Hulke said.
Although Kansas sophomore forward T.J. Pugh was a student in Hukle's Business Calculus 115 in the spring semester last year, the teacher did not realize he was a basketball player until she saw him on a team poster in her daughter's room.
What followed would change the lesson plans of her calculus class and the complexion of Snow Hall.
TJ Push
Fan Club
Hukle, who is responsible for the T.J. Pugh Fan Club sign overlooking Jayhawk Boulevard in Snow Hall, began to take a more sporting approach to preparing her students for a test.
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
"Everything in class became basketball analogies," Hukle said. "OK, we're going into this midterm exam," Hukle would say, doing her best Rory Williams imitation with both fists clinched. "And we're going to be ready!"
Marian Hukle, founder of the T.J. Pugh Fan Club, stands in front of the club's sign in a Snow Hall window. Hukle is Pugh's calculus instructor.
So much did Hukle enjoy the hard work Pugh last spring that she promised another student in the class, Angela Kopp, Lenexa sophomore, that she would start the T.J. Pugh Fan Club.
Living up to her promise, Hukle erected the sign during winter break.
Although membership is still small - just four members (Hukle, her two daughters and Kopp) - recognition has been overflowing.
"It's like I've got everybody's attention because they'll come by and poke their head in the door and say, 'Your boy's playing good,' she said.
Hukle said Pugh was a model student.
Although his shy demeanor doesn't allow Pugh to flaunt his fanclub status, he appreciated Hukle's backing.
"It's nice to have that kind of support," the soft-spoken Pugh said, chuckling. "She was a great teacher, and I really enjoyed the class."
"He was one of the really good students," she said. "And what was amazing was even though basketball made for a difficult schedule, I always got his homework, and he always did well on his exams.
"he never slacked off at all in the class." Hukle said.
Since Pugh completed her class, Hukle said she had talked with Pugh twice.
"At the end, he came to me and said, 'Thank you. I'm doing well because you're a good teacher,'" Hukle said. "And I saw him at the end of 116, which is the class that follows mine, and he said he did well because I prepared him well."
Pugh, an Omaha, Neb, native, was as Academic All-Big Eight Honorable Mention player last season.
Hukle said she held Pugh in high regard not only for his athletic ability and his intellect but also for his character.
man," Hukle said. "Whoever his parents are did a great job raising him. He's so charming and polite. T.J.'s just an all around great kid." After amputing time with Hukle.
"He's such an incredible gentle-
one realizes that the teacher does not have a bitter word to say about her former student.
After spending time with Huke,
But why would she? She is his No. 1 fan.
Home run completes Jayhawk comeback
Bayhawks
28 27
Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
Outfielder Les Walrond celebrates after hitting the game-winning home run against Nebraska.
Kansan Staff report
The Kansas baseball team rebounded from Tuesday's loss to Wichita State by coming from behind to defeat Nebraska 4-3 yesterday at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
It was the second time this season that Kansas has defeated the Cornhuskers.
The Jayhawks improved their overall record to 7-5 and 3-2 in the Big 12 Conference. The Cornhuskers fell to 5-7 for the season and 0-2 in the Big 12.
Kansas pitcher Linus Williams earned the victory after relieving Rusty Philbrick in the seventh inning. Philbrick came in for starting pitcher Aric Peters, who tallied four strikeouts. Steve Fish took the loss for Nebraska.
Kansas trailed 3-0 in the fourth inning before the team recorded two runs in the third inning. Kansas also scored up a run in the seventh.
Then, with the score tied 3-3,
right fielder Les Walrand blasted a solo home run in the eighth inning to clinch the win.
The series concludes at 3 p.m. today at Hoglund-Maupin.
Where: Regionalists Room
Pre-Occupational Therapy Club Meeting
Time: 8:30 pm
Pre-Occupational Therapy
When: Tuesday, March 11, 1997
Topic: Elections
March is Women's History Month
Do We Take Women's Right to Vote For Granted?
Women are paying more attention to the political issues that affect their lives. This program will celebrate the voting power of women.
Wednesday, March 12, 1997
7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Facilitators:
Jent Dodd and Renee Spetcher
Graduate Assistants
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
急救
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall, University of Kansas. For more information contact Jent Dodd at 864-3858.
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Kansan Classified
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H
100s Announcements
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
300s
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X
200s Employment
140 Lost and Found
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Servi-
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
235 Typing Services
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400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
****
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against persons under the age of 21 on sea, age, sea color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan 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 1986 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference' discrimination or disqualiation on base色, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status. Real estate advertisers must 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.
Golf seasons swing into play
The men will participate in the Louisiana Classic Invitational Intercollegiate Tournament on March 10-11
By Seth Hoffman Kansan sportswriter
in the 20-team field, the Jayhawks finished 48 strokes behind Oldahoma State, the only other Big 12 competitor and the tournament champion.
The men's and women's golf teams were in action this week in separate locations.
the women's team, led by Missy Russell, Beth Reuter and Susan Tessary, finished eight of 17 teams at the Bay Area Classic in Vallejo, Calif. All three women tied for 21st place after shooting 169 for 36 holes.
The men's golf team opened its spring season Monday in the Bridges All-American Intercollegiate Invitational in Mississippi. The Jayhawks finished in 10th place. They could not recover from a poor first-round team score of 310.
The Kansas women's team, the only Big 12 representative, shot a total of 676.
The women's team returns to action March 17 at the University of New Mexico Spring Invitational Tournament. The tournament lasts until March 19.
Kansas' only nationally ranked golfer, sophomore Chris Thompson, tied for 32nd with a three-round total of 224.
Kansas' top individual performance came from freshman Ryan Vermeer. In the first two rounds he shot 71 and 70 respectively. He then fell to 21st overall with a 79 in the final round for a total of 220.
Belle rings in new season as victim
By Matt Woodruff
A disgruntled man stormed into the newsroom this morning and unplugged all of the computers, claiming he was a messenger from God. He was shouting something about how the Kansan doesn't have enough respect for the people in Cleveland. Fortunately, security arrived and sedated the man before he seriously hurt anyone. If anyone knows who this guy is, please come by and pick him up.
Kansan sportswriter
Okay, so that didn't happen, but anything is possible. Just ask Albert Belle, the professional baseball player who was harassed by a man during spring training claiming that Belle did not respect the people of Cleveland.
MATT
WOODRUFF
■ When are opposing point guards going to learn not to talk trash about Jacque Vaughn before a game? Before the game on Sunday, Nebraska point guard Tyronn Lue said
point guard was not really an offensive threat. Let's vaughn was not really an unselfish point guard who contributes in many ways to a winning team or a ball hog who routinely scores in double figures and loses? Hmmm, let me think ...
I have always been a big fan of Iowa State running back Troy Davis, and feel that he was overlooked for two straight years in the Heisman Trophy voting. I was a little disappointed to hear about his extremely low score on an intelligence test. Obviously, a guy with Davis' talent has a future in pro football and doesn't exactly need to be a genius. He just needs to know when to run right, when to run left, and when to run up the middle. But six out of 50? Does he know right from left? I'm not trying to poke fun here, but I'm
SPORTS REPORTER
pretty sure Beavis and Butthead could swing at least a seven. 'C'mon, Troy, say it ain't so.
This is probably a bad time to bring this up, since we're kicking off March Madness, but it involves the potential loss of two big keys to the Jayhawks' success. Fans should not only be hoping that Raef LaFrentz returns for his senior year, but there also may be a job opening at North Carolina, Roy Williams' alma mater. But what am I worried about? They would never leave KU. Would they?
In other college basketball news, don't be surprised if Kansas State basketball coach Tom Asbury isn't in Manhattan next year. It seems that his wife, who is also employed by the university, is leaving her job with or without him. I would love to tell you all of the juicy details, but until I hear more, I'll have to keep it a secret.
Some alarming trends that seem to be developing in the sports world:
1. Boxing press conferences are more entertaining (and usually last longer) than the actual fights.
2. Some mediocre quarterbacks are getting paid some un-mediocre salaries.
3. In the college basketball polls, some people are still rocking Minnesota above Kansas.
4. Expansion teams are running out of names.
Tampa Bay Devil Rays? Please.
The Kansas City Chiefs had a great run in the past few years, but I'm afraid their downward spiral won't end this season. They still haven't landed any free agents who may have an impact, and team leaders, such as Derrick Thomas, are becoming frustrated with the front office. The dominating defense that carried the adequate offense in the last few seasons is dissolving, and last season's offense was less than adequate. It appears to be time for some rebuilding, and unless Greg Hill and Lake Dawson can do it all by themselves, the team probably won't make the playoffs for awhile. But they still will defeat the Raiders twice next season.
P
100s Announcements
105 Personals
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KU & A offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unsure. Please call KU Info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
110 Business Personals
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!
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120 Announcements
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Tired of the same old professions? Interested in being an information manager or broker? Stop by the Kansas Union on Friday March 7 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. to find out more. Sponsored by the Student Chapter of American Library Assoc.
Used Book Sale. March 7/8, 9 am-5pm. March 9
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125 Travel
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 6, 1997
1
125 Travel
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140 Lost & Found
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LOOKING FOR SWF, who is blonde, beautiful, around 5"6" and interested in a fun, loving relationship. Call Joe at 842-2467.
Men and Women
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Tail 748-3343 between 1:00 & 3:00 m.pk. ask for
surveys.
Local landscapes company accepting applications from motivated individuals. Irrigation, lawn care, and general experience helpful, but not essential. Call 843-1944 from 8-5.
Saferide is currently hiring drivers for the remainder of the Spring Semester. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. If interested contact Robert at the Lawrence Bus Co. 842-0544
Saint. John School seeks responsible individual who has experience w/children for its after school program $5.50/hour. To apply, contact Natalie Pahnsi 843-6511(day)s or 843-3884(evenings)
SWM in fourth grade needs spectacular watchmate with wheels to guide him through safe, fun summer at our southern Overland Park house. Call Barbie at (413) 685-2650 in evenings.
215-887-9700 or e-mail: pinetree@pond.com
Wanted 87 students. Lose 9-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough.Doctor recommended.Guaranteed $30 cost.Free gift.1-900-435-7591
Wanted-Personal Care Attendant for female quadriplegic. Female preferred, full and parttime openings. CNA preferred but not required. Call 865-0616
CAMP COUNSELORS Overnight camps in Pocono Mtns. of PA Over 40 activities - Seeking general and specialist counselors
Highly organized female who is good with children, needed to be mother's helper. 10:20 hr. per week. Must be available on Monday through Friday. Exemption from Expense Claim. Expressferred, but not required. $8.50.hr. Call 841-1074
Headstart needs an assistant cook/delivery person to help with food preparation and transport. 9:30-1:30 M-F Will consider MWF/TTR jobs at 925 Vernon. Equal Opportunity Employer.
JON'S NOTES
Note taker needed for Chem. 188, MWF 8:30-9:20.
Must have completed this or higher w/ an A. Earn
10$-19$ per lecture. Call Nancy at
84$-249$.
Seeking self-motivated person for part-time receptionist at lawrence airport. Phones, Unicom, light bookkeeping, and cleaning. Evening and weekend office work per wk. Call 842-0900 to schedule interview.
wait staff positions available at Mass. St. Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Must have some daytime lunch availability during the week. Apply at www.buffalosmokehouse.com or call 719-739-7197. (Mugs above smokehouse).
Paisoano's Italian Ristorante is looking for heart of the house employees.
Experienced kitchen help needed.
Dishwashers, line cooks, and prep cooks
Competitive wages based on experience.
Apply in person 2112 W, 25th st.
Babysitter/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
own car, experience, and knowledge of child
development. Send letter, resume, schedule, and
reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Stairwater Flint.
Immediate opening for Customer Service Associate to work daytime hours. Flexible scheduling. 20-30 hours per week. Send resume to Kerry Hart, M. Gattis, 3514 Clinton pkwy, ST 1, Lawrence, KS, 60047, fax to 838-3122 or in person at Mr. Gattis.
INTERNET SURFERS
Do you surf the Net? Would you like to earn $25k?
$50k or more, playing on the Net? Then go to
the browser (INDEPENDENT) on GO(A).
Your 's' name (INDEPENDENT) + password:
(TRAVELER). Site opens 2/34/97
Kitchen staff position available at Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Food prep and line cooking. Some days hours are helpful. Start $5.50/hr up to $6.50/hr. after 8.m. plus profit sharing. Apply at Schumm Food Company business offices 9-4 M-F at 719 Mass. (upstairs against smokeburee).
205 Help Wanted
Work time help needed calling on behalf of SADD.
Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/hr plus commission,
schedule your own hours. Come join our friendly
atmosphere! Call 843-5101 evening and weekends only. Come to 1619 Mass Suite B 1M-H 4pm-10m and fill out an application. EOE
STUDENT WORK - up to $19.25 . Nat! LCH is immediate PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCOC, Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Apply call your JCOC office at (931)831-WORK (10am-5pm)
Summer Jobs for the Environment
Earn $4000+/month
Earn job with a water
protection endangered species. Offices in 33 states
Call Campaign To Save the Environment
P/t Building Services has immediate opening for bPI crew leader to join our late evening commercial cleaning team. Hours are late Sun.-Thurs. 8:11; p.m., qualified applicant will have a eye for color and work history. Call them at 6264 or apply in person at 6393 Call them Appliance Plus.
Computer: Need personnel for greater KC/Lawrence Area, for on site computer consulting. Flex hrs, F or PT. Must have reliable trans. and be able to pass pre-employment drug test.
Desired skills: strong customer serv.; Know what is required; Win 3.10/8.6 & DOS; ability to answer needs.
Send resume to: Geeks On Wheels, PO Box 688, Lawrence, KS 68540, Fax: 93-149-1922.
CNA/CNHA
Explore the possibilities of HOME CARE where you can enjoy the freedom of giving one on one attention to your client without interruption. VNA provides a private Home Care Aide Program with early A.M., late afternoon, and evening hours. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits include 24/7 visitation in County Visiting Nursing Association, 385 Missouri, Lower Level or call 841-4636 for Pat. EATO
**STUDENT HOURLY POSITIONS AVAILABLE**
(2). Duties: Receptionist; filling; duplicating;
running errands; tying (at least 48 wpm); proof-
reading and editing documents as assigned. Must be available to work 12:00 to 1:00 (noon hour). First position available Mar 20, through Dec 31, 1997. Opportunity for renewal for May 1, 1998. Applications available at $4.75/hour. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 22 Strong, 864-404. Deadline who are available to work summer, and through the 1997-98 academic year.
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week
Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
FEMALE AND MALE CAMP COUNSELORS needed for outstanding Maine camp! CAMP VEGA for girls and CAMP CEDAR for boys. Each located on magnificent lakefront setting with exceptional facilities. Over 100 positions at each camp, tennis court, baseball field, basketball, baseball, volleyball, soccer, lacrosse, golf field, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, canoeing, scuba, water-skiing, archery, weight training, athletic trainer, journalism, photography, nature study, backpacking, horseback riding, ropes course, trip leaders, mountain biking, riflery, general (w/youngest students). Also looking for secretaries, maintenance, cheerleader, top Skiing room, board, laundry, clothing, and travel allowance. MEN-CAMP CEDAR for boys, 178 Beacon Street, Brookline, MA 02146, 812-639-5000. MEN-CAMP VEGA PO BOX 1771, Duxbury, MA 02332, jobs@campvega.com. http://campvega.com/1-800-838-VEGA WE WILL BE ON THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CAMPUS on Wednesday, March 12th in Kansas Union Ordeal Room from 4PM. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY.
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith Dr.
(at the corner of 19th and Naismith
We are now accepting applications for Fall 1997 Resident Assistants. Weare looking for individuals with strong leadership skills, great enthusiasm, and personal empowerment. Come to our front skl for information and an application between 8a.m. and 11p.m., Mondays through Fridays.
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
Inso Kansas City Corporation Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64112
Fax: (816) 753-8387
E-mail: hr-kc@inso.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
205 Help Wanted
Inso CORPORATION www.inso.com
Database Coordinator
Oread a in drug development has an immediate full-time opening for a Database Coordinator.
Duties & responsibilities will include: researching, maintaining, & using database of industry contacts for business intelligence & marketing purposes.
Qualified candidate should have a very strong Win95 background, with exp. using Excel & Word or WordPerfect, FileMaker Pro, or similar database applications.
Individual needs to have strong oral & written interpersonal communication skills.
For consideration please mail or fax resume along with salary requirements to:
Oread
1501 Wakarusa Dr.
Lawrence, KS 66047-1803
fax (913) 749-1882
No calls please/ EOE
DB-1
Oread
Professional Ethical Massage
Certified Massage Therapist
Student Pricing
331-0242
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG Lawrence Office 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
The offices or
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th
842-5116
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 823-8844 for applications, term
of enrollment. Call the teacher at 823-
5551 for satisfaction. Makin 'the Grad.
excellence.'
Quality Tipping former newsletter edit w/ laser
Quality Tipping the top quality paper you for. Call
Danna @ 845-266-2946
---
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
14ft. Glaston Bay, good condition. Buy now.
has a for Spring Break. Leave message @ (013) 587-7961
FINAL FOUR TICKETS Two seats six games.
[920) 612-7855 Leave message.
[920) 612-7855 Leave message.
Oceanic S5 Aquarium, wet/dry filter, reef light
inside. Calibrated. About 100 lbs. of base rock. Case 855-360-890.
DEMO computer. Radius System 100 Mac clone,
110 mzh, 62G Hard Drive, 32MB Ram, 17 Precision View monitor, Preloaded software and
software packages. See description now $2,495.00. Call Jayhawk Bookstore 853-328-6100.
340 Auto Sales
405 For Rent
190 Ge Metro, 5 sp.2 rp, hatchback, great gas
190 Ge Metro, 5 sp.2 rp, bumper and dumper bag
1995 VW Cabrio convertible
400s Real Estate
- Beautiful dark blue metallic
• 5-speed • Leather interior
405 For Rent
Available now-3 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer./Dryer.
equipped kitchens. On KU ban route. Call 841-654-
2073.
1999 W Cash converts
Beautiful dark blue metallic
Spacious 3 bedroom house, hardwood floors, lots
of space. R. U. Availability May 15. No. Pts.
Call 789-2619.
- CD playe
Summer Sublease - 5 Bdrm House Close to Campus call 841-8496.
$16,800 842-5733
3 br apartment sublease in May. May rent free.
Close to campus. 1135 Kentucky. Call 862-2510.
D2b B矮室 available / 5!/ quiet area, pool,
central air and heat. $345 per month at 685-3692.
Studio 1 & 2 Bedrooms.Available for summer & fall. Some locations close to campus, on bus route, reasonable rent. Call 841-1155 for more info.
To need Sublease? Move in April at 11 a.m. apt, on KU Bus route, A/C, dishwasher, walk-in closet space, $365/month. Must lease August if it want to stay. Assume Call 748-5248.
Going abroad Fall '977 Need a sublease for Spring
'98? Call ASAP: Tali at 331-3469 or Jenny at 331-
2469
Condo for Sale 3 bdmr 2 bath, washer/dryer, on bus route. Best view in Lawrence. Assumable FHA Loan, $79,000 OBO. Call to view 832-2081.
Studio w/ storage room. Sublease. New carpets. furnished. Walk to campus. On bus rt. Cable & trash pad. Avail now. March 2-12, 939-820-993. Must see.
Mackenzie Place 1239 Kentucky. Now leasing for Aug. 1. Great Location! Luxury apts, close to kitchen. Free Wi-Fi, oven/dryer/all kitchen apples, 2 desk space, Wet insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1186.
Mar. & Apr. Freet. 1 br B sublues $270/mo.
Broom, A.C. chl. 850-963-8844
Boony, A.C. chl. 850-963-8844
FURNISHED 3 BR AP T., WD/W, A/AC
BALCONY, ON BUS ROUTE, NEAR CAR
Avail 8/14 @ 1027 Tennessee.
1 yr. Issuer $50, for delivery of no pets,
quiet no animals, in mind security deposit.
Bdrm $640 + utilities. Also avail. June & July.
Bdrm $460 + utilities.
Telephone CALL 913-266-5000.
Non-smoking Female to sublease apartment from Non-smoking Female from campus $210 plus $15 utilities per month. One bedroom. No pets.
Now leasing Bradford Square Apartments on a 20'x14' deck, cals allowed, for more info, call 855-7964
PINNACLE WOODS
1*2*3 br. luxury apt. homes
5000 Clinton Pkwy.
1 / 4 mi. west of Wakaraum
All new - 865-5454
LCA
1st Month Free — Call for details
PINNACLE WOODS
PLS
&
Spacious Apartments for rent.
"Convenient affordable housing"
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher Avail.
Central Air • Close to KU Campus
Studios 1, 2, 3, & 4 bedrooms
Call: LCA Apartments
381-215 (757) am
after 4pm 749-3794
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury.
1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
- Washer/Dryer
- washer/Dryer
- Built-in TV
- Built-in TV
- Alarm System
- Alarm System
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
- Alarm System
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
Hawthorn Place
Townhomes and
Residential Homes
- Fireplace, one-car garage
Private Courtyard
331-2332
405 For Rent
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MWF 3pm-6pm to work with children age 18 mo-5 yrs. A.M. & P.M. Substitutes needed also-Call Rosemary 843-4147
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
MOVE IN NOW...
One Month Free Rent
MOVE IN NOW...
water paid
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
Carson Place Stadium View
841-7726
call or stop by today
Shannon Plaza Apartments
"Apartments Designed for Your Lifestyle"
Chamberlain Court
1425 Kentucky
Oread Apartment
Bradford Square
1425 Kentucky Abbottz Center
Hawthorn Place
Bradford Squat
1425 Kentucky
Abbotts Center
Hawthorn Place
Call for an appointment 841-8468
Move In Now...
Heritage Place
Highpointe
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
Move It Now...
One Month Free Rent
On lease through July 31
1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment
Call or stop by today
843-2116
11th and Miss
Berkelv Flats $_{0}$
OnKUBus Route
1&2Bedrooms
Apartments
1,2 & 3 Bedrooms
Washer/Dryer
Alarm System
Clubhouse & Swimming Pool
Workout Facility
Basketball Court
NOW LEASING
Call First Management
841-8468
OPEN HOUSE
Sat., Mar. 8 - 10-2
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
10-Month Lefees Available
3 Hot Tubs
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
Volleyball Court On KY Roe Routes
Park25
- On KU Bus Route
Exercise Room
Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
FLATS
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
HIGHPOWTE AMERICAN HOMES
M-F10-6 SAT10-4SUN12-4
Call or stop by today!
2401 W.25th,9A3
842-1455
---
405 For Rent
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
supportive membership, non profit operation, demo-
crative control. $820-180 incl. wk dimmers. Util,
alongside. Cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 718-395-6360.
Lorimar and Leannamar Townhomes
"No one lives above
"No one lives above or below you"
(our townhomes are two levels)
Leasing for Summer/Fall '97
1, 2, 3 bdrm/2 bath, 4 bdmr/3 bath
*Washer/Dryer*
*Dishwasher*
*Microwave*
*Fragrance*
*Celling Fans in every room*
*Cable in every room*
*Walk-in closets*
*cable paed*
Lorentzman-8501 China Paey
Lorentzman-8501 Wimbledon Dr.
Call 814-7849 Office hrs. 9-5 M-F
West Hills APARTMENTS
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
(no pets, please)
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall '97
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30-4:30
430 Roommate Wanted
No Appointment needed
Female Roommate盯ead 2 bdrm 1/2 block from campus. Washer/Dryer. Call 838-4702
3-rooms for rent. Nice house. Good price. Please call 749-2886.
Roommate needed. Apt. close to K.U. Good deal.
Call 841-4688
2 Females & share 15 bedrooms luxurious home
/10 mo. /mo. all airconditioned from casa
/room. W/T/ W/T 665-8423
9 Female & share 10 bedrooms
/mo. /mo. all airconditioned from casa
/W/T 665-8423
How to schedule an ad:
Non-smoking female needed immediately to camp at campg69/mp +1 ushelies (gill 331-550) g69/mp +1 ushelies (gill 331-550)
THE UNIVERSITY DAIDY KANSAN
NON-SMOKING FEMALE ROOMMATE
$200/MO. 1/2 UTILITIES
749-2947
Female roommate wanted to share furnished 1
room with male roommate $230.00 a month.
011-318-6456 ask for Erica.
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
- By Mail: 119 Stairfer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60445
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kauan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check,
charred on MasterCard or Wusa.
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is
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. Ada that are killed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Calculating Notes.
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When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Credit, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Fees on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by cash or with cash are not available.
**Ball box numbers:** The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan 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:
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30+X
3 lines 2.30 1.80 1.20 1.00 0.85 0.80
4 lines 2.15 1.40 1.00 0.90 0.75 0.55
5-7 lines 2.10 1.24 0.95 0.75 0.70 0.60
8+ lines 2.00 1.10 0.90 0.70 0.65 0.45
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$18.00 (4 lines X 96 per line X 5 days).
105 personal
119 business personas
129 announcements
130 announcement
140 lcd & sound 365 for sale
205 help needed 400 auto sales
225 professional services 380 unallocated
225 typing services
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 recommend wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Please print your ad one word per box:
Name:
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper ___
Phone: -
Address:
_ Classification:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daisy Kansen)
Furnish the following if you are charging your af:
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Print exact name appearing on credit card:
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Expiration Date:
The University Daliv Kausan, 119 Stairford Flint Hall, Lawrence. KS.66045
KANSAS BAYLOR
24-4, 14-4
15-13, 7-9
RANKED NO. 9
UNRANKED
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
JAYHAWK BASKETBALL WOMEN'S
54
PAGE 10
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1997
KU vs. BU
No.9 Kansas 66, Baylor 54
KANSAS (24-4)
Pearson 5
Trapp 3-4
Trapp 3-4
Sanford 2-7
Habible 4-19
Dionn 9-22
Raymant 0-1
Hayes 0-1
Reed 0-4
Canada 3-4
Grayer 1-4
**
| BAYLOR (15-13) | FG | FT | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Harris | 1-5 | 0-0 | 2 |
| Palmer | 3-11 | 2-2 | 11 |
| Moffitt | 2-9 | 3-4 | 7 |
| Byas | 1-2 | 1-2 | 3 |
| Hayworth | 2-10 | 2-2 | 7 |
| Ellis | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Boutse | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Ackman | 0-1 | 0-4 | 4 |
| Wright | 2-6 | 2-2 | 6 |
| Mooney | 6-12 | 2-4 | 14 |
| Applebury | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Totals | 19-61 | 12-16 | 54 |
Hafftime: Bayor 25, Kansas 21, 3-Point goals:
Bayor 4-1 (Pier 38, Keyworth 3, 1-Byas 0, 1-Boyne 0, 2-Kansas 2, 7-Hablebill 2, Dixon 0, 9-Pier 13, Keyworth 3, 1-Byas 0, 1-Boyne 0, 2-Kansas 2, 7-Hablebill 2, Dixon 0, 9-Pier 13, Keyworth 3, 1-Byas 0, 1-Boyne 0, 2-Kansas 2, 7-Hablebill 2, Dixon 0, 9-Pier 13, Keyworth 3, 1-Byas 0, 1-Boyne 0, 2-Kansas 2, 7-Hablebill 2, Dixon 0, 9-Pier 13, Keyworth 3, 1-Byas 0, 1-Boyne 0, 2-Kansas 2, 7-Hab
Women's Basketball Game Notes
The Kansas women's basketball team advanced to the championship game of the Big Eight Conference Tournament four of the last five years. The Jayhawks were a combined 1-3 in those games, including a 64-60 victory against Nebraska to win the championship in 1993.
The No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team won its eighth-consecutive game when it defeated Baylor 66-54 in the Big 12 Tournament quarterfinals yesterday. The win streak is Kansas' longest of the season, and dates back to an 82-78 victory against Iowa State on Feb. 8 at Allen Field House.
Kansas forward Lynn Pride had career and game-highs with 19 rebounds against Baylor yesterday. She added nine points, six steals, two assists and a blocked shot.
Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon surpassed the 1,600-point plateau last Saturday. Dixon and former Jayhawk Lynette Woodard are the only players in Kansas women's basketball history to record more than 1,600 points and 300 assists in their career.
Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon scored 22 points in yesterday's victory against Baylor. It was the 16th time this season she has scored more than 20 points in a game.
Kansas guard Angie Halibieb had 10 points in yesterday's game against Baylor. It was the fourth consecutive game that she has scored in double digits.
Baylor shot 35 percent from the floor against Kansas when it played at Allen Field House on Jan. 11. Yesterday, the Bears shot 31 percent. They were outbounded by 22 in the first meeting, and were outbounded by 14 in yesterday's game.
Freshman redshirt Casey Pruitt tore her left anterior cruciate ligament three times during one year. Two of those injuries happened on the same day, exactly one year apart.
The 1996 Kansas women's basketball recruiting class was ranked sixth by the BlueStar Basketball Report. The four Jayhawk signees combined to give Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington a top-10 recruiting class for the second-consecutive year.
Big 12 Conference tournament results:
No. 9 Kansas 66, Baylor 54
No. 12 Texas 74, Nebraska 68
Kansas State 76, No. 15 Texas
Tech 68
Colorado 56. Iowa St. 39
Kansas women beat Baylor
Jayhawks to take on K-State in semifinals of Big 12 tournament
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
Although the Jayhawks did not end the first half with the lead, Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said she had expected a sluggish start from her team.
With a dominating defensive performance, the No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team defeated No. 8 Baylor 66-54 yesterday in the Big 12 tournament quarterfinals.
"Like every first game of a tournament, our players came out tight," Washington said. "In the second half, I thought we played a little bit better. Now that we got this one out of the way, maybe we can come and play better tomorrow."
The Jayhawks trailed 25-21 at halftime after shooting just 30 percent from the field in the first half. Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon, who averages 21 points a game, had five points after connecting on just two of 10 shots.
Washington's cause for concern started with a sloppy first half of basketball by both Kansas and Baylor.
"I'm not proud of my offensive game," Dixon said. "There were times where I missed some easy opportunities, and I just wasn't hitting from the outside."
Forward Lynn Pride kept the
Starting lineup
G Brit Jacobson, 5-7, Jr.
G Missy Decker, 5-10, Sr.
F Andria Jones, 6-1, Sr.
F Nicky Ramage, 6-1, Fr.
C Kayla Hester, 0-0, Sr.
Kansas State (18-10 overall,
9-7 in the Big 12) Probable
Starters:
Kansas (24-4 overall, 14-2 in
the big 12) Probable Starters:
G Tamecka Dixon, 5-9, Sr.
G Angie Halbleib, 5-10, Sr.
F Lynn Pride, 6-2, Fr.
F Jennifer Trapp, 6-1, Sr.
C Nakia Sanford, 6-3, So.
Time: 5 p.m.
Time: 5 p.m.
Place: Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo.
TV/Radio: Fox Sports Mountain (Ch. 45) and KLWN-AM,
1320
Jayhawks close with 11 rebounds at halftime. She finished with 19 rebounds, which were game- and career-highs. Pride added nine points, six steals and two assists.
The Jayhawks had trouble breaking Baylor's pressure defense in the first half, and Kansas had 13 turnovers at halftime.
Guard Angie Habblebil said that the Bears caught Kansas by surprise during the first half.
"Once we broke the press, we were running." Dixon said. "Our problem in the first half was that we tried to dribble through the press rather than passing over it. When we were able to pass over the press, it created scoring opportunities for everyone."
After two Baylor free throws, the Jayhawks began a 9-0 run that included a three-point shot by Halbleib. The Bears (15-13 overall, 7-9 in the Big 12) got no closer than seven points during the rest of the game.
"We really haven't been pressed all season, so that was real difficult for us to adjust to." Halbleib said. "We turned the ball over more times in the first half than we do in one game. It was an ugly game during the first half and for all 40 minutes."
Baylor capitalized on the Jayhawks' turnovers by seizing and maintaining the lead. Despite the defensive effort, the Bears shot 29 percent in the first half and could not build a lead any larger than seven points.
With Kansas leading 44-43 with more than eight minutes left to play, Dixon stole the ball from Baylor guard Toya Ellis. Ellis fouled Dixon as she drove for a layup. Dixon converted the three-point play by making the free throw.
The Jayhawks regained momentum in the second half with center Nakia Sanford and forward Jennifer Trapp posting up against the Bears' under-sized frontcourt.
Once Kansas had established an inside game, Hallebib and Dixon broke loose and helped the Jayhawks push past Baylor. Kansas outscored the Bears 45-29 in the second half, and outrebounded them 52 to 38 for the game.
In the second half, Halbleib scored eight of her 10 points, and Dixon scored 17 of her game-high 22 points.
Kansas (24-4 overall, 14-2 in the Big 12) will play Kansas State at 5 p.m. today at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo.
Despite the backcourt's point production, Kansas needed a decisive run to out the game out of reach.
The Jayhawks swept the season series with KState, winning in Lawrence 70-54 on Jan. 4 and 62-46 in Manhattan on Feb. 22.
Although K-State (18-10 overall, 9-7 in the Big 12) is an in-state rival, Hallebli said she had no preference when it came to who the team played.
"At this point, you just have to go out and do your game plan," Halbleib said. "As long as we do that, I really don't care who we play."
CITY HAWKS
51
20
GTE
Staff Photographer / KANSAN
Forwards Jennifer Trapp and Lynn Pride attempt to rebound the ball away from Baylor forward Tonia Harris, in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament. Each girl contributed a lot, Trapp with nine points and three rebounds, and Pride had nine points and 19 rebounds.
Pride rebounds team to victory
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
SANDY MAYER
Playing in the first postseason game of her college career, Kansas forward Lynn Pride did not resemble a freshman who was learning from her more experienced teammates.
Instead, she was the Jayhawks' backbone.
Lynn Pride
Pride had 19 rebounds yesterday as the No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team defeated Baylor 66-54 in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament. She also had nine points,
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Forward Lynn Pride tries to wrestle the ball away from Baylor forward, Nicole Palmer. The Jayhawks defeated the Bears 66-54 yesterday at Municipal Stadium in round one of the Big 12 Tournament. The KU women play Kansas State in the semifinals at 5 p.m. today.
six steals and two assists.
For Pride, yesterday's game was more about timing than talent.
"I knew I had a bunch of rebounds today, but it wasn't something that I set out to do," Pride said. "I was just at the right place at the right time.
"I like to play defense more than offense, so I just went out there and played the best I could," she said.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said Pride's versatility had helped the Jayhawks during the season.
"Lynn is one of our best defensive players because, with her size and quickness, we can do a lot of things with her," Washington said.
"We can put her on the perimeter or we can keep her on the inside," she said. "Baylor had a quick team out there, so we had her playing at power forward some. We haven't worked with her a lot there, but she really gives us another dimension."
Pride started the first eight games of the season for Kansas, but sprained her right knee in practice Dec. 21. She missed four games because of the injury before returning Jan. 11.
"I knew I had to step up my game today because of the way the first half was going," Pride said. "It is very important for us to match our opponent's intensity in every game the rest of the season.
Pride played 14 minutes in that game and recorded four points and seven rebounds.
Almost two months later, Pride fared much better against the Bears yesterday.
"We have to be ready for every game because every team will be ready for us," she said.
Pride and the rest of the Jayhawks will play in the semifinals of the Big 12 Tournament against Kansas State at 5 p.m. today.
"Lynn is one of our best defensive players because, with her size and quickness, we can do a lot of things." Marian Washington Kansas head coach
Basketball: Women's loss to K-State eliminates team from Big 12 Tournament. Page 1B Mascot: Students don Jayhawk costume, exhibit tradition and school spirit. Page 6A
****************************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1997
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.103,NO.113
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
U.S. tells Vietnam it's time to pay off debts
HANO1, Vietnam — To clear the way for a trade pact, the United States is asking that Vietnam repay a $100 million debt, which was incurred by South Vietnam.
Before the South Vietnamese government fell to communist North Vietnam in 1975, the United States was the country's biggest benefactor, channeling billions of dollars into military, humanitarian and development aid.
Divided Vietnam then was reunited under communist rule
The U.S. Embassy confirmed that Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Barbara Griffiths was in Hanoi for the talks.
Vietnamese Foreign Ministry representative Tran Quang Hoan said that the talks, which began earlier this week, had not shown any signs of progress.
Hoan also said that Vietnam was prepared to settle South Vietnam's debt although it was incurred by its former enemy.
Neither side would disclose the amount to be repaid, but an official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that the amount was $100 million.
The U.S. wants the loans made for development and humanitarian purposes to be repaid.
U. S. officials and Western diplomats in Hanoi said that the resolution of Saigon's old debts was a prerequisite for concluding a bilateral trade agreement.
WASHINGTON — In a backset for a high-priority Pentagon missile defense project, a Thaad interceptor launched yesterday from a test range in New Mexico failed to hit its target.
It was the fourth miss in four tests since December 1995.
Lt. Col. Rick Lehner, spokesman for the Pentagon office that oversees the project, said the cause of the latest failure had not been determined. He said it was too early to say what consequences the failure might have on the project.
Paul Kaminski, the top Pentagon official in charge of weapons development, told a trade publication last month that if Thaad failed another test the Pentagon probably would push back its goal of fielding the system in 2004.
The multibillion dollar missile project is a top priority for the military, which sees a growing threat to U.S. and allied troops abroad from attack by medium-range ballistic missiles more sophisticated and deadly than the Scud missiles Iraq used during the 1991 Gulf War.
Thad is intended to provide a better defense than the Patriot missile, the only anti-missile missile in use.
Guyana President dies in Washington
GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Guyana President Cheddi Jagan died in a Washington, D.C., hospital yesterday, three weeks after suffering a heart attack, the government said.
Jagan, 78, died at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where he had been hospitalized Feb. 16 after being flown to Washington on a U.S. military jet.
Jagan, a U.S.-trained dentist, helped lead Guyana to independence from British colonial rule in 1966. As head of the People's Progressive Party, he was elected president in 1992, ending 28 consecutive years of People's National Congress rule.
Jagan long was an outspoken Marxist but more recently had supported free market economic policies.
Guyana, a country of 800,000 people, is the only English-speaking country in South America.
The Associated Press
Comet
Hale-Bopp's
Orbit
Comet Hale-Bopp
April 1, 1997
March 2.
1997
Jan. 31.
1997
May 1,
1997
85.2 million
miles
May 31,
1997
SUN
MERCURY
June 30,
1997
EARTH
April 1,
1997
MOON
April 1,
1997
Story by Tim Harrington
Illustrations by Andy Rohrback
Five times the size of Halley's Comet, Hale-Bopp will reach its perihelion Apr and the entire astronomy community will be CHASING A
COMET
0 n April 1, just a few degrees above the northwestern horizon, the brightest comet seen by mankind since 1577 may appear. Or there may be just a small white fuzzball. KU astronomers and amateur comet watchers can only
Or there may be just a small white fuzzball. KU astronomers and amateur comet watchers can only
wait to see.
Such is the unpredictable nature of comets, which have in the past promised spectacular displays and provided spectacular letdowns.
Comet Hale-Bopp, which should be in its optimum viewing period between March 25 and April 13, shows all the preliminary signs of being a great show.
"When Hale-Bopp was discovered it was very far out, certainly past the orbit of Jupiter," said Tom Cravens, professor of physics and astronomy. "Normally a comet doesn't become active until it gets within a couple Earth-orbits."
Cravens was a former co-investigator on the 1986 Russian, Vega Mission to Halley's Comet.
A couple Earth-orbits translates into roughly 186 million miles away from the sun. Hale-Bopp was discovered at 666 million miles from the sun.
Comets are giant, celestial dirty snowballs which emit jets of gasses and dust when heated by the sun, thus creating the characteristic tail observable from Earth.
Comets are usually undetectable before they become active, and the fact that Hale-Bopp was spotted at such a great distance means that something about it is different.
"It's big," said Craven as he looked at the latest estimates of Hale-Bopp's size.
Scientists cannot be certain, but Hale-Bopp, more formally known as C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp), could have a diameter of 25 miles across, possibly even 35 miles, said Craven.
By contrast, the famous Halley's Comet had a diameter of about 6 miles.
The key is to get as far away from city lights as possible. Then look to the northwestern horizon soon after sunset.
April 1 will be the comet's perilion, its closest point to the sun, and probably the best night to see it.
Although the comet should be easily visible with the naked
Where to look
+30
April 1
+20
May 1
+10
May 20
Horizon
West West-northwest Northwest North-northwest
eye, Stephen Shawl, professor of physics and astronomy, said that comet watchers would want a pair of binoculars so they can see a large portion of the sky at one time.
"A telescope really magnifies it too much," Shawl said.
Hale-Bopp, which is just now becoming visible in the predawn, northeastern sky, was last seen by humans when bronze knives were cutting-edge technology 4,200 years ago. Missing it this time will mean a 2,400-year wait until Hale-Bopp returns.
Scientists are interested in comets because of what they can tell us about the history of the universe.
"They're undigested remnants from the nebula from which the sun and planets condensed," Cravens said. "It's a link between us and that interstellar cloud 4.5 million years ago."
Cravens said any U.S. involvement would be minor.
Cravens recently returned from a meeting of scientists in London where a mission sponsored by the European Space Agency to land on the surface of a comet was discussed.
Hale-Bopp, however, will have no visitors as it hurts towards the sun at 97,000 mph.
Cravens and Shawl said they didn't know exactly where they would go to see Hale-Bopp, but neither seemed too worried about missing the event. Cravens said that wherever he was he would just look up.
Local cases of AIDS show no decline
By Sean Demory
Kansan staff writer
Last Thursday, the Centers for Disease Control reported a 13 percent nationwide drop in AIDS-related deaths.
This is the first major drop since the AIDS epidemic began in 1981. Infection rates nationwide also have decreased from 6 percent to slightly under 2 percent.
April Ramos, director of the Douglas County AIDS Program, said that infection rates may have increased as much as 6 percent in the past few years.
Infection rates in Douglas County, however, have not fallen.
The reasons attributed to the national decline include reduced potency of the AIDS virus and the use of protease inhibitors.
However, the idea that the AIDS virus has become less lethal, a theory called balanced pathogenicity, is unfounded, said Elizabeth Boyce, associate professor of microbiology.
"It's happened with other pathogens," Boyce said. "If you're a germ, you want your host to live as long as possible to spread your progeny. But with HIV, there's such a long period in which the host can spread the disease, it's not as likely."
A prime force in the decrease is the use of combination therapies and protease inhibitors. Boyce said.
Combination therapies, Boyce said, do not allow the virus to adapt to treatment as quickly as the earlier single therapies.
"Protease inhibitors not only decrease the loads of the virus, but the T-cell rates go up when they're used," Boyce said. "No one can explain why this happens, but it's extremely encouraging."
The new therapies are not without risks, however.
"For the people that the drugs do work for, there are fantastic results. There's no real data on the long term results, though." Ramos said.
Ramos said that the side effects could be debilitating for weeks before any improvement occurs.
"The drugs are keeping people alive, not necessarily keeping them working." Ramos said.
The majority of Ramos' clients are not on protease inhibitors or combination therapies. A very small percentage of people with AIDS, she said, are on the new drugs.
"A lot of people can't afford them, and make take too much money to get federal funding for the drugs but not enough to spend $15,000 a year on medication," Ramos said.
Boyce said that the problem with the combination therapy was the expense.
"It's a great thing for people with insurance or who are in clinical trials. If you look worldwide, though, most people will never be able to afford them," Boyce said.
"Some people think that AIDS could become a chronic disease that is managed, like diabetes," Boyce said. "It seems, though, that could only be possible for the affluent fortunate few."
For more information regarding the Douglas County AIDS Project, call 843-0403.
TODAY
TODAY
INDEX SUNNY
Television . . . . . . . 2A
Features . . . . . . . 6A
Sports . . . . . . . 1B
Horoscopes . . . . . 4B
Classifieds . . . . . 5B
High **62°**
Low **33°**
Weather; Page 2A
Microstation to invade Lawrence's airwaves Sunday
6-watt KAW-FM to offer community variety of music choices, talk shows
By Paul Eakins Kansan staff writer
Radio listeners flipping through the stations this Sunday will hear a new sound.
The Lawrence Community Radio Station, KAW-FM, will begin broadcasting at 11 a.m. on 88.9 FM, offering a diverse assortment of music, talk shows and other programming throughout the week.
By broadcasting, the six-watt KAW-FM is joining several other community radio stations, or microstations, across the country in opposing the Federal Communications Commission.
In a recent court case in Berkeley, Calif., a district court judge had indicated her reservations about taking a microstation, Radio Free Berkeley, off of the air because of the possible unconstitutionality of FCC regulations.
The FCC wants to move the case to a different court, and the resulting legal situation could take months or years to be resolved. In the interim, people have started microstations in several cities around the country.
KAW-FM, which has been in the works for several months, is an all-volunteer station, composed of both Lawrence residents and KU students, young and old, experienced disc jockeys and those completely new to radio.
With such a diversity of programming and people, Steve Stemmacher, co-program director, hopes to attract an equally
diverse audience.
"Our audience will be a wide hodgepodge of local people," he said.
"It will be focusing on community news and community information," he said. "We don't really have a purely community-influenced radio station."
Bob Oderkirk, co-program director, said that the station was a positive thing for Lawrence.
1
Kendra Oglott, a DJ at KAW-FM, said that the station will serve the community.
"We're going to play things that are equally appealing to the community," she said. "Not controlled by money."
And it should be appealing to many. Show themes will range from country, jazz, punk and Native-American music, to spoken word, talk shows about local and national issues, and interviews with local people, among other shows.
Matt Caldwell, Overland Park, junior, who has a talk show on KAW-FM, said that the station would provide services not met by the other radio stations.
Getting the station together has taken a lot of hard work.
"We'll fill a lot of the voids that KJHK can't fill," he said.
Caldwell said the station will not be afraid to explore controversial issues and will strive to allow every voice in the community to be heard.
After acquiring a space in the basement of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., the station needed to get equipment, money and volunteers. Money has been gathered through donations, but the search for funds is far from over. Oderkirk said.
MURPHY BREWER
"The most difficult area is always raising enough money from donations," said Oderkirk, an experienced DJ. "It is going to be, and will remain, the biggest obstacle."
Pete Laufer, Lawrence resident, prepares for the first broadcast of KAW-FM, a new community radio station, which will begin Sunday.
Although money may have been scarce, the search for volun
teers was a fruitful one.
"In two to three months, we came up with more than 60 shows by word-of-mouth." Stemmerman said.
Coordinating schedules and beginning training were other problem areas, because there were so many people involved, Stemmerman said.
Pete Laufer, a KAW-FM DJ with previous experience, said that getting the station in order could take a while.
"They don't realize all of the headaches they're going to have to keep this together," Lauer said. "They only care about what you're playing on the turntable. They don't realize the dance of bodies going on."
+
2A
Friday, March 7, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
QuickINFO
WEATHER
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
62 33
33
BETTLETON
CAMPUS EVENTS
Mostly sunny with more warm temperatures.
FRIDAY
60
35
10
Good chance of late-morning or early-afternoon showers.
SATURDAY
58 35
Partly cloudy and dry.
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about French-Language Study Abroad at 10:30 a.m. today at 4021 Wescoe. For more information call OSA at 844-3742
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at the Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the Rev. Raymond Mayat at 843-303-6825.
ON CAMPUS
Golden Key National Honor Society will have a members' social and officer elections at 4:30 p.m. today at The Yacht Club, 530 Widmore. For more
information, call Teng Chang at 864-1733.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate mast at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crew Street, Philadelphia, PA 19105. For the Rev. Rowhill Max @ 243-0357.
**KU Tae Tawen Do Club will meet from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson. For more information, call Adam Capron at 842-9112.**
■ Lied Center Concert Series presents "La Boheme" at 8 tonight and at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Lied Center. For more
information and tickets call the Lied Center, Murphy Hall, or SUA Box Offices, or any Ticketmaster outlet.
KU Amnesty International will sponsor "Human Rights in the Heartland" from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center at 1204 Ead. For more information and tickets, call Rachel Wise at 842-0594.
KU Ballroom Dance Club will have ba-
room dance lessons at 2 p.m. Sunday
at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union.
For more information, call Shane Haas
at 864-5597.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's checks were stolen between midnight and 10:30 a.m. Feb. 4 in the 400 block of Florida Street, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $5.
estimated at $100.
A KU student's car was damage between 8:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. Feb. 26 in lot 112, KU police said. Damage was
A coin-operated parking meter was stolen between 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Feb. 25 from lot $3, KU police said.
items were estimated at $800.
A KU student's parking permit was stolen between 8 a.m. and 3:15 p.m.
Feb. 28 from a car in the lower level of
lot 110, KU police said. Items were valued at $50.
A KU student's parking permit was stolen between 8:15 p.m. March 2 and 12:15 p.m. March 5 from lot 110, KU police said. Items were valued at $50.
Former port authority chairman indicted
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, MO. — The former chairman of the Kansas City Port Authority was indicted yesterday on 14 counts of bribery and other charges.
Elbert Anderson, who resigned as Port Authority chairman last year without a clear explanation, is accused of paying $37,000 in bribes to influence a former city council member and $10,000 to influence a
former chairman of the Jackson County Legislature.
None of the charges of bribery, mail fraud and money laundering allege that Anderson was acting in his official capacity on the occasions he was accused of paying bribes.
Anderson, 52, sought to influence the City Council and Jackson County Legislature decisions to steer or assure business for private companies, Hill said.
Instead, most of the counts involve private consulting and public relations businesses in which he had an ownership or controlling interest. U.S. Attorney Steve Hill said at a news conference.
In addition, he is accused of paying three separate bribes, totaling $20,000, between October 1993 and February 1994 to a city council member to influence a decision in favor of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City on a health insurance contract for city workers.
FRIDAY PRIMETIME
TV TONIGHT
FRIDAY PRIMETIME MARCH 7, 1997
© TVData 7 PM 13:00 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO ★ "Runaway Train" ★**½ (1985, Suspense) Jon Voight. Tarzan: The Epic Adventures Mad Abo, You Bzzzl Cops ★ LAPD
WDAF College Basketball: Big 12 Tournament College Basketball: Big 12 - Teams TBA, (Live) Newvs ★ Sliders "Sole Survivors" ★
KCTV Dave's World Dave's World JAG "Force Recon" (In Stereo) Nash Bridges Zodiac' (R) ★ News ★ Late Show (In Stereo) ★ Selfinfe ★
KS6 Home News Plus
ET CETERA
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 7, 1997
3A
Kansan in La Boheme
K-State graduate is youngest in cast
By Amanda Arbuckle
Kansan staff writer
After seeing Miss Piggy and Beverly Sills sing a duet on The Muppet Show, Juli Borst knew she wanted to go into opera.
"The first time I saw a real opera, I was 14," said Borst, a Manhattan native. "I made my dad take me to see the New York City Opera perform when they were in Manhattan."
Borst is the youngest cast member in La Boheme, which will be performed at 8 tonight and tomorrow night at the Lied Center. Tickets are still available for both nights.
Puccini's La Boheme is the story of
four impoverished artists living on Paris' Left Bank. The opera will be performed in Italian, but a paraphrased translation will be projected above the stage.
The 25-year-old Borst auditioned for her chorus role last November.
"My roommate got the New York City Opera newsletter, and I saw the audition listing," Borst said. "I was working on a show at the time in Arizona. But after finishing dress rehearsal, I hopped on a plane to New York, auditioned and got back in time for opening night. That plane ticket was like my $500 lottery ticket."
Borst received her music degree from Kansas State University. She said that growing up in Kansas had worked to her advantage.
"I received good, basic musical training." Borst said. "I think that
growing up here, if you have talent,
you'll get lots of chances to perform.
I'll never regret staying in my hometown
and going to school there."
Borst said she enjoyed life on tour, especially getting to know the other cast members and not being in one place for very long. She said it did get tiring, however.
"It is one of the major companies in the United States," Stephens said. "It's particularly good for young singers who want to be noticed."
John Stephens, assistant professor of music and dance, said performing with a city opera as prestigious as the New York City Opera was quite an accomplishment.
Borst said that she has no desire to be famous, but she plans on pursuing opera as a career.
"My goal is to make a living doing what I love to do," she said.
Dance your heart out tomorrow
By Harumil Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
Three hours of exercising this weekend can contribute to cardiovascular research and help keep hearts healthy.
The KU Fit Team, the KU Interfaerntery Council and the KU Panhelenic Association will be sponsoring Dance for Heart from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. tomorrow at 215 Robinson Center.
"We are having a good time and working for a good cause at the same time," said Brooke Warde, Dance for Heart chairwoman and
Greeley, Colo., sophomore.
Shannon Bollman, fitness director for Recreation Services, said that while participants can try a variety of exercises available, they can donate their money to research and education.
A donation of $7 for an individual,
$30 for a group of five, or $60 for a 10
person team is required, Bollman said.
Registration will start at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow, but anyone can walk in and participate, Bollman said.
Warde said participants would receive T-shirts and water bottles and would be eligible to win gift certificates donated by local merchants
"We expose them to the different types of exercises available, and we hope to motivate them to do more in the future." Bollman said.
By combining the efforts of three organizations, Bollman hoped the program would be more successful.
"They have great fund-raising ideas and we have been able to provide our instructors," Bollman said. "We are expecting a greater number of participants."
DANCE FOR HEART
American Heart Association
Sponsored by KU Panhellenic/IFC & Robinson Recreational Services KU FIT TEAM
March 8,1997 11:00-2:00 p.m.
@ Robinson Gym,215
Entry fee: $7 for individuals
$30 for 5 person team
$60 for 10 person team
*Dance For Heart is a 3 hour aerobic-thon
*Prizes from Lawrence merchants will be raffled off throughout the day
*Upon entry you will receive a T-shirt
Hope to See You There!
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SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
The University of Kansas • The University Theatre • Presents the Robust Comedy
MGRQy
EOE • Drawing Creativity from Diversity
Directed by Ron Popenhagen
Movement Choreographed by Ludvika Apinyte Popenhagen
Scenic Design by Mark Reaney
Lighting Design by Ann Hockenberry
Costume design by Galina Urman
Directed by Ron Popenhagen
shoregraphed by Ludvika Apinyte Popenhagen
Scenic Design by Mark Reaney
Lighting Design by Ann Hockenberry
Costume Design by Galina Urman
8:00 p.m.
March 7, 8, 13, 14*, 15, 1997
2:30 p.m.
Sunday, March 9, 1997
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
WALY DISNEY WORLD.CO.
of WINDSOR
by William Shakespeare
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in the KU box offices: Murphy Hall, 864-3982, Lied Center, 864-ARTS, SUA Office, 864-3477; public $12, KU students $6, other students and senior citizens $11; both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders.
FOR MORE INFO, CONTACT: Lori Montgomery (913) 864-3624
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee
*The Friday, March 14, performance will be signed for the deaf and hard-of-hearing.
STUDENT
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INFO SESSION DATE: Monday, March 10 TIME: 7 pm
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- Learn from some of the top managers in the hospitality and entertainment industry.
- The opportunities are priceless! And so is the experience. You must attend our Casting Session to be considered. Start building up that résumé now.
- Work behind the scenes at the world's number one vacation destination.
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CRAIG LANG, Editor
SUSANNA LOOF, Managing editor
KMBELYE CRARTTEE, Editorial editor
TOM EBILEN, General manager, news adviser
HARK OZIMK, Business manager
DENNIS HAUPT, Retail sales manager
JUSTIN KNUPP, Technology coordinator
JAY STEINER, Sales and marketing adviser
Friday, March 7, 1997
JOHNSON COUNTY
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
REGENTS
Amy R. Miller / KANS/
Editorials
Community colleges may be hurt if Regents are given control
Two Kansas representatives have sponsored a bill that would give the Board of Regents control of Kansas' 19 community colleges and alter the colleges' funding.
The bill, intended to limit rising property tax levels and give the Regents control of community colleges, is not advantageous to the community colleges.
The bill would force community colleges to cap local property taxes at 15 mills—$86 a year for a $50,000 home, according to the Launceston Journal World.
If funds from property taxes were limited, tuition rates would have to rise. The bill would require each college to raise 20 percent of its annual budget through tuition fees. Requiring a community college to raise tuition is counter to the purpose for which community colleges were created.
Community colleges allow people who can't afford university to improve skills.
Community colleges are inexpensive, and they should stay that way. Community colleges allow a county to provide
people who do not want or cannot afford a university education with an opportunity to improve their skills. Raising tuition rates could make these colleges inaccessible.
To help ease the loss of property-tax generated funds, the bill proposes to increase the schools' budgets by 5 percent through state financing. However, this increase would not cover lost revenue if property taxes were capped. Neosho County has a 30.8 mill, and property taxes provide 41 percent of the Neosho County Community College's annual budget. Capping the mill at 15 would slash the amount collected from property tax by more than 50 percent.
Also, the Regents may not have the experience necessary to control these institutions. Many community colleges focus on training and technical education. The programs differ from those offered at the four-year institutions traditionally controlled by the Regents. Some people involved with community colleges doubt the Regents' ability to handle the colleges' curricula.
"We think it would be difficult for the board to manage two-year institutions," said Sheila Frahm, the executive director of the Kansas Association of Community Colleges, in the Lawrence Journal-World. "We don't want to be overlooked in any way."
Giving the Regents control of Kansas community colleges would hurt the schools. It will damage the ability to provide education and practical training for those who cannot afford or are not suited to four-year universities.
KELLI RAYBERN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
University should control buses
The time has come for the administration to show it is willing to cooperate with Student Senate and assume the responsibility of KU on Wheels.
KU on Wheels, which handles the busing system at the University of Kansas, has been a financial disaster for years. Ideologically, its premise sounds great
- a transportation system run by the students for the students.
But there are many problems with the transportation system.
For one, students have much of the responsibility in leading KU on Wheels. This gives those students plenty of experience, and many of them are capable of the job. But full-time administrators could devote even more time and energy to the system and solving its problems.
As operating costs of the bus system have gone up annually, the campus transportation fee that students pay has
Let's hope administrators are ready to ease the KU on Wheels' burden.
also consistently risen. Students now pay $14 in fees to finance campus transportation. On top of that, students must pay $60 if they wish to ride the bus for a semester. If all students were wealthy, this wouldn't be a problem, but that isn't necessarily the case. Busing rates have gone up while the number of riders has gone down.
The administration has traditionally taken a hands-off approach to KU on Wheels, as if it didn't recognize that the organization was in trouble. But finally it seems administrators are willing to play a role in the bus system and they should be encouraged to do so.
parking and busing systems be combined in a park-and-ride shuttle system and that the University take some financial responsibility for the busing system.
Student Senate has proposed that the
It is also important that routes in East Lawrence and other areas far from campus aren't cut so that bus riders are limited to those who live on Daisy Hill.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway is scheduled to meet with Grey Montgomery, student body president, and other University representatives later this month to address the future of University transportation. Let's hope that he and other University administrators are finally ready to ease the KU on Wheels burden.
This idea would be a positive one if students could continue to have a voice in campus transportation without having to deal with the huge financial burden involved.
KANSAN STAFF
LATINA SULLIVAN . Associate Editorial
KRISTIE BLASI . News
NOVELDA SOMMERS . News
LESLIE TAYLOR . News
AMANDA TRAUGHBER . News
TARA TRENARY . News
DAVID TESKA . Online
SPENCER DUNCAN . Sports
GINA THORNBURG . Associate Sports
BRADLEY BROOKS . Campus
LINDSHE HENRY . Campus
DAVE BREITENSTEIN . Features
PAM DISIMAN . Photo
TYLER WIRKEN . Photo
BRYAN VOLK. Design
ANDY ROHRBACK . Graphics
ANDREA ALBRIGHT . Wire
LZ MUSSER . Special sections
AERICA VAZEY . News clerk
IAN RITTER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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**Letters:** Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kimberly Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (sulllvan@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Ebonics protesters don't know the facts
Columns
Spike's not the only one who's disappointed.
A few weeks ago, Spike Lee came to the University of Kansas only to be greeted by a lot of stupid questions, one of which was, "What are your feelings on Ebonics?"
RUFUS COLEMAN
He was applauded by a majority of the 1,900 people in the auditorium.
And I have never been so disappointed
It wasn't just Spike Lee that disappointed me. It was also those who applauded him — the educated elite. These were the KU professors and students and the educated people of Lawrence. And they more than showed their ignorance.
if anyone who applauded understood what had happened in Oakland, they would have known that there was nothing to stand for or against. Ebonics is not meant to be a separate language. The purpose of Ebonics is to take a dialect and to use it to teach English. Rather than telling people their culture is wrong and that they must start over, teachers are telling them it's OK and that they can learn from it.
If anyone had picked up an honest article, they would have known that the real issue had been overlooked.
The real issue isn't Ebonics. It's the large number of kids coming from schools like the one in Oakland who either don't finish or finish without learning the English language.
But when someone tried to help, it was turned into an uproar of gossip and opinions based on $c$
distorted facts.
No wonder no one ever speaks up and offers solutions.
How can people condemn something when it's obvious they do not know the context or the background?
I find it even more disappointing to come to a university and see that people aren't learning about the true environment in which they live and are not trying to create solutions. University life doesn't just prepare us for jobs, as a trade school does. I assumed that coming to a university meant coming to learn what it was to be an intelligent, contributing citizen.
But that's not the case, or else how could so many people in an auditorium of 1,900 educated people be so erroneous?
I'm disappointed and ashamed.
My political science professor said that America had never truly had an internal war, at least of late, and I couldn't help but laugh.
This is not social Darwinism. The class at the top is not fighting for survival — it is simply sheltered by money. But we have a greater problem when people choose to be so sheltered.
Are we so sheltered that we do not see that the poor and the uneducated are piling up? Can't we see the uprisings that have been popping up all across our country?
It seems that every time someone offers a solution, we make a mockery of it. It seems that every time someone says we have a problem, we ignore it.
We're so sheltered because we choose to remain uninformed extremists.
Rufus Coleman is a Dallas junior in journalism.
Abusers should receive more than slap on wrist
June Henley. Calvin Rayford. And now Scott Whittaker. All in the last year. And all from the University of Kansas.
These guys, two of them first-string athletes, were all accused of domestic violence. As representatives of a university that is about to be illuminated in the March Madness spotlight, what kind of image are they projecting?
Unfortunately, not a strong enough one. Some people may not even remember Rayford's arrest last summer, and Whittaker's problem only occupied a four-inch
DENA
PISCIOTTE
spot in the Quick Look section of The University Daily Kansan. Henley's situation did make headlines. And whatever became of their girlfriends? In the interest of journalistic ethics, some were granted anonymity. I imagine the women later changed their minds about pressing charges, took their men back, and the cycle continued.
As a survivor of domestic abuse, I know exactly what was going through these women's minds. They're on a psychological teeter-totter known as Stockholm Syndrome, identified by researchers at the University of Cincinnati and presented to the American Psychological Association three years ago.
People who have never experienced this nightmare often wonder why women put up with the abuse.
At the root of Stockholm Syndrome lies the victim's bond with her tormentor.
The relationship starts out well — he is charming and romantic, a nice guy according to those who know him. But after a significant investment of time and emotion, the subtle misdeeds begin. And one day, as she is watching talk shows about battered women and pitying those whose lives are so pathetic, it hits her that she is one of them.
Meanwhile, the abuser has taken control of her life. He drives her everywhere so he knows exactly where she is at all times. He takes control of her finances. He cuts her off from friends and
family.
Most battered women spend the span of the relationship trying to bring out that charming, sensitive guy they have only glimpses of. Consequently, he blames her because he isn't that man. And at the back of every abused woman's mind is the fear of retribution.
In the case of many athletes, their lives are centered on control, their physiques and who wins the game. The notion that the man is the dominant partner is ingrained in some, and the result is someone who, at the very least, is a control freak.
And the sports world generally views domestic violence as a misdemeanor — not something that should be encouraged, but something that's not discouraged either. When Nebraska's Lawrence Phillips was arrested, I was impressed that Coach Tom Osborne suspended him indefinitely. I lost every shred of respect for both of them when Phillips was reinstated with barely a slap on the wrist.
where are the criminal prosecutions in these cases? If children were beaten, they would be taken into the state's custody. If a bar brawl breaks out, everyone involved is arrested. Why is it that police won't get involved when a woman is beaten?
Even worse is the treatment of athletes in these cases. It seems almost dangerous for a woman to press charges and face the retribution of several thousand season-ticket holders: How dare she endanger the future of a Heisman hopeful? How dare she ruin his chances to take the team to the championship?
These men are poor role models for the millions of children who look up to them. Children think that if it's OK for these athletes, then it must be right.
Looking at these cases, I realize I was lucky — I got out. For the sake of those who haven't, the Lawrence Phillipses and Warren Moons of the world need to be stopped before they become the O.J. Simpsons.
Dena Piscotte is a Grand Junction, Colo., senior in English Journalism.
Letter
Columnist simplifies Senate elections
Eric Weslander, disillusioned by candidates, frustrated with hot pink fliers, has chosen a passive approach to Student Senate elections and doesn't vote at all. In Senate hopefuls act won't win this vote, Weslander sends a disturbing message to KU students. He oversimplifies Student Senate elections as a war zone of fake, predatory candidates.
There's a lot to be said for frustration with superficial candidates. Their nature is offensive to the issues that they supposedly care about.
But shallow people are generally an exception and should not be used to stereotype the majority of hard-working candidates.
Weslander is asking for legitimacy and sincerity from candidates.
The argument of not voting is a choice doesn't fly. Maybe Weslander has deep pockets and doesn't care how his student money is spent.
He claims that Senate is important, but yet he won't bother to vote for qualified people. So how does he expect qualified and sincere people to enhance Senate if he doesn't vote?
Weslander also asserts that Senate is an essential part of the University. He mentions services such as KU on Wheels, speakers and financing for student organizations that Senate handles.
---
But many others do care how
I agree and think voters should demand these qualities in all candidates. But the surest way to single out sincere candidates is to go to Wescoe Beach with these folks. Only then can intelligent choices be made about who is sincere and who is a poser.
Members of Senate work from August to April. Despite popular opinion, there is little material benefit in being the chair of a committee or gobbling up fancy titles.
our money is spent to make our years at the University enriching. That's why hundreds of students, not just senators, participate in Senate and help create policies that help us all.
Instead, the hours are long and there is no pay. From talking to senators I have found that their dedication to serving students ranks far above any benefit from title or resume.
Every student has the right to walk away from candidates. Every student has an obligation to be informed about candidates. Every student should vote.
How will you justify your vote?
Scott Kaiser
Overland Park freshman
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 7, 1997
5A
Reporter relates experience
Japanese American tells of minority life
By Umut Bayramoglu Kansan staff writer
Stephanie Nishikawa admired Connie Chung since she was a child. Although Nishikawa's parents were not always in full support of her choice of career, she went into the world of broadcasting to make her childhood dreams come true.
Last night Nishikawa, an Asian American reporter for WDAF in Kansas City, shared her personal experiences as a minority in broadcasting with an audience of 20 people at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Nishikawa did not charge the Asian American Student Union for her appearance.
The Asian American Student Union presented her as the keynote speaker for the fifth annual Asian-American Festival.
"As an Asian American, I can give my community a voice on TV," she said.
"Everything you learn is in the real world, not in the classroom," she said.
Nishikawa said she moved to Los Angeles and interned with Tritia Toyota for three months following her graduation.
"I worked 40 hours a week for three months for free," she said. "As a student, you can't expect to get paid for an internship."
Nishikawa said she sent 300 audition tapes after her internship and received 100 rejection letters.
"I sent most of the tapes to the Midwest and the South," she said. "At the time, I didn't realize that I didn't meet the demographics."
Before coming to Kansas City in 1994, Nishikawa worked with KCBS in Los Angeles as a news researcher and KPIX in San Francisco as a field producer.
She also spent a year and a half in Agama, Guam, working as an anchor for Guam Cable TV, a CNN affiliate.
homesick," she said. "But, you have to make a lot of sacrifice for your job if you really want to make it."
She said that it was also difficult to become the first Asian-American reporter at WDAF. Some people assumed she got the position because of her ethnicity, she said.
"It was very difficult. I was
"The hard part was being the only Asian American, but I learned to live with it." Nishikawa said.
The 28-year-old reporter said she was planning to move back to the West Coast when her contract with WDAF expired in September.
"My eventual goal is to be on a show like 20/20 or Prime Time Live," she said.
Crystal Johnson, Milwaukee graduate student, said Nishikawa's speech was not only inspiring to journalism students, but everyone in attendance.
"It was like," Here is my life story. This is how I dealt with it. Get what you can out of it," Johnson said.
Quentin Lay, Hoyt sophomore, said the issues she mentioned directly affected Asian Americans.
"It was very enlightening for me." he said.
Bills would make English Kansas' official language
The Associated Press
TOPEKA—Two bills being considered by a Senate committee could make English Kansas's official language.
One bill is sponsored by Sen. Janice Hardenburger, R-Haddam.
"This bill simply means that the official, public business of governing will be conducted in English," Hardenburger told the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee yesterday.
Phillip de la Torre, KU professor of law, testified against the bills.
"I come only as a Kansan who is concerned that his state government is about to make a serious mistake," de la Torre said.
Sen. Don Steffes, McR-Phelson, cited Canada as an example of why an official language should be designated.
"They made the mistake many years ago of going to a two-language society," Steffes said.
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KU
Rock Chalk Jayhawk
Story By Stephanie McDuff
F
For two years, Carrie Moore, Roeland Park junior, and her friends watched the Big Jay and Baby Jay mascots parade around at KU games. Then one of Moore's friends told Moore she'd make a great Baby Jay, and after thinking about the prospect, Moore realized that if she didn't try out she would regret it.
Moore said she saw being a Jayhawk mascot as a chance to express another part of her personality - her more goofy side.
But she also knew this opportunity would not be without sacrifice. To have enough time to be Baby Jay during her junior year, Moore had to postnose nursing school for a year.
The intense time commitments involved with being a mascot has been the biggest drawback for her. She said balancing her schoolwork and life as Baby Jay was sometimes difficult, although she had learned to schedule more study time this year.
Looking back, Moore said her year as a mascot was definitely worth the sacrifices, because of the many people she was able to meet as Baby Jay.
Moore said one of her favorite appearances was in Allen Field House, hearing the roar of the crowd during a basketball game.
"It just gives you the biggest rush," she said. "It's moments like that which makes everything completely worth it."
Traditionally there have been six mascots, three Big Jays and three
Turtle, who has been the mascot coach for two years, also played Baby Jay for two years.
The most unusual appearance Tuttle said she ever made as a mascot was at a wake for a former KU band member. During the memorial service, dressed as Baby Jay, Tuttle and others in attendance sang the Rock Chalk Chant.
Unsung heroes
After seeing an advertisement in The University Daily Kansan for mascot tryouts two years ago, Danny Iskak, HI Singapore,apore, junior, decided he would give it a try because being Big Jay sounded like fun. After two years of performing as Big Jay, Iskak said it had been a good experience.
"It's great once you get into costume," Iskak said.
Despite his enjoyment of performing for crowds and greeting fans, Ialek said the job could get frustrating at times.
"Some people forget there's a person under the costume." he said
Children have pulled on and punched the mascots, Iskak said, but there's little a nutte mascot could do to stop them.
Sara Jarrell, Lawrence senior and two-year mascot, agreed that little children could be obnoxious when they tried to remove the bird's head and find out who was inside the costume.
Even with the occasional ornery child, Jarrell said, her years as a mascot have been a great experience.
Mascots
Danny Ikeka (far left), Indonesia *n junior; Carrie Moore, Roeland Park junior; Sara Jarell Alberquerque, N.M., senior; Tara Moloray, Elkhard sophomore, and Kyn Jones, Wellsville junior pose with their Jayhawk apparel. These five mascots stay busy showing their school spirit at numerous KU events.
Baby Jays, each year. This year, however, one person was academically disqualified, leaving only five. Each of the mascots is expected to exercise and remain in good physical condition throughout the year so they can keep up with all of the appearances they have to make.
Last year's mascots made more than 250 appearances, said mascot coach Le-Thu Tuttle, Lawrence graduate student, and Tuttle expects to surpass that number this year. The total does not include regular appearances at men's and women's basketball, football, soccer and volleyball games. The mascots also occasionally attend baseball games to cheer players on and entertain spectators.
Birthday parties, company picnics, hospital tours, the Hutchinson State Fair and special breakfasts are the most common special appearances made by the Jayhawks.
Wedding appearances are also fairly common. Throughout the years, Tuttle said, several people have requested that the school mascots walk the bride down the aisle or make an appearance at the reception.
"I've enjoyed every second." Jarrell said.
Jarrell was a KU cheerleader for one year, but decided that being a mascot might be more fun. As a mascot, she doesn't have to smile all the time and she can act like an idiot, she said.
Jarrell said she enjoyed approaching older alumni and little children and watching them react as they meet Baby Jay.
Jarrell's most memorable experience as a mascot was when she appeared at the birthday party for a 60-year-old KU alumnus who had brain cancer.
The man, who is now deceased, had been a life-long fan of the Jayhawks and had attended every home basketball game except one since he was five years old. Because of his illness, he could no longer attend the games, so his colleagues and friends brought the Jayhawk to him. Jarrell said the man was so happy that Baby Jay was at his party that he couldn't stop holding her hand and crying for joy. At that moment, jarrell said, she was honored to wear the mascot uniform.
Suiting up
Big Jay's costume weighs about 20 to 25 pounds, and the pint-sized Baby Jay's suit weighs about 15 pounds. The heavy suit and awkward head size makes it harder for the mascots to tumble during games.
New costumes were purchased last year and were revealed at the KU vs. UCLA basketball game. Tuttle said the suits cost $5,000 each and were made by Scollon Productions, Inc. in North Carolina.
The new costume for Baby Jay, however, wasn't quite what Tuttle had envisioned and was sent back a couple of times to be remade before it looked just right.
Although they can't tumble too much, this year's mascots have joined in more of the dance routines and cheerleading stunts.
The heavy costumes also are hot to wear. Even though he had been warned that he would get hot while wearing the Big Jay suit, Iskak said, he didn't realize how much being a mascot would wear him out.
Tara Mobray, Elkhart sophomore, remembers everyone telling her that being a mascot would be hard work, but said she never understood how difficult the task was until she performed at a basketball game.
Despite the sweaty costume, Mobray said, her appearance at her first basketball game this year was when she realized she truly enjoyed being Baby Jay. She loved running around during pregame festivities pretending to act like a three-year-old, she said.
Trying out
The mascot's season starts in April and continues through March. As this season draws to a close, Tuttle is preparing for next year's tryouts.
A mandatory clinic will be held April 21 in Anschutz Sports Pavilion for those interested in becoming a mascot for next year. The actual tryout will be April 22.
Tuttle said that endurance and creativity were two qualities of a good Big Jay and Baby Jay. She also said it was important for the mascot to be able to interact well with the crowd.
There is a $$ clinic fee for the mascot tryouts. During the clinic, students will out on the costumes to get used to wearing them.
A panel consisting of band members, alumni, professors and former mascots will select the new mascots. Tuttle said there had usually been five judges, but this year she plans to add a few more. The six people selected as mascots will attend the University's cheerleading camp during the last week of May and weekly practices throughout the year.
Page 6A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
March 7, 1997
Page 6A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
March 7, 1997
News of the WEIRD
The Associated Press reported in January on the 8-year-old anti-smoking policy of Kimball Physics of Wilton, N.H. The policy not only forbids smoking at work, but it subjects each employee and visitor to a sniff test of the person's breath and clothing performed by receptionist Jennifer Walsh. Those with an odor so strong that it is likely they smoked within the last two hours are not allowed into the building.
LEAD STORIES
In February, Schenectady, N.Y., patrolman Robert J. O'Neill reportedly retired. He had been on sick leave since 1982, at full salary that
now has reached $508,000, because of psychological problems related to his Vietnam Marine experience that allegedly made him a danger to the public.
Modern-day Stagecoach Robberies: Reuters news service reported in January that the 400-mile route from Moscow to St. Petersburg, Russia, is being worked by armed thieves who rob and hijack cargo trucks. And in August, gunmen on the runway at the airport in Parpignan, France, halted a taxing Air Force airliner carrying 167 passengers and stole moneybags containing about $800,000.
■ In a November Associated Press dispatch from Payiir, Sudan, a reporter described the local competition among unmarried Dinka men to gorge themselves and refrain
CULTURAL DIVERSITY
from exercise to become fat. This practice is regarded as a way to win females because it demonstrates that the men's cattle herd is large enough for him to consume extra milk and meat. The typical Dinka is tall and reed-thin — former basketball player Manute Bol is a Dinka — and some men gain so much unfamiliar weight so quickly that they have been known to topple over.
The hottest selling computer software in Japan in November was a love simulation game in which boys try to get a virtual 17-year-old girl, Shiori, to fall in love with them. There is even a magazine, Virtual Idol, devoted to supplying fictional tales of Shiori and other virtual girls. Wrote one young mar., Virtual Idol "is just the right kind of magazine for a person like me who's not interested in real girls."
By January, several news services had reported on an equally popular
Japanese computer craze, the Virtual Pet, a $16 electronic "bird" the size of an egg that responds to nurturing instincts in many teen-age girls. By pushing buttons, the owner can feed it, play with it, clean up after it and discipline it.
According to an October Associated Press story, young mothers in large Japanese cities have adopted the city park as a forum for vying for status. Some young mothers interviewed claimed they were scared to take their toddlers to the parks (to make their "park debut") because of the established cliques of mothers who dominate the facilities. Guide-books teach the proper park behavior; department stores feature the proper park clothing; and a recent satric movie depicted a park ruled by 50 authoritarian mothers.
In Singapore, which is so pristine that even public gum-chewing
is illegal, police expressed concern in February about the recent crisis of apartment dwellers in high rise buildings who casually toss their belongings out the window. Fifty-one people were arrested last year for throwing objects ranging from TV sets to a tricycle to flower pots.
The Time of London reported in December that Bombay (whose name was recently changed to Mumbai) become the first city in India to ban public spitting, which the reporter described as one of the two most ubiquitous of male habits in India (the other being public urination). "Boys barely old enough to walk can be heard practicing guttural sounds, which is regarded as macho," the article in the Times stated.
A September Los Angles Times story described what Argentine writer Tomas Eloy Martinez called
the country's obsession with emotional necrophilia toward its prominent citizens. Frequently, corpse of luminaries such as Juan Peron are dug up and either celebrated or desecrated to excite national pride. The hands of Peron's corpse were sawed off by a zealous grave robber in 1987 and have not been recovered and last year a judge ordered Peron's body to be disinterred yet again so that a DNA sample could be taken as evidence in a women's claim that she is Peron's illegitimate daughter.
According to a June China Daily story, 40 million Chinese live in caves, but many are leaving for regular houses, putting a strain on the available arable land in some areas. Thus, architects working for the government are designing futuristic cave homes in Gansu, Henan and Shanxi provinces to encourage the cave dwellers to stay put.
INSIDE SPORTS
The Kansas baseball team completed its season sweep of the Nebraska Cornhuskers last night, 11-6, at Hogland-Maupin stadium. The Jayhawks are scheduled to play at home at 3 p.m. today against St. Cloud State. Page 28
KANSA ST.
19-10, 12-7
73
UNRANKED
KANSAS
24-5, 14-5
RANKED NO. 9
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
58
JAYHAWK BASKETBALL WOMEN'S
FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1997
KU VS.
Kansas St. 73. No.9 Kansas 58
KANSAS (25-4)
Pride FG FT TP
Tulip 5-4 4-1 11
Trump 5-4 4-1 11
Sanford 0-1 0-0 0
Noblebble 6-16 1-0 0
Dixon 6-16 1-0 14
Raymant 0-3 0-0 0
Scott 0-3 0-0 0
Reed 0-1 0-2 1
Canada 0-1 0-0 0
Grayer 0-1 0-0 0
Texas 20-45 12-29 58
SANTA CLARA (19-10) FG FT TP
Decker 2-7 6-7 11
Jones 9-18 7-8 28
Hester 1-6 0-0 3
Jacobson 6-14 4-7 18
Remige 1-1 1-1 18
Coatson 0-0 1-2 1
Finkos 3-5 4-4 10
Totals 22-51 27-7 73
Haltifme: Kansas St. 33, Kansas St. 32, 3-Point
games: Kansas 5-13 (Halliburton 5-10, Rayman 0-
1, Decker 2-5, Decker 1-4, Heister 1-5). Fouled out: None.
Reboundes: Kansas 31 (Trump 7), Kansas St. 39
(Jones 9). Assists: Kansas St. 34, Pride, Halliburton,
Jones 8). Jaboeton (2) Total fouls: Kansas
21, Kansas St. 16, NA.
Women's game notes
The Kansas starters accounted for 111 of the Jayhawks' 124 total points during their two games of the Big 12 Tournament. Of the reserves that scored, forward Shelly Canada scored six points, guard Erinn Reed had five points, and forward Patience Grayer had two points.
SECTION B
The loss ended an eight-game winning streak for the No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team. The streak started on Feb. 8 with a 62-58 win against Iowa State at Allen Field House
Forward Lynn Pride had 11 points, six rebounds, three assists and three steals against Kansas State yesterday. Her two-game totals for the Big 12 Tournament were 20 points, 25 rebounds, six assists and nine stolen.
Kansas guard Angie Halbleib scored a team-high 19 points last night. By doing so, she surpassed the 1,400-point plateau and moved into eighth place among Kansas women's basketball scorers.
If the Jayhawks play host to first- and second-round games of the NCAA Tournament next week, they will have a chance to break the school's home-court win-streak record. Kansas will break the record of 20 games if it wins its first round game.
The Jayhawks are ranked No. 7 in the USA Today/CNN Coaches' poll and No. 9 in the Associated Press poll. It was the first time since Feb. 7, 1994, that Kansas was able to crack the top 10. Kansas has been in the top 25 for the past 22 weeks.
- Heading into the NCAA Tournament next week, Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington has a 40-25 postseason record. She won her 450th career game earlier this season and has an overall record of 456-257.
Big 12 tournament results:
Women
Kansas St. 73, Kansas 58
Colorado 56, Iowa St. 39
Men
Oklahoma St. 80, Baylor 66
Texas Tech 73, Kansas St. 57
Missouri 78, Nebraska 72
Oklahoma 67, A&M 84
Men's starting lineup
PROBABLE STARTERS
Kansas (29-1 overall, 15-1 in the Big
(12):
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
G Jacque Vaughn, 6-1, Sr.
G Jerod Hase, 6-3, Sr.
F Paul Pierce, 6-7, So.
R Faef LaFrentz, 6-11, Jr.
C Scot Pollard, 6-11, Sr.
the Big 12:
G Chad Alexander, 6-3, Jr.
G Adrian Peterson, 6-4, So.
F Chianti Roberts, 6-6, Sr.
F Maurice Robinson, 6-7, Sr.
C Brett Robisch, 6-11, Jr.
Oklahoma St. (16-13 overall, 7-9 in
15
Kansas senior guard Angie Halbleib wrestles with Kansas State senior center Kayla Hester for a loose ball last night in the Wildcats' 73-58 victory over the Javhawks.
Wildcats claw Kansas
Women fall to unranked in-state rivals
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
In its third meeting against unranked Kansas State this season, the No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team lost 73-58 in the Big 12 Tournament semifinals.
The loss ended the Jayhawks' eight-game winning streak and hurt their bid to obtain a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said her team must maintain a positive attitude while preparing for the NCAA Tournament next week.
"We didn't play very well in this tournament," Washington said. "We're certainly not going to let
1948-2006
Marian Washington
Kansas' problems started when it had its largest lead of the game, 28-18, with 8:15 left in the first half. The Wildcats went on an 15-4 run to close the first half and entered halftime with a 33-32 lead.
The Jayhawks regained the lead in the opening of the second half but lost the game in the last 13 minutes. K-State outscored the Jayhawks 32-13 during that stretch.
K-State women's basketball coach Deb Patterson said she was proud of her team's effort considering the opponent.
Kansas guard Angie Halbleib had a season-high of five three-point field goals and a team-high of 19 points.
"It's always tough to line up against a team for a third time," Patterson said. "We did a good job answering their run in the first half. That was as good as anything considering how they beat us each time during the regular season."
The Jayhawks had defeated K-State by 16 points in both regularseason meetings.
Held in check for most of the second half was Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon, who finished with 13 points, three rebounds and three assists. She did not attempt a field goal during the final 7 minutes.
"We wanted to win this game," said Dixon. "Now that we lost you we look at it in a positive way. We'll work on the things that we didn't do today and hopefully better prepare for the NCAA."
Leading the Wildcats was forward Andria Jones, who had 28 points and nine rebounds. Jones and teammate guard Missy Decker played all 40 minutes of the game.
K-State guard Brit Jacobson had 18 points, six assists, five rebounds and three steals against the Jayhawks. She had played all 40 minutes of the Wildcats' first two tournament games before last night, when she played 38 minutes.
The Wildcats used seven players yesterday, while Kansas used 10. The Jayhawk reserves totaled one point while combining for 53 minutes of play last night.
"We were trying to find the right defensive combination, so we were not necessarily playing a lot of players," Washington said. "We weren't switching out and communicating as well as we did (on defense), and that limited who I wanted to put out there."
Kansas' madness begins with Cowboys
Jayhawks prepare for Big 12 shootout
By Bill Petulia
Kansan sportswrite
For Kansas, the march in March begins today.
The first stop for the Kansas men's basketball team as it embarks on its goal of a national championship is in the Big 12 Conference Tournament against Oklahoma State at noon today in Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
"Tournament time is when all the teams put everything out on the table," Kansas guard Billy Thomas said. "And the team that loses, they might be going home for good."
Kansas defeated Oklahoma State, 104-72, in their only meeting this season on Feb. 12 at Allen Field House.
In that game, the Jayhawks forced 22 turnovers and held Oklahoma State forward Chianti Roberts to only six points.
The Cowboys defeated Baylor yesterday, 80-65, to earn the right to play the Jayhawks.
Guard Andrian Peterson paced Oklahoma State with 19 points, and forward Maurice Robinson chipped in 17 points in the losing effort.
Although Kansas did not have the services of center Scot Polard, who was sidelined with a
"in order for us to be successful we need a big center that can play well," Oklahoma State assistant coach Paul Graham said.
"Chianti can play a lot of positions, he's versatile and he's strong." Graham said. "He's so confident in taking players off the dribble that he's done that several times."
If the Cowboys expect to be competitive on the boards, they will need to get some production out of center Brett Robisch.
broken left foot, the Jayhawks out
broke Oklahoma State 36-26
Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn dished out 10 assists and forward Raef LaFrentz led all scorers with 22 points in the victory against Oklahoma State.
Another key for the Jayhawks will be to stifle Roberts, who netted 17 in yesterday's win against Baylor.
LaFrentz, this season's Big 12 Player of the Year, is averaging 19 points and nine rebounds per game.
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
KANSAS
31
Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams said he was delighted with LaFrentz's play this season.
Center Scot Pollard rips down a rebound over Nebraska's Andy Markowski during the Jayhawks' game with the Cornhuskers last weekend in Lincoln, Neb.
"He's had an incredible year for him on both ends of the court," Williams said. "I'm extremely pleased with him and, at the same time, he and I know he can be doing this for a long time."
The game will be televised at noon on the Big 12 television station, channels 9 and 13.
Basketball tournament waste of time, janitor says
In my campaign to improve the Big 12 Conference basketball tournament, I wrote on Tuesday that the bottom four seeds, not the top four, should get first round byes.
That day some people wrote me saying I was crazy and some called to inform me that I was an idiot.
Even my mother laughed.
SPORTS EDITOR
SPENCER DUNCAN
My first call was to Big 12 Commissioner Steve Hatchell.
However, I believe in my mission to make the Big 12 tournament the best that it can be. So, I called some influential people to solicit suggestions on ways to spice up the tourney.
When I called, his secretary informed me that Hatchell was not in the office because he was busy with tournament duties. Then she muttered under her breath something about me not being important.
I told the secretary why I was calling and asked her if she had any suggestions.
She said the tournament should have an All-Star game. She thought that before the tournament the All Big 12 Teams should square off with one another, and use the third team and honorable mention players as subs.
"They would get tired before the tournament," I said.
"But it would be interesting," she replied.
"But they would get injured," I said. "It would make a lot of money," she replied.
"Good point," I answered. Then I muttered under my breath what a stupid idea that was.
I thanked her for her suggestion and asked her who else I should talk with. She transferred me to the office of Tim Allen. Not the comedian, but the Big 12 associate commissioner.
Again, I found myself talking to a secretary. I asked her if I could talk with Allen.
She said he was busy with other duties, then muttered under her breath something about reading my last column and thinking I was an idiot.
So I asked her if she had any ideas.
"I asked her for the fair any whats.
"That is not the fair fan, but my husband." she said.
"What would he suggest?" I questioned.
"He would like to see the tournament seeds done away with and the teams matched up based on how exciting the games would be," she replied. "Watching Kansas State and Texas Tech play is as exciting as his family reunion. You know, a bunch of hicks get together and pretend they are better than they are."
I don't know where she meant to send me, but I was soon talking to Tony the janitor.
I muttered under my breath how I thought the idea was as dumb as giving the bottom four teams a bye. Then I asked her to transfer me to someone else.
So, I asked Tony what he thought
The only way to improve the Big 12 tournament is to get rid of it," he said.
"No one benefits," Tony continued. "It takes the conference's best teams and tires them before the NCAA tournament. And it can let a sucker team like Missouri into the tournament if it gets on a hot streak. Plus, who cares? What's the point of a regular season if they are going to make all the teams play again? Quit the foreplay and just get to the Big Show."
Here was an intelligent man. I thanked Tony and hung up.
After pondering his brilliance, I found myself with only one thing left to do.
I called my mother to see what she thought
Comments? E-mail Spencer at sports@kansan.com
---
2B
Friday, March 7,1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Softball team on the road again
Jayhawks to compete in Hall of Fame tourney
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
When Willie Nelson wrote his hit song On the Road Again, he might have had the Kansas softball team in mind.
The Jayhawks won't play their first home series until April 2.
The team will play its third tournament of the season, and its second in Oklahoma City, this weekend when it competes in the Hall of Fame Tournament, hosted by Big 12 Conference rival Oklahoma.
"I think we can do very well in this tournament, if not win it all," Kansas assistant coach Marla Looper said.
Kansas competed in a makeshift tournament in Oklahoma City on Feb. 14 that was put together after rain canceled the
Arlington Intercollegiate Tournament in Texas.
"This tournament will have a similar setup, but also some differences," Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso said. "There will be seven teams instead of eight, and it will be a double-elimination tournament with bracket play. So teams are guaranteed to play in more games."
The teams competing are Kansas Northwestern, Wichita State, Baylor, Stephen F. Austin, Notre Dame and Oklahoma.
"I think the toughest team in our bracket is Baylor, Looper said. "They're a first-year program, but they have knocked off some very good teams and played others close."
Kansas enters the tournament with a 7-4 overall record after going 3-2 last week at the Hillenbrand Invitational in Tucson. Ariz.
The team went 3-0 last Saturday but fell to No.1 Arizona and unranked LSU on Sunday.
Jayhawk softball
obcable start lineup:
■ LF Sara Holland
■ 2B Heather Richins
■ C Kristina Johnson
■ SS Michelle Hubler
■ 3B Sarah McCann
■ IB Shannon Stanwix
■ CF Julie True
■ DP Katie Malone
■ RF Jennifer Funkhouser
■ P Sarah Workman
"We were pleased with last weekend, overall," Looper said. "On Saturday, we played very well. We hit well, pitched well and played good defense. But Sunday was just one of those days, and unfortunately, we all have them."
The Jayhawks will play Notre Dame (2-7 overall) at 12:30 p.m. and Stephen F. Austin (10-10 overall) at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at Reaves Park in Oklahoma City.
Kansas sweeps Nebraska
Unlikely source provides big hits
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
Aaron Wilmes only had two doubles all of last year.
two doubles all of last year.
Last night, he had three in one game.
Wilmes stroked his first hit of the afternoon in the fourth innning. With no outs and two runners on base,
the first baseman's offensive spark helped the Kansas baseball team beat Nebraska 11-6 at Hogglund Maupin stadium. With the victory, the Jayhawks (8-5, 4-2) completed the season sweep of the Cornhuskers
the Lawrence native ripped a double off Nebraska's Patrick Driscoll, scoring catcher Josh Dimmick from second. The Jayhawks added one more run in the iming, but the Cornhuskers' still lead to 4-3.
With Kansas trailing by a run in the sixth, Wilmes lead off the inning by tagging his second double. He scored when right fielder Stephen Mathews hit a single. The score would lead to a three-run inning for the Jayhawks and give Kansas its first lead of the game, 8-6.
An errant throw to home in the eighth inning enabled two Jayhawk runners to score. Wilmes then hit his third double, scoring two Jayhawks and capping a
five-run inning.
Wilmes, making just his second start of the season, said he was just trying to make something happen for the team.
"I was looking for something in the zone," he said.
"I work hard everyday. I was just glad to get a chance to get out there."
Kansas baseball head coach Bobby Randall said Wilmes' hitting was one of the main ingredients to the Kansas win.
"He had an extremely big game," Randall said. "Aaron came in there and gave us a lift.
The Jayhawk return to action at 3 p.m. today when they begin a home series against St. Cloud State.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 7.1997
3B
The following are comments received by the sports desk. Comments and suggestions can be e-mailed to sports@kansan.com Selected comments may be printed.
In response to Spencer Duncan's column that the bottom four teams in the Big 12 conference tournament get byes:
I hope you were kidding or trying to evoke some response from your readers. I understand that it would be nice to have had the Big 12 conference stronger this year, but is this ANY solution?
The object is NOT to force underserving teams into the NCAA tournament. The object is NOT to trivialize the Big 12 tournament. To give these teams a bye week is a ridiculous and ill-conceived notion. By the same argument, we should have the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds play each other during the first round and progressively
TALKING BACK
attempt to eliminate the higher seeds in order to better the chances of a low-seed team winning the championship.
Real college basketball fans would object to such an idea. The NCAA tournament is supposed to be the tournament to determine the national champions, not merely an opportunity for leagues to make money. I would rather see a better at-large team that has had a good season but didn't get an automatic bid in the tournament. The lesser teams will get beat and they are a waste of seed.
Your article about rewarding the last four teams in the Big 12 is hilarious. Did you just fall off of the watermelon truck today or was
it yesterday? Better have the doc check your head out.
Spencer, in my opinion you have it wrong if you're giving the bottom of the Big 1.2 a chance to be Included in the Big Dance.
Are you crazy? This hurts the teams that you claim are on the bus. OU, Texas Tech and Nebraska would not get byes in this system. They are the ones that you are purporting to help, but you are only hurting them. These teams need wins. Allowing them to play the lower four teams should do this a heck of a lot better than making them play the top four teams in the first round.
Miscellaneous comment:
■ I think that for the success of the team, every player needs to stay out of early foul trouble (especially Paul). Billy Thomas can make some critical shots, but he is always ignored in critical moments. Just an opinion; I'm not a coach.
Bulls ponder the Rodman factor
By Mike Nadel
The Associated Press
DEERFELT, Ill. — Michael Jordan says the Chicago Bulls don't need Dennis Rodman to repeat as NBA champions. Coach Phil Jackson doesn't know who would do the dirty work in Rodman's absence.
A
in Rodman's absence.
Scottie Pippen wonders if the Rodman is worth all the trouble he causes. Luc Longley says Rodman is too valuable to dismiss so casually.
Rodman will return tonight to play against the Indiana Pacers from yet another suspension — his fourth in less than a year. And even the Bulls can't decide if that's good or bad.
Dennis Rodman
"Dennis isn't a distraction for me.
'I've gotten used to his act,' Pippen said. 'But there are some nights that you just don't feel like dealing with him.'
"I differ with Scotte on that point," Longley, Rodman's biggest supporter on the team. "It's easy to wonder if Dennis is worth having after we beat a team by 40. Wait until we play tough, physical teams like New York, and then tell me if you think he's worth having or not."
The Bulls defeated injury-ravaged San Antonio 111-69 Wednesday without Rodman, who was serving a one-game suspension for hitting Milwaukee's Joe Wolf below the belt.
Chicago's two-season record without Rodman is 27.5—an. 844 winning percentage that would mean 69 victories over an 82-game NBA campaign. With Rodman, the Bulls are 112.15, including last season's 15-3 playoff showing. That's an. 882 percentage, a 72-win pace.
"We're better with Dennis, but I'm prepared to go with whatever we have," Jordan said. "Can we win the title without Dennis? I think we can. It would be easier if we had him, but we could do it without him if we have to."
Jackson, however, wants Rodman to behave for the rest of the season and to stay in the lineup.
Jackson said he didn't know if the Bulls could win a championship without Rodman.
"The physical nature that Dennis brings us against teams that scrum inside that's important to us," he said. "To this point, I haven't seen anyone who could replace that."
Second-year forward Jason Caffey started in Rodman's place yesterday.
Caffey has had some good games this season, but he's no Rodman, who is on pace for an unprecedented sixth consecutive NBA rebounding title.
Of course, Caffey also isn't a foul-mouthed, cross-dressing, hair-dyeing, cameraman-kicking referee baiter who thinks the NBA is out to get him.
"When you accept the rebounds Dennis brings you, you have to accept his whole package," Longley said. "I can speak only for myself, but I know that I'm willing to accept Dennis for what he is. I like Dennis."
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© 1997 Traacker Insurance and Identity Association College Retirement Equities Fund, 710 Third Avenue, New York, NY
1029 Massachusetts
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KANSAS
840 Massachusetts 842-NIKE (6453)
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Form 1040 Department of the Treasury—Internal Revenue U.S. Individual Income Tax
For the year Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1996, or other
Label
(See instructions on page 12)
Use this form to record your income.
Please enter your name and address.
Your first name and initial
If a joint return spouse's first name an
CREF certificates are distributed by TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services. In. For more complete information, including charges and expenses you must 800-823-7599, extension 6599, for a current CREF certificate. Read the prospectus carefully before you invest or sell money. Date of first use: 297.
UNFORTUNATELY, THIS IS WHERE PEOPLE ARE PUTTING TOO MANY RETIREMENT DOLLARS.
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS + (913) 841-LIVE
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BLEACHERS SPORTS BAR OPENING MID-MARCH
BLEACHERS is a huge 7000 sq. ft sports bar featuring 2 rooms, 3 10ft big screens, multiple TVs, pool, darts, aqua walls, comfy couches, and a dance floor with DJ playing舞,retro, modern rock, and alternative favorites.
NOW HIRING Bartenders, Waitresses, Bouncers Apply in person M-F 12-5pm
ATTENTION KU PLAYERS WANTED: ANYTHING AUTOGRAPHED
FOR MORE INFO CALL: 749-HAWK 804 W 24TH - BEHIND McDONALDS
KANSAS BASEBALL BIG WEEKEND SERIES!
KU
Kansas
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ST. CLOUD STATE
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Nerf Herder
Their debut album features "Van Halen," and the new single "Sorry."
"So memorable, Nerf Herder may be one of the surprise success bars of the year."
- NY Post
Don't miss
Don't miss Nerf Herder and Bloodhound Gang at the Bottleneck Saturday, March 8th!
Sale ends 3-17-97
4B
Friday, March 7,1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.
832-8228
Pre-Occupational Therapy Club Meeting
When: Tuesday, March 11, 1997
When: Tuesday, March 11,
Time: 8:30 pm
Where: Regionalists Room
Topic: Elections
Pre-Occupational Therapy
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Todav's Birthday (March 7)
Today's Birthday (March 7)
Make plans and finish old projects in March. Upgrade your skills in May. Fall in love in July and get married in November. If you're already married, recommit and go on another honeymoon. You'll power through a career confrontation in December. Development brings you luck in February.
Aries (March 21-April 1.9) - Today is a 8.
Consult with your teammates and figure out your game plan. Use a tactic that has worked before. Later in the day, you'll get lots of helpful suggestions. Instead of getting cranky and irritable, write them down.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)- Today is an 8.
Your best time to finalize a business deal is first thing this morning. That's also best for calling a person who lives far away. You could be ordering supplies or talking to a friend, but make the call early.
Geminil (May 21-June 21) - Today is a 6.
If you're thinking about going shopping, don't do it. Instead, stash away as much of your paycheck as possible. Some people watch what happens and lots of people wonder what happened.
HOROSCOPES
Conditions this weekend are perfect for travel, romance and conversations about the meaning of life. Redeem one of your "Time Off For Good Behavior" coupons.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is an 8.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 6.
Service is the key to success. Treat
other people as if they were the royalty
and you were the servant. This is not
easy for a Leo, but the rewards could
be great. It's good for you.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is an 8.
Your best tactic is to work through a partner. This might be your mate, a good friend or somebody you hire. Your partner is going to save you money in the long run, even if he or she costs you money now.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 5.
*
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 6.
You may not have time to go out to lunch. Oh well,... that's a good way to go on a mini-diet. There's a lot to do, and most if it seems to fall on you. If you can appear to enjoy it, you'll make a better impression on the person who sign your checks.
There's so much you want to buy, but there's a limit to your resources, even if you did just win the lottery. Put as much as you can into your savings account before you even get to the stores.
Scorpio (Oct, 24-Nov. 21) - Today is a 9
hard to think about anything else. Luckily, it's a Friday. This is going to be a marvelous weekend for a rendezvous. Your sweetheart is in the same frame of mind.
Information will sink in better if you put it through your own personal mental scanner before noon. Then, you'll want to go home and stay. Are you the one who's throwing the party? The team may drop over uninvited.
Capricorn (Dec, 22-Jan. 19) - Today is an 8.
You always learn best through experience and it's a marvelous day to practice. This condition is in effect all weekend, so stock up on provisions.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) - Today is a 9.
What are you, on your honeymoon or something? You're in love and find it
If you've just guessed that it doesn't get much better than this, you're right! Speaking of guessing, your intuition is right on target. Follow your whims wherever they lead you.
New Girls
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Today is an 8 .
New Girls
earing nothing but a smile...
New Girls
Juccers Showgirls
Open at 7:30 everyday until 2:00am
Juicers Showgirls
Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS
$2 admission with student ID Free Admission on your Birthday!
913 N. Second
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
Grad Fest 97
Graduation Announcements
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only at the top of Naismith Hill! 20 Crescent Road843-3826
The Gates of Paris...
(coough-cough)
Marcello, I don't know what to do. Rodrigue's daughter our life unbearable - I'm at a loss for his cruel accusations.
I'll talk with him - he is staying here with Musetta and me.
STUDENT
SENATE
3/8
AD
Kansan Classified
BOHÉME
The tragic romance of the fiery poet Rodolpho, and Mimi, a gentle seamustress.
* Part III *
March 7 & 8, 1997
8:00 p.m.
The Lied Center of Kansas
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Concert Series presents the New York City Opera National Company in BUCCINIUS
THE LIFT GENIUS CENTER
Rodolpho, why do you torture Mimi so - you know she loves only you.
I'm jealous and ill-tempered, but I am afraid. Mimi is very well. I trust she is doomed.
ALL TICKETS HALF-PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Rodolpho...
Oh, I can not leave you all will be better in the spring.
LA ...
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Rodolpho...
tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (913) 864-ARTS and all TicTicketmaster at (913) 234-4545 or (816) 931-3300.
Will true love win out?
Will Rodolpho and Mimi remain together?
Or will her health divide them?
...
300s
Merchandise
Jetmaster Ticket Centers or call Illustrated by Melissa Dehner.
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Y
Find out at the Lied Center in the New York City Opera's presentation of La Bohme.
A
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
110 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
X
400s Real Estate
100s Announcements
...
KANSAN CLASSIFIEIDS:
864-4358
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
ces 235 Typing Services
200s Employment
140 Lost and Found
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Servi-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertisin in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Federal Housing Act of 1984 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, national origin, status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, nationality, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulations.
Classified Policy
100s Announcements
105 Personals
T
SWM age 40's brown eyes & hair, country background, animal lover. Desires female for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P.O. Box 4215 Lawrence, KS 60944
KU Q&A offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unsexual. Please call KU info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 812-4345 for more information.
Sterling Silver Jewelry For Gaws & Gals.
Hoops, naval rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc. Shop, 928 Mass.
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
Desiring to see *La Boheme* in dream seats; Offering 2 side aisle tickets and cash for yours. Call Eric #843-8906.
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!
GRANTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE FROM SPONSOR! NO REPAYMENT EVER!!
FOR MORE INFO CALL: 1-800-243-2455
THE MOST SHOCKING THING ABOUT THIS MOVIE IS HOW MUCH PEOPLE LOVE IT!
"Private Parts' is A COMIC FIRECRACKER with a surprising human touch." Peter Davies, BOLLING STONE
"FUNNY! 'Private Parts' is a public pleasure."
"You'll be surprisingly charmed by 'Private Parts' - IT'S VERY FUNNY!"
*Charles Ferrizzo*, KANSAS CITY SUN
"You'll love Howard Stern.
A MUST SEE.
Don't miss this movie.
Mary Oldfield, FOX-7
A.J.
HOWARD STERN PRIVATE PARTS
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RIGHT OF USE, ACCOMPLISH
FATIGUE OR WASTE OF VECTOR
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FACTORY WARRANTY FOR USE WITHIN THE U.S.
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6B
Friday, March 7, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Into the deep
After diving for 16 years,junior Brian Humphrey sets his sights on the Zone Diving championships
By Kelly Cannon
Kansan sportswriter
Humphrey began diving when he was six.
As junior diver Brian Humphrey heads to College Station, Texas, for the Zone Diving championships, he remembers his accomplishments and still relishes in the thrill of the sport.
"When I do new dives and I hit them, it is thrilling." he said.
"I was at a public pool messing around doing flips and a lifeguard suggested to my parents that I should take diving lessons," Humphrey said. "My parents enrolled me in them that winter."
Diving wasn't the only sport that Humphrey devoted his time to, however. He began gymnastics at age 8.
Humphrey's success in the sport continued through high school. He dove with a U.S. diving team until he entered high school at Olathe East, when he started diving only for his high school team.
- He placed first at state three out of his four prep years.
However, those accomplishments are not what Humphrey said he was most proud of.
"That is the accomplishment that I remember," he said.
After his accomplishments in high school, Humphrey seriously considered two colleges where he could continue his diving: Kansas and Southern Illinois.
"I looked at several different places," Humphrey said. "Lawrence was familiar and I liked the campus. I liked the people and felt comfortable, and it was close to my family."
Humphrey's talents attracted the attention of Kansas diving coach Don Fearon.
"I recruited him," Fearon said. "He is
SPORTS
one you don't want to let slip away."
Humphrey placed fourth in the one-meter and fifth in the three-meter competition his freshman year at Kansas. He decided to take a break and not compete his sophomore year, eventually getting back into the sport after Fearon asked him to coach at a summer clinic for the University.
"I started diving around, and we went to a meet that summer," Humphrey said.
Last year Humphrey placed fourth on both the one-and three-meter boards at the Big Eight championships. Last weekend his placings went up again as he finished third on the three-meter and fourth on the one-meter at the Big 12 championships.
"I was pleased with my three-meter performance in the finals," Humphrey said.
"Humphrey may seem reserved about his accomplishments, but that is because he is his own hardest critic," Fearon said.
"He'll give it his best until the end," Fearon said. "He doesn't have to be that hard on himself, and sometimes I have to tell him to take it easy on himself. He has a strong work ethic."
Humphrey also is reserved about what he adds to the team.
"I don't add a whole lot," he said. "I add my presence, and I'm trying to achieve to be the best I can be."
However, Fearon said he thought Humphrey was a strong influence on the Kansas team.
"Brian is a quiet leader, leading by
example." Fearon said. "He is not your
"I don't feel I'm done in diving. There is so much more I want to achieve in diving."
Brian Humphrey KU diver
rah-rah cheerleader type of guy, but you can count on him because he is a competitor."
Humphrey said he was motivated by the meets he attended and the competition he faced
"My biggest motivator is going to a big meet and seeing really great divers," he said. "I want to compete at their level and improve to be the best. I love competing against good divers, even though sometimes I feel self-conscious. I have to reach down and perform at a higher level."
Humphrey's next meet is the Zone Diving championships March 14-15 in College Station, Texas. Humphrey must place in the top six on either the one- or three-meter boards to advance to the NCAA championships.
I
"I want to dive as well as I can," he said. "If I dive as well as I can and don't make the NCAAs, it's OK. I just want to perform my best."
"I don't feel I'm done in diving," he said. "There is so much more I want to achieve in diving."
Despite all his years in the sport, Humphrey doesn't think his job is finished.
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Diver Brian Humphrey approaches his dive at practice in the Robinson Center natatorium. Humphrey placed third on the three-meter, and fourth on the one-meter at the Big 12 competition. He will be competing next at the Zone Diving championships March 14-15 in College Station, Texas.
Kansan Classifieds Get the Results You want
NOMINATIONS WANTED
THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN IS NOW ACCEPTING NOMINATIONS TO HONOR OUTSTANDING WOMEN STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF FOR ITS ANNUAL
WOMEN'S RECOGNITION PROGRAM
Hall of Fame: Designed to honor outstanding women graduates of the University and K.U. faculty or staff who provide models for students as they choose careers and become effective citizens.
Outstanding Woman Teacher: Designed to honor a female instructor, student or non-student, who has performed effectively and professionally as an educator at the University of Kansas.
Outstanding Woman Staff Member: Designed to honor a non-faculty woman who has contributed in a unique way to the University.
Outstanding International Woman Student: Designed to honor a woman student from a country other than the United States who has demonstrated academic achievement and participation in various aspects of community or college life.
Outstanding Nontraditional Woman Student: Designed to honor a nontraditional woman who has made a unique contribution to the University or community. (Nontraditional includes those who are continuing their education after an absence from school, those who are over 21 and just beginning their college education, those who work full-time and attend school part-time, veterans, or single parents who are students.)
Outstanding Woman Student in Student Services: Designed to honor a woman student for outstanding contributions to student or university organizations.
Outstanding Woman Student In Leadership: Designed to honor a woman student who has exhibited leadership and active participation in concerns of contemporary women on campus, in the community, state, or at the national level.
OUTSTANDING WOMEN WILL BE HONORED FOR ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN EACH OF THE ABOVE AREAS. THE WOMEN'S RECOGNITION COMMITTEE WILL REVIEW THE INFORMATION OBTAINED AND ANNOUNCHE THE WOMEN SELECTED AT THE WOMEN'S RECOGNITION PROGRAM ON THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1997 AT 8:00 P.M. IN THE ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, KANSAS UNION.
DEADLINE FOR NOMINATIONS: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1997 AT 5:00 P.M.
Outstanding Woman Student in Community Services: Designed to honor a woman student for active contributions in off-campus oriented work.
Commission on the Status of Women is a student organization funded by Student Senate.
Outstanding Pioneer Woman: "...for a woman's historic contributions to humanity'
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EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Baseball: Kansas picks up four wins at home during the weekend. Page 11A
Twisters: Siren's sound to warn Kansans of the danger of tornadoes. Page 3A
****************************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING 864-4358
NEWS 864-4810
MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1997
SECTION A VOL. 103, NO. 114
Quick LOOK
(USPS 650-640)
Fire not intentional; started in water heater
The fire that destroyed Sunflower Outdoor and Bike Shop, 804 Massachusetts St., and damaged other buildings on Feb. 26 was not intentional, the Lawrence-Douglas County Fire and Medical Department said on Thursday.
Investigators said the fire originated in a gas-supplied hot water heater. Combustible material was near the hot water heater, which contributed to the spread of the fire throughout the structure
Officials said the investigation was complete.
Suspected bomb box sent by Florida man
A box that KU police thought was a bomb mailed to the University last week contained painted seashells and photographs from an apparent KU fan, KU police said.
Sgt. Chris Keary said the box was addressed to "Dean or President and Basketball Coach." He said that a sticker on the box indicated that it was mailed by Lawrence Axelrod, a man from Daytona Beach. Fla.
The box was X-rayed Wednesday to detect wires or explosives and was opened in a field next to KANU radio station with a water cannon.
The box contained hand-painted seashells, eight cents, five cash register receipts and four photographs of a man police think is Axelrod. One photo shows a young man in a military uniform, another is a picture of an abdominal scar with fresh sutures and the others show an older man, whom police also assume is Axelrod.
The March 5 issue of the Kansas City Star reported that a similar box had been sent to Carol Lehman, mayor of Gardner.
Kansan staff report
Daytona Beach police told KU police that they were familiar with Axelrod. They said they did not consider Axelrod a threat, but they said he was schizophrenic.
Gangsta rapper dies in drive-by shooting
The 24-year-old rap star, whose real name was Christopher Wallace, was shot outside a party while sitting in his parked GMC Suburban last after midnight.
LOS ANGELES — The Notorious B.I.G. made his name as a gangsta rapper barking hip-hop rhymes about his real-life past dealing crack on the tough streets of Brooklyn, N.Y. He died in a drive-by shooting yesterday.
He was attending a party at the Petersen Automotive Museum Saturday in celebration of the 11th annual Soul Train Music Awards. No immediate arrests were made.
Recent kidnappings link with Mexican official
MEXICO CITY — The former drug czar charged with taking payoffs from one of Mexico's most notorious drug lords now is being tied to several recent kidnappings, The New York Times reported yesterday.
The bulk of the victims had no proven links to the drug world, although some had had run-ins with authorities, The Times said.
Gutiérrez's appointment was part of the government's effort to give the military a more visible role in the drug war and replace corrupt police forces.
Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo's lawyers did not return calls seeking comment, the paper said.
Since his arrest last month after only three months in office, a number of families of kidnapping victims have emerged to tell their stories, the paper said.
Steve Puppe/KANSAN
+ SOLARIS +
—The Associated Press
ON TO THE DANCE
CHAMPIONS INTERNATIONAL
Scot Pollard hoists the Big 12 Tournament trophy after Kansas defeated Missouri, 87-60. The Jayhawks play in the NCAA Tournament against Jackson State. For coverage of the Big 12 Tournament, see pages 13A and 16A and today's NCAA Tournament special section.
Natalie Sullivan, Kansas City, Mo., Junior, makes her contribution to the sidewalk "editorial page" in front of Wesco Hall on Friday.
Students say it with chalk
Passers-by urged to express views on Wescoe Beach
By Paul Eakins
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
People walking on Jayhawk Boulevard Friday may have noticed some writing in the "sand" of Wesco Beach.
Andrei Urasov / KANSAN
A group of KU students spent the afternoon passing out chalk, encouraging passers-by to use the sidewalk as an editorial page.
The students distributed the chalk to get people to express their opinions and to show the diversity of views on campus.
"We're doing it so that everybody knows that there are many different ways to look at an issue," said Matt Caldwell. Lawrence junior.
Caldwell said the group did not want to promote certain views but wanted to allow everyone's views to be spread.
Chalk writing can be a forum in which every voice can be heard, said Andy Pressman, Columbus, Ohio, sophomore.
"Anyone can come out and express what they feel," he said.
"Real Christians don't endorse hate. Seek peace and pursue it."
And many people did. Natalie Sullivan, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said that at least 30 people took part in the sidewalk editorializing.
A range of messages appeared on the sidewalk, including:
Apathetic sadness "Love thy veggies."
Lighthearted greetings also graced the walkways, such as "I hope your day is as nice as the weather."
"Keep our Earth clean. Stop careless littering."
Some people used the sidewalk
Anna Palos, Lawrence freshman, drew flowers but said she did not write much because she thought there were better ways to express opinions. She said that it was interesting to see the views of others but that the writings probably would have little impact.
not as an editorial page but as an artist's canvas.
"No one's going to change their religion because of something they saw on the sidewalk." Palos said.
Sullivan said reactions to the chalking were mixed. Some people were excited by it, and others imored it.
"Some people just shook their heads and tried nnc. to read it," she said. "They probably thought, 'Oh, those crazy lefters.'"
Chalking has been controversial
because some people seem to be bothered by it. Sullivan said.
Caldwell said there were competitions of a sort between chalkers with different views last semester.
"We had a bunch of reactionaries coming out writing about the 'meat is murder' writings," he said.
After some anti-meat-eating messages were left on sidewalks, proponents of eating meat responded. Caldwell said chalking was a good forum for this because it allowed both views to be expressed equally.
Although students may enjoy expressing themselves on the sidewalk, at least one University staff member wishes they would find another medium.
Mike Richardson, director of Facilities Operations, said that whenever people wrote on the side
walks, his crews had to wash away the writing, wasting time and money.
"It takes us away from the work that needs to be done," he said. "We have better things to do than washing off sidewalks."
Richardson said the equipment, water and employees needed to wash a sidewalk could cost from $35 to $40 an hour.
"Rather than try to censor what was and was not offensive, we wash everything off," he said.
The students who organized the chalkhalls plan to cover more sidewalks this week and hope to *cover* locations other than Wescoe.
Facilities Operations policy is to wash writing off sidewalks because some chalkings can be offensive to some people. Richardson said.
Murphy lot will remain ungated, KU officials say
By Dave Morantz
Kansan staff writer
After protests and a petition from students, staff and faculty of Murphy Hall, a University planning official said the parking lot across from Murphy Hall probably would not be gated under the new campus access plan.
Tom Waechter, planning coordinator for design and construction management, said he and a University committee in charge of filtering feedback to the access plan have received numerous complaints about gated lots in general.
The untitled committee consists of Waechter; Grey Montgomery, student body president; and other University officials. After receiving the committee's recommendation for the access plan in late March, Provost David Shulenburger and Chancellor Robert Hemenway will make a decision on the plan in early April.
The access proposal calls for some campus lots to be gated, a shuttle system to run between lots at Memorial Stadium and Robinson Center, the creation of a parking garage north of the Kansas Union and additional surface lots on campus.
"I think it's safe to say that gated lots will be a very small percentage of the total number of lots on campus," Waechter said. "There may even be none."
Jennette Selig, Manhattan junior and office assistant at Murphy Hall, solicited more than 125 signatures protesting the proposal to gate the lot and other parts of the access plan, such as a raise in the price of parking permits.
Waechter and other planners presented the plan to the University community in a series of town hall meetings. Students, staff and faculty at Murphy Hall became concerned about not having adequate access to the lot across from the hall.
She said that faculty and staff needing to run errands during the day were concerned about a lack of access to the lot. Students needing to study or rehearse at Murphy Hall late at night also were concerned about the lot being closed.
In the petition, Selig alerted the administration that patrons of performances at Murphy Hall did not like to walk long distances or take a shuttle to the hall.
"Since the administration seems to be motivated by revenue concerns rather than cultural concerns, I thought we'd point out that aspect of it," she said.
Selig said that other people in the University community needed to take action to express their concerns with the plan rather than just complaining.
"The administration as a whole is acting very selfishly. They seem to be valuing profit more than education," she said. "People on campus need to be more proactive and voice their concerns."
Montgomery said Student Senate also opposed the plan to gate lots. In Senate's response to the access plan, Montgomery and Robert Grunzinger, campus transportation coordinator, said that the proposal to gate lots would not benefit students and would create a problem finding evening parking spaces on campus.
TODAY
INDEX
Television ... 2A
On Campus ... 2A
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 8A
World News ... 9A
SUNNY
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Monday, March 10, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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HOTEL
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at the Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the Rev. Raymond May at 843-0357.
- Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center will sponsor The Spanish New World and the Critical Imagination at 1 p.m. today. For more information and location, call 864-4798.
ON CAMPUS
Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center will sponsor a British seminar titled James I of England and Letter Writing from 3:30 to 5 p.m. today at the Hall Center Conference Room. For more information, call 864-4798.
206 Blake Hall.
University of Kansas Linguistic Colloquium will sponsor Language, Emotion, and Discourse in the Great American Ebonics Debate at 3:30 p.m. today at
International Programs will have an informational meeting about Fulbright/Graduate Direct Exchange Grants for 1998-1999 from 4 to 5 p.m. today at Alove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hodgie Bricke at 864-1411.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call the Rev. Raymond B at 843-0357.
**KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Adam Capron at 842-9112.**
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For
more information, call David Cohavi at 841-1010.
KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7736.
The Orthodox Christian Fellowship will pray Lenten Sermons at 6:30 p.m. today at the Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Andreaa Andreasau at 844-6520.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate the Fundamentals of Catholicism at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0575.
KU Bahai Club will have an informational meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jim at 832-2226.
ON THE RECORD
A KU staff member's parking permit was stolen between noon and 3:30 p.m. Wednesday from a car in lot 16, KU police said. Items were valued at $70.
A KU faculty member's keys were stolen from 9:40 a.m. and 1:20 p.m. Thursday from room 204 Murphy Hall, KU police said, items were valued at $25.
A KU student's wallet, drivers license,
KUID and bus pass were stolen
between 2:20 and 4:10 p.m. Thursday
from Fraser Hall, KU police said. Items
were valued at $30.
Carp has become popular,may be healthier choice
The Associated Press
FULTON, III. — It was a foul, fourletter word detested by the sliestest of fishermen, the name of a creature so reviled that most anglers just threw it onto the bank to rot.
However, carp is undergoing a renaissance.
Sports fishermen are beginning to recognize the fish for its intellig-
gence and fight. And its meat also is gaining popularity.
It isn't just its smarts that attract fishermen; it's the sheer brute strength of the fish. Carp can grow to more than 50 pounds, and every ounce is fight.
Fish markets sell hefty chunks of smoked carp. At Schafer's Fish Market in Fulton, McKea Schafer produces carp jerky, smoked carp
sticks—even a carp bologna.
"It's not a white meat fish. It looks a lot like ground beef, but it's very lean," Schafer said. "It's healthy for you. We're getting a lot of doctors sending people over here."
Over the holidays, Schafer's stocks were depleted as he filled orders from all over the country.
Schafer also is working to go beyond jerky and bologna.
MONDAY PRIMETIME
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
3A
Student health insurance plan slashes rates
Premiums drop by 41 percent
By Emily Vrabac
Kansan staff writer
The KU student health insurance program will have lower rates in the 1997-98 school year. The program, available through G-M Underwriters, is responding to low participation by reducing premiums by 41 percent for students under 25.
"There are not as many students in the plan as there have been in the past," said Jim Strobl, director of student health services at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Strobl said that the program was the only insurance plan endorsed by the Student Senate but that it was competing with other programs on campus.
"It's excellent insurance in terms of the coverage," he said. "This is by far one of the better plans you'll find anywhere."
The current yearly rate is $815 per year for students under age 25.
Next school year's rates for students under 25 will be $480, which averages out to $40 per month.
Students age 25 and will pay
$866 next year or $73 per month.
The plan is a major comprehensive medical plan, said Chris Nowland of G-M Underwriters.
"It's excellent insurance in terms of the coverage."
"It's a sickness and accident plan only," she said. "It doesn't cover
Jim Stroble
Jim Stroble director of student health Watkins Memorial Health Center
But Nowland said that the plan would provide one Pap test and one mammogram a year for women.
routine care."
The program is based on a $250 deductible, which is waived if the
Once the deductible is paid, the plan covers 80 percent of expenses, and the student is responsible for the remaining 20 percent.
student is treated at Watkins.
There is a maximum total out-of-pocket expense under the 80/20 plan. Once that amount is reached, the insurance covers 100 percent of expenses up to $250,000. Nowland said.
"Theoretically, you could have a baby, a broken leg and asthma," she said.
Undergraduate students must be enrolled in a minimum of nine hours on the Lawrence campus, Strobl said.
Graduate students must be enrolled in six hours on the Lawrence campus.
KU Student Health Insurance Plan
Undergraduate students must be enrolled in a minimum of nine hours on the Lawrence campus.
Graduate students must be enrolled in a minimum of six hours on the Lawrence campus
Coverage is available for students' spouses and/or children.
existing conditions that have been treated in the previous six months will warrant a 12-month waiting period before insurance can be obtained.
Call G-M Underwriters at 800-521-2623 for more information or pick up an enrollment form at Watkins Health Center, 864-9500.
Enrollment in the insurance program can begin at any time, Nowland said.
She said that G-M Underwriters would establish a site on the World Wide Web in the next few months with a link on the Watkins home page. In the meantime, students
with questions can e-mail Watkins at healthyjayhawk@ukans.edu
To enroll in the insurance plan, students must fill out an enrollment form available at Watkins.
Forms are also available from G-M Underwriters by calling 1-800-521-2623.
State to be warned about tornadoes with siren's song
By Doug Weinstein Special to the Kansan
A tornado safety siren is scheduled to go off Tuesday as part of the statewide Severe Weather Awareness Week.
John Mullens, coordinator of security and safety at KU, hopes that the siren will remind students to think about their actions in the event of a tornado.
"We want people to be aware that the sirens will go off and consider what they would do," he said.
Mike Akulow of the National Weather Service said that the last tornado had touched down in Lawrence in 1995.
"Since 1981, there have been 10 tornadoes in the county," he said. "Douglas County has had 28 tornadoes since the 1950s."
But at a large university like the University of Kansas, that's not easy.
The purpose of Severe Weather Awareness Week and this drill is to improve general awareness, Mullens said.
"With the number of buildings we have to deal with, where people are changing buildings hour to hour, we want people to become somewhat familiar with the buildings that they are in," he said.
Mullens said that students also were accustomed to hearing the sirens going off, so the sound of the alarm doesn't cause concern.
"Generally about the best that can be expected is about five minutes notice," he said.
But students shouldn't take the alarms for granted because they won't allow much time in the event of an actual tornado, he said.
Mullens also said that common sense played a great role.
"What you're looking at is trying to put as much solid material as possible between you and the outside," he said. "The recommendation is to seek the lowest level of a building that you can get to without jeopardizing yourself."
Large spaces and auditoriums in buildings such as the Lied Center, Wescoe Hall, Murphy Hall and Allen Field House
Kansas Tornadoes
■ Kansas ranks third in the nation in the number of tornadoes, averaging 47 per year.
So far in the 1990s, 592 tomadores have hit Kansas.
In 1996, 68 tornadoes
In 1996, 68 tornadoes were reported in Kansas.
In 1996, 68 tornadoes were reported in Kansas.
1991 had the most tornadoes in one year: 116.
Tornadoes have struck every month except January and every year since 1950. Most were between 3 and 9 p.m.
Tornado fatalities have occurred as early as March 13 and as late as Oct. 31.
Eastern and central sections of Kansas have had more tornadoes than western sections.
Douglas County has had 28 tornadoes, with one fatality and 42 injuries, between 1950 and 1996.
Finney County has had the most tornadoes in Kansas—66 in one year—and Wyandotte County has reported the fewest with seven.
Statistics provided by the National Weather Service 1996 Kansas Tornado Facts
wouldn't be good places to stay in a tornado because of the way they're supported, he said.
"They have that kind of ceiling support—mathematically and engineeringly sound," he said. "But if you twist them out of line they would collapse. We have some areas which you're almost better off outside. Seek shelter in areas that have small ceiling space and are basically without windows."
Mullens said that students should be especially concerned with finding a shelter that wasn't surrounded by windows.
"Probably 90 to 95 percent of people killed are hit by debris," he said. "And 90 percent of those people killed are killed by glass."
The last major tornado in Lawrence struck in 1981, destroying Kmart and causing one fatality and 33 injuries.
Speakers, workshops promote activism
By Mark McMaster Kansan staff writer
Members of Amnesty International from Kansas and Missouri gathered in Lawrence on Saturday to discuss how to fight international human rights abuse.
The conference, Human Rights in the Heartland, was sponsored by the KU chapter of Amnesty International. The program featured guest speakers as well as workshops on issues, such as the death penalty and women's rights.
Jeronimo Aguirre, the keynote speaker, told an audience of 40 people about his experience in Guatemala during the early 1980s.
"The political situation in my country was really bad," he said. "One of my brothers was killed by the army when he was 15. The army just came and grabbed the young men and forced them to be soldiers."
Aiguirre fled his country during the 1980s and now resides in Salina. He said that disappearances, random killings and coercion by the army continue today in Guatemala, and the international community needs to take more responsibility for these abuses.
The conference also attracted experts on other issues that were discussed. Michelle Mohr, who traveled to Beijing in 1995 to participate in the United Nations World Conference on Women, led a workshop on women's rights.
Donna Schneweis, a lobbyist who has urged the Kansas Legislature to abandon capital punishment, spoke at the workshop on the death penalty.
The conference's coordinator, Rachel Wiese, Stanley junior, said that she thought the speakers' expertise would motivate members.
"I hope they get a big boost of energy for their work," she said. "It helps to see other people doing the same thing, raising awareness on human rights issues."
Mehdi Riazi, Hays senior and a member of KU's chapter of Amnesty International, said that the conference raised his awareness of many issues.
"A lot of time you get wrapped up in cases, and you lose track of the emotional impact of it all. This helps put it in perspective," Riazi said.
The program, which was held at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, was funded by $15 ticket sales and the regional Amnesty International office.
C
Jeronimo Aguilre, Salina resident, speaks to the Amnesty international conference about his experiences as a Guamalan refugee.
Bill's defeat elicits mixed responses
By Ann Marchand
Kansan staff writer
Students at the University of Kansas had various reactions to last week's failure of the balanced budget amendment.
On Tuesday, the U.S. Senate defeated the measure on a 66-34 vote, one vote shy of the two-thirds margin needed to pass a Constitutional amendment. It was the second time in three years that the measure was defeated.
Brad Burke, Topeka senior, said that the amendment's failure showed that the president had vacillated on his election promises.
all this talk about how we needed to come together and pass bipartisan legislation," he said. "This was a bipartisan amendment. I think the president had a chance to show some true leadership by passing a balanced budget amendment, but once again he failed."
"You heard during the 96 election
But several students said that they were relieved that the amendment failed.
Chris Sexton, Salina junior, said that although Congress should balance the budget, they should not need an amendment to force them to do it.
"I think that balancing the budget can be a long-term governmental objective, but I don't think it is something that should be in the Constitution," she said. "It may not always be in the best interest of the country."
Two critical votes against the measure came from Sens. Robert Torricelli, D.N.J., and Tim Johnson, D.S.D. According to The Washington Post, the two voted against the measure because they feared it would strangle Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid funding.
Chad King, Overland Park junior, said that the measure would not pass until the government's social spending habits were curtailed.
"I don't think the balanced budget amendment will ever pass until either or both sides will admit that we can't
balance the budget without revamping the Social Security situation," he said. "Until someone is willing to do the job of revamping it, a balanced budget just won't happen."
For some students, a balanced budget simply was not a priority.
Tina Lewerenz, Manhattan senior, said that although Congress should strive to balance the budget, a constitutional amendment was unnecessary.
Jason Schreiner, Wakeeney junior, agreed.
"I think the amendment's a joke," he said. "It won't do anything whether it fails or passes. I think it's a stupid idea."
Organization helps students get jobs overseas
By Laurie Fletchall Special to the Kansan
A group on campus is helping students interested in working overseas get internships.
The International Association of Students in Economics and Business Management, or AIESEC, is the largest student-run organization in the world, and its international trainee exchange program is also the largest in the world.
AIESEC has chapters in 48 American universities and in 87 countries.
The University's chapter has 20 active members, said Jennifer Boston, Topeka senior and president of the KU chapter of AIESEC.
Each chapter pairs students that are interested in internships overseas with businesses that are interested inhiring them.
The KU chapter of AIESEC has two members doing internships overseas. Emma Schmidt, a French exchange student who graduated from the University in May, is in Poland, and Brandon Clark, 1996 graduate from Overland Park, is in Brazil.
"The club is open to students of all majors that are interested in working outside the United States," said Tesis Hostelter, Topeka sophomore.
Hostetler spent two months working in Lappeenranta, Finland, this summer as a research assistant for an economics professor.
She said that her experience in Finland was invaluable.
"When I came here, I knew I was interested in international interests, but I didn't know how to proceed," she said. "AIESEC helped me focus and got me an internship in my field."
Kevin Walker, 1988 graduate of the University and director of marketing and membership services for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said that AIESEC was valuable to the business community.
"I think it is good any time there is an exchange of ideas from outside the community," Walker said. "It is always good to get fresh ideas and perspectives from people who can look at a situation or design with a fresh outlook."
For more information about AIESEC, call 864-3304.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HILLEL presents:
NOW SHOWING NOW SHOWING The Israeli Film Series A Collection of Israeli Made Films
Cup Final Monday, March 10, 1997, 7:00 pm 2092 Dole Hall A humorous, political film about an Israeli soldier detained by a PLO guerrillas and his shifting relationship with the group's leader, both of whom carry an obsession for the Italian national soccer club.
Beyond the Walls Monday, March 31, 1997, 7:00 pm 2092 Dole Hall Israel's nominee for Best Foreign Film of 1984 is set within the confines of an over-crowded Israeli prison where hatreds and conflicting ideologies come into sharp focus. When a prison official kills a Jew and blames the Arabs, the stage is set.
My Michael Monday, April 14, 1997, 7:00 pm 308 Dyche Hall Two intelligent young adults find each other and marry in a divided Jerusalem of the late 1950's.
Wedding in Galilee Monday, April 28, 1997, 7:00 pm 2092 Dole Hall The muktar of a Palestinian village under Israeli occupation wants to hold a traditional wedding for his son, and invites the Israeli military governor as a guest of honor.
OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
CRAIG LANG, Editor
SUSANNA LOOP, Managing editor
KIMBELY CRATEFTE, Editorial editor
TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser
4A
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DENNIS HAUPT, Retail sales manager
JUSTIN KNIPP, Technology coordinator
JA YSTEINER, Sales and marketing adviser
Monday. March 10. 1997
Mexico's Most Wanted
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Editorials
Policies against hazing aren't enough to stop this tradition
As evidenced last week with the suspension of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, hazing among Greek students does occur, despite how many times greeks say that it doesn't.
It appears that those who haze do it to promote morale and elicit loyalty among members. Hazing is also said to be a tradition, so much so that some greeks may not even know why they haze, except that members before them did it.
But this is a sick tradition, one that must be stopped. Although some greek houses have taken steps toward this end by detailing to members the consequences of hazing, that obviously hasn't completely solved the problem. The tradition of hazing appears so ingrained in belonging to a greek house that it is has practically become a requirement.
To be sure, hazing is not all that greeks are capable of. Every year, greek members devote hundreds of hours to community-service projects, among other positive activities.
Still, hazing among greeks does occur
There is no reason that hazing activities should occur anywhere.
on this campus. A recent article in the Topeka Capital-Journal reported that within the last 18 months, the University has taken action against four fraternities for hazing-related incidents. Besides being detrimental to the houses and members, hazing violates the Code of Student Rights and Responsibilities.
The fault for hazing lies with the active members and with those who haze. These members often command complete subservience from those who rush their houses, which gives active members power over their pledges.
However, with this power comes responsibility that is too often ignored. Greek members' power should be used for constructive activities, not hazing.
Using tradition as an excuse to further conduct hazing is ludicrous. It is petulant
and unoriginal to adopt the "they did it to us, so we are going to do it to them" mentality that some greeks have when brooding about the ethics of hazing.
Some greeks also argue that hazping promotes unity within pledge classes. This is a false dogma. Most pledges want to be included in a Greek house to the extent that they will tolerate minor inconveniences. When these inconveniences become abusive hazing tactics, pledges are often alienated if they speak out against such activity, and they may forfeit their membership if they do so. This promotes divisiveness, not unity, within the pledge class between those who protest hazing and those who do not.
Active members should be more vocal in their opposition to hazing policies, and they just shouldn't haze. Hazing is abusive, and it only adds fire to the stereotyping of greeks that so many members are always fighting against. Most Greek houses may claim not to participate in hazing policies, but when one house is implemented, all are punished.
NICK ZALLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Minority faculty plan is good for all
The University's new Minority Faculty Recruitment Plan takes a much-needed step by making minority recruitment a priority. With this the University is improving upon a key aspect of education in the late 20th century: exposure to diversity.
Increasing minority faculty from the current 124 to 200 by the year 2000 is a main aspect of the plan, which was issued March 4 by Provost David Shulenburger. This directive follows a goal Chancellor Robert Hemenway stated in his August 1995 convocation address.
Right now there are four Native American, 73 Asian, 31 Black and 16 Hispanic faculty members. To meet the plan's 200 by 2000 goal, almost half of 180 to 200 new hires anticipated during the next five years will need to be faculty of color.
These are challenging numbers, and often any mention of increasing quantities of certain groups raises questions about quotas. But the proposed 202 bv
Exposure to diversity is essential to offering students a good education.
2000 goal is not a quota. Rather it's a demonstration of the University's intentions to put significant effort toward recruiting minority faculty. There is no penalty for falling short of the goal, and no unqualified candidates will be hired just because they are minorities.
To help departments offset the cost of recruiting minority faculty, the Provost's office has established a $250,000 bridge fund, up from the $40,000 fund of previous years. Although it could cost more to attract minority candidates, it's a worthwhile investment. The new plan is not about tokenism; it's about education.
exposure to diversity is part of a good education in the late 20th century," said Maurice Bryan Jr., director of the University's Equal Opportunity Office.
"In my mind, the reason why we want minority faculty is not to color in our coloring book. It's because we really believe
If the University is a forum for conversation, exchange, intellectual questioning and growth, we must support diversity. But even from a practical point of view, increasing minority faculty is smart. Because students will leave the University to work with all sorts of people — not just Caucasian people — exposure to diversity during college is essential. "We need to have our University look like the rest of the world," said Danielle Dempsey-Swopes, associate director of the Equal Opportunity Office.
Clearly, arguments against recruiting minority faculty pale in light of the benefits the entire community stands to gain. The University's new plan for minority recruitment has the best interests of the entire academic community in mind, and it deserves student support.
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
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Police take power trip when leaving nickel tip
Let me tell you a little story that will eliminate any faith you once had in human beings.
Columns
JEFF
RUBY
An inboxed couple eats a late-night breakfast at a local Village Inn, an activity for which drunk people have had a biological need ever since the invention of sausage links. The couple isn't too thrilled with the service they receive. They verbally abuse their waitress, who is trying her best for someone who's being bossed around at 1 a.m. by drunk people.
The couple shows their annoyance by leaving her a nickel for her labor. A wee bit disgusted with this paltry gratuity, the waitress picks up the coin. Instead of pocketing it, she places it in front of the couple as they're paying their bill at the cash register. They put the nickel back on the table.
The waitress switches from disgust mode to downright surly. As the couple is leaving the restaurant, she angrily flips the nickel at them.
The couple shows their
The coin manages to hit one of them in the head, doing the kind of damage only a coin can do: None. But the next thing we know, the couple calls the police in an attempt to press charges.
The cops, no doubt, wave off the petty squabble, laughing and citing it as a waste of their time, right? The police department has more serious snags to deal with on a Saturday night, right?
Wrong. The waitress is arrested for assault, escorted out of the diner in handcuffs and led on to a strip search. She spends her evening in a cell with the rest of the hardened criminals. Straight to jail. Do not pass go, do not collect 4,000 nickels.
How does this happen, you ask? Simple: It turns out both members of the generous, dining couple are off-duty police officers. In the unspoken brotherhood of cops, one cop doesn't question another's unbending desire for swift punishment.
Even when the weapon in question is a coin.
In a just world, anyone who leaves a nickel tip shouldn't be too surprised to find it firmly embedded in his or her skull.
It should come as no surprise that this episode really occurred last month in Wichita. The Wichita Police Department stood behind its actions, claiming there was nothing excessive about arresting a woman for throwing a nickel.
After delivering pizzas here in Lawrence — and getting stiffed again and again while deliverling during paralyzing blizzards — I myself had concocted various vengeful plans involving a sudden, violent union between my car and the offender's living room.
But the real issue here is the abuse of power. How many times have you seen a cop change lanes without using a turn signal? Speed? Run a stop sign? How many times have you wished you could pull one over and sobly say "License and registration, please?" while he sweats and fumbles through his glove box to appease you with the proper identification?
If we bad-mouth a policeman on the job, we are arrested faster than you can say "night stick." Why is a waitress worthy of any less respect? Must be because one carries a gun and the other a ketchup bottle.
Shouldn't the police have been more concerned with the inadequate sobriety level of the off-duty cops who were on their way to their car when the nickel incident occurred? They waved this issue off almost immediately.
Doesn't this scare you a little? Almost like an out-of-control police car zipping in and out of lanes like that of the intoxicated Georgia diplomat that killed a teenager in Washington in December?
But what the Wichita Nickel Massacre tells us is the ones we need to get off the streets are the snipy restaurant servers of the world, not those who are really a menace to society.
Media more concerned with sports than lives
Jeff Ruby is a Wichita graduate student in Journalism.
One must wonder about the fate of mankind when a news story about a man threatening to jump off a bridge during rush hour is delayed by a story about sports.
I realize the importance of basketball in this town. I used to camp out for the games as a freshman. This was back in the old days when students had to camp outside all day and night for days before the big games. I attribute the severe case of mono I caught to those wonderful, freezing nights waiting in a tent with friends just to see a basketball game. I remember my dedication and my need to sit
My youthful enthusiasm has been replaced with a respect for the game, but a deeper respect for my health and sanity. Now I prefer to watch the games on TV in a calmer atmosphere where heat, restrooms and a comfortable couch replace the tent, Holly Hobby sleeping bag and the many trees and bushes around the field house.
But I digress. As much as I like basketball, and as much as I understand the fiscal benefits of hosting the conference at Kemper Arena, I am still a little miffed about the arrangement of the news stories.
SABRINA
STEELE
as close to the bench as possible just to catch a bead of sweat from the towel of Rex Walters.
What happened to our priorities? Although I am concerned about the Chiefs and the Jayhawks, I am more perturbed by death, destruction and anarchy, especially when it is on a busy interstate
A similar situation arose a few weeks ago when a huge disaster occurred where lives were lost, extensive property damage was done and chaos reigned. After providing a one-second teaser about the disaster, the yutz of a newcaster gleefully turned the broadcast to a colleague who was standing in a hotel lobby talking to Jeff George. Suddenly the precarious quarterback situation with the Chiefs was more important than people dying.
The troubled soul perched atop a wire overpass at the Van Brunt exit ready to end his life on a busy highway was apparently less newsworthy than the Chiefs. Perhaps if the man attempting suicide had been Steve Bono or the relative of a quarterback the Chiefs are eying, then he may have garnered a top seed in the news-bite feeding chain.
Sabrina Steele is an Overland Park senior in political science.
Perhaps the aforementioned instances were isolated occurrences with regard to the story arrangement, but I don't think that is the case. Unless our lives are directly impacted, we tend not to pay attention, not to care and not to concern ourselves with the trivial details of other people's lives or deaths. The media is simply catering to our whims, showing us the things we care about, like football and basketball, and squeezing in a few brief bits about death, peril and destruction.
I cannot unleash a blanket condemnation of the TV and print media, for I contribute to the perpetuation of the idea that viewer's priorities are whacked. I probably fit the profile of the average viewer and reader more than I am willing to admit. The recent fire at Sundance Apartments claimed the lives of two complete strangers. I watched a bit of the report, rather disinterestedly, then switched to C-SPAN. I didn't give the tragedy a thought until I saw a front-page photo of a friend rifling through his stuff in the same building a few days later. The deaths of two men with families, friends, futures and dreams didn't phase me, but as soon as an acquaintance of mine is impacted, watch out, because I almost begin to care about the human race.
highway in my area. I am happy the Jayhawks are playing well, and I hope the Chiefs work things out. I'd really like for Elvis Grbac to join the gang, simply so we can enjoy the cheesy pleasure of saying, "Elvis has left the stadium." Perhaps if he signed with us, I would allow that to preempt a story about a truce between Israel and Palestine
Foreigners like Namkyu Park should not whine about discrimination. They should accept it.
Letter only re-enforces Namkyu Park's point
That is basically how Lawrence resident Clara Westphal responded to Park's column. Why? Because we pesky foreigners already enjoy more privileges than we deserve. Apparently we are just a bunch of opportunists who are abandoning their home country and flooding into this country for one purpose: to live on handouts from the U.S. government.
Letters
Thank you, Ms. Westphal, for complementing Park's column with a living demonstration of the kind of ignorance and stereotyping that keeps discrimination alive in this day and age. You: backward attitude has managed to overshadow the otherwise legitimate issues that you raised.
Albert A. Gapud Los Banos, Philippines graduate student
Support from greeks is heart-warming
If you cannot take part in that tradition, then perhaps it is you, Ms. Westphal, who should find a place where you are more comfortable.
I am writing this letter as a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority.
I have news for you: Discrimination is wrong. We are not talking about a mere inconvenience that one can learn to live with. We are talking about an unacceptable injustice that this country has long rejected and condemned. You live in a nation that strives to promote the dignity of people of all origins. Lawrence in particular has an exceptional tradition of hospitality toward international visitors.
ity to extend our thanks to all those who have offered us support.
However, we are doing just fine because of the perseverance of our Rock Chalk directors, the cast and the support that we have received from the Greek community.
Obviously we have been under stress because of losing our Rock Chalk partner so close to the opening of the show.
Although many people perceive sororities and fraternities to be in constant competition, this week has proven the opposite. The cards, phone calls and general support and encouragement that we have received have made me proud to be a member of the Greek community at the University of Kansas.
Leigh Nida Lawrence sophomore
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
5A
Student names for sale
Telephone directories make information purchasable
By Nicholas C. Charalambous
Kansas staff writer
It floods into our mailboxes every week, and usually we pitch it straight into the trash. But last week's University-wide direct mail solicitation from Citibank raised a few student eebrows.
Citibank's letters, boldly using students' full names and campus addresses on every piece of paper, reminded graduating seniors and graduate students at the University of Kansas that now would be a great time for a Citibank credit card.
It also included the student's preprinted field of study on the application form.
That caught the eye of Shelly Wachter. Topeka senior.
"I assumed the University sells our addresses because I use my home address for catalogs and subscriptions," she said. "When I saw that Citibank had my major, I thought maybe the University could have sold other information that I have no control over."
Wachter was wrong on both count
The University is not allowed to sell student information by law, said Bob Turvie, assistant University registrar.
"I get students that call me occasionally and say, 'Will you quit selling my name,'" he said. "It's a big issue for students. They don't want their information being sold to every credit card company in the world."
"We do field questions from companies wanting access to our lists, but we refer them to the published directory and say they could make use of that if they wish."
affairs, said that student information in University files was used only for educational purposes.
Linda Mullens, assistant vice chancellor for student
American Student Lists of Long Island, N.Y., computerizes the printed directories of more than 1,700 U.S. universities and sells the information to Citibank and more than 1,000 other companies. The charge is about 5 cents per name and address, company president Marty Lerner said.
The KU phone directory includes coded information about each student's year in school and field of study, as well as campus address, campus phone number and home address. Students who want information withheld must write to the University registrar by the end of the first week of the fall semester, according to the University of Kansas Student Records policy.
Mary Mendler, Citibank vice president of public affairs, said that a major was not a criterion for granting credit but was used to personalize information sent to students. Greater personalization had produced good results, she said.
"Consumers want to know that we're looking out for their needs. If we're making them offers that don't apply to their lives, they say, 'Why are you sending me this?' Mendler said.
Victor Karter, president of A Lists Unlimited, a New York, N.Y., list brokerage firm that boasts that it can purchase every list in the industry targeted to every possible category of person, said the question of invasion of privacy was spurious because the information was publicly available.
"Nothing is sent out that is offensive," he said, "and lots of information is sent out that could benefit a student."
Student directory listings
The KU telephone directory contains more than phone numbers. Mailing list companies gather and sell information such as students' home addresses, year in school and area of study.
Level code (see key)
Phone Number
Name
School code (see key)
555-1234
Doe John 4F ...
1234 Main St Lawrence KS
5678 Mockingbird Ln Anytown KS
Type 1 address Where a student will receive mail when classes are in session
555-5678
Type 2 address
Where a student will receive mail when classes are NOT in session
Level codes:
1- Freshman 5- Fifth year of a five
2- Sophomore year program
3- Junior 9- Non-degree seeking
4- Senior 6- and G- Graduate
KEY
School codes:
A- College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
B- Business
C- Applied English Center
D- Education
E- Engineering
F- Fine Arts
G- Graduate school
H- Allied Health
J- Journalism and Mass Communications
L- Law
M-Medicine
N-Nursing
P-Pharmacy
R-R Architecture and Urban Design
S-Social Welfare
Z-University special student
Some say 'I love you,' others send their love via airplane
Many have trouble verbally telling loved ones their thoughts
Love is in the air.
By Elena Macaluso Special to the Kansan
At least it is at Wings Unlimited, an Olathe shop specializing in airborne message banners.
"It's quite popular to fly messages such as 'Will you marry me?'" Hockett said. Hockett also receives requests for "Happy Anniversary" and "I Love You."
Pat Hockett, part-owner of Wings Unlimited, said that although she dealt mainly with business advertisers, she also received requests for personal messages of love. And she welcomed them.
Hockett said that she received many requests throughout the year to fly personal messages but that she received more during the summer.
Hockett also said many people requested her planes to fly over Kansas City Chiefs or Royals games and that the planes also had flown over houses, lakes and restaurants.
Why do people go to such extreme measures to get someone to notice
them?
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, said that in many ways the grand gesture was easier than a face-to-face confrontation.
Dailey, a sex therapist who has a private counseling practice in Lawrence, said it was easier to send flowers, chocolates or even write someone's name in the sky than to sit down and tell them how you feel.
"What people are doing is struggling around with ways to say, 'I love you,'" Dailey said. "All of those things are easier ways of attempting to connect with another person, to take the risk, to let another person know how you feel."
What was so strange, Dailey said, is that real communication, sitting down and telling people directly how one feels, often works better than the most outlandish plan.
Writing someone's name in the sky doesn't mean anything, Dailey said. The person reading it has absolutely no idea what the person sending the message means. They will fill in whatever they think love means and hope that they are right.
However, Dalley said that many people were afraid that if they told someone they loved them, they would be asked why.
"I love you' doesn't mean crap," he said.
But for many people, telling someone they love them face-to-face is a lot riskier emotionally than hiring a pilot, Dailey said.
KU students have been on both the giving and receiving end of schemes to say "I love you" or "I like you."
One Valentine's Day, a man whom Melissa Schmitz, Topeka senior, had been dating for only a few weeks gave her more than two dozen roses. He didn't give them to her at all once.
"He followed me around everywhere I went with a rose, but he would get there five minutes early so other people had to give them to me," Schmitz said.
That was four years ago, and they are still together.
Matt Reetz, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, once left a rose with a note under the car windshield of a girl he admired.
"I dated the girl for about a year and a half," Reetz said. But he has not always been so successful.
Reetz said he tried to get a waitress to notice him by sitting in her section. Although it did not turn into a romance, it was a friendship.
When students consider the cost and trouble involved in such elaborate measures, they may decide that the conventional method of meeting people is best after all. Reetz agreed.
"The bus works. That's a good place. You just sit next to somebody you're interested in," Reetz said.
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Museum director leads way by putting biodiversity online
NAFTA funding launches project to create database
By Osvaldo Munoz
Special to the Kansan
When the North American Free Trade Agreement became effective in 1994, its founders had the goal to eliminate barriers to manufacturing and services trade among the United States, Canada and Mexico, but also addressed concerns on the lives of plants and animals.
Leonard Kristhalka, director of the KU Natural History Museum, represented the U.S. Organization for Biodiversity Information to the NAFTA commission because of the museum's initiative to create the organization in 1995.
The museum held a retreat for scientists in September 1995 and planned a National Science Foundation-funded workshop in April 1996 to form the organization.
It was created to carry out a systematic examination of hundred of millions of specimens and to understand how they interact.
Kristalka was chosen last fall as the co-chairman of the Commission on Environmental Cooperation that implemented the NAFTA project.
The demonstration project, discussed in some NAFTA talks in Montreal, consists of an online encyclopedia of the flora and fauna, and the creation of a database for museums and herbariums across North America.
"This electronic encyclopedia will be useful to land planners, scientists, teachers, students, conservationist agencies and cooperative sectors, among others," Kristalka said.
Bradley Kemp, public relations director for the museum, said that the nations involved in NAFTA had provided $100,000 in 1997 to launch the project.
The demonstration project will serve the goals of the U.S. Organization of Biodiversity Information just as it serves the goals of NAFTA. Kemp said.
"It's a great opportunity to leverage available funds to the best possible advantage." Kemp said.
Steve Ashe, curator of ontology at the museum, said that this project would be important because there was no complete locale to assess the
"This electronic encyclopedia will be useful to land planners,scientists teachers, conservationist agencies and cooperative sectors, among
others."
Leonard Kristalka co-chair of the Commission on Environmental Cooperation
Leonard Krishtalka
Commental Cooperation
information that was already in the museums.
However, Ashe recognized the point that it would also be difficult to work with this large database because no organization had created something like this before.
"People will have access to a broader array of information that is currently being collected," Ashe said.
Jama Defever, Independence sophomore majoring in biology, said that although she was not familiar with the use of Internet tools, this project would be useful to anyone concerned about biodiversity.
"Not many people know what is around them even in their own region," she said. "This project would compile a large amount of material that may be hard to find at the present time."
Kemp also said that thanks to Kristhalka's vision for how the natural history collection could be best used in the future, the museum's leadership in this area was a demonstration of the University's excellence in biodiversity research.
"We are lucky to have him at the University. KU is leading the way in this important new field because of Dr. Kristalka," Kemp said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
7A
Hillel House dwellers dwindling
By Sarah Chadwick Special to the Kansan
The Hillel House, the KU Jewish communal living organization, has been left with half its usual residents for the spring semester.
Carrie Fleider, director of the KU Hillel Foundation, said that six residents usually live at the Hillel House each year. In the fall semester the usually coed house was full of women, but this semester the house is in search of new residents. One woman graduated, one moved and the third left to study abroad. Fleider said.
Recruiting was done to find spring residents, Fielder said, but has proved unsuccessful so far.
"Most of the time we let students find us, but we'll put fliers out and advertise within our own internal organization," Fleider said.
The loss of rent money has not affected the Hillel House, Fleider said.
"The largest impact of not having those three residents is that the house members put on our Shabbat dinners, and it's kind of hard with only three people," she said. "We've had to get outside help, but that's been a positive thing because it got more people involved."
The Hillel House, Fleider said, was designed to provide a Jewish communal living experience, which includes keeping kosher and living among other Jews.
Shabbat dinners, the Jewish celebration of the Sabbath, occur biweekly at the house on Fridays. Residents are required to coordinate the dinners as well as shop and cook for them, while keeping everything kosher. Fleider said.
Kosher meals are prepared in accordance with Jewish dietary laws, including keeping meat and milk products separate and choosing meats that were slaughtered in a more humane, kosher fashion.
The house has six private bedrooms, a complete kosher kitchen and full laundry facilities.
Molly Ackerman, Minneapolis junior, has lived at the house since August.
"It's a lot like The Real World on MTV," Ackerman said. "When we had men here it was really chaotic. It's kind of like a family."
Ackerman decided to live at the Hillel House after experiences in a sorority and an apartment. One of the advantages, she said, was that everything was Jewish.
"You don't have to deal with Christian holidays like you would in the dorms or a sorority," Ackerman said.
The first floor of the house is open to the public. Rent is $150 per month, including all utilities except phone service. In exchange for low rent, residents are expected to perform a certain amount of work for Hillel.
Applications can be picked up at the house at 940 Mississippi St., across from Memorial Stadium.
Jews avoid Sabbath laws by selling stores weekly, buying them back the next day
Israeli stores stay open
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Every Friday afternoon, Amos and Alice Meroz sell their art gallery in northern Israel to a Muslim friend for 10 shekels or about $3. On Saturday night, they buy it back.
In this way, the couple bypasses an Israeli law barring Jewish-owned stores from staying open on the Jewish Sabbath, which lasts from sunset Friday to sunset Saturday.
Their clever tactic may please Saturday visitors to the gallery, located in the picturesque town of Zichron Yaacov. But ultra-Orthodox government officials are not impressed.
The Meroz, however, are not breaking the law—at least, not technically.
So the town's deputy mayor, Itamar Ben-Ezer, retaliated Saturday by parking a hearse in front of the gallery's entrance. Ben Ezer said Meroz was tampering with a balance between religious
The Antikon Gallery stayed open, though, and hundreds of Israelis came to show their support, Amos Meroz said yesterday.
and secular relations that has long existed.
The incident highlights how tensions between secular and observant Jews in Israel have grown since last year's national elections, when ultra-Orthodox parties made significant gains.
The ministry responsible for enforcing the Sabbath law is controlled by the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, which has ordered that violators be fined.
The Sabbath issue has taken a different twist in Tel Aviv, where Mayor Roni Milo has threatened to support a boycott of a new shopping mall being built in his city if mail owners force a McDonald's restaurant there to close on the Sabbath.
Tel Aviv is predominantly secular, and when city officials granted the building
license for the mall they understood it would be open Saturdays. Since then, an ultra-Orthodox multi-millionaire bought a controlling share in Africa-Israel, the company that owns the mall. And he says it will be closed on the Sabbath.
Ironically, it was Sabbath religious customs that gave Meroz the idea of selling his gallery to avoid the Sabbath law.
Every spring, with the approach of the Passover holiday, Jews are forbidden to eat or even possess leavened bread. So all of Israel's leavened bread is symbolically sold to an Israeli Arab for the duration of the eight-day festival.
In its crackdown, the labor ministry avoids forcing Jewish inspectors to work on the Saobath by sending Druze Arabs to impose fines on stores that stay open.
Meroz said that he does the same by selling his gallery every Friday to his Muslim friend.
"They send Shabbas gogoyi (Sabbath non-Jews) to fine me," Meroz says. "So I have my own shabbas gogoyi."
Cardinal says Clinton misled on late-term abortion issue
O'Connor quoted from a letter to the president signed by the U.S.-based cardinals and the national Conference of Catholic Bishops, who urged Clinton and Congress to support a bill banning the late-term procedure.
"These abortions may actually endanger a woman's life," the cardinal told a packed St. Patrick's Cathedral during yesterday's morning Mass.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Cardinal John O'Connor led the nation's seven Roman Catholic preides yesterday in urging President Clinton to admit that he was misled into believing most late-term abortions save a woman's life or health.
The bishops' conference said that the message was to be read beginning yesterday in Catholic churches across the United States as well as at the Vatican.
White House representative Kathleen
"These abortions may actually endanger a woman's life."
John O'Connor Roman Catholic cardinal
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On the contrary, O'Connor said, specialists now acknowledge that such abortions may actually pose a risk. The cardinal cited the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, which recently reversed itself by saying that late-term abortions may not be safe.
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FBI says China tried to buy votes
Republicans want to know if Clinton knew of the probe
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Republican leaders pledged yesterday to find out what the White House knew about an FBI investigation into alleged Chinese attempts to buy influence in American politics last year. Leon Panetta, White House chief of staff at the time, said that his office knew nothing about it.
Panetta and his successor, Erskine Bowles, also mounted a defense of the Clinton administration's aggressive fund-raising activities before the 1996 election, saying they were forced to collect a lot of money to stop the Republican agenda from winning.
"We at the White House were in a fight of our lives," Bowles said on ABC's This Week. "This president
was fighting for what he believed in.
Campaign finance scandals dominated yesterday's television news programs. The chief topic was a story in The Washington Post that said the FBI warned six members of Congress that they were targets of an illegal effort by China to funnel laundered money to influential lawmakers.
The article, quoting government officials, said that investigators had conclusive evidence that Chinese funds entered the country last year, although it remains uncertain whether any of the money reached congressional or presidential campaigns.
One senator, Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., confirmed through a spokesman that she was briefed last June about the Chinese money-laundering threat. The other five were not identified.
Panetta, interviewed on NBC's Meet the Press, said that neither he nor President Clinton was advised of the FBI probe.
"Obviously this is something that
the Justice Department is investigating," Panetta said. "Congress ought to investigate because clearly this kind of thing should not have happened."
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said on Fox News Sunday that it seemed to him that the White House had to be warned. too.
"And if that's true, that makes these charges or these allegations even more serious than before," he said.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said that he believed the FBI didn't warn the White House because the money had already been delivered.
"There's a potential for people in the White House to be under investigation in this attempt, so I think that's why they were not informed," McCain said.
McCain said that the main Chinese objective had to be to influence the annual debate over extending to China most-favored-nation trade status or normal commercial relations.
"Billions of dollars in trade were involved," he said.
"We at the White House were in a fight of our lives. This president was fighting for what he believed in." Erskine Bowles White House chief of staff
"It's high-stakes poker, and if this is true that Chinese were attempting indirectly to influence that vote in our electoral process, that's unacceptable," said Sen. Richard Durbin, D-III, who joined McCain on CNN's Late Edition.
Signature souvenirs stolen from IRS
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service's former historian says the agency mishandles, even destroys, important historical records. The alleged law violations includes the vandalizing of presidential tax returns by IRS employees seeking souvenirs.
A new book by Shelley L. Davis, who resigned in 1995, hits the stands as the tax-collecting agency faces attacks on its system.
In a passage of Davis' book Unbridled Power: Inside the Secret Culture of the IRS, she describes reviewing tax returns of presidents dating back to Woodrow Wilson.
Davis writes that IRS privacy laws prevent her from detailing tax return contents. But, she wrote, "I can note, to my dismay, that the signature blocks on nearly all the returns had been torn off—where the president had set down his autograph."
Davis said that an IRS secretary mumbled about 'souvenir hunting' when she reported the vandalism.
IRS spokesman Frank Keith said that he couldn't respond to the allegation because the tax code forbids disclosing information about any taxpayer's return—even the president's.
Keith denied charges the agency violates the Federal Records, Act in its handling of old IRS files and taxpayer returns.
Links of Swiss banks to Nazi gold still vague
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A draft U.S. report on Nazi gold is likely to disappoint Jewish groups looking for direct evidence that melted-down jewelry and dental fillings of Holocaust victims went to Swiss banks.
Officials said an examination of American files turned up grusome documentation that Adolf Hitler's troops seized money, gold and possessions from concentration camp prisoners. There's also proof the booty went to Nazi Germany's Reichsbank, which dealt with Swiss banks during World War II.
However, despite strong suspicions by the United States and the Allies, the records do not establish definitively that Switzerland accepted so-called non-monetary gold from personal effects when its banks took for safekeeping gold bars the Germans
looted from banks across Europe, said officials close to the investigation.
Evidence that Swiss banks accepted not only looted gold but also that extracted from Holocaust victims would increase the moral imperative for making fresh reparations—and would shatter Swiss arguments that the country did not collude completely with the Nazis.
"The Allies never really came up with any hard-core evidence that the Swiss accepted that kind of gold," said one official familiar with documents examined for the report. "You would almost have to have people on site testing it as it came in. Whether the gold the Allies captured in the camps was slated for Switzerland, perhaps we'll never know."
This official and most others interviewed spoke on condition that they not be identified.
Union recruits asbestos workers
The Associated Press
SANTA FE SPRINGS, Calif. — In a large-scale attempt to recover some of the labor movement's old clout by rebuilding its ranks, a major laborers' union is in the midst of a million-dollar campaign to organize Southern California's asbestos workers.
The behind-the-scenes unionizing is set to go public today, flexing the newfound muscle of the Laborers' International Union of North America with demonstrations in Los Angeles.
The effort is part of a cultural shift under way in organized labor. Most of the 2,500 targeted asbestos-removal workers are Latino immigrants. Many lack proper immigration papers and fear that if they complain about poor working conditions, employers will summon authorities.
"It's got all the ingredients of what the labor movement should be doing," Richard Bensinger, AFL-CIO organizing director, said. "They are helping one of the most exploited work forces in the country."
Rather than fight employers one at a time, the Laborers' International is taking on the entire regional industry in a high-profile campaign unusual in the stodgy old building trades, Duane Stillwell, organizing director, said.
The union began the drive in Los Angeles County, where it has leverage with unionized general contractors hiring asbestos-removal companies.
Stillwell said that the drive would heat up this week with protests in downtown Los Angeles complete with demonstrators clad in asbestos-proof garb. Organizers hope owners of buildings besieged by picketers will be able to sway contractors to improve working conditions and wages.
At the same time, the union is
reaching out to churches and immigrant groups,trying to raise a critical mass of community support.
Organizers said that the region's asbestos workers earned an average of $8 per hour with no benefits and had to put in uncompensated overtime.
Their work is also dangerous. Inhaling asbestos fibers can cause lung cancer or asbestosis, a deadly lung disease that can lie dormant for as long as 20 years. Typically nonunion asbestos workers get no health benefits.
Workers said that they often were provided no gloves or new filters for protective masks and that wash stations were improperly installed. They claimed that supervisors rushing to beat deadlines had asbestos removed without hosing it down and preventing fibers from becoming airborne.
Susan McNiel, executive director of the Southern California branch of the Associated Builders and Contractors, said that federal regulations mandated strict rules on safe asbestos removal.
She said that dodging federal law would put contractors at great risk of losing licenses. She expressed surprise that any would chance that.
Immigrant workers move frequently, organizers said, and bad addresses are a constant frustration.
But after fruitless visits to seven homes one night, rank-and-file organizer Luís Espejel hit pay dirt. In one apartment, he found five asbestos workers eager to sign cards and provide a phone list of three dozen co-workers.
"They want to join the campaign because they're tired of being treated badly," Espejel said. "There's a lot of pressure. The shower is not in good condition. They claim that they have old filters."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
9A
Israel to begin West Bank pullout
Some Israelis and Palestinians still unsatisfied
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM—Israel's next troop pullout from the West Bank will be completed within days, giving Yasar Arafat full control of dozens of villages and tens of thousands more Palestinians, Defense Minister Vitzah Mardekhal said yesterday.
The imminent pullout has been harshly criticized by right-wing members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's governing coalition, which opposes an surrender of West Bank land, and by Palestinians, who had hoped for a much larger expansion of their autonomy.
Israeli and Palestinian officials met last night in Jerusalem to work out details of the withdrawal.
Under a plan narrowly approved Friday by the Israeli Cabinet, troops will be withdrawn from an additional 9 percent of the West Bank. Seven percent of the West Bank will be transferred from joint Israeli-Pal-
Yassar Arafat
Mordechal said that detailed plans for the redeployment would be submitted to him for approval today and that immediately after that the redeployment would begin. It will be completed in two to three days, he said.
the west Bank—and partial control over more than 500 villages—about 24 percent. They also control most of the Gaza Strip.
The redeployment, which was supposed to take place by last Friday, is the first of three called for under the Israeli-Palestinian peace accords. It will reportedly give Arafat's Palestinian Authority full control of 50 more West Bank villages with a population of about 200,000.
Despite Israeli statements to the contrary, Palestinians said that they expected to be in control of most of the West Bank at the end of the three redeployments and had hoped to gain control of a third of the territory in the first pullback.
A rebellion in Netanyahu's coalition appeared to fizzle yesterday when a key legislator backed down from his threat to support a no-confidence motion against the government. Moshe Peled said that he had met with Netanyahu and had received promises about construction in Jerusalem and settlement actions in the West Bank, which Israel captured in the 1967 Six-Day War.
"We do not want our homeland to be cantons which the Israelis control," said Ahmed Abdel Rahman, a top side to Arafat.
Palestinian anger was compounded by Israel's decision last week to go ahead with construction of a new Jewish neighborhood in disputed East Jerusalem, where the Palestinians hope to establish a capital.
estinian to full Palestinian control, while 2 percent now under Israeli occupation will come under joint control.
Palestinian minister Faisal Husseini said yesterday that the peace
process was on its way to the grave due to the Israelis' insistence on doing what they wanted without taking their Palestinian partner into consideration.
Palestinians now have full control over eight cities—2.8 percent of
Mordechal, however, insisted the pullout was substantive.
Another minister, Hanan Ashrawi, called the planned pullout a big fraud because it largely involved territory already under partial Palestinian control.
"The transfer of dozens of villages, tens of thousands of Palestinian residents who are passing from one status to another, a new and different deployment of Israeli army forces—I have no doubt that these things are new and another layer of progress in the peace process with the Palestinians," he said. "I think that the government decision shows a desire and willingness to move the process forward."
The Maariv and Yediot Ahronot newspaper said that the redeployment would include villages northeast of Jenin, in the northern West Bank, the university town of Bir Zeit, north of Ramallah, a village west of Bethlehem, and villages south of Hebron.
Kabul college reopens lacks women,money
The Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan — Lacking desks, books and female teachers and students, Kabul University reopened its doors yesterday for the first time since the Taliban religious army took control of the Afghan capital in September.
Many of the university buildings have been reduced to rubble by bomb and rocket attacks. Much of the campus, littered with land mines, is off-limits.
Because the Taliban bans women from going to school or work, there were no female teachers or students. This was expected to significantly limit the school's standards because 60 percent of the teachers and half the student body had been women.
The Taliban closed the university last year, saying it was against Islam to house female students in dormitories.
"Unfortunately our college is still not really ready to reopen," university director Dr. Syed Amir Shah Asanyar told about 400 Taliban officials and students in the shabby campus auditorium.
Asanyar was made director of Kabul University when former President Burhanuddin Rabbani reopened the school to 10,000 students in 1994. It had been closed
under the previous Soviet-backed regime.
Asanyar said that years of fighting had destroyed most of the school's facilities and that money for new equipment was lacking. "We don't even have chairs and desks for the classrooms," he said. "And there is no money to pay the salaries of the teachers we still have."
Asanyar called for foreign aid and appealed to teachers who have left Afghanistan to return home.
In what was seen as a veiled attack on the Taliban government, he also said that the university belonged to Afghanistan's people and not any party or political group.
Taliban's minister of higher education saw it differently. In his speech at the ceremony, Maulvi Amanullah Noman said that the university had strayded from its rightful path.
"In previous times, we had a university operating in Kabul, but we lost our culture nonetheless," he said. "Now we want all the teachers and students at Kabul University to forget Western culture and adopt traditions that are purely Afghan. Teachers should be here only to lead students through the study of Islam."
Mexican official may be linked to drug lords
Country's top prosecutor may have been bribed
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — At first glance, Texas Commerce Bank account No. 08100355370 seems unremarkable. Its healthy balance of $9,041,598 is nothing special in Houston, where millionaires are plentiful.
But this single account and its owner could blow wide open a corruption scandal simmering in Mexico and further damage the U.S.' drugfighting partnership with its southern neighbor.
The account belongs to Mario Ruiz Massieu, once Mexico's top drug prosecutor, who is now named in allegations that top Mexican officials were paid to protect drug cartels.
U. S. prosecutors go to court this week to prove that Ruiz Massieu's nest egg, fed in six-figure deposits over 13 months, was not the result of shrewd stock picks or a lucky real estate deal.
The money, they say, came from Mexico's leading drug traffickers, who wanted unfettered routes to get drugs into the United States and their profits back into Mexico. If they can convince six federal jurors, U.S. taxpayers will be $2 million richer, thanks to federal asset forfeiture laws.
In Mexico, this is more than some mere cash forfeiture trial; it has
exploded into a kind of Mexican Watergate.
This is what has happened in public view:
In 1993, then-President Carlos Salinas de Gotari appointed Mario Ruiz Massieu deputy attorney general, with a primary goal of cracking down on drug traffickers.
In 1994, assassins killed Jose Francisco Ruiz Massieu—the prosecutor's older brother and the No.2 man in the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party—and Luis Donaldo Colosio, then the party's presidential candidate, within six months of each other.
Despite convictions in both deaths, questions remain as to whether the murders were motivated by political struggles within the ruling party or linked to drug trafficking—or both.
Using false names, Raul Salinas in 1989 opened a network of bank accounts. Four years later, he began shifting money to banks in Switzerland and elsewhere via Cayman Island shell corporations. So far, Mexican investigators have found at least $120 million in Salinas bank accounts.
Mexican prosecutors believe Salinas conspired with federal congressman Manuel Munoz Rocha to hire a hit man for the killing.
On Feb. 28, 1995, police in Mexico arrested Raul Salinas and charged him in the murder.
Ruiz Massieu is currently under house arrest in New Jersey, awaiting a deportation hearing in May.
Belgrade crowds rally for free press
The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Fifty thousand jeering, flag-waving opponents of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic rallied in central Belgrade yesterday in support of more democracy and freedom for the media.
The crowd gathered at Belgrade's Republic Square in the first big protest since Milosevic reinstated opposition victories in local elections last month.
The demonstration also marked the sixth anniversary of the first street protest against Milosevic on March 9, 1991. Then, Milosevic used police and army tanks to disperse protesters.
Anti-Milosevic rallies began last November, when Milosevic annulled results of municipal elections in 14 districts, including Belgrade, where his Socialist Party lost.
Zoran Djindjic, who last month became the first non-communist mayor of Belgrade in 52 years, said that no one could stop the march toward democracy.
The opposition protests were put on hold last month when Milo-
This time, there was no visible police presence. Three leaders of the opposition Zajedno, or Together, coalition, spoke.
"Democracy in Serbia has started, and soon it will triumph," said one of the leaders, Vuk Draskovic.
Belgrade
BURGAMY
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ROMANIA
BOSMA
GERMANY
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sevic reinstalled original election results. But the opposition said that it will continue with occasional protests until Milosevic frees the state-run media, especially Serbian TV from his grip.
Following Milosevic's official line, the TV has been blasting the opposition leaders as tools of foreign powers and traitors to Serbia. The Serbian president needs a monopoly on TV, which covers the whole of Serbia, to influence public opinion before general elections later this year. Serbia's independent media covers only bigger cities and towns and does not reach rural districts, the pillar of Milosevic's support.
"If they had television in the stone age, it would look like Serbian TV," opposition leader Vesna Pesic told the crowd. "Our main aim is to take this dangerous toy away."
Eclipse, comet coincide
The Associated Press
BEIJING — Sky gazers in China and Russia got a double delight yesterday when the sun disappeared behind the moon in a total solar eclipse that coincided with a rare view of the bright Hale-Bopp comet.
Tens of thousands of people in northern China and eastern Siberia watched the sky go dark and felt already freezing temperatures drop as the moon blocked the sun's rays for more than two minutes.
The moon looked like a giant black hole ringed by a necklace of fire.
In Chita, near Russia's border with Mongolia and China, people crowded in the streets to watch the eclipse through pieces of smoked glass to protect the eyes, the ITAR-Tass news agency said.
Nearly 90,000 people saw the eclipse from Mohe, a county on China's northern tip that banned people from lighting stoves at home yesterday morning to keep the air smoke-free for sky gazing, the state-
run Xinhua News Agency said.
They bundled up in thick coats there against temperatures of minus 13 degrees.
The eclipse coincided with the arrival of the Hale-Bopp comet, extending its fiery tail toward the northwest, Xinhua said.
Just twice before in Egypt in 1882 and in Brazil in 1947—have a full eclipse and the close passing of a comet been recorded at the same time, said Li Qibin, president of the China Astronomical Society.
China does not expect to see another full eclipse until 2008, Xinhua said.
Astronomers from Moscow and other Russian cities, as well as from abroad, conducted observations from a specially equipped platform on top of Chita's Teacher Training Institute, ITAR-Tass said.
Chinese and Russian scientists planned to study the sun's corona, its hottest, outermost region, during the eclipse.
Solar eclipses occur when the sun, moon and Earth line up, with the moon in the middle.
The Road Trip of a Lifetime.
The journey begins March 10
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John Colbert
for Student Senate — Is he serious?
An engineering student running as an independent, Colbert has a platform that makes you wonder.
Story by Dave Morantz Photos by Geoff Krieger
S
student Senate elections are less than a month away. Candidates will soon set up shop along sidewalks, hand out fliers and grovel for votes. If we're lucky, they might even discuss pertinent campus issues.
But who really cares about campus recycling, city-wide transportation and student fees? Why don't the candidates shed their stuffy auras, stop dressing like poster children for the Republican Party and admit that what this campus really needs is a water slide complex?
That's what John Colbert, Lenexa junior and candidate for an engineering seat, wants to know. Colbert aims to turn Student Senate upside down. Colbert wants to construct a monorail system on campus, require all student senators to wear clown suits, and yes, construct a water slide complex on West Campus with student fees.
Colbert doesn't worry about what other candidates think.
"If you think your positions are better than mine, then we'll put them up to a vote." he said.
Platform
Where John Colbert stands:
Opposes student rec center.
slide complex on West Campus financed by increased student fees
Supports bill requiring all student senators to wear clown suits to all official functions.
Supports a bill that would replace current bus system with mule-drawn cars.
John Colbert, Lenexa junior, is diving into a Student Senate campaign...literally. One of Colbert's issues is to place a water slide in the middle of campus.
- Opposes KU Student Senate.
- Supports a monorail system that would link the West Campus, Daisy Hill and the main campus.
Supports phone-in registration handled by the Psychic Friends Network.
Supports the abolition of Student Senate and the creation of a Student Monarchy.
Source: John Colbert campaign flyer
VOTE FOR JOHN
OR I WILL
HUNT YOU DOWN.
Colbert campaigned unsuccessfully for Student Senate last year on many of the same issues. He fell short of winning an engineering seat by about 30 votes.
JOHN COLBERT INDEPENDENT Engineering Candidate for KU Student Senate
"After the election, I see all these people at parties, and they'd say, 'Oh man, I wanted to vote for you. Did you win?' If a few more of those people had voted, Senate might be a bit different," he said.
As of yesterday, neither coalition had submitted its candidates' campaign declarations, so Colbert's opposition for the engineering seat is unknown. The deadline for coalitions to submit their packets to Chad Perlov, elections commissioner, is tomorrow.
Colbert certainly stands apart from other candidates. While most candidates debate placing a parking garage north of the Kansas Union, Colbert proposes a simple solution: build a parking garage on the Hill. Just plop it down right below the Campanile. Doing so would benefit the Athletic Department as well as the parking department.
20M
"It would once and for all put an end to anyone who ever wanted to see a football game for free again," he said.
Building a monorail system to connect the main campus with new parking lots on West Campus would also help the parking problem.
"I know there's a lot of houses in the way, but we can just buldoze the whole residential neighborhood," he said. "It'd be just like Disney World. We could even have Mickey Mouse waving to people."
The idea for a water slide complex came from the recent debate about a student recreation center. Colbert said that the University's concern about keeping pace with peer institutions fueled the entire debate.
"Why should we worry about just keeping up with the Joneses? Let's go one further. Student fees are our money; let's have some fun with it," he said.
Despite his outlandish plans, Colbert is serious about winning. He
plans to spend $400 on this spring's campaign and has even set up a page on the World Wide Web at
www.engr.ukans.edu/~jshaft Colbert said he became interested in running for Senate when a friend at Kansas State University ran a mock campaign. He originally wanted to run for president, but said that obstacles such as petition requirements and exorbitant filing fees kept him from running for the top office.
Neil Hague, engineering senator, said that despite
JOHN CENTURY
IS LUCKED TO
JOIN DIRECTOR OF
MTS DIDDY MONEY
A TRAIL BUSINE
Qualifications
John Colbert's qualifications:
He has never been convicted of a felony.
图
He was in the bottom half of his high school graduating class.
He has a bad haircut.
He doesn't care about Student Senate.
He's on Prozac.
He doesn't even know what Student Senate does.
Opposes student reo center
supports construction of a water slide complex
a west campus funded by increased student fees
supports bill requiring all student senators to
or clown mute to all official functions
supports a bill that would replace current KU
system with male drawn curls
poses KU1 Student Senate
ME AND LESSON
ADVY GOSHA VOTE
FOR MORROW ELSE
Source: John Colbert campaign flyer
Colbert's attitude toward Senate, a diverse group people needed to run for Senate.
"It's great for as many people to run as possible," he said. "But when you're running as an independent, it's harder to get your message out."
Colbert's unorthodox attitude toward Student Senate results from a belief he claims many other students share. He said Senate did a better job of providing greeks a social scene and resume padding than representing students' views.
ME AND LEONY
DONT EAT, GOING VOTE
FOR JOHNSON ELSE.
Where John Stands
Colbert faces an uphill challenge. As an independent running for Senate, he will have to battle coalition candidates who often have more funds and resources than independents. Many candidates form coalitions to pool money and spread campaigning tasks among its members. Presidential candidates often invite people to run with a coalition.
"If I'm elected, I won't have any hesitations about introducing some of this legislation," he said of proposals such as the water slide complex. "I've seen more amusing bills passed in Senate."
"Sometimes in campaigns that aren't dominated by issues, the style or ads are the big difference. You have to do something to distinguish yourself," Cigler said. "I'm not endorsing the strategy, but it appears to be a campaign where he's trying to point out that the system doesn't work very well."
Despite Colbert's practical, hardnosed plans, he was not invited to run with a coalition.
Requiring senators to wear clown suits would add to the amusement.
"All these people have to come before Senate and jump through hoops to receive money," he said. "Why not make them feel comfortable and make the senators dress like clowns?"
Allan Cigler, professor of political science, said Colbert's campaign might positively impact the elections by increasing voter turnout. In the last five years, an average of only 16 percent of the student body has voted in Senate elections.
"All candidates seem to be the same," he said. "I'm the excitement."
So exciting that Colbert feels Student Senate tried to prevent him from running in this spring's election. Last fall, Senate passed a campaign reform bill. The original draft of the bill contained a provision stating that all campaigning was expected to be done in a mature, professional and legitimate manner. Although the provision was excluded from the final bill, Colbert felt the Senate wrote the provision with his nearly successful campaign from the previous year in mind.
Campaign financing also concerns Colbert. The Student Sen-
election code states that all independent candidates and coalitions must set a voluntary spending limit. Colbert spent $220 last year on his campaign and said the coffers ran dry in the last few days.
This year, he plans to spend $400, almost twice the amount recommended by Elections Commissioner Chad Perlov. Colbert unabashedly admits spending his father's money.
"A lot of people just go crying to daddy for campaign money," he said. "I'll just admit that at least 50 percent of my funds come from Daddy."
A campaign flier pictures former presidential candidate Steven Forbes saying, "John certainly is willing to spend enough of his daddy's money. A true protege."
Colbert is also concerned that his campaign spending will be watched more closely than the coalitions' spending.
"I don't know how honest coalitions are in spending. But in a campaign like mine where you step on peoples' toes, you've got to follow the letter of the law," he said.
Reasons
The reasons the John Colbert campaign believes that you should vote for him:
He has spent more money than all of the other candidates.
You're not just voting for John but against Student Senate.
It would be a mighty blow to his self-esteem if he loses.
It's obvious that he has a lot of spare time on his hands.
Student Senate Elections
Source: John Colbert campaign flyer
Please fill in each circle completely
O Hill Topics
O University Daily Kansan
O March 10, 1997
O Page 10A
PARKS
RESTING
LAUNDRY
ROOM
GARDEN
MEDICAL
CENTRE
Colbert has an unusual set of qualifications for the senate seat he's running for, including the fact that he doesn't know what Student Senate does.
News of the WEIRD
Lead Stories
In 1978, the Oakland Raiders Jack Tatum made a "clothesline" hit on New England Patriots receiver Darryl Stingley's neck, causing permanent paralysis. At the time, Tatum arrogantly defended the play as legal and warned other opponents that they could expect the same. In January 1997, Tatum applied for disability benefits of $165,000 a year from the NFL Players Association, pointing to the mental anguish he has suffered having to live with the incident. (The $156,000 "catastrophic injury" category is the NFLA's highest; it is the same category that Stingley is in.)
Dick Shields made the Pittsburgh newspapers on his 75th birthday on
Jan. 11 for his remarkable recuperative powers. Among the medical traumas from which he has recovered: in a coma near death for a week after a burst appendix; three times a broken neck (once while falling out of bed during recuperation from a previous broken neck); a broken back; triple-bypass heart surgery; a grapefruit-sized blockage of a blood vessel; a fungus that ate the skin off his feet; and duty during World War II that included hand-marking of active mines. Said Shields, apparently without irony: "I'd have to say I've been truly blessed."
Beyond Fingerprints and Earprints: Lavelle Davis, 23, was convicted of murder in Geneva, III., in February.
Prosecutors showed how Davis and an accomplice rehearsed the murder at the scene just beforehand, including how the accomplice placed duct tape over Davis' mouth just as they would later do to the victim. Davis was linked to the crime scene when his lip prints were found on the piece of tape.
The Continuing Crisis
The Continuing Crisis
Member of the First Husbands Club: In October, welfare workers found a 50-year-old man living alone in a cave in the ifsahan province in Iran. According to the workers, he had moved there 30 years ago when his wife dumped him.
Reuters news service reported in October that seven women and eight newborn babies were being held in the
King Baudoin hospital outside Kinshasa, Zaire - some for as long as three months - because they could not pay maternity bills. Said a hospital official, "We are obliged to use unusual means to force the patients to find the money."
In January, the wife of Dr. Michael Baden – head of the New York State Police forensics unit – filed papers in her divorce action against him in New York City. (Baden testified on behalf of O.J. Simpson that the victims' knife wounds probably were caused by more than one assailant.) According to his wife's papers, Baden once performed a pair of autopsies on the couple's dining room table, once asked her permission to impregnate his girlfriend,
and once told her he could kill her and make it look like a natural death.
In October, a court in Fort Worth.
in October, a dawn in Fort Worth.
Texas, awarded former patient Jeanie Warren, 23, $8.4 million in her lawsuit against the now defunct Psychiatric Institute of Fort Worth because of its "rage reduction therapy." The treatment involves restraining the patient and creating a rage "in a controlled and loving environment," said the institute, so that any underlying anger would be exposed. Warren said that in two dozen lessons, institute personnel pinned her down, punched her in the abdomen and ribs, and demanded continually to know what she was angry at. Said Warren, "I couldn't think of anything except, 'You!"
PHILLIES PLAYER
CURT SCHILLING was angered yesterday when the Philadelphia Phillies failed to offer him a guaranteed, three-year contract extension.
Schilling, eligible for free agency following the season, was thought to have asked for about $16 million in three years.
Schilling, 30, led the first six weeks of the 1996 season after shoulder surgery the previous August. He went 9-10 with a 3.19 ERA in 26 starts.
Phillies
Schilling will give the Philies another proposal today. The sides won't meet again until March 18.
KENYAN BREAKS MARK AT INDOOR MEET
Wilson Kipketer set his second 800-METER WORLD RECORD in three days at the World Indoor Championship yesterday when he ran 1 minute 42.67 seconds, slicing 1.29 off the mark he set Friday.
The Kenyan-born athlete, who runs for Denmark, ran 1:43.96 in Friday's first heat, beating the old mark of Kenya's Paul Ereng.
MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1997
BOMB SCARE
Locker rooms at KEMPER ARENA were cleared and bomb-sniffing dogs were brought in Saturday after someone phoned in a bomb threat.
The threat was made just before halftime of the Missouri-Oklahoma semifinal in the Big 12 postseason tournament.
A search by Kansas City police, Kemper security guards and Big 12 staff turned up nothing. Officials and the Missouri and Oklahoma teams were taken to different dressing quarters at the half but returned to their own locker rooms after the game, which Missouri won 89-80.
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
The crowd of 19,300 was not notified and was
not affected by the halftime search.
Fast BREAKS
Rugby club team defeats KSU 46-5 on Saturday
The Kansas club rugby team defeated Kansas State 46-5 on Saturday at the Westwick Rugby Complex in Lawrence.
The win guaranteed the rugby team a spot in the rugby club sport playoffs to be held in Houston on April 1.
Kansas needed to defeat the Wildcats by at least 28 to clinch a spot. The team won by 41.
Leading the charge for Kansas were Mike Effertz and Eric Sutton. Both scored two tries for the Javahaws.
Dan Carl, Brian Holmes and Jake Corrigan each added one try for Kansas.
The game was Kansas' first at the new Westwick complex, which is owned by the rugby team. The Kansas rugby team is one of only three teams in the country to own its field.
—Kansan staff report
NFL ponders new sites for its expansion teams
PALM DESERT, CALIF. — Here's the NFL's dilemma:
But where else? It's possible the league could expand by one team in 1999 and another in 2001, when there might be a stadium in Los Angeles.
There may be an inking of that this week when the owners begin preliminary discussions about expansion, probably by appointing a committee to study it.
It must put a team in Cleveland by 1999 — that was written in stone (or at least in contract) when Art Modell took his franchise to Cleveland.
But while Los Angeles, deserted by the Rams and Raiders in 1995, seems to be the logical second city, there is still no stadium there that the NFL deems suitable.
Other teams that are looking for new stadiums will either get them or, like Denver and San Francisco, are too entrenched in their areas to move far.
One reason for the league's interest in expansion is the relative stability in the NFL — Tampa Bay and Cincinnati, two teams that might have moved into the Cleveland vacancy, are getting new stadiums.
West Virginia player dies after vehicle's tire went flat
MORGANTOWN, W.VA. — A West Virginia football player was killed yesterday when the sports utility vehicle he was driving went out of control after its tire went flat.
Daniel VanEtten, 19, a freshman lineman, was thrown from the vehicle in the accident about 1:25 a.m. on Interstate 95 in Camden County, Ga., Georgia state police said.
Three other West Virginia football players were in the vehicle. Carlos Osgeueda, a freshman receiver from Miami; Matt Wilson, a freshman lineeman from East Sparta, Ohio; and Donnell Khori Ivey, a freshman from Boca Raton, Fla., were treated for minor injuries at Camden Medical Center and released, the Camden County Sheriff's Department said.
Another passenger, Dina Karwosci,
18, of Beaver, Pa., also was in the
vehicle and was treated and released,
the sheriff's department said.
Georgia state police said the vehicle had traveled about 350 feet after the left rear tire started to separate. Then it began rotating and overturned.
"Danny was a wonderful young guy," West Virginia coach Don Nehlen said. "He was liked by all the players and coaches here at West Virginia."
VanTetten, of Jupiter, Fla., was second-team all-state in Florida's Class 5A as a senior.
—The Associated Press
PAGE 11A
'Hawks sweep series
ANDALL
Kansas offense shines at plate against St. Cloud
Kansan staff report
The Jayhawk baseball team is on a hot streak.
During the weekend, Kansas grabbed four wins in a series with St. Cloud State at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. Kansas, 12-5 overall, now has won six consecutive games.
"There are always things that can be improved on," Kansas coach Bobby Randall said. "But right now we are playing well. We are a young team, and if we can get some early wins, we will keep improving."
The Jayhawks put together their best offensive showing of the season yesterday, defeating St. Cloud 24-3.
Kansas scored in every inning that they batted except for the second.
The biggest Kansas burst at the plate came in the eighth inning, when St. Cloud pitcher Chris Jurak gave up eight hits and seven runs. Kansas earned eight runs in the inning.
Kansas centerfielder Mike Dean went 3 of 3 at the plate, including two doubles. Right fielder Les Walrond hit 3 for 6, and designated hitter Joe Demarco was 2 for 4, including a triple.
"I think that we are being a little more patient at the plate than we have been," Randall said. "You can't ask for better production."
Kansas pitcher Jake Good (2-1) earned the victory.
On Saturday, the teams played a doubleheader.
Kansas took the first game 5-2 and picked up the second game 6-1.
Kansas led the entire game, jumping out to a quick 5-0 run. St. Cloud tried to come back by scoring its two runs in the eighth inning, but it wasn't enough.
Kansas pitcher Derek Metz made his pitching debut for the Jayhawks and got the win. In his first game, Metz pitched three innings and allowed just one run on two hits.
On Friday, the Jayhawks defeated St. Cloud 12-7 after scoring seven runs in the first inning.
The Jayhawks then posted three more runs in the fourth inning. Then St. Cloud attempted a comeback.
(1)
The Huskies scored six runs in the seventh inning, making it a 10-7 game. But Kansas was able to hold off St. Cloud by putting in two insurance runs in the bottom of the seventh.
During the four-game series, the Kansas pitching staff allowed a total of 13 runs on 24 hits.
Randall said he had been pleased with how the team was pitching.
"We have improved this year and since last season," Randall said. "The more chances we get to go out and get some work, the better we will be."
Kansas will play against Missouri at 3 p.m. Tuesday at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Top:
Andrei Urasov / KANSAN
Kansas coach Bobby Randall counsels pitcher Derek Metz during the Jayhawks' win against St. Cloud Saturday. Metz pitched his first collegiate game in the second half of the weekend doubleheader.
Bottom
Center fielder Mike Dean tags out a St. Cloud player at home during game two. The 'Hawks won the game 6-1.
No time for games' time-outs
College basketball is a waste of time.
Excessive time-outs slow the flow of a regulation game and waste the fans', players' and coaches' time. As many as 20 time-outs can be taken by officials, players and coaches during a 40-minute game.
Eight media time-outs account for at least 16 minutes of down time, depending on what television network carries the game. Each team can take three full time-outs per half, accounting for another 24 minutes of inactivity.
The 20-second time-out halts the game for another two minutes. Plus, officials have the authority to stop the game for injuries and scuffs.
When many baseball fans recently became bored with the lack of constant action and switched to basketball, major league baseball attempted to win back the hearts of its fans by analyzing and implementing ways to speed up the game.
All 26 time-outs, coupled with dead balls and fouls, make the game of college basketball slower than it needs to be.
But authorities of NCAA basketball have allowed teams to have additional time-outs, thus slowing the game even more.
game in which athletes utilize their years of intense conditioning to play at their peak.
But I don't have time to stand at the field house and watch KU athletes sit on the bench for as
I want to see a back-and- forth, high-flying physical
GUEST COLUMNIST
DAVE BREITENSTEIN
The reason fans like the sport is because of the nonstop excitement, so why take that awav?
I can live with halftime and a few time-outs, but coaches Roy Williams and Marian Washington prepare their players for several days before a game, so there cannot possibly be that much more to say to the players.
much as 42 minutes during a game's time-outs.
KU basketball players are some of the best-conditioned athletes in the country, so time-outs probably are not designed to give them a breather. Discussions of strategy should take place before the game — not after every few minutes of play.
A typical game lasts about two hours. That's 120 minutes of my time to watch only 40 minutes of play. Basketball players average a three-minute break for every one minute of work.
What other professions allow this? It would take me 24 hours to complete an eight-hour work day in college basketball time.
It's a good thing not every profession allows its workers to have so many breaks.
Forward Raef LaFrentz averages about 29 minutes a game. Spread that over a season of 30 or more games, and he still plays fewer than 20 hours.
I'd love to work for 20 hours and earn a scholarship worth about $12,000 a year. In fact, I'd probably feel guilty sitting on the bench during time-outs.
I think a few time-out reforms are needed in college basketball.
Get rid of the 20-second time-out. What could coaches possibly have to say that is so important that he or she must stop the game? Just yell it to the players on the court so the fans won't lose excitement.
Only allow teams to have one time-out each half. Teams should be able to discuss relevant game plans in the eight media time-outs spaced throughout the contest, but just in case of emergencies, coaches should have a backup.
Players should substitute into the game the same way hockey players or tag-tteam wrestlers do. When Tamecka Dixon is running down the sideline, she could just slap Erinn Reed's hand and the players would switch. This would cut down on the time wasted when officials must stop the game to make substitutions.
As a former player, I know the game is exhausting and timeouts help players catch their breath.
Get rid of the 20 second time-out. What could coaches possibly have to say that is so important that he or she must stop the game?
But I never needed 26 timeouts to drink my Gatorade and wipe off sweat, and I'm far from being in the same superb condition as Kansas athletes.
We should make them earn their scholarships through hard work, but time-outs are cutting into the excitement of the game – and I don't pay good money for tickets, wait in line for several hours before tipoff and stand in a sweaty field house to see our athletes sitting on padded chairs during time-outs.
Comments? E-mail Dave at dbtretenk@kansan.com
Jayhawks win some lose some in Oklahoma
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas advanced to the championship game in the consolation bracket yesterday but fell to Notre Dame 4-2.
The Kansas softball team traveled to the Sooner State for the second time this season and split six games in the Hall of Fame Tournament in Oklahoma City.
Pitcher Sarah Workman (6-6)
took the loss, pitching seven
innings and surrendering eight
hits and four runs.
The loss came despite a 4 for 4 hitting performance by Sara Holland, who earned a spot on the 1997 Sooner Invitational All-Tournament Team with her consistent hitting.
The team split its first two
games of the tournament on Friday, losing 7-5 to the Fighting Irish and defeating Stephen F. Austin 9-1 in five innings. Kansas rel-
Kansas rallied in the seventh
Sarah Workman
Workman took the loss after going six innings, allowing seven runs off eight hits.
inning against Notre Dame with back-to-back home runs from Holland and Kristina Johnson but came up two runs short.
Kansas came out hitting against Stephen F. Austin, scoring four runs in the first inning. Shannon Stanwick hit a two-run homer, and Holland went 2 for 2 at the plate with three RBI and a run scored.
Christy McPhail pitched five innings, giving up just one run on four hits.
Holland went 5 for 5 in Friday's games, belting her fourth and fifth home runs of the season and driving in six runs.
"It looked like two completely different teams out there today," Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said Friday. "We were more aggressive in the second game. The first game we were just really flat. Even though we had 11 hits, we really didn't put anything together until the last inning, and then it was too late."
The team, now 10-6, won its first two games on Saturday, defeating Baylor 9-1 and Northwestern 9-7.
Kansas pounded out 16 hits against Baylor, with Michelle Hubler going 4 for 4 at the plate.
Heather Richins and Stanwix each hit home runs, and Workman earned her sixth victory of the season with a one-hit shutout.
Stanwix and Holland paced the victory against the Wildcats, collecting six hits, two home runs and four RBI between them
In their third game on Saturday, the Jayhawks fell to Oklahoma 8-0, managing just two hits off Sooner pitcher Jill Moss.
"I was pleased with the way we swung the bats, other than the OU game," Bunge said. "Jill Most is tough, and when Oklahoma jumped out to the lead, she just relaxed and blew us away."
The team will be back in Oklahoma next weekend to compete in the OSU Cowgirl Classic in Stillwater, Okla.
12A
Monday, March 10.1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Women's Conference Tournament Glances All Times EST
America East Conference
At Campus Sites
First Round
Thursday, Feb. 27
aware 76, Boston University 65
acon State 62, Northeastern 49
Quarterfinals Sunday, March 2
Maine 99, Towson State 57
Vermont 72, Delaware 40
Drew Hamphey 74, Hotfura 62
Drexel 75, Hartford 69
Wednesday, March 5
Maine 110, Drewal 68
Vermont 63, New Hampshire 60
Championship
Saturday, March 8
Maine 92, Vermont 70
Atlantic Coast Conference
At Independence Arena
Charlotte, N.C.
First Round
Thursday, Feb. 27
Lake Forest 70, Florida State 59
Quarterfinals
Friday, Feb. 28
Duce 60, Maryland 52 OT
North Carolina 86, Wake Forest 60
Virginia 77, Georgia Tech 63
Clemson 87, North Carolina State 75
Saturday, March 1
North Carolina 56, Duke 54
Clemson 77, Virginia 75 OT
Championship
Sunday, March 2
North Carolina 62, Clemson 58
Atlantic 10 Conference
At Campus Sites
First Round
Tuesday, Feb. 25
Fordham 68, Dayton 65
Virginia Tech 83, St. Bonaventure 80
Temple 74, Xavier, Ohio 69, OT
Duqueen 77, Rhode Island 62
Quarterfinals
Thursday, Feb. 27
St. Joseph's 65, Fordham 48
La Salle 61, Virginia Tech 66
George Washington 78, Temple 35
Masachusetts 75, Duquesne 60
Semifinals Sunday March 2
St. Joseph's 59, George Washington 56
Sunday, March 2
St. Joseph's 61, La Salle 51
George Washington 80, Massachusetts 39
Championship
Monday, March 3
Big East Conference
At Gampel Pavilion
Storra, Conn.
First Round
Saturday, March 1
Miami 64, Pittsburgh 50
Boston College 65, St. John's 58
Wilmington 68, Providence 54
Williamson 69, Providence 54
Lutte 66, Syracuse 77
Rutgers 68, Syracuse 77
Quarterfinals Sunday, March 2
Miami 63, Boston College 48
Connecticut 63, Villanova 45
Georgetown 79, West Virginia 60
Notre Dame 86, Rutgers 58
Semifinals Monday, March 3
ROUND ONE Tuesday
Monday, March 3
Connecticut 98, Miami 71
Notre Dame 83, Georgetown 43
Championship
Tuesday, March 4
Connecticut 86, Notre Dame 77
Big Sky Conference
At Dahlberg Arena
Missoula, Mont.
First Round
Thursday, March 6
Montana State 66, Cal State Sacramento 55
Northern Arizona 67, Weber State 62
Semifinals
Friday, March 7
Montana St. 72, Idaho St. 61
Montana 73, N.Arizona 42
glendale
Big South Conference At The Vines Center Lynchburg, Va. First Round Thursday, Feb. 27
Championship
Saturday, March 8
Montana 52, Montana State 49
North Carolina-Greensboro 68, Maryland-E
more County 50
Radford 77, Charleston Southern 57
Winthrop 70, North Carolina-Ashville 60
Liberty 71, Coastal Carolina 61
Semifinals Friday, Feb. 28
ROUND TWO
Wednesday
North Carolina-Greenwood 83, Radford 70
Liberty 83, Winnipeg 50
Big Ten Conference
At RCA Dome
First Round
Friday, Feb. 28
Saturday, March 1
Liberty 89, North Carolina-Greensboro 82
Indiana 72, Michigan 64
Ohio State 80, Penn State 79
Minnesota 60, Wisconsin 75
Quarterback
Quarterfinals Saturday, March 1
lowa 87, Indiana 53
Illinois 77, Michigan State 66
Championship
Monday, March 3
Indiana 61, Purdue 54
lowa 73, Northwestern 63
Michigan St. 85, Ohio State 79
Illinois 98, Minnesota 76
Semifinals Sunday, March 2
Big 12 Conference
At Kansas City
Tuesday, March 4
First Round
kansas State 62
Baylor 68, Oklahoma State 62
Kansas State 81, Oklahoma 56
Nebraska 62, Missouri 58
Iowa St 53, Texas AAM 46
Wednesday, March 5
Kansas 66, Baylor 54
Kansas State 76, Texas Tech 68
Texas 74, Nebraska 68
Colorado 54, Iowa State 39
Thursday, March 6 Semifinals
Quarterfinals
Big West Conference
At Lawlor Events Center
At Reno, Nov.
Wednesday, March 5
First Round
Kansas St. 73, Kansas 58
Colorado 64, Texas 50
Saturday, March 8
Championship
Colorado 54, Kansas St. 44
UC Santa Barbara 78, Boise State 54
Idaah 71, Pacific 46
Long Beach St. 79, Nevada 69, OT
UCI Irvine 65, New Mexico 54
SEMIFINALS Thursday
UC Santa Barbara 76, Idaho 57
UC Irvine 57, Long Beach St. 50
Saturday, March 8
Championship
UC Santa Barbara 81, UC Irvine 66
Colonial Athletic Association
At Richmond College
Richmond, Va.
First Round
Wednesday, Feb. 26
William & Mary 78, N.C.-Wilmington 63
Quarterfinals
Thursday, Feb. 27
James Madison 55, George Mason 48
Old Dominion 101, William & Mary 35
Va. Commonwealth 71, American U. 65
East Carolina 76, Richmond 66 Semifinals
Friday, Feb. 28
Old Dominion 86, James Madison 48
BU
Live, same-day and delayed national TV, sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and or blackouts).
100%
SPORTS WATCH
nSσ
(All times Central)
Monday, March 9, 1997
Noon
5 a.m.
ESPN — SportsCenter
2 p.m.
ESPN — Tennis, Champions Cup
Tennis
FINALS Saturday Women's
6:30 p.m.
2 p.m.
ESPN2 — fabulous Sports Babe
@
1 p.m.
ESPN2 — English Premier Football, taped, Newcastle at Liverpool
6:30 p.m.
ESPN —NCAA Tournament Preview
FSN — FOX Sports News
East Carolina 67, Va. Commonwealth 56
East Carolina 67, Va. Commonwealth Championship Sunday, March 2 Old Dominion 83, East Carolina 48
Tournament
OKLAHOMA STATE
Seeded No. 9
BAYLOR
Seeded No. 8
OKLAHOMA
Seeded No. 12
KANSAS STATE
Seeded No. 5
MISSOURI
Seeded No. 10
NEBRASKA
Seeded No. 7
TEXAS A&M
Seeded No. 11
IOWA STATE
Seeded No. 6
Baylor 68-62
NOON
Kansas 66-54
NOON
Kansas State 81-56
2:20
K-State 73-58
2:20
TEXAS TECH
Seeded No. 4
Colorado 54-44
CHAMPION
Nebraska 62-58
6:00
Texas 74-68
6:00
TEXAS
Seeded No. 2
Colorado 64-50
Iowa State 53-46
8:20
Colorado 56-39
IOWA STATE
Seeded No. 6
COLORADO
Seeded No. 3
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
ROUND ONE
Thursday
ROUND TWO
Friday
SEMIFINALS
Saturday
FINALS
Sunday
Men's
BAYLOR
Seeded No. 9
OKLAHOMA STATE
Seeded No. 8
KANSAS STATE
Seeded No. 12
TEXAS TECH
Seeded No. 5
MISSOURI
Seeded No. 10
NEBRASKA
Seeded No. 7
TEXAS A&M
Seeded No. 11
OKLAHOMA
Seeded No. 6
Oklahoma State 80-66
NOON
Kansas 74-59
NOON
Texas Tech 73-57
2:20
Iowa State 72-70
2:20
IOWA STATE
Seeded No. 4
NOON
Kansas 72-48
1:00
Missouri 78-72
6:00
Missouri 80-75
6:00
TEXAS
Seeded No. 2
Missouri 89-80
3:20
Oklahoma 67-58
8:20
Oklahoma 55-41
8:20
COLORADO
Seeded No. 3
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Saint Louis 73, Southern Mississippi 64
Alabama-Birmingham 65, South Florida 40
DePaul 100, Houston 75
Conference USA Chicago
Louville 84, Cincinnati 67
Tulane 75, Saint Louis 57
Memphis 68, Alabama-Birmingham 58
Marquette 80, DePaul 65
First Round Friday, Feb. 28 Cincinnati 63, North Carolina Charlotte 49
Quarterfinals Saturday, March 1
Semifinals Sunday, March 2
Sunday, March 2
Tulane 76, Louisville 74
Marquette 83, Memphis 77
Championship
Monday, March 3
e 76, Masonville 53
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
At Marine Midland Arena
Buffalo, N.Y.
First Round
Friday, Feb. 28
Semifinals Saturday, March 1
Niagara 81, lona 64
St. Peter's 74, Loyda, Md. 63, OT
Championship
Sunday, March 2
Sunday, March 2
St. Peter's 66, Niagara 38
Seminars
Thursday, March 6
At Sea Gate Centre, Toledo
10 Beijing College 55
Bowling Green State Bay 76, OT
Bowling Green City 81, Ohio State
Hiam, Chicago 54, Ohio University
Toledo 86, Eastern Michigan 74
Kent 106, Central Michigan 63
Nigraar 79, Fairfield 70
Siena 68, Iona 62
St. Peter's 76, Manhattan 57
Loyola, Md. 74, Kanisius 56
Mid-American Conference First Round Tuesday, March 4
At SeaGate Centre, Toledo
Toledo 69. Bowling Green 55
Kent 90, Miami, Ohio 80
Championship
Telangana 88, Kott 64
Compiled from The Associated Press.
HOROSCOPES
You have to go to school or work. That isn't what you want to do. You want to run wild and free, like a Tiger. This is just an exercise in accepting delayed gratification. You can have what you want later tonight. Set up a marvelous date for this evening, or go to the zoo.
Today's Birthday (March 10)
Arles (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 7.
You may walk into a hornet's nest this morning. Something that was supposed to go out last week didn't. If your boss or any of your clients are hotheaded, expect them to go off today. Don't worry. Everything will settle down by tomorrow afternoon.
Learn to manage money this year or you'll wish you had. The temptation to spend is strongest in April. Learn ways to make more in May. Spend on romance in July. Providing an old service makes a good job in September. A surprise benefits your career in December. A friend gives you a good job lead in January. Keep controversial information private in February. A loved one helps you formulate a fantasy next March.
All you have to do is slow down a little. Be decisive yet compassionate, assertive yet gentle, confrontational yet kindly. Sound impossible? Well, it's not. Tricky, yes. Impossible, no. Nothing is impossible. Nothing.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 5
You're nice. You're polite.
You're well groomed. People like you. Don't forget how important all those things are.
Each one is like a little bit of ammunition in your arsenal.
Continue to be your best, and you'll win against tough odds.
Never let them see you sweat.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 6.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)
-Today is an 8.
If you're like most Leos, you can sing, play a musical instrument or tap dance. You may not do it professionally yet, but you know you have talent. Put on a show for your friends tonight. Rent Grease or Police Academy. It'll make you feel better, especially if you had to work a regular job all day.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -
Today is a 6.
Explain reality as carefully as you can. Basically, it's like this: If you spend the money, you won't have it anymore. This may seem pretty obvious, but it could be a wake-up call to your friend. Be patient as you can, without laughing. But if it's really, really funny, go ahead and laugh.
You know that gorgeous hunk or babe who sometimes cruises through your life? The one you dream about but never seem to be able to catch? He or she could show up again. You might even make the connection. The secret is that you're making this happen.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Today is an 8.
Scorpio (Oct. 24 Nov. 21)
Today is a 6.
This could be a difficult day for you. A customer or coworker could be irritating. Be patient and you'll prevail. The other person will lose interest before you do. You two actually have quite a bit in common, although you may not want to admit it.
This should be a marvelous day for you, even if you do have to go to work. Your mood's good because you're in love. You're in love because the moon is in Aries. When the moon is in Aries, you're always in love. If you don't already have a mate, check out a place where athletes, such as basketball players, congregate.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec.
21) - Today is an 8.
It may be hard to concentrate on your job today. Take the day off if you can. If could be a household project that's underway; the place might be in shambles. you're being motivated to act quickly to achieve your dream.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). Today is a 7.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.
18) - Today is a 6.
You're a wacky, intelligent person and getting more so all the time. That's because of your inquisitive nature. Although there are some things you find easier than others, you can learn just about anything except quantum physics.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7.
You're great at buying gifts. Just about everything you see would be good for one or another of your friends. If you're not careful, you could give away everything you have and then some. Don't go near the malls unless you (or your parents) are made of money.
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
13A
Big 12 Conference Tournament: At the games
KU
31
Pepper
PHILIPS
66
G12CONF.COM
Dr Pepper
G12CONF.COM
GO
STATE
KANSAS
17
51 1732 3
OKLAHOMA
13
STATE
OKLAHOMA
20
STATE
OKLAHOMA
31
OWY
KANSAS
ASSOCIATES 24
ABOVE FAR LEFT: Kansas forward Paul Pierce works his way past Missouri's Derek Grimm for a layup. Pierce, who scored 30 points and grabbed 12 rebounds yesterday against Missouri, was named the Big 12 Tournament Most Valuable Player. He was joined on the all-tournament team by Kansas teammates Reef LaFrentz and Jacque Vaughn. Also on the team were Missouri's Jason Sutherland and Oklahoma's Corey Brewer.
LEFT: Kansas center Scot Pollard wrestles for the ball with Oklahoma State center Brett Robisch. Pollard scored just five points against the Cowboys but recorded double digits in Kansas' next two games. He had 13 against Iowa State and 10 against Missouri.
ABOVE: Kansas guard Ryan Robertson and forward Rae LaFrentz get tied up with two Iowa State players as they try to get a rebound. Kansas defeated the No. 19 Iowa State Cyclones 72-48 Saturday and went on to claim the Big 12 Conference tournament title yesterday. For the Jayhawk seniors, it was the first time they had won a conference tournament championship.
FAR LEFT: Kansas forward Billy Thomas stumbles after a loose ball in Friday's game against Oklahoma State. The Jayhawks survived a minor scare in their first-round game against the Cowboys and won by 15 points. Kansas took control of the game after Oklahoma State's Chianti Roberts fouled out in the second half, Guard Jacque Vaughn took the charge that sent Roberts to the bench.
14. F
23. A
28. C
33. B
38. D
BELOW LEFT: Kansas center Scot Pollard attempts to draw a charge while Missouri guard Jeff Hafer goes for the shot. The Jahawks' defense stifled the Tigers throughout the game. Missouri made only 30 percent of its field goal attempts and scored just 26 points in the first half.
BELLOW FAR LEFT: Kansas coach Roy Williams talks to the team during yesterday's game against Missouri. Despite the Jayhawks' loss to the Tigers earlier this season, Kansas shut down Missouri, 87-60. in Kemper Arena. Kansas 'victory in the championship game marked only the second time in Williams' career at Kansas that he has won the conference tournament title.
25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
1.4A
Monday, March 10, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
Monday
$1.00 Draws - Bud,
Bud Light and
Coors Light
$1.25 Premium Draws
Friday
$1.50 Miller highlife
bottles
$3.00 LaBatt's Oil Cans
Tuesday
$2.75 Premium Jam Jars
$1.50 Premium Draws
Saturday
$3.00 Large Premium
Bottles
Wednesday
$1.25 Wells
$2.50 Doubles
Sunday
$2.00 Calls
75¢ cans of Schmidts
LIVE MUSIC
Thursday
$1.75 Jam Jars
CBIL, Bud Light
and a more light
75¢ Draws
50¢ Pool
12 beers on tap
1031 Massachusetts Street, Lawrence, Ks
841-1960
RECYCLING
Keep it clean.
NATURALWAY NATURAL BODY CARE
NATURAL WAY
• NATURAL BODY CARE
• NATURAL FIBER
CLOTHING
• 820-822 MASS. • 841-0100
F. M. BERGESSEN
HEALTH IS SAFE
www.cjnetworks.com\`natural way\
ongratulations
Congratulations
to our February 1997 Staff Members of the Month
(from the left)
Cathy Eastwood, Regional Sales, junior, Overland Park, Kansas Sarah Scherwinski, Manager, junior, Tulsa, Oklahoma Anne Ferraro, Campus Sales, sophomore, Overland Park, Kansas Doreen Phang, Intern, junior, Malaysia Jeff Clennon, Retail Sales, junior, Wilmington, Illinois Mike Soifer, Retail Sales, junior, Northbrook, Illinois Matt Shatzman, Creative, senior, Kirkwood, Missouri
Chris Haghirian, Zone Manager, sophomore, St. Joseph, Missouri Jeff Phelps, Creative, sophomore, Fairway, Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Texas Tech unable to receive NCAA bid
School officials let ineligible players slip through cracks
The Associated Press
LUBBOCK, Texas — It's starting to look like Texas Tech athletic officials read the NCAA rules as well as some student athletes read their text-books
Chancellor John Montford ended Texas Tech's men's basketball season Saturday after two players were
F
coaches deserve better support than what they're getting in terms of being able to rely on certification," Montford said.
found academically ineligible.Ten of 12 Big 12 victories were forfeited, and Texas Tech withdrew from consideration for the NCAA tournament.
"I would have to say from the bottom of my heart that, frankly, our
A misinterpretation of NCAA rules led Texas Tech officials to conclude that Gracen Averil and Deuce Jones were eligible even though they made D's in courses related to their majors. At Tech, a D doesn't count toward a major, meaning that both players fell below the required number of hours needed to play.
They became the fifth and sixth players since August to lose eligibility or playing time because of administrative mistakes:
Texas Tech admitted last August that it improperly certified defensive tackle Jerome Lang by using a faulty correspondence course, the same kind of course that helped prompt a year-old NCAA investigation.
The Red Raiders pulled offensive lineman Casey Jones from the lineup minutes before the Aug. 31 season oppen against Kansas State because
Texas Tech signed off on a change in major that left him academically deficient. He later won a restraining order and played in six games.
Receiver Malcolm McKenzie also missed the season opener because of questions over a grade.
After the season, Tech revealed that an administrative error four years ago meant that defensive end Tony Daniels lost his senior year of eligibility. However, Daniels already 'had declared for the NFL draft when the school realized the mistake.
Both Montford and basketball coach James Dickey called the latest mistake a bitter pill. The Raiders were considered a near-lock for an NCAA bid after falling just short to favored Iowa State on Friday in the Big 12 tournament.
"We're not looking for any apologies or anything right now," guard Stanley Bonewitz said. "We're not really concerned about that. All we know is it's over, and it's a bad feeling right now."
North Carolina wins ACC tournament
The Associated Press
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Talent and height won out over desire in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament yesterday — but barely.
As an upset-filled ACC regular season spilled over into its postseason, No. 5 North Carolina ended the madness in the tournament final by beating N.C. State 64-54, the first eighth-seeded team to play
or the title in the event's 44-year history.
It was the Tar Heels' 14th ACC crown — 13 of them under legendary coach Dean Smith.
Shammond Williams sank three three-pointers in a span of two minutes during a second-half surge, and Antawn Jamison added two key layups six minutes later as the Tar Heels (24-6) won their 12th straight, locking up a No. 1 seed in
the NCAA tournament.
Williams led with 23 points and was selected the tournament MVP, while Jamison added 17 points and 11 rebounds.
The Wolfpack was 1-10 this regular season when trailing at halftime but 3-0 in the ACC tournament. However, N.C. State couldn't pull out one last miracle, getting out-bounded 41-21 as the Tar Heels shot 59 percent.
Get your artwork in front of KU!
SUBMIT YOUR ARTWORK FOR THE SPRING STUDENT SHOW IN THE KANSAS UNION GALLERY.
DROP WORK OFF THIS WEEK IN THE SUA OFFICE TO THE SUA FINE ARTS COMMITTEE. THE SHOW WILL RUN MARCH 15-22, 1997. MORE THAN ONE PIECE MAY BE DISPLAYED ACCORDING TO SPACE AVAILABLE. CALL 864-3477 FOR MORE INFO AND CHECK OUT WWW.UKANS.EU\~SUA FOR OTHER UPCOMING SUA EVENTS.
The Etc. Shop
It's
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
928 Mass. Downtown 843-0611
We Buy, Sell,
Trade & Consign
USED & New
Sports Equipment
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts
II
Kansan Classified
100s Announcements
1015 Personales
110 Business Personals
1210 Announcements
125 travel
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
225 Typing Services
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscollaneous
370 Want to Buy
---
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan
Classified Policy
I
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,
sex religion, sex, religion, familial status or national origin,
or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
100s Announcements
KU QA offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unaware. Please call KU info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
105 Personals
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!
GRANTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE FROM SPONSORE! NO REPAYMENT EVER FOR MORE INFO CALL: 1-800-243-2435
110 Business Personals
SWM age 40's brown eyes & hair, country background, animal lover. Desires female for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P.O. Box 44215 Lawrence, KS 60549
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
110 Business Personals
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
GROUP
Stering Silver Jewelry For Guys & Gals.
Hoops, naval rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc. Shop. 292 Mass.
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
864-9500
120 Announcements
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or unsex?
KU QA offers a confidential support group
Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. Call KU Info at 864-3806
or Headquarters at 843-2445 for location
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
FAST DUNRIVER-AIRE $200 IN DAYS-
GREETES, GROUPS, CLUBS, MOTIVATED
INDIVIDUALS, FAST, EASY - NO FINANCIAL
OBLIGATION (800) 1682-1892 EXT. 33
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24 hrs. Free
Kansan Ads Work for YOU
120 Announcements
Need a 2-way route to Florida during Spring Break. Driving away from Tampa, call Carson Call or Don. 749-3472.
NUDE RECREATION
North American Nudist Directory lists 100% of suds, nudities, clubs, & inroads in your state. (www.nudist.org)
NEED $$$$$$$$$ ?
Men & Women needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research studies. Earn up to $1000/wk. 24 Hour Info(2.5 minutes) : 1-812-879-4777.
125 Travel
SPRING BREAK PANAMA CITY BEACH
FLORIDA SANDIPPER-BIECON BEACH
BAYSIDE HOT TUR, SUITES UP TO 10
PEOPLE, TRI BIKE BAR, HOME OF THE
WORLD'S LONGEST PARTY
1-800-456-8585
WWW.SANDIPPER-BECON.COM
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
864-4358
AAI#Swing Break '97. Cancun, Jamaica, & Bahamas!' nights w/ airfare from $89. Enjoy Daily Free Pee Party Parties, No Cover or a Best Bare Package. Endure Sunsets 300-824-1707
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
男 女
Now hire all positions. Need AM/PM burens, FT or
Bursaries. Apply within. 3511 Cilton Parkway
Fork Parkway
Babyfisher tested. Monday-Friday in Eudora.
Must have own transportation and provide
transportation to school.
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED... 6 wk summer youth recreation program. Lake Quiva, KS. Questions? Call 288-4875.
Student hourly secretary $5.hr 13 hr/h Good Companion
$7.hr 10 hr/h Good Companion 140 hr/h
Worth, Contact Gretchen 864-6720
Local landscape company accepting applications from motivated individuals. Irrigation, lawn care, and general experience helpful, but not essential. Call 843-7454 from 8-5.
MAKE THE MONEY YOU DESERVE
Excellent profit potential with new company, get in before the growth explosion! Recorded message. 1-800-640-2374.
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MWF 3pm-6pm to work with children age 18mysrs. A.M. & P.M. Substitutes needed also-Call Rosemary 843-4147
Need 5 people to take surveys. Earn up $10/birch.
743-3432 with 1:00 & 3:08; ask for earl-kerk.
205 Help Wanted
australia is currently drivers for the remainder of the Spring Semester. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. If interested contact Robert at the Lawrence Bus Co. 842-0544
Saint John School seeks responsible individual* who has experience w/children for its after school program $5.50/hour. To apply, contact Natalie Panshin 843-6181(days) or 843-3884(evenings)
SWM in fourth grade needs spectacular watchmate with wheels to guide him through safe, fun summer at our southern Overland Park house. Bar Callee at (913) 488-2565 in evening.
*Now hiring, restaurant worker, all positions, all*
*payings. Start paying at $8.50 and up, depending on*
*experience and availability. Please apply in person,*
*Monday-Friday between 2:00 and 5:00 P.M.*
Wanted 87 students. Lose 8-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough.Doctor recommended.Guaranteed.$30 cost.Free gift.1-800-435-7919.
Wanted-Personal Care Attendant for female quadriplicate. Female preferred, full and part-time openings, CNA preferred but not required.
Call 865-6016
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in Pocomo Mins. of PA
Over 40 activities - Seeking general and specialist counselors
215-887-9700 or e-mail: pinetree@pond.com
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
205 Help Wanted
Headstart needs an assistant cook/delivery person to help with food preparation and transport.ours 9:30-1:30 M-F. Will consider MW/TF/EM jobs at 925 Vernon. Equal Opportunity Employer.
JIFFY LURE
Hiring full and part-time. Flexible hours. Paid training. Pre-employment drug-screening. No experience required. Apply at 91AW. 23rd
NANNY
Note taker needed for Chem. 188, MWF. 8:30-9:20.
Must have completed this or higher w/ an A. Earn
$10-815 per lecture. Call Nancy at
843-3485
JON'S NOTES
Part time help need called on calling of SADD.
Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/hr plus commission,
schedule your own hours. "Come join our Friendly
Team." Call us at (855) 497-3333 or M-Tri
4pm-10pm and fill an application.
Jo. Co. professionals seek a loving caring and responsible Nanny to care for their infant daughter. M - F, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. References and background checked. Call Jackie at 685-071-9-6 p.m.
BabySister/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
town car, experience, and knowledge of child
development. Send letter, resume, schedule, and
reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Staffer Flint.
Ceramic studio needs full and part time experienced artist. Requirements: knowledge of glazes, and chemicals, firing techniques, working with clay slabs, drawing and design capabilities. Production studio. Serious applications only, 913 843-7288, 766-5586 Steve.
**STUDENT WORK. up to $12.50! Nat.' CO has immediate PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCOO. Flexible day, evening, week-end schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Apply call your JCOO office at (931)831-508m (10am - 5pm)
TJ's
A 24 hr diner w/bar & pool. Located at 1105 Mass in former Tin Pan Alley. Now hiring kitchen, service, & bar managers. Laborers. Apply in person after 3 days. Bartenders & cooks all shifts.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/b girls, summer camps. Teach, swimming, canoeing, water skiing, gymnastics, rifflery, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $130 or more plus R& B. Camp LWC/GWC 1765 Maple, NHP, IL 610098. 847-444-244.
Food Service Supervisors: 3 positions available @ The Mass Street Deli & Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Experience in food service and 1 year experience in supervising, $5.50-$7.00 per hour based on prior experience. $5.50 up to $1.500. Apply SERVICE Food Company Upstairs @ 78 Mass. (upstairs above smokehouse).
Computer: Need personnel for greater KC/A Lawrence Area, for on site computer consulting. Flex hrs, F or PT. Must have reliable trans. and be able to pass pre-employment drug test. Desired skills: strong customer serv.; knowledge of SAP; Win 3.10/8.0 & DOS; ability to assist client needs. Send resume to: Goeks On Wheels, PO Box 688, Lawrence, KS 65204, Fax 913-143-1922.
STUDENT HOURLY POSITIONS AVAILABLE (2). Duties: Receptionist; filling; duplicating; running errands; typing at least 45 wpm); proctored activities as assigned. Must be available to work 12:00 to 1:00 (noon hour). First position available Mar 20, through Dec 31, 2015. Opportunity for renewal for the same position. Available at 84/75-hour. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 22 Strong, 864-6044. Deadline Mar 12, 1975; 5:00 P.M. Preference given to per-forming summer and through the 1979-88 academic year.
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-academic graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with possibilities of renewal for next academic year. Interested students should have at least two years and will have no other job commitments.
Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community experience, research skills, leadership and supervisory experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, in helping other. Must be Lawrence resident. Come by KU info, 400 University Park Avenue (Mechanics), and come base with final deadline for application Spm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: The Rock Springs 4- H Center is looking for applicants for 46-50 summer staff jobs. Job lengths vary from 2 to 3 months. There are jobs available in recreation, custodial, maintenance and food service. Possible internships available in all the listed areas. Job locations may include offices, campuses, board and, other benefits. Applicants must be 17 by June 1 of this year.
SUMMER JOBS
For more information write:
Or Call: (913) 257-3221
SUMMER JOBSEBOCK RPRINGS 4+H CENTER5405 W. Highway k-157JINCITY CITY K 66441
Hiring dining & laundry aides.
Immediate openings.
Weekday or weekend hours.
No evenings.
Full or part time.
Will train.
Benefits available.
DRURY PLACE RETIREMENT CENTER
Apply at 1510 St. Andrews Drive
Earn cash on the spot
Earn cash on the spot
$20 Today new donors
Up to $40 this week
Donate your life saving plasma
Walk-ins welcome!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W. 24th 749-5750
Juicers
Needs a few good Men for Male Night
Apply in person, if you think you have what it takes
205 Help Wanted
Coming soon:
Mondays are Ladies night
Ladies only
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN Deadline: 3/14/97
Salary $6.50-12.50/hour. 25 hrs per week. Weekends include install, configure & customize software products. Participate in systems testing & applications library maintenance. Required qualification and experience in software testing or 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, send resume to University of Kansas in computer Center, University of Kansas, EO/AA COMPUTER EmployE
18+ Apply in person
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
Inso Kansas City Corporation
Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64112
Fax: (816) 753-8387
E-mail: hr-kc@inso.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
Inso
CORPORATION
www.inso.com
225 Professional Services
Professional Ethical Massage
Certified Massage Therapist
Student Pricing
331-0242
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG Lawrence Office 841-5716 Metro KC Office (800)-733-2404
TRAFFIC-DUFF'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. Strobel
Donald G. Strobel
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
235 Typing Services
Call Jack1 at 823-8444 for applications, term
description, etc. Contact the application's e-
satisfaction manager. Make a contact.
Quality Typing form the newsletter editor w/ later printer. Will create all quality paper for you. Call us at 1-800-456-7232.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Macintosh Perform with color monitor and color style/writer. Click 838-6297 for details.
Laptop-ToPen: 8682X-50. Color Display: 339 HD, 20mm memory, Call Soft @ e1467-8105
FINAL FOUR TICKETS-Two skies/sk games
[0251 621-8488] [0623 720-8488] Leave message
[0623 720-8488] Leave message
DEMO computer. Radius System 100 Mac clone, 110 mzb, 62G Hard Drive, 32B Ram MB, 17 Precision View monitor, Pre-loaded software and Windows 8.1 Pro Edition, $2,955.00, Call Jayhawk Booksstore 843-3326.
Red 1983 Chrysler LeBaron convertible, tall top, computer with voice, luggage rack, tape deck, leather seats, good tires, A/C, always start$4050 obo, 749-2634
CLASSIC MUSCLE CAR! 1979 Mercury Cougar, 20
OBDI, 1983 (OBDI), 1983 (OBDI),
1983 (OBDI), 1983 (OBDI)
(OBDI, 1983)
www.superloreacura.com Pictures of pre-owned
Cars listed in our catalog. Call 1-800-876-ACURA for more info. Ask for Pa
1900 Geo Metro, 5 sp. 2p, hatchback, great gas
rust and bumper and bump damage $140
O800 180-31, O800 180-31
340 Auto Sales
370 Want to Buy
WANTED :
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
Summer Sablease - 5 Bdmr House Close to Campus call 841-8498
1 new 1dram. Locks of extras. $340. Great deal.
841-5650. Available immediately.
2,4,5,8 BR houses for rent.
Your used computer (PC or Mac)
Avail June 1 and Aug 1.
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
2 BDRM, 2 bath College Hill condo, Wd,
water pd, Valu Avg Rental $75; (913) 855-6800
Available now-$3 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer/Dryer
equipped. On KC bus route. Call 841-762-3590.
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG. 1
Prices vary. Reference, lease, & deposit. Call Jim Edwards at (913) 649-3198.
br apartment sublease in May. May rent free. 3 br apartment off street parking. Close to campus, 1,124 KB of space.
Condo for Sale 3 bdrm, 2 bath, w/shower/dryer, on
Fernandina Blvd., $795,000. FAX 814-356-8500,
FAO Laua, 709,000 OBQ. Call to view 823-508-1911
UNI Computers 841-4611
Got a group? Available for fall b 8dmr or b 6dmr
Got a group? Available for fall b 8dmr or b 6dmr
common areas
facilities. b14SPAR (709) 215-3890
We are paying up to $1,000 Reward
FURNISHED 3 BR AP.T, 2 BATH.W/D. A/C.
BALCONY, ON BUS ROUTE, W/AID.C.
BALCONY, ON BUS ROUTE, W/AID.C.
Nonmissing Female sublease apartment from mid May third day. One block from campus $210
per month. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath.
for your good used computer.
Studio & 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Available for summer & fall. Same locations, same entrance, same outfitting. Call 844-1158 for more info.
Mackenzie Place. 1123 Kentucky. new leasing for
I. a Great Guide. Location: Luxury apartments, close to campus. AB 3B MR. Microwave, washer/ dryer, all electric. Efficiency. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-166-9.
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Meadowbrook Apt. Fireplace, good view, each. $400/month Call 864-3038 (DAY) Ask for Kerry.
Awesome 2-bedroom apartment for summer sublease. Next door to Yellow Sub. Have you ever seen the T.V. show Friends? This apartment is just as cute. $480/mo + electric, call 841-8178
Single apartments in cooperative student living for summer and/or fall in ECM Center, one block from KU. Utilities, laundry, ample plumbing, kitchen appliances, $817-$2,843; ecomplicated cations at ECM, 1204. Information #84-4933.
GATEAV4V AND REGENCY PLACE
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 81-8468.
South Pointe
PARK VILLAES
NOW LEASING
- Built in '95
* Designer Interior
* 3 Bed, 2 Full Bath
* On Bus Route
* Swimming Pool
* No Pets
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- 1, 2, 3, 4 Bedroom
* Bus On Route
* Pool & Volleyball Court
* Pets Welcome
* Hot Water & Trash Paid
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury.
- 1,2, & 3 Bedrooms
- Washer/Dryer
- Built-in TV
- Alarm System
- Washer/Dryer
* Built-in TV
2 Pools & Hot tubs Fitness Center
405 For Rent
Hawthorn Place
Fireplace, one-car garage
COLONY WOODS
331-2332
Townhomes and Residential Home
Private Courtyard
Need to Sublease? Move in April at 11am, apt on KU Bus route A/C, dishwasher, walk-in closet space. $365/month. stay assume Lease August if; want you to assume陪. Call 749-5428.
Residential Homes
Fireplace one-car
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
1&2Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
842-5111
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3 Hot Tubs
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- Close to campus
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HIGHPOINTE APARTMENT HOMES
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Washer/Dryer Alarm System
Clubhouse & Swimming Pool
Workout Facility
Basketball Court
NOWLEASING
Call First Management 841-8468
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On lease through July 31
1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment
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call or stop by today
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Shannon Plaza Apartments
"Apartments Designed for Your Lifestyle"
Carson Place
Chamberlain Court
Oread Apartments
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1425 Kentucky Abbott Center
- Great Apartment
- Bradford Square
Bradford Square
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Hawthorn Place Heritage Place
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Call for an appointment
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841-8468
SUNY New Paltz
Highpointe
Apartments
--closets in a friendly, service-oriented community.
Park25
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
10-Month Leases Available!
- On KU Bus Route
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
405 For Rent
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
1 yr. leaww hardwood / off street parking, no pets.
quiet non smoke. 1 month security deposit.
3 Bdrm $840 + utilities. Also avail. June & July.
4 Bdrm $840 + utilities.
--closets in a friendly, service-oriented community.
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
Avail 8/1 @ 1837 Tennessee.
1 Bdram basement $225 + utilities. CALL 740-0619.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
Tenn, a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership, non profit operation, demand control. 180-240 inc. wk dym dormers, Uilh, W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 841-9484.
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall'97
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30 4:30
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
(no pets, please)
No Appointment needed
---
FALL '97
meadowbrook
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to come see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like atmosphere
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly, service-
2 & 3 Bdrm. Townhouses
- 2 Pools
405 For Rent
SUMMER SUBLEASE: avail. mid-May thru July
31. Spacious 3 apt., 2 full baths, living/dim
rm, fully equipped kitchen, big cloats, cats ok. $600
+ may rent. May free rent. C82-83787.
- 2 Volleyball Areas
- 7 Bus Stops
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5-30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat. 1-4 Sun
PINNACLE WOODS
1*2*3 luxury.apt. homes
5000 Clinton Pkwy.
1 / 4 mi. west of Wakarusa
All new - 865-5454
Month Free — Call for detai
Quail Creek Apartments & Townhouses
"In a busy, impersonal world,
2111 Kasold Drive 843-4300 Call for Appt.
Quiet Bird
we provide good old-fashioned personalized service."
Managed & maintained by Professionals
430 Roommate Wanted
Female Roommate needed. 2 bdmr 1/2 block from campus. Washer/Dryer.Dryer.833-4702
3-rooms for rent. Nice house. Good price. Please call 749-2886.
Female roommate is wanted to furnish 3 furnished rooms for route: $230.90 month + .113-3416 ask for RSVP
2 Females to share 5 bedrooms luxurious home,
3 male rooms, 1 female room, 2 male rooms
no pets, WFD, A/C, Call 618-749-2800
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY KANSAN
Non-smoking female needed immediately to camp $200/mo + 1/2 vacations ($50) call 33-877-8860.
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
NON-SMOKING FEMALE ROOMMATE
$200/MO. 1/2 UTRILITIES
7A9-9A47
Pre-ap transpersonal lives in Lawrence area seeks
another gay/gay friendly member to share a townhouse
duplex with non-smoker, social drinker
bachelor, and non-female friend. Two if.
interest please call (913) 371-1284
- By Mail: "119 Staffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045"
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U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
BASKETBALL
60
PAGE 16A
MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1997
NCAA pairings announced
The Kansas men's basketball team will play Jackson State on Thursday in Memphis, Tenn.
Game times will be announced today. See today's March Madness section for more details.
The Kansas women's basketball team will play Detroit Mercy on Saturday in Allen Field House.
KU vs. M
CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
Kansas 87, Missouri 60
KANSAS (32-1)
Pierce FG 6 FT TP
12-18 3-6 19
LaFrentz 7-11 2-2 16
Pollock 4-5 2-3 19
Haase 2-8 4-4 9
Vaughn 5-5 2-2 13
Williams 0-0 1-0 10
Pugh 0-1 1-1 9
Thomas 1-7 0-0 3
Robertson 2-3 0-0 5
Brudford 1-0 0-0 5
Nooner 0-1 0-0 0
McGrath 0-1 1-2 1
Branstrom 0-0 1-0 1
Rensom 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 33-61 14-19 87
MISSOURI (16-17) FG FT TP 6
Tate 1- 4 1- 4 1- 4
Thames 2-10 2-4 2-4
Ogrom 4-9 4-9 6
Hafter 0-5 2-2 2-2
Sutherland 4-10 0-0 1-0
Lee 2-12 1-2 1-5
Ray 1-9 1-5 1-5
Murdock 1-3 2-2 2-4
Allouche 3-4 3-4 1-4
Wather 1-3 2-4 1-4
Revere 0-1 0-0 0-4
Totals 19-62 16-20 10
Halftime: Kansas 51, Missouri 23. Three-point goals: Kansas 7-14 (Pierce 3-4, Vaughn 1-8, Robertson 1-2, Hassan 1-5, Thomas 1-7, Fugh 0-1), Missouri 6-26 (Gibbon 2-4, Grimlich 6-1, Ray 1-9), Kansas 2-1 (Dixon 1-3, Vaughn 0-1,呼尔 1-7, Dealer 0-2, Lee 0-4) Outfiel: none. Rebounds: Kansas 46 (Pierce 11), Missouri 30 (Griffin, Lue, Murdock 5). Assists: Kansas 21 (Griffin, Lue, Murdock 5). Total fouls: Kansas 19, Missouri 18, A. 19, 310.
KU VS. HOWE STATE
SEMIFINAL GAME
Kansas 72, Iowa State 48
KANSAS (31-1) FG FT TP
Pierce 9-14 1-3 19
Lawrence 7-13 1-3 19
Poland 5-10 3-4 13
Hasee 1-5 0-0 12
Vaughn 4-6 5-5 13
Thomas 0-3 0-0 0
Pugh 1-2 0-0 0
Williams 0-0 0-0 0
Robertson 1-3 0-0 2
Bradford 1-2 0-0 6
McCarthy 1-0 0-0 6
Branstrom 0-0 0-0 0
Nooner 0-0 1-0 0
Ransom 1-4 0-0 0
30-60 12-17 72
IOWA STATE (20-8)
Pratt FG FT TP
4 4-9 6-8 14
Bankhead 0-4 0-0 0
Cato 1-3 0-0 0
Willettighy 3-13 2-5 10
Holloway 0-4 0-0 0
Edwards 2-3 1-0 4
Rampton 1-1 9-5 5
S. Johnson 3-7 4-4 10
Harris 1-3 1-2 3
Soley 1-2 0-0 0
B. Johnson 0-1 0-0 0
Totals 15-50 16-24 48
Halftime: Kansas 27, Iowa State 23. Three-point goal: Kansas - Oberscher (P-2) - Hasele 2, Vaughn 5. Vaughn - Oberscher (P-2) - Hasele 2, Vaughn (Wiltinghoy 2), Holloway 0, Harris 2, Fowlde 0. Oute: None. Rebounds: Kansas 43 (Lafrentz 19), Minnesota 6, Iowa State 13, Kansas 14 (Kvaughn 5), State 6, Kansas 16 (Vaughn 5). Iowa state 16, Kansas 19, A: 19, 310.
NU vs. OSU
OUARTERFINAL GAME
KANSAS (30-1)
Pierce FG FT TP
LaFertte 6-12 3-1 16
Poland 5-9 4-3 16
Hasee 1-7 3-6 14
Hasee 4-6 3-8 13
Vaughn 4-11 2-2 11
Williams 0-1 2-1 11
Thomas 1-3 0-1 0
Pugh 2-3 0-0 5
Robertson 1-2 0-2 5
Bradford 1-2 0-0 5
Ransom 0-0 0-0 0
Nooner 0-0 0-0 0
McGrath 0-0 0-0 0
Brasson 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 25-56 19-25 74
Kansas 74: Oklahoma State 59
OKLAHOMA STATE (16-14) FG FT TP
Mason 2-6 0-2 4
Trevor 2-6 0-2 4
Robbie 6-12 0-2 13
Peterson 2-6 0-2 0
Dorsey 2-7 0-2 0
Mayes 0-7 0-2 0
Adkins 0-2 0-2 0
Alexander 2-3 0-2 0
McQuarters 0-1 0-0 0
Total 24-49 6-13 59
Halftime: Kansas 35, Oklahoma State 28. Three-point goals: Kansas 15, Pearce 14 (Piece 1, Hasee 0-2, Vaughn 1-4, Thomas 2-1, Pugh 1-8, Johnson 1-4, Peterson 2-4, Doresey 0-1, Akhmer 1-2, Peterson 2-4, Doresey 0-1, Akhmer 1-2, McQuarrels 0-1). Fouled out: Roberta. Rebounds: Kansas 35, LaFenit 20, Oklahoma State 30 (Roberts, Robiché) . Assists: Kansas 11 (Roberts, Robiché) . Goals: Oklahoma State 20, Kansas 13, A: N/A.
45
'Hawks seize Big 12 crown
Kansas sweeps tourney waltzes into Big Dance
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
The Big 12 Conference Championship game yesterday between Kansas and Missouri was billed as a shoot-out. After all, the Tigers were the only team this season to put a blench on the Jayhawks' record with a 96-94 win in an offensive showdown.
But was it a shoot-out?
More like a blowout.
Apparently still fuming from their Feb. 4 loss to Missouri, the Jayhawks dismantled the Tigers yesterday 87-60 in Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., featuring a 30-point performance from the tournament's Most Valuable Player Paul Pierce.
The win was Kansas' third in three days; it defeated Oklahoma State 74-59 Friday and Iowa State 72-48 Saturday.
Considering the blowouts against the Cyclones and Tigers, Missouri coach Norm Stewart said he thought it would take an extraordinary effort to bring the Jayhawks to their knees in the NCAA tournament.
Men's All-Tournament Team
"If they're playing like they have been the last two
Steve Pudde / KANSAN
Paul Pierce, Kansas
Raef LaFrentz, Kansas
Jacque Vaughn, Kansas
Jason Sutherland, Missouri
Most Valuable Player Paul Pierce, Kansas
Corey Brewer, Oklahoma
all games, it will take a hell of a team to beat them," Stewart said.
At the 10:01 mark, Missouri took a 3-2 lead on a three-pointer by forward Derek Grimm. On the following possession, Pierce nailed a three-point shot and gave Missouri a chilling view of what was to come from Pierce and the Jayhawks.
The Jayhawks attacked the weary Tigers, who were playing in their fourth game in four days. Fueled by 12 points each from Pierce and forward Rafel LaFrentz in the first half, the Jayhawks closed the half with a 25-point lead. 51-26.
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams said that he thought Pierce had shown the hot hand and that he had wanted to get him involved in the offense.
"Paul got on such a roll out there that I just wanted to get him the ball," Williams said.
Guard Jacque Vaughn was equally impressive for Kansas in the first half. He scored 13 first-half points, making 5 of 5 from the field and delivering seven assists.
Vaughn said that he expected Kansas' last two wins to raise some evebrows.
"I hope we scared a few teams," Vaughn said. "Also, I think we got a lot of respect around the country."
In the second half, the Jayhawks picked up right where they had left off in the first, taking apart Missouri's defense. Pierce shot eight of 11 in the second half en route to 18 second-half points.
Kansas forward Reef LaFrentz goes up against Iowa State's Kelvin Cato and Jacy Holloway. LaFrentz and the Jayhawks defeated the Cyclones on their way to winning the Big 12 Conference tournament championship.
Pierce's performance awed the Tigers' coach as well as Pierce's own teammates.
"Paul is phenomenal," Kansas center Scot Pollard said. "When we were on the bench, I said to him, 'Can you miss so some of us can get a rebound?'
Stewart said LaFrentz and Pierce couldn't miss yesterday.
LaFrentz rolled in four second-half points and finished with 16.
"The whole thing was the defensive effort," Williamsa said. "But we can't take all of the credit. We caught Iowa State on an
On Saturday the Jayhawks stifled Iowa State, holding the Cyclones to 48 points and 30 percent shooting from the field.
Kansas was a bit stale in its first game of the tournament against Oklahoma State. The Cowboys, powered by the offense of forward Chianti Roberts, tied the game with 6:00 remaining in the second half with a basket by center Brett Robisch.
However, Roberts fouled out with 5:20 left, and the Jayhawks closed the game with a 17-2 run and defeated Oklahoma State 74-50.
1. What is the ratio of the sum of the squares of two numbers to the square of one number?
2. If the sum of the squares of two numbers is 40, and the square of one number is 8, what are the two numbers?
Presumably, Kansas took advantage of the wake-up call against the Cowboys.
"It was a real eye-opener for us as a team," Vaughn said.
"They came out with more fire than us."
Pierce said that the Jayhawks were heading into the NCAA tournament on the right foot.
"This is where we want to be," Pierce said. "We accomplished one of our goals by winning the Big 12 and the Big 12 tournament."
Colorado fights, wins Big 12 title
Wildcats beat Kansas then fall to Buffaloes
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sports editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Colorado women took home the first Big 12 Conference tournament title on Saturday.
Colorado became the Big 12 tournament champions by defeating the Kansas State Wildcats 54-44 in the championship game. Kansas State advanced to the final game after defeating Kansas on Thursday in the semifinals.
Kansas State looked tired in the championship game. The team played the maximum number of games possible in the Big 12 Women's Tournament — four games in five days.
But K-State coach Deb Patterson would not make excuses
"I give all the credit to Colorado," Patterson said. "I don't think fatigue was a factor. I don't want to blame it on that." Colorado coach Coulomba Porry said he
Colorado
te a m,
which won
the final
Big Eight
Confer-
ence tour-
nament
last
season,
should be
proud.
"This is a great day for our program," said Barry, who is team is now 21-8 overall.
Women's All-Tournament Team
Tamecka Dixon, Kansas
Andria Jones, Kansas
State
Brit Jacobson, Kansas State
LaShena Graham, Colorado
Erin Scholz, Colorado
Most Valuable Player Andria Jones, Kansas State
This is a great win for our program and a great honor."
In the first half of the game, the Wildcats jumped out to a 12-5 lead. But Colorado responded with a 17-7 run, ending the half. At halftime, Colorado led by just one point, 27-26.
But sometime between the first and second half, K-State lost some momentum.
"We were not as quick," K-State guard Missy Decker said. "I don't know if we were tired, but we just didn't play well."
Colorado's win marked the fifth time that the Buffaloes have won the conference tournament.
K-State scored just 17 points in the second half. They were also cold from the three-point line.
They also grabbed just three offensive rebounds in the second half.
After shooting seven three-pointers in each of the three games before the championship, the Wildcats shot just 3 of 15 from the arch on Saturday.
"We weren't jumping up for the rebounds, and we were giving them second chances at shots," Patterson said. "We weren't playing smooth."
Colorado was led by guard LaShena Graham, who scored 17 points. The Wildcats were led by forward Angie Finkes, who scored 12.
And although the Wildcats couldn't pull off the win, their tournament run clinched them a spot in the NCAA Tournament.
The Wildcats (19-11 overall) grabbed wins against No. 15 Texas Tech and No. 9 Kansas.
After the Jayhawks were upset by the Wildcats in the semifinals of the tournament, Kansas coach Marian Washington praised them.
"They are a very tough team, and they are playing really well," Washington said. "They deserve a lot of credit for what they have done."
Patterson said that while she was proud of her team, the Buffalooes were the ones who got the job done and won the tournament title.
"Colorado played great, and they have played great all year," she said. "They should be honored to win the first Big 12 tournament."
KU
NCAA
MARCH MADNESS
A SPECIAL EDITION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1997
SECTION B
DIXON VAUGHN 27
Points of Attack
Senior point guards Tamecka Dixon and Jacque Vaughn lead their teams into battle in the NCAA tournaments
Tamecka Dixon soars higher than most - female or male
By Jenni Carlson Special to the Kansan
The clock speeds toward halftime
16 seconds, then 15. Now 14.
---
Tamecka Dixon starts down the floor and slows just before the half-court line. She takes two giant steps like a jointless robot, dribbling the ball under her leg with each step.
She crosses midcourt and a Texas defender advances, her ponytail swinging back and forth, shuffling her feet, trying to anticipate Dixon's next move.
At the top of the three-point line, Dixon moves to her right. The defender goes with her.
Dixon crosses over to her left. The defender goes nowhere. She can't. It's happening too fast.
An open look. Elevate. Swish.
Halftime.
"I know a guy in Chicago who can do that," marvels Nancy Lieberman. Cline, television color analyst.
ening cross-over dribble.
"Yea," she says, chuckling "Michael Jordan."
"Do we know him?" play-by-play man Bill Land asks.
Tamecka Dixon is like few women on the court.
Kansas' senior point guard can drive and score. She can pull up for a three-pointer. She can penetrate and deftly find an open teammate. She can leave defenders' heads spinning and feet akimbo with her light-
"A lot of people say I play like Allen Iverson with my ball-handling skills and the way I attack the basket." Dixon says.
It's not that Dixon has skills that few women possess. It's more than that. She has skills that only a smattering of men possess.
And she might have been an iverson or a Stephon Marbury or a Damon Stoudamire, but for a missing microscopic Y chromosome. Put Dixon's skills in a male body and imagine the possibilities. She would have grown up in New Jersey with realistic dreams of the NBA and the
accompanying fame and million-dollar contracts.
That's changing, though. The American Basketball League and the Women's NBA are beginning to give the world's elite females an American stage where they can showcase their basketball talent.
Instead, Dixon lived with a harser reality — she could turn the women's game upside down and still only have a obscure career somewhere in Europe to look forward to.
And what talent Dixon has to offer. She is scoring 20.8 points a game, which ranks in the top 20 nationally, as well as grabbing almost six rebounds and hitting nearly 50 percent of her shots from the floor.
"I can't lie to you that I haven't thought about it." Bowers says, "I'd think, 'If she's this good as a girl, the NBA would be waiting. She'd be a can't miss.'"
Still, the question lingers — what if?
Russell Bowers wonders every once in awhile what his daughter would be like as his son.
Bowers, Dixon's father, never spoke about those daydreams. It's not exactly a good idea to tell your 8- or 9-year-old daughter, "You're good, but man, if you were a boy..."
See TAMECKA, Page 4B
Here is Jacque Vaughn's story: Final chapter still incomplete
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
Here is what it's like being the perfect student, the perfect athlete. And, most importantly, the perfect person.
Here is the poem (origin unknown) that Jacque Vaughn memorized as a youth and used as his motto:
1
I've seen the daylight breaking
High above the brow.
I've found my destination
And I won't stop now.
So whether you deprive me,
Deplore me,
Beseech me,
Or ignore me,
Mighty mountains loom before me
And I won't stop now.
Here's what Kansas' energetic point guard's mother said about Jacque Vaughn as a youth: "Ever since he was little, you just wound him up, gave him the key and he'd keep going."
Here is what Jacque Vaughn said his parents (Nathaniel, a construction worker, and Linnie, a clerical worker) instilled in him at an early age: "Hard work will pay off. No matter what you do down the line, education has to be a part of it."
Here's what Jacque Vaughn said about his dribbling pace: "I remember when I was young, I used to pretend like I was in gears — 'OK,
throw it in third now' — and shift it on a little hit."
Here is Jacque Vaughn's grade point average in high school: 3.97.
Here's how many B's Jacque Vaughn received at John Muir High School in Pasadena, Calif.: One. (A B+ in English.)
Here's where Jacque Vaughn ranked in his class of 350 at John Muir High School No.2.
Here's how many men's basketball players have been awarded the Dial Award, given annually to the nation's top high school scholar athlete, before Jacque Vaughn won: Zero.
Here are the recently retired jerseys at Pasadena's Muir High School: Stacey Augmont (No. 32), and Jacey Vaughn (No. 11).
Here's what Muir High School coach Rocky Moore called Jacque Vaughn: A dream player. "He enriched my life as a coach and person." Moore said.
Here's what the co-MVP to Jacque Vaughn (Jerry Stackhouse) in the 1993 McDonald's All American game is doing now: averaging more than 37 minutes and 19 points for the Philadelphia 76ers.
Here are some of Jacque Vaughn's numbers in high school;
Junior year: 23 points a game. 8.5 assists a game.
Sophomore year: 21.3 points per game. 9.0 assists a game.
Here is what was predicted of Jacque Vaughn as a college sophomore by the Dallas Morning News: "By the time he leaves Kansas, Vaughn should break every assist record at the school."
Here's what he has done at Kansas: Just that — broken Cedric Hunter's Kansas and Big Eight Conference assist records.
Here is how Jacque Vaughn handled his college selection: A telephone call to Williams and a call to a local reporter, then on to practice to work on his goal of leading Muir High School to the Southern Section
See JACQUE, Page 5B
2B
442
Mondav. March 10. 1997
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Women seeded lower than Buffs
'Hawks surprised unranked Colorado took higher slot
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
Most teams would roar with excitement after learning that they would play host to first- and second-round games of the women's NCAA Tournament.
Not the No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team
Kansas coach Marian Washington
couldn't believe it when she learned that Kansas was the No. 3 seed in the West Region while unranked Colorado was awarded the No. 2 seed in the Midwest Region.
committee's decisions concerning the top seeds.
The Jayhawks (24-5) swept Colorado (21-8) during the regular season while winning the Big 12 Conference regular-season title with a 14-2 record. The Buffaloes won the Big 12 Tournament this past weekend.
"They weren't even ranked," Halbleib said of Colorado. "I guess they had their reasoning. Whatever it is, I don't know. I thought we deserved the No. 2 seed, but you won't hear me complain about it after today because we have games to play."
Kansas center Nakia Sanford said that she was speechless when she saw the seedings.
"I assumed that we'd be a No. 2 seed when I saw that Colorado was two," Sanford said. "We were ranked, and they weren't. We won the conference and swept them this
"I hate focusing on Colorado," Washington said. "It's not about Colorado because it's
Ticket Info
Here is how to get tickets to the women's NCAA Tournament first and second-round basketball games at Allen Field House. The games will be played March 15 and 17.
Where: Tickets can be purchased at the KU Ticket Office in Allen Field House or call 1-800-GO-HAWKS for information.
The Kansas women's team will play at the field house in the first two rounds.
All-Tournament Package: Through this package, tickets can be purchased to both first-round games on Saturday and the second-round game next Monday.
Package Cost: $6 for students with a valid KUID and $10 for adults.
Non-Package Cost: Individual tickets may be purchased for $3 to $6.
about the seeding committee. I feel that we worked hard to have a high seed, so we'll do the very best we can with that."
While Kansas has been ranked in the Top 20 all season, the Buffaloes have not been in the Top 25 since mid-December. They will enter the tournament having won five consecutive games.
The Jayhawks defeated Colorado 61-58 on Jan. 25 at Allen Field House and won 72-60 on Feb. 15 in Boulder, Colo.
Kansas guard Angie Hablelbleid said that she questioned some of the
season. The way I see it, they got the spot that we would have wanted."
Seedings aside, Washington said that she had no problems with her team's draw for the tournament.
KANSAS
"It's all right because we're in it, and we're going to do our best," Washingon said. "We have to take on two opponents here at home, and hopefully we'll make the Sweet Sixteen again. If we get that far, I feel we matchup pretty well with Georgia."
The Jayhawks will play host to No. 14-seeded
Detroit-Mercy on Saturday in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The other first-round game will feature No. 6-seeded Vanderbilt against No. 11-seeded Washington.
Kansas defeated Washington 76-61 on Dec. 8 at Allen Field House, but it has not played against Vanderbilt or Detroit-Mercy this season.
"We don't know a thing about Detroit-Mercy," said Washington, "but we're going to find out a lot more about them by tomorrow though."
A
ABOVE: Shelly Canada reacts after finding out the seedings for the NCAA women's tournament. Kansas was ranked third, behind Stanford and Georgia.
LEFT: Coach Marian Washington writes down the pairings as the rest of the team watches in Hadi Auditorium. Kansas was placed in the West Region and will be playing in Allen Field House for the first and second rounds.
Geoff Krleger / KANSAN
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U N. I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Monday, March 10. 1997
3B
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RIGIT2 TOURNAMENT
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Big 12 champions to meet Jackson State in first-round game
By Bill Petulla Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Roy Williams celebrates the Big 12 Conference tournament title with his team. The Jayhawks won the tournament championship for just the second time in Williams' career at Kansas with an 87-6 victory against the Missouri Tigers on Saturday at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
Steve Purne / KANSAN
It looks like Kansas men's basketball center B.J. Williams got his wish.
When asked where he wanted to play in the NCAA Tournament, Williams said, "I don't care, just as long as it's warm there." Kansas will play in the Southeast region against Jackson State in Memphis, Tenn., where it was 74 degrees yesterday. As expected, the Jayhawks drew a No.1 seed. Game times will be released today.
The Jackson State Tigers finished the season with a 14-15 overall record and a
9-5 record in the Southwest Athletic Conference.
Kansas has only played the Tigers once under Coach Roy Williams, a 93-85 Jayhawk victory in the first round of the 1992 Rainbow Classic.
"I don't care, just as long as it's warm there."
B. J.Williams On where he wanted to play
Roy Williams said he was a bit stumped that the Jayhawks weren't playing in Auburn Hills, Mich., where most prognosticators had predicted Kansas playing. "I am somewhat surprised that we're going to Memphis," Williams said. "Everybody was saying that we were going to Auburn Hills (Mich.) to play Fairfield."
Instead, the No.1 seed in the Midwest bracket went to Minnesota, and Fairfield will play North Carolina in the first round of the East region.
Assuming the Jayhawks defeat Jackson State, they will meet up with the winner of the Purdue-Rhode Island game. If Kansas plays Purdue, the Jayhawks will hope that history doesn't repeat itself in the Southeast region. The Boilermakers defeated Kansas in the 1994 Southeast Regional in Knoxville, Tenn.
But history is on the Jayhawks' side when it comes to playing teams in the Southwest Athletic Conference. The Jayhawks have never lost to a team from the SWAC. However, in the team's only meeting under Roy Williams, Tigers guard Lindsey Hunter, now with the Detroit Pis-
tons.s scored 48 points.
Hunter's 48 points were the most ever scored by an opponent in the Roy Williams era.
Considering the Jayhawks' failure to catch Hunter's scoring, Roy Williams thought Jackson State coach Andy Stoplin
had little reason to worry about the Kansas defense.
"Andy knows how good we are defensively, with Lindsey scoring 48," Williams joked. "So I don't think our defense is going to scare him any after what he saw that night."
The No. 2 seed in the Southeast bracket is Duke. The Blue Devils took the regular season title in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
The Jayhawks watched the tournament selection show from Roy Williams' house. Williams said their reaction was passive,
especially center Scot Pollard.
"Scot Pollard did his usual bit," Williams said. "He said, 'Boy, I'm glad we won that one (the Big 12 Tournament) so we don't have to worry if we got into the big one or not.' He liked the fact that we got the automatic bid."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tamecka
JAPAN
33
New Jersey playgrounds were her classrooms; guys who came to play were her teachers. The result: a killer game and a killer attitude.
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
Continued from Page 1B
However, Dixon could tell what her dad was thinking, that he wanted a boy to craft into the kind of player he had been.
Bowers didn't have a son then. He just had Tamecka but decided to mold her in his likeness anyway. With or without a Y chromosome.
Bowers quickly discovered that his daughter wasn't like the other girls. Even in elementary school she showed a love for the game, but many women and men who love the game eventually end up as accountants, factory workers or secretaries, not basketball players.
Still, Dixon had skills, including an uncanny ability to dribble. Especially to cross-over dribble.
"That's the first thing we put in," says Bowers, who is better known as "Boo." "I believe it's the best offensive move in the game. You can shake your defender down and make them look stupid."
Bowers made his share of defenders look stupid during his pride. As a collegiate player at American University in Washington, D.C., Bowers became the school's all-time leading scorer — 2,056 career points and 22.1 points a game.
He seemed to be a lock for the pros.
"Ijust remember him being unstoppable in college," Dixon says. "My dad was really, really popular. Whenever I was with him, we always got thronged by people wanting autographs."
The security of an NBA contract seemed particularly important to Bowers, who supported Portia Dixon and their daughter. Boo and Portia were 17-year-olds when Tamecka was born. They never married but remained close due, in large part, to their daughter.
Young Tamecka lived with her mother while her father played at American, and even as games, practice and school filled Bowers' life, he took every opportunity to spend time with his daughter.
- Often he combined Tamecka time with practice time.
Dixon doesn't remember her earliest days on a basketball court, but her dad is quick to tell her and everyone else the stories.
"I'd let her get the rebound for me and throw it back out to me," Bowers says. "She was constantly around basketball."
One summer while Bowers was home from college, he worked out at a nearby elementary school. Tamecka went along like always.
"He was doing his drills and running suicides. I was holding his towels, but I was doing the suicides with him," she says, recalling the intense wind sprints.
Dixon can't help laughing and smiling as she tells ___ the story.
"I used to ask him: "Dad, am I sweatin', too?' And there wouldn't be any sweat dripping from me or anything," she says. "I'd be completely dry."
Thousands of miles didn't end the father-daughter workouts. A knee injury limited Bowers' NBA career to two years before he had to take his game overseas. Amid the ashes of an NBA dream, though, Bowers started to see the game he loved catch fire in his daugh
ter, a youngster who could do things that no one else her age — girl or boy — could do.
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
JA
three-pointers. If the guys wanted to go one-on-one, she wanted to go one-on-one.
Dixon first played organized basketball in junior high. Her team would score 40 points; she would have 30. She could play.
"I guess I style my game after any athletic male point guard who can attack the basket hard and play defense hard," Dixon says.
But it was on the playgrounds of New Jersey and New York where she really played ball.
"I've played against so many great players — so many," Dixon says. "It was Jace Vaughns. It was Scot Pollards. People who could play."
"People" isn't exactly the right word "Men" is more to the point.
Male point guards?
"Any male point guard who can take over the game," she says with a short laugh, "with his offensive skills and his defensive skills."
The men she played against taught her to take her game to a whole different level. If the guys were shooting three-pointers, she was shooting
Growing up, Dixon couldn't watch women's basketball on television.
simply wasn't on. Girls didn't have female basketball idols like today.
No Sheryl Swoops.
Swoops.
NoLiga Leelie
No Rebecca Lobo
"I don't think if I'd grown up playing with girls all my life that I would be as skilled as I am with the
So girls either picked up what they could from each other or they looked elsewhere for their basketball education. Dixon found her teachers on the playground.
ball, with the dribble, with everything,
"Dixon concedes."
Don't think that her skills have gone unnoticed.
"Tamecka is as difficult a back-court player to guard as anyone we've every faced," says Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma, whose Huskies defeated the Jayhawks 85-64 earlier this season but allowed Dixon to score 22 points.
Quite a compliment considering that this year alone Connecticut has faced potential All-Americas such as Tennessee's Chamique Holdsclaw, Western Kentucky's Leslie Johnson and Georgia's La 'Keshia Frett.
"One-on-one, she may be as good a player as we've ever gone up against." he said.
Dixon's dribbling and shooting and
rebounding aren't the only results of her time on the playground. And those who have seen her play know... She has an attitude
It seeps from her. It reveals itself in her steely eyes, her flinty glare, her fiery outbursts.
"I'm going to show it emotionally on the court," Dixon says. "I'm gonna let you know."
However, standing over someone after you've blocked her shot isn't exactly the way things are done in the Midwest — a place where ladies let gentlemen open doors for them.
Not everyone appreciates that in-your-face style. It sets many Big 12 Conference players back on their heels. They never saw anything like Tamecka Dixon back in Chickasha, Okla., or Vinton, Iowa.
Dixon may not win any popularity contests. Her emotion draws glares and an occasional elbow to the head.
"All in all, I think people saw my emotions as bad." Dixon says. "At home, it was just, 'She gettin' her team hyped. She just loves the game."
Emotions are still part of Dixon's game, but they are a far cry from three years ago when they carried her to the heights or dragged her to the depths.
"As a freshman, sometimes my emotions took me out of games rather than help me," Dixon admits. "Now, I control it to a point where my emotions are always helpful."
Her toned-down emotions still have helped the Jayhawks on more than one occasion.
A tie up and ensuing stare down in Colorado guard LaShena Graham earlier this season made the difference in Kansas' victory. Coach Caeal Barry conceded that her team never recovered after the incident.
Graham complained that Dixon had elbowed her throughout the game. Dixon shot back that Graham had swung at her.
To see Dixon trying to push through another Colorado player to get at Graham made it clear that she had no thought of backing down.
"I don't care what people think for 40 minutes," Dixon says. "After it's all over with, then I'm back."
When Dixon uprooted that New Jersey-style game and relocated it in
See TAMECKA, Page 11B
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
Jacque
5B
"When I watched him on tape,I thought I had it on fast forward." Western Kentucky coach Matt Kilcullen
34 VAUGHN 11
Continued from Page 1B
championship.
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
Here is how another local boy and highly-touted recruit, Charles O'Bannon, handled the same situation: Live broadcast on a Long Beach cable television station and simulcast on radio. A well-planned news conference with 25 newspaper, television and radio reporters. O'Bannon stayed home from school to rest for the evening's press conference.
Here is how Jacque Vaughn told Roy Williams he was going to Kansas: "I told him that I had made up my decision. .and that I was going to change my mind and go to UCLA."
Here is what Jacque Vaughn said before he came to Kansas: "I want to break the stereotypes."
Here is how Williams responded: silence.
Here is how Jacque Vaughn broke the lull: "Just kidding, Coach. I'm going to be a Jayhawk."
Here are three stereotypes of a Division-I athlete: Dimwitted, vain and inarticulate.
Here's what Jacque Vaughn considers to be the toughest thing about being an athlete: The constant scrutiny.
Here's how the scrutiny that Jacque Vaughn has faced in his four years can be described: More salutary than sinister.
Here is what The Sporting News predicted would happen after Jacque Vaughn's junior season:
"..g. guard Jacque Vaughn will become a first-team All-American."
Here's why: NBA Draft expert Don Leventhal said Vaughn was a certain lottery pick. "He's quick. He can pass, and he's a traditional point guard."
Here is what Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams predicted the future calling of Jacque Vaughn: "He might be governor of California. Or governor of Kansas."
Here is how Jacque Vaughn's defensive tenacity has been described: "He's the fly that can't be swatted." — Austin American-Statesman.
Here is what New York Daily News writer Dick Weiss said about the sophomore Rick Vaughn: "Vaughn is the best pure point guard in the country."
Here is how Western Kentucky
coach Matt Kilcullen described scouting Jacque Vaughn: "When I watched him on tape, I thought I had it on fast forward."
Here is what Roy Williams said about Jacque Vaughn the player and the person: "You get the total package with Jacque. He's a joy being around and would be successful if he never played the game of basketball."
Here's what Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said about Jacque Vaughn in his sophomore season: "I think Vaughn's as good a point guard as there is in college basketball."
Here's what the Unofficial Oklahoma Football Page said about Jacque Vaughn being named Big Eight Conference Player of the Year instead of Sooner Ryan Minor last year. "What the hell were they thinking?"
Here is how former Kansas forward Sean Pearson said the Jayhawks broke the full-court press: "We just try to get the ball to Jacque and have him break the press and find the open man."
Here is how the Buffalo News described Jacque Vaughn in his first year at Kansas: "He is the team's heart and brains, its coach on the court."
wouldn't trade Jacque Vaughn for anyone in the country."
Here's what Roy Williams said:
"For what Roy Williams wants, I
Here is what Providence coach Pete Gillen, who coached Jacque Vaughn in the U.S. Olympic Festival, said about his intelligence: "If he tells me something, I go with it. He's smarter than me."
Here's how old Jacque Vaughn was when these remarks were made:19.
Here is what backcourt mate Jered Haase said about what it's like to play with Jacque Vaughn: "Jacque Vaughn makes it a lot easier for me."
Here's how many total strangers followed the then-freshman Jacque Vaughn from Wescoe Hall to his bus stop in front of Snow Hall: seven. None spoke a word to Vaughn, they just wanted to get a close-up glimpse of their hero.
Here is how Jacque Vaughn celebrated his 20th birthday: getting seven stitches to close a cut on his head during the Feb. 11, 1995, game against Oklahoma.
Here's what a bus driver belted out at Jacque Vaughn during his sophomore season before the Iowa State game: "Hey Jacque, kick ass on Saturday, man."
Here is what Jacque Vaughn said was his role on the team as a sophomore: "It's my job to sacrifice myself to get the other guys great shots."
Here's how he sacrificed himself as a sophomore: playing 35 minutes or more in 15 games, playing on a sprained ankle and dishing out 238 assists.
Here is what the Jayhawks were nicknamed in Jacque Vaughn's junior year when the team's towers were Greg Ostertag and Scot Poliard: "Jacque and the Beanstalks."
Here is what Jacque Vaughn said when asked if fatigue was contributing to his ineffectiveness as a sophomore when he hit a dry spell: "I don't make excuses."
Here is how Williams warned Connecticut before their Jan. 28, 1995, meeting: "We've got a guy that can go coast to coast."
Here's what the guy that can go coast to coast did to the Huskies: 10 assists, seven rebounds and nine points.
Here is what UConn coach Jim Calhoun said about Jacque Vaughn: "I don't know if he knows other teams are pressing him, because he goes by them so fast."
Here's what Calhoun said about Jacque Vaughn two years later when Vaughn guided the Jayhawks to a 73-65 victory against UConn, despite trailing by as many as 19 points in the first half. "I called my players to the sideline when we were up 19 and said, 'Did you guys look at Jacque Vaughn? He never blinked.'"
Here are the first words Jacque Vaughn uttered after the Sept. 10, 1996, fall that forced him out of action for 10 games: "It's bad."
Here's how bad it was: A scapohunate disassociation. In layman's terms — the ligaments in his right wrist were torn from the bone. Prognosis — sidelined for 10 weeks.
Here's how many major newspapers and magazines reported Jacque Vaughn's injury: 104.
Here is one of the strongest encouragements that got Jacque Vaughn through the rigorous day of rehab. While in Maui earlier this year, Magic Johnson sent a messenger to tell him he wished Vaughn was playing, but he knew that he'd see him back on the court again.
Here's what Jacque Vaughn said about returning to Kansas despite tearing a ligament in his hand and possibly hurting his standing in the NBA draft: "I think I'm still getting better as a player and as a person also. I HAVE NO REGRETS!"
Here's why: "I have no fear. I've really been blessed. So many people love to be in the situation that I'm in now. I have no regrets at all about coming back. Why should I?"
Here is how many times Jacque Vaughn was asked if he had any regrets in a 25-minute press conference in late-February. Four.
Here is what Jacque Vaughn shouted in his first game back on Dec. 30, 1996, after giving a trademark assist which led to a three-point play: "I'm back I'm back."
Here are three words that Jacque Vaughn said best describe him: Meticulous, proud and unique.
Here's what Jacque Vaughn does to get psyched up for a game: "I watch old Magic Johnson video tapes."
Here is who Jacque Vaughn would pretend to be as he dribbled and shot on the playgrounds in Pasadena: Magic Johnson.
Here is what Jacque Vaughn once told a reporter was his optimum nightly performance: "I'll take 25 assists," he said.
Here is how the reporter responded: "Is this guy from another planet or what? Are personal pronouns not part of his vocabulary?"
Here is what one reader wrote
Sports illustrated about Jacque
See JACQUE,Page 11B
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The Kansas men's basketball team has one of the country's deepest benches. Jayhawk reserves have filled in both when starters needed a break and when Jacquie Vaughn and Scot Pollard suffered injuries.
Strong bench bolsters team
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan sports editor
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams was upset with his starters during the Jayhawks' 74-59 victory Friday against Oklahoma State in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Conference tournament — so upset that he yanked all five from the floor and put in the next five guys from the bench.
Those five players lit up the court with nine points in three minutes.
Few coaches in the country can do what Williams did.
"One of the reasons we have been successful is because we have so many guys that can come onto the court and play," said Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz. "We are lucky."
Kansas' luck has helped them win all season.
After the Jayhawks defeated George Washington University early in the season, the Colonials' coach Mike Jarvis said that Kansas never let up. That, he said, was because the Jayhawks had fresh legs on the court.
"I don't know if there is a deeper team in America," Jarvis said. "It's one thing to be able to rotate players in and out of the game on a regular basis. It's another thing when the guys you are bringing in are really good. That's what Kansas has."
Kansas' bench has even been called upon to fill starting spots.
When guard Jacque Vaughn missed 10 games because of a torn ligament
in his wrist, Williams brought in back-up point men Ryan Robertson and C.B. McGrath.
During that stretch, Kansas went 10-0 and earned the No. 1 ranking.
"Ryan and C.B. did a wonderful job," Williams said. "They really didn't get enough credit. I don't know of too many teams that could have a player like Jacque Vaughn go down and still play like we did."
When center Scot Pollard suffered a stress fracture in his left foot, Williams again went to his bench.
Forward B.J. Williams started in Pollard's place and T.J. Pugh became his substitute.
"They did a good job," Pollard said. "B.J. did well for someone who had never started before and T.J. was in there banging. They could probably start somewhere else."
Then there is guard Billy Thomas, Kansas' three point threat.
Thomas is shooting a team-high 43 percent from the three-point line. He has hit 65 three-point shots this season.
Roy Williams has said that Thomas is the only player on the team with the go-ahead to shoot three-pointers at will.
It's a role Thomas has enjoyed.
"I have been able to get good shots," Thomas said. "When I get a good look I step up in the spot and shoot."
These players have been complemented by freshman Nick Bradford,
The Kansas Bench
Player PPG FG% 3F%
B.J. Williams 3.2 43.0 7.0
Ryan Robertson 4.2 39.2 39.1
Nick Bradford 2.4 41.0 13.6
Billy Thomas 8.4 41.7 43.3
T.J. Pugh 3.8 57.9 16.7
Steve Ransom 0.7 58.3 0.0
Joel Branstrom 1.1 58.3 0.0
C.B. McGrath 0.6 45.4 0.0
Terry Nooner 1.2 44.4 36.4
who plays more than seven minutes a game.
Bradford hasn't put the ball in the basket often. He averages just 2.4 points a game. But Roy Williams said that is not where Bradford has been most effective.
"Nick is energetic and very athletic," Roy Williams said. "He plays tough defense and that makes him a good player for us."
These players, combined with the five starters, are one reason Kansas is No. 1. But the Jayhawks know that if they want to be No. 1 when the season ends, the bench will have to continue to play well.
"When we get on the court, we have to play well," Thomas said of himself and his bench buddies. "If we can give the starters a chance to rest and play well enough that they don't have to worry when they sit down, then that makes us a better team. We have to play well if we want to win."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
7B
Final Four tickets pricey for students
Following Kansas' basketball team too costly for some
By Harley V. Ratliff
Kansan sportswriter
Almost every Jayhawk fan would like to sit courtside at the Final Four, sip on a big soda, munch on a giant tub of popcorn and watch the Kansas basketball team cut down the nets at the Indianapolis Hoosier Dome on March 31.
All you need is about $10 for the concessions and about $3,000 for the courtside tickets.
And you thought concessions had gotten too expensive.
Depending on where you want to sit, tickets for the NCAA Championship game will cost between $275 and $3,000, said a representative at Barry's Ticket Service, a Los Angeles-based ticket broker.
"The $3,000 tickets will get you the best seat in the house, right between the baskets and on the front row," the representative said. "The least expensive tickets will put you somewhere in the corner of the upper deck."
Buying a Final Four ticket will not only get fans into both of Sunday's semifinal games, but also into the National Championship game on March 31.
Although ticket prices may seem steep, they are actually less expensive than last year. The ticket broker said that because the Hoosier Dome holds nearly twice as many spectators as last year's venue in Charlotte, N.C., prices have gone down.
With the Kansas men's basketball team one of the front runners to reach the finals, a number of students want to head to Indiana to cheer on their team. However, high ticket prices have already forced some loyal Kansas fans to watch the tournament on television.
Ben Shrepf, Iowa City, Iowa, sophomore, was at the Hoosier Dome when the Jayhawks made the Final Four in 1991. He said that while he would like to attend this year, he can't afford the tickets.
Better luck next year
Tickets for this year's Final Four at the Indianapolis Hoosier Dome are sold out, but it's not too early to plan ahead for next year's Final Four at the San Antonio Alamo Dome.
Here's what you need to do:
Watch your local newspaper for the ticket information number on or about April 1.
Call the number between April 1 and May 9 and request a ticket application.
Send in as many as 10 applications but know that your name can only be drawn once.
Make out your check for the exact amount — the cost of how many tickets you are requesting plus a $2 handling fee for each entry.
Send in your application so that the NCAA receives it no later than midnight on May 29.
Sit back and hope that your name is drawn in a random computerized drawing that will be held in July.
Watch for your acceptance or rejection form in the mail in August.
"I really want to go if Kansas can make it to the Final Four," Shrepf said. "But the last time I got my tickets through the University. There's no way I could afford to go through a scalper."
"Maybe I'm out of touch, but I never would have guessed that going to the Final Four could cost so much money," Fawcett said. "The best seats I'm going to get are on my couch in my living room."
John Fawcett, Lawrence sophomore,
said he has run into the same dilemma.
Should Kansas reach Indianapolis, the NCAA will allot the University of Kansas a certain number of tickets. However, the Kansas ticket office will not know how many tickets it will receive or how much the Final Four tickets will cost until about one week before the Final Four.
Fans consider viewing options for road games
When the Kansas Jayhawks play in Lawrence,it's not hard to figure out where the basketball fans are. Just check Allen Field House.
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
But when the team is on the road, it's a little bit more complicated. Some fans are able to follow the team and attend road games, but the rest of us must decide the always difficult question: Where should we watch the game?
"It kind of depends on what mood you're in," said Brandon Davidson, Overland Park junior. "If you want to go out and be around a crowd, like at the game, then you go
to a sports bar. But sometimes you just want to call up a few friends, get some brew and chill out on the couch."
While coach Roy Williams and the players rack up wins on the road, Lawrence restaurants and sports bars rack up local business from those that choose to go out.
"When Kansas is on TV. we don't have an
"...You never
Jason Williams Olathe senior
have to wait in line for the bathroom.
empty seat in the house, and they're at least three or four deep at the bar," said Pat Scott, co-owner of Scott's Brass Apple. 3300 W. 15th St.
Scott said that during the postseason tournaments, business was the best when Kansas was playing, but many come to the restaurant watched the tournament no matter who was playing.
"As long as KU is in it, people want to get together in their groups and cheer and carry-on and so forth," she said. "But when KU is out, we still have a certain number of people still interested in seeing the games."
Mike Regnier, general manager at Old Chicago, 2329 Iowa St., said the channel that the game was televised on also affected turnout.
"When they show the away games on a local channel, not as many people go out to watch it," Regnier said. "But if it's on ESPN or something, we get a lot."
Regnier said that the Big 12 Conference Tournament was great for area restaurants because so many people were interested.
"I don't mind the crowd at the games, but it's hard to see what's going on when you can't see the TV through all of the people," Williams said.
"With 24 teams playing, including the women's teams, that's a whole lot of people who came to the area," he said. But, for fans like Jason Williams, Olathe senior, the crowds can sometimes be a negative.
Williams said that there were other advantages to watching the games at home.
"It's a lot cheaper, and you never have to wait in line for the bathroom," he said.
The University Daily Kansan Wishes the Best of Luck to the Men's and Women's Basketball Teams. Good Luck Teams!
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
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First Round March 13-14
NCAA
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Regionals
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Semifinals
Arizona 16
Kansas 8
Virginia 9
Boston College 5
Valparaiso 12
St. Joseph's 4
Pacific 13
Stanford 6
Oklahoma 11
Wake Forest 3
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North Carolina-Charlotte 7
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Indianapolis March 29
SW Texas State 16
Mississippi 8
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Boston University 12
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Miami (Ohio) 13
Iowa State 6
Illinois State 11
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Xavier (Ohio) 7
Vanderbilt 10
UCLA 2
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Jennifer Trapp stays close to home
Senior doesn't regret playing in hometown of Lawrence
By Tommy Gallagner
Kansan sportswriter
It was Saturday. March 1. 1997.
The Kansas women's basketball team celebrated Senior Day. Five players, including forward Jennifer Trapp, played in their last regular-season game at Allen Field House.
Tears were shed by the players, coaches and teammates. Tears were also shed by the senior's parents, who flocked from places across the country to walk onto the flower-filled court with their children.
The families of guards Tamecka Dixon and Angie Halbleib flew from New Jersey and Wisconsin, respectively. Forward Shelly Canada's family drove from Oklahoma, and forward Patience Grayer's family drove from Illinois.
As for Trapp's parents, they did not make any extravagant travel plans to attend Senior Day and its festivities because they have always called Lawrence home.
Trapp has started all but one game since she came to Kansas four years ago, and has averaged 7.1 points and 4.4 rebounds during her career. This season, Trapp has averaged 8.5 points and 5.5 rebounds a game.
She has been called a fighter by Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington. According to some of her teammates, Trapp is the inspirational leader on a senior-labor team
SHELLEY 51
"I think Jennifer is the glue that
holds our team together," Halbleib said. "When you look at her, she's playing tough 100 percent of the time. I don't think I've ever seen a game where Jen does not give it her all on the court."
There was a time when Jennifer was not a driven leader on the court. It fact, there was a time when she did not play basketball, or any other sport for that matter.
Trapp had never really participated in sports until she was in junior high school. She played basketball, volleyball and track before deciding that perhaps one of the sports could land her a college scholarship.
After several years of learning the odds and ins of basketball, Trapp eventually blossomed into a marquee player during her senior season at Lawrence High School.
"Kansas was first visit, and I canceled all the rest," Trapp said. "Kansas was type of program that I wanted to belong to, and not a program that was in a standstill. There was a winning program here before, but I could tell that they were really looking toward the Final Four."
That year, she was a member of the Converse All-America team, and was the Kansas Gatorade Basketball Player of the Year. She earned all-state and all-Sunflower League honors, and was a Kansas City all-metro honorable mention.
Trapp was recruited heavily coming out of high school, with Kansas and Colorado as the front-runners. She had planned visits to five different schools, although she
made a visit to just one of them.
Although her parents are both Kansas alums, Rick Trapp, her father, said there was no pressure for Jennifer to choose one school or the other.
"We didn't state a preference on what school she should choose because we wanted her to make her own choice," Rick Trapp said. "We tried very hard not to push her."
Rick Trapp said that if his daughter had chosen Colorado, he and her mother wouldn't have been heartbroken because they had a great amount of respect for Colorado coach Cali Barry and the program they have there.
While Colorado might have been great place to play
it have been great place to play basketball, Jennifer said she was excited about playing in front of a hometown crowd.
"It was a pretty easy choice," Trapp said. "I love Lawrence, and I was really comfortable here. I'm sure there are other cities that I'd like also, but I had a good feeling about playing here in my hometown."
While the Buffaloes have slipped from being the perennial conference power they were several years ago, Kansas has replaced them. The Jayhawks won the last Big Eight title last year, and won the first Big 12 title this season.
Kansas is 24-5 overall and has had its best season since Trapp was a freshman. That season, the Jayhawks were 22-6 overall and lost in the second round of the NCAA Tournament to Penn State at University Park, Penn.
For Rick Trapp, watching his daughter the last four years has been an experience that he and
his wife, Patty, will never forget.
"The past four years have been a tremendous experience for Jennifer and for us," Rick Trapp said. "We'll remain loyal fans of the women's basketball program, but we won't be as close to them as we have been through Jennifer. I'm glad that it worked out for her so well, and I'm glad that we were able to see Jennifer play her college career back home."
By the time the NCAA Tournament start this week, the Jayhawks will have had a week's rest to prepare for a run at the Final Four. Although Trapp will finish her college basketball career sometime during the next three weeks, she will remain at Kansas for another year.
Trapp is an education major who has one year of classes remaining before graduation. While it is valuable to learn in the classroom, Trapp said there is a lot to be learned from anyone who plays sports.
"In terms of education, there are a lot of lessons sports can teach," Trapp said. "When I see girls that are a young age that are able to play sports, they don't realize that it develops a lot of life skills. There's teamwork and being able to deal with winning and losing."
HARRIS
20
PARKS
51
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
ABOVE: Jennifer Trapp has started all but one game during her four-year career at Kansas. The senior forward has consistently contributed to the Jayhawks since she chose Kansas instead of Colorado and several other schools as a senior at Lawrence High School.
LEFT: Her teammates and coaches call Trapp the inspirational leader on a team with five seniors. "When you look at her, she's playing tough 100 percent of the time," guard Angie Halibble said. "I don't think I've ever seen a game where Jen does not give it her all on the court."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
11B
Tamecka
Continued from Page 4B
"I'd just feel so shallow if I get Kodak All-American and we don't go anywhere. I don't even want it."
Kansas, some people thought it wouldn't last long. How could an East Coast kid make it in the Heartland?
"A lot of people around here thought she might go out there and be back in a year," says Rich Haley, who covered Dixon's high school career for the Home News & Tribune in East Brunswick, N.J.
Dixon almost followed suit.
Many others had done it before Dixon — gone to a school far from Jersey, become unhappy and transferred back home to Rutgers or St. John's or somewhere else.
She found herself thinking about transferring throughout her freshman year. She had gone to Kansas as a slashing, scoring off guard. Yes, coach Marian Washington had mentioned something during the recruiting process about playing point guard. But that was just talk, right?
Wrong.
Washington moved Dixon to point guard before she ever played a college game and started her at that position in her first game.
At first, the change was good. It meant more playting time for Dixon on a veteran ball club. Then the reality hit.
"When I started to realize what it takes to be a point guard," she says, "I was like 'Fold up.'"
She fought the change. Hard.
And Washington remembers
Dixon's struggle.
"Hated it. Got frustrated. Head went down," Washington says. "I was constantly pulling her off the floor."
Being frustrated was more than just adjusting to point guard.
"I'm expected to come in here and do great things like I did in high school, and I couldn't do anything." Dixon says. "I was really depressed my freshman year, dreading games and practice."
She averaged 6.8 points and 4.2 rebounds her freshman year, which is nothing to scoff at for a first-year player. However, the numbers were light years from the 28.1 points and 13.6 rebounds that she had as a high school senior.
Dixon talked about her problems with a small group of people — her parents, some of the coaches, and team veterans Angela Aycock and Charisse Sampson. In the end, Dixon based her decision to stay on one reason, the same reason she had picked Kansas in the first place — Marian Washington.
"I couldn't see myself playing for another coach," Dixon says. "I would feel like I let her down. I talked to her and decided to stick it out and come with a different attitude the next year."
After a summer of working with her father, Dixon was becoming a point guard.
That fact became evident against UConn in 1994. Dixon showed up Rebecca Lobo, Jennifer Rizzotti and even Angela Aycock, scoring a thencareer-high 30 points.
"Up until UConn, she had showed spurts of greatness but then she wouldn't have a great game," Bowers says. "But UConn, it was the turning point of her college career." "I thought he was beautiful."
"It was beautiful."
Dixon's father should know. He watched the game from his seat a few rows behind the bench. From there, he could easily coach her, too.
And Dixon could easily hear him.
"It does not matter how many people are at the game. I still hear him say, 'Go straight up,' Dixon says. "Anything he says I can pick up."
With a connection between father and daughter that borders on telepathy, it's no surprise Dixon went home last summer to work on her game. She and Bowers ran drills, jogged miles, lifted weights and primed for Dixon's senior season.
They focused most on her jump shot.
"We'd pick a spot, and she'd have to go up and land on that same spot," Bowers says. "When she started to see it go, she got some confidence. I told her, 'If somebody leaves you unguarded, you're just going to feel it. They doomed.'"
The summer was about more than her jump shot. She and her father had one last opportunity to prepare for the college basketball season and a chance to impress the scouts.
They knew that with a good senior
season, Dixon might be one of the new stars in the women's professional leagues — the ABL and the WNBA.
Even though Dixon appears to be well on her way to landing a professional contract in the United States, she hasn't thought a lot about what comes after her Kansas career. She wants to focus on making a run at the national championship.
She'll worry about herself later.
"After we get our team goals accomplished, if you want to say that I helped to do this, then honor me," Dixon says. "I'd just feel so shallow if I get Kodak All-American and we don't go anywhere. I don't even want it."
No matter how the season ends for Dixon, she already has the attention of many people, including some sports agents. They have sent her mail and even followed her on campus trying to get to sign with them.
"They offered me a contract," Dixon says. "Coach and I had talked about it before. I just turned and walked away."
Tamecka Dixon is back on the court after a full morning of classes. The Jayhawks don't have practice this afternoon, but Dixon is in Allen Field House anyway.
She can't miss a day and can't let down. Someone else might be out there practicing, getting better than her.
Her father told her that.
Assistant coach Maggie Mahood snares the ball after each shot and passes it back to Dixon. They talk and laugh about everything from practice last night to the new speaker system in the locker room.
The lights high in Allen Field House hum softly and at times drown out the sound of the basketball hitting the floor and ripping through the nylon net.
Dixon crosses her dribble over once, then again. It's as if she can still hear Boo in the stands.
'Find your spot!'
She stops.
"Go straight up!"
"You're not even sweatin'!"
The basketball finds the heart of the net.
Jacque
The legend's legends: redoing a math problem eight times as a freshman; making daily to-do lists; living on fish, spinach and Fig Newtons.
Continued from Page 5B
Vaughn: "To watch Stackhouse and players like Joe Smith of Maryland, Bryant Reeves of Oklahoma State and Jacque Vaughn of Kansas is such a relief from the showboating and trash talking that is ruining basketball."
Here's what another Sports Illustrated reader wrote: "Jacque Vaughn is a true role model. It's good to see that not every scholarship athlete wings it through college."
Here is who Jacque Vaughn said was the person in history he would like to converse with: Arthur Ashe.
Here is the honor that Jacque Vaughn was bequeathed last spring: The Arthur Ashe Jr. Award, given for athletic and academic success.
Here are some Jacque Vaughn legends. He studies on Friday nights. He rewrites his English papers seven or eight times. As a freshman, he redd a math problem eight times. He turns off the ignition in his car at night, returns three or four times to make sure the lights are off.
He checks his luggage about five times before road games to make sure he packed his jersey. He reads Maya Angelou and Slyvia Plath before games. His diet revolves
around fish, spinach and Fig Newtons. He studies in different positions for different classes. He once wanted to watch a Kansas-Louisville basketball game in high school on television, but he had to study for a physics test. He makes daily lists. He makes game plans detailing what he must do. Roy Williams drove around campus during the Michigan State football game that was widely attended and one light was on at Ajayhawker Towers...then freshman Jacque Vaughn was studying.
Here is the peace and quiet that Jacque Vaughn has gotten since leaving the bright light and big city of Los Angeles: Kansas Sports Information Director Dean Buchan said that during the NCAA tournament Vaughn gets 10 interviews requests a day.
Here's how many interview requests Jacque Vaughn granted from the time of his wrist injury and Kansas Basketball media day on Oct. 16: Zero.
Here's how many fans, on an average, wait outside Kansas' locker room on home and away games: About 200.
Here's why: "He knew he wasn't playing and he didn't want to detract from the team." Buchan said.
Here are the similarities that Jacque Vaughn and roommate Scot
Pollard share: Ahhh, hmmm..their birthdays are one day apart. They both play basketball.
Here is who Jacque Vaughn and Pollard are compared to: The Odd Couple.
Here is the car that Jacque Vaughn drives: a Volkswagen Jetta.
Here is the car that Pollard drives: 1969 green Cadillac convertible he calls Marvin Martian.
Here is who Scot Pollard selected to be the best man in his wedding on May 10: Jacque Vaughn.
Here is how Jacque Vaughn's Senior Day speech ended: with tears and a hug for Roy Williams.
Here is Jacque Vaughn's advice to children: Read Philippians 4:13 in your Bible.
Here's how Pollard's Senior Day speech ended; with a cartwheel.
Here is what Philippians 4:13 says:
"I can do all things in him who strengthens me."
Here is how Jacque Vaughn responded when asked if his career at Kansas would look back in regret if he never went to the Final Four..
"The book isn't closed and I still have a chance to write that last chapter of winning a national championship."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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KU
SUPERFAN
Ryan Hodapp is known to most Jayhawk fans as the KU Superfan. The Overland Park junior has been donning his wiie and cap for the last two seasons.
By Eric Weslander
Kansan sportswriter
Four hours before the tip-off of the last men's home basketball game of the season, fans inside Allen Field House lazily read newspapers and munched on doughnuts. Some of them caught quick naps on the track surrounding the basketball court.
But while other fans relaxed, Ryan Hodapp dealt with the pressures of being the KU Superfan.
Hodapp, wearing a red wig, face paint and a blue cap, posed outside the field house for a photographer from GQ magazine. He gladly obliged when several people asked to take snapshots of him. He consoled a fellow face-painter who asked to borrow some crimson paint.
"Sorry, I did this at home," Hodapp said, pointing to his face. "You don't need the paint; just go crazy, man. That's all that really matters."
KU Superfan, the Overland Park junior's alter ego, has appeared at all men's home basketball games for the last two seasons. He's big, he's boisterous and he's not afraid to show some spirit.
Before every men's home game, Hodapp begins by donning a red sweatshirt, dime store wig and blue cape. Then he painstakingly divides his face into crimson and blue halves.
Sometimes he paints his face at home, sometimes he paints it in the restrooms of the field house. No matter where he prepares, though, he goes crazy once he gets in the stands.
about his superhuman abilities.
Although Hodapp confessed that he originally painted his face only to get on television, he said the KU Superfan had become a part of him. He even speculated
"It's kind of an emotional release thing," he said. "No one really knows who you are, so there's no reason not to let it all hang out."
"They haven't lost with me at a game," he said. "Of course, I guess they'd win without me there."
Like all superheroes, Hodapp has sympathy for the underdog, which is reflected in his choice of favorite player.
"I've got to go with Terry Nooner," he said. "Jacque, Jerod, Paul, they're all good players, but I have to pull for the walk-ons."
Jeff Warren, Hodapp's roommate and Augusta sophomore, is usually alongside him at the
games, but Warren said he did not plan to become the KU Superfan's trusty sidekick.
"I told him I would start painting my face as soon as Roy (Williams) started painting his," Warren said.
"The regular season is over, but the Superfan will return next year. He loves the game, he loves the enthusiasm, and he loves Allen Field House," Hodapp said. "Nobody's got better fans than KU. We may not all end up painting our faces and wearing the capes, but we'll go crazier than anyone in the nation."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
1.4
13B
Talent of 'Hawks bench vital to postseason play
By Tommy Gallagher and Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter and Kansan sports editor
While the No. 9 Kansas women's basketball team relies heavily on its starters, the bench is an important part of how the team plays.
The Jayhawks' reserves have accounted for more than 23 percent of the team's offense in 24 victories, but producing just 12.5 percent of the offense in its five losses.
Kansas had a season-low one point from the bench in its 73-58 loss against Kansas State in the Big 12 tournament semifinals. That point came when guard Erinn Reed made one of two free throws during the second half.
The poor bench play in the loss was something Kansas coach Marian Washington said
her team would have to improve.
"It's a definitely something that we will look at," Washington said. "If you want to win games in the tournament then you have to get some quality minutes from the people who come off the bench. If we don't, then we will not be as successful."
The top point producers off the bench have been three forwards — Patience Grayer, Suzi Raymant and Shelly Canada. Grayer averages 5.7 points, Raymant 4.7 points and Canada 3.4 points per game.
Canada said she knew that her role off the bench was just as important as the role of a starter.
"They can't do it all." Canada said of the starters. "I want to go in there and play hard and help us win. If I can play well when I get the chance to be on
the floor, then that just makes us a better team."
In her two seasons at Kansas Rayman has been considered a three-point threat. Last season she shot 33 percent from the three-point line. However, she has struggled this season.
Raymant was suspended for four games by the NCAA in January for violating amateurism regulations. She has been slow to regain her shooting touch since then.
In the loss to Kansas State in the Big 12 tournament, Raymant was 0-2 from the three-point line.
One player off the bench who has seen little playing time this season is center Kova Scott.
At the beginning of the season, Washington said she wanted to see Scott contribute more. That hasn't exactly happened.
Last season Scott averaged six
minutes of playing time a game. This season she played just more than two minutes a game.
"She hasn't done as much as I had hoped," Washington said. "But she has played at well at times when we needed her."
Scott had sore knees early in the season, and although she has recovered, it has effected hergame.
In the Jayhawks' loss to Kansas State, just five players scored. Four starters scored in double figures and Reed had one point.
This team knows that it cannot go far in the NCAA tournament with a repeat performance. That means that the bench will have to play well.
"We know our role." Grayer said. "We need to step up and play like we are starters if we want to win, and that is what we have been trying to do. We want to give a team effort."
52 31
Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
Patience Grayer is the top scorer off the Jayhawks' bench. She averages almost six points a game.
Seeding,ranking important in postseason
Kansas women's team thinks playing at home will help it win games
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
When it comes to women's college basketball, national rankings and earning a high seed in the NCAA Tournament are enormous factors in having postseason success.
In the women's NCAA Tournament, the top four seeds in each region enjoy homecourt advantage for first- and second-round games. That makes the women's tournament vastly different from the men's, where every game is played at one of 13 neutral sites during March Madness.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said she
preferred the men's NCAA Tournament format because no team has an advantage during postseason play.
"If I had a chance to change the rules, every tournament game would be played on a neutral court," Washington said. "When you work as hard as you do all season long, then have to go on the road in the postseason, it's wrong. For teams that have to play first and second-round games at Connecticut or Stanford, it becomes much tougher trying to make the Sweet 16."
Of the current homecourt winning streaks in college women's basketball, six of the top 10 streaks belong to teams ranked ninth or higher nationally.
No. 3 Stanford has the longest homecourt winning streak. The Cardinal streak is 46 games, dating back to Nov. 25, 1994. The streak is the ninth-longest in women's
college basketball history.
No. 5 Louisiana Tech ranks fourth with 32 consecutive home victories, and top-ranked Connecticut is fifth with 25 consecutive wins.
No. 9 Kansas recently tied its school record for consecutive homecourt victories at 20. The Jayhawks tied the mark with a 92-69 victory against Oklahoma, and can break the mark by winning their first-round NCAA Tournament game, which will be held at Allen Field House.
Behind Kansas is No. 3 Old Dominion and No. 4 North Carolina, both of which have won 13 consecutive games at home.
With homecourt advantage assured, Washington said she was concerned with Kansas' postseason seeding.
"I felt secure in that we were going to be in the NCAA Tournament, but we needed to get a good
seed," Washington said. "Last year we got the first two rounds here, but we were seeded fourth so we immediately had to face the No. 1 seed in the Sweet 16. This year we wanted to earn something different, like the No. 2 seed, or the No. 3 seed at least."
The Jayhawks made the Sweet 16 for the first time in school history last year after winning two games at Allen Field House. Kansas defeated Middle Tennessee State 72-57 in the first round, and Texas 77-70 in the second round.
Kansas forward Jennifer Trapp said that playing two games at Allen Field House is a huge advantage.
"Last year it was really great to have the tremendous amount of support that we had," Trapp said. "With the women's game, if you have the opportunity to be a home seed, it helps you get past those first two games. You agree that it's
"When you work as hard as you do all season long, then have to go on the road in the postseason, it's wrong."
Good Luck, KU
Marian Washington Kansas women's basketball coach
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Roy has smile of champion
Never before have we seen so much of Roy Williams teeth.
Near-perfect regular season has Williams and Jayhawks grinning into tournament
The man who has the winningest team of the 1900's never had dared smile as much as he has this season.
In the previous eight years, people
SPORTS EDITOR
SPENCER DUNCAN
have watched the Kansas bench, waiting to see when Roy would flash a smile.
Often he would wait until the final buzzer sounded or at least until there was one minute on the clock and he knew his team had the game won.
On sure, might have smiled occasionally. Like when he was joking with an official or one of his players did something unbelievable. But never before did Roy smile like he has this season.
Oh sure. he
Roy smiled when a player missed a dunk. He smiled when one of his players was called for a foul. He smiled when the Jayhawks committed a turnover.
Maybe Roy knows something.
Roy even had the audacity to smile when his team was down—by 15 no less.
There are stories of how Kentucky coach Rick Pitino smiled more last
The year before, even UCLA coach Jim Harrick was known to smile more than usual. There is one story of how, when his team was down by 12, he actually told a joke during a time out.
season. His players and assistants all said that Pitino, known as a demanding person, wore an unusual smirk
That year, his UCLA team won the national championship.
Some say that those years Pitino and Harrick knew something. They couldn't prove it, but they felt it.
Pitino's team won the national championship last season.
That's why they could smile.
Roy says he doesn't know anything about his totoier self. His team is on a mission, he says, and they are trying to have fun.
Maybe that's why Roy can smile.
So far they have done both, which gives Rover a reason to smile.
But the next two weeks may be filled with less smiling from Roy. Now is when concentration and seriousness are key.
The players say they don't notice anything different about their coach. The same old Roy, they claim.
A No. 1 national ranking. A school-best regular-season record of 29-1. Wins against Cincinnati, UCLA, and California. The first-ever Big 12 Conference title. It's enough to make anyone smile.
This is the part of the season that counts.
This is supposed to be the year.
Six seniors. Raef LaFrentz, the Big 12 Player of the Year. Jacque Vaughn, all around good guy. Jerod Haase, all around scrappy guy. Paul Pierce and Billy Thomas, extraordinary shooters.
Through all of this, Roy has shown his down-home grin. The more Roy smiles, the more the fans have smiled.
These are the weapons that win titles and this season they are supposed to earn the trophy.
If he can't do it this year, when will he do it? That will be the question heard around the state.
But now, in the minds of fans
Right or wrong, fans will judge this season by how it ends. Fans want to see Roy smiling with the championship net around his neck.
everywhere, if Kansas cannot complete the mission, there will be little reason to smile.
If they don't, it will not take long to wine the smile of Roy's face.
This is supposed to be the year.
But for now, Roy will keep smiling. He knows the pressure because he's been here before. He knows the expectations because he has helped perpetuate them. Roy, more than anyone, knows what is supposed to happen at the end of this month.
They have told Roy about the smile. So Roy is smiling more this year because he knows that his team is the best. Now he just has to prove it.
He has probably talked to Pitino and shot the breeze with Harrick. And he does know some guy named Dean Smith at North Carolina. They probably have talked.
And maybe, just maybe, when the final game of the season is played on March 31, Roy Williams will get to flash the biggest smile of the season.
God knows he has had enough practice.
The following is poem sent to the Kansas sports desk about the Kansas men's basketball team.
1996-97 Jayhawks
Jacque Vaughn has got the point
Life is best when one travels the road less traveled
Yet, if I might assist
Life is yours, when you create your own path
Jerod Haase, Mr. Hustle of B-Ball With broken wrist and a competitors fire
He leads in floor burns Defining heart and desire
Scot Pollard, with painted nails and
Paul Pierce drives the baseline smooth speed and power With an inner quiet and strength He hits a 3 or flows in for the jam
Elvis sideburns
Leads the defense inside the paint
With the intimidation, blocks and rebounds
The Great White Rodman Hope?
Rael LaFrentz at power-forward
With the turn around jumpers
and monster tomahawk jaws
KU's first left-handed All-American?
KU heads into March Madness
With Ryan and Billy hitting 3's
With B.J. and T.J. hitting the boards
With Nicky and the walk-ons
Led by a good man
Led by a great coach
This 96-97 team
Can be Roy's dadgum best?
Playing as a true team With poise and confidence With determination and a common goal The national championship is within your grasp
Seize it!
And never let it go.
'Hawks make it so
Don Burns Wichita senior
Enter to Win a Trip to the Finals! Meet Mister-big-sh
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If he can do it, so can you. Just come to Old Chicago. Enter to win a trip for two to the Finals in Indianapolis. It's not about skill, it's all about luck. And everybody's got the talent for that.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 10, 1997
158
SEASON IN REVIEW
Kansas Men's Basketball
Overall record: 32-1 Big 1.2 record: 1.8-1
Home: 15-0 Away 10-1 Neutral: 7-0
Date Scores
11/22 Kansas 76 Santa Clara 64
11/25 Kansas 82 LSU 53
1/26 Kansas 85 California 67
11/27 Kansas 80 Virginia 63
12/1 Kansas 79 San Diego 72
12/4 Kansas 72 Cincinnati 65
12/7 Kansas 96 UCLA 83
12/11 Kansas 85 G. Washington 5
12/15 Kansas 105
12/11 Kansas 85 G. Washington 56
12/15 Kansas 105
UNC-Ashville 73
12/15 Kansas 105 UNC-Asheville 73
12/21 Kansas 84 N.C. State 56
12/30 Kansas 90 Washburn 65
1/2 Kansas 107 Brown 49
1/4 Kansas 62 Kansas State 59
1/6 Kansas 86 Texas 61
1/9 Kansas 134 Niagara 73
1/11 Kansas 87 Baylor 68
1/13 Kansas 80 Iowa State 67
11/19 Kansas 73 Connecticut 65
11/22 Kansas 89 Texas A&M 60
11/26 Kansas 77 Colorado 68
11/29 Kansas 86 Texas Tech 77
2/1 Kansas 82 Nebraska 77
2/4 Missouri 94 Kansas 96
2/9 Kansas 69 Iowa State 62.
2/12 Kansas 104 Oklahoma State 72
2/15 Kansas 114 Colorado 74
2/17 Kansas 79 Missouri 67
2/22 Kansas 79 Kansas State 67
2/24 Kansas 70 Oklaoma 68
3/2 Kansas 85 Nebraka 65
3/7 Kansas 74 Oklahoma State 59
3/8 Kansas 72 Iowa State 48
7/8 Kansas 72 Iowa State 48
3/9 Kansas 87 Missouri 60
SEASON IN REVIEW
Kansas Women's Basketball
Overall record: 24-5 Big 12 record: 15-3
Home: 14-0 Away: 8-4 Neutral: 2-1
Date Scores
11/15 Kansas 77
Southern Methodist 67
11/17 Tennessee 79 Kansas 60
11/17 Tennessee 79 Kansas 60
11/24 Kansas 81
11/24 Kansas 81 UC-Santa Barbara 71
UC-Santa Barbara 71
12/4 Karen B
Northeastern Illinois 45
12/8 Kansas 76 Washington 61
10/11 Kansas 75
12/1 Kansas 71 Purdue 61
12/7 Kansas 63
12/8 Kansas 76 Wash.
12/11 Kansas 75
Missouri-Kansas City 55
12/15 Kansas 88 Creighton 70
12/21 Connecticut 85 Kansas 64
12/28 Kansas 89 Buffalo 66
12/29 Kansas 65 St. Joseph's 60
1/4 Kansas 70 Kansas State 54
1/8 Kansas 70 Iowa State 67
1/11 Kansas 79 Baylor 49
1/18 Texas 82 Kansas 72
1/22 Kansas 79 Texas A&M 63
1/25 Kansas 61 Colorado 58
1/30 Kansas 69 Texas Tech 52
2/2 Kansas 67 Nebraska 59
2/5 Missouri 68 Kansas 66
2/8 Kansas 82 Iowa State 78
2/12 Kansas 79
Oklahoma State 76
2/15 Kansas 72 Colorado 60
2/19 Kansas 70 Missouri 60
2/22 Kansas 62 Kansas State 46
2/26 Kansas 62 Nebraska 58
3/1 Kansas 92 Oklahoma 69
3/5 Kansas 66 Baylor 54
3/16 Kansas State 73 Kansas 58
3/6 Kansas State 73 Kansas $^{5}$
10
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
51
11
12
KANSAS
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
LEFT: Outstretched arms in the student section frame Raef LaFrentz at the free-throw line. En route to a 31-1 record as well as the Big 12 Conference regular season and tournament titles, the Kansas men's basketball team shot 69.5 percent from the free-throw line.
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
SHOW LEFT: Jacque Vaughn drives around Kansas State's Aaron Swartzendruber. Vaughn returned from a wrist injury before the Big 12 season began and preceded to lead the men's basketball team to a 15-1 record in the conference. The men, like the women, paired the first Big 12 championship with the last Big Eight championship.
BELLOW FAR LEFT: Jennifer Trapp and Suzi Raymant pressure Baylor's Nicole Palmer. The Kansas women's basketball team held 11 opponents to 60 points or less during the regular season. The Jayhawks' season best came against Northeastern Illinois in the Dial Soap Classic when they held Northeastern Illinois to 45 points.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NCAA
1997 National Collegiate Division I Women's BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
First Round March 14-15 Second Round March 16-17 Regionals Semifinals National Championship Semifinals Regionals Second Round March 16-17 First Round March 14-15
Connecticut 1 Lehigh 16 North Carolina State 8 Iowa 9 Duke 5 DePaul 12 Illinois 4 Drake 13 Oregon 6 San Diego 11 Tennessee 3 Grambling 14 Stephen F. Austin 7 Toledo 10 Colorado 2 Marshall 15 North Carolina 1 Harvard 16 Michigan State 8 Portland 9 George Washington 5 Northwestern 12 Tulane 4 UC-Santa Barbara 13 Notre Dame 6 Memphis 11 Texas 3 Southwest Texas State 14 St. Joseph's 7 Kansas State 10 Alabama 2 St. Francis, (Pa.) 15
MIDWEST Iowa City, Iowa March 22 & 24 Knoxville, Tenn.
Xavier, Ohio March 28 Columbia, S.C. March 22 & 24
Xavier, Ohio March 30 NATIONAL CHAMPION
Xavier, Ohio March 28 West Lafayette, Ind. March 22 & 24
MIDEAST Gainsville, Fla.
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Stanford, Calif.
Howard
Texas Tech
Montana
Utah
Iowa State
Virginia
Troy State
Vanderbilt
Washington
Kansas
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1997 NCAA
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turnament: Big 12 Conference represented well in NCAA brackets. Page 10 Fraternity: Zeta Beta Tau passes resolution to improve standing. Page
3-DIDIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PD BOX 3585
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1997
SECTION A VOL.103, NO.115
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Thieves vandalize, damage cars north of Oliver Hall
KU police reported yesterday that in less than 48 hours, 10 cars were burglarized and damaged in Lot 112 north of Oliver Hall.
Between 10:30 p.m. Wednesday and 5 p.m. Friday, about $6,275 worth of CDs, car stereos, stereo equipment and other various electronics were stolen from students' cars. Windows were broken in eight of the cars, and all of cars were damaged in some way, police said. The combined damage to cars was estimated at $2,075.
KU police Sgt. Chris Keary said the burglaries were the most he had seen in one place at one time. He encouraged people to call the KU police if they had seen anyone unlawful loitering in the Oliver Hall parking lot around the times of the burglaries.
Kansan staff report
Concealed handgun law approved by voice vote
TOPEKA — The Kansas House of Representatives gave tentative approval yesterday to a bill that would allow licensed Kansans to carry concealed handguns.
The measure, passed on an unrecorded voice vote after 21/2 hours of debate, advanced to a final vote scheduled for today. Passage would send the bill to the Senate, where the leadership has said it prefers a public referendum.
The key vote came when the House rejected an amendment by Rep. Bruce Larkin, D-Baileyville, that would have required a vote in each of the state's 105 counties at the 1998 primary election.
Voters in each county would have had to approve the concealed handgun measure to take effect.
Rep. Steve Lloyd, R-Clay Center, said the amendment would make concealed handguns unworkable because people would have to know the law in each city and county in the state.
Opponents of the bill believe it must have some kind of statewide referendum or local option provision before Gov. Bill Graves will sign it.
The House also narrowly adopted an amendment that would require concealed handgun permit holders to have additional training every two years instead of every four.
before Gov. Jim Bridges will sign it Kansas law generally allows individuals to carry concealed handguns only on their own property or at their own businesses.
Citadel men punished for hazing woman cadets
CHARLESTON, S.C. — A male cadet at The Citadel was expelled and nine others were given lesser punishments in the hazing and harassment of two female cadets, military school officials said yesterday.
One cadet was cleared, and FBI and state investigators continue to look into the women's allegations for possible criminal charges.
Cadets Jeanie Mentavil of Charlotte, N.C., and Kim Messer of Clover said their clothes were set on fire and cleanser was put on their heads. They also said they were forced to drink tea until they became ill, made to drink alcohol and forced to stand in a closet while being shoved and kicked last semester.
Of 15 male cadets who faced discipline, one was expelled, the maximum penalty, and one was given the second most severe punishment: He is restricted to campus for the rest of the semester and must do 120 hours of marching in the barracks courtyard.
They didn't return to the state military school for the spring semester. The Citadel still has two women cadets. It began accepting women cadets last June after a court battle
The school did not identify the punished cadets. The dismissed cadet can apply for readmission after a year.
The Associated Press
Destiny of the campus fee
By Dave Morantz Kansan staff writer
The University is charging $210 in campus fees in addition to tuition each semester, but many students wonder where the money goes.
"I'm sure it goes to projects that this school needs or gets returned to students through services," said Terry Hyland, Topeka senior. "It's not something that I'd go out of my way to find out, but I'd prefer to know what's happening."
Hyland's lack of knowledge of where the fee goes is not uncommon for KU students.
Divided into 13 areas, the fee finances organizations and services, such as Watkins Memorial Health Center, the Kansas and Burge unions and campus transportation.
Students taking more than six hours at the Lawrence campus must pay the $210 fee. Students in some schools, including engineering and pharmacy, pay equipment fees.
Watkins receives the largest portion of student funds. Each semester, students pay $86 for the services, upkeep and expansion of the health center.
Student fees
Jim Strobl, director of Watkins,
Health fee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $69.50
Health facility, maintenance, repair and equipment fee . . . $1.50
Health facility addition fee . . . $15.00
Union building fee . . . . . . . . . $22.50
Union renovation fee . . . . . . . $18.50
Senate activity fee . . . . . . . . $23.00
... (next semester: $22.00)
Media fee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3.00
Women's and non-revenue inter-collegiate sports fee . . . $20.00
Educational-opportunity fee $6.00
Recreational-services fee . $13.00
Campus-lighting fee . . . . . . . $2.00
Child care facility construction fee . . . . . . $2.00
Campus transportation fee $14.00
said that because the facility received no funds directly from the University administration, student fees were essential.
Over time, every student fee was approved by Student Senate, said Linda Mullens, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs.
Mullens said a Watkins fee had been around since the beginning of the century.
"For such a big university that does so much, they have to get money somewhere to make improvements," said Jaime Carden, Olathe junior. "It would be nice to have details about where the money is going."
Court to decide legality of giving student fees to advocacy groups
By Ann Marchand Kansan staff writer
Each semester, students at the University of Kansas give $23 to Student Senate to finance registered student groups.
But a case verdict last fall challenged the legality of financing advocacy groups.
The case has been appealed to the Seventh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago, and the trial has been scheduled for May.
If the plaintiff wins again, it probably would be appealed to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
The decision could have wide implications for student governments across the country, including the University.
Kelly Huffman, Bellevue, Neb., junior and chair of the KU Student Senate Finance committee, said the current system was legitimate.
"I don't think we're doing anything wrong," Huffman said. "People pay for things they don't take advantage of or don't necessarily agree with every day."
Three law students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison decided
The students were opposed to the method in which the student government distributed fees to groups that advocated issues that the students did not support ideologically.
last year that they did not want their student fees to subsidize certain student groups. When their requests to cease the collection of student fees — known as segregated fees in their university system — were denied, they sued.
The Phoenix-based Alliance Defense Fund, a conservative Christian group, paid their legal fees.
See COURT, Page 2A
This semester, $23 of the $210 fee went to Student Senate for allocation to various University organizations and programs. Senate voted last month to lower the fee to $22, which goes into effect starting Fall 1997.
Scott Sullivan, Leawood junior and chairman of the Student Senate campus fee review subcommittee, said Senate bodies tried to notify students of where the Senate fee money went, but the administration needed to do a better job of telling students
where the remaining $187 goes.
"It would be really simple and inexpensive for the administration to put together a pamphlet or a brochure stating where the money goes," Sullivan said. "It would also build interest in the organizations that receive money."
Senate allocates fee money to organizations such as Student Filmmakers, KU Environs, Habitat for Humanity and the Proponents of Animal Liberation.
A court case now in Wisconsin questions the legality of financing advocacy groups through student fees.
"I don't even know where it really goes to," said Danny Caplan, Houston senior. "I feel like I'm paying a lot of money in fees, but people should pay fees to keep things going."
Hyland said that forcing the administration to pay for organizations and services financed now with student fees probably would just increase tuition costs.
Nature's classroom
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
Cara Calvert, Anchorage. Alaska, sophomore. sketches Anschutz Science Library for her drawing class.
Allergy sneezes signal springtime
By Emily Vrabac
Kansan staff writer
Springtime is near — just ask any allergy sufferer. Seasonal allergies to pollen and mold have begun as the trees are budding and the wind increases.
Rock said that people with seasonal allergies usually started experiencing symptoms in February. The trees begin their budding process, and additional moisture in the air leads to an increase of mold spores and other allergens, he said.
Randall Rock, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said. "Allergies are a year-round experience for some, but for others, they are seasonal."
Rock said the most common symptoms were a scratchy throat, watery and itchy eyes and fatigue.
Tricia Burlin, Watkins pharmacist, said the pharmacy had a variety of medications for allergy sufferers. Burlin said over-the-counter medications and prescription
"Sorting symptoms out from an upper respiratory infection is sometimes difficult," he said. "But the sufferer can usually tell."
However, some prescription drugs, such as Claritin and Allegra, can cost as much as $2 a day. Rock said that most allergy sufferers used over-the-counter medications.
"The decongestant has a stimulant effect, and they're formulated with the purpose of counteracting the antihistamine," she said. "It can keep students awake during the night, so we suggest early dosing, like at dinnertime."
medications differed.
"The advantage of prescription antihistamines is that they don't cause drowsiness," Burlin said.
Burlin said students should be careful when combining antihistamine and decongestant medications.
Another option for allergy sufferers is to treat the sinuses directly with nasal inhalers, which cost $35 a month.
"We have nasal inhalers that are used for runny nose and breathing problems," Burlin said. "They are low-dose, local steroid inhalers."
Rock offered an alternative to medication.
"Even though the thermometer may say it's appropriate to sleep with the windows open, keep them closed," he said. "Let the cooling
Allergy remedies
Sleep with windows closed.
Limit exposure to cats and dogs.
Minimize first- and second-hand
smoke intake.
smoke inhaler. Limit outdoor activity on windy days
卷
- Limit outdoor activity on windy days.
- A doctor can prescribe non-sedating antihistamines.
- Decongestant/antihistamine combinations are available over-the-counter, but avoid use at night.
system filter the air."
Rock also cautioned allergy sufferers to avoid first- and second-hand cigarette smoke because smoke irritates the lungs and simuses.
If the precautions and medications do not deter symptoms, allergy sufferers can receive allergy shots that desensitize them to allergens. Usually the shots are used only in severe cases. Rock said.
"The shots require specific tests to know what you're allergic to," Rock said. "They teach your body to ignore what you're allergic to."
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
Library discovers heist of 372 books New Orleans book dealer finds KU library stamps, calls Watson
Almost $33,000 worth of library books were stolen from Watson Library, KU police said yesterday.
The library reported Wednesday that 372 books had been taken from the stacks sometime between May 1, 1990, and Feb. 25, 1997, police said.
Sgt. Chris Keary said that a book dealer in New Orleans had bought the books and had seen the library's stamp. The dealer then called Watson and said he had some KU books.
Keary said that the books were being sent back to the library but that the police did not know how the books had been taken.
"The dealer in New Orleans was helpful and willing to send back everything," Keary said. "We know that one person sold the books to the dealer, but we don't know if anyone sold them to the individual. We don't know how far back it may have gone."
William Crowe, dean of libraries, said pinpointing the exact date was almost impossible.
Police are still investigating the details of the theft, such as who sold the books to the dealer, who took the books from the library and when the theft took place.
"There are a lot of ways to lose a book in the library," Crowe said. "Unfortunately, it's an old problem with open-stack libraries. In practical terms, there is not anything we can do about it. We always have a constant tension between access and the potential for theft."
Crowe said that although the potential for theft was high, recovery of stolen books was easier when thieves planned to sell the books.
"A good bookseller will ask questions," he said. "Booksellers don't want stolen goods. Lots of naive thieves don't understand this."
Thefts like this are not uncommon, Crowe said. A similar heist occurred at KU about six years ago in which even more books probably were taken, he said.
People who do these don't confine themselves to one library," Crowe said. "There's always the propensity for thievery, unless we lock up all the books."
TODAY
INDEX
Opinion ...4
National News ..6
Horoscopes ..8
Classifieds ..9
Sports ..10
SUNNY
SUNNY High 71° Low 36°
All-American
See page 10
Raef LaFrentz
★
土
2
Tuesday, March 11.1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
QuickINFO
WEATHER
ON CAMPUS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
71
36
71 36
Sunny with unseasonably warm temperatures and dry conditions.
WEDNESDAY
67 35
ON CAMPUS
More warm temperatures with partly cloudy skies.
THURSDAY
32
60
32
60
32
Cooler but still comfortable, with partly cloudy conditions.
Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center with sponsor Narrative and Referent: Interdisciplinary Strategies of Reading in Literature and History at 10 a.m. today.
OAKS Nontraditional Student Organization will have a brown-bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Alcove in the Kansas Union. Contact:
Episcopal/Lutheran Campus Center will worship with Eucharist at noon today at Danforth Chapel. Contact: the Rev, Joseph T.S. Allard, 843-8202.
Office of Study Abroad will have a meeting about French study abroad at 3:30 p.m. today at 4064 Wescow Hall and a meeting about Great Britain/Ireland study abroad at 4 p.m. today at 1054 Umpongit Hall, Call 864-3742
SL Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a Health Science Division Group at 4 p.m. at Above A in the Kansas Unip. Contact Mitchell, 843-0357
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Russell Contact: The Rev. Raymond
May,843-0357.
KU Fencing Club will meet from 5 to 7
Center.
Contact John. W. Haskins, 892-261-3430.
National Association for Anorexia and Eating Disorders will sponsor a support group from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at 327 Fountain Street. Contact: Alice Calbrera, 855-6737.
KU KI Alki Club will meet at 5:30 p.m.
today. Jerry Conner, Conn.
Linda Willey, 864-124-7290
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6 p.m. at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Contact Manuel Avila, 814-8038.
KU Science Fiction and Fantasy Writer's workshop will meet from 6 to 8 p.m. at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. Contact: David-Michael艾尔, 831-1989.
Inspirational Gospel Voices will practice from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at 328 Murphy Hall. Contact: Kimberly Evans, 864-8101.
Study Abroad Club will meet at 6:30 p.m.
today at the Multicultural Resource Center, Contact: Ted Norrøvann 8643-3742
KU Yoga Club will meet from 7 to 8:30
town at the Daisy Hill Rocking
Rock.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 p.m. at the Sunflower Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Lori Hauwell, 841-5852.
AIEESEC will meet at 7:10 tonight at
Hall. Contact: Jen
Boston, 804344
Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Multicultural Resource Center. Contact: Khemarat Sushiwan, 865-5375.
Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center will sponsor The Spanish New World in the Narrative Imagination at 7:30 tonight at the Museum of Art Auditorium. Call 848-4278.
Jayhawker Campus Ministry will sponsor Deliver Us From Evi at 8 ontight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Rebecca Hupq, 749-7996.
Pre-Occupational Therapy Club will meet at 8:30 on the Regionist
COURT
Continued from Page 1A
The groups that the students opposed in the Southworth v. Grebe case included the Campus Women's Center; the Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Center; the UW-Greens, an international issues-advocacy group; and the Wisconsin Public Interest Research Group, a local issues-advocacy group founded by Rahb Nader.
The Campus Women's and Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Centers are not UW offices — they are private groups with office space in the union, similar to space groups receive at KU's Organizations and Activities Center.
Huffman said student fees paid to
student governments were analogous to taxes paid to the government.
"It seems to me that students paying fees to their elected representatives is not that much different from citizens paying fees to their elected representatives," Huffman said.
But Jordan Lorence, Southworth's attorney, said that financing services and financing advocacy were distinct issues.
"This right only extends to the advocacy of others, so people who say they object to funding the army—the army doesn't advocate," Lorence said. "The other thing is that taxes are made for revenue raising. The university doesn't implement fees to raise revenue, they're raising money to pass on to these student groups. If the University of Kansas allowed students to opt out and the student fees went down to zero, the University would still operate."
Rick Levy, professor of law, said that precedents for such decisions had been set, mostly in union cases relating to financing advocacy campaigns.
"There is some precedent for the idea that you can't be compelled to support speech that you don't agree with, but it's not clear that you could apply that to this case," Levy said. "A group has less standing to complain about funding of a particular viewpoint if all viewpoints are being funded."
Lorence said that egalitarian financing mechanisms existed at UW-Madison, but that was not what his clients sought.
TUESDAY PRIMETIME
MARCH 11, 1997
© 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 Blockhunter Entertainment Awards (In Stereo Live) ℮ Hercules: Legendary Jmyjs. Mad Abo. You Bzzz Cops ℮ LAPD
WDAF 4 "Blue Chige" ★★! (1994, Drama) Nick Note, (In Stereo) News ℮ News ℮ H. Patrol Cheers ℮ Extra ℮
KCTV 5 Promised Land "The Motel" "Something Borrowed, Something Blue" (1997, Drama) News ℮ Late Show R (In Stereo) Seinfeld ℮
KS06 6(30) Lawrence City Commission Meeting (Live) Lawrence News Plus
KCPT 8 Royal Years John Teish: The Avalon Concert (In Stereo) Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
KSNT 4 Mad Abo. You Something So Frasier ℮ Caroline Dateline (In Stereo) News Tonight Show (In Stereo) Late Night ℮
KBMC 8 Rosanne Ellen (R) Home Imp. Spin City ℮ Eight Weeks to Optimum Health (In Stereo) News Roseanne Rooseanne ℮ M*A*S™ KTWU 1 Spontaneous Healing (In Stereo) People-Here Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
WEBW 10 Promised Land "The Motel" "Something Borrowed, Something Blue" (1997, Drama) News Late Show R (In Stereo) Late Late ℮
KTKA 1 Roseanne Ellen (R) Home Imp. Spin City ℮ Practice "Pad I" (In Stereo) News Seinfeld ℮ Married... Nightline ℮
CABLE STATIONS
A&E 2 Biography: Sonja Henie "Inspector Morse: Greens Bears Gift" (1994) John Thaw Law & Order "Life Choice" Biography: Sonja Henie
CNBC 4 Equal Time Hardball Rivera Live Late Night (In Stereo) Charles Grodin Rivera Live ℮
CNN 4 Newt Press Burden-Proof Larry King Live Today Sports Illus. Moneyline NowtShowbiz
COM 1 1 Night Stand 1 Night Stand Comedy Club All-Stars II (R) Jackpot, Dream On Daily Show Comic Relief Tick Sat. Night
COURT 1 Prime Time Justice Trial Story: Parents on Trial Cochran & Grace Prime Time Justice (R) Trial Story (R)
CSPAM 2 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
DISC 4 Wild Discovery: Walbers Mystery Univ., World-Word Chopper Power: Vietnam Wild Discovery: Walbers Mystery Univ., World-Word ESPN 11 NCAA Legends of Hockey Legends of Hockey Baseball Sportscenter Madness Auto Racing
HIST 5 Newsreels to Nightly News Great Ships (R) History Undercover Year by Year '87' (R) Newsreels to Nightly News
LFE 1 Unsolved Mysteries "No One Would Listen" ★★! (1992) Michelle Lee Living Mysteries Unsolved Mysteries
MTV 3 Prime Time (In Stereo) Silvercalf Concert Buzzkill World Tour Singled Out Loveline (In Stereo) Altern. Nation
SCFI 1 Tekwar (In Stereo) Forever Knight "Father's Day" VR.5 "Control Freak" Time Trax "Little Boy Lost" Tekwar (R) (In Stereo) Tekwar (R) (In Stereo)
TLC 2 Treasures America Rogues Gallery Treasures America Rogues Gallery
TNT 1 NBA篮球: Houston Rockets at San Antonio Spurs (Live) Inside-NBA "The Star Chamber" ★★! (1983, Drama) Michael Douglas.
USA 2 Murder, She Wrote Boxing: Domnick Carter vs. Rocky Gannon (Live) Wings Wings Silik Stalkings "Night Games"
VHJ 5 Donny Partridge Partridge Partridge Partridge Partridge New Yorks Rock'n'Eve
WGN 1 "Beilweild" ★★! (1991, Comedy) Emma Samsons (In Stereo) News (In Stereo) Wiseguy (In Stereo) In the Heat of the Night
WTBS 1 "Dick Tracy" ★★! (1990, Adventure) Warren Beauty "Big Treble in Little China" ★★! (1986) Kurt Russell.
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 10 "Down Periscope" ★★! (1996) PG-13 Comedy Hour: R. Dangferal "Miss Evers' Boys" ★★! (1997, Drama) Afre Woodard Comedy Jam
MAX 1 "Patriot Game" ★★! (1992) Suspense Harrison Ford. R" ★★! "Sometimes They Come Back... Again" R Ericio Confessions "Getaway"
SHOW 2 Poltergeist Poltergeist: The Legacy "Showfirm Murders" (1996) Mari Ford. R" Red Shoe Situations "Cellblock Sisters"
ETCETERA
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Tuesday, March 11, 1997
3
Candidates share stances at forum
By Paul Eakins Kansan staff writer
Candidates for the Lawrence City Commission gave their views about issues like recreation centers, city growth and tax abatements last night during a forum at City Hall.
In their opening statements, candidates gave their qualifications and addressed the issues that were most important to them in their campaigns.
Jo Andersen, incumbent commissioner and a kitchen designer, focused on the work she had done as a commissioner and mayor. She said her time in office had helped improve the infrastructure, begin Douglas County Area Transit and create more recreation centers and playing fields.
A public bus system was the main concern for candidate Alan Black, who said his qualifications were being a member on various urban planning committees and being an urban planning professor at the University of Kansas.
"I want to push for expanded public transportation here." he said.
Lisa Blair, administrator of Downtown Lawrence Inc. said she wanted to create better community planning and stop growth that outpatched Lawrence's financial base.
"Growth is not bad," she said, "but it does not nav for itself."
She also said neighborhood improvements and preservation were important.
Born and raised in Lawrence, retire Erv Hodges said his experience in making million-dollar deals at Grinnell Corporation in Kansas City, Mo., would help him handle the city's financial situation.
"Fiscal responsibility will be a key component." he said.
he said Lawrence would remain strong if the government and the people worked together.
Marty Kennedy, also a lifelong Lawrence resident and co-manager of Kennedy Glass Inc., said he wanted to keep neighborhoods strong and develop them as the city grows.
Bob Moody, incumbent commissioner and advertising representative for the Trading Post, said that he had learned a great deal about the city during his term and that listening well to the people had led to sound public decisions.
The candidates are running for three open spots on the five-member City Commission, and elections will be held on April 1.
Election turnout low
By Paul Eakins
Kansan staff writer
The City Commission and School Board elections are rapidly approaching, but many KU students seem to be oblivious to them.
Some students may not vote because of their indifference to the issues. Others may not vote because, as non-residents at the University of Kansas, they think they cannot vote in local elections. They're wrong.
Any person who lives in Lawrence, whether or not they are a permanent resident, may register and vote, said Jo Dalquest, deputy county clerk.
"All you need is an address," she said.
Registering in Lawrence is fairly simple because it takes only a few minutes and there are 10 registering locations.
Dalquest said voter turnout among KU students usually was low.
A person cannot be registered in two places, though. When registering in Lawrence, students must remove their registration from their hometowns by filling out a form.
Allen Field House was a polling place which served mainly students, including those in the Daisy Hill residence halls, but the county removed it for city and county elections because less than 25 people usually voted there. Dalauget said.
"It's not economically feasible to pay someone to sit there for 12 hours for only 25 people to come in and vote." she said.
As a result of the turnout, students rarely play a large role in election results. However, KU students have the potential to be a factor.
According to the Office of Institutional Research and Planning, of the 23,230 people
Registration Outposts
Douglas County Clerk's Office, 1100 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence City Clerk's Office, 6 E. Sixth St.
Independence Inc., 1910 Haskell Ave.
Kindergarten, 233 Greetling Drive
Douglas County Health Department, 336 Missouri St.
Kansas Veterans Commission, 745
Vermont St.
Social and Rehabilitation Services, 1901 Delaware St.
Audio Reader Network, 1120 W. 11th St.
St.
Cottonwood. Inc.. 2801 W. 31st St.
- Love Garden Sounds, 936 1/2 Massachusetts St.
who attend the University at the Lawrence campus, 92.5 percent of them live in Lawrence and are potential voters.
Comparing this to the current number of registered voters — 52,974 and the number of those who voted in the primary election in February — 10,450 - KU students could be a significant factor in the elections. Dalquest said.
Allan Cigler, professor of political science, said students did not vote because they believed their lives were not affected by the local government's work.
"Most students don't believe that those decisions are salient in their lives," Cigler said.
Cigler said students often considered other issues in their lives to be more important.
Students who want to register to vote have until March 17. The general election is April 1.
A child climbs on a wheelbarrow.
Hoop dreaming
GR Gordon-Ross / KANSAN
Lawrence resident Adrian Twombley holsts his 23-month-old son Austen up to the basket as Lawrence resident Norris Hunter awalts the rebound.
Fraternity seeks good standing
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
The national fraternity of Zeta Beta Tau suspended the KU chapter last fall
In an effort to reorganize its chapter after an alleged hazing incident last fall, Zeta Beta Tau passed a resolution designed to keep the fraternity in good standing.
Andy Strauss, president of Zeta Beta Tau and Minneapolis, Minn., sophomore, said that during the last four months, chapter members have reevaluated the purpose of their chapter.
"We have learned from the mistake in the past," Strauss said. "We will start everything over, reorganize everything and establish moral values in the chapter."
In the resolution, Zeta Beta Tau made it clear that the fraternity members would conform to a risk management policy and would promote academic excellence. The chapter also reaffirmed the no-pledging policy that the national Zeta Beta Tau fraternity established in 1989, which allows new members to be initiated into the fraternity after 72 hours.
after an alleged hazing incident.
The chapter now has only 13 members. Bill Nelson, associate director of the Organizations and Activities Center, said the chapter's membership dropped partly because some members refused to do the community service required by the national fraternity for an incident involving improper behavior during sorority rush.
Since then, new executive board members have been appointed, Strauss said.
Strauss said that before the alleged hazing incident, some chapter members did not know how to eliminate the potential of hazing.
David Eichler, assistant chapter adviser for Zeta Beta Tau, said that because of the reduced size of the chapter, the members did not reside in the former address, 1942 Stewart Ave.
He said that a new risk management chairman had been appointed recently, which Straus hopes will reduce the potential for hazing.
"For the past seven years, nobody taught us how to run the chapter," Strauss said. "One thing we want to emphasize is to make sure everyone knows what's going on."
"We have learned from the mistake in the past."
Zeta Beta Tau president
Brett Herback, director of chapter development at the national fraternity, was sent to the University to educate the chapter's remaining members about the basic policies of Zeta Beta Tau. Strauss said.
Herback said that because most members in the chapter were freshmen, he would have to teach them how to run the chapter.
Jordan Strauss, Riverwood, Ill., freshman, said the resolution would lead the chapter in the right direction.
"The 13 guys left in the house are all a good group of people," Strauss said. "People are getting confused that there is no ZBT, but there is ZBT. We have a no-pledging policy, and we aren't going to have any hazing."
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Learn from experts in the retail clothing industry about the proper attire for a job interview. A style show of men's and women's suits will be presented by The Executive Suite from the Lawrence Riverfront Mall.
HOW TO DRESS FOR SUCCESS
Tues. March 11, 1997 7:00 p.m.
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Sponsored by the University Placement Center, 110 Burge
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
CRAIG LANG, Editor MARK OZIMER, Business manager
SUSANNA LOOP, Managing editor DENNIS HAUFF, Retail sales manager
KIMBERLY CRAFTREE, Editorial editor JUSTIN KNUPP, Technology coordinator
TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser JAY STEINER, Sales and marketing adviser
Tuesday, March 11, 1997
I'M SORRY, I'M JUST NOT FEELING THE LOVE HERE . . . NEXT!
MARRIAGE COUNSELL
MB
Matt Breidenthal / KANSAN
Editorials
Forced premarital counseling intrusive, invasion of privacy
College is a time to prepare for the future by getting ready for a job. For some students, preparing for the future includes meeting the person they will marry. But for those who plan to get married in Missouri, Michigan, Arizona or Florida, a test may be required first.
That's because legislators in these states want to make sure that your first marriage is also your last. The Show-Me state and others are enacting legislation that would require couples to show the state, through an approved marriage counselor, that they are truly compatible.
This is in response to the country's high divorce rate and all of the factors that follow such a split. Two such factors are the expense states must incur in tracking down deadbeat parents to pay child support and in supporting some newly single parents through welfare and Medicaid.
Some Missouri legislators want to make sure your first marriage is your last.
But welfare has already been cut, keeping the state from expending more on these people. Also, a large number of deadbeat parents were never married to their partners in the first place, so this bill would likely have little effect.
Besides that, this bill represents an invasion of privacy. Although most people would agree that the divorce rate is much too high, this does not mean that it is the state's job to correct the problem.
Marriage is a private institution, a covenant between two people who, ideally, plan to spend the rest of their lives together. For many couples, premarital
counseling could be beneficial. However, a state law to that effect is likely to lower people's receptiveness to any advice simply because it is perceived as being an intrusive formality. Although the proposed Missouri law would only require couples who didn't get the counselor's approval to wait 60 days to be married, the next step could be an outright ban on non-sanctioned partnerships.
If the Missouri law passes, other states are likely to follow suit, and some have. This level of intrusiveness is a threat to our rights to privacy. Because counselors have to be approved by the state, this bill would practically amount to having a state inspector question your love and commitment. And like some Missouri automobile inspectors, who will pass any car for enough money, this could ultimately be a field for corruption.
MEREDITH TOENJES FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
New Army standard is not solution
The U. S. Army is going to make more people eligible to be all they can be. But why?
Last week, the Army announced that it would allow people to enlist who have not received their high school diplomas. The number of people allowed to be in the Army without diplomas has risen from 5 percent to 10 percent, according to the Associated Press.
But recent problems the Army has faced need to be corrected before the standards to join are lowered.
At face value, this may seem like a good policy. Without a diploma, finding a stable job in the United States is next to impossible. These new eligibility terms could allow people who were not able to graduate from high school for whatever reason to have a second chance at employment. Experience in the Army then could help these people
The Army has other problems to solve before it lowers its criteria.
to either finish their education or find better employment opportunities, which may fit their qualifications.
But the Army doesn't seem to be doing this simply for the sake of giving more people job opportunities.
Two main issues that have gained considerable attention in the media, sexual harassment and the government's refusal to diagnose illnesses suffered by Gulf War veterans, are fueling the lowering of standards for recruitment.
Probably no one thinks that working in the Army is going to be a safe job without possibility of danger. But no one applies for a job to be sexually harassed, and no one wants to be lied to about what may be causing their illnesses.
The attractiveness of joining also is decreasing for women who don't want to be sexually harassed and people who are afraid of not knowing exactly what
dangers they will be exposed to.
If the Army truly wants to gain more recruits, severe problems in the organization need to be corrected. On the chance that the sexual harassment and other allegations happen to be false, a skeptical public needs to be convinced of their nonexistence.
Giving more people the opportunity for work is always a good thing. But if the working environment is unstable, then those open jobs aren't going to be filled.
But a simple boost in the amount of people who can be hired seems like a weak marketing ploy.
KANSAN STAFF
LATINA SULLIVAN... Associate Editorial
KRISTIE BLASI... News
NOVELDA SOMMERS... News
LESLEY TAYLOR... News
AMANDA TRAUGHBER... News
TARA TRENARY... News
DAVID TESKA... Online
SPENCER DUNCAN... Sports
GINA THORNBURG... Associate Sports
BRADLEY BROOKS... Campus
LINDEY HENRY... Campus
DAVE BRETTENSTEIN... Features
PAM DISIMMAN... Photo
TYLER WIRKEN... Photo
BRYAN VOLK... Design
ANDY ROHRBACK... Graphics
ANDREA ALBRIGHT... Wire
LIZ MUSSER... Special sections
AERICA VAZEY... News clerk
IAN RITTER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NEWS EDITORS
ADVERTISING MANAGERS
ADVERTISING MANAGERS
HEATHER VALLER . Assistant retail
JULIE PEDLAR . Campus
DANA CENTENO . Regional
ANNETTE HOVER . National
BRIAN PAGEL . Marketing
SARAH SCHERWINSKI . Internet
DARCI MCLAIN . Production
DENA PISCOTTE . Production
ALISON PERCE . Special sections
SARA ROSE . Creative
DANA LAUVETZ . Public relations
BRIAN LEFEVRE . Classified
RACHEL RUBIN . Assistant classified
BRIDGET COLLYER . Zone
JULIE DEWITT . Zone
CHRIS HAGHIKIAN . Zone
LIZ HESS . Zone
ANTHONY MIGLIAZCO . Zone
MARIA CRIST . Senior account executive
Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns? Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut or lengthen all submissions. For any questions, call Kimberly Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (islulvann@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Columns
College offers training useful for politicians
In his well-known essay, Robert Fulgrum contends that the basic tenets of peaceful human civilization — don't hit people, for example — are learned in our first year of school.
know to live,I learned
Fulgrum says all I needed to knn in kindergarten. But I've found that all I needed to know about politics. I've learned in college.
ANDY
OBERMUELLER
College is a great training ground for aspiring politicians, where the skills requisite to a successful political career are subtly pounded into your brain. Think back to your first college class and how hard you worked, perhaps even for a meager grade. Then look back to the last class you took and compare
them. You probably spent more time on the first class. This is the first rule of politics: never do more work than is absolutely necessary. This isn't efficiency. It is indulgence, and it abounds in academia.
In college you also learn to use more words than needed to express what you want to say. As William Jennings Bryan, an 1881 alumnus of the University of Illinois, once said, "Do not compute the totality of your poultry population until all the manifestations of incubation have been entirely completed." I'll bet the English faculty loved him. Well, you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of idiocev.
If you use more words than necessary, it is hard for others to understand you. Thus, while people are trying to decode what you said, you have moved on to your next stream of drivel, and the result is total confusion. People tend to think that if they don't understand something, the fault is theirs. This is the second rule of politics: all blame, fault and responsibility must be shifted to someone else.
Good politicians, like academics, also use meaningless studies to make an obvious point. This practice refines the shift strategy to "qualified shifting." If you move the responsibility to an expert, say someone who holds a doctorate, then the likelihood that you will ever be doubted is "statistically insignificant," a favorite term of academics and politicians.
I discovered the value of qualified shifting when, as a sophomore, I realized the awesome power of the Ph.D. A distinguished professor was telling my class about the trouble he had pressing the small buttons on his watch to set it to daylight savings time. He said he solved the problem by buying another watch exactly like it, setting one of them an hour faster and alternating between the two. "When you have a Ph.D," he said, "you can figure these things out." It was a turning point in my educational career.
But at some point, even well-trained politicians run into situations where these normal obfuscations won't work. Here, the appropriate dodge strategy is one students see daily in class: the overly broad question or overly broad answer.
When discussion lulls, good politicians will ask a question that makes whomever has been speaking start again. Then the politician looks for other details to nitpick or simply nods as if everything is now perfectly clear. The speaker will then feel redeemed that he has explained it successfully and will not ask more questions to further confuse them.
If you are directly asked a question, you give an overly broad answer. The first thing you do here is praise the question. Because it doesn't take much of your brain to speak, you briefly task your cerebrum and begin to devise a usable answer. Next you can either broaden the issue into a topic you actually know something about or admit ignorance in the name of truth. "Well," you would say when employing the latter strategy, "I don't know what that means."
"That" could mean farm subsidies or population growth models. Add a touch of superficial profundness. And while they are thinking their question is stupid, and this corollary variable statement: "What is 'that' anyway?" This sounds like you not only know what you are talking about, but it also appears that you are about to forage in that direction and expose the questioner's own ignorance (see, shifting). The questioner simply will shrug off the question, and another possible discovery of your absysmal ignorance will be avoided.
And that, I submit, is the point of both college and politics.
Andy Obermueller is a Liberal, Kan., junior in journalism.
Community spirit makes it hard not to love'Hawks
I've made an observation: Basketball is an infectious most.
ious sport.
This is so a challenge I have only a passing nod to the Super Bowl, can become such an enthusiastic fan.
It has to be if someone like me, who usually gives
OK, I admit, it helps to have the No.1 team in the nation.
But it's not just the game. It's the atmosphere. The sense of spirit within the community is amazing. As an outsider, I can say that without bias. Never before have I been in a place where practically everyone in the community holds such admiration for a team. And the
ELENA
MACALUSO
that is something for Lawrence to be proud of.
In a world where we don't know our neighbors and are standoffish to strangers lest they mean to do us harm, this invokes a warm feeling.
Community spirit is everywhere. And it's not just for Kansas basketball, but for all the University's athletic teams. Everywhere I am surrounded by Jayhawks. I see the Jayhawk mascot while eating at Molly McGee's and while working out at Total Fitness Athletic Center. I've seen Jayhawk picture frames, Jayhawk-shaped pasta, even Jayhawk Christmas decorations. Commerce Bank offers checks with the Jayhawk logo. I see people, young and old, students and non-students, donning Jayhawk apparel and talking Jayhawk shop talk.
However, basketball draws the most devotion.
However, basketball draws the most devotion. Students plan study breaks around games. Employees gather around TV sets during lunch breaks. Some people simply tune in to the radio while they continue to work. The Lazer, Lawrence's very own 105.9 FM, is one of two radio stations making sure that's possible.
Applebee's Neighborhood Grill & Bar, 2520 Iowa St., reserves a spot for Roy Williams when he does his radio show there. People come early just for the show. Non-smokers sit in smoking sections, and non-drinkers sit at the bar. All want to hear the man whom many believe is responsible for the Jayhawks' success.
Of course, Coach Williams and the team, from starters to walk-ons, merit this enthusiasm. Williams' genuine concern for his team comes through. And the players' sportsmanship attitudes are to be commended.
The spirit of it all is transferred to everyone, even passing visitors. I find myself at games, grimacing about lost shots and clapping spasmodically about good plays. And this enthusiasm carries over into televised games, especially when watching it with other fans.
And let's face it, the Jayhawks are a conversation piece for me, dare I say a bragging right. Whenever I mention that I attend the University of Kansas to a guy friend back home, nine out of 10 times the first thing he says is about basketball. Never mind that the University has a top-ranked journalism program; as far as these guys are concerned, I could be getting my masters in underwater basket weaving. I am attending a school with the top-ranked basketball team in the nation.
To be honest, had I come all the way to Kansas and not attended a basketball game, I'd be laughed right out of California by every guy I've ever known
So what does this California transplant have to say to the Jayhawks as they venture into March Madness?
In the words of a local Bagel and Bagel advertisement, "Schmear 'em Hawksi!"
Elena Maculuso is a San Francisco graduate student in Journalism.
Letters
Ebonics lecturer didn't support his argument
The debate about how Ebonics should be treated in schools hinges somewhat on whether it is recognized as a language. Arguments on both sides have served more to confuse than to clarify, and Robert Williams' lecture, *Ebonics: Myths, Realities and Science*, on Feb. 10 did nothing for clarification. Those in search of reason left the lecture hall disappointed.
Williams' main argument for Ebonics amounted to the following: "The purpose of language is communication; Ebonics communicates; therefore, Ebonics is a language."
Unfortunately, Williams never took a course in basic logic. His argument is just as implausible as the following: The purpose of a car is transportation; legs transport; therefore, legs constitute a car. This exemplifies the fallacy of undistributed middle.
Legs do not constitute a car, but
Next, Williams tied Ebonics to African roots. West African languages, he said, do not employ formulated double-consonant sounds. Slight differences in phonetics, however, hardly constitute the basis for a separate language, especially considering how much more important syntax and semantics are to language, both overwhelmingly retained by overwhelmingly retained by Ebonics from standard English. Yet Ebonics advocates resist its classification as a dialect or slang.
Williams offered an example of Ebonics: "The hawk ain't jivin' outside," meaning "The wind chill is cold outside." However, that phrase demonstrates sufficient deviation from yet important retention of elements
a means of transportation. Similarly, Williams' argument merely asserts the obvious that Ebonics is a means of communication — no more, no less. The most amazing aspect of his defective argument, however, was not that he used it but that the audience appeared to accept it.
The under-educated in many countries routinely commit the same errors in speech that characterize Ebonics. Those include the misuse of subject-object pronouns, shortening of words and sentences and incorrect verb conjugation. It is irresponsible on Williams' evidence to classify Ebonics as a language, for the reasons that the under-educated in many countries are criticized, namely, the misuse of their standard language.
of standard English, syntax and semantics, both important to dialect. Furthermore, it involves the humorous and extensive use of metaphor that characterize slang.
I left the lecture hall still waiting to hear a sensible argument for Ebonics, one based in reason, not advocacy. For from advocacy springs zealotry, and from zealots we can hardly expect truth. I look forward to that argument — and to further clarification.
1
J. Ramon Ziadie Miami graduate student
1
I
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 11. 1997
5
Public transportation to be focus of discussion panel
Speakers to field questions about busing and parking
By Dave Morantz
Kansan staff writer
Citywide busing, a campus shuttle system, parking improvements, a coordinated transportation system. If you have questions about what it all means, you are not alone.
The Citizens Coalition for Public Transportation, a Lawrence
group concerned about the future of public transportation, is holding an informational meeting for KU students, staff, faculty and Lawrence residents at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the auditorium in the lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
University planning and transportation officials will join in a discussion panel with a city transportation planner. The panel will field questions from the public.
The Kaw Valley chapter of the Older Women's League, the Lawrence Coalition for Social Justice, The League of Women
Voters of Douglas County and the Lawrence-Douglas County Advocacy Council on Aging will sponsor the meeting.
Hilda Enoch, Lawrence resident and moderator of the meeting, said the groups had decided to hold the meeting because they thought they had been left in the dark by the city about the future of public transportation.
"It's a big bone of contention whether to do it or not and how much money to spend on it," she said. "We don't know where it's at or why it's not on the table being discussed with great enthusiasm."
Considering the April 1 City Commission election, Enoch said the direction of public transportation could change drastically.
Tom Waechter, planning coordinator for design and construction present the University's campus access plan at the meeting.
"We feel a real urgency because the city elections will either turn up the people who want to implement a plan or people who just want business as usual," she said.
"I think to the extent that there are issues that we can coordinate on, it will be an effective meeting," he said. "You never know what issues the public will bring into it."
Emily Taylor center celebrates women's history,right to vote
Program honors suffrage activists
By Umut Bayramoglu
Kansan staff writer
U. S. women received the right to vote in 1920, but whether the voting power of women is fully recognized.still is a hot debate for some people.
As a part of the Women's History Month celebration, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will present Do We Take Women's Right to Vote For Granted? at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
Rachel Lee, graduate assistant at the resource center, said the center used to celebrate Susan
Women's HISTORY MONTH
B. Anthony's birthday in February to honor the women's suffrage movement.
"We decided that we need to recognize the movement as a whole and other women involved in it," she said.
Lee said that the program would focus on the history behind the women's suffrage movement and how women formed the coalition that helped pass the 19th Amendment.
"This program is just another effort to focus on the history of women neglected in even college classes," she said.
Lee said that the purpose of women's history month events was to encourage students to learn and ask questions about current and historical issues
related to women.
"Young women today have more rights than ever before," she said. "But there is still room for improvement."
"I don't think that women are represented enough in the political scene," she said.
Sylvia Stone, administrative assistant for the women's studies program, said that women's political power still faced some problems.
Stone said that women's place in politics relates to other women's issues such as equal representation and pay in the workplace and sharing childcare and child support.
"Only after the achievement of these goals can women reach true equality to men in society," she said.
Connie Berg, KU Empowerment Action Coalition facilitator, said that the problem women face in politics was not
Women's History Month Events
Do We Take Women's Right to Vote For Granted? 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union
Mother/Daughter Relationships 7 p.m. March 18 at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union
International Women Students Reflect On Their Experience: 7 p.m. March 19 at the English Room in the Kansas Union
the right to vote being taken for granted but the system itself.
"When you have a system that is not representative, being able to vote is not sufficient to have an impact on it," she said.
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Flooding continues to ravage towns
People return home to decay and death around Ohio River
EVANSVILLE, Ind. — People began returning to their muck-filled homes yesterday to see what disaster the flooding Ohio River had wrought.
The Associated Press
As the dangerous crest of the Ohio River moved toward well-protected Evansville and the farming communities of western Kentucky, some of the 192 people who evacuated this community last week returned for the first time.
weather system that brought deadly tornadoes to Arkansas and Mississippi. The twisters and high water in West Virginia, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee have killed 59 people since March 1.
They were only allowed to look, not moveback in.
The flooding began with a violent
The Federal Emergency Management Agency sent employees into the hardest-hit areas. Damage is expected to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
The crest of the Ohio River, at its highest level in 33 years, headed for Evansville, the biggest city affected by flooding since Louisville last week. City workers checked the city's 25-mile levee eight times a day for leaks and to measure the river's depth.
Paducah, Ky, the next largest city expecting the crest, is protected by a floodwall. The river is expected to reach its highest point there on Friday. Seventy homes have been evacuated.
Upstream, rescues continued searching for the bodies of two men whose canoe capsized near Owensboro. Kv.
Authorities in Owen County, Ky. finally freed the bodies of a couple from a car in which they drowned last weekend. Allen and Marilyn Wilson were swept off a highway by the raging Kentucky River.
Volunteers and emergency crews used sandbags to plug holes in the main levee at Old Shawneetown, Ill., where the Ohio had risen nearly two feet and is expected to crest at 53.8 feet Friday morning.
A few miles down the river, Smithland, Ky., was surrounded by waist-high water that is expected to rise until Friday.
Beer and soda cans, rotten food and dead fish added to the stench of dirty river water in Aurora, downriver from
Evansville, Ind.
AREA OF
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Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
Cincinnati, where members of the Aurora Eagles Lodge had tears in their eyes as they began to clean up.
Authorities in Hanover Beach began 24-hour patrols amid reports of scattered looting by people using boats to reach evacuated homes.
Job seeker may go from welfare to White House
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton said yesterday he wanted to hire someone off welfare as a White House employee — if there's a vacancy.
Speaking during a news conference with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Clinton said the
possibility of hiring a former welfare recipient at the White House depended on whether vacancies were available, and what those vacant positions were.
PETER J. DENNIS
Bill Clinton
"I'd like to
we see us set an example, if we have a chance to do so." Clinton said.
During the weekend, Clinton ordered all federal agencies to spend the next 30 days determining how they can hire people who are laying welfare rolls under the new welfare law. He noted that the federal government — which hired 58,000 people last year — is the nation's largest employer.
Although the number of jobs in the federal government has shrunk by 285,000 positions in recent years, Clinton said there are still enough vacancies every year that we can make a substantial contribution to moving people from welfare to work.
WASHINGTON — In a slap at the FBI, President Bill Clinton said yesterday that he should have been alerted when the bureau told national security officials at the White House that the Chinese government might try to influence U.S. elections.
FBI failed to inform, Clinton says
Indeed, FBI agents had briefed at least one member of Congress about the alleged plot as long ago as 1991 during the Bush administration, a congresswoman said.
Declaring that he should have been informed, Clinton said, "It didn't happen. It should have happened. It was a mistake. The president should know."
The withholding of information from Clinton seemed even stranger in the wake of revelations that the FBI gave classified briefings — to members of Clinton's National Security Council staff last year and to a member of Congress five years earlier — warning that China was trying to influence members of Congress with campaign contributions.
The FBI declined to comment about the issue.
Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said that FBI agents approached her in late 1991 and early 1992 with a caution that China was going to attempt to get funds into U.S. campaigns.
Speaking at a Capitol Hill news conference, Pelosi said she heard nothing more about the issue until last June, when the FBI again came to her with similar warnings.
Six months before the 1996 election, the FBI briefed two officials at
the White House National Security Council that China might channel money to congressional races.
The Associated Press
In an unusual twist, the FBI instructed the officials to keep the information to themselves, secret even from their White House bosses and the president.
A senior law enforcement official said, "There is no factual reason why the FBI could not have briefed top White House officials about any foreign effort aimed at congressional campaigns. There's no allegation about White House misconduct."
The president ordered his top lawyer, Charles F.C. Ruff, and his national security adviser, Sandy Berger, to find out why the FBI insisted that the White House briefing be kept confidential.
Gangsta war may be for real
Two rappers died in similar shootings
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Industry leaders long tried to dismiss a simmering feud between West Coast rapper Tupac Shakur and his East Coast counterpart The Notorious B.I.G. as just an overblown publicity stunt.
Now both are dead, victims of almost identical drive-by shootings
No arrests have been made in the September shooting of Shakur, 25. The Notorious B.I.G.'s killing Sunday morning also showed little promise of a quick arrest.
six months apart, leaving fans and investigators wondering if the coastal rivalry is more than an act.
The Notorious B.I.G., whose real name was Christopher Wallace, had just left a party celebrating the Soul Train Awards when he was shot by someone in a passing car as he sat in a parked GMC Suburban. The 24-year-old was pronounced dead at a hospital.
Las Vegas police officials said that they had no indication that the two shootings were related.
Some have said the artists were victims of gang violence, while others say the deaths were the culmination of a growing East Coast-West Coast rivalry that typifies the violence of so-called gangsta rap.
"I think that it's time that the authorities got serious about recognizing that the East Coast-West Coast thing is dangerous, and it's legitimate," said Don Cornelius, creator and executive producer of television's Soul Train music show.
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Tuesday, March 11, 1997
7
Albanian rebels beef up firepower
Jet fighters, guns stolen from army
The Associated Press
TIRANA, Albania — Rebels in southern Albania seized more territory yesterday, looting assault rifles, heavy machine guns and MIG fighter planes from government bases as police and army units fled north.
Ih Kucova, 75 miles south of Tirana, the capital, rebels towed three Chinese-made MiGs off the tarmac of Albania's largest military air base — now abandoned — to hide them from government forces.
A shopkeeper pleaded for people to put down their guns, but they answered by firing Kalashnikovs into the air. Violence in the town injured eight people, the Health Ministry said.
Security forces withdrew 25 miles north to the town of Lushinha.
In Trana, President Sall Berisha met with opposition leaders to discuss the composition of a new coalition government, which would run the country before elections held by June. Opposition politicians, however, do not control the armed civilians, who have said they would accept nothing less than Berisha's resignation.
Berisha agreed to the election and the new government in an attempt to quell the rebellion, which was sparked by public rage about high-risk investment schemes in which nearly every Albanian family lost money.
Many blame the government for not warning people away from the pyramid schemes, and some claim that the government profited from the funds.
Berisha and the Socialist opposition agreed yesterday that the new government would have a prime minister from Berisha's Democratic Party and a deputy prime minister from the opposition, the state news agency reported. Other posts would be shared evenly between the two sides.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns welcomed the agreement.
But as politicians debated, the insurrection in the south grew.
"We now strongly urge all parties in Albania to implement this agreement, to implement the amnesty, the cease-fire, and to work toward a formation of the new government," he said yesterday.
State TV reported unrest in Gramsh, 60 miles south of Tirana. There were unconfirmed reports of two dead there. Hurma Rredhi, a local reporter in Fieri, just south of Gramsh, said that the police and armed supporters of Berisha's ruling Democratic Party had fled.
In Permet, farther south, residents looted an artillery brigade yesterday after more than 2,000 soldiers switched sides and let civilians into the base.
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In New York, Macedonian officials asked the United Nations to suspend plans to cut its peacekeeping force there because of the unrest in neighboring Albania. The force includes 500 U.S. troops.
The 1,100-member peacekeeping force was sent to Macedonia in 1992 to prevent fighting in Bosnia from spreading there. In November, the Security Council decided to keep the peacekeepers in Macedonia for another six months.
Clinton fears delays in Israeli peace talks
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton intensified his criticism of Israel yesterday for deciding to build 6,500 new Jewish homes in Jerusalem and said that negotiations about the city's future probably would be delayed.
But Clinton urged the Palestinians, who want to make Jerusalem the capital of a state carved out of Israeli-held land, to hold their fire. Speaking as Palestinians clashed with Israeli forces on the West Bank, Clinton said they wind up losing every time they resort to violence.
"They have made dramatic progress in self-government," Clinton said at a joint White House news conference with visiting Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. "We are urging always on the Israelis more opportunities to let them progress."
Clinton said the decision did not build confidence as the two sides prepared for negotiations about the future of the city, borders, refugees and other touchy issues.
Last week Clinton criticized the decision by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to build the new Jewish housing units in Jerusalem, which he vows to retain as Israel's eternal and undivided capital.
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Jerusalem Amman
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ISRAEL
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Yesterday Clinton was more explicit in his objections. He said that ownership of the land on which Netanyahu intended to build was disputed and that the decision was perceived by the Arabs as illegal.
The result, he said, was that the Saturday deadline for beginning negotiations may not be met.
"When the parties get together and negotiate in good faith, good things happen," Clinton said. "When they attempt to preclude the process of negotiations, or pre-empt it, or are insensitive to the needs of the people ... it becomes more difficult to make peace."
Trial of accused torturers begins
Bosnian prison camp officers are charged
The Associated Press
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Shifting uneasily in their seats, three Muslims and a Croat heard a war crimes prosecutor describe yesterday how the four men allegedly raped, tortured and murdered Bosnian Serbs.
The four on trial, Zejil Daletic, 48, Esad Landz, 24, Hazim Delic, 32, and Zdravko Mucic, 41, rolled their eyes, fiddled with pencils and seemed bored as prosecutor Eric Ostberg opened the trial before the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal.
Serbs held for months at the Celebici camp in Muslim-controlled central Bosnia were murdered, tortured, raped and beaten by prison guards and by outside persons who were permitted into the camp, Ostberg said in his opening statement.
About 500 Serbs, most of them civilians, were kept in the camp.
Imprisoned for months or years, inmates were beaten with steel cables and wooden and metal
bars, burned with heated scissors,
and wrapped with fuses, lit on fire
and kept in vats of water, a 49-page
indictment alleges. At least 14
died.
Women were raped, it said, and one man died after a badge with a Muslim party logo was nailed to his head. Some prisoners were forced to act like animals or perform oral sex on each other.
The indictment points to different roles the four may have had in the camp. Delalic, a corulent, wealthy entrepreneur, became a Muslim military commander in 1992. Mucic, a Croat, was the camp's commander. Delic was his Muslim deputy, and Landzo was a guard.
Some survivors have said that Mucic, who feverishly scribbed notes during most of yesterday's four-hour session, tried to lessen their suffering but could not control the guards who carried out most of the atrocities.
There has been no evidence that Delalic or Mucic personally committed atrocities. Even so, they were indicted as men in charge who knew about the crimes and could have stopped them.
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- Hostel Membership
- Spring Break
- Travel Insurance
- Packages for 18-34 yrs.
- Budget Hotels
(800) 777-0112 www.sta-travel.com
- International Student Identity Cards
- Around the World
- Student Airfares
- Domestic Discounts
- Eurail Passes
Leg Vein Treatment Sclerotherapy for spider/varicose veins
Simple, Effective Treatment (starting at $50)
Mt. Oread Medical Offices 842-5070 3510 Clinton Pkwy (across from Hy-Vee)
RECYCLE!
recycle • recycle • recycle • recycle • recycle • recycle • recycle • recycle
Your University Daily Kansan
KU SPORTS CALENDAR CORNER
recycle * recycle * recycle * recycle * recycle * recycle * recycle * recycle * recycle
KU MEN'S TENNIS
17 KANSAS
KU
12 TEXAS
TODAY!
1:30 pm Robinson Courts*
vs.
*Bad weather - match moves to Alvamar @ 6:30 p.m
BATTLE FOR THE MIG IS CONFERENCE TITLE!
KU
KANSAS BASEBALL
TODAY!
vs.
Tues.· Mar.11th 3:00 pm
M
TOMORROW!
Wed. • Mar. 12th
3:00 pm
Missouri HOGLUND-MAUPIN STADIUM
KU Students... Join the Jayhawk Bullpen Get FREE seeds & a FREE t-shirt! KU Students Free with KUID!
KU BIG 12 CONFERENCE XII TENNIS BATTLE
TODAY!
17 KU MEN
VS.
12 TEXAS
1:00PM
ROBINSON TENNIS COURTS*
*IN CASE OF INCLEMENT WEATHER,
MATCH WILL BE AT 6:30PM AT ALVAMAR RACQUET CLUB
FREE ADMISSION!
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
TENNIS BATTLE
TODAY!
17 KU MEN VS.
12 TEXAS
1:00PM
ROBINSON TENNIS COURTS*
*IN CASE OF INCLEMENT WEATHER,
MATCH WILL BE AT 6:30PM AT ALVAMAR RACQUET CLUB
FREE ADMISSION!
NCAA HOOPS are here this weekend!
NCAA.
CHAMPIONSHIP
1st & 2nd Round Action
SAT. & MON., MAR. 15/17
IT'S TOURNAMENT TIME...
COME CHEER ON THE KU WOMEN!
SATURDAY: 6pm
Game 1: #6 VANDERBILT vs.
11 WASHINGTON
Then 30 minutes following,
Game 2: #3 KU vs. #14 DETROIT
MONDAY: 7pm Winners of Game 1 & 2
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
ALL-SESSION TICKETS ONLY:
ADULTS $10, STUDENTS/KIDS $6
CHAMPIONSHIP
93
8
Tuesday, March 11, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Etc.
Shop
928 Mass.
Downtown
843-311
CENTRAL FREE CHECKING ACCOUNT will benefit you with
We want your business and to prove it, with each new account opened until May 31st you will receive a $5 gift certificate to use at any of these fine stores.
The Flower Market La Familia
Hastings Waxman Candles
Images Hairstyling or
Joe's Bakery Willie C' s
charges
• No minimum balance and
• No limits on check writing
minimum opening balance
Centre
Central National Bank
All faculty, students and staff are invited to
the Inaugural Kemper Fellows Teaching Symposium
TEACHING AND THE REAL WORLD
Tuesday, March 11, 1997
3:00 - 5:00 p.m.
Auditorium, Spencer Museum of Art
featuring Kemper Fellows:
Paul D'Anieri, Beverly Davenport-Sypher Burdett Loomis, Bozenna Pasik-Duncan Robin Rowland and Marylee Southard
ALEXANDRIA
MISS. STREET DELI 1941 MASSACHUSETTS
HOMEMADE cherry-blueberry-chocolate CHEESECAKE
99¢ regular price $2.25 offer expires
LIMIT - FOUR PIECES PER PERSON
offer expires 3/31/92
'Hawks ready to pitch Mizzou
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team heads into today's game against Missouri on a six-game winning streak. Kansas is 12-5 overall and 4-2 in the Big 12 Conference, and the 'Hawks have knocked off high-quality opponents such as the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, Nebraska and Oklahoma State.
With the early-season success, head coach Bobby Randall should be excited, and he is, but he said he's not satisfied.
"I'm never satisfied," Randall said. "Twelve and five is a good record, but we're still not pleased."
Randall said that despite the quick start and the winning record, the Jayhawks have yet to reach their potential. The Kansas coach is quick to point out that he is less worried about victories and losses and more concerned with his team's play.
One of those problems has been a lack of offensive firepower. Until this weekend's four outbursts against St. Cloud State, including Sunday's 24-3 victory, Jayhawk hitters had struggled to put runs on the scoreboard. Randall said that although his team had improved at the plate as the season had progressed, the coaching staff still was troubled by continuing mistakes.
The Jayhawks have some lingering problems as they enter the two-game series today with border rival Missouri.
"Offensively, we're learning," Randall said. "We just haven't reached our peak. We are still having too many bad at-bats."
Senior first baseman Aaron Wilmes said the team had the potential to score runs.
"Wheever Coach Randall puts in can play ball," Wilms said. "Everyone on this team can hit."
Randall said that his pitching staff had been plagued by the same inconsistency that had stricken his batters.
"We're pitching well, but our command needs to improve," Randall said.
Randall said that the offense and pitching were still coming along but that the Kansas defense had made positive progress.
"A lot of guys have stepped up defensively," Randall said. "Josh Dimmick has really gotten into the groove behind the plate. We are improving with every game."
Randall will need his players to continue to improve if they are to beat Missouri. Although the Tigers (9-8) are only a game above .500, they have won seven of their last 10 games. Five of those victories came against conference foes Kansas State and Texas A&M.
"I'm not sure that Missouri isn't the best team in the conference right now," Randall said. "This is going to be a big series for us."
Fresno State player denies game-fixing
By Joe Bigham
The Associated Press
FRESNO, Calif. — Dominick Young of Fresno State doesn't recall talk to an alleged gambler who reportedly spoke with the basketball player at a night-club.
"I don't recollect coming across the individual they are talking about," said Young at a news conference yesterday.
Ernest Kinney, Young's attorney, said that Young didn't know the person whom the media had described.
"It could be one of hundreds of people who have approached him at nightspots." Kinney said.
The Fresno Bee reported Thursday that university officials were investigating rumors that Fresno State players shaved points.
The article said that the investigation focused on Young. The Bee also reported that he was seen at a nightclub after a game with a Fresno businessman, whom The Bee identified as a sizable sports bettor who had ties to organized bookmaking.
Michael Idiart, Kinney's co-counsel, said he wanted The Bee to publish a statement that it had no evidence of point-shaving and that it had no evidence of gambling.
Kinney demanded yesterday that The Bee print a complete retraction of any wrongdoings.
With his parents and brothers standing behind him, Young read a statement reiterating his earlier denial of wrongdoing.
The Bee's executive editor, J. Keith Moyer, was unavailable for comment.
"The rumor that I conducted myself improperly as a member of the Fresno State basketball team is just that — a rumor," according to Young's statement. "It has no basis in fact. It is untrue."
Both Young and Fresno State coach Jerry Tarkianan previously denied that Young had shaved points. Points are shaved when players keep the margin of victory inside the point spread.
Kinney said the retraction demand would be made in writing today. The Bulldogs (20-11) begin National Invitation Tournament play tomorrow against Nevada (20-8).
The alleged gambler said that he also would demand that The Bee retract its claim that he talked with Young at length the night of Feb. 20.
The businessman also told local television station KJEO on Friday that he only bought Young a soft drink at the nightclub.
Fresno County sheriff's deputies have given information to the FBI, but Idiart said he was told that the FBI didn't plan to investigate.
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday (March 11)
Today's Birthday (March 12)
Save your money in April so you can invest in yourself in May. You are smart enough; you just need to get an education. Continue on course through the summer. Return to a good job in September. Make a surprise move in December. A friend joins you in a fantasy in January.
February is unusual but amusing. A secret love could cause you to rethink your motives next March.
Plisse (Feb. 19-March 20)—Today is a 7.
If you went on a shopping spree recently, you could be pretty far into the hole by now. But there is no need to worry. Looks like everything will work out fine. Study money tonight, and maybe next time you will be able to spend as much as you want.
If you have a child who likes to have
Arles (March 21-April 19)—Today is a 7.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)—Today is a 5.
You are hampered by the necessity to conform, but you are learning self-discipline. That is a handy trait. Another annoyance is a loved one who will not stop whining.
screaming fits, keep him or her on a short leash. If you show fear, you are in trouble. Things calm down as the day progresses. By afternoon, you obviously will be in control of the situation again.
Gemml (May 21-June 21)—Today is a 6.
This afternoon you will get a more difficult assignment. It involves talking a brick wall into changing positions. Start by outlining the reasons why your idea is the best. If you can include a substantial savings, your chances of success improve.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)—Today is an 8.
Your antagonist's bark is a lot worse than his or her bite. You have friends in high places. So stride confidently forward this morning. That will help you make a good first impression. Be supportive if your partner is bummed out tonight. It has been a rough day.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)—Today is a z
An older person — your boss, teacher or parent — has a job for you. Instead of being the leader, you are the follower. That is not easy. If you are not a manager yet,
this is how you get there. If you are,
this is how you stay there.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)—Today is a 6.
It looks as if somebody is trying to deplete your reserves. Your best time for a discussion on the subject is this morning. Do not be afraid; you can do it. You are armed with the truth. Tonight, do something different. It will freshen your spirit.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)—Today is an 8.
Let your significant other talk you into doing something outrageous before breakfast. At work, you will be amazed at your sensitivity and creativity. You will find exactly the right words to get your point across. Your intuition should be better than usual, too.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)—Today is a 6.
You are as solid as a rock this morning. Maybe that is what has the other person so upset. He or she wants a change, and you simply are not interested. Tempers will have cooled by this afternoon. Besides, decisions made then have a better chance of lasting.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)—Today is an 8.
You have to do the job now or go out hunting for another one. Do not do that — the one you find could be worse! You may be facing a tough assignment, but at least it is one you have faced before. You know what to do. It is not really so bad.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)Today is a 7.
Take action you know is necessary first thing this morning. Around the middle of the day, you may think your dreams are impossible to achieve. They are not. This afternoon is best for making purchases, decisions and commitments that have to last.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)—Today is a 6.
You are a voracious reader. Today you may beat your own speed record. That is good because there is a lot you want to know. It would not be a bad idea to consult an expert, too. Some of the most important information never makes it into books.
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
Kansan Classified
100s Announcements
1015 Personals
1020 Business Personals
1025 Announcements
1025 Travel
1030 Entertainment
1040 Lost and Found
男女厕所
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan
Classified Policy
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
tise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advert
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
KU QA offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unsure. Please call KU info at 864-3058 or head quarters at 812-345 for more information.
SWIM age 40's brown eyes & hair, country backyard, animal love. Desirees female for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P.O. Box 42151 Lawrence, KS 60044
- ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!
- GRANTS AND SCHOOLARIS AVAILABLE FROM SPONSOR! NO REPAYMENTS EVER!
- FOR MORE INFO NEED: 1-800-243-2435
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
Sterling Silver Jewelry For Guys & Gals
Hoops, naval rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc. Shop, 828 Mass.
110 Business Personals
864-9500
HEALTH
Since 1906
Watkins
Caring For KU
GREATER
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
Hours
了
120 Announcements
Guy, lebian, blixun, transgender or unsure? KU QA® offers a confidential support group Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. Call KU Info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2435 for locations
Need 2 a-way rite to Florida during Spring Break.
Call the office at Don. 749-3472 or leave message for Don. 749-3472.
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If you are a participant in the
TAA-CREF Retirement Program,
Please visit http://mclacley interkan.net
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North American Nudist Directory lists 100's of
exciting events & in your area and around the country. 24/7 access.
120 Announcements
Kansan Ads
Work for YOU
NEED $$$$$$$$ ?
Men & Women needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research studies. Earn up to $1090/wk. 24 Hour info(2.5 minutes):1-612-879-4778.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION
& SPEED WORKSHOP
Improve your reading speed and retain more.
Thursdays,
Mar 13, Mar 20, Apr 3
7-9:00 pm
Advanced Registration and materials fee ($19) required
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
Kansan Ads Pay
25 Travel
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Men and Women
AAAiSIPing Break '97. Cancun, Jamaica,
Bahamas! '98. Nairs / wair up '98. Enjoy Daily Free Drink Parties, No Cover or Bars Bars, & group discussion!! !Endless Summer Tours I-
BabySister needed. Monday-Friday in Eudora.
Missage is by transportation and provide
difference.
Now hire all positions. Need AM/PM hours. FT or PT. Please apply. Apply within 3141 Clinton Street.
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. 6 wk sum
King, Jake and Sam. Lake Quivira,
KS? Questions 309-487-7777.
205 Help Wanted
Need 5 people to take surveys. Earn up tp $10/hr.
Call 749-3343 between 1:00 & 3:00p.m. ask for Earl.
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MWF 3pm-6pm to work with children age 18-roses A.M. & P.M. Substitutes needed also-Call Rosemary 843-8147
Local landscape company accepting applications from motivated individuals. Irrigation, lawn care, and general experience helpful, but not essential. Call 843-4944 from 8-5.
Saferee is currently hiring drivers for the remainder of the Spring Semester. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. If interested contact Robert at the Lawrence Bus Co. B42-0544
Classified Ads Get Results. Fast!
Fast!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 11, 1997
9
205 Help Wanted
*Now hiring, restaurant worker, all positions, all shifts. Pay starting at $6.50 and up, depending on experience and availability. Please apply in person, Monday-Friday between 2:00 and 5:00 P.M.*
SWM in fourth grade needs spectacular watchmate with wheels to guide him through safe, fun summer at our southern park Orkney Park. Call Barbie at (913) 408-2565 in evenings.
Wanted-Personal Care Attendant for female quadriplicidic. Female preferred, full and part-time openings. CNA preferred but not required. Call 805-2616.
CAMP COUNSELORS
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in Pocono Mounts. of PA
Over 40 activities - Seeking general
and specialist counselors
Headstart need an assistant cook/delivery per
to help with food preparation and transport.
Apply at 1:30 PM. Will consider MW/FT/PR
Spill. Apply at 825 Vermont. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
and specialist counselors
215-887-9700 or e-mail: pintree@pond.com
Note taken needed for Chem 184 MWF 12:30-10:4,
1. Chem 188 MWF 9:30-10:20. Must have completed
this or higher w/ an A. Earn $10-$15 per lecture.
Call Nancy at 843-3465.
NANNY
Jo. Co. professionals seek a loving caring and responsible Nanny to care for their infant daughter, M.-F, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. References and background check. Call Jackie at 8517-057-69
Part time help needed calling on behalf of SADD.
Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/hr plus commission,
$7/hr plus commission, $9/hr plus commission,
atmosphere! Come to GIass. Suite 18. M:Th
4pm-10pm and fill out an application. EOE
BabySister/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends. Must have knowledge of
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
experience, experience, and knowledge of child
development, used letter, schedule, and
management skills. Send resume to:
babysitter@nanny.com
Ceramic studio needs full and part time experienced artist. Requirements: knowledge of glazes, and chemicals, drawing techniques, working with clay slabs, drawing and design capabilities. Production studio. Serious applications only, 913 843-7886. 786-5586 Steve.
STUDENT WORK- up to $125 'Nat! ICO. he immediate PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCOC. Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Apply call our JOCC office at (913)381-WORK (10am-5pm)
JOIN THE FUN
A 24hr dinner w/bar & pool. Located at 1015 Mass in former Tin Pan Alley. Now hiring kitchen, service, & bar managers. Laborers. Apply in person after 3 day. Bartenders & cooks all shift.
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club, adjudicate to campus has openings for banquet servers, bartenders and hosts. Flexible hours, some daytime and weekend availability preferred. Above min. wage, employee meal plan in a professional, business environment offers average six hours. Apply at 126 Broad Ease
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private MICHIGAN boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swim, diving, archery, tennis, riffle, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, campers, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, kitchens, maintenance. Salary $45-$60 per hour. GC/WC/176 Maples, NHP, IL. 40093, 847-464-2444.
Food Service Supervisors. 2 positions available @ The Mass Street Deli & Buffalo Bob's @ McDonalds. 1 position at the mass experience in food service & a year experience supervising in food service & a year based on prior training. $5-$7.00 per hour based on prior training. Bonus bonus up to $1,500. Apply at Schubert Food Comp Group office @ 712 Mass. (upstairs abside smokehouse).
STUDENT HOURLY POSITIONS AVAILABLE (2). Duties: Receptionist; filling; duplicating; running errands; typing (at least 45 wpm); proof-reading; data entry; bulletin board; other duties (e.g., writing for students, answering phone calls) 1:00 (noon hour). First position available Mar 20, through December 31, 2019. Opportunity for renewal for positions with the University at 8:45/7:45/hour. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 22 Strong, 864-6644. Deadline Mar 12, 1997: 5:00 P.M. Preference given to pervious applicants. Summer and through the 1997-student academic year.
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN. Deadline: 3/14/97
Salary $6.49-5.75/hour, 20 hrs per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software products. Participate in systems testing & applications library maintenance. Required qualifications partial listing; experience in designing and building computerized guages, 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 programming example to Ann Riat. Complement University of Kansas. OE/AA EMPLOYEE
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1987 with possibility of renewal for next academic year. Interested students may complete the years and will have no other job commitments. Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community experience, solid research skills, leadership and supervisory experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, interest in helping others. Must be Lawrence resident. Come by KU Info, 420 35th Street, to consider on first come basis with final deadline for applications. Spm, Friday, March 21, 1987.
HELP WANTED - SOFTBALL UMPIRES -
DEPARTMENT IS LOOKING FOR INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN WORKING AS A DEPARTMENT TEAM. THE SUMMER AND FALL LEAGUES.
TRAINING SESSIONS WILL BEGIN MARCH
15TH AND WILL CONTINUE DURING MARCH.
ATTEND THESE SESSIONS ATTEND THESE SESSIONS LEAGUE PLAY
BEGINS IN APRIL AND CONTINUES
THROUGH OCTOBER. ANYONE INTERESTED
SHOULD CONTACT THE ADULT
YOU WILL BE MAILED THE DATES AND
TIMES OF THE TEAM MEETINGS.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: The Rock Springs 4-6 H center is looking for applicants for 46-50 month staff jobs. Job lengths vary from 2 to 3 months. There are jobs available in recreation, custodian, maintenance and food service. Possible internships available in all the listed areas: library, day care, nursery, board and board, and other benefits. Applicants must be 17 by June 1 of this year.
For more information write:
SUMMER JOB85
ROCK SPRING H-CENTER
5405 H. Highway k157
JUNCTION CITY, KS, 66441
DRURY PLACE
RETIREMENT CENTER
Hiring dining & laundry aides
Immediate openings.
Weekday or weekend hours.
No evenings.
Full or part time.
Will train.
Benefits available.
Apply at 1510 St. Andrews Drive
Kansan Ads Pay
205 Help Wanted
Corrections/Security; Detention Specialist
Responsible for direct supervision of juveniles assigned to Corner. Complete paperwork as required for correctional and juvenile post-Requirements: Over the age of 61. High School diploma or its equivalent. Three semester hours of academic study at the college level in child development or caring for youth or both or a subject and have equivalent training courses in child development or caring for youth or both. House parent in a facility serving youth between the age of 3 and 25 years and job position is FACJ. P.O. Box 2093, Topanga, CA 85479. Applications will be accepted until March 21, 1997. Telephone (913) 882-0895/Fax (913) 863-6619. Applications will be accepted until March 21, 1997. Telephone (913) 882-0895/Fax (913) 863-6619.
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
Juicers
Needs a few good Men for Male Night
Apply in person,
if you think you
have what it takes
Coming soon:
Mondays are Ladies night
Ladies only
18+ Apply in person
918 N, Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m. 2 a.m.
or call 841-1022 after 7 p.m.
FEMALE AND MALE CALE COUNSELORS needed for outstanding Maine camp[s] CAMP VEGA for girls and CAMP CEDAR for boys. Each located on magnificent lakernel setting with the best facilities, camp for heads and assistants in tennis, basketball, baseball, volleyball, lacrosse, lacristo, golf, field hockey, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, canoeing, scuba, water-skating, archery, weight training, athletic trainer, journalism, photogrammetry, nature study, backpacking, horseback riding, ropes course, trip leaders, mountain biking, rifflery, general (w/youngest students). Also looking for secretaries, maintenance, kitchen room, board, laundry, clothing and travel allowance. MEN-CAMP CEDAR for boys, 1758 Beacon Street, Brookline, MA 02146, 914-8323, CAMP VEGA PO BOX 1771 HAMMOND, MA 02332, jobs@campvega.com, http://campvega.com, 1-800-383-VEGA WE WILL BE ON THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CAMPUS on Wednesday, March 12th in Kansas Union Oral Room from 10am to 4PM. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY.
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
Inso Kansas City Corporation
Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64112
Fax: (816) 753-8387
E-mail: hr-kc@lnso.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
Inso
CORPORATION
www.inso.com
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG Lawrence Office 841-5716 Metro KC Office (800)-739-2404
225 Professional Services
305 For Sale
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Quality Typing formatter newsletter editor w/ laser printer can create top quality paper for you. Call us at 1-800-743-2556
235 Typing Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 164 G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
164 G. Strole Free Initial Consultation
Call Jacki at 823-844 for applications, term
issued to students who pass the ESL.
Satisfaction motivation, make 'the Grade,
the Class'
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
FINAL FOUR TICKETS-Two sats six games.
FINAL FOUR offers:
Call (603) 822-6488 or
(603) 722-5988.
Laptop-ToShiba: 4860X-DX, Color Display: 330
HD, 30mm memory, Software, Call友e684+1765
Red 1983 Chippewa Leafson convertible white top computer with voice警告, tape deck, leather seats, good tires, A/C, always start$400 obo, 749-2624
Macintosh Perform with color monitor and color
stylewriter. Call 838-9297 for details.
DEMO computer. Hardware System 100 Mac clone,
110 mhz, 2GB Hard Drive, 52 MB Ram, 17 Precision View monitor, Pre-loaded software and
hardware for Windows XP, now 625.480, 640.000, 650.000, Call Jayakwaw Jarkwayk
get reprints of your favorite Jayhawk players and other Big 12 basketball photos from the Kansas State. Star. Color embryologies available at www.kansasstatephotographers.com. Call StarInfo 810-634-2461 for details.
340 Auto Sales
www.superioracura.com Pictures of pre-owned
phones with free shipping.
Call 1-800-624-ACURA for more info. Ask for Past.
Delivery.
CLASSIC MUSCLE CAR! 1973 Mercury Cougar, 2
door, 8 cylinder, rebuilt trunk, fair condition.
$1200 IBO (913) 248-1842
BARN
400s Real Estate
1 new lhrm. Locks of extras. $340. Great deal
841-7650. Available immediately.
Summer Sublease. 5 Bdmr House Close to Campus call 841-8496.
2, 4, 5, BBR houses for rent.
Avail June 1 and Aug 1.
No pets. Deposit. Close to KU. 843-1601
3 br apartment sublease in May. May rent free. W/D, DW, AC, off street parking. Close to campus. 1138 Kentucky. Call 865-2810.
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
3 Bedroom Room. Great location! Available for
18-hour room availability in Fall of 2006.
Kegerator included. Call 858-5817
Available now 3 bedroom, bather. Wash/Dryer.
Fully equipped kitchen. On KU ban话. Call M41-
872-6060.
2 BDRM, 2 bath College Hill condo. W/d,
4th floor. pail Avg. Alam. Rent $77/h
(813) 658-3230
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG. 1
variety, Reference, lease, & deposit. Cal
Jim Edmonson
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG. 1
FURNISHED 3 BR APT., 2 BATH, W/D/A, A/BALCON, ON US ROUTE, 8A.
Condo for Sale 1 bldm 3 brm, bather/washer/dryer on,
975-286-0500 FHA Loan, $79,000 OBQ. Call to view 832-268-01
Got a group? Available for fall. 9 bdrm or 6 bdrm home. Well maintained. Nice common areas, laundry facilities. 841-StAR (7827).
Great old house!! Seven bedrooms, 3 bathrooms,
2 staircases. New to load; available August 1st. Call 848-3217.
Studio & 168 Bedrooms. Available for summer & winter occupancy on campus, on bus route, reasonable. Call 843-292-2500.
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Meadowbrook Apt. Fireplace, good
view, each. $400/month Call 864-3038 (DAY) Ask
for Kerry
Awesome 2-bedroom apartment for summer sublease. Next door to Yellow Sub. Have you ever seen the T.V. show Friends? This apartment is just as cute. $480/mo + electric. call 841-8178
Need to Seleuce? Move in April 1st, bldp apt. on KU Bus route. A/C, dishwasher, walk-in closet space. $365/ month. Assume lease August 1st if you want to stay put. Call 749-628.
Mackenzie Place. 1133 Kentucky. new leasing for
a. 1 Great. Location! Luxury laundry, close to
campus. b. Microwave, washer/dryer, all
appliances. c. Kitchen. d. Well insulated,
energy efficient. Call 749-1868.
Single apartments in cooperative student living for summer and/or fall in ECM Center, one block from KU. Utilities, laundry, ample living space, and recreational facilities at ECM, 1204 Oread/information 843-4633.
Avail 5/1/1 @ 1637 Tennessee
1 yr lease, 20% interest on pets,
no quiet non-smoker. 1 month security deposit.
3 Bdmr $640 + utilities. Also avail. June July.
4 Bdmr $640 + utilities.
5 Bdmr $640 + utilities. CALL 789-9191
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
Tenn, a student housing alternative, open
diverse membership, non profit operation,
democratic control. $18-240 incl. lkn w dyk dimmers, Utl,
W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 814-0484.
Tuckaway
NOW LEASING
GATEWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 841-8468.
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
1&2Bedrooms
1. 2. & 3 Bedroom
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
OnKUBusRoute
- 1,2, & 3 Bedrooms
- Washer/Dryer
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
- Alarm System
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Washer/Dryer
- Built-in TV
Live in Luxurv.
3 Hot Tubs
405 For Rent
ExerciseRoom
M-F 10-6
SAT10-4 SUN12-4
Washer/Dryer Alarm System
1,2 & 3 Bedrooms
HIGH POINTE
AFARTMENT HOMES
Clubhouse & Swimming Pool
Workout Facility
Basketball Court
Call First Management 841-8468
NOWLEASING
One Month Free Rent On lease through July 31 1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment Call or stop by today
Move In Now...
FLATS
843-2116 11th and Miss Berkeley Flats (ERG)
MOVE IN NOW...
One Month Free Rent
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
call or stop by today
water paid
841-7726
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
Shannon Plaza Apartments
Lorimar and Leannamar Townhomes
MIDLAND HISTORY MUSEUM
"No one lives above or below you"
(our townhomes are two levels)
Leasing for Summer/Fall '97
1, 2, 3 bdm/2 bath, 4 bdm/3 bath
*Washer/Dryer
*Dishwasher
*Microwave
*Fireplace
*Ceiling Fans in every room
*Cable in every room
*Walk-in closets
*cable paid
Lorraine-3001 Clinton Pkwy
Leannamar-4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Call 841-7489 Office hrs. 9-5 M-F
阳光海岸旅游度假区
405 For Rent
Sunrise Apartments
- 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms
* Garages (village)
* Tennis Courts, Pools
* Free Cable TV (Place)
* Luxurious Town Homes
* On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon.- Fri. 1-5
Park25
- Close to Campus
SUMMER SUBLEASE: avail. mid-May July 31.
Spacious 3 barm apt., 2 full baths, dining/dining rm, fully equipped kitchen, big closets, cat k. $000 + utilities. May rent free. Call 823-8671.
3 or 8 bldm house. 3 bbls from campus. 3 bbls from
student unit. 1 bldm from campus. 2 bldm from
university units. Subtotal U.A. 1, Aug. 1,账单 e677.
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
Apartments
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
10-Month Leases Available!
PINNACLE WOODS
- Volleyball Court
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2
boutique accommodations as well as
spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
PINNACLE WOOL
1*2* br. luxury apt. homes
5000 Clinton Pkwy.
1/4 mi. west of Wakarua
All new - 865-5454
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
1st Month Free - Call for details
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall '97
West Hills APARTMENTS
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30-4:30
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
(no pets, please)
Visit the following locations
No Appointment needed
MASTERCRAFT
Campus Place
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes
1145 Louisiana 841-1429
Hanover Place
Orchard Corners
15th & Kapold • 749-4226
Hanover Place
14th & Mass • 841-1212
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 740-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood
405 For Rent
Sublease 2 BR, 2 Bath Apt. at Tuckaway Pool,
security, fireplace, veranda, LARGE. Will give
you deposit upon approval 84-1499
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
Af some locations
MASTERCRAFT 842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
Hawthorn Place
Townhomes and Residential Homes
Residential Homes
- Fireplace, one-car garage
Private Courtyard
Private Courtyard
331-2332
--oriented community.
Studies 4, 5, 7, Prentice, Auto
FALL'97
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to come see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like somewhere.
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly, service-oriented community.
meadowbrook
eadowbrook
- 2 Pools
- You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
- 2 Volleyball Areas
* 3 Bus Stops
Studios,1,2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts.
2 & 3 Bdrm. Townhouses
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat, 1-4 Sun
Now to schedule an ad:
430 Roommate Wanted
1 roommate wants to share house $20/mth.
4 blocks from campin, Smoke O.K. Pet
OK. P.K.
3-rooms for rent. Nice house. Good price. Please call 749-2886.
Female Sun. Sublease needed middle of May to
Sumatek in Kuala Lumpur. Call 823-823-
6100 for Kuala Lumpur, Close to Chemist. Call 823-
823-7491 for Kuala Lumpur.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
2 Females to share 5 bedroom luxurious home,
$50/mo. or two animals, 1/2 mile from
their house, w/pet/DW, $30/mo.
NON-SMOKING FEMALE ROOMMATE
$290/MO. 1/2 UTILITIES
749-2947
Non-smoking female needed immediately to campus $200/mo + 1/2 utilities ($90; call 331-339).
Pre-pre transsexual lives in Lawrence area seeks another gay/gay friendly person to share a townhouse/duplex with. Non-monster, social drinker interested in same-sex relationship. If two. Interested please call (913) 731-1236
- By Mail: 119 Sturff Flat, Lawrance, KS. 66045
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
UCLA BASKETBALL
---
JIM HARRICK, fired as UCLA's basketball coach for lying about an expense report, has accepted the school's offer to settle the remaining four years of his contract and will not sue, said athletic director Peter Dalis.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
Harrick requested a meeting last week with Dalls and other UCLA officials and accepted the school's offer a few weeks after his Nov. 6 firing. Dalls said Sundav.
UCLA
Harrick apparently will receive his $140,000 base salary for the 1996-97 season as stipulated in his contract in the event of firing but will not receive the rest of his compensation package, which totaled about $440,000 a year.
Schmidt left the Pirates* spring-training camp Sunday after a routine examination and heart monitor readings revealed an irregular heartbeat. He will undergo more
PIRATES PITCHER
Tests conducted yesterday on Pirates right-hander JASON SCHMIDT showed no heart abnormalities.
COACH WITH 702 VICTORIES RETIRING
RICHARD "DOC" SAUERS, whose 702 victories make him one of the nation's winning basketball coaches, announced his retirement after 41 years at Albany State.
Sauers, who will be 67 on April 3, said he was stepping down for several reasons including the desire to spend more time with his family.
tests today.
PIRATES
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1997
Schmidt 24, started two exhibition games this spring and is 0-0 with a 4.50 ERA. He was acquired in a trade from Atlanta last August and went 2-2 with a 4.06 ERA in six starts for the Pirates at the end of last season.
PAGE 10
Fast BREAKS
KANSAS
45
NCAA announces times for opening-round games
The NCAA announced yesterday the times for first and second-round games in the men's and women's basketball tournaments.
In the men's tournament, Kansas will play Jackson State at 1:13 a.m. Thursday in Memphis, Tenn. The winner of that game will play at 1:30 p.m Saturday.
The Kansas women's basketball team opens tournament play at 8:30 p.m. Saturday at Allen Field House against Detroit Mercy. The winner will play at 7 p.m. Monday.
Men's AP Top 25
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press men's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through March 9.
rank team rec pts prv
1. Kansas (70) 32-1 1,750 1
2. Utah 26-3 1,578 3
3. Minnesota 27-3 1,571 2
4. North Carolina 24-6 1,566 5
5. Kentucky 30-4 1,559 6
6. South Carolina 24-7 1,365 4
7. UCLA 21-7 1,343 9
8. Duke 23-8 1,245 7
9. Wake Forest 23-6 1,223 8
10. Cincinnati 25-7 1,014 10
11. New Mexico 24-7 949 14
12. St. Joseph's 24-7 856 19
13. Xavier, Ohio 22-5 765 11
14. Clemson 21-9 713 13
15. Arizona 19-9 654 12
16. Coll. of Charleston 28-2 599 17
17. Georgia 24-8 524 24
18. Iowa State 20-8 485 18
19. Illinois 21-9 437 15
20. Villanova 23-9 387 21
21. Stanford 20-7 371 23
22. Maryland 21-10 344 22
23. Boston College 21-8 255 —
24. Colorado 21-9 244 18
25. Louisville 23-8 226 20
Women's AP Top 25
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press women's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through March 9.
rank, team rec pts prv
1. Connecticut (38) 30-0 1,020 1
2. Old Dominion (2) 29-1 980 2
3. Stanford (1) 30-1 951 3
4. North Carolina 27-2 899 4
5. Louisiana Tech 29-3 854 5
6. Georgia 22-5 765 7
7. Florida 21-8 752 6
8. Alabama 23-6 741 8
9. LSU 23-4 645 10
10. Tennessee 23-10 638 11
11. Kansas 24-5 588 9
12. Virginia 21-9 516 14
13. Auburn 21-9 506 19
14. Texas 21-7 498 19
15. Notre Dame 27-6 442 13
16. Illinois 22-7 325 16
17. Texas Tech 19-8 304 15
18. Colorado 21-8 246 —
19. Stephen F. Austin 27-4 218 17
20. Vanderbilt 18-10 212 20
21. Clemson 19-10 200 21
22. Geo. Washington 25-5 189 18
23. Tulane 26-4 183 18
24. Michigan State 21-7 133 23
25. W. Kentucky 21-7 132 23
Kansas legends go to bat for Sports Hall of Fame
KU sports broadcaster Max Falkenstein and former mile record-holder Wes Santee told a Senate committee that money continued to be a problem for the sports hall.
TOPEKA — Two prominent Kansas sports figures appeared in the Statehouse yesterday to make a pitch for the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame.
The Abilene sports hall now receives funds from a $2 surcharge on games designated by the Board of Regents schools and Washburn University.
Max Falkenstein, a former chairman of the hall's board of trustees, and Santee, the current chairman, supported a bill to legislate what was now a contractual agreement with the state universities. The bill also would include high school basketball championship games.
All-America team tabs Raef LaFrentz
The Associated Press
Jacque Vaughn is on second team
By Bill Petulla Kansas sportswriter
the All-America first team yesterda y LaFrentz will become the first Kansas All-American since Danny Manning, who was named to the squad in 1988.
He's been superb for the Kansas men's basketball team all year, and now forward Raef LaFrentz has caught the eye of those around the country.
"Raeh has been sensational for us all season l o ng , " K ans as men's basket ball coach Roy Williams said.
LaFrentz, a junior who averages 18.7 points and 9.1 rebounds, was selected to
All-America Teams
FIRST TEAM
Roundting out the first team was Wake Forest center Tim Duncan, Utah forward Keith
Tim Duncan, Wake Forest, Sr.
Keith Vorn Horn, Utah, Sr.
Ron Mercer, Kentucky, Soph.
Raef LeFontz, Kansas, Jr.
Dannv Forson, Cincinnati.
SECOND TEAM
■ Brevin Knight, Stanford, Sr.
■ Antawn Jamison, North Carolina.
Jacque Vaughn, Kansas, Sr.
Chauncey Billups, Colorado,
Soph.
Bobby Jackson, Minnesota,
Sr.
THIRD TEAM
Shee Seals, Tulsa, Sr.
Adonal Foley, Colgate, Jr.
Keith Booth, Maryland, Sr.
Ed Gray, California, Sr.
Andre Woolridge, Iowa, Sr.
HONORABLE MENTION FROM
THE BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Tony Battle, Texas Tech; Cory Carr, Texas Tech; Reggie Freeman, Texas; Paul Pierce,
Kansas; Scot Pollard, Kansas; Dedric Willoughby, Iowa State
Raef LaFrentz reaches back to snag the rebound in Saturday's game against Iowa State. LaFrentz was named an Associated Press first team All-American yesterday.
Van Horn, Cincinnati forward Danny Fortson and Kentucky forward Ron Mercer.
Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn was a second-team All-America selection. Stanford guard Brevin Knight, Colorado guard Chauncey Billups, North Carolina forward Antawn Jamison and Minnesota guard Bobby Jackson also were named to the second team.
Vaughn averages 10.5 points and 6.2 assists per game. He made the second team despite suffering a wrist injury, which kept him out 10 games.
LaFrentz, the Big 12 Conference Player of the Year, stepped up his game in the absence of center Scot Pollard, who was sidelined for one month with a broken foot. LaFrentz scored at least 20 points in each of the nine games that Pollard was hurt.
Although few distinctions'are more prominent than being a first-team All-American, LaFrentz told the Associated Press yesterday that he would trade it for a championship trophy.
"I'm fortunate because I am surrounded by an extremely talented, extremely unselfish group of guys who are genuinely excited for me to be named an All-American," LaFrentz said. "As thirled as i am, I have to admit I would trade it in for an opportunity to cut down some nets later on."
Van Horn and Fortson were both secondteam selections last season.
Duncan was the only one of four underclassmen on last year's All-America team who returned to school. Marcus Camby of Massachusetts, Allen Iverson of Georgetown and Ray Allen of Connecticut all declared for the NBA draft. The other first-team member was senior Kerry Kittles of Villanova.
Seniors Shea Seals of Tulsa, Ed Gray of California, Keith Booth of Maryland and Andre Woolridge of Iowa were joined on the third team by Colgate's junior Adonal Foyle.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Kansas goes to Big Dance ranked No.1 team to beat
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
The Associated Press rankings came out yesterday and for the 15th consecutive week, the Kansas men's basketball team has held the No. 1 ranking in the country.
Although the top ranking in the nation is nothing new to the layhawks, this is the first time in Kansas basketball history that it has been ranked No. 1 at the end of the regular season
Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams said he had never coached a Jayhawk team that was the team to beat in the NCAA Tournament.
Basketball analysts Dick Vitale, Billy Packer and Digger Phelps each have chosen the Jayhawks to go to the Final Four in Indianapolis on the weekend of March 29-31.
"It's probably the only time that we've been the favorite." Williams said. "Even when we've been a No.1 seed, there were other teams that were a heavier favorite."
"My gut feeling is Kansas will follow Kentucky's pattern of a year ago," Vitalte wrote in ESPNET. "That's right, the odd-on favorite will go in and win it all."
Vitale also picked North Carolina, UCLA and Wake Forest to play in the Final Four.
Kansas will play Jackson State at 11:25 a.m. Thursday at The Pyramid in Memphis, Tenn. The Jayhawks will practice tonight and take a chartered flight from Topeka to Memphis after practice.
Oklahoma State and Nebraska will play in the National Invitation Tournament. The Cornhuskers are the defending champions.
■ Five teams from the Big 12 Conference were selected to play in the NCAA Tournament. Kansas, Iowa State, Colorado, Texas and Oklahoma will represent the Big 12.
"I was very happy for the league." Williams said. "I think Iowa State, Oklahoma, Colorado and Texas will play very well in the tournament."
Williams praised senior guard Jacque Vaughn for his performance in Sunday's 87-60 victory against Missouri. Vaughn also was named to the All Big 12 Tournament team.
"Jacque was sensational." Williams said.
Vaughn was sidelined for the first 10 games of the season because of a torn ligament in his wrist. However, he said he was physically ready for the tournament.
Jacque was sensational, Williams applauded Vaughn's passing, noting that he had 12 assists to one turnover in the 29 minutes he was on the court.
"My body right now is the best it's been all year," Vaughn said. "The X-ray showed that my wrist was even stronger than before I got hurt."
STATE 34
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
Forward Lynn Pride reaches for a loose ball in front of Kansas State's Andria Jones. The Jayhawks will face Detroit Mercy at 8:30 p.m. Saturday.
1A01L7354
Big 12 basketball talent rewarded as six teams head for tournament
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
Among the coaches was Deb Patterson, Kansas State women's basketball coach, whose Wildcats were 19-11 this season. The No. 10-seeded Wildcats will play No. 7-seeded St. Joseph's in an East Region game on Friday in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Coaches around the Big 12 Conference were pleasantly surprised to learn that six teams from the conference received invitations to the women's NCAA Tournament, which starts on Friday.
"We had no expectations in terms of seeding, but we were very positive that we would make the tournament." Patterson said. "It's neat to be part of the NCAA Tournament, but we must keep a business approach to it. There's not going to be much hype or publicity because we'll be on the road so we have to look at it as we would any other road game."
The Wildcats had been 16-10 during the regular season. In the Big 12 Tournament, they won three games before losing the championship game to Colorado.
Also in the East Region is No. 3-seeded
Some history exists between Conradt and the coach of Texas' first-round opponent, which is just 30 miles away.
Texas women's basketball coach Jody Conrad said there was not much to the postseason except for playing the games.
"This is the time where everyone has an equal opportunity to win any game," Conrad said. "You'll hear every coach say the same cliches as you've heard all season long. We just have to win these first two games because you never want to lose on your home court."
Texas, the Big 12 South champion during the regular season. The Longhorns will play No. 14-seeded Southwest Texas State on Saturday night.
Conradt coached Texas to a national championship in 1988 when it defeated Southern California in the title game. Linda Sharp, who had coached at Southern California, is now the coach at Southwest Texas State.
Kansas, Texas and Colorado have the home-court advantages for the first- and second-round games of the NCAA Tournament, while Kansas State, Texas Tech and Iowa State must travel to their first-
No. 8-seeded Texas Tech will play No. 9-seeded Montana in Stanford, Calif., and No. 12-seeded Iowa State will play No. 5-seeded Utah in Charlottesville, Va. Both teams will play on Friday.
round sites.
The No. 3-seeded Jayhawks will play host to No. 14-seeded Detroit Mercy on Saturday in the West Region. No. 2-seeded Colorado will play at home against No. 15-seeded Marshall in the Midwest Region on Friday.
The SEC landed a conference-high seven teams in the NCAA Tournament, while the Big 12 tied the ACC with six teams.
Patterson said that there was reason for everyone to celebrate the Big 12's first- year success.
"It's nice to see that the committee understood the quality of play across the board in this conference," Patterson said. "Combining the Big Eight and Southwest conferences will keep us up there with the SEC and ACC year-in and year-out. It is a tremendous step for the conference, and I believe we will continue to make similar strides in the future."
Baseball: Kansas defeats Missouri 6-5 at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. Page 1B
Off air: Transmitter problems have temporarily halted KANU broadcasts. Page 3A
THE UNIVERSITY DAIL KANSAN
****************************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PD BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1997
SECTION A VOL.103.NO.116
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Missile shot down TWA 800, pilot says
NEW YORK — A military helicopter pilot who witnessed the explosion of TWA Flight 800 repeatedly told investigators he thought a missile had struck the plane, a source said yesterday.
The Air National Guard pilot has not been allowed to speak publicly because of an FBI ban on federal employees speaking about the investigation. The pilot, Capt. Chris Baur, is a civilian pilot for U.S. Customs.
Baur's eyewitness report comes to light as critics of the investigation claim to have evidence suggesting that Flight 800 was shot down by an errant U.S. Navy missile.
One of the reasons that a missile still is being considered as a cause was the number of eyewitness accounts from people who said they saw something in the sky the night of the crash. Baur's clear view from the helicopter and his military training would make his account one of the most credible.
Mechanical failure or a bomb also haven't been ruled out as possible causes of the crash.
The National Transportation Safety Board and FBI continue to say they can't yet determine whether the jumbo jet was brought down by a bomb, a missile or a mechanical malfunction. The July 17 crash into the Atlantic Ocean off New York's Long Island killed all 230 people aboard.
Gas explosion kills 86 at Chinese coal mine
BEJIING — A gas explosion at a privately run coal mine in central Henan province killed 86 people and injured 12 others.
The blast happened March 4 at the Red Dirt mine, in Nanjie Village, Henan province, about 470 miles south of Beijing, said an official in the town government who gave only his surname, Liu.
Officials said the explosion was caused by an accumulation of gases inside the mine over the long Chinese New Year holiday.
Local mines had been ordered to conduct safety inspections before allowing work to resume, but the managers of the Red Dirt mine ordered workers back into the pits before doing so, Liu said, confirming a report in the government-run Yangcheng Evening News seen yesterday in Beijing.
Three owners of the mine, who fled after the explosion, have been arrested, Liu said.
Women accuse Army of urging rape charges
ABERDEEN, Md. — Five women Army recruits accused investigators yesterday of trying to coerce them into saying they were raped by superiors.
The women said they refused to make the rape allegations. Although several servicemen were charged as a result of the women's sworn statements, none were charged with rape, an Army representative said.
Officials at Aberdeen's ordinance training school, where the alleged sexual misconduct occurred, denied that investigators tried to coerce the women into making false statements.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which organized the women's news conference, called for an independent investigation.
The NAACP has claimed that the Army had unfairly targeted black soldiers based on complaints of white female recruits. The five women who spoke out yesterday are all white, and the seven men charged with sexual misconduct are black.
The Associated Press
Burglaries at KU drop by 44
KU thefts rise by 31
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
Burglaries are down, but thefts are up, according to the annual campus crime statistics released Monday.
In 1996, 266 burglaries were committed on campus, 44 fewer than the year before. However, thefts rose to 616 in 1996, 31 more than in 1995.
Burglary is knowingly and without authority entering into or remaining within a building or vehicle with the intent to commit a felony or theft therein.
Theft is an act done with the intent to deprive the owner permanently of the possession, use or benefit of the owner's property.
KU police Sgt. Chris Keary said that the disparity occurred because thefts and burglaries did not always
"There's no real correlation," Keary said. "It just depends on where you're at."
go hand in hand.
Keary said he didn't think that the number of thefts were escalating out of control, because this year's total was 13 fewer than it was two years ago.
The most common place for thefts on campus was from a building, such as a residence hall room, library or classroom. Keary said that these occurred when students left their belongings in their rooms or a study area unattended.
"It doesn't take very long for someone to see that you've left," Keary said. "You may remember you left your textbooks under your desk, but when you come back one hour later, they're gone."
He said that if the police department recovered lost items, the owners were notified. But usually it was hard to return property to the owner.
"Occasionally we get part of it back, like a wallet without the cash," Keary said. "But not enough people write
their names in books or engrave their valuables. If things are engraved or marked somehow, it becomes much easier to return them."
Keary said that the total amount of property stolen last year was estimated at $288,830. Of that, $40,815 or about 14 percent, was recovered.
Thefts from a motor vehicle on campus dropped by 25 to 163 times in 1996, and many of these thefts could be avoided by simple precautions, said Lawrence police officer Tom Moore.
"The object is to make yourself less of a target," Moore said. "Burglars look for purses on seats. They break the window, grab it, and they're gone in seconds."
Parking under a light or as near to a residence hall as possible were suggestions Moore gave to reduce the risk that a student's car would be broken into.
Moore said that burglars wouldn't bother breaking into cars that didn't appear to have anything of value in them. He said to put valuables in the glove box or under the seat.
Campus crime
Annual campus crime statistics show that burglaries have gone down, but there have been more thefts. Burglary involves entering a building or car illegally, while theft is stealing property. In order to reduce the risk of theft, students should:
Park under a light or near a residence hall
Engrave or mark valuables
1995 1996
Burglary 310 266
Theft 115
Do not leave valuables unattended or in plain view
"They want to get in and get out," Moore said. "They're not going to fish around if they don't see something they want right away."
Angie Kuhn/KANSAN
Source: KU Office of Public Safety
Both Keary and Moore agreed that the easiest way students could avoid
being a victim of theft was to not leave anything of value unattended.
"Take it with you," Moore said. "Don't let it out of your sight. You can't take it for granted that it will be there when you get back."
Light reading
4
P
Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
TODAY
INDEX
reaching up to 72 degrees. However, snow is possible this weekend, according to weather forecasts.
Television ... 2A
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 7A
World News ... 7A
Features ... 8A
Sports ... 1B
Horoscopes ... 4B
Classifieds ... 5B
SUNNY
KUUU
Day on the Hill planning under way
High 72° Low 45°
Weather: Page 2A
By Dave Morantz
Kansan staff writer
The warm, spring weather means that Day on the Hill, one of the University's most popular events, is just around the corner.
If recent history repeats itself, gobs of area high school students wearing hemp necklaces will descend on Lawrence May 3 in their parents' cars to join KU students lounging on Campanile hill enjoying live music.
Although the headline bands for the event have not been named yet, Student Union Activities is accepting demo tapes and CDs from local bands interested in playing at the annual show.
Bands should contact Michelle Dennann, live music coordinator, in the SUA office in the Kansas Union at 864-3477 by Friday.
The event is sponsored by SUA with money from Student Senate and donations from local businesses. The event is free.
In addition to the headline acts, Dennard said SUA will select two to
four local bands to play the event Selections will be made during the week before or after spring break, she said. The winner of the Farmer's Ball, a band contest to be held April 22, 23 and 25 at the Bottleneck and sponsored by KJHK, will also play.
"Usually we try to get a diverse group of bands," Dennard said. "We've been getting all different kinds of music. It will definitely be a good mix."
Jade Brown, Lawrence junior and saxophonist for The Norman 360, a ska band also auditioning for Day on the Hill, said the event gave bands that normally just play in bars around Lawrence a good alternative.
"I think it's a great show, one of the highlights of the year," he said. "It's one of the few things we haven't played yet."
Day on the Hill was started in 1989 after Sue Buckley, SUA adviser, and students decided to revive an annual music festival from the mid '80s called Day on Green Hill. In 1989, SUA only had a budget of $3,000. With Pearl Jam's performance in
1992, the event began drawing fans from all over the region.
This year, SUA has a $20,000 budget. Money left over after paying rental fees, services and headline bands will be divided among local bands which were not selected to play through the Farmer's Ball.
Nick Walker, Wichita junior and bass player for the band Margin of Error, said his band auditioned for the event in hopes of gaining exposure.
Walker said his band played a style somewhere in between U2, Smashing Pumpkins and Radio Head.
"Lately, it's been tough to get local shows so it would be a great way to get to the college market," he said.
Tawni Freeland, Lawrence senior and guitarist and vocalist for the band The Glitterkicks, a guitar oriented pop-rock band, agreed with Walker.
"When you're a smaller band, you don't really get the chance to build up a fan base," she said. "You just kind of stick with it and keep playing until someone likes it."
Trafficway lawsuit to be filed
By Paul Eakins
Kansan staff writer
The conflict over the South Lawrence Trafficway will take a new turn today.
KU Environs and other opponents of the eastern leg of the South Lawrence Trafficway are scheduled to file lawsuit against several individuals and groups involved in the trafficway process.
According to a Wetlands Preservation Organization press release, Jason Daniels, Colby sophomore with Environs, Anjanette Bitsie, Thomasine Ross, Stanley Ross, Pamina Yellow Bird and the Wetlands Preservation Organization plan to file a lawsuit in a U.S. District Court.
The defendants named in the lawsuit will be the Federal Highway Administration, the Federal Highway Division administrator David Geiger, Douglas County Commissioners Mark Buhler, Tom Taul and Dean Neider, and Kansas Secretary of Transportation E. Dean Carlson.
The main issue of the lawsuit is that the plaintiffs want a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement completed before any construction begins on the trafficway, which is to pass through the Haskell Wetlands south of Lawrence.
"Our concern is that the federal environmental laws are not being followed," said Bob Eye, an attorney for the plaintiffs. "If the South Lawrence Trafficway goes through without the statement, then the intent behind NEPA is being disregarded."
That statement would investigate the environmental influences that the trafficway would have on the wetlands. The statement was started by the Federal Highway Commission, but it was never concluded.
If it is proven that the trafficway's impact would be detrimental to the wetlands, the eastern leg may not be completed.
Completion of the statement would make the trafficway comply with the National Environmental Policy Act.
Bruce Plank, another attorney for the plaintiffs, said that after much protest by opponents of the trafficway, the lawsuit was the next step to get the statement completed.
The plaintiffs are concerned about the harmful environmental effects that construction could have on the wetlands and the negative effects it could have on the religious practices of Haskell Indian Nations University students and alumni who use the wetlands for religious rites, said the news release.
I
Eye said that he thought the court would find for the completion of the statement.
2A
Wednesday, March 12, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
WEATHER
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TODAY
72 45
EXPANSION
THURSDAY
56
43
Getting cloudy and cooler. Chance for rain.
FRIDAY
CAMPUS EVENTS
52
38
Chance for rain continues.
Assemblages, featuring artwork by Karen Jacks and Ardys Ramberg will be at the Phoenix Gallery, 919 Massachusetts St., from March 1 to April 15. Contact: 843-0800.
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Western Civilization study abroad at 11:30 a.m. today at 105A Lippincott Hall. Contact: Alison Lusk, 864-7810
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will present the University Forum, Positive Connections to Our Elders: Taking Care of Them in Our Homes and Theirs from noon to 1 p.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact-Thad Holopome. 843-4933.
Gay and Lesbian Academic and Staff Advocates will have a brown bag lunch from noon to 1 p.m. today at Alcove F in the Kansas Union.
Contact: David. 864-0624.
Ninth Street Baptist Church will sponsor a mid-week prayer and study at noon and 7 onatight at 847 Ohio St. Contact: 843-5828.
KU German Club will meet at 1 p.m. today at the engl Library in 2094
ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel. Contact the Rev. Raymond May at 843-0357.
Wescose Hall. Contact: Lindsey
Schulz, 864-1339.
International Student Services and the University Placement Center will sponsor Career Employment and Job-Skewing Skills: A Workshop for International Students at 3 p.m. today at the UPC Conference Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Daphne Johnston. 864-3617.
Office of Study Abroad will have in informational meeting about Australia/New Zealand study abroad at 4 p.m. today at 105A Lippincott Hall. Contact: OSA, 864-3742.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact the Rev. Raymond May, 843-0357.
KU Tae Waw Do Club will meet from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. Contact: Adam Capron. 842-9112.
■ KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 6:15 p.m. today at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. Contact: Alberto Marquez, 864-1255
Armnest International will meet at 7 tonight at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. Contact: Andrew Humphrey, 864-1731.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource
Center will sponsor Celebrating Women's Right to Vote at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. Contact: the center at 864-3552.
KU Queers and Allies, the support group for Lesbigytrans, will meet at 7 tonight. Call KU Info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for location.
KU Sailing Club will meet at 7 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. Contact: Chris, 864-1125.
Proponents of Animal Liberation will meet at 7 tonight at the candy counter in the Kansas Union. Contact: Laura Ford, 864-6560.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have scripture study at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact: Karen.843-0357
Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at: 7:30 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Steve Swanson, 542-1101.
Jayhawker Campus Ministries will meet at 8 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Rebecca Hupp, 749-7996.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. Contact: Chris Wiswell, 864-6408.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's car was damaged and a stereo and coat were stolen between 3 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Monday from a car in the 2000 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $750.
A KU student's car was damaged around 2 a.m. Saturday in the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police said. Damage was estimated at $200.
WEDNESDAY PRIMETIME
MARCH 12,1997
BROADCAST STATIONS
**KSMO** **10** NCAA Tournament Selection **Sentilin" Smart Alec"** [R] Babylon 5 "Walkabout" [R] Mad Abo, You **Bzzz!** Cops **10** LAPD
**WDAF** **14** Figure Skating: Battle of the Sexes on Ice. [R] News **10** H.Patrol **12** Extra **10**
**KCTV** **15** Nanny Temporality. **Feds" Do No Harm"** [R] EZ Streets (In Stereo) **10** News **10** Late Show (R) (In Stereo) **12** Seinfeld **10**
**KS06** Health Check **News Plus** News **10** Silhouette **12** News Plus
**KCPT** **7** Spontaneous Healing (In Stereo) Lord of the Dance Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
**KSNT** **13** Newravardio Chicago Sons Winger (R) Just Shoot Prince Street (In Stereo) News Tonight Show (In Stereo) Late Night **13**
**KBTM** **8** Grace Under Coach Drew Carey Arsenio Primetime Live News Roseanne Roseanne M"A'SH" **14**
**KTWU** Colin Wilkinson Sing... (In Stereo) Lord of the Dance Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
**WIBW** Roy Williams NCAA Special Feda "Do No Harm" [R] EZ Streets (In Stereo) News **10** Late Show (R) (In Stereo) **12** Late Late
**KTKA** Grace Under Coach Drew Carey Arsenio Primetime Live Seinfeld **12** Married.. Nightlife **12**
AEE 82 Biography; Howard Stem American Justice (R) 20th Century Law & Order "Virus" 83 Biography; Howard Stem
CNBC 82 Equal Time Hardball Rivera Live Late Night (In Stereo) 83 Rivera Live (R)
CNN 82 Prime News Burden-Proof Larry King Live 83 World Today Sports Illus. Moneyline 83 NewsWright Showbiz
COM 82 Police squaddl Police squaddl Police squaddl Town Hall Daily Show Comic Relief Town Hall (R)
COURT 82 Prime Time Justice Trial Story: Kids and Guns Cochran & Grace Prime Time Justice (R) Trial Story (R)
CSPAN 82 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
DISC 82 Wild Discovery Discover Magazine Chopper Power; Guardians Wild Discovery Discover Magazine
ESPN 83 College Basketball: NIT First Round College Basketball: NIT First Round -- Teams TBA Sportscenter College Basketball (Live)
HIST 83 Newsworth to Nightly News True Action Adventures Weapons at War (R) Year by Year "1931" (R) Newsworth to Nightly News
LIFE 83 Unsolved Mysteries "Nightmare in Columbia County" **** (R) Suspense Living Mysteries Unsolved Mysteries
MITV 83 Prime Time (In Stereo) Real World Jenny M. Singled Out Lovewalk (In Stereo) Altern. Nation
SCIFI 83 Tekwar (In Stereo) Forever Knight (In Stereo) Sightings (In Stereo) Time Trax "Mysterious Man" Tekwar (R) (in Stereo)
TLC 83 SeaTek Pop Science Rogues Gallery Transplant-Ticking SeaTek (R) Pop Science Rogues Gallery (R)
TNT 82 "The Principal" **** (1987, Drama) James Bekahi, Goose Lee Jr. "Taps" **** (1981) Military cadets secure their campus from co开发企业
USA 84 Susan, She Wrote "Tell, Dark and Deadly" **** (1995, Suspense) Kim Delaney "Wings" Wings Silk Skating (In Stereo)
VH1 85 Donny Partridge Disco Explosion (R) Sexes (R) Takin' Care of Business (R) New year's Rocke'n Eve
WGN 86 Hercules; Legendary Jyms. Xena: Warrior Princess (in Stereo) Wiseguy (in Stereo) In the Heat of the Night
WTBS 85 NBA Basketball: Orlando Magic at Houston Rockets (Live) Inside-NBA "The Perfect Weapon" **** (1991) Drama) Jeff Speakman
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 80 "The Rookie" **** (1990, Drama) Clint Eastwood. 80 Tracey Takes Larry Sanders "Profile for Murder" (1997) Lance Henkinksen. Comedy Hour
CNN 82 "Friday the 13th," part 2. **** (1981) RU "The Crush" **** (1993) Cary Ewles. RU "Dangerous Movies" **** (1985, Drama) NR "Outbreak"
SHOW 82 "Dead Man's Gun" (1997, Western) Frank Wailley. (In Stereo) Last Man Standing **** (1996, Drama) Jeff Wincolt. "Chain of Command" (1993)
ET CETERA
www.kansan.com
UDKI THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
Do you picture yourself a prestigious post-season prognosticator? Well, our Cool Sites Dept. has found the site for you. Check out the Topek Capital-Journal's online NCAA Tournament Bracket Contest at www.cjonline.com/~nca_jentry.html and test your prediction skills during the tournament. Also, off the UDI homepage, you can now access a collection of columns by the Kansan Editor and Online Editor.
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.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60454, 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. 60444. 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. 60454.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 12, 1997
3A
KANU off air for second time
By Mark McMaster
Kansan staff writer
KANU-FM radio went off the air around 11 p.m. Sunday, once again because of problems with the station's transmitter.
Interim Station Director Janet Campbell said that the problems were similar to those that caused the station to shut down last month. Those repairs cost the station approximately $2,500 to repair.
"Last time, an arching in the trans-
mission line burned. They could easl
ily identify it because it could be seen in the line. This time, it hasn't burned as bad, so it isn't visible, but they suspect it's the same thing," she said.
The station will borrow testing equipment from the School of Engineering that should diagnose the problem this morning.
As soon as the equipment can be used, the transmitter should be repaired quickly, she said.
Campbell said she did not know when the station would be back on the air.
Many listeners have called the station to find out why it was off the air, said the station's bookkeeper, Sherri Moore.
"It's sure to say we won't be on tomorrow," she said yesterday.
Derek John, Topeka freshman, said that he was annoyed by the station's problems.
"I always listen to KANU in the car," he said. "This morning, I turned it on, and there was just static, I almost had a wreck."
The transmitter's failure has also be a nuisance to those working at
"The news department had lots of news reports prepared, and they can't go on the air," Campbell said.
the station.
"We're all mystified," Campbell said.
The station doesn't know what was responsible for the recurring transmitter failure.
She said the station planned to conduct a more thorough inspection of the transmitter when it was repaired this time.
Asian journalist Nguyen to address racism
By Umut Bayramoglu
Kansan staff writer
Many minority students worry about going into predominantly white work places.
But the experiences of an Asian American who will be speaking on campus tonight show that success is possible no matter what a person's ethnicity might be.
Qui Duc Nguyen, an Asian-American producer for KALW-FM radio station in San Francisco, will address the racism that Asians face in the United States at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Nguyen will be the second speaker the Asian American Student Union has brought to campus for the Fifth Annual Asian-American Festival.
AASU paid $2,500 to the Speakers' Bureau for Nguyen's appearance.
Kim Tran, Wichita senior and AASU public relations officer, said that the main purpose of the festival was to raise campus awareness to eliminate stereotypes about Asian Americans.
"I think N guyen's speech will allow people to see a different point of view," she said. "Most
Qui Duc Nguyen
people grow up believing in one aspect, and they don't know what's on on the other side."
Aside from his job as a producer of programs dealing with multicultural issues at KALW-FM, Nguyen has been a regular commentator for National Public Radio since 1986.
In 1989 he received the Overseas Press Club's Award for Excellence for his NPR reports about Vietnam.
Tran said that Nguyen had written for publications such as the New York Times Magazine, the San Francisco Examiner, and the
City Lights Review in San Francisco.
Before becoming a producer for KALW-FM, Nguyen worked for the Far Eastern Services of the British Broadcasting Corp.
Tran said that AASU chose Nguyen because of his prestigious background.
Nguyen grew up in Vietnam and fled to the United States at the age of 15 after his father was captured by the Viet Cong in 1973.
Tran said that one of the subjects Nguyen would talk about was his experiences as a refugee resettlement worker in California.
"He is not one of those people that came to America and forgot all about their background," she said.
In 1982, Nguyen went back to Indonesia to work in a cultural orientation program where he trained teachers to prepare Vietnamese and Cambodian refugees for life in America.
Nguyen also has written an autobiography, Where The Ashes Are:
The Odyssey of a Vietnamese
"Most people grow up believing in one aspect, and they don't know what's going on on the other side."
Kim Tran Wichita senior
Family.
Lu Xu, Olathe sophomore, said that she would be interested to hear about Nguyen's experiences.
"Id like to know what he has to say about what it takes to become successful in America as an Asian American," she said. "Hopefully he'll give us advice about how to keep our goal in life."
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March is Women's History Month
Mother-Daughter Relationships
These questions and others you might have will be discussed at this unique program.
- Are Daughters reflections of their mother?
- Are Daughters special names special to your Mother's best friend?
- Is your Mother your best friend?
Tuesday, March 18, 1997
Pine Room, Kansas Union
7:30 p.m.
Special Quests:
Fund of Mothers and Daughters
Moderator:
Dr. Barbara D. Burns, Director
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
118 Brewing St. For more information contact Jenn Dodd at 644-3920.
Multiculturalism & Women
Widen your Horizons In celebration of Women's History Month
Facilitator:
Daphne Johnston, Associate Director International Student Services.
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
English Room, Kansas Union
7:00 p.m to 9:00 p.m.
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall, University of Kansas. For more information contact, Jennifer Joseph at 864-3552.
ATTENTION RIDERS!
The Student Senate Transportation Board (KU on Wheels) will be conducting Route Hearings on
Tuesday, March 18 at 5:00 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room on the 5th Floor of the Kansas Union
E. LAWRENCE and WEST 6TH
ROUTE HEARINGS ARE THE TIMES FOR THE BOARD TO RECEIVE INPUT FROM OUR RIDERS
For more information please call Bob Grunzinger at 864-4644
SAA
KU STUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
ELECTIONS
Student Alumni Association
TONIGHT at 7p.m. Adams Alumni Center
Bring your calendar,
bring a friend.
and bring your Jayhawk spirit.
OPINION
4A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
CRAIG LANG, Editor MARK OZIMEK, Business manager
SUSANNA LOOP, Managing editor DENNIE HAUPT, Retail sales manager
KIMBERLY CRABTREE, Editorial editor JUSTIN KNUPP, Technology coordinator
TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser JAY STEINER, Sales and marketing adviser
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Amy Miller / KANSAN
Editorials
Kathleen Richards, Lawrence freshman, would be a junior now if she hadn't had to wait two years to get her children into Hiltop Child Development Center.
Richards is one of many nontraditional students whose access to campus daycare is directly related to her ability to get an education.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that the University was not able to find a private donor to offset the cost of a proposed $3.3 million childcare center. But couldn't the University have drawn from the pool of unallocated funds that alumni donate each year, as suggested by Grey Montgomery, student body president?
Childcare is an educational issue. Like financial aid, childcare is an essential tool in the pursuit of education. It provides access and makes the theoretical right to an education a practical reality.
University should accept a compromise, financially support Hilltop.
And just as it is the University's responsibility to provide tools for education — like computers, libraries and lab space — it is also its responsibility to provide childcare facilities.
Although many agree that the Hilltop program is top-notch, the facility is clearly insufficient. The building is too small, although about 150 children are enrolled, 200 other children are on a waiting list.
If the University would comply with plans for a 310-space childcare center, maintenance and space problems could
be largely alleviated. Since the University refuses to provide financing, Montgomery has proposed a compromise—a 220-space center.
"Id rather see something than nothing," Montgomery said. That compromise would require that $4, rather than $2, from student fees go to the center. However, Montgomery worried that the University's response would be the same—no money. The University has not yet responded to the proposal. Let's not be fooled. When University administrators say there is no money for Hilltop, the truth is that they simply do not choose to draw from the year's unallocated funds to support childcare.
There is always a choice. And in this case, the University's choice could reflect a lack of interest in the educational opportunities of a significant population of its students.
LAURA WEXLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Parents need to repeat warnings
Do not talk to strangers. Do not invite a stranger into your house. Adults often repeat these phrases to their children hoping that children will follow this sound advice in a time of crisis. Yet once children reach a certain age, they may disregard the commands.
After a man posing as a magazine salesman allegedly raped a Lawrence woman, maybe students will take this advice more seriously. Somehow people think that Lawrence is safe and that nothing bad will happen to them. This can be attributed to the belief that everyone is friendly and that young people are invincible.
However, none of this is true. Lawrence is safe if you take the necessary precautions, like locking your doors and not walking alone at night. Inviting strangers into your house, even if they are solicitors, is not safe. The
Students should stop assuming that Lawrence is safe, protect themselves.
University of Kansas even has a policy against solicitation in the residence halls to help keep students safe.
Rape, however, is not committed only by strangers. In fact, acquaintance rape, or date rape, is one of the most common types. Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said national statistics indicated that one in four women would be raped or would have rape attempted against them before leaving college.
Although the victim is not at fault when rape occurs, many rapes could be prevented. The Emily Taylor Center
has peer educators who participate in a sexual-assault-and-prevention program and talk to campus groups about preventing rape.
Communication is a key to prevention. Women and men need to talk about what they want — and be clear about saying yes or no to sex. Other precautions peer educators tout are simple, such as not going to social gatherings alone, not leaving with someone you don't know and not being afraid to leave an uncomfortable situation.
Also, 90 percent of raps involve alcohol, and students should be cautious when they drink alcohol so that they do not inadvertently put themselves in dangerous situations.
This advice should not be unfamiliar. Most of our parents delivered the same message to us when we were children, and many give us the same advice now.
KANSAN STAFF
NICOLE SKALLA FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
LATINA SULLIVAN . . . Associate Editorial
KRISTIE BLASI . . . News
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**Letters:** Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
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Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kim Crabtreat (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (sullivan@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Columns
Senate must face reality, pass budget
Until last week, I wasn't sure if politics was about rhetoric or reality. Now I know it's the former.
ANDY
ROHRBACK
When the U.S. Senate voted down a Constitutional amendment that would have required a balanced budget by 2002, it demonstrated that no matter how much people talk about responsibility, no one is willing to bite the bullet and do the job. All 55 Republican senators voted for the amendment, but only 11 Democrats voted for it. The measure was defeated 66-34 —one vote
ANDY ROHRBACK
ity needed to pass the amendment.
It's not even worth asking if the amendment would have been ratified by the necessary 38 states. It wouldn't have been.
State governments have little to fear from an amendment regulating the federal purse strings. In fact, such an amendment might force the federal government to give the states a little more power.
Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., announced on Feb. 28 that he would vote against the amendment, giving the opposition the necessary 34 votes. Torricelli had run for office on the promise that he would support a balanced budget amendment, and Republicans made sure everyone remembered his earlier pledge.
But Torricelli alone is not to blame. What
As a result of the cowardice of 34 senators and one president, the federal government is buying time at the cost of my children's prosperity. The "Bridge to the 21st century" is looking more like a bridge that eventually will drop into the ocean. The fact is, no matter how many sob stories about Medicare and welfare there are, those debts have to be paid. I could tell the credit card company how badly I need this new big-screen TV, but it won't stop them from billing me for it.
defeated the balanced budget amendment was 34 spineless legislators who spouted the rhetoric of fiscal responsibility but couldn't handle the reality of actually carrying out their promises.
I wish I could have been there when Torricelli and the 33 other senators voted against the amendment. I really only have one question for them: "So do you honestly believe that government can continue to plummet into debt indefinitely?" Of course, I would have to tape their comments and play them once every five minutes over the TV during election season.
With elections coming in 1998, the amendment's supporters have talked about bringing it to the table again. It's sad that our leaders don't have the guts to put the rhetoric behind them and face reality.
I spoke with some Canadians by Internet recently, and they asked me why Americans let such "losers" be our leaders. As much as I love this country, I didn't have an answer.
Andy Rohrback is an Andover Junior in Journalism.
e-mail: arohback@kansan.com
Technology threatens to degrade quality of life
I support the Unabomber.
Before the FBI comes busting through my door I must qualify this by stating that I sympathize with his or her ideas and not the methods of broadcasting them. For example, I do support many of the Unabomber's ideas on technology. Technology is not inherently beneficial, and we should not accept all past and future advances.
COLIN
GOTHAM
The Unabomber called for more simple times, and the
hour nas come to question what will become of our future exploits. Throwing away our technologies and returning to a more basic existence seems unlikely, but we at least need to consider where we are heading.
Technology has a storied past. Each important technological advance has been greeted with amazement, hope and fear.
The idea of cloning a human is frightening as we move one step closer to godlike status. Looking beyond these emotions and viewing technology with cost-and-benefit analysis leads me to conclude that many technological miracles are no longer worth the trade-off. We welcome the surge in information access but do not stop to think about the threat to our privacy while satellites spin above us. The double-edged sword of technology has become too sharp, and our quality of life is suffering because of the pervasiveness of technology and our dependence on it. Thanks to technology, we are obese, lazy and no longer the sole arbiters of our lives.
Technology has given us many comforts, helped alleviate suffering and prolonged our lives. It sure is nice to be able to run again after four knee surgeries that couldn't have been performed 30 years ago.
Technology has given us the ability to overcome some inconveniences. However, our existence is not more enjoyable because of our longevity. Accepting technology as something beneficial
because it makes our lives easier and longer is not a complete analysis.
We are able to grow plenty of food so that most of us do not have to provide for ourselves, but technology also has given us weapons of mass destruction and environmental degradation. I step out of my apartment each day and smell not nature but automobile exhaust.
Technology has enslaved us. Cars, elevators, adjustable beds, riding lawn mowers and more control us. People perform mind-numbing labor inside factories or have their hands nailed to computers. We no longer know simple joys like hunting for food, but only understand that our spirits have been crushed by the march of progress. Place the majority of us in the wilderness without a portable generator, and we will die.
Technology reduces us to impersonal communication and shallow relationships. Instead of talking with someone face to face, we just use the telephone or the Internet. We use ATMs instead of going to the bank.
The automobile gave us freedom to ride, so we have moved farther from each other. Our most basic relationships with family, friends and community are no longer essential because they are no longer necessary for survival. Our dependence on our neighbors has been replaced with dependence on technology.
I am not advocating a march to Strong Hall to demand that we be recognized as more than just our KUID numbers.
Sadly, computers and technology are here to stay. My one-man army will not stop the march of progress.
I just beg those of you in Learned and Malotl halls and other technocrats who will be developing technology and dictating our futures to give the simpeltons a thought.
The thought of multiple Dennis Rodman clones and cameras that can see through the walls of our homes makes many of us just plain scared.
Colin Gotham is a Kansas City, Kan., first year law student
Letters
Rock Chalk committee made the right choice
Kudos to the Rock Chalk Revue advisory board for not allowing Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity to participate in Rock Chalk activities this weekend.
By excluding the fraternity, they sent a strong message to all present and future groups who decide to put forth the many long, strenuous hours that are necessary to make the Rock Chalk competition: If you act irresponsibly, the Rock Chalk Revue has the right to drop your group from the show at any time, no matter where you are in the rehearsal process.
While the disreputable act in question, at this point, is still only an alleged hazing incident, the additional description of the events that took place that night are enough to garner at least some attention from the Rock Chalk Revue folks.
Unfortunately, the women of Alpha Delta Pi seem to have gotten the bum end of the deal.
Derek John
Topeka freshman
which was made about waking up three times in the wee hours of the morning to a fire alarm, was false.
Columnist exaggerated fire alarm incident
Nevertheless, it is reassuring to know the Rock Chalk Revue folks can still make a good decision when needed.
I would like to address Mary Corcoran's editorial about leaving Oliver Hall.
First of all, the statement,
Lastly, being apart of a hardworking, creative and conscientious group that wasn't selected by the Rock Chalk Revue judges this past fall, I can't help but be more than a little bit angry at the Pi Kappa Alpha for squandering its golden opportunity to perform in front of the Lawrence community for a good cause.
They knew the risk of signing on with a fraternity, which appears to me to have a questionable reputation.
I can sympathize, only to a point, with these women.
We only awake once at 3:30 a.m. that morning, which was due to a resident finding it humorous to pull the alarm.
It was not the fault of the resident assistant, security monitor or staff that residents had got out of bed and stand in the cold.
So, I ask Corcoran, how bad was it?
And one more thing, Ms. Corcoran. You must also know that during the two years you lived in Oliver, you met some of the best friends that you will ever have. And had some of the best times and memories of you life in that very same residence hall. That I know.
Joyce Newman Chicago sophomore
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 12, 1997
5A
Funds being established for Sunflower fire victims
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
A donations fund has been established for two victims of the Feb. 26 fire at Eighth and Massachusetts streets.
Rachael Tucker, office manager for the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Dole Hall, said she wanted to establish a fund to help two women, Terry Thompson and Toni Casagrande, whose apartments were destroyed in the fire.
"I saw all the activity downtown when I was coming home, and I read the article Thursday morning," Tucker said. "I think it affected a lot of people. They couldn't stop talking about it. So I just wanted to help in some way."
Tucker decided to set up an account at Mercantile Bank in Lawrence for donations to help the women, who lost almost all of their possessions in the fire. She said that she hadn't had much response but that she was going to distribute more flyers and letters this week.
K. T. Walsh, the manager of the Social Service League Store, a local thrift store at 905 Rhode Island, said that the store had donation jars for the two women and that they had collected about $150 so far.
"It's not a lot, but it's better than
nothing." Walsh said. "Every little bit helps."
Donations for the women also are being accepted at Sarah's Fabrics, 925 Massachusetts St., and at Stitch On Needlework and Gifts, 926 Massachusetts St.
Karla Menaugh, treasurer for the Kaw Valley Quilters Guild, said that a little more than $400 had been collected at Sarah's. She said the quilting guild was involved because Thompson was the vice president of the guild.
"We're hoping that as we get more information out, we'll get more money in to help." Menaugh said.
The fire destroyed the apartments above Sunflower Outdoor and Bike Shop, 804 Massachusetts St., and above the former Herbivores restaurant. 9 E. 8th St.
Fire Marshall Richard Barr said that the fire started in the L-shaped basement shared by the two buildings that burned down. He said that the cause was a gas-fueled hot water heater in the southeast corner of the basement.
The water heater was not malfunctioning before the fire. Barr said.
Barr said the fire traveled through the many open spaces in the building and moved up the stairs in the Eighth Street building. Fire consumed the second floor and then moved west to the north half of Sun-
Donations
Donations can be sent to:
Sunflower Fire Victims Fund,
c/o Rachael Tucker
c/o Rachael Tucker
NICHD-HDFL. 4037 Dole Hal
NICHD-HDFL, 4037 Dole Hall University of Kansas. 66045
Or The Mercantile Bank of Lawrence, 900 Massachusetts St.
Donations also can be made at:
The Social Service League
The Social Service League Store. 905 Rhode Island St.
Sarah's Fabrics, 925 Massachusetts St
Stitch On Needlework and Gifts
Stitch On Needlework and Gifts,
926 Massachusetts St.
926 Massachusetts St.
flower at 802 Massachusetts St.. The openings in the fire wall between the two Sunflower buildings allowed the fire to move into the 804 building.
Barr said that the first floor of all three shops basically were intact but that the second floors were destroyed because of breaks in the fire wall between the buildings.
"The first floor of the 804 building is OK to the alley, but the second floor is gone." Barr said. "When the roof on Eighth Street vented, that's when the fire started to spread along the roof to the other buildings."
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Senator resigns after GTA argument
By Stephanie McDuff Kansan staff writer
A disagreement in a meeting of the Classified Senate's Public Relations Committee six weeks ago resulted in the resignation of one member of the senate yesterday.
Kershenbaum said that Simons should speak at the rally, while Hutton said she should not.
Richard Kershenbaum, manager of Technical Services, said the dispute between him and Tom Hutton, director of University Relations, was due to their differing opinions on the status of graduate teaching assistants.
The Classified Senate represents classified employees at the University of Kansas, such as support and clerical staff and University police officers. Thelma Simons, president of the senate, said the dispute began when she had asked the Public Relations Committee if she should speak at an upcoming GTA Coalition rally to which she had been invited.
"It has become clear to me that the Senate no longer values free expression or independent thought within its ranks," Kershenbaum said in his letter, which Simon has yet to receive.
Kershenbaum said that he then corrected Hutton during the meeting by reminding him that GTAs had in fact been deemed employees by the University's Public Employee Relations Board.
According to Kershenbaum's resignation letter, received by the University Daily Kansan, Hutton had said that the GTAs were not employees, but merely "interns" preparing for a "very privileged position in society."
Hutton said he only meant that the classification of GTAs differed from classified staff because most leave the University after a short period of employment, whereas classified employees work on a longer-term basis.
He said that after the disagreement in the meeting, he had thought little about it.
Following the disagreement in the Public Relations Committee meeting, Kershenbaum e-mailled then-president of GTAC Karen Hellekson about the GTA status disagreement.
Hutton said yesterday that from his perspective, the two shared only a difference in opinion on an emotional issue.
Hutton said that during the disagreement, he said GTAs were vying for privileged positions as University faculty members. He said this statement was meant to be a compliment to those desiring to be University faculty members, who are in esteemed positions.
Simons said the letter was not intended to discourage Hutton and Kershenbaum's discussion but to challenge Kershenbaum's notification of Hellekson about the remarks made in the meeting.
Kershenbaum said that he thought he had the right to tell the GTAC about the incident.
She said that the committee may appoint someone else, or it could wait until the elections to be held in August.
Abortion bills to be hot topic in Statehouse
He later said that because the senate expected him to be silent, he questioned his freedom of speech as a committee member.
After Simons had been notified of the letter sent to the GTAC, she was instructed by the University Executive Council to write a letter to Kershenbaum deeming his actions inappropriate.
"I decided that it was important for the Graduate Teaching Assistants Coalition to know that a key member of the administration was spreading misinformation about the status of GTAs," Kershenbaum said in his resignation letter.
Simons said that at this time she does not know if Kershenbaum's senate seat will soon be filled.
The Associated Press
Doctors who fail to comply with the measure could be subjected to civil penalties up to $250,000.
Get your artwork in front of KU!
The bill last year extended that period to 24 hours, prompting the veto.
"This is a bill that will not prevent a woman from making a choice," said Harrington.
The measure, she added, is designed to allow a woman considering an abortion to make an informed, intelligent choice.
The informed consent measure has been described as a moderate proposal.
The Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee will hold hearings today and tomorrow about abortion bills.
TOPEKA — On the second floor of the Statehouse's east wing, a small committee room will become the center stage of the abortion debate next week.
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Graves, in his veto message, said that the 24-hour waiting period would be a hardship for women who were forced to travel long distances to undergo abortions.
Sen. Nancey Harrington, R-Clearwater, the principal sponsor of the measures, said she hoped Graves would sign the measure this year because it would retain the provision in present state law that requires women to wait eight hours between seeking and getting an abortion.
Supporters hope that won't happen this year.
DROP WORK OFF THIS WEEK IN THE SUA-OFFICE TO THE SUA-FINE ARTS COMMITTEE. THE SHOW WILL RUN MARCH 15-22, 1997. MORE THAN ONE PIECE MAY BE DISPLAYED ACCORDING TO SPACE AVAILABLE. CALL 864-3477 FOR MORE INFO AND CHECK OUT WWW.UKANS.EDU/~SUA FOR OTHER UPCOMING SUA EVENTS.
The Women's Right to Know measure, which requires doctors to provide women with certain information before they have abortions, was veted by Gov. Bill Graves last year.
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7A
Russia to be reorganized
Yeltsin vows to shake up government
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin ordered his Cabinet overhauled yesterday, following through on promises to shake up a government that has been unable to pull Russia's fledgling market economy out of its rut.
The newly invigorated Yeltsin, who last week castigated his government for lying motionless while the economy drifted, only guaranteed the jobs of two Cabinet members — Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin and his new top deputy, Anatoly Chubais.
Yellsin gave Chermyrdyn a week to reorganize the government. He
PRESIDENT
Boris Yeltsin
said it should be trimmer, with a smaller Cabinet and fewer ministries, although it was not clear how many officials would lose their jobs.
The Russian government has seemed rudder-
less since at least July, when an alling Yeltsin won re-election to a second term and then dropped largely but of sight because of heart trouble and a bout with pneumonia. Only in recent weeks has he appeared to be fully back in control.
In the meantime, the economy has stalled on the difficult road from communism to capitalism. Millions of workers, both in government and private industry, have gone for months without pay. Taxes have gone uncollected and public disgust has grown.
"The president wants to take some steps following his recuperation which would show him out and about on top of things," said lawmaker Grigory Yavlinsky.
But, he said that a personnel reshuffle alone would solve neither economic issues nor internal policy problems."
Yeltsin repeatedly has pledged to fix pressing problems since becoming Russia's president in 1991 but often has not delivered and has blamed his ministers for the shortcomings.
The Russian leader promised a shakeup in his State of the Nation Speech, and followed that with yesterday's order, saying Chermomyrdin would work out the details of the decree.
In addition to Chernomyrdin, the Cabinet consists of 33 ministers and deputy premiers. Government representative Alexander Voznesensky said that the decree also might apply to at least some of the heads of 19gov-
ermment committees and 23 federal agencies.
However, the ITAR-Tass news agency quoted another government representative as saying the only officials who would lose their jobs were those whose departments are being eliminated.
While 'Yeltsin will be seeking quick improvements to social and economic problems, he also has stressed the urgency of military reform. That could result in the ouster of Defense Minister Igor Rodionov, who already was rumored to be on the way out.
The Russian stock market soared yesterday, rising 3.3 percent after news of the government reshuffle was announced.
Chernomydyni, a reliable but colorless premier who has demonstrated strong survival skills, told reporters that the changes would lead to the deepening of reforms in all directions.
"Everything will be all right," he assured Russians.
Depleting bison population in Montana causing concern
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — With more than half of Yellowstone's wild buffalo herd destroyed, Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt said yesterday that continued killing of the animals is threatening the survival of a national symbol.
Babbitt has been sharply critical of Montana state officials who for months have waged war on buffalo that wander outside of Yellowstone National Park, killing or sending to slaughter 1,049 of the animals so far this winter.
Hundreds more are believed to have died within the park from the severe winter weather that also has caused more of the animals than expected to wander into surrounding forage areas in search of food.
"The continued killing by the state of Montana could threaten the future of this national symbol and the biological integrity of the last wild herd," Babbitt said in a statement.
Montana Gov. Marc Racicot called Babbitt's remarks shameful and said they show he does not understand the problem.
"I'm really tired — and I think the people of this country and I know Montanans are tired — of this same rhetorical posturing," Racicot said.
Montana officials contend that they have no choice but to kill the animals if they leave the park because of fear that they may spread disease to livestock. Some
bison carry brucellosis, a disease that causes livestock to abort their calves.
Even the threat of such disease can cause havoc to a state's livestock industry, the officials said. Oregon, for example already has barred Montana cattle from its borders unless they are tested for the disease.
Interior officials said Babbitt planned to offer new proposals next week about ways to deal with the buffalo and concerns by Montana officials about the spread of brucellosis. A news conference about the subject was canceled yesterday because of what aides said were scheduling conflicts.
Babbitt has been in a long tug-of-war with the state about how to deal with the problem. In a settlement of a lawsuit filed by Montana against the agency, the Interior Department agreed to a plan in which bison leaving the park are killed or captured for slaughter, either by state officials or by park rangers.
Interior officials said that 68 buffalo have been killed since Feb. 26, when Babbitt sent Racicot a letter urging a halt to the killing and suggesting some alternative short-term solutions aimed at stopping the slaughter.
Yellowstone National Park
MONTANA
WYOMING
IDAHO
UTAH
AREA OF DETAIL
But Montana officials have accused the National Park Service of not doing enough to control the Yellowstone bison herd, which they said had grown too large. They also have complained
about inadequate research into developing a brucellosis vaccine for wild buffalo.
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
Babbitt said that the unusually severe winter has driven a large number of the animals out of their historic winter range and beyond the Yellowstone boundary.
Although there are buffalo found elsewhere, the Yellowstone bison are the only truly wild herd in existence, Interior officials said. Babbitt said that if the killing persisted, the future of the herd was in jeopardy.
Racicot disputed that, noting that the park's top bison researcher, Mary Meagher, has said that thinning the herd to about its current level may ensure the herd's future in a park incapable of supporting a larger number of bison.
"I'm surprised and mystified by the secretary's lack of knowledge," Racicot said. "I don't think that he has a full grasp of all the issues."
Wisconsin dealer convicted of stealing military equipment
The Associated Press
MADISON, Wis. — A military surplus dealer was convicted yesterday of masterminding the biggest theft of fighting equipment ever from a U.S. base — a $13 million heist that included a tank and 17 armored personnel carriers.
Leo Anthony Piatz, nicknamed Tanker Tony, was found guilty of all counts of conspiracy, bribery and conversion of government property.
Platz, 37, could get up to 125 years in prison and $2.75 million in fines at his sentencing next month.
Prosecutors said Platz used bribes, phony documents and help from six accomplices to drive off with at least 153 vehicles from Fort McCoy, located 95 miles northwest of Madison. Five others charged in the scheme face trial in June.
In addition to a Vietnam-era Sheridan tank and the personnel carriers, the stolen vehicles included an airport runway snowblower truck, a crane and other heavy equipment. They were taken between 1994 and 1996.
Prosecutors said that the vehicles were sold to museums and collectors.
Piatz was also accused of trying to lease a missile launcher to 20th Century Fox for use in filming the Desert Storm movie Courage Under Fire, but the studio decided against the deal.
Most of the equipment has been returned to Fort McCoy.
Citizens demand war payments
Latin Americans seek apology
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Latin Americans interned in U.S. camps during World War II because of their Japanese heritage appealed to President Clinton yesterday to let them share the financial redress made to Japanese Americans.
Under a little-known World War II program, more than a dozen Latin American countries shipped 2,264 citizens of Japanese heritage, mostly from Peru, to U.S. internment camps for possible barter with the Japanese for American prisoners of war. No such prisoner exchanges occurred, however, and after the war, many of the Latin internees weren't accepted in their home countries.
They went to Japan or stayed in the United States.
At a news conference, Nishimoto and two other former internees — all U.S. citizens now
The White House had no comment about the group's request.
— displayed 4,000 signed form letters to Clinton from American, Peruvian and Japanese citizens. The letters urged Clinton to issue an executive order to compensate Japanese-Latin Americans who had been denied because they weren't U.S. citizens when they were intermed.
"This callous denial of redress is inexcusable ...," the letter said in part. "Please act now, and don't make them wait another day for justice long overdue."
ment about the group's request. Rep. Xavier Becerra, D-Calif., is supporting the new redress claims and said that if Clinton doesn't act, lawmakers will likely introduce legislation to seek compensation for the Japanese-Latin Americans interned.
"This is a true story that belongs in the believe-it-or-not chapter of American history," said Becerra. "It seems to me that any time a government believes it can barter for human beings, it must pay a price."
Drug trader suspect skips bail in Thailand
The Associated Press
BANGKOK, Thailand — The chief suspect in the biggest heroin shipment ever seized in the United States — enough to supply every American addict for a month — has skipped bail in Thailand.
A Thai court granted bail despite a U.S. extradition request, and the United States urged Thai authorities yesterday to take Li Yun Chung back into custody as soon as possible. The police said they feared he already had fled to neighboring Burma, making it extremely difficult to apprehend him.
Li has been at large since a senior criminal court official, apparently violating customary procedures, granted him $200,000 ball Feb. 7 without notifying prosecutors or presiding judges.
Li was indicted in U.S. District Court in New York in May 1996 in connection with 1,070 pounds of heroin seized at a warehouse in Hayward, Calif., in 1991. The heroin was destined for New York.
The drugs, hidden in a shipment of plastic bags, were the biggest heroin
seizure in U.S. history, with an estimated street value of $1 to $3 billion.
The 90 percent pure "China white" heroin was estimated by then-Customs Commissioner Carol Hallett as enough to supply the 700,000 heroin addicts in the United States with as much as they desired for a month.
Li would face life imprisonment if extradited and convicted on the U.S. narcotics trafficking and criminal enterprise charges.
Authorities have linked him to other heroin shipments to the United States and to 162 pounds of heroin seized in March 1996 in Singapore.
Li did not reappear as ordered, and the court seized the $200,000 bond — three land deeds police said turned out to be worthless.
Bail was granted by the criminal court's deputy director general, said Maj. Gen. Viraj Jutimatta of the Police Narcotics Suppression Bureau. Disciplinary action was likely to be brought against the official, whom Viraj did not name. He has not been charged with any crime.
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RECYCLE
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Kansan
The University of Kansas • The University Theatre • Presents the Robust Comedy
Directed by Ron Popenhagen
Movement Choreographed by Ludvika Apinyte Popenhagen
Scenic Design by Mark Reaney
Lighting Design by Ann Hockenberry
Costume Design by Galina Urman
8:00 p.m.
March 7, 8, 13, 14*, 15, 1997
2:30 p.m.
Sunday, March 9, 1997
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
of WINDSOR
by William Shakespeare
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in the KU box offices: Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS, SUA Office, 864-3477; public S12. KU students $6, other students and senior citizens $11; both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee.
*The Friday, March 14, performance will be signed for the deaf and hard of hearing.
RECYCLING
M
8A
Wednesday, March 12, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Coming Out OF THE DARK
BY: AMY RUSH
I
Julie had been rehearsing the conversation for days. She walked into the principal's office at the elementary school where she works, sat down and took a deep breath.
"There is something I need to tell you. I am a professional, and I know that you are professional enough to handle this information," she said to the principal.
She didn't want her last name used because she is afraid of the backlash that may come from children's parents if they find out about her sexual orientation.
Julie, who asked that her last name be withheld, proceeded to tell the principal that she was a lesbian.
Many heterosexuals may take it for granted that they can talk about their sexuality in the workplace. However, many gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people may face uncertain outcomes when they decide to talk about their sexual orientation.
Julie told her principal about her sexual orientation so that there wouldn't be a surprise if anything should ever happen at school, like a parent having a problem with her.
___
On National Coming Out Day, Hampton decided to write her boss a letter, to tell i am about her sexual orientation and about a co-worker who had told offensive, homophobic jokes.
Chris Hampton, Lawrence graduate student and office manager of
Upward Bound, said that she chose to come out at work after being involved with the LesBiGay Services of Kansas, which is now called Queers and Allies.
"I was tired of tiptoeing around the issue here." Hampton said.
However, some people decide not to come out of the closet because of their environment.
Mary, who also asked that her last name be withheld, is a KU law student and works as a clerk at a law firm.
National Coming Out Day is set aside for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people to come out to those around them.
"I'm afraid," Mary said. "In the law school, there is a conservative atmosphere; particularly for Lawrence. I don't want to be the odd one."
"I was pretty nervous about it, and it turned out that he was very supportive." she said.
Mary doesn't regret not telling her
co-workers about her sexual orientation.
THE GAME
"It's nobody's business who you're sleeping with or who you want to be sleeping with," she said. "When I grew up, there was a real stigma about gay people. I'd just as soon not have that in addition to my job stress."
Matt Hydeman, Leawood graduate student, helps two students in the Academic Resource Center, where he works. Hydeman is one person who felt comfortable enough to come out in his work place.
When Scott Manning, Lawrence graduate student, worked as a French and Italian instructor, he first chose to hide his sexual orientation. During his second year in the department, he became involved with LesBiGayS OK and was quoted in the University Daily Kansan about gay issues.
"I got some backlash, nothing direct, from some students," Manning said. "They were disrespectful. I guess they thought of me as a less authoritative figure."
Matt Hydeman, Leawood graduate, feels secure in coming out about his sexuality in the workplace.
However, Manning's co-workers and the chairman of the department were supportive.
"I would be very unhappy if I were not out, because when I think of the times I wasn't out, I felt disconnected," he said. "I avoided talking about stuff. It's not worth it."
In 1995, a coalition called Simply Equal formed to add the words "sexual orientation" to Lawrence's human relations code. This addition made it illegal for anyone to discriminate against a person for employment, housing or public accommodation on the basis of sexual orientation.
Hampton said that coming out at work still was scary for her. She knew that the code would protect her. However, she said that people could always discriminate in subtle ways.
Coming out in the workplace also can affect a person's job in a negative way. But for Joe Cuevas, Topeka junior and student assistant for Upward Bound, the experience of coming out has been positive.
"I feel that I can express myself fully," he said. "I don't have to hide anything at all."
Although some gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people have positive experiences while being out in the workplace, Andy Dunlap, who is working on his social work
practicum as a therapist, said that many people didn't come out to their co-workers for a variety of reasons.
"Some people will feel uncomfortable to be identified as a queer person," said Dunlap, also a Lawrence graduate student.
Hampton said that some closedet
people could be afraid of discrimination, receiving less respect or losing the possibility of advancing professionally.
"But the more people who are out in the workplace, the more straight people know that we're just as normal as they are," Hampton said.
Ellen to come out with a little help from her friends
The Associated Press
BURBANK, Calif. — ABC finally confirmed everyone's suspicions: Ellen will come out as a lesbian.
To help Ellen Morgan make that historical network leap, the quirky character, played by Ellen DeGeneres on the show *Ellen*, receives help from her friends; actress Laura Dern, talk-show host Oprah Winfrey and singers Melissa Etheridge and k.d. lang. All celebrities will appear in the long-anticipated, one-hour episode scheduled to air April 30 on ABC.
there's a lot on our shoulders here."
While several sitcoms, such as Roseanne and Mad About You, have featured homosexual characters, Ellen Morgan will play the first gay lead in a prime-time show.
"There is an incredible amount of care going into this — that it's done right and done well," said executive producer Dava Savel. "We realize
In the episode, half of which was taped last Friday night, Dern plays a lesbian who comes into town with an old college friend of Morgan's.
Morgan finds she's more attracted to Dern's character than to her male friend, said Mark Driscoll, another executive producer.
Winfrev plavs one of Morgan's therapists.
In the portion of the show already taped, a nervous Morgan declares she is gay and confesses her attraction to Dern's character, said David Tomb, a member of the audience who heads a gay and lesbian organization of United Airlines employees.
Her declaration, made in an airport, is accidentally carried over a public address system, he said.
ficult, why can't we just come out and say who we are?"
The idea was leaked to the media last September. Since then, there have been several on-air quips by Morgan and off-air jokes by DeGeneres that she may be "Lebanese" or that the show would add a new male character named Les Bian. In one episode, Morgan told her divorcing parents: "What if I said something shocking to you? Like my whole life has been a lie and I'm really... left-handed."
Etheridge will perform a song during the opening title sequence, and lang will appear as a singer/waitress in the bookstore.
The plan for the series, now in its fourth season, already has generated some expected criticism from conservatives.
"It was really important to Ellen to reveal it in such a way that everybody, including middle America, was on board." Savel said. "That everybody saw her angst, everybody saw what she was going through, and that by the end, you're rooting for her."
Savel and Driscoll wrote the episode, along with DeGeneres and consulting producers Tracy Newman and Jonathan Stark.
Driscoll said DeGeneres first mentioned the idea for the episode in June.
"We all met in the summer and Ellen pitched this idea and we toasted it with champagne," he said.
After many discussions with the network and Ellen's production company, Walt Disney Television, on how the coming-out episode would be handled and where later episodes would go, ABC chief Robert Iger gave his approval.
"It's never going to become the lesbian dating show," Iger said. "I think a lot of people are nervous about that. Ellen Morgan has always had problems dating anyway, and that will certainly continue."
NIGHT Life
WEDNESDAY
Bill Janovitz (formerly of Buffalo Tom), Lincolnville and Glitter Kicks, 7 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $6 and $7 advance tickets.
Leenkat Soh, 8 p.m. at the Nouvelle Deli, 129 F. 10th St. Free.
The Cowa, Skeleton Key and Priss, 9 p.m. at The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Cost: $6 and $7 advance tickets.
THURSDAY
Student Recital, piano students of Sequira Costa, 7:30 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall Free.
University Theatre Series, The Merry Wives of Windsor, 8 p.m. at Murphy Hall. Tickets available at the Lied Center, SUA and Murphy Hall box offices. Cost: $12 public, $6 students and $11 senior citizens.
Springhill Jack and The Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $8 advance tickets.
Urban Safari, 9 p.m. at the Nouvelle Deli, 129 E. 10th St. Free.
FRIDAY
Rod Block's Jazz, 6 to 8 p.m. at the Nouvelle Deli,
129 F 10th St Free
University Theatre Series: The Merry Wives of Windsor, 8 p.m. at Murphy Hall. Tickets available at the Lied Center, SUA and Murphy Hall box offices. Cost: $12 public, $6 students and $11 senior citizens.
Visiting Artist Series: Sarah Avery Guyver, viola,
7:30 p.m at Swarthout Recital Hall. Free.
Moe and The Coyote Project, 9:30 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $5 and $6.
The Samples and Stir. 6 p.m. at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Cost. $12.50 advance tickets.
Doghouse Blues Quartet, 8 to 11 p.m. at the Kaw River Brewery, 729 Massachusetts St.
SATURDAY
■ University Theatre Series: The Merry Wives of Windson, 8 p.m. at Murphy Hall. Tickets available at the Lied Center, SUA and Murphy Hall box offices. Cost: $12 public, $6 students and $11 senior citizens.
Alan White & Friends, 10 p.m. at the Nouvelle Deli,
129 E. 10th St. Free.
Shag and Level, 9:30 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737
New Hampshire St. Cost: $5 and $6.
Visiting Artist Series: Maurita Murphy Mead, clarinet; 3:30 p.m. at Swartwhout Recital Hall. Free.
SUNDAY
**The Business and Warzone, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $10 advance tickets.**
Choral Concert: The Joy of Singing! featuring the Kansas City Choral, Topeka High Madrigals, Lawrence High School Acappella Choir, Lawrence South Junior High Singers, KU Chinese Students' Choir, KU Oread Concert and the KU Chamber Choir at 7:30 p.m. at the Lied Center. Tickets available at the Lied Center, SUA and Murphy Hall box offices. Cost: $4.
Leo Kottke, 7 p.m. at Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Cost: $16.50 reserve seating.
MONDAY
Faculty Recital: Richard Reber, piano; 7:30 p.m. at Swarthmore Recital Hall. Free.
Open,Mike, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Free.
TUESDAY
Student Recital Myra Fernandez, cello; 7:30 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall, Free.
Lied Center New Directions Series Presents Population at 8 p.m. at the Lied Center. Tickets available at the Lied Center, SUA and Murphy Hall box offices and Ticketmaster outlets. Cost: $22 and $18 public, $11 and $9 students, and $21 and $11 senior citizens.
George Hunt, 8 p.m. at the Nouvelle Deli, 129 E. 10th St. Free.
Universal Honey, The Black Water and Nasa's Little Secret, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $4 and $5.
WILDCATS HIRING
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
Tennessee finished the season 11-16 and was 36-47 in the three years since O'Neill was hired. Northwestern went 7-22 this season and
KEVIN O'NEILL left Tennessee yesterday to become basketball coach at Northwestern. Tennessee officials held a late-night meeting with O'Neil on Monday in an unsuccessful effort to keep him from leaving. Tennessee finished the season 11-4 and went
has won only five Big Ten games in the last three years.
NCAA
D'Neill was paid $375,000 a year at Tennessee—plus income from summer camps — after getting a $30,000 raise last year. His compensation package could exceed $500,000 annually at Northwestern.
▼
GEORGE FOREMAN TO FIGHT AGAIN
GEORGE FOREMAN, 48; will defend the World Boxing Union heavyweight title against Lou Savarese on April 26 in Atlantic City, N.J.
Foreman stopped Michael Moorer in November 1994 to gain the WBA and IBF titles, but he was stripped of the crowns after refusing to face mandatory opponents.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1997
PHILLIPS JAILED
St. Louis Rams running back LAWRENCE PHILLIPS was sentenced to 30 days in jail yesterday for violating his Nebraska probation.
Phillips was on probation for beating his former girlfriend and damaging a building in the September 1995 assault. He violated his probation when
Dhill
Lawrence Phillips
he was arrested for drunken driving last summer in California
last summer in California.
Lancaster County Judge Jack B. Lindner revoked Phillips' probation yesterday and sentenced him on both counts stemming from the assault of then-University of Nebraska basketball player Kate McEwen. The assault occurred while Phillips played for Nebraska. Lindner said the two sentences of 30 days should run at the same time.
SECTION B
Fast BREAKS
Football player to transfer hopes to play close to home
Cleve Roberts, a sophomore offensive lineman on the Jayhawk football team, is leaving the University.
Roberts, a 6-foot-6-inch, 300-pounder, started all but one game in his two years at Kansas.
Roberts said that he does not know where he will go next, but that he decided to transfer when former Kansas coach Glen Mason and offensive coordinator Pat Ruel left Kansas.
Mason became the head coach at Minnesota and Ruel is not employed.
2
Roberts said that his transfer had nothing to do with the new coach Terry Allen. He said that Allen seemed like a good coach, but that Ruel was a close friend, and he did not want to be at Kansas if Ruel was no longer coaching.
Roberts, who is originally from Louisiana, also said that he was homesick for the South and would like to attend school there.
Roberts started in 22 games for the Jayhaws.
Women's soccer team hires Wake Forest coach
Last season, Wake Forest earned a No. 20 national ranking and reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Soccer Tournament.
Dan Magner, who for the last two seasons was an assistant coach at Wake Forest University, has been named the new head Kansas women's soccer coach.
Kansas just completed its second season.
"Dan was an integral part of Wake Forest's success in reaching the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament in that program's third year," said Amy Perko, Kansas associate athletics director. "His experience in building a program will be a great asset to our young program."
Magner is replacing former Kansas coach Lori Walker, who resigned in January to become the head soccer coach at Ohio State.
Prior to working for the Demon Deacons, Magner served as head coach at Lafayette College for three years. He also was head coach at Wheaton College in Chicago.
Fifteen teams participated in the two-day, par-72 tournament, sponsored by Louisiana State.
Magner will begin his duties on Monday.
Before coaching, Magner played soccer at Eastern Nazarene College in Quincy, Maine, where he graduated in 1985.
The Kansas men's golf team finished 13th at the Louisiana Classics at Oakbourne Country Club in Lafayette, La.
Kansas short stop, Paul Evans attempts to tag Missouri left fielder, Bey Slemour. Kansas scored another victory by beating Missouri 6-5. The men will play at 3 p.m. today in Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
The Jayhawks posted a three round team total of 911, which was the second worst total of the season for Kansas.
Men's golf places 13th at two-day tournament
Kansas finished ahead of two Big 12 Conference foes. Colorado and Texas Tech finished 14th and 15th.
The tournament was won by Arkansas State, who clinched the title with a one stroke victory against Mississippi State.
The Jayhawks were led by Ryan Vermeer, who shot a three round total of 225 to finish in 29th place. Chris Thompson shot rounds of 77, 76 and 74 for a total of 227 and a 44th place finish.
The 13th place finish was the first time in six tournaments that Kansas did not finish in the top 10.
the other Kansas finishers were Brad Davis, who finished in 56th place with a three round total of 229; Kit Grove, who shot a 230 for a 59th place finish and Dustin Anderson shot a 247 total and finished in 81st place.
-Kansan staff report
Kansas strikes out Mizzou
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
With the help of a ninth-inning rally, the Jayhawks beat the Missouri Tigers 6-5 yesterday at Hochland-Maupin Stadium.
The victory extended the Kansas
minimum honor to seven states.
The victory extended the Kansas winning streak to seven games. The Jayhawks (13-5, 4-2) fell behind early as Kansas starter Tim Lyons (1-0) struggled with his control. The senior pitcher opened the inning by getting Tiger leadoff man Matt Nivens out, but he walked the next two Missouri batters. After Kansas catcher Josh Diminnick lost a Lyons' pitch in the dirt. Tiger cleanup hitter Ryan Fry singled in a run to give the Tigers a 1-1 lead.
The Jayhawks struck back in the bottom of the second inning.
Rightfielder Les Walrond led off the inning with a double. First baseman Nick Frank followed with a double that scored Walrond from second base. The Jayhawks took a 2-1 lead when Frank scored on an errant Tiger throw to first base.
The Kansas lead, however, was short-lived.
Missouri tied the score one inning later when Tiger second baseman Torre Tyson hit a home run over the left field wall.
After the home run, Lyons mowed through the next three innings.
The Missouri batters finally knocked Lyons out of the game in the seventh inning.
seemingly put the game out of reach by hitting a three-run home run. Niven's shot gave Missouri a 5-2 lead.
Tiger centerfielder Matt Nivens
Still, Kansas head coach Bobby Randall said he knew the game wasn't finished.
"I was confident that we could come back," Randall said. "We had been hitting the ball well all game."
Kansas cut the Tiger lead to two when pinch runner Kevin Nannini scored on second baseman Joe Demarco's ground ball. The heroes, however, were still to come.
After Aric Peters (2-1), who had replaced Corson in an innerting earlier, kept the Tigers scoreleast in the ninth, the Jawhaves' bats awoke.
Dimmick opened the inning by hitting a home run over the scoreboard in right field. Dimmick's hit both closed the Tiger lead and turned theide in the Jayhawks' favor.
"Josh's home run was an emotional burst—for both teams," Randall said.
comeback by doubling in the winning runs.
Dinnick said he was trying to get a hit, but once he made contact, he was sure the ball was leaving the vard.
Rightfielder Les Walgrd followed the home run by drawing a walk. Aaron Wilmes put the Jayhawks within a run, when he singled, which scored Walgrd. Andy Juday finished the Tigers and the
"It was the guys in front of me that gave me a chance," Judy said.
"It was typical pressure. I just relaxed and tried to do what I do in batting practice."
Kansas will try to duplicate yes-
terdy's success when the Jay-hawks finish the Missouri series at 3 p.m. today at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Men's tennis loses meet
Kansan sportswriter
By Andy Rohrback
On a perfect day for tennis, with the Big 12 Conference lead on the line, Texas slipped past the Kansas men's tennis team 4-3 yesterday.
The Jayhawks entered the match after opening conference play with consecutive 5-2 victories against Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.
Yesterday's meet saw countless upsets and lead changes, including Fernando Sierra and Luis Uribe's loss to Texas' Jack Brasington and Allen Eric, 9-8, in doubles. The match was deadlocked at eight games apiece, which forced a tiebreaker. Sierra and Uribe held a 5-2 lead in the tiebreaker game, but Brasington and Allen charged back to win the tiebreaker 7-5.
"Those are the ones that hurt the
...
Enrique Aboroa, the No. 1. singles player for Kansas, returns a shot during a match against Texas. Aboroa won his match 6-4 7-6 7-5, but Kansas lost the duel 4-3 yesterday in Lawrence.
most, the close ones," Sierra said. "We could have won this one."
Kansas' No. 1 doubles team, Enrique Abaroa and Xavier Avila, overcame a brief slump and won their match 8-4. Before the Texas meet, Abaroa and Avila had lost of their last 5 matches.
At the No. 3 doubles spot, Trent Tucker and Jeff Ern lost 8-1.
Losing the doubles point put added pressure on the Jayhawks, Kansas coach Mark Riley said.
"We hurt ourselves early, and it caught us," he said. "We're capable of winning after losing the doubles point. We proved that at Fresno, but we've got to win some doubles points."
In singles competition, Kansas and Texas traded matches, with Kansas winning the No. 1, 3, and 5 matches and Texas picking up the rest. At the No. 5 spot, sophomore Trent Tucker won his fifth consecutive match.
Tucker's teammates call him "the stal man" because he knows everyone's stats. However, he didn't know of his streak until after he won the match.
"I don't really know how I'm doing," he said.
Abaro picked up the first set 6-4, and took a 6-5 lead in the second. His opponent, Paul Martin, came back to win the second set 7-6.
The No. 1 and No. 2 singles matches were the longest. With Texas ahead 3-2, Abaroa and Avila found themselves in the spotlight, but on separate courts.
Meanwhile, Avila split the first sets with Texas' B.J. Stearns 4-6, 6-3. The final set saw Stearns take a 4-3 lead on Avila. Abaroa, after trading sets with his opponents, put together a 5-4 lead.
"There were too many ups and downs," Abaroa said. "He's a good player when he's down. He came on with good shots on important points."
Avila kept his match close, tying the score 5-5 in the third set. Stearns won the next game, earning a 6-5 advantage. Avila's last return landed just out of bounds, handing Stearns the match and Texas the 4-3 victory.
Abaroa won his third set 7-5.
Riley said the meet resembled a duel between conference powerhouses.
"When you have chances, you have to take advantage of them," he said. "I wanted to put some pressure on Texas, and we didn't."
Bv Bill Petulla
Fans figure odds of NCAA tournament
Kansan sportswriter
Presumably just for entertainment purposes.
Far be it for the University Daily Kansan to endorse any type of illegal activity, but several KU students are partaking in NCAA Tournament pools.
KU Police Sgt. Chris Keary said the tournament brackets were considered gambling, a breach of Kansas law. "Our policy is the state law." Keary said. "It is a viola-
"Our policy is the state law," Keary said. "It is a violation of state law to place a bet."
Despite the risk, some students are taking their chances.
An Edina, Minn., senior, who asked to remain unnamed, said he was in a pool more for the enjoyment than the wagering.
"I'm in one that costs five dollars," he said. "I just fill it out for fun to make the less interesting game more intriguing."
He said those who placed in the top three spots would win money. He expected 40 people to participate in the pool, making the total prize money $200.
Las Vegas oddsmaker Danny Sheridan has given the Kansas men's basketball team the best chance of winning the national championship with 2:1 odds in favor of Jayhawks accomplishing the feat. He has also predicted the Jayhawks as a 34-point favorite against Jackson State in Thursday's game at 11:25 a.m. in Memphis, Tenn.
Although Todd Sperry, Shawnee junior, would neither confirm nor deny that he was engaged in a tournament pool, he did give some predictions for the Final Four.
"It's going to be Kansas and North Carolina for sure," Sperry said. "The talented UCLA and Utah are going to overcome the top rated teams in their bracket."
Along with Sperry's projections, several Kansan staff members submitted their Final Four selections for print. See if you can find a common thread in these picks.
Sports editor Spencer Duncan: Kansas, Kentucky,
North Carolina and UCLA
Associate sports editor Gina Thornburg: Kansas, Kentucky, North Carolina and UCLA
Sports reporter Tommy Gallagher: Kansas, Kentucky,
North Carolina and UCLA.
Sports reporter Adam Herschman: Kansas, Kentucky,
South Carolina and Minnesota
Sports reporter Matt Woodruff: Kansas, Kentucky, North Carolina and UCLA
North Carolina and UCLA
Staff reporter Ann Marchand: Kansas, Utah, North
Carolina
Staff reporter Kevin Bates: Kansas, Utah, Cincinnati and North Carolina
Staff reporter Emily Vrabac: Kansas, Wake Forest,
Clemson, North Carolina
.
2B
Wednesday, March 12, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sanford grabs defensive role for NCAA Tournament
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas center Nakia Sanford would like nothing more than to dominate her opponent on defense and grab every rebound when it bounces off the rim.
The way Sanford sees it, that is her role with the No. 3-seeded Jayhawk women's basketball team if it is to travel far in the NCAA Tournament.
"We each need to remember what our roles are, and those are my roles." Sanford said.
"I am a physical player, and I love the contact that comes with playing in the post. Don't ask me why, but I do."
Sanford has been one of the Jayhawk's most physical players during the season.
In a Feb. 22 game at Kansas State, Sanford was involved in an altercation with Wildcat guard Brit Jacobson shortly after the opening tip. She and Jacobson exchanged words for the rest of the game.
Sanford heard the taunts of more than 10,000 Wildcat fans for the rest of the game.
She said there were numerous encounters during the game that took her attention away from basketball.
"There were a lot of things that just didn't set right with me in that game," Sanford said.
"Unfortunately, I lost focus about what was important, and that was the game. I think next time I'll be able to handle that situation better."
Sanford finished the game with
Nakia Sanford's KU Career Statistics
Season Pts-Avg Rbs-Avg
1995-96 209-6.5 211-6.6
1996-97 216-7.4 199-6.9
four points and nine rebounds. She is averaging 7.4 points and a team-high 6.9 rebounds per game.
In a 73-58 loss to Kansas State in the Big 12 Tournament semifinals, Sanford was held scoreless in 31 minutes of play. She was 0-for-1 from the floor and had just two rebounds.
"My offensive game has a lot to be desired," Sanford said. "I've never been an offensively-aggressive person because I have always prided myself in my defense. I think I've really stepped up from last year, but the team really doesn't need someone to score because we have Tamecka (Dixon)."
U-STATE
Dixon said that Sanford and the team's other frontcourt players had to contribute more points in each game if Kansas expected to go far in the NCAA Tournament.
"If we're going to go anywhere in the tournament, Nakia has to score eight to 10 points. The whole inside game has to be more aggressive," Dixon said.
"While one might be more effective than another," Dixon said, "I think there has to be some balance between the perimeter and the post for a team to advance to the Elite Eight or the Final Four."
Geoff Krleger / KANSAN
Kansas center Nakia Sanford blocks a Kansas State player during the game in Manhattan on Feb. 22. Sanford says that she is more concerned with her role as a defensive player than a scorer.
No surprises in this season KU will win over Kentucky
Normally, the NCAA Tournament is difficult to predict. There are upsets, Cinderellas and factors that contribute to making the whole thing unpredictable. Not this year.
SPORTS COLUMNIST
JOHN
ERCK
This year,
destiny, tradition
and fate
will combine to make the tournament easy to predict. It is only right that the tournament will play out as follows.
See if you can follow me through this. North Carolina will be playing Fairfield in the first round of the tournament. The last time Fairfield was in the Big Dance was 1987. It lost, 92-58 to eventual champion Indiana.
North Carolina will beat Fairfield, and its second round opponent will be Indiana. When North Carolina wins that game, it will be head coach Dean Smith's 877th victory, which will break the all-time record set by former Kentucky coach, Adolph Rupp.
Two games later, North Carolina will play against South Carolina, whose head coach is Eddie Fogler, a former assistant coach under Smith.
Next on the schedule for the Tarheels will be Kansas.
Let's jump back and see how Kansas got to this point. First the Jayhawks beat Jackson State, one of two teams in the tournament with a losing record.
Next will come Purdue. Purdue and Kansas last met in the Southeast Regional of the NCAA Tournament in 1994. Purdue was the number one seed that year and beat Kansas, 83-78.
Purdue is the alma mater of John Wooden, former coach of all the great UCLA teams. Wooden helped build KU's Memorial Stadium on his way out West after he graduated from college.
Two games later, Kansas will match up against Duke. The last time the Jayhawks made it to the National Championship, the Jayhawks lost to Duke, 72-65. The Blue Devils had three players who at one time or another earned All-American honors - Christian Laetner, Bobby Hurley, and Grant Hill.
This year, it's Kansas with those three All-Americans. Jacque Vaughn was a first team Wooden All-American last year, Raef LaFrentz is first team All-American this year, and Paul Pierce will be a first team All-American next year.
This brings us to the Kansas - North Carolina match-up.
We all know that Dean Smith is a Kansas alumnus. We all know that Roy Williams was an assistant under Dean Smith and that the reason Roy is here is because Dean recommended him for the job.
These two coaches have faced each other twice before, both times in the Final Four. In 1993, North Carolina beat Kansas, 78-68. North Carolina went on to win the National Championship by beating Michigan in the Superdome in New Orleans.
Two years earlier, Kansas beat North Carolina, 79-73. That game was played at the same site this year's game will be played, the RCA Dome in Indianapolis.
It was billed as the passing of the torch from Dean to Roy. Dean was ejected for the second time in his long, illustrious career, and Roy led his team to the championship game.
The Jayhawks came up short, however, losing to Duke.
Perhaps Roy wasn't ready to grab the torch yet.
He'll be ready this time. The Jay hawks will win.
And they will win two days later when they face Kentucky, last year's National Champion and whose former coach, Adolph Rupp, will then have the second most wins of all-time. Rupp, of course, is a graduate of the University of Kansas.
Got a comment? Got a complaint?
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 12, 1997
3B
Vaulters hope to continue tradition
Past members have competed in the Olympics
By Matt Woodruff
Kansas sportswriter
Since 1976, when two former Kansas pole vaulters competed in the Olympic Games in Montreal, excelling in the event has been a Kansas tradition.
This season, a new group of pole vaulters will look to continue the tradition, which includes 22 All Americans since 1970 and three Jay hawk vaulters who have competed in the Olympics.
"That's what we're trying to do," said Marc Romito, who nearly became the 23rd All-American during this year's indoor season, but fell less than five inches short of the NCAA qualifying mark. "That's the place we want to get back to."
When he's not participating in competitions, former Jayhawk Scott Huffman, who placed 13th in the pole vault at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, attends practice in Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
"Scott is unreal, he's more than just an example, he's an inspiration," Romito said. "He works hard and he's a strong Christian, and I am a Christian, so I really look up to him. He's a pretty good pole vaulter, too."
Romito said that another inspiration to the vaulters had been their coach, Rick Attig.
"He has so much knowledge," Romito said. "He understands everything from the psychological aspects to the bio-mechanics, and even how different weather effects us. He knows too much."
Attig is in his 13th year with Kansas and is in charge of the pole vaulters, high jumpers, and multievent athletes.
Attig is nationally known for his work with the pole vaulters and has coached 24 Big Eight Champions, 19 All-Americans and two NCAA record breakers. Former Kansas vaulters and Attig pupils Pat Manson and Huffman are ranked first and third in the U.S. pole vault rankings.
"We've had some really good, hard working groups in the past," Attig said. "We don't quite have what we've had in the past as far as four or five close-knit guys that really push each other. They just aren't forcing each other right now, but I think
"We don't quite have what we've had in the past as far as four or five close-knit guys that really push each other."
Rick Attig
Kansas pole vault coach
that's going to happen."
Attig said that having junior Todd Zubyck, who transferred from York University in Halleyburg, Ontario, back from injuries and the consistent progress of sophomores Jon Colby Miller and Chip Malmstrom could create that kind of competition in practice.
"Todd is a super-hard worker," Attig said. "He tore a tricep back in December and was ready to go, then hurt his hamstring. We'll have to start him out slow. He's been very
Outdoor All-Americans
1970 Jan Johnson, 1st place
1973 Terry Porter, 3rd place
1983 Jeff Buckingham, 4th n
Outstanding Pole Vaulters
Owen Buckley, 6th place
1987 Pat Manson, 3rd place
1988 Craig Branstrom, 6th place
1989 Pat Manson, 2nd place; Cam
Miller, 3rd place
1991 Pat Manson, 3rd place
1996 Mike Evers, 6th place
Indoor All-Americans
1969 Bob Steinhoff, tied for 3rd
place
1970 Jan Johnson, 2nd place
1973 Terry Porter, 1st place
1975 Tad Scales, tied for 5th place
1970 Jeff Buckingham, 2nd place
patient and was making tremendous progress in the early fall. He has set his goals at breaking the Canadian indoor and outdoor record, and I think he's capable of doing that."
Attig said that Miller had made consistent progress in the indoor season and that Malmstrom would benefit from concentrating more on the pole vault during the outdoor season.
The team also will benefit from the return of senior All-American Mike
1982 Jeff Buckingham, 5th place
1983 Jeff Buckingham, 4th place
1986 Chris Bohanan, 3rd place
We Buy, Sell, Trade
Manson, 3rd place
1989 Pat Manson, 2nd place; Cam
Wilson
Humphrey, an place,
1988 Scott, an place;
Patt Manson, 6th place.
Miller, 3rd place
1990 Pat Manson, 2nd place
1991 Pat Manson, 2nd place
1994 John Bazzoni, 5th place
1994 John Bazzoni, 4th place
Olympians
1976-Montreal
Terry Porter, 13th place
Jan Johnson did not place
1996-Atlanta
Scott Huffman 13th place
Evers, who redshirted during the indoor season.
"He and Nathan Prenger have the potential to vault very high," Attig said. "They are both potential 18 foot vaulters, and the pole vault can score them a lot of points in the decathlon, and it can be a strong open event for each of them."
Attig said he was somewhat pleased with the indoor season, but said he expected even more in the outdoor season.
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The more you learn, the more valuable you'll be. Put your dream into words in March. Get advice along with old money in April. Start building your foundation in May. Make time for love in July. Take care of your health in September. Follow your dream in October. A career choice sends signals in December but doesn't appear until January. Take care of paperwork in February and celebrate with your sweetie next March.
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Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is a 6. The lesson for today has to do with patience, perseverance and politeness. That's what it will take to achieve your objectives. Do something that shows you care. Offer something the other person wants. If you offer only what you want, it ruins the gesture.
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Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 5. What you need to do now is more research. Figure out exactly how much you need. This is basic arithmetic. Add up all of your bills, and you'll have a good idea. If you get that much done today, celebrate. You're on your way to a balanced budget.
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Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Today is a 6. Every few weeks, you have to spend a day in the office doing paperwork. This is that day. There may also be a health issue to resolve. Hopefully, that's not the case. It would be terrible if you had to do paperwork with a cold.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 9. You work all the time so you can make more money and buy things for people you love. It's a little-known fact that under that gruff exterior, you are a marshmallow. You can relax and let it show tonight in the company of a very special person.
Aquarius (Jan, 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 6. You like to think through all the possible consequences before you take action. This is good if you're not going to be around to fix things when they break. It may not be necessary in a domestic matter, however. Give it another day and then make a choice.
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205 Help Wanted
Babyssitter needed. Monday-Friday in Eudora.
Facilitation and provide reference, Call 549-203-8761
Now hire all positions. Need AM/PM hours, FT or PT. Flexible hours. Apply within. 9314 Clinton Parkway Suite I.
Part-time delivery driver needed. Drugs free.
Applied in person. Carquest Auto Parts
Office.
Student hourly secretary. $/5 hr. 15 wk./wk. Good computer skills. Applications can be picked up at 114 Haworth. Contact Gretchen 848-0729.
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. *6 wk summer youth recreation program. Lake Quilva, NJ.*
Need 5 people to take surveys. Earn up tp $10/hr.
Need 45-343 between 1.00 & 3.90/hr for:
*Rental*
MAKE THE MONEY YOU DESERVE
Excellent profit potential with new company, get in before the growth explosion! Recorded message. 1-800-640-2374.
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MW 3pm-5p to work with children age 18 mo-5 yrs. A.M. P.M. Substitutes needed also-Call Rosemary 834-8147.
*Now hiring, restaurant worker, all positions, all shifts. Pay starting at $6.50 and up, depending on experience and availability. Please apply in person or by phone between 2:00 and 5:00 P.M. call or e-mail: c393-2814.
Wanted-Personal Care Attendant for female quadriplegic. Female preferred, full and part-time openings. CNA preferred but not required.
Call 955-6616.
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in Poco Mons. of FA
Over 40 activities Soekaling general
Aerial photography 215-878-907 or e-mail pinetree@pond.com
Wanted 87 students. Lose 8-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough.Doctor recommended. Guaranteed. $30 cost. Free gift. 1-800-435-7591.
JON'S NOTES
NANNY
Note taker needed for MEM 184 MWF 12:30-10:20 &
Chem. 188 MWF 8:30-9:20. Must have completed this
higher w/ an A. Earn $10-$15 per lecture.
Call Nancy at 843-3485.
Jo. Co. professionals a loving caring and responsible Nanny to care for their infant daughter. M - check, F - 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. References and background checked. Call Jack at 851-075-6794
Part time help needed calling on behalf of SADD.
Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/hr plus commission.
Use the company’s own friendly
shelter room! `Come to IQ Train. M-TH
4pm-12pm and fill out an application. EOE`
Apartment Manager. Rapidly growing management firm is currently seeking out individual to join our management team. Experience preferred but will train right person. Apply at first management Inc. 1820 W. 6th or mail resume to PO. Box 1832 north KS. 60044
Babysitter/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
own car, experience, and knowledge of child
development. Send letter, resume, schedule,
and reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Staffer Flint.
Ceramic studio needs full and part time experienced artist. Requirements: knowledge of glazes, and chemicals, firing techniques, working with clay slabs, drawing and design capabilities. Production studio. Serious applications only, 913 843-7288, 766-5586 Steve.
STUDENT WORK-up to $10.25 *Nat' I CO has immediate PT/PT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCOC. Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. Co-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Apply call our JOCO office at (931) 383-1087 (1am-5pm)
T.J's
A 24hr diner / hbar & pool. Located at 1035 Mass in former Tin Pan阵 Aley. Now hiring kitchen, service, & bar managers. Laborers. Apply in person after 3 today. Bartenders & cooks all shifts.
Recycle the Kansan
205 Help Wanted
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club, adap-
cent to campus has openings for banquet servers,
bartenders and hosts. Flexible hours, some day-
time and weekend availability preferred. Above
min. wage, employee meal plan in a professional,
department with average six hours. Apply at
1280 Orest Ave
LAKER SHAWNEE GOLF COURSE- Topeka
Opportunity for an individual who enjoys working
with food preparation and customer service.
Lake Shawnee Golf Care has opportunities for the
euthническая individual. A variety of hours available.
Lake Shawnee Golf Course G, C, 414 SE East Edge Rd., Topeka 267-2935.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, music, art, computer campers, computers, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary and benefits vary. © 2009 CAMP LWC/WC/1785 Mansion #0003. 847-689-8009.
Food Service Supervisors. *p* positions available @ The Mass Street Deli & Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Experience in food service 4 & year experience in supervising $5-$10.00 per hour based on prior experience up to $10.00. Apply at Schultz Food Company http://www.schultz.com / #79 Mass. (unstairs above smokehouse).
FREE T-SHIRT
Credit Card fundraisers for fraternities, sororities & groups. Any campus organization can offer this service by shopping $5.99/VISA application. Call 1-800-933-0328 ext. 65.
Qualified callers receive
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN Deadline: 3/1/97.
Salary $6.40-7.50./hour. 20 hrs per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software products. Participate in systems testing & applications maintenance. Required qualification in computer science or related 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.careers.mit.edu and a programming example to Ann Riat. Computer Center, University of Kansas. EO/AA EMPLOYEE
Corrections/Security: Detention Specialist.
Responsible for direct supervision of juveniles assigned to the Center. Complete paperwork as required by the school district. Requirements: Over the age of 21. High School Diploma or its equivalent. Three semester hours of academic study at the college level in adolescence. Completion of the course and equivalent training courses in child development or care for youth or both one or two years experience as a child care worker or house parent in a facility serve as an adult supervision role. Resume and job history to FJAC, P.O. Box 1025, Topeka, Kansas. 66519. Applications will be accepted on March 21, 1997. Telephone (913) 832-4928 or fax (913) 832-4929.
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with possibility of renewal for next academic year. Interested in candidate who will be next two students to join our job community. Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community resources, highly computer literate (Macintosh). Must have experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, interest in helping other. Must be Lawrence resident. Come by KU info, 420 Union, for an application. Will consider on first-come, first-serve for applications, 5pm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
HELP WANTED - SOFTBALL UMPIRES
DEPARTMENT IS LOOKING FOR INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN WORKING AS SUMMER AND FALL LEAGUES.
TRAINING SESSIONS WILL BEGIN MARCH 15TH AND WILL CONTINUE DURING MARCH. BEING CONTINUED ATTEND THESE SESSIONS, LEAGUE PLAY BEGINS IN APRIL AND CONTINUES THROUGH OCTOBER. ANYONE INTERESTED SHOULD CONTACT THE ADULT MANAGER FOR ASSISTANCE YOU WILL BE MAILED THE DATES AND TIMES OF THE TRAINING MEETINGS.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: The Rock Springs 4-H Center is looking for applicants for 46-50 summer staff jobs. Job lengths vary from 2 to 3 months. There are jobs available in recreation, custodial, maintenance and food service. Possible internships include a number member receive a monthly salary, room and board, and other benefits. Applicants must be 17 by June 1 of this year.
For more information write
SUMMER JOBS
SOMEMBROWS
ROCK SPRINGS + H CENTER
5405 W. Highway k-157
JUNCTION CITY, KS 66441
Or Call: (913) 257-3221
DRURY PLACE RETIREMENT CENTER
Hiring dining & laundry aides Immediate openings. Weekday or weekend hours. No evenings. Full or part time. Will train. Benefits available.
Apply at 1510 St. Andrews Drive
Apply in person, if you think you have what it takes
Juicers
Coming soon:
Mondays are Ladies night
Ladies only
18+ Apply in person
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-1422 after 7 p.m.
Needs a few good Men for Male Night
205 Help Wanted
FEMALE AND MALE CAMP COUNSELORS needed for outstanding Maine camps! CAMP VEGA for girls and CEDAR for boys. Each located on magnificent lake locations. Over 400 pairs at each camp for heads and assistants in tennis, basketball, baseball, volleyball, soccer, lacrosse, golf, field hockey, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, training, athletic trainer, journalism, photography, ceramics, crafts, drama, dance (jazz, batlet), nature study, backpacking, horseback riding, ropes course, trip leaders, mountain bikers, looking for secretaries, maintenance, kitchen. Camp dates approx. June 21-Aug 21. Top Salary, room, board, laundry, clothing, and travel allowance. MEN-CAMP CEDAR for boys, 1758 rooms, job location. Dearvee@armeo.com, 1-888-444-8800. WOMAN-CAMP VEGA. PO BOX 1771, Duxbury, MA02332, jobs@campvega.com, http://campvega.com, 1-800-883-VEGA. WE WILL BE ON THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. March 12th in Kansas Union Oread Room from 10AM to 4PM. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY.
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week
816 W. 24th 749-5750
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
Inso Kansas City Corporation
Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64112
Fax: (816) 753-8387
E-mail: hr-kc@lnso.com
225 Professional Services
CORPORATION
www.inso.com
Inso
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG Lawrence Office 841-5716 Metro KC Office (800)-733-2404
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL IN JURY
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
PERSONAL HISTORY
Fraud and alcohol offences
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally K. Gelsey
16 East 13th B42-5116
Free Initial Consultation
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 823-8484 for applications, term
issuer, or transcription transcripts, etc.
Satisfaction guarantee is available.
Quality Template former newsletter editor / w/ laser Printering form the quality paper supply You call Campbell @ 863-250-4177
X
300s Merchandise
5 Samples Tickets!! Sold out show! Friday
March 14th Call Chat at 865-0631.
305 For Sale
Jeopard Wear Soft Top. Light Gray. $200 B.O.B.
Call Tim @ 823-2743
5 Samples Tickets!! Sold Out Show Friday
March 14th. Call Chad at 865-0631.
Red 1983 Chrysler LeBaron convertible, white top, computer with voice, luggage rack, tape deck, leather seats, good tires, A/C, always starts $4050 obo, 749-2624
Get reprints of your favorite Jayhawk players and other Big 12 basketball photos from the Kansas State University by color image photographers. Call StarInfo 816-324-4544 for details.
Macintosh Performa with color monitor and color stylewriter. Call 838-9267 for details.
DEMO computer. Radius System 100 Mac clone
110 mk2, 62B Hard Drive, 232M Ram, 17 Preci-
tive few monarchs, new Mac and More.
Now to sell for over $8,000, now $2,455,000.
Call Jay Hawkay 843-332-868.
Toshiba-Tooship 484D2X-50, Color Display 330
HD, 20mb memory, software, Caller @ 864-1705
www.superlaceracu.com Pictures of pre-owned
the on with various makes and models.
Call 1-800-556-2793.
405 For Rent
340 Auto Sales
FINAL FOUR TICKETS - two seats/six games.
Rewardable offers only. Call (602) 851-8486 or
rewardonline.com
Men's Memphis Regional Tickets 2 sets, lower level. 1st and 2nd rounds Call (513) 241-7782
CLASSIC MUSCLE MU521 1873 Mercury Cougar, 2
8120 OSO (013) 348-1482, fair condition,
MUSCLE MU521 1873 Mercury Cougar, 2
8120 OSO (013) 348-1482
Macintosh IISi with high resolution monitor and large hard drive for software.
B31-1219-259 for details.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 new 1dbm. Locks of excess. $340. Great deal
841-650. Available immediately.
Recycle the Kansan
Available now~3 bedroom, 1 bath, Washer/Dryer,
equipped kitchen. On KU bus route. Call M841-
6579.
2 DBRM, 3 bath College HIII condo. W/d,
watercock, water P. avail. Avail R77% Baths.
Summer Sub lease 3 BR, 1/2 bath, W/D, on KU bus rt. Rent $49/mo (ca. 832-9986)
2, 4, 5, BBR houses for rent.
Avail dine i and Aug 1.
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
5 Bedroom house. Great location! Available for 1
person in Fall of 96. Keeper registered.
Call 843-821-3171.
3 o'clock bdm屋. 2 blks from campus. 3 blks from
wu教室. 4 big sculpture. 5 blks from
wu教室. 1 day in campus. 1 Call: 846-7877
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG. 1.
Pierce House & deposit.
Piper Edwards (612) 693-7048.
www.campus.edu/campus
2,4,5,8 BR houses for rent.
Avail June 1 and Aug 1.
Coord for Sale 3 dkm lrbr, 3 bth, washer/dryer on,
FAO Loan, 400 BD, OBO. Use view 82-281.
FURNISHED 3 BR APT. 2 BATH W/D, A/C
BALANCE 500 SQFT.
HVAC: 12/800 BTU.
Got a group? Available for fall. 9 bdrm or 6 bdmr home. Well maintained. Nice common areas, laundry facilities. 841-STAR (7327).
Great old house! Seven bedrooms, 3 bathrooms,
2 fireplaces, large outdoor area, eight extra
bedrooms. Available August 11. Phone: 681-957-6117
Studio 1 & Bedrooms. Available for summer &
fall holidays. Free parking, our route,
phone: 841-355-9026. Web site: www.sunnybrook.com
Awesome 2-bedroom apartment for summer sublease. Next door to Yellow Sub. You have ever seen the T.V. show Friends? This apartment is just as cute. $400/mo + electric, call 841-8178
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Meadowbrook Apt. Fireplace, good
view. $400/month Call 864-3038 (DAY) Ask for Kerry
Low $55 per month for nice spacious 2 br QR
app. Lifters, C/A, bus route and pool. Low
utilities! No pets. 1 yr leases beginning in May,
June, July or Aug. Spanish Crest Apts. 841-6860
Mackenzie Place. 1132 Kentucky. Now leasing for Ang. 1. Great Location! Luxury apts, close to campus. All BIR. Microwave, wash/dryer, all WiFi. Energy efficient. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 748-1569.
SUMMER BURLEASE: avail. mid-May thru July
31. Spacious 3 bpm apt. 2 full, baths, living/dining
fully equipped kitchen, big closets, cats kc. $600
+ utilities. May rent free. Call 832-7871.
Single apartments in cooperative student living for summer and/or fall in ECM Center, one block from KKL, with kitchen, study room, laundry, ample space, and kitchen. $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each; $172-$197 each;
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
Tenn. a student housing alternative. Open and
diverse membership, non profit operation, democratic control. $185-240 inc. wk dwellings, Dutil., W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 841-0484.
NOWLEASING
GATEWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 841-8468
CALL 841-8468.
South Point
PARK VILLAGE
Built in '95
- Designer Interior
- 3 Bed, 2 Full Bath
- On Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- No Pets
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
South Pointe APTMENTS
1, 2, 3, 4 Bedroom
• On Bus Route
• Pool & Volleyball Court
• Pets Welcome
- Hot Water & Trash Paid
- Pets Welcome
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury.
- Washer/Dryer
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
- Alarm System
- Beds and Wet Areas
HARPER SQUARE
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
- 1 BR425.00
APARTMENTS
BR $10.00
3BR 725.00
CALL 838-3377
- Washer/Dryer
- Alarm System
- New in 1996!!
LCA
Spacious aApartments and Townhouses for rent.
Washtey/Driver, Dialkwarfa Avail.
Central Air - Clor to Campus
Studio 1,2,3, & 4 bedrooms
Call 611 LAKA Apartments
(787) 757-7870
484-798-3648
"Convient affordable housing"
Kansan Ads Pay
405 For Rent
Sublease 28R, 28R Apt. at Tuckaway, Pool,
Pool 28R, 28R Apt. at Tuckaway, Pool.
WILL give approval upon approval 43.
PINNACLE WOODS
*1*2*3* br. luxury apt. homes
5000 Clinton Pkwy.
1 / 4 mf. west of Wakarusa
All new - 865-5454
st month Free — Call for details
COLONY WOODS
1301 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
1&2 Bedrooms
OnKUBus Route
3Hot Tubs
Indoor/OutdoorPool
Exercise Room
M-F10-6
SAT10-4 SUN12-4
TRAILRIDGE
- 2,3,4 bedroom townhouses available
- Near shopping areas
- Walking distance to New Life Fitness Center
- Small pets welcome w/ deposit
- Swimming Pool
CALL 843-7333 FOR MORE INFORMATION OR STOP BY 2500 W. 6TH ST.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE
- Laundry facility
- Close to campus
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- Swimming pool
- On bus route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
1,2 & 3 Bedrooms
HIGHPOINTE APARTMENT HOMES
Washer/Dryer Alarm System Clubhouse & Swimming Pool Workout Facility Basketball Court
NOWLEASING
Call First Management 841-8468
Move In Now..
One Month Free Rent On lease through July 31 1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment Call or stop by today
843-2116 11th and Miss Berkeley Flats.
FLATS
MOVE IN NOW...
841-7726
call or stop by today
water paid
One Month Free Rent
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
Shannon Plaza
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
Apartments
405 For Rent
Townhomes and Residential Homes
Hawthorn Place
Fireplace, one-car garage
Private Courtyard 331-2332
"Apartments Designed for Your Lifestyle"
Carson Place Stadium View
★ Great Apartment
★ Bradford Square
Stadium View
Chamberlain Court
Chamberlain Court
Abbots Center
Hawthorn Place
Bradford Square
Oread Apartments
Hawthorn Place
Haven Place
1425 Kentucky
Abbotts Center
◆ Heritage Place
◆ Highpointe
Call for an appointment
Our townhomes are 2 levels
"No one lives above or below you"
Lorimar & Leannamar Townhomes
Leasing for Sum/Fall 97
1, 2, 3 bdmr/2 bath
4 bdmr/3 bath
Call 841-7849
Office hrs 9am-5pm M-F
--closets in a friendly, service oriented community.
Studios.1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts.
Park25
STATE FARMING COUNTY
Apartments
Currently Leasing For Fall '97 10-Month Lenses Available!
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
- Volleyball Court
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
meadowbrook FALL'97
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to see see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like atmosphere
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly service-
Onseted comming
Studios, 1,2 & 3 Bdm. Apts.
2 & 3 Bdm. Townhouses
- 2 Pools
- 2 Volleyball Areas
- 3 Bus Stops
meadowbrook
15th & Crestine
842-4200
8:5-30 Mon-Fri
10:4-Sat 1-4 Sun
430 Roommate Wanted
3-rooms for rent. Nice house. Good price. Please call 749-2888.
1 roommate wanted to share house. $200/m.
bought a boften campus, Smoke K.G. Pets.
OR, Pets.
Non-smoking female needed immediately to camp 620/mo +1.7 utilities (box, call 331-550)
Pre-pre transsexual lives in Lawrence area seeks another gay/gay friendly person to share a townhouse with the same drinking drinker preferred. Bills will be divided by two. I interested please call (913) 731-1236.
98¢
lb.
80% Lean Ground Beef
Family-pack
98 lb.
80% Lean Ground Beef
Family-pack
1.68 lb.
Fresh Asparagus
1.68 lb.
Fresh Asparagus
98 lb.
80% Lean Ground Beef
Family-pack
1.68 lb.
Fresh Asparagus
1.78 lb.
Hormel Pork Spareribs
5.98 lb.
Alaskan Halibut Steak
2/$3
Downyflake Waffles, Assorted Varieties
10 to 12.5-oz.
1.88
Minute Maid
Premium Orange Juice
Assorted Varieties
1/2-gallon
1.98 lb.
Sterling Silver® USDA Certified Choice
Boneless Top Sirloin Steak, Family-pack
1.18 lb.
Fresh Red & Green Seedless Grapes
78¢ lb.
Hudson Chicken Drumsticks
or Thighs, Family-pack
88¢
Flavorite Vegetable Blends
Assorted Varieties, 16-oz.
2/$3
Oscar Mayer Wieners
Assorted Varieties, 1-lb.
4/$5
Carl Buddig Lunch Meat
Assorted Varieties, 2.5-oz.
SuperTarget combines the best of both worlds:
a jumbo-sized, upscale discount store with a family-sized grocery.
It's one big convenient way to shop - from fresh fashions to fresh fruit.
LAWRENCE
SUPERTARGET
IOWA STREET AND 33RD STREET
1-800-800-8800
Open seven days a week 7 am till midnight
Advertised prices good Sunday, March 9 through Saturday, March 15, 1997.
NAMIBIA
1.78 lb.
Hormel Pork Spareribs
5.98 lb.
Alaskan Halibut Steak
DownyFlake 2
Hungry Jack
MORE RUMPLES
2 Downy Flake
Hungry Jack
MORE RUMPLES
2 Downy Flake
Hungry Jack
2/$3
Sterling Silver
Minute Maid
Minute Maid
ORIGINAL
MILITARY PRODUCTS
1.18 lb.
HUDSON.
Oscar Mayer
American Pizza Co.
Wieners
2/$3
Oscar Mayer Wieners
Assorted Varieties, 1 lb.
Favorite
CALIFORNIA BLEND
WITH LEMONS & HONEY
Buddig
Home Party
Super TARGET.
1
NFL: Team owners now able to own more than just football clubs. Page 3B
Trafficway: KU Environs and students file lawsuit to stop construction. Page 3A
******************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1997
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL. 103, NO. 117
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Fire department answers false alarm at Fraser Hall
The Lawrence Fire Department responded to a fire alarm about 5:35 p.m. yesterday on the fifth floor of Fraser Hall after someone on the sixth floor called KU police, said Mark Haskell, an employee at facilities operations.
Capt. Shaun Coffey of the Lawrence Fire Department said the fire department had responded to a call from KU police, but it was a false alarm. He said he had found smoke coming from a trash can in room 526. The smoldering came from a cigarette thrown in the trash can.
Coffey said he smelled smoke when he entered the fifth-floor hallway, but firefighters did not have to douse any fire.
—Kansan staff report
Clinton says drug-use guilt 'the biggest load of hooey'
WASHINGTON — Dismissing baby-boomer guilt about past drug use as the "biggest load of hooey." President Clinton said yesterday he had confessed his own experiment with marijuana to daughter Chelsea when she was just 6 or 7 years old.
The president told three dozen parents and students assembled in the East Room of the White House he had advised his daughter to avoid making the same mistakes he had.
Clinton, who admitted during the 1992 campaign he had tried marijuana but did not inhale, said yesterday he was, at the time, older than the kids first trying drugs today and he did not know then how dangerous drugs were.
Clinton, 50, admonished fellow baby-boomer parents to forget feeling awkward about their drug histories and to talk frankly with their children.
Clinton's past became a political issue when, early in his 1992 race for the White House, he recalled his days at Oxford: "I experimented with marijuana a time or two and didn't like it. I didn't inhale, and I didn't try it again."
FBI warns minority groups to prepare for bombings
Called Straight Talk on Drugs, the town-hall discussion was broadcast by ABC Radio as part of the network's month-long public service campaign.
WASHINGTON — The FBI is warning minority groups that have been the targets of hate crimes to guard against more bombings in Atlanta.
FBI representative Jay Spadaford said yesterday the FBI had contacted minority groups that historically had been victimized by hate crimes to discuss security issues. He declined to identify the groups.
Sen. Paul Coverdell, R-Ga., who arranged an FBI briefing for Georgia lawmakers last week, said federal agents had inferred that more bombings were possible in Atlanta after the blast at last summer's Olympics, the January attack on an abortion clinic and the February bombing of a gay nightclub.
Coverdell and others at the briefing said the FBI had told the lawmakers there was no evidence linking the bombing in Olympic Centennial Park to the other two but were not ruling out a connection.
The FBI has scheduled a news conference today in Atlanta to release photographs of people who were in the park when the bomb exploded.
The bomb killed one person and iniured more than 100 others.
The Associated Press
Law enforcement sources said the photographs were of potential witnesses.
Lawsuit filed against KU
Assistance center faces allegations of denied equality
By Emily Vrabac
Kansan staff writer
A KU student has filed a lawsuit alleging that the University of Kansas violated the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Brenda Vanhyning, Lenexa junior, said the Student Assistance Center at the University failed to provide her with notetakers, which denying her an equal college education.
Vanhyning has disabilities in both hands, which only permit her to write about one minute at a time. She has had 33 surgeries on her right hand since sustaining injuries in a automobile accident. She also
injured her left hand at work when she fell and shattered her wrist, on which she needed 14 surgeries.
"They advocate all these rights and all these things they'll help students with, and then they shut the door on students," she said.
Vanhyning's lawsuit was filed in federal court in Kansas City, Kan., last week.
Rose Marino, associate general counsel for the University, said her office could not comment on the suit.
"We have not received it, and we have not seen the complaint," Marino said.
Michael Shuttic, assistant director of the Center, said he did not have a response either.
"I don't have any knowledge about the lawsuit itself." Shuttle said.
Vanhyng said she had requested notetakers from the Student Assistance Center because she was unable to take notes herself. Notetakers are provided to students on a
volunteer basis, and volunteers are not always available.
"The problem is that because it's a volunteer program, there is no initiative from the University to do this," Vanhying said.
She said employees of the Center told her to tape-record the classes for which a notetaker was not available.
Vanhyning said she was filing the lawsuit because she had exhausted her efforts trying to obtain help for every class.
"I've gone about trying to get the services I need in every way possible," she said. "I've had a lot of support from instructors and professors to get what I need. These problems are something that has happened to
me every single semester."
Other students agree with Vanhyong that the Student Assistance Center does not provide adequate service.
Mary Drouin, Lawrence senior, is working with the Office of Civil Rights, hoping that the University signs a commitment to provide students with textbooks on tape. She wants the tapes to be made available at least three weeks prior to the class period covering that reading assignment.
Drouin, who is legally blind, said she often received the cassettes just 18 hours prior to class, even though she had given the Center her books six to 10 weeks before the semester began.
"I wanted them recorded before the semester started," Drouin said. "They use my books to record from and then I don't have books all semester. I have to have my books to keep up with reading assignments."
Erik Peltzman, San Francisco junior who has dyslexia, said he experienced similar situations with the Student Assistance Center. He was unable to obtain a notetaker for several classes at the University, he said.
"A lot of the times I've dropped classes, it's been because nobody has volunteered," he said. "If nobody volunteers, then I don't get a note-taker."
Peltzman said his education was being sacrificed because the Center did not have a good notetaking system.
"Right now, I don't feel like it's an equal playing field," he said. "I feel like I'm fighting the people that are helping me."
Drouin agreed with Peltzman that something was wrong with the system at the University.
"They're using a system that's not effective, and the ADA says they have to be effective." Droun said.
Molding a role model
Salome Meadows and Jessica Hardy, New York Elementary School students, cover KU basketball player Tameka Dixon's face with plaster. Hardy and Meadows are participating in a six-week program from Mobile Arts Inc. called There's No Face Like Home. The students were asked to select their heroes, to make
GR Gordon-Ross / KANSAN
plaster casts and to write stories about them. Meadows chose Dixon as her role model. The students' masks will be displayed from 2 to 4 p.m. March 23 at the East Lawrence Community Center. Dixon was named an Associated Press second-team All-America player yesterday. For more details, see page 1B.
Seniors evaluate education while earning a little cash
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
After tonight, about 115 seniors at the University of Kansas will have had a chance to tell faculty what they think about the condition of undergraduate education.
The University mailed letters to certain graduating seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the schools of social welfare, engineering and journalism, asking students to take part in a 45-minute interview designed to gauge what kind of an education they have received, said Carrie Towns, analyst in the Office of Institutional Research and Planning.
"We want to determine the University's success in imparting general educational goals," Towns said.
The interviews have taken place in Wescoe Hall each evening this week and will conclude tonight. Three faculty members spend almost an hour with each of three students every night. After tonight, the University will have
"This is a part of a large assessment for undergraduates," she said. "This assessment is to see how effective we've been at meeting our own goals. We're basically evaluating ourselves."
some idea of the success of each student's college career, said Associate Provost Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett.
"Each interviewer rates the goals completely independently," she said. "Faculty members don't discuss the interview before they rate the goals, and we don't change the methodology from year to year."
After each interview, the faculty members rate the educational goals on a 10-point scale for each student, McCluskey-Fawcett said. The numbers are crunched and then fed back to the deans of the schools.
Faculty members said they enjoyed the interviews and thought students enjoyed the chance to voice their opinions.
"I really learned a lot," said Glen White, assistant professor of human development and family life. "I approached each interview
Students also receive $25 at the end of the interview for their time. McCluskey-Fawcett said the money, part of the University Assessment budget, came from the state and not from student fees.
Stephen Shawl, professor of physics and astronomy, said he thought that, even though some interviews might be more positive than others, the learning process was reciprocal.
"Sometimes we can find what we're after, other times maybe not," Shawl said. "But either way, it's fair to say we're both learning something."
like it was a dinner conversation. It was just an informal time to just talk. My goal was to be a listener and to observe."
The money was not the only incentive for John Robinson, Prairie Village senior.
He said he was impressed that the University wanted his input.
"It was a good idea," Robinson said. "No one ever asked me my opinion on how I thought the University was handling my education. It's nice to know someone
"The students picked were based on criteria of sex, ethnicity, ACTs and GPAs," Teeter said. "We chose students that represented the whole range. We chose our sample very carefully, so I think if you look at those demographics, you'll find that they're fairly representative."
cares."
"They made me think of things that had not occurred to me," she said. "They really pulled information out."
Deb Teeter, director of the Office of Institutional Research and Planning, said the small cross-section of each school was representative of the University as a whole and not just top-notch students.
Beth Ackerman, Dallas senior, said the interview had opened her eyes.
Teeter said the interviews were not tests to see how much students have learned.
"It's more an examination of the institution," she said. "I think the interviews help us to explore where we need to go, because this process is evolving all the time. We experiment and adjust each time."
Group plans two meetings on child care
By Dave Morantz
Kansan staff writer
Relying on a tactic used by the February Sisters in 1972, a group of students, staff and faculty at the University of Kansas has formed to increase public awareness about the impasse about a new child-care facility.
The group will hold meetings at 2:30 p.m. today and 7 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. The meetings are open to the University and Lawrence communities.
High demand for child care has packed Hilltop Child Development Center to its limit. This, along with 200 children waiting to be accepted into the program, has left Hilltop desperate for a new facility.
Students have been paying a $2 fee for three years to finance a new facility. Last fall, the administration discovered that $2 would not produce enough funds to construct a new child-care center. Student Senate then requested the administration pay at least 30 percent of the cost of building a new facility. But last month, the administration told Senate and Hilltop it could not afford to finance the construction because of higher priorities.
Hilltop, across from the Kansas Union, was created in 1972 after a group of concerned University women called the February Sisters protested the lack of child care on campus. Hilltop serves the children of students, staff and faculty of the University.
"Hopefully this will inspire more student support and awareness about the issue," said Grey Montgomery, student body president, who has assisted in the negotiations.
Pat Pisani, Hilltop director, will attend both meetings and answer questions from the public.
Jason Fizell, Olathe junior and organizer of the group, said in a press release he hoped the meetings and other events would force the administration to listen to students, staff and faculty. But most importantly, he said, the administration should attend to the needs of the children.
"Something's going to need to be done to meet this demand," she said. "We hope the meeting will encourage the administration to change its mind."
TODAY
INDEX
Television ... 2A
Weather ... 2A
Opinion ... 4A
Sports Focus ... 6B
MOSTLY CLOUDY
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2A
Thursday. March 13. 1997
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TODAY
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Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of showers.
TOMORROW
35
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Light chance of snow. Cold for a change of pace.
SATURDAY
38
27
27
Drier than Friday. Beginning to warm back up.
ON CAMPUS
Office of Study Abroad will have an Informal meeting about Great Britain and Ireland study abroad at 11 a.m. today at 105A Lippincott Hall. For more information, call the office at 864-3742.
■ KU Environers will sponsor a veggie lunch from noon to 1 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries at 1204 Oread Ave.
832-9963.
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Western Civilization study abroad at 12:30 p.m. today at 105A Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Alison Llusk at 864-7810.
Baptist Student Union will have Bible study at 6:30 p.m. today at the Baptist Center at 1629 W. 19th St.
KU Students for Life will meet at 6 p.m.
today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas
Union. For more information, call Michel
at 843-0357.
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Australia and New Zealand study abroad at 2:45 p.m. today at 105A Lippincott Hall. For more information, call the office at 864-3742.
KU Champions Club will meet from 6:30 to 10:45 tonight at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
KU Fencing Club will meet from 5 to 7 p.m. today at 212 Robinson Center. For more information, call John HDRix at
information, call Lindsay Schulz at 864-1339.
Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 7 tonight at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
Catholicis Actively Reaching the Elderly will meet at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Jenny at 843-0357.
Kansas Chapter of the ACLU will meet at 7 onight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Buddy Lloyd at 864-6598.
Student Assistance Center will sponsor a "Reading for Comprehension and Speed Workshop" from 7 to 9 onight. For more information, registration and location, call the center at 864-4064.
KU Germany Club will have Film Night at 7 tuight at 2094 Wesco Hall. For more
icthus — Christian Outreach will sponsor "What's a Christian" at 7:30 tonight at the Burge Union. For more information, call Kelly at 331-0020.
KU department of philosophy will have a lecture by Simon Blackburn titled "The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters: Reflection of the Sokal Affair" at 8 tonlight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Russ Shafer-Landan at 846-3976.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's car was damaged and CDs and a CD case were stolen from it between 9:30 p.m. Sunday and 1:30 p.m. Monday in lot 103, KU police said. Items were valued at $1,020.
A KU student's KUID and bus pass were stolen between 11:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday from the third floor lobby of Elsworth Hall, KU police said. Items were valued at $55.
A KU student's cellular phone was stolen between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday from room 4093 in Dole Hall, KU police said. Items were valued at $300.
A KU student's car radio antenna was damaged between 10 p.m. March 6 and 11 a.m. Friday in lot 300, KU police said. Damage was estimated at $50.
A KU student's wallet and miscellaneous items were stolen between 1:30 and 2 a.m. Sunday in the 1200 block of Tennessee, KU police said. Items were valued at $54.
THURSDAY PRIMETIME MARCH 13, 1997
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N
N HEIR ONOR
HEIR
ONOR
A Dramatic Collage of Women's Voices
In Celebration of
0.5
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omen's
Copyright © 2016 HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved.
omen's history month
Don't miss this evening of readers theatre celebrating the voices of women past and present. This collection of literature, poetry, and monologues serve as a reminder of the rich diversity that makes the voices of women unique. Share in the struggles and triumphs of these women and the contributions that they made to their communities.
8:00 p.m.
Thursday, March 20, 1997
200 Smith Hall
(Across from the Kansas Union)
Directed by: Suzanne Grachek
Performed by: Betsy Atkinson and Louise Flory
Co-sponsored by The Commission on the Status of Women, The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, and Student Senate.
火
GIVE YOUR PARENTS ONE MORE REASON TO LOVE YOU.
B
GO TO SCHOOL THIS SUMMER.
Everybody knows it's getting harder to graduate from college in four years. A missed class, a change of major- and all of a sudden, you're on the five-year plan. The extra semester or year in school can cost your folks a bundle in tuition and delay you from getting started with that great new job.
So, play it smart. Pick up a course this summer at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
UIC is a 4-year research university with world class faculty and is located in the heart of Chicago. Our summer session offers over 400 courses in 55 departments-lots of chances to catch up, get ahead or concentrate on a particularly important course. It's easy to apply, tuition is a great value and the semester is over in just eight short weeks.
For information about the UIC Summer Session, call 800-625-2013 or, in Chicago, (312)996-9099. Or, send us e-mail at: summer@uic.edu.
Give us a call or send us an e-mail and we'll send you everything you need to get started. Your parents will love you for it—even more than they do already.
UICSUMMER
SESSION
Making your summer count
June 2-July 25
THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 13. 1997
3A
Haskell Wetlands lawsuit filed
Plaintiffs want to halt trafficway construction
Two KU students and KU Environs were among the plaintiffs who filed a lawsuit yesterday in U.S. District Court against county, state and federal officials and organizations.
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By Paul Eakins
Kansan staff writer
The completion of the statement is necessary for the county to comply with the National Environmental Policy Act. By beginning construction without completion of the statement, the federal laws of NEPA are being violated, the plaintiffs said at a press conference yesterday.
The purpose of the lawsuit is to stop construction of any portion of the eastern leg of the South Lawrence Trafficway, which is supposed to pass through the Haskell Wetlands along 31st Street. The plaintiffs want to stop the county from buying land and from buying the 265,000 cubic yards of fill needed for the road until after the completion of a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement, court documents said.
The statement was started by a company which was contracted by the Kansas Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration. The statement was never finished.
The statement would assess what effects the trafficway would have on the Haskell Wetlands and the Baker Wetlands farther south.
A court date has not been set, but plaintiff Jason Daniels, Colby sophomore, said trafficway
If future lawsuits are filed, the plaintiffs could get some help from the Sierra Club.
opponents would not give up.
"This is the first step in a series," Daniels said. "Future lawsuits would be all-encompassing, addressing all of the violations."
Charles Benjamin, legislative coordinator for the Kansas chapter of the Sierra Club, said the organization agreed with the lawsuit and may participate in future legal action.
"We think that the NEPA process needs to be completed," Benjamin said. "They are trying to circumvent it by pretending that the federal government is not involved."
The plaintiffs also discussed the religious rights of Haskell students and faculty and other Native Americans. The medicine wheel, a place of worship located in a wooded area north of 31st Street near the Haskell campus, is used for religious purposes.
"I would not be exaggerating to say that a member of KU Environs uses the wetlands every day of the year." Daniels said.
"The trafficway will do irreparable harm to the wetlands area here," said Stanley Ross, plaintiff and Haskell Indian Nations University alumnus. "We are asking that the federal NEPA process be continued and completed."
Native Americans already can hear the noise from 31st Street while they are praying, said plaintiff Pemina Yellow-Bird, Lawrence resident.
Daniels said the trafficway would cause damage to the most diverse natural area in Douglas County and building it would harm the educational uses of the wetlands, which are used by both Haskell and KU students.
SLT
Eric B. Howell / KANSAN
"We've listened to sirens, trucks and cars zooming by while we're in there praying," she said.
And with the trafficway there, the noise would double, intruding into their prayers.
Plaintiff Anjanette Bitsie, Lawrence junior and Haskell alumna, said the wetlands contained the few places Haskell students could go to practice their religion properly.
Jason Daniels, Colby sophomore, speaks to the cameras at the South Lawrence Traffick lawsuits press conference. The conference was held yesterday on 31st Street between Louisiana and Haskell streets.
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LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE
"Here in Lawrence, this is the only spot," she said.
Professors from around the nation and the University of Kansas will gather on campus to discuss political and economic trends in Latin America.
Latin-American conference to talk trends
A federally funded conference sponsored by the Center of Latin American Studies at the University will take place on March 14 and 15 in the Kansas Union.
By Umut Bayramoglu Kansan staff writer
Vill Holliday, Lawrence graduate student, said the conference should provide students, teachers
Political, economic issues will be focus
"We will have graduate students defending their dissertations and professors with published articles and books on Latin-American issues," he said.
"I think this conference will not only help KU students update their knowledge on Latin America but also give them information for their term projects," he said.
and business people with current information about Latin-American countries.
Holliday said 200 people were expected to attend.
Holliday said the conference would start at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow with an optional workshop on conservation and environmental development in Latin America.
"We made the workshop optional so that people still feel welcome to the sessions on Saturday," he said.
"We picked Trudeau as the keynote speaker because he has a lot experience on the turmoil Guatemala went through," Holiday said.
Robert Trudeau, professor of political science at Providence College in Rhode Island, will give the keynote address, Guatemalan Peace Accords: Implications for a Democratic Future.
Trudeau is the author of Guatemalan Politics: The Popular Struggle For Democracy.
the conference, from 8:15 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, will include
Marc Becker, Lawrence graduate student and leader of the session about ethnic movements in Latin America, said he was interested in attending the other presentations.
three sessions: transitions from dictatorships to democracies, national identity and the North American Free Trade Agreement
Bryant Freeman, director of Haitian studies, said his presentation would include information about recent U.N. interventions in Haiti and other Haitian problems that have affected the United States.
Registration is free for KU students and faculty and $15 for the public. For more information, contact Holliday at 864-4213.
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MEN ADMITTED AFTER 10:00
Get your artwork in front of KU!
SUBMIT YOUR ARTWORK FOR THE SPRING STUDENT SHOW IN THE KANSAS UNION GALLERY.
DROP WORK OFF THIS WEEK IN THE SUA-OFFICE TO THE SUA-FINE ARTS COMMITTEE. THE SHOW WILL RUN MARCH 15-22, 1997. MORE THAN ONE PIECE MAY BE DISPLAYED ACCORDING TO SPACE AVAILABLE. CALL 864-3477 FOR MORE INFO AND CHECK OUT WWW.UKANS.DU\~SUA FOR OTHER UPCOMING SUA EVENTS.
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Streb/Ringside
If you’re not flying what’s the point?
-Elizabeth Streb
Gravity be
damned...
-L.A. Times
Flying,
bouncing &
crashing off
surfaces, like
giant atomic
particles in a
super collider
these daredevil
performers
catapult
audiences
into a new
century of dance.
Tuesday
March 18, 1997
8:00 p.m.
The Lied Center of Kansas
Student Tickets 1/2 Price
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office
(864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982);
SUA Box Office (864-3477) and Ticketmaster at
(913) 234-4545 or (816) 931-3330.
Presented by the Uiversity of Kansas School of Few Arts Lied
Center New Directions Series.
Streb/Ringside
If you're not flying what's the point?
-Elizabeth Streb
Gravity be damned...
-L.A. Times
Flying, bouncing & crashing off surfaces, like giant atomic particles in a super collider these daredevil performers catapult audiences into a new century of dance.
Tuesday
March 18, 1997
8:00 p.m.
The Lied Center of Kansas Student Tickets 1/2 Price
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); SUA Box Office (864-3477) and ticketmaster at (913) 234 4545 or (816) 931-3330.
Presented by the UK diversity of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center New Directions Series.
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HILLEL KANSAS UNIVERSITY
- CORRECTION: The March 12 paper advertised the incorrect Shabbat Dinner time. The correct meeting time is Friday at 5:30 p.m.
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Just because we see ourselves as individuals doesn't mean others see you the same way.
Let them know
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
CRAIG LANG, Editor
SUSANNA LLOFF, Managing editor
KIMBELY CRATTEEFT, Editorial editor
TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser
4A
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JUSTIN KNUPP, *Technology coordinator*
JAY STEINER, *Sales and marketing adviser*
Thursday, March 13, 1997
HOLD ON... RON, WE GOT ANOTHER ONE, A FRESHMAN PIKE JUST PASSED OUT.
EXCELLENT-SEND AN INVESTIGATOR AND KICK'EM OUT OF ROCK CHALK.
"On A Mission"
Tim McCabe / KANSAN
Editorials
Fraternity members should not be punished until proven guilty
Rock Chalk Revue is a prestigious event, an event that any group should be proud to perform in.
Unfortunately for Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity members, they will not be able to participate in Rock Chalk even though their skit was chosen. Some may say that it is their own fault. After all, they did allegedly haze one of their members.
Although the fraternity may have participated in hazing, which is illegal by the University of Kansas standards and the standards of its national chapter, this is not a good reason to exclude them from an activity in which they had already pledged participation.
This is not to condone hazing. But the Rock Chalk Revue advisers, who made the decision to exclude Pi Kappa Alpha from the program, ignored the basic rights of the members of this fraternity when they kicked them out of the Revue.
The hazing allegations against Pi Kappa Alpha are just that一allegations.
By all legal standards, the Pike house has not been found guilty of hazing. Although an investigation is under way, this doesn't prove that the fraternity is guilty.
The argument that this prestigious event should not be tarnished by bad behavior disregards the whole point of Rock Chalk: community service. By excluding the fraternity from participating in a community service, the Revue advisers are sending the message that only good, wholesome people who never make mistakes are capable of lending a hand in the community. If this was actually the case, judges would not assign people community service projects as punishment for crimes.
If Pi Kappa Alpha had been proven guilty of hazing and had been officially punished by the University, excluding the members from Rock Chalk would be a different matter. But by the laws of the United States, you are innocent until proven guilty, not the other way around. On campus, student actions should be treated with that same principle. The Revue advisers, by excluding Pi Kappa Alpha, essentially presumed that the fraternity was guilty of hazing.
Rock Chalk chose the skit of the Pi Kappa Alpha and Alpha Delta Pi houses because it was one of the best. Excluding part of that team because of its alleged behavior is wrong. Maybe the fraternity members committed a crime, or maybe they didn't. But unlike the Rock Chalk Reveal advisers, some of us will wait for the official verdict.
NICOLE SKALLA FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Other athletes victimized by error
Ever heard the saying "don't let a few bad apples spoil the bunch"?
Unfortunately, in Lubbock, Texas, the Texas Tech's basketball bunch got spoiled. Because of two academically ineligible players, Texas Tech withdrew from consideration for the NCAA tournament and also has forfeited all of its conference wins for this season.
The decision to withdraw was made by the chancellor of Texas Tech, who said a University oversight was the reason this infraction wasn't detected earlier. Although extreme, the withdrawal was a safe option because it protected Texas Tech from some of the harsher consequences it could face at the hands of the NCAA.
Although the decision was a difficult one for the University, it also was commendable. At some universities with strong athletic programs, it is easy to lose sight of priorities and upset the balance between athletics and academics.
Texas Tech's problems should have been found earlier in the season.
By withdrawing from the tournament and forfeiting previous conference wins, Texas Tech has made it clear that it realizes the university is an academic institution first and that athletics come second.
entered the most important tournament in college basketball. The withdrawal could have been prevented by monitoring grade standings during the season and suspending the two players until they met the eligibility requirement.
Unfortunately, this university oversight also affects players who maintained eligible grades and worked all year long for the conference wins and a chance to play in the NCAA tournament. These players fulfilled their academic commitment while dedicating themselves to athletic responsibilities, yet they still got the short end of the stick.
It is hard to believe that the two players were ineligible for the majority of the season, yet their academic status was never discovered until right before they
This is not even the first time Texas Tech has been in this position. According to the Associated Press, these two basketball players were the fifth and sixth players since August to have violated grade eligibility requirements without the University realizing it as a result of administrative mistakes. In the case of the basketball players, the late detection of the violations was the mistake of the university that all the players have to pay for. The first or second time, it is a mistake. The fifth and sixth, it is a travesty that affects the entire team and the school.
It is not fair that the entire team has to suffer because two players slipped through the system.
CATHY PIERCE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
LATINA SULJIAN ... Associate Editorial
KRISTIE BLASH ... News
NOVELDA SOMMERS ... News
LESLIY TAYLOR ... News
AMANDA TRAUGHBER ... News
TARA TRENARY ... News
DAVID TESKA ... Online
SPENCER DUNCAN ... Sports
GINA THORNBURG ... Associate Sports
BRADLEY BROOKS ... Campus
LINDESE HENRY ... Campus
DAVE BRETENSTEIN ... Features
PAM DISIMAN ... Photo
TYLER WIRKEN ... Photo
BRYAN VOLK ... Design
ANDY ROHRBACK ... Graphics
ANDREA ALBRIGHT ... Wire
LIZ MUSSER ... Special sections
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
Column
I'd like to introduce a fellow KU student to you. I'm sure most of you already recognize him when you see him on campus, but I doubt any of you really know who he is.
His name is Robert
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kimberly Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (isullivan@kansan.com) at 844-681-409.
His name is Robert Steven Gilmore. The University of Kansas classifies him as a non-degree seeking special student. Other University students classify him as the "That's My Dillons" man.
I'm not exactly sure why Robert has become so famous on campus and around Lawrence. There really isn't anything that unusual about him. Yes, he is a person with disabilities, but there are
many people with disabilities on campus. Maybe he has become famous because he is so recognizable because of his attire.
MARY CORCORAN
Students call Robert the "That's My Dillons" man because people usually see him on campus wearing a red T-shirt with the slogan "That's My Dillons." The T-shirt often completes a red-dominated outfit that includes sweatpants. We see Robert wearing a sweat suit most of the time because he takes an aerobics class at the Robinson Center, staff there say. Robert probably wears the same outfit whenever he is on campus for the same reason Paul Pierce wears the same outfit whenever he plays basket-
out whenever he plays basketball.
THAT'S
NO
JOBLESS
Many students think Robert is weird or strange. They see him on campus wearing the same clothes, sometimes humming or talking to himself. So what? I've seen many more unusual people on campus who don't get half as much attention as Robert does, even when they ask for it.
Look out in front of Wescoe Hall on a warm day and you might see two or three people standing on top of concrete podiums preaching their version of the gospel. They might get an audience of three or
four KU students, and they're begging for the spotlight.
Andy Rohrback / KANSAN
However, watch Robert leave Robinson after he finishes his aerobics class and you'll see six or seven people watching him. What is so fascinating about seeing a man walk home?
Robert doesn't seem to care about the people observing him. It looks to me as though he quotes his poetry for himself, not for an audience. If people have enough free time to pay attention to a guy talking to himself, why not go to Wescoe and give an audience to the guys who want one?
Robert has almost become a cultural icon for the University. He is recognized by more people on campus than anyone else I know, and that includes the basketball team. Students might miss T.J. Pugh sitting with a group of people at the Kansas Union, but I'd bet if Robert were there, students would immediately identify him.
This University is known for its diversity. How often are students bombarded with pamphlets and lectures about multiculturalism? Student Union Activities brings people like Spike Lee and Bill Maher to the Lied Center to present differing voices to our diverse campus.
I don't want to offend Robert, but he does not deserve all of the attention that he gets. He is a student just like any of us. There is no reason to single him out or ridicule him just because he acts a little differently and wears a shirt bearing the name of a major grocery store.
We should see, understand and respect every race, creed, gender and ethnic group we encounter. Our generation has been taught that since grammar school. That is, we've been taught to do that as long as the person from the different race, creed, gender or ethnic group is "normal."
Maybe our culture is slowly becoming colorblind. But it has a long way to go before it understands and respects people like Robert. If taken at face value, Robert is an Anglo-Saxon male. He is not even a part of the minority groups we have been taught to see as non-minorities. However, he is still not respected or understood.
The archaic views we have when it comes to people with disabilities amaze me. The simple fascination of Robert and his mundane actions proves just how little we understand the community of people with disabilities in Lawrence.
is the closest thing I've ever seen to a completely colorless educational environment. If a stranger walked into my mom's classroom, he or she would not see an Asian-American girl but a girl with Down Syndrome.
Instead of seeing him as that strange guy who wanders campus in the red sweats, we need to see him as Robert. Instead of calling him the
My mother has taught students with special needs for more than 15 years. Her students have African-American, Caucasian, Latino and Asian backgrounds, but more importantly, they have disabilities. That is what people see when they walk into her classroom. Consequently, her room
The more we try to find ourselves in people with disabilities, the more we will be able to find understanding and respect for them. We need to put the same amount of effort into understanding persons with disabilities now that we did into understanding persons from minority groups in the past. I know at least one person on campus who would benefit from such an understanding. It's not the "That's My Dillons" man. It's Robert Gilmore.
"That's My Dillons" man to make our friends laugh, we need to call him by his name. Instead of mocking him for quoting poetry and singing, we need to realize that that he is educated enough to know the poetry in the first place.
Mary Corcoran is an Overland Park sophomore in Journalism.
Letters
Anything is possible with persistence, faith
Sometimes we are overwhelmed by the responsibilities that assail us. More often than not, these forces originate well beyond ourselves. Because of this, our inner selves and our mechanisms for coping are constantly taxed and weakened. It would do us all well to realize that we have within ourselves the ability to transcend these external forces, and that ultimately we can draw from the inner strength inherent to what we truly are.
As a graduate student, I am painfully aware of the outward manifestations of the powers beyond myself that influence my academic, professional and personal life. During these times, I console myself with the words I once shared with high school graduates at their commencement. As a former high school educator, I know that the words I spoke then can now benefit and empower the many students at the University:
"The elusive gems of our highest aspirations are wrought from the raw and unpolished stones of our hopes and dreams. Through persistence and determination, these stones are forged in the crucible of the heart. Knowledge, success and happiness emerge as delicate and sparkling facets adorning the finished jewels. Among these will be many which seem to shine as if the sun itself had been captured within their cores. Golden threads of character, formed through self discipline, guided by morality and strengthened with the love and comfort of our chosen faiths and family, course through those special jewels, preserving them as wonders and shimmering examples of majesty, for all to contemplate, and all to heed."
As Winston Churchill once
Wayne Stark Falls Church, Va., doctoral student
said, "Never give up, never." We, as students, should always remember that the power to succeed comes from within. The high expectations that others may have for us always augment the ones we have for ourselves.
Rock Chalk director appreciates support
stands behind. The terms sisterhood and brotherhood go much further than our own chapters, and this time stretched to Alpha Delta Pi. These men had no obligation to commit. If anything, it will be more of a burden in their lives by the demand on their time. Still, they stepped up and supported Alpha Delta Pi.
Often, the negative aspects of Greek life are emphasized but the positive things that the greek community does are ignored.
What exactly does it mean to be a member of a fraternity or a sorority? For those who see the superficial side, a social clique, think again. I am a Rock Chalk director for Alpha Delta Pi sorority, and because of all the letters of support, words of encouragement and men who rose to the occasion, I have proof that the greek community stands for more than just a social group.
This is an example of something good that has come from a bad situation. Everyone is so quick to jump at the negative aspects of greek life, but here is an example of unity within the greek community. The men that came to audition on March 3 in the Kansas Union Ballroom for our Rock Chalk Revue show demonstrate the values of leadership, support, dedication and sisterhood and brotherhood that the greek community
At a time of need, a time when we were in a difficult situation, the men of the greek community stepped forward to lend a helping hand to us and the Douglas County United Way. These men represent the future leaders of our nation, for they are not afraid of challenge. They are not afraid to take a risk, and for that I thank each and every one of you.
The original cast will always hold a special place in my heart, for the members created and made our production come to life. But the show must go on, and it will. We face a difficult task, but I know we can and will accomplish great things. Thank you to all who have given us the opportunity to do so.
Yes, cows are so wild and vicious.
Police shouldn't have killed loose animal
Meg Strayer
Glen Ellyn, Ill., senior
The brief in the March 3 University Daily Kansan was completely absurd. I was absolutely shocked that an officer felt the need to kill a cow to gain control of the animal.
To me, this shows boredom in the police department and the uncontrollable urge to bring some excitement to the average day in a Lawrence police officer's life.
The owner of the cow doesn't even deserve livestock if he can't keep control of the animals. When one does get loose, the owner should find a non-lethal measure to control a harmless creature.
Whether it was boredom or laziness that brought on this absurd incident, we must all remember, cows must be like bears and lions that are incredibly, and I mean incredibly, vicious.
Can we all say sedation?
Jill Bailey
Overland Park senior
U·N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Thursday, March 13, 1997
5A
Pharmacy students win by making it personal
Team stresses interaction with doctors,patients
By Gerry Doyle Special to the Kansan
Ten KU students have won a national competition by taking a more personal approach to pharmaceutical care.
They hope the approach will change the landscape of their profession.
"It has pharmacists interacting with doctors and patients rather than just writing prescriptions," said Mike Doughty, faculty adviser for Phi Lambda Sigma, the pharmacy leadership fraternity that sponsored the competition. "It fosters a good deal of communication."
The team won the Phi Lambda Sigma Pharmacy Leadership Challenge, a competition designed to improve pharmaceutical care, with a proposal to create more community-oriented pharmacies. The national competition included 37 other schools.
The proposal centered on the creation of health-improvement programs within community pharmacies, Doughty said. These programs would target specific conditions such as arthritis and asthma and conduct sessions in which people suffering from these problems could discuss them and could receive medical counseling.
The students received the packet containing information about the competition on Oct. 1. Then they formed a committee and brainstormed, trying to reach a consensus about pursuing more community-oriented care.
The committee broke into smaller groups and studied facets of its goal,
These surveys were designed to expand the role of the pharmacy by finding the full range of the patients' needs beyond medicine.
In this way, pharmaceutical care would be altered to benefit the community, said Ashish Dhingra, Salmiya, Kuwait, fifth-year senior who oversaw the project.
"The competition helped give students a working knowledge of what pharmacy involves as well as helping them network," he said. "The time frame we were given was inadequate, but we got it done."
This is the third year of Phi Lambda Sigma at the University.
The chapter has participated in the competition the past two years. It tied for first two years ago and placed third last year.
The students will receive the trophy at the national American Pharmaceutical Association convention in Los Angeles in March.
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By Mark McMaster Kansan staff writer
Finding a job can be a formidable task for any college graduate, but for international students it can be even more difficult.
To make the process easier, the University Placement Center and the Office of International Student Services held a workshop on job-hunting skills yesterday at the Burge Union.
"There are so many international students that want to work after they graduate," said Daphne Johnston, associate director of the Office of International Student Services. "This is a good way to see a lot of them at one time so we can answer their questions."
Johnston spoke to 15 students at the workshop about immigration issues.
Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
She said it was important for international job applicants to be familiar with immigration law because often employers would be unfamiliar with the regulations and reluctant to hire international students unless the laws were explained to them.
Gaya Hea, Colombo, Sri Lanka, senior, said he thought interviewing skills were especially necessary to get hired.
"The job market is competitive whether or not you are an international student," he said.
James Henry, associate director of the placement center, discussed the interview process and how to prepare a resume.
James Henry, associate director of the University Placement Center, speaks about preparing for the job market. Henry spoke about interviewing, resumes and other job-search tips.
Henry encouraged students to visit the placement center for more information on these topics.
The center is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. Students may make appointments, and a counselor also is available to answer questions without an appointment.
Building better health for you
P. H. K.
Leah L. Luckeroth
M. D., Univ. of Kansas, 1886 Board Certified in Internal Medicine
From the beginning of student health services in 1906—to the opening of Watkins Hospital in 1932 (a gift from Elizabeth Miller Watkins)—to the opening of Watkins Health Center in 1974—there has been a history of changing to meet the health care needs of KU students.
When students voted for the current expansion and renovation, it furthered Mrs. Watkins' belief that the future
"depends on the proper care of your health."
As we continue the legacy of building better health for you, we invite you to come see the progress.
HEALTH Since 1906 Watkins Caring For KU CENTRUM
the world is getting smaller
smell better.
don't imitate
INNOVATE
check it out at your
campus bookstore.
http://www.hugo.com
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6A
Thursday, March 13, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU band to perform in Japanese park
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas marching band held a rehearsal last night in preparation for their upcoming trip to Japan, which begins Tuesday.
The band played six different songs for about 80 people at West Junior High School, 2700 Harvard Road. The concert included specially choreographed performances, including songs from The Wizard of Oz.
Fifty-five students and four staff members in the band will fly to Japan for the International Marching Band Festival at Huis Ten Bosch Park in Nagasaki. The theme park features a 19th-century Dutch village and seaport.
Robert Foster, band director, said the band would have two 20-minute stage performances in the park, in addition to a marching performance at the park's daily opening.
Foster also said the park would pay for all transportation and accommodation expenses.
Foster said the trip overlapped with the NCAA basketball tournament, but band members decided whether to go to Japan or the tournament. A total of 60 members will perform at the tournament for the KU basketball games.
I faithfully excited about it," said Dena Schlesener,
Peabody sophomore. "We have never been able to do
this before. I want to experience everything I can while I am there."
Atsuke Kamiya, general manager of Office Two-One International, helps with the performances in the park. She said the office had chosen the band because a member of her staff, a KU graduate, had recommended the band.
After seeing a recent performance by the band in Lawrence, Kamiya made the final decision to invite the band to Japan for its annual Tulip Festival.
"There aren't very many marching bands in Japan," Kamiya said.
She also said most Japanese universities did not have bands that supported university athletic teams, which was an idea she would like to introduce to the country.
10
During the two-week stay, band members will see an active volcano and the atomic bomb museum in
The KU Band practices for an upcoming trip to Japan. Fifty band members, who chose the trip over the NCAA men's Final Four, will take part in the trip.
Nagasaki, Foster said. Students have the freedom to do anything they want between daily performances.
Foster said students would miss some classes, but because the second week overlapped spring break, the classes missed would be minimal.
Minorities see slim chance for opportunities in politics
By Ann Marchand Kansan staff writer
There are no Hispanic members of the Kansas Legislature, and African-American and female Kansans are underrepresented.
rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, said minorities often have had to work harder to be perceived as efficient.
"I think if you are a woman and you are a minority, you learn to do that early," she said.
Ballard has had her share of experiences where she has been in the minority. In 1985, she and one other woman were the first African-American women elected to the Lawrence school board. In 1992, she and Rep. Ruby Gilbert, D-Wichita, was the first African-American women to be elected to the Legislature.
There are five African-American members in the House, which has 35 females in the 125member body.
Two of the Senate's 40 members are AfricanAmerican and 14 of them are women.
Sen.Sandy Praeger, R.Lawrence, said the Legislature was well-balanced with regards to gender, but not ethnicity issues.
Praeger said that does not mean minority interests are trampled.
"Women in the legislature really run the gamut from very liberal to very conservative," she said. "I think we try to bring a balance to the debate."
Julius Williams, assistant director for the Office of Minority Affairs, said many African Americans thought it was difficult to enter politics.
Kansas has had prominent women in leadership positions in the past. When Joan Finney was governor she was one of three female governors in the nation. Kansas and California were the only two states to have two female U.S. Senators serve concurrently last summer.
"If people believe in that person, then they are the right person for the job, whether they're White or not," he said. "But that's the whole challenge of many Blacks, whether you're dealing with politics or getting a job."
Danny Martinez, Shawnee sophomore and former treasurer of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said that the absence of Hispanics was largely due to the low interest in the Hispanic community.
"I think it has a hindrance and we need to get more Hispanics as legislators," he said.
Ballard, who is the only African-American representative who does not represent a majority-minority district, said that demographics were not her primary concern as a state legislator.
"I am extremely proud that my district would send me, but they didn't send me because I'm an African-American," she said. "They sent me because I have a history of being a good leader and getting things done."
By Dave Morantz Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas finally may get an extensive recycling program.
Last night, Student Senate passed a resolution calling for the creation of a campus recycling center and for the development of a more extensive campus recycling system.
Now, recyclables, such as aluminum cans and newspapers, are collected and transported to Leavenworth.
"Throwing your UDK in a campus box does not constitute a campuswide program," said Scott Sullivan, Leawood junior and Senate presidential candidate. "There are high schools that have a better recycling program than the University of Kansas."
The Senate plan calls for the administration and Senate to finance the construction of a 4,000-square-foot recycling center at West Campus.
The center would cost about $137,000 and would be financed equally by Senate and the administration.
Senate requests that the administration match the total contributions from the student fee. The fee could be implemented as early as next fall.
The plan calls for a $1 student recycling fee to pay for the collection of recyclables and the center's operating costs.
Jason Fizell, Olathe junior and Senate presidential candidate, said he planned to collect signatures for a petition to bring the $1 student fee to a referendum.
Anhough he said he supported the resolution and the fee, a referendum would allow students to express their views on the proposed program.
Kevin Lafferty, Valley Center senior and Student Senate executive committee chairman, said a recycling center would allow the University to sell recyclable items to companies for a profit.
"With all the aluminum, cardboard and paper that we could sell, the center would be self-supporting," he said.
Fitzell said although profits would be nice, the advantages of a recycling center could not be calculated in dollars and cents.
"I'd say everybody would agree that there is more of a value to recycling than just profit," he said.
Journalism dean prospect to meet students,faculty
By Ryan Koerner Special to the Kansan
The search for a new dean of the School of Journalism has entered its final stage.
James Gentry, the first of two finalists who will visit the University of Kansas, is arriving today.
The other candidate's name will be released next week during that finalist's campus visit, said Tim Bengton, associate professor of journalism and search committee chairman.
Gentry earned a bachelor's degree in history from Millsaps College in Jackson, Miss., and master's and doctoral degrees in journalism from the University of Missouri.
"Jimmy Gentry is highly regarded as very faculty- and student-oriented," said Bengtson. "He is an excellent candidate, and we are definitely interested in him."
He then taught journalism at Missouri and directed the business program in the MU journalism school. For the past six years, Gentry has been a facilitator for New Directions for News, an organization housed at the University.
Gentry said he first became acquainted with KU's journalism program because it was close to Missouri.
He said he had a high degree of respect for the program and the constant commitment it received from the University.
Gentry is the dean of the journalism school at the University of Nevada-Reno, where he also teaches a graduate seminar, Media Organizations and Change. The class conducts a study of newsrooms undergoing change as part of a project for the American Press Institute.
"Ihave a great job now," Gentry said. "I'm looking to see what would make the University of Kansas a better opportunity."
During his tenure as dean, the journalism school has received grants from national foundations for recruitment and retention and for summer minority newspaper workshops.
"We were looking for someone who has a proven record as a journalism administrator and as an innovator, and Jimmy Gentry does very well on that," Bengtson said.
Gentry will be in Lawrence until Friday. During his trip, he will meet with the search committee, administrators and University technology personnel. He also will meet with journalism students and faculty.
Bengtson said he would like students to have the opportunity to interact with Gentry and ask any questions they have. Students are invited to meet with Gentry at 2:30 today in room 206 in Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The search for a new dean began after Mike Kautsch, the dean of journalism, announced last August he would resign effective June 30.
Kautsch said he hoped the faculty would get a good feel for Gentry's abilities.
"Its important that the faculty understand how he manages rapid change in journalism and mass communications, particularly in journalism education," Kautsch said.
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PITCHER PROBLEM
HIDEI IRABU's agent, Don Nomura, sent a fax to all major league teams telling them the pitcher would sign only with the New York Yankees and would go back to Japan if he wasn't dealt to the team by March 18.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
San Diego obtained Irabu's rights in January from the Chiba Lotte Marines of Japan's Pacific League, but Irabu has refused to negotiate with the Padres. San Diego is said to be conducting trade talks with several teams,
SPORTS
.
including the Yankees, New York Mets and Seattle Mariners.
ERIK KRAMER TO REMAIN A BEAR
Quarterback Erik Kramer re-signed with the Chicago Bears, accepting a one-year offer with a reported base salary of $600,000 plus the chance to earn $1.4
thursday
million in incentives.
Kramer, 33., was an unrestricted free agent after playing out his three-year contract.
MONDAY MARCH 13, 1997
PANTHER RESIGNS
Carolina Panthers president MIKE MCCORMACK retired yesterday.
McCormack had told team owner Jerry Richardson of his plans about two weeks ago.
The Panthers won the NFC West with a 12-4 record with two victories against San Francisco. They defeated Dallas in a divisional playoff game and advanced to the NFC Championship against Green Bay. McCormack became an assistant coach
with Washington in the late 60s
CLE
with Washington in the late 60s and was named coach of the Philadelphia Eagles in 1973. He also worked on staffs at Cincinnati and Baltimore before being hired as director of football operations for the Seahawks in 1982. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1984.
SECTION B
Fast BREAKS
Certification plan leads to firings at Texas Tech
LUBBOCK, Texas — Texas Tech has fired or reassigned at least three people, including two executives, involved in the academic certification of athletes, Texas Tech Chancellor John Montford announced yesterday.
Citing University procedure, Montford would not reveal the names of employees involved. He also would not comment on the employment status of Taylor McNeel, assistant athletic director, and Michele Matticks, assistant director of academic services.
T
Both have been responsible for a certification program that resulted in the disqualification of two men's basketball players last weekend. Because the NCAA deemed Gracen Averil and Deuce Jones inelegible, the school forfeited its 10 Big 12 Conference victories and removed itself from NCAA Tournament consideration.
The school already had been investigated by the NCAA for alleged violations in the football and men's basketball programs.
Michigan roundballer fails to register vehicle
Traylor did not register the custom-built Chevrolet Suburban with athletics department officials, as he was required to do. The Detroit News said
DETROIT — The University of Michigan will investigate basketball player Robert Traylor's use of a $47,906 vehicle leased by his aunt.
The newspaper said there had been no indication that Traylor's use of the vehicle was improper, but it could draw the attention of NCAA investigators.
On three occasions in the past year, beginning with Taylor's Ford Explorer, the NCAA has asked Michigan officials to check into the use of vehicles by members of its men's basketball team.
The University announced Monday the results of an investigation into a sport utility vehicle driven by Maurice Taylor, another Wolverines basketball player. That probe discovered improper benefits had been extended by a booster.
NCAA gives details of invaded website to FBI
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The NCAA, embarrassed after a computer hacker posted racial slurs on what had been its official Internet site, is giving details of the case to the FBI.
Experts at NCAA schools across the nation have rushed to help figure out who hacked into the organization's World Wide Web home
racial epithets.
The invaded page displayed an encircled fist with the words "White Power" and a counter with a slurring phrase above it.
organization's World Wide Web home page on Sunday and replaced it with
NCAA
NCAA representative Wally Renfo said attorneys were considering whether the incident constituted trespassing.
The racial display was replaced later on Sunday by a toned-down page that read "Basketball sucks? Badminton rules!" Under the counter the message's fractured grammar read, "Stop commercialization of the Internet stops here."
Yesterday, the Kansas City Star quoted an unnamed 14-year-old high school freshman from "somewhere on the East Coast" who had claimed responsibility for hacking the site.
—The Associated Press
'Hawks revving up for Jackson State
Preparing for the Big Dance allows no team relaxation
By Bill Petulla Kansan sportswriter
The last leg of the Kansas men's basketball team's quest begins today.
The Jayhawks will take their first step toward claiming a national championship when they play their NCAA Tournament game against Jackson State University today at 11:35 a.m. at the Pyramid in Memphis, Teen. The game will be televised on CBS, channels 5 and 13.
Despite winning the Big 12 Conference Tournament, Kansas coach Roy Williams said he wouldn't let the team rest on what they have accomplished lately.
"We won the (conference) tournament in '92, and seven days later the season was over with," Williams said. "I'm not going to make that the only pitch, but I am going to remind them of that."
21
KANSAS
35
LAHOMA
31
Williams was referring to the 1991-92 season when the Jayhawks entered the tournament as a No.1 seed after winning the Big Eight Conference Tournament and then losing to the University of Texas-El Paso. 66-60 in the second round.
The Tigers of Jackson State got an automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament by defeating Mississippi Valley State, 81-74, in the finals of the Southwest Athletic Conference. Despite starting the season at 2-12, the Tigers won 12 of their next 15 games, including nine consecutive victories to finish out the season.
Williams said before the Jayhawks stepped foot on the court in Memphis, he and his staff would have compiled a 12-page scouting report on Jackson State.
Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Some components of the scouting report may include stopping the Tigers top scorer, guard Trent Pulliam. Pulliam is a versatile 6-foot-8-inch guard who can play any position on the court. He leads the team in scoring with 13.6 points per game, averaging eight boards per contest.
Pulliam, however, is the only returning starter from last season's 15-12 team. Guard Doug Williams is second in scoring and rebounding for the Tigers, with 10.5 points and 5.2 rebounds per game.
Despite Jackson State's strong guard, Williams said he probably would condense the scouting report to one page.
Although the Kansas basketball team is a 34-point favorite against Jackson State, Williams said the Jayhawks would take the same approach they had used all season.
The team did not get too bogged down by scouting reports, he said.
"We're going to play the way we've played all year," Williams said. "We hope to be good enough to make other team react to us instead of the opposite."
"We don't get too deep with this team," Williams said. "You've just got to take your butt out there and play."
Jerod Haase swipes at the ball in Adrian Peterson's hands during Friday's Oklahoma State game. Kansas opens NCAA Tournament play at 11:35 a.m., today in Memphis, Tenn., against Jackson State University.
The Big Dance: Round one
IN THE HUNT: 64 TEAMS
1 Kansas
16 Jackson State
8 Purdue
9 Rhode Island
Today's game:
11:25 a.m.
Channel 5
The Pyramid
Memphis, Tenn.
KLZR
106 S.F.
Jackson State: 9-1 in last 10 games, won seven straight De Carto Draper: 34.9 three-pointer shooter
KANSAS JAYHAWKS (32-1)
NOTES
G Jacque Vaughn 6-8 Sr.
G Joer Haeam 6-4 Sr.
F Raef LaFrentz 6-10 Jr.
F Paul Pierce 6-3 So.
C Scot Pollard 6-1 Jr.
PROBABLE STARTERS
PROBABLE STARTERS
G Trent Pullam 6-8 Jr.
G Doug Williams 6-4 Jr.
C Robert Fairley 6-10 Jr.
G Marino Walker 6-3 Fr.
G Decarto Draper 6-1
KANSAN
1
Wanting the win, basketball mania takes over town
Kansas basketball fans have been waiting for this day all year.
"We'll get them next year," everyone said.
After last year's season ended with a 60-57 loss to Syracuse, talk instantly turned to the next NCAA Tournament.
This season Kansas has gotten them.
Today, at 11:30 a.m. the streets will be empty. Every television will be turned to CBS. Every radio will be tuned to Bob Davis and Max Falkenstien. High schools will sneak televisions into classrooms, and business owners will be "Out to Lunch."
Now, as the No. 1 Jayhawks go into the NCAA Tournament as the favorite to win the national championship, the town of Lawrence has gone nuts.
"This is madness," people are saying.
Madness? That doesn't begin to describe it.
For the past three days teachers have not been asking students to hand in their papers. They are asking students to pass in their brackets.
These same teachers have been stuck with a moral dilemma: "Do we cancel class?" they ask.
Students have the same moral dilemma: "Do we skip class?" they ask.
For weeks, every television in the audio/visual departments has been requested.
SPORTS EDITOR
SPENCER DUNCAN
"I've never seen so many teachers want televisions on the same day," a woman in one department said. "This is madness."
When the clock strikes 11:30 a.m, the only sound o. campus will be the unread newspapers blowing toward Potter Lake.
Administrators will not be able to take phone calls.
I sorry, I'm in a meeting, when voice that will say Catholic churches, which have seen an increased attendance as fans pray for the Jayhawks, will close confessionals.
"This is madness," a priest will cry. "Absolute madness."
Open a window and the only sound will be the breeze carrying the cheers of Lawrence, the voices of Bob and Max and the CBS announcers.
Only one real sound will be heard in Lawrence. Every time Raef LaFrentz dunks or Billy Thomas hits a three-pointer or Jacque Vaughn dishes an assist, people will cheer.
"But what if they lose?" a lone voice will cry out when Kansas is down by five with six minutes remaining in the Final Four.
"That would be madness," a man would say. "This is the year."
But it could happen. Something could go wrong and the season would be forgotten.
No one but Roy Williams would remember that this team made a school record with 22 consecutive wins. Few will think about the undefeated season at home or that Kansas won the first ever Big 12 Conference title.
This year Lawrence wants a victory. So do Roy and Scot Pollard and Ryan Robertson and the team managers and everyone else. This team will be measured by how things go in the tournament.
No one wants to repeat, "We'll get them next year." Lawrence is basketball crazy, and the weight of a town rests on the shoulders of a group of students who just want to play basketball
This is madness. Absolute madness.
Comments? E-mail Spencer at
sports@kassan.com
MYHANKS
AP names Dixon All-American
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
Averaging 21 points, 5.5 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game, Kansas guard Tameeka Dixon earned second-team All-America honors from The Associated Press yesterday.
Dixon was an honorable mention player last season.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said it was hard to choose individuals for national honors in college women's basketball.
Tamecka Dixon, being covered by a defender, earned The Associated Press's second-team All-American honors.
"We're not on television as much as the men, where a lot of people have a chance to keep up with teams by just sitting at home," Washington said. "With the women, you have to do your homework. You really have to spend some time to know what's going on around the country, and I think that's been a real drawback to women's basketball."
Dixon will lead the No. 3-seeded Jayhawks when they play host to No. 14-seeded Detroit Mercy at 8:30 Saturday night in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Kansas was ranked No. 11 in the final regular-season AP poll.
Eric B. Howell / KANSAN
Dixon's All-America selection came more than two weeks after she was left off a list of 12 candidates for the Boost-Naismith Foundation Player of
the Year ballot.
"It makes them look very foolish." Washington said of the foundation's selection committee. "I have to assume there's a group of stale individuals sitting around a table, not really aware of what's
The Kodak All-America team, which has 10 players, will be announced at the women's Final Four.
going on around the country when it comes to women's basketball. I'm more concerned with the Kodak All-American selection, anyway."
Women's All-American Teams
Ticha Penicheiro, Old Dominion, Sr.
FIRST TEAM
FIRST TEAM
Kate Starbird, Stanford, Sr.
Kara Wolters, Connecticut,
Chlamique Holdclaw, Ten-
SECOND TEAM
Tamkee Dixon, Kansas, Br.
Tracy Reid, North Carolina, Jr.
Tina Thompson, Southern Cr
Nykesha Sales, Connecticut, Jr.
1.
Clarisse Machanguana, Old Dominion, Sr.
THIRD TEAM
Kim Williams, DePaul, Sr.
La Keshia Frett, Georgia, Sr.
La Marion Jones, North Carolina
Shalonda Enis, Alabama, Sr.
Kedra Holland-Corn, Georgia,
Sr.
BIG 12 CONFERENCE PLAYERS NAMED
HONORABLE MENTION
Anna DeForge, Nebraska; Andria
Jones, Kansas State; and Erin
Scholz, Colorado.
2B
Thursday, March 13, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Hawks bat away Missouri with sixth-inning comeback
17
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team just can't stop winning.
Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
Designated hitter Aaron Wilmes puts on the brakes after being trapped trying to score. Wilmes was out, but the Jayhawks were not, beating Missouri 13-8 yesterday afternoon.
Behind the strength of an offensive onslaught and a winning all-around performance, the Jayhawks beat the Tigers 13-8 last night at Hoghund-Maupin Stadium. The victory concluded Kansas' two-game series sweep of Missouri and marked Kansas' eight consecutive win.
Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall said he was impressed with his team's performance, especially at the plate.
"Everybody on the team, offensively, was absolutely outstanding," Randall said. "I'm really pleased with how our offense is progressing."
The Jayhawks scored two runs in each of the first two innings and built an early 4-0 lead for starting pitcher Rusty Philbrick, who made his first start in a Kansas uniform.
the freshman held the Tigers scoreless in the first four innings.
Missouri, however, did not give up.
Behind 4-1 and with the bases loaded in the sixth inning, Tiger first baseman Aaron Jaworowski tied the score by smacking a three-run triple down the right-field line. Tiger pinch hitter Jeff Terrell finished the Missouri scoring spree when he singled in Jaworowski.
The Tigers had their first and only lead of the afternoon, 5-4, following Terrell's hit.
The Jayhawks tied in the bottom of the inning when designated hitter Aaron Wilmes doubled home Nick Frank.
Kansas put the Tigers away two innings later.
fielder Justin Headley bashed a home run over the right-field fence, scoring two runs.
"I didn't want it to end." Randall said about the inning. "It was a confidence builder for the whole team."
A long eighth inning began for the Missouri pitchers when Kansas right fielder Les Walrond hit a double to right field.
Twelve batters, nine hits, eight runs and three Tiger pitchers later, the Jayhawks led 13-5. Center
Kansas reliever Josh Wingerd, who held the Tigers scoreless for two innings, said the Kansas offense had done more than its part to help avenge last year's five losses to Missouri.
"Missouri really drug us around last year," Wingerd said. "But our hitters have really been incredible. They've been on a tear."
Track team kicks off new season
Multi-event athletes represent Kansas in meet's 36-team field
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
Let the games begin
Kansas assistant coach Rick Attig said the team had made progress in the indoor season and was looking forward to starting the outdoor season.
Kansas will compete in the multi-events held today and tomorrow. It will send two athletes from the men's team and four from the women's side.
Six members of the Kansas track and field team will begin the 1997 outdoor season today in College Station, Texas, as they represent one of 36 teams competing in Texas & M's annual event.
"I was really pleased with the work ethic and the willingness to make changes," he said. "This is a good way to start out the year."
This will be the first meet that Kansas All-American decathlete Mike Evers will compete in after redshirting the indoor season. He will be joined by teammate Nathan Prenger, who had a strong indoor season, but was slowed by a sore hamstring before he had the chance to qualify for the NCAA Indoor Championships. The decathon will have three divisions – gold, silver and bronze.
The team will send Candace Mason, Amber Mounday, Heidi Lundervold and Mandy Schroeder to compete in the women's heptathlon, which will have two divisions - gold and bronze.
Although it will be the team's first outdoor meet, several of the other teams already have competed, including Texas A&M, which won eight gold medals in its first outdoor meet at Baylor.
"It was good to get the outdoor season going for us," said Ted Nelson, Texas A&M track coach. "Our teams are built to be more competitive during the outdoor season, and I think that was apparent."
Other teams competing in the multi-events include Kansas State, Penn State, Clemson, East Texas State, Houston, Abilene Christian, Louisiana State, Montana, Angelo State and Northern Arizona.
SCORES & MORE
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NCAA Basketball Tournament EAST REGIONAL
First Round
At Lawrence Joel Coliseum
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Thuriday, March 13
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
California (21-8) vs. Princeton (24-3), 11:15 a.m.
Villanova (23-9) vs. Long Island University (21-8). 90% after nine hours.
(21-8), 30 minutes after previous game
North Carolina (24-6) vs. Fairfield (11-18),
6:40 p.m.
Indiana (22-10) vs. Colorado (21-9), 30 minutes after previous game
At Pittsburgh Civic Aren
Pittsburgh
Friday, March 14
Wisconsin (18-9) vs. Texas (16-11), 11:15 a.m
a.m.
South Carolina (04:37) Cincinnati State (04:18)
8) 30 minutes after previous game
New Minutes, No. 1269
Coppi State (6)
New Mexico (24-7) vs. Old Dominion (22-
10). 8:40 a.m.
Second Round
At Lawrence Joel Collisum
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Saturday, March 15
13) 30 minutes after previous game
Recorded game
Louisville (23-8) vs. Massachusetts (19-
20). 30 minutes.
N.Carolina-Fairfield winner vs. Indiana-Colt-
ford winner
Cal-Prinotone winner vs. Villanova-IU winner, 30 minutes after previous game
At Pittsburgh Civic Aren
Pittsburgh
Sunday, March 16
S. Carolina-Coplin St. winner vs. Wisconsin-Texas winner, 30 minutes after previous game
SOUTHEASTREGIONAL
New Mexico-Old Dominion winner vs.
Louisville-Massachusetts winner, 1:20 p.m.
SOUTHEAST REGIONA
First Round
At Round
Memphis, Tenn.
Thursday, March 13
Kansas (32-1) vs. Jackson State (14-15).
11:25 a.m.
Purdue (17-11) vs. Rhode Island (20-9), 30
minutes after previous game
Maryland (21-10) vs. College of Charleston
Maryland (21-10) vs. College of Charleston
(28-2), 8:50 p.m.
Arizona (19-9) vs. South Alabama (23-6),
30 minutes after previous game
At Charlotte Coliseur
Charlotte, N.C.
Friday, March 14
Illinois (21-9) vs. Southern California (17-
Georgia (24-8) vs. Tennessee-Chatt-
ington (90-6) 14:00
10) , 30 minutes after previous game
Marquette (22-8) vs. Providence (21-11)
6:40 p.m.
Duke (23-8) vs. Murray State (20-9), 30 minutes after previous game
Second Round
At Charlotte Coliseum Charlotte, N.C.
Kansas-Jackson State winner vs. Purdue-
Rhode Island winner, 1:25 m.
Memphis, Tenn.
Saturday, March 15
zona-South Alabama winner, 30 minutes after previous game
Moscow Island winner, 12:30 p.m.
Maryland-Carol of Chadwick winner, Adi.
Sundav. March 16
At Charlotte Coliseum
Georgia-Tn-Chattanooga winner vs. Illinois-Southern Cal winner, 30 minutes after previous game
Duke-Murray St. winner vs. Marquette-
Providence winner 11-12
MIDWEST REGIONAL
WEST REGIONAL
First Round
At the Palace of Auburn Hills
Auburn Hills, Mich.
Cincinnati (25-7) vs. Butler (23-9), 11:30 a.m.
Iowa State (20-8) vs. Illinois State (24-5), 30
minutes after provoking a game
Xavier, Ohio (22-5) vs. Vanderbilt (19-11), 4:08 p.m.
UCLA (21-7) vs. Charleston Southern (17-12)
30 lbs. after pruning plants
At Kemper Arena Kansas City, Mo. Friday, March 14
Clemson (21-9) vs. Miami, Ohio (21-8).
14:05 PM
30 minutes after previous game
2023 p. 115
Tulsa (23-9) vs. Boston University (25-4).
Juglyne Mississippi (20-8) vs. Templ (19-10), 6:50
n.m.
Minnesota (27-3) vs. southwest Texas State (16-12), 30 minutes after previous
Second Round
At The Palace of Auburn Hills
Auburn Hills, Mich.
Saturday, March 16
Cincinnati-Butler winner vs. Iowa St-Illinois.
St. winner: 3:40 p.m.
UCLA-Carlison Southern winner vs. Aviva-Vand篮球员 30 minutes after
At Kemper Arena Kansas City, Mo. Sunday, March 18
Tulsa-Boston U. winner vs. Clemson-
Michigan.
Minnesota - SW Texas St. win vs. Mississippi-Temple win, 30 minutes after prevail
WEST REGIONAL First Round At The Huntman Center Salt Lake City The
Boston College (21-8) vs. Valparaiso (24-6)
Boston College (21-8) vs. Valparaiso (24-6)
St. Joseph's (24-6) vs. Pacific (24-5), 30 minutes after pregame game.
Kentucky (30-4) vs. Montana (21-10), 6:55 n.m.
iowa (21-9) vs. Virginia (18-12), 30 minutes after previous game
At The McKale Cente Tucson, Ariz. Friday, March 14
North Carolina Charlotte (21-8) vs. George-
ton (90, 21)
town (20-9), 1,42 p.m.
Utah (20-6) vs. Navy (20-8), 30 minutes
after previous game
Wake妃 (23-6) vs. St. Mary's, Calif.
Wake Forest (4-6) vs. St. Mary's, Calif.
(23-7) 8:55 p.m.
Stanford (20-7) vs. Oklahoma (19-10), 30 minutes after previous name
Second Round
Boston College-Valparaiso winner vs. St.
Innsbury College-948 m
Saturday, March 15
Halbleib named third team academic All-American
LAWRENCE — Kansas guard Angie Halibble has been named to the third team of the 1997 GTE Academic All-America Team.
Halbleib earned a 3.82 cumulative grade point average in math education, including a 4.0 average for the last fall semester, the University said yesterday in announcing the honors
Halbleib holds the Kansas career records for three-point field-goal attempts (646) and three-pointers made (235). She scored in double figures in 19 of 27 games this season.
The Associated Press
Tucson, Ariz.
Sunday, March 16
Kentucky-Montana winner vs. Iowa-Virginia
winner, 30 minutes after previous game
Utah-Navy winner vs. N.C. Charlotte-
Georgetown winner, 1:35 p.m.
Wake Forest-St. Mary's winner vs. Stanford-Oklahoma winner, 30 minutes after previous game
PRO HOCKEY
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division
W L T Pts GF GA
Philadelphia 38 20 10 862 173
New Jersey 36 19 12 84 188 155
Florida 30 23 15 185 160
N.Y. Rangers 31 28 9 71 219 191
Tampa Bay 32 7 32 7 61 184 206
Washington 27 33 7 61 170 188
N.Y. Islanders 23 34 10 61 183 198
Northeast Division
W L T Pts GF GA 19
Buffalo 35 21 11 81 195 167
Pittsburgh 32 28 6 70 228 216
Hartford 26 30 10 62 183 201
Montreal 32 12 13 62 210 243
Ottawa 22 32 13 57 184 197
Boston 23 35 9 55 197 238
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division
Pacific Division
W L T Pts GF GA
Dallas 40 23 15 205 165
Detroit 32 19 15 79 211 155
Phoenix 31 33 14 66 192 205
St. Louis 29 31 8 66 199 209
Chicago 26 31 11 63 174 170
Toronto 25 37 5 55 196 231
W L T Pts GF GA
x-Colorado 41 17 17 9 128 163
Edmonton 31 31 7 9 61 213 208
Anaheim 31 31 7 9 65 195 194
Calgary 28 34 7 6 83 181 196
Vancouver 28 34 7 6 80 209 233
'Los Angeles 25 35 9 9 58 184 224
San Jose 23 37 7 9 57 172 220
x-clinched playoff berth
Compiled from The Associated Press.
St. Patrick's Weekend
AICHIMIZ
Specials
This Thursday- Monday
Boulevard Irish pints (Downstairs)
$2.50 for the first &
$1.50 for the rest
Killian's pints (Upstairs)
$2.50 for the first &
$1.50 for the rest
$2.00 Killian's bottles
Watch out for the regional "Singled Out"
tournament next Thursday at Johnny's
JOHNNY'S
BAGEL & BAGEL
The Bagel, Coffee & People Place
Massachusetts
1026 Massachusetts
913-838-9494
23rd & Kasold
3914 Clinton Parkway
913-838-3600
TAVERN
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NATURALWAY
Did you know?
- NATURAL BODY CARE
- NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
- 820-822 MASS.
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THE LIGHTS OF GOD
Kansas ranked 3rd in the nation for recycling... from the bottom.
Let's improve our record
RECYCLE
Kansan
RECYCLING
ATTENTION RIDERS!
The Student Senate Transportation Board (KU on Wheels) will be
conducting Route Hearings on
in the Jayhawk Room on the 5th Floor of the Kansas Union
ROUTE HEARINGS ARE THE TIMES FOR THE BOARD TO RECEIVE INPUT FROM OUR RIDERS
Tuesday, March 18 at 5:00 p.m.
E. LAWRENCE and WEST 6TH
Routes to be discussed include:
For more information please call Bob Grunzinger at 864-4644
HenryT Bar&Grill
Thursday
S
Thursday
$.75 Domestic Draws
$2.00 Import/Micro Brews
1/2 Price Appetizers after 9 pm
749-2999
2 SATELLITES!
All regional feeds
Saturday
$2.00 all bottles
$2.50 Blacks & Tans
for the tournament
on 9 TV's!
[ ]
Sunday
Sunday
$2.00 Coronas
$2.50 Margaritas
$.75 Tacos/$3.50 Taco Salads
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 13, 1997
3B
NFL owners OKownership of nonfootball sports teams
The Associated Press
PALM DESERT, Calif. — Wayne Huizenga is in as an NFL owner. Paul Allen can be too, if he desires.
NFL owners approved crossownership on Tuesday, clearing the way for Huizenga to maintain control of the Miami Dolphins.
Huizenga also owns baseball's Florida Marlins and the NHL's Florida Panthers.
The ruling at the league's meetings eliminated a barrier that bars owners of non-football
franchises from also owning NFLteams.
"I'm glad that this issue has finally been resolved," Huizenga said in a statement released at the meetings. "Now that this matter is behind us, we can turn our full attention to the team itself."
"Wayne has shown he is a good owner and has operated the Miami Dolphins in an exemplary fashion," said Team President Eddie Jones, who represented the Dolphins at the meeting.
"The team will be taken out of trust, and it will now be a full-
fledged ownership, he said. Allen now can have a full-fledged ownership, as well.
The league's rule change means an NFL owner can also operate other major league franchises within his market, or in a neutral market — one with no NFL clubs.
That clears the way for Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, to take control of the Seattle Seahawks.
Allen, who owns the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers, can exercise his option on the Seahawks, whose current owner, Ken
Behring, tried last year to move them to southern California.
Allen's option is contingent on approval by the Washington State Legislature and the voters of a $400 million stadium and conference center.
"At least all our hurdles are clear now," said Bob Whitsitt, president of the Trail Blazers and of Football Northwest.
"I think it's time cross-ownership comes to the NFL," said Steelers president Dan Rooney, whose family is an original league owner. "It was important
to get it done, and we've done a good job tightening up our rules."
Corporate ownership still will not be allowed.
It took some last-minute lobbying to get the cross-ownership rules changed.
The final vote was 24-5-1 — Buffalo, Washington, Chicago, Cincinnati and Detroit voted no and Oakland abstained.
But it did not pass until Carolina, New Orleans, Minnesota and Tampa Bay moved from the negative side and voted yes.
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Visit Lawrence's hippest Lounge
AQUA
LOUNGE
"Serious Drinks for Drinking Seriously"
4B
Thursday, March 13, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONLY
$9.19
plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
704 Mass.
Open 7 days a week
--it is a marvelous day to buy real estate. If you don't have a cent to your name, check out special programs for people in your category. Promising you will pay it back and meaning it could be enough. That is especially true if you offer some sweat equity.
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* Improve the Lawrence Bus system
- Protect Lawrence's environment
- Ensure vitality of Downtown Lawrence Vote Alan Black
City Commissioner
Political Ad paid for by Alan Black for City Commission John P. Davidson, treasurer
Got a comment? Got a complaint?
This is your University Daily Kansan and we want to hear what you think about it. The next Spring '97 Kansan advisory board meeting will be at 6 tonight in 206 Stauffer-Flint Hall Remember, we can't make this a better newspaper unless we know what you want.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NATURALWAY
• NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING • NATURAL BODY CARE
• 820-822 MASS. • 841-0100·
BLEACHERS SPORTS BAR
DOORS OPEN SATURDAY AT NOON FOR THE GAME
GO HAWKS!!!
10 FT BIG SCREENS & LOTS OF TVs 18 ENTER 21 DRINK FOR MORE INFO CALL: 749-HAWK
804 W 24TH - BEHIND McDONALDS
Come Watch the 'Hawks March through March, and Get Paid! New Donors Earn $20 Today, Up To $40 This Week!
Donate your life saving plasma, watch the Hawks on TV and EARN CASH !
Walk-ins are welcome-
NABI
The Quality Source
11
Nabi Biomedical Center
816 W 24 • 749-5750
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
Hours: M-F 9am-6:30pm Sat 10am-2pm
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday (March 13)
It is time to go back to school. Put your thoughts into words in March.
Pay off an old debt in April. Sign up for classes in May. You are lucky at home in June. Be your own quality control inspector in September and gain respect. Make more on your career in December. Friends give you a boost in January. Watch for a bureaucratic bonus in February. Your sweetheart is the wind beneath your wings all year.
**Aries** (March 21-April 19) - Today is
Todav's Birthday (March 13)
It is a good time to ask for a raise.
If that doesn't work, get a second job. You will be surprised at what you can do for six months if you have got your eyes on a bigger goal. In the beginning, there is an idea. Then comes a commitment.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) - Today is an 9.
Decisions pertaining to travel, higher education, children and romance will all go well today. You are lucky at games. It looks like your chances of being in the right spot at the right time are better than usual.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)-Today is a 6.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is a 9.
You are intelligent, well organized and practical. You are thinking things over carefully before you act. You are not taking a great deal of time to do it, either. Face it, you are awesome. Do something you have been thinking about doing.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 6.
Today, there may be a test. Don't worry about it. You will do fine. All you have to do is apply what you have learned recently. Although you would prefer to get what you want without much trouble, this time you have to work for it.
Virgo (Aqu. - 23-Sep. 22) Today is
Virgo (Aug, 23-Sept. 22) - Today is an 8.
You still have to work, and you still want to play, but somehow they are
not exclusionary. You even may be enjoyng your job for a change.
That is just because you are in a better mood. This might have something to do with love.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 7.
Delegate a difficult job, but keep track of what is going on. After all, you are the brains behind the operation. Some say Scorpios will set up another person to take the heat — not that you would ever do anything like that, of course.
This is a very good day for finding money. You may locate some of it under the couch cushions or in a pocket of an old pair of jeans. Don't stop there. Schedule a private conversation with a person who deals with money all the time.
**Scroor** (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is an R.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)-
Today is a 7
You have to work, but good will come of it. In this case, it looks like you could get a pay raise. If you haven't had one for a while, ask, it is also a very good day to get another job.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9.
Your boss is more and more impressed with your work. In short, this is a perfect day to begin just about whatever you want. If you are looking for true love, ask a likely prospect for a date. If you want a better job, send out your resume.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 7
Your scientific calculations, plus a little bit of guesswork and an outright miracle, could add up to a big solution. You want to fix not only little things around the house, but also global problems. You are pretty good at it, too, when you keep an open mind.
Pliscs (Feb. 19-March 20) - Today s a 9.
Is there something you are trying to learn? This is a good time to practice. Pisceans make wonderful musicians. It is easier to express your feelings through music than it is through words. Instead of watching television tonight, take a step toward stardom.
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
1997-1998 University/Community Service Scholarship Award
From the Kansas and Burge Unions
As a result of the efforts of many students saving the furniture and art objects while providing invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire on April 20, 1970, insurance carriers decided to present the Kansas Union with a gift. Each year, the Student Union Activities Board awards around $1,200 to deserving students who have made significant contributions to the University and Lawrence communities.
Qualifications:
- Must have demonstrated service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Academics and financial need will be minimal considerations in application reviews.
- Must be a undergraduate KU student this spring semester and enrolled in nine or more hours.
* Must be returning to KU for the Fall 1997 and Spring 1998 semesters.
Applications:
Available at the SUA Box Office, Level Four in the Kansas Union. Applications must be received by poon Friday, March 21, 1997 at the SUA office. For more information, call (913) 864-3477.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Kansan Classified
100s Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
男士女士
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
366 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
A
Classified Policy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan
tise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
Y
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Houshold Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to adver-
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
100s Announcements
105 Personals
KU QA Offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unsex. Please call KU Info 864356 or Head quarters at 861-2435 for more information.
110 Business Personals
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
CENTER
Stering Silver Jewelry For Gays & Gals.
Hoops, naval rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc. Shop. 928 Mass.
864-9500
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
Kansan Ads Pay
120 Announcements
Need a 2-way ride to Daytona FL, also would like to take the bus to Daytona Beach area. Call or leave message for 709-347-8477.
3 Years. + 112%. (curious?) If you are a participant in the TIAA-CREF Retirement Program, please visit http://mcclaskey.interkan.net
INDEPENDENT FILM AUDIENCE casting for feature film. All ages and experience levels: $5 Sat., March 15 in the Pine Rm. of K.U. Union. Call Jeff at 832-9879.
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or unuse?
KU QA® Ao offers a confidential support group
Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. Call KU Info at 864-356
or Headquarters at 824-2434 for location.
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
841-2345·1419 Mass
24 hrs. Free
120 Announcements
FAST FUNDRAISER - RASE $400 IN DAYS
GREEKS, GROUPS, CLUBS, MOTIVATED
INDIQUIDALS. FAST. EASY. NO FINANCIAL
OBLIGATION (800) 882-182 EXT. 33
NUDE RECREATION
EED $$$$$$$$ ?
NUDE RECREATION
North American Nudist Directory lists 100's of
nude beachs, clubs, & resorts in your area and
around the country. 24 hour info: 412-879-4778
Men & Women needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research studies. Earn up to $1000/wk. 24 Hour Info(2.5 minutes) 1-817-839-7887
Thursdays,
Mar 13, Mar 20, Apr 3
7-9:00 pm
Advanced Registration and materials fee ($19) required
Improve your reading speed and retain more.
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
READING FOR COMPREHENSION
& SPEED WORKSHOP
FOR
125 Travel
CALL TODAY
Train
TOWERS
EUROPE SUMMER
TRAVEL
749-0700
AIRLINE TICKETS HOME
TRAVELLERS INC.
831 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
125 Travel
AAA!Spring Break '97. Cancun, Jamaica,
&!aaaa!8 nights / w/ air from 8:30. Enjoy
Dink Parties, No Cover, Best Bars,
& Group寝室!Endless Summer Tour 1:
802-249-7047
男 女
205 Help Wanted
BabySister needed. Monday-Friday in Eudora
have own transportation and provide
reference.
Now hire all positions. Need AM/PM hours. FT or
NH requirements. Apply within. 3514 Clinton
City, IL.
Part-time delivery driver needed. Drugs free
1800 W. 5th st. Carquest Auto Parts.
1800 W. 5th st.
1
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. 6 wk sum.
Moon, Lake Quiva, 15K.
QUESTIONS: Call 398-7677.
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MWF 3pm-4pm to work with children age 18 mo-5 yrs. A.M. & P.M. Substitutes needed also-Call Rosemary 843-4147
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 13, 1997
5B
205 Help Wanted
Student hourly secretary $5/hr, 15 hrs/wk. Good up at 14:49 Haworth. Contact Grethet Coughlan.
Help wanted for after school care of a 39 old boy, Car needed for picking up from school and some driving to baseball practice. MTh 3:07- 4:07. Need preferences/requests 75/week. 749-3034.
MAKE THE MONEY YOU DESERVE
Excellent profit potential with new company, get in before the growth explosion! Recorded message. 1-800-643-2374.
Wanted 87 students. Lose 18-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough.Doctor recommended.Guaranteed. $30 cost. Free gift. 1-800-435-791.
CAMP COUNSELORS Overnight camps in Pocono Mines, of PA Over 40 activities - Seeking general and specialist counselors
215-897-9700 or e-mail: pinetree@pond.com
Note taker needed for Chem 184 MWF 13:20·10:20;
1. Chem 188 MWF 39:9·10:20. Must have completed
this or higher w/ an A. Earn $10-$15 per lecture.
Call Nancy at 693-3485.
NANNY
Jo. Co. professionals take a loving caring and responsible Nanny to care for their infant daughter, M - F; 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. References and background checked. Call Jackie at 685-017-6 - p.m.
Part time help needed calling on behalf of SADD.
Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/hr plus commission,
schedule you own hours. Come join our friendly
business. Send resume to EOS, 401-783-4290,
401-783-4290, 401-783-4290, or fill out an application. EOE
"Now hiring, restaurant staff, all positions, all shifts. Pay startting at $6.50 and up, depending on experience and availability. Please apply in person or via mail between 2:00 and 5:00 P.M. or call 492-2330."
Apartment Manager. Rapidly growing management team. Work with managers to join our management team. Experience preferred but will训 right person. Apply at a management institute or mail resume to KS, 6044
Babysitter/nanny wanted. Afternoon, evenings,
Saturday and Thursday. Any daytime.
Starting now. Full-time job. You must own a car,
experience, and knowledge of child care.
Available to Blind Box 10, 119, Staunton Flipper,
and reference to Blind Box 10, 119, Staunton Flipper.
Ceramic studio needs full and part time experi-
ence, training in ceramics and chemicals, firing techniques, working with clay slabs, drawing and design capabilities. Pro-
vide training for applications only, 913-843-7288, 766-588-5808. Steven
STUDENT WORK- up to $12.50 *Nat I' CO, immediate PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCOC. Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Call our JOCC office at (913)381-WORK (1am-5pm)
A 24hr dinner w/bar & pool. Located at 1015 Mass in former Tan Pan Lier. Now hiring kitchen, service, & bar managers. Laborers. Apply in person after 3 today. Bartenders & cooks all shifts.
Adams Alumni Center *The Learned Club*, ad-
iscent to campus has openings for banquet servers,
bartenders and hosts. Flexible hours, some day-
time and weekend availability preferred. Above min.
wage, employee meal plan in a professional,
based on skill sets it offers average six hours.
Apply at 1286 Gread Ave
LAKE SHAWNEE GOLF COURSE - Topeka
Opportunity for an individual who enjoys working with food preparation and customer service.
Lake Shawnee Golf Café has opportunities for the enthusiastic individual. A variety of hours available. G.C., G. 410, SE East Edge Rd, Erdpe 762-265-326.
CA.IP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swim, basketball, tennis, golf sports, rifley, arebey, tennis, golf sports, computers, campains, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary: $210K/year. C/WC 1746 Maple, MAPL, ID. IL 60089, 847-446-7954
Food Service Supervisors: 2 positions available @ The Mass Street Deli & Buffalo Bill's Smokehouse; 3 hours per service; have 2 years experience in hotel service; have 2 years experience in $5.00-$7.00 per hour on prior basis; must be up to $1,500. Apply at Schumann Food Company in upper up to $1,500. Apply at Schumann Food Company in upper up to $7.99. (upslants above smokehouse).
Corrections/Security: Detention Specialist.
Responsible for direct supervision of juveniles required. Detention requires required, perform duties required of assigned post. Requirements: Over the age of 21. High bipolarism or its equivalent. Three semester college education. adolescent development, psychology or related experience. equal opportunity to child development and caring for youth or both one year experience as a child care worker or child worker on the ages of 12 through 17. Send resume and job history to FACJ, P.O. Box 10926, Topeka, Kansas. 86194. Applications will be accepted until March 15. Telephone: (913) 862-0855 | Fax: (913) 862-0991
Seeking students majoring in social/human service fields for hands-on experience & internship credit working with children who have multiple disabilities and significant behavior disorders. Intensive training in behavioral programming provided. Staff will assist in the implementation of highly structured program to develop students' skills in a residential setting. Positions are live-in working five days on and off two days. Salary for 9 week program is $2,560 to $2,800 depending on assignment and work schedule. Prefer applicants with 60 credit hours in human service field or other occupation. Please submit resume or submit resume to: Human Resources, Heartspring, 2400 Jardien Dr., Wichita, KS 67219
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with possibility of renewal for next academic year. Interested in candidate who will be at KU for next two years. Students will study Bachelor's or Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community experience. Will have solid research skills, leadership and supervisory experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, in helping other. Must be Lawrence resident. Come by KU info. 420 658-3922 or visit www.ku.edu to come base with final deadline for applications. Spm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
HELP WANTED - SOFTBALL UMPIRES - THE LAWRENCE PARKS AND RECREATION DEPARTMENT IS LOOKING FOR INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN WORKING AS A SOFTBALL UMPIRES DURING THE SUMMER AND FALL LEAGUES.
TRAINING SESSIONS WILL BEGIN MARCH 15TH AND WILL CONTINUE DURING MARCH. ALL INTERESTED INDIVIDUALS MUST BE IN THE TEAM. THE TEAM BEGINS IN APRIL AND CONTINUES THROUGH OCTOBER. ANYONE INTERESTED SHOULD CONTACT THE ADULT TO JOIN THE TEAM. YOU WILL BE MAILED THE DATES AND TIMES OF THE MEETING TUESDAYS.
DRURY PLACE RETIREMENT CENTER
Hiring dining & laundry aides
Immediate openings.
Weekday or weekend hours.
No evenings.
Full or part time.
Will train.
Benefits available.
205 Help Wanted
Apply at 1510 St. Andrews Drive
NYSTEST TEAM INTERNE. Deadline: 3/14/97.
salary $49.50-7/5-10, 20 hrs per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software products. Participate in systems testing & applications library maintenance. Required qualification is computer science or 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, submit a cover letter and current resume covering example to Ann Rist, Counsel Center, University of Kansas, EO/OA EMLOYEE
Earn cash on the spot
$20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week
Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
JCPenney Fine jewelry selling specialist job available.
Selling experience preferred; commission
pay plan; part-time. Flexible schedule.
Some daytime available & required. Gener-
ous employee's discount plan
JCPENNY CO.
1801 W.23rd. EOE/M/F/V/H
Juicers
Needs a few good Men for Male Night
Apply in person,
if you think you
have what it takes
Coming soon:
Mondays are Ladies night
Ladies only
18+ Apply in person
913 N, Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
Inso Kansas City Corporation Department 0305K
Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64112
Fax: (816) 753-8387
E-mail: hr-kc@lnso.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
Inso CORPORATION
www.inso.com
225 Professional Services
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG Lawrence Office 841-5716 Metro KC Office (800)-733-2404
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJury
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of D. WARD G. SCHULZ
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-5118
Free Initial Consultation
Call Jacki at 823-8844 for applications, term
description, etc. Satisfaction Makes. Make an e-
mail to: Call Jacki at 823-8844 for applications, term
description, etc. Satisfaction Makes. Make an e-
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/inner printner @ sample #40 quality paper for you. Call us at 312-596-7872.
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
305 For Sale
FINAL FOUR TICKETS-Two seats/six games.
Reasonable offers only. Call (602) 661-6488 or
(602) 729-8592. Leave message.
Jeopard Wear Soft Top. Light Gray $200 O.B.O.
Call Tim @ 832-2743
Macintosh IIs with high resolution monitor and laser printer. Lots of software.
Macintosh Performs with color monitor and color
stylewriter. Call 383-0297 for details.
300s Merchandise
Red 1803 Chrysler LeBaron convertible, white top, computer with voice, luggage rack, tape deck, leather seats, good tires, A/C, always start$4500 obo, 749-2624
Get reprints of your favorite Jayhawk players and other Big 12 basketball photos from the Kramer Gallery. These images are available near photos by Star Saffi photographers. Call StarSaffi816-324-4654 for details.
340 Auto Sales
Laptop-Toshiba: 486DX25-20, Color Display: 330
TOShiba 30mb memory, software, Caller @ 8645 7846
X
5 Samples Tickets!! Sold out Show! Friday March 14th. Call Chad at 865-6831.
Light blue 189 Chevy Corsica, A/C, AM/FM
radio, very reliable, 49% or best offer. B/43-227
B/45-230
www.superiorcuracu.com Pictures of pre-owned vehicles on the web. Various makes and models.
Call 1-800-875-ACURA for more info. Ask for Pat.
CLASSIC MUSCLE CAR! 1973 Mercury Cougar, 2
door, 8 cylinder, rebuilt tranny, fair condition.
$1200 BOO. (913) 848-1842.
A
WANTED:
Your used computer (PC or Mac)
We are paying up to $1,000 Reward for your good used computer.
370 Want to Buy
G.E. heavy-duty W/D, extra large capacity,
white, 520 or best offer. 843-2297
UNI Computers 841-4611
405 For Rent
1 new lbram. Lods of extras. $340. Great deal.
811-5650. Available immediately.
5 Samples Tickets! Sold Out Show! Friday March 14th. Call Chad at 865-0631.
2 BDRM, 2 bath College Hill condo. W/d/microwave, water pail. Avg All. Rent $77/L
Studio, 1-3 BR, also 5 BR house all near KU. Call 841-6254
400s Real Estate
Available now-3 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer/Dryer.
Fully equipped Kitchen. On KU bus route. Call Bali-
phone: (850) 742-9612.
8 BR houses for rent
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
3 10m 5dkm house. 2 1kms from campus. 3 kins from downtown. Big augustian hardwood floors, W/ white paint on walls. 2 kins from campus.
3 Bedroom house. Great location! Available for 1
Bathroom in Fall of 1964.
Kegerator included. Call 845-821-3871.
FURNISHED 3 BR AP-T, W/D/A/ A/
BALCONY, ON BUS ROUTE, NEAR CAR
EXTERIOR.
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG.1.
CAMPUS, 302 W. 67th St., & deposit, & permit
Jim Edwards (912) 636-3848
Condo for Sale 32dmk, 28ath, washer/dryer, on busi route B. Best view Linnassville Assume
Got a group? Available for fall. 9 bdrm or 6 bdmr home. Well maintained. Nice common areas, laundry facilities. 841-STAR (7827).
Great old house! Seven bedrooms, 3 bathrooms,
240 sq ft. Next to a large textible animal Amalta Intl Call 681-597-8111
Studio & 2 Bedrooms. Available for summer &
reasons only. On bus route
reasonable rent. Call 643-1158 for
more details.
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Meadowbrook Apt. Fireplace, good
view. $400/month Call 864-3038 (DAY) Ask for Kerry.
Sublease 2BH, 28th pt. at Tuckaway. Pool, security, firewall and ERP. WILL give
SUMMER SUBLEASE: avail. mid-May July 31.
Spacious 5 barm apt., 2 full baths, living/dining
ruf, fully equipped bikers, big closets, cats ok. $600
+ utilities. May rent free. Call 823-9871.
Mackenzie Place, 1323 Kelburn. Now leasing for Aug. 1. Great Location! Luxury apps, close to campus. All 38 B, Microwave, washdryer, dryer, refrigerator. All hot water. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1066.
Awesome 2-bedroom apartment for summer sublease. Next door to Yellow Sub. Have you ever seen the T.V. show Friends? This apartment is just as cute. $480/mo + electric, call 841-8178
Low $350 per month for nice spacious quiet 2 BR apt. Carsions, A/C, bus route and pool. Low utilities! No pets. 1 yr leases beginning in May, June, July or Aug. Spanish Crust Angels 841-6868
405 For Rent
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400
diverse membership, non profit operation, democratic control, 818-240 incl. wk dy dorms, UliL,
W/D, cable. Close campus & Mass. Calc or stop
www.sunflowerhouse.com
NOWLEASING
Tuckaway
GATEWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
HARPER SQUARE
PINNACLE WOODS
1*2*3 br. luxury apt. homes
5000 Clinton Pkwy.
1 / 4 mi. west of Wakarusa
All new - 865-5454
- 1 BR 425.00
Sumsh $ub lease 3 BK_1/2/bath W/D, on KU bus rt. Rent $640/mo call 832-9980
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 841-8468.
- 3BR 725.00
- 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
- Washer/Dryer
Live in Luxury.
- Washer/Dryer
Naismith Place
- Washer/Dryer
- Alarm System
- 2BR 610.00
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
low leasing for summer and
• 2 BR from 8440
• 1 bed, basement
• 1bk to 1bk bus rossi
• Park balcony
• Pd cable TV/Pers
• Bedside court
• Court entrance
Oudswijk & 25th Ct. 841-1815
APARTMENTS
LCA
Landmark International
Call for Appointments
4:15-6pm Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
- Alarm System
---
CALL 832-9918
- Built-in TV
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
1st Month Free - Call for details
1&2Bedrooms
- New in 1996!!
Spacious a apartments and Townhouses for rent.
Waher/Dryer, Dishawar Avail.
Central Air - Close to Campus
Studio 1,2,3 & 4 bedrooms
Call LCA Apartments
311-8157 (767) am
8:30 am - 7:45 pm
"Convenient affordable house!"
OnKUBus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Fitness Center
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
ExerciseRoom
3 Hot Tubs
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
405 For Rent
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
water paid call or stop by today
MOVE IN NOW...
One Month Free Rent
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
841-7726
Shannon Plaza Apartments
Sunrise Apartments Signing new for fall
- Close to Campus
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
Apartments
Currently Leasing For Fall '97 10-Month Leases Available!
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan Sunrise Village 6th & Gateway Open House Daily 841-1287 or 841-840 Mon.- Fri. 1-5
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms
* Garages (village)
* Tennis Courts, Pools
* Free Cable TV (Place)
* Luxurious Town Homes
* On Bus Route
- On KU Bus Route
Holiday Apartments
- Close to campus
Move In Now...
- Laundry facility
Sunrise in the hills
- Laundry facility
- Swimming pool
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as snacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
One Month Free Rent On lease through July 31 1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment Call or stop by today
Park25
211 Mount Hope Court #1
For more info, or Appt.
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
843-2116
11th and Miss
Berkeley Flats (EHO)
- On bus route
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Leasing for Summer & Fall
PALM ISLAND
or below you"
*2 Bedroom $400-$445
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
(our townhouses are two levels)
Leasing for Summer/Fall '97
1, 2, 3 bdmr/2 bath, 4 bdmr/3 bath
*Washer/Dryer*
*Dishwasher*
*Microwave*
*Fireplace*
*Celling fans in every room*
*Cable in every room*
*Walk-in closets*
*Bath/pool*
Loramur-3801 Clinton Pkwy
Lennannar-4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Call 814-789 hours. 9:5-M-F
FLATS
405 For Rent
No one lives above
---
Lorimar and Leannamar Townhomes
meadowbrook FALL'97
- 2 Pools
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to come see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like atmosphere.
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly, service-oriented community.
Opened comming.
Studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdm. Apts.
2 & 3 Bdm. Townhouses.
- 2 Volleyball Areas
* 3 Bus Stops
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5-30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat. 1-4 Sun
430 Roommate Wanted
Female Sum, Subsea needed midline of May to
June; Female Sum, Subsea needed midline of August to
September; Female Sum, Subsea needed midline of October to
November.
3-rooms for rent. Nice house. Good price. Please call 749-2886.
1 roommate wanted to share house. $200/month.
Roommates from campus. Smoke. Oily. Potts.
O. Friendships.
Non-smoking female needed immediately to
care. Provide her apt. app; close campus
and 1/2 unit/house.
Pre-op transsexual lives in Lawrence area seek another gay/gay friendly person on a townhouse duplex with no. smoker, social drinker or partner. Ask two of her. If interested please call (913) 371-1288.
- Byphone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66845
6B
Thursday, March 13, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Allen brings winning record,nature to team
I have a good feeling Kansas has found the right person to replace former Kansas football coach Glen Mason.
After interviewing new football coach Terry Allen, I was impressed with his cordial manner. His personality, combined with his football background and his school spirit bring a fresh outlook to Kannas football
After this year's disappointing 4-7
lowed a 10-2 season and 1995 Aloha Bowl victory, a change in the program was needed. After nine years, Mason's departure came at the right time for him and Kansas football.
My impressions of Mason and Allen are completely different.
SPORTS COLUMNIST
ADAM HERSCHMAN
If Head & Shoulders shampoo sponsored a "You never have a second chance to make a first impres-
"ton" contest between the two coaches, Allen would win.
Mason was, well ... Mason. He was up front, blunt and to the point.
In my interview with Allen, he wasn't afraid to show his personality.
Before interviewing Allen, I didn't know what to expect. I was sitting in his office, prepared to ask the first question, when he said, "Adam, tell me about yourself."
I almost fell out of the chair.
Rarely in my brief interviewing experience has an interviewee broken the ice. After we talked, I started asking questions, and he answered every one with the same enthusiasm throughout the 45-minute interview.
His amiable personality and genuine manner immediately gained my respect.
Not only did he display his character, but also some of his plans for the football team.
Offensively, it sounds as if he plans to have the ball thrown more often. Defensively, he prefers a 3-4 formation.
"People will have to drive the football against us," he said. "We'll force them to get eight,-10,-12-play drives to put
points on the board."
Allen's football background is solid. He was a three-year (1976-78) starting quarterback for Northern Iowa before becoming an assistant football coach at his alma mater.
He has the distinction of being the youngest football coach at either I-AA or I-A when he was named coach at Northern Iowa in 1898. He was 31.
In eight seasons, he guided the Panthers to a 81-33 record and seven conference championships. Allen is 3-3 against Big 12 Conference teams, including 1-0 against Kansas State.
If there is an argument against his qualifications, it is probably that he has never coached a Division I program.
But would his .743 winning percentage in 101 games be considered successful at the high school level, pro level, Division I or even Pon Warner? Yes.
Roy Williams didn't have any Division I head coaching experience before he accepted the job at Kansas.
I am not comparing Allen to Williams, but even though Allen wasn't a household name when he was hired, his credentials were impressive. He deserves the opportunity to coach here.
Allen also has shown plenty of school spirit so far, attending the Kansas men's and women's basketball games this season. When was the last time you saw Mason attend a Kansas sporting event other than football?
Mason gave Kansas football fans some great years. But Mason appeared ready to move on last year after accepting the coaching job at Georgia before returning to Kansas for a forgettable ninth season.
Allen brings a new outlook and energy to the team. His football qualifications prove he can win football games; he just needs a chance.
Of course, only time will tell whether Allen can get Kansas on the winning track. But at least Kansas football will be exciting for the next few years.
By the way, if you still are upset Mason left, you can grab a piece of memorabilia in the Kansas Union Bookstore. I saw football T-shirts with Mason's signature on the clearance rack.
Comments? E-mail Adam at sports@kansan.com
Time out with Allen
An interview with Adam Herschman
In December, the Kansas Athletic Department hired Terry Alleh as the new football coach.
Allen, 39, arrived on campus having never coached a Division I-A program. Although he brings a 75-26 record during eight seasons at Northern Iowa and seven Gateway Conference Championships to Kansas, he still has a lot of work to do.
A
Q: What do you think of the basketball craze at Kansas?
Year Record Final Ranking Postseason
1989 8-3 20th 2nd in the Gateway conference
1990 8-5 11th 0-1 in I-AA playoffs
1991 12-3 4th 1-1 in playoffs
1992 14-3 3rd Gateway champions, 2-1 in playoffs
1993 8-5 13th Gateway champions, 0-1 in playoffs
1994 8-5 11th Gateway champions, 0-1 in playoffs
1995 9-6 13th Gateway co-champions, 1-1 in playoffs
1996 14-3 3rd Gateway champions, 2-1 in playoffs
A: I love it. I hadn't been here a week, and I vividly recall standing outside on a Monday night at the parking ramp looking out over the students as they waited to get into Allen Field House for the Iowa State game. To see that excitement and emotions is what college athletics is all about.
The Allen file
Q: What can you bring to this football program to make it charismatic?
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
A: From our personal standpoint as far as the coaching staff and myself, I'm going to do everything I can to be an active member of the University community. We really strived to do this at Northern Iowa, but our football team has to take an active role in the image portrayal. We have to become better citizens, if you will, so that they respect us for the efforts that we're putting forth and the things that we're doing both on the football field and off. I think at this particular juncture, our image is very tarnished, and so we're going to be actively attempting to become a part of the norm and not try to identify ourselves as people that are football players.
Q: You just said that the image is very tarnished. Why would you sav that?
A: I'm not downgrading anybody previous to that or anything else. I'm impressed with the things that Glen Mason accomplished.
Q: Like what?
Q: Why did you leave Northern Iowa?
A: You look back at history nine years ago and this football program was in very dire straits. The things that he accomplished: the caliber of the quality of the athlete he was able to bring in here, a couple bowl appearances in the last five years. He accomplished an awful lot. But sometimes change is good, and I think there was time for change.
A. I chance to coach in the Big 12. I think it's the premier football conference in the country, and I took a particular liking to the University of Kansas because of its outstanding academic reputation and the setting as far
Kansas football coach Terry Allen, shortly after announcement of his hiring, is congratulated by basketball coach Roy Williams.
as the community — the size of the community, Midwestern values and background. Q: Have you met Glen Mason?
A: Yes, I've known Coach Mason before, and in fact I had a chance to sit down and talk with him for a little bit. This last weekend we had a coaches meeting in Dallas and got to see Mason talk a little bit there.
A: Just - and I appreciate the point he was making - a lot of times in situations like this
Q: What did he say to you?
t h a t coaches for their own pers o n a l pride want to see the
SPORTS focus
next person be unsuccessful. He just reiterated that fact and said, "Hey, I really enjoyed the people there, and I wish you the best and I hope you're successful."
Q: Have you set any goals yet?
A: Win-loss-record goals, no. We will set the goals as a team, and I think we have to have a better understanding of what we've been dealt before we can legitimately start placing goals. The only goal that I have is to bring this football team together right now under one common cause where they feel so they're a part of the program.
Q: What will you try to do to get Kansas on the winning track?
A: I think it's a classic example of two years in there where they were a 10-2 football team and 4-7 football team. There wasn't a lot of difference. I think the measuring stick between a 10-2 team and a 4-7 team is so little that it reinforces the fact that the little things can make a difference.
Q: What's your football philosophy?
A: Defense and special teams win football games, and offense makes it fun. We're very much a wide-open offensive football team.
Q; What's important to you?
A: The players and their success. I think that one of the things in football, and all athletics for that matter, is a great learning experience to make you a better person and more successful in the game of life.
Q: What would you like to accomplish in your first year?
A: I would like to accomplish a sense of a football team coming together, and being able to have the University and the community appreciate the effort and the image that we are attempting to portray.
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GRAD FAIR '97
KU Bookstore,
Kansas Union
10am - 4pm
March 11, 12, 13
Join us for this special event!
Official KU Graduation Announcements
Official KU Caps & Gowns
ArtCarved & Josten's College Rings
KU Placement Center & Alumni Assoc. Representatives
Resume' & Interview Aids
Diploma Frames
Official announcements delivered to your home!
Call 1-800-899-8205
A KU Concessions/KU Bookstores Event
phone 864-4640 • www.jayhawks.com • e-mail jayhawks@ukans.edu
PIZZA PAPA JOHNS Delivering The Perfect Pizza!
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NCAA Tournament: Kansas defeats Jackson State 78-64. Page 1B
New bar: Where Langston's closed, Bleachers sports bar will open. Page 5A
*******************************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 6601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1997
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL. 103, NO. 118
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Student has seizure in Watson Library
KU police responded to a medical emergency at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Watson Library.
Police said they found a graduate student in room 303 of the library lying on the floor. The student was semi-conscious when the Douglas County Ambulance arrived to take her to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
The student, who asked not to be identified, said the seizure was caused by a reaction she had had to medicine she was taking. She said the hospital held her for more than two hours, checking her vital signs to make sure her body would not continue to react to the drugs.
"I guess the medicine was just a little touchier to me than it might have been for someone else," she said.
—Kansan staff report
NAHARAYIM, Jordan — Grabbing a comrade's assault rifle, a Jordanian soldier fired on Israeli junior high school girls taking a field trip yesterday to a Jordan River island known as a symbol of Mideast peace. Seven girls were killed and six were wounded.
Israeli schoolgirls killed by Jordanian
Still shooting, the gunman chased the screaming students down a grassy river embankment while his fellow soldiers yelled "Madman, madman" before overpowering him. He was in the custody of Jordanian security officials.
It was unclear whether the gunman, 22-year-old army driver Lance Cpl. Ahmed Yousef Mustafa, had political motives or was mentally unstable. But the shooting on the island of Naharayim — known as the "岛上 Peace" — came at a time of deep crisis between Israel and Jordan over the impasse in Mideast peacemaking.
Israeli leaders indirectly blamed Jordan's King Hussein for creating the climate that made such violence possible. "Words and a difficult atmosphere can also lead to violence," said Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai.
President Clinton called the shootings a "senseless denial of a future for these children" and said, "I condemn this act in the strongest possible terms."
Police arrest suspect in slaying of Cosby
LOS ANGELES — Police arrested one man and were questioning two others in the roadside slaying of Bill Cosby's son, Ennis Cosby, police Chief Willie Williams said late Wednesday.
Cosby, 27, was shot to death Jan. 16 while changing a flat tire on his Mercedes-Benz convertible near a freeway off-ramp in the hills above the city's San Fernando Valley.
The death of Cosby, a doctoral candidate in special education at Columbia University, prompted a huge public outpouring of sympathy and hundreds of calls offering tips to police.
The state of California and two tabloid newspapers offered rewards totaling nearly $400,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killer, although the state later withdrew its $50,000 reward.
A composite drawing of the murder suspect was also placed on 3,000 pay telephones throughout California, urging callers to notify the LAPD if they recognized the 22- to 32-year-old white man.
Williams said the two people being questioned were a male and female but did not elaborate.
THE ACE OF SANTA FE
—The Associated Press
'Mission'accomplished
Successful promotions lead to big ticket sales
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
Steve Puppe / KANSBAN
Gamma Phi Beta and Phi Delta Theta perform *The Family Jewels* in the opening night of the Rock Chalk Revue. More than 1,000 tickets were sold for the opening night, which is 200 more than last year's opening night sales.
The lights went off, the theme music of Mission: Impossible blared and the audience applauded wildly — Rock Chalk Revue finally opened its curtain last night.
One of the revue highlights came when Alpha Delta Pi and company performed *Digging for Gold*, the story of a diamond ring dropped between two couch cushions. Because their skirt partner, Pi Kappa Alpha, was removed from the show for an alleged hazing incident and underage consumption of alcohol, the sorority counted on the 15 volunteers whom they recruited less than two weeks ago.
The opening marked the 48th annual revue. Beginning with The Family Jewels, a show by Gamma Phi Beta and Phi Delta Theta, actors and actresses in the five shows danced and sang songs to laughs and applause from the more than 1,000-member audience.
After watching the show, Danny Pumpelly, Wichita sophomore, said he was moved by the group's work.
"I was impressed with the show by ADPi," he said. "Their costumes and dancing were really good. I can't believe that they made it in just a week and a half."
Almost all of the seats in the Lied Center were occupied
Almost all of the seats in the Lied Center were occupied. Danny Timblin, business manager for the revue and Atlanta senior, said that approximately 1,500 tickets were sold for last night's performance. This was 200 more tickets than sold for last year's opening night.
While organizations involved in the show and corporate sponsors sold approximately 1,200 tickets, non-greek students also purchased about 300 tickets through the Student Union Activities box office.
"I am pretty impressed with the sales at the SUA," Timblin said.
Timblin said that strong promotions also boosted ticket sales this year.
Kara Monson. Omaha. Neh.. junior. said the sales
increased partly because the revue targeted non-greek audiences as well as sorority and fraternity members. One of the new promotions was to put 10,000 of the revue's labels on soda pop cans. The cans were sold through KU Concessions on campus.
And they're off—races begin for Student Senate
By Dave Morantz Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate campaign season has officially started. Until the elections on April 9 and 10, bright posters will cover telephone poles, and candidates will give neon fliers to anyone on campus with a hand.
Last night, the Unite coalition, headed by Scott Sullivan and Mike Walden, Leawood juniors, held its campaign kick-off party in the Malott Room of the Kansas Union. About 70 people attended the party.
UNITE KU
Candidates form coalitions of 65 members to pool money and resources. Each candidate runs for one of 65 Student Senate seats. A candidate can win a seat even if the presidential and vice presidential candidates of the coalition do not win.
Laurie Fletchall / KANSAN
The deadline for coalitions and independent candidates to file for the election was Wednesday.
Sullivan is running for president and Walden for vice president for the Unite coalition. They will face Jason Fizell, Olathe junior, and Matt Caldwell, Lawrence junior, of the Delta Force coalition. Two independent candidates also are running. Michael Yaghmour, Pittsburg junior, is running for president and David Hennessy, Ballston Lake, N.Y., junior, is running for vice president.
Kim Cocks, Lee's Summit graduate student and former student body president, spoke to the group of Unite candidates and campaign boosters.
Cocks said Sullivan and Walden's extensive experience on Senate made them ideal candidates.
Rebecca Kelly, Engelwood, Colo., sophomore,
speaks to supporters at the Unite coalition's kickoff
part last night. Kelly is running for the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences Student Senate seat.
Sullivan said Unite's campaign would rely on four major planks: the availability of faculty evaluations to students, the future of public transportation on campus and in Lawrence, Student Senate campus and community outreach, and an ethical choice policy that would allow students who object to class requirements such as dissecting animals to complete an alternative assignment.
"Yes, we do need new people in Senate, but I believe that if we want an effective Student Senate, we need people who know where we've been, where we are, and people who have innovative ideas about where we're going," she said.
Sullivan said voter apathy in recent elections concerned him. In the last five years, an average of only 16 percent of the student body has voted. To address this, Sullivan said Unite candidates would campaign all over campus and throughout Lawrence.
Travis Harrod, KU graduate and former Student Senate Executive Committee member, said this year's election would depend on which coalition tapped into the large number of students who traditionally ignored Senate elections.
"Any amount of student apathy is atrocious," he said. "There's a lot of ways to inform people about our ideas and to show people how they can get involved."
Pupils allowed to pray in spite of court ruling
"The campus really wants senators to come and talk to them and prove to them what Student Senate has done for them lately," he said.
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — A federal judge struck down Alabama's school prayer law Wednesday, a ruling likely to be ignored in a Bible Belt state where politicians encourage religious expression in classrooms and courtrooms.
The Associated Press
Michael Chandler, assistant principle at Valley Head Middle
School, and a student's mother contended that the law forced teachers to allow students to pray out loud in class and give readings from the Bible, with students told to stand in the hall if they didn't want to take part.
U. S. District Judge Ira DeMent said the law violates the Constitution by creating excessive entanglement between religion and state and leaving some students with no choice but to listen to the pravers.
Gov. Fob James said through a spokesman that he believed the First Amendment allowed every American to pray whenever and wherever and that he would not tell Alabamans to obey the ruling.
James has said he would send in state troopers if necessary to support expressions of religious faith in Alabama courtrooms.
Grade complaints often unjustified
GTAs commonly blamed by undeserving students
By Nicholas C. Charalambous
Kansas staff writer
Many students disappointed by midterm exam results will work harder or seek help, but some will do nothing — until they lean on professors to raise their grades at the end of the semester.
Professors and teaching assistants say that scenario is all too common. Some students now consider a university degree to be something they are entitled to rather than something they should work for, they say.
Ann Willner, a professor of political science who is on leave, wrote an article in the *Washington Post* last June arguing that higher education no longer deserved its name.
Students expected to be spoon-fed information and didn't have proper study skills, she wrote. A few are brazen enough to demand a good grade, even though they haven't put in the effort.
Kurt Wiesenfeld, a physics professor at Georgia Tech, put it even more bluntly in a *Newsweek* article last July.
"Many students wheedle for a degree as if it were a freebie T-shirt," he said.
That article is now taped to the office door of David Born, professor of human development and family life.
Born said students felt trapped by a failing grade because it could jeopardize their scholarships, stop them from graduating, get them kicked out of school or disappoint parents who are paying for tuition.
Some students who receive failing grades ask professors to change the mark even though they previously did not acknowledge the problem, Born said.
The wake-up call should have come sooner, he said. Students are told what they need to do to get a particular grade and should take the initiative during the semester to seek the help
Campbell Thompson, Born's graduate teaching assistant, said many students complained to GTAs at the end of each semester.
that was offered
"You see the GTAs' faces," said Thompson, Coromandel, New Zealand, graduate student. "I've never had a student who has been abusive, but I've had students who have been visibly upset, and I've been upset."
Kristen Villone, a graduate teaching assistant in human development and family life, said she had been abused verbally. She said students were looking for a scapegoat for their failings.
"It's as if you're doing something to keep them back personally," said Villone, Johnstown, N.Y., graduate student. "They think they can be here and get a degree without doing the work that's necessary."
Amy Devitt, director of freshman and sophomore English, said she thought students appealed grades from GTAs when they would not dream of appealing a professor's grades. But students should not be afraid to challenge grades if they think they have been treated unfairly. she said.
Pam Houston, director of undergraduate services in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said there would be grounds for a legitimate grade appeal if an instructor had applied grading criteria inconsistently or had unfairly singled out a student.
Jennifer Wilson, Olathe senior, said she had complained about a grade on a test last week because the questions were confusing.
The University of Kansas does not release figures for the number of official grade appeals, but most appeals to GTAs and professors are verbal and aren't recorded, according to University Governance.
"I think you have some lazy students who want to get freebie points," Wilson said. "But most of the time there are good students who want to get a good grade and have a legitimate gripe."
TODAY
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
World News ... 6A
National News ... 7A
Features ... 8A
Scoreboard ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 6B
COLD AND WINDY
High 35° Low 20°
THINKING
Weather: Page 2A
2A
Friday, March 14, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
QuickINFO
WEATHER
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
35
20
35 20
25 mph winds diminishing by afternoon.
SATURDAY
Drier with light winds.
45
25
SUNDAY
CAMPUS EVENTS
60 35
Clear and warmer.
ON CAMPUS
Assemblages, featuring artwork by Karen Jacks and Ardys Ramberg, nuns from March 1 to April 15 at the Phoenix Gallery, 919 Massachusetts St. Call 843-0080
Chapel. Contact: the Rev. Raymond May, 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact: the Rev. Raymond May, 843-0357.
**KU Tae Tawn Do Club will meet from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center; Contact: Adam Capron, 842-9112.**
KU Ballroom Dance Club will have lessons at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union. Contact: Shane Haas, 864-6597.
ON THE RECORD
A faculty member's parking permit was stolen between 1 and 5 p.m. Tuesday from a car in Lot 37, KU police said. It was valued at $150.
A student's parking permit was stolen between 8 a.m. March 1 and noon Wednesday from a motorcycle in Lot 34, KU police said. It was valued at $30.
A faculty member's car window was broken between 5:30 p.m. Monday
and 1.p.m. Wednesday in the 1200 block of Mississippi Street, Lawrence police said. Damage was estimated at $400.
A KU student's fishing equipment was stolen between 2:30 and 10:30 a.m. Monday in the 2400 block of Louisiana Street on 62nd Avenue, said items. *was not identified*
aged and car stereo and speakers were stolen between midnight Tuesday and 7:30 a.m. Wednesday in the 200 block of Brittany Place, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $600.
A KU student's car window was dam-
Nine windows were broken between 1:45 and 2:15 a.m. March 7 at the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, 1942 Stewart Ave., Lawrence police said. Damage was estimated at $400.
Rusted water tank kills four squatters
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — A 60,000-gallon water tank, rusting for 20 years, collapsed on slum resettlement houses, killing four and injuring 16, police said yesterday.
The tank burst after it collapsed late Wednesday and water cascaded over nearby houses in Damarinas, about 20 miles south of Manila, police investigator Ernesto Olaez said.
Dasmarinas is a resettlement site for some of metropolitan Manila's estimated 3 million squatters. Officials ordered the inspection of other water tanks in the town.
Correction:
The information in the graphic on the front page of yesterday's special Rock Chalk
Revue section contained incorrect information. The following graphic is correct:
Familiar faces
Familiar faces
Chalk rock shakes
Consecutive years in Rock Chalk Rush:
8 years
Alpha Tue Oral Gamma 1950-57
8 years
Oral Gamma 1957-61
8 years
Beta Theta Pi 1957-80
North College 1953-56
Alpha Kappa Gamma Lamtech 1970-73
Alpha Delta Pi 1982-85
Sigma Nu 1982-85 and 1987-90
Lambda Chi Alpha 1991-94
Beta Alpha Theta 1992-95
Delta Gamma 1994-97
Kappa Kappa Gamma 1994-97
Repeat performers
Top ten groups in terms of Rock Chalk Rush appearances:
Beta Theta Pi 19
Kappa Alpha Theta 25
CII Gamma 22
PI Betu Pi 22
Alpha CII Gamma 19
Delta Upsilon 19
Alpha Tau Gamma 19
Delta Gamma 17
Kappa Kappa Gamma 17
Sigma Nu 19
Cheek Reflex
| | |
| :--- | :--- |
| 6 Years | |
| Alpha Tau | 1900.67 |
| Alpha Teal | 1900.67 |
| Cil Omega | 1957.61 |
| Beta Theta Pi | 1957.60 |
| Gamma Lambda | 1933.58 |
|Lambda Lambda | 1970.73 |
|Alpha Delta Pi | 1962.85 |
|Signal Ma | 1987.90 |
|Lambda Chi Dai | 1987.94 |
|Gamma Lambda | 1991.94 |
|Kappa Alpha Theta | 1992.95 |
|Delta Gamma | 1994.97 |
|Gamma Upsilon | 1994.97 |
FRIDAY PRIMETIME
TV TONIGHT
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**BWB** *College basketball: NCAA Tourn. – Teams TBA* College篮球: NCAA Tournament First Round Game – Teams TBA News **E**
**KTKA** *Fam. Mat.* Boy-World Sabrina-Witch Step by Step 2020 News Selfinfant Married. Nightlife
MARCH 14,1997
CABLE STATIONS
**AAE** **92** Biography "The Shadow Rider" *\*\*\* (1982, Western) Tom Selck. Law & Order "Self Defense" Biography (R)
**CHBC** **10**Equal Time Hardball Rivers Live Late Night (In Stereo) Charles Grodin Rivera Live (R)
**CNN** **11** Prime News Burden-Proof Larry King Live World Today Sports Illus. Moneyline Newsbill
**COM** **12** Gallagher A-List (R) Comics Come Home (R) Dana Carvey: Critic's Choice Drew Carey Comics Come Home (R) Gallagher
**COURT** **13** Prime Time Justice Trial Story: Abuse Cochran & Grace Prime Time Justice (R) Trial Story (R)
**CSPAN** **14** Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
**DISC** **15** Wild Discovery: Wild River Invention Beyond 2000 Wings (R) Wild Discovery: Wild River Invention Beyond 2000
**ESPN-16** Hockey Boxing: Kevin Kelley vs. Jesus Salve (Live) Baseball Sportscenter NCAA Sportscenter
**HIST** **17** Vietnam: The Camera at War "The Killing Fields" (1984) a newsman stays in 1970s Cambodia after America pulls out. Vietnam: The Camera at War
**LIFE** **18** Wire Pandora "Grimela 2: The New Batch" *\*\*\* (1980) Zach Gellman Dish (R) 3 Billond Data Wire (R) Pandora (R)
**MITV** **19** AI TV (R) (Stereo) Beavis-Butt. Sports Singled Out Loveline (B stereo) Beavis-Butt.
**SCIFF** **20** "Puppet Master 5: The Final Match" *\*\*\* (1994, Horror) Friday the 13th: The Series She-Wolf of London "Puppet Master 5"
**TLC** **21** Quest (R) what a Word Rogues Gallery Gloria's toxic Death (R) Quest (R) what a Word Rogues Gallery
**NTY** **22** "The End" *\*\*\* (1978, Comedy) Butkyn Reduels, Sally Felt "The Exorcist" *\*\*\* (1973) Elen Burtsyn. A 12-year-old girl is demonically possessed.
**USA** **23** "A Kiss Before Dying" *\*\*\* (1991, Suspense) Mild Dillon La Femme Nicole "Gray" Last Call *\*\*\* (1991, Suspense) William Kall (K stereo)
**YHI** **24** Donny Partridge "A Star Is Born" *\*\*\* (1978) Seaseling careers disrupt two rock superstars' marriage New Year's Rockin' Eve
**WGN** **25** Angle "*\*\*\*" (1984, Comedy-Drama) Geenia Davis (Lens) Newe (Stereo) Wiseguy "Crime d'Amore" in the Heat of the Night
**WTBS** **26** "The Cutting Edge" *\*\*\* (1992, Comedy) D.B. Sweeney "Weird Science" *\*\*\* (1985, Comedy) Anthony Mallah Kelly, LeBaock "Bill & Ted"
PREMIUM STATIONS
**HBO** **20** "Broken Arrow" *\*\*\* (1998, Adventure) John Travota *\*\*\* (1997) Jeff Faire *\*\*\* Dennis Miller Real Sex 17 (Stereo)
**MAX** **21** "The Dogfighter" *\*\*\* (1996, Suspense) Robert Davi *\*\*\* Heat *\*\*\* *\*\*\* (1995) A Pacino: A homicide detective match was with a cunning adversary.
**SHOW** **22** "Leaving Las Vegas" *\*\*\* (1995), Drainal Nicolas Carker O'Donnell Limits Politis "Politis" (1991) Dimitri Mintoli
ET CETERA
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 14.1997
3A
[Picture of a man playing the piano]
GR Gordon-Ross / KANSAN
Caroline Curry, Arkadelphia, Ark., graduate student, and Ilya Goynensky, Moscow
Russian House fosters conversation, learning
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
The Russian House allows KU students to live in a Russian environment in Lawrence.
Galina Urman, Odessa, Ukraine, graduate student and manager of the house, said that the Russian House, 1536 Tennessee St., was home to two Russian students, two visiting scholars from Kyrgyzstan and two American students studying Russian.
The house was started by Louise Redford, KU graduate from the department of Slavic languages and literatures. Redford, who is from Russia, and her husband purchased the house in 1988 and rented rooms to Russian students and students studying Russian.
"Because graduate students did not have the opportunity to speak Russian, we thought it would be a great idea to have a place like the Russian House," Redford said. "You can't learn a foreign language from the book."
The residents get together during dinner, some nights with cups of tea, to
talk about their classes at the University of Kansas and about Russia.
Caroline Curry, Arkadelphia, Ark., graduate student, said living in the house helped her improve her Russian because the native Russians sometimes would converse with her in Russian.
"I don't speak Russian all the time because they sometimes refuse to speak Russian," Curry said. "But if I didn't live here, I don't think I would have any opportunity to speak Russian."
Redford said she sold the house to Lee Lemesay, the house's current owner, several years ago because it had been difficult to manage the house after she moved to the Kansas City area.
Urman said a variety of cultures met at the house. Visitors from Spain, France and Israel have stayed in the house, and other international students sometimes have parties there.
"The Russian House is for international students to hang out," said Ilya Gnoyenskiy, Moscow senior.
KU professor making history, working to publish lost gospel
Gnostic manuscript has passages not in Bible
A KU professor's discovery in a German museum may change the way scholars look at early Christianity.
By Sean Demory
Kansan staff writer
Paul Mirecki, associate professor of religious studies, discovered fragments of a fourth-century manuscript in the Egyptian Museums in Berlin. The fragments contain a lost Gnostic gospel dating back from the first or second century A.D.
Mirecki first discovered the fragments
in 1991. Mirecki and Charles Hedrick,
professor of religious studies at Southwest Missouri State, are editing the manuscript for publication this summer.
The Gnostics were a North African sect of Christianity from the second and third centuries, said Jim Hamilton, professor of philosophy at Kansas State University. They believed salvation was based on a special knowledge that could allow release from entrapment in the flesh.
The gospel, Mirecki said, contains a discussion between the resurrected Jesus and his disciples that is independent of the biblical Gospels.
One of the passages from the lost gospel reads, "Whoever is near me is near the fire; whoever is far from me is far from life," which is almost identical
to a passage from the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas discovered in Egypt in 1945.
"This lost gospel presents us with more primary evidence that the origins of early Christianity were far more diverse than medieval church historians would tell us," Mirecki said.
Mirecki said the prime importance of the lost gospel was historical.
"The point is not to discover some sort of 'real Jesus' but to reconstruct the nature of early Christianity as a set of diverse social movements in late antiquity."
"The question is not if these are the actual words of Jesus," Mirecki said. "That's a question that can never be answered, as even the biblical Gospels contain the teachings of diverse early communities rather than the direct teachings of Jesus.
KU style a case for fashion police
International students surprised by casual dress on campus, at clubs
By Steph Brewer Special to the Kansan
Where are the skirts?
That's what David Cohavi, Rehovot, Israel, senior wanted to know when he began classes at the University of Kansas. Cohavi is not the only international student who has been taken aback by KU students' casual approach to fashion.
"Go to campus. Look around you," Cohavi said. "What do people wear? Jeans."
Heather Grimmer, receptionist at the Office of Study Abroad, said British students often were surprised by KU students' casual clothing. She said they were shocked that students wore jeans and sweatshirts to bars.
"They just don't get it." she said.
For an average KU student, wearing jeans to a bar probably isn't a big deal. But to Neile Abbs, Exeter, England, junior, it seems downright sloppy. She said jeans were almost all she saw on KU students.
"They all look the same," she said. "There's no individuality."
In England, Abb's said, style was different because college students tended to follow
fashion magazines.
"A lot of fashion magazines come out every two weeks," Abbs said. "It goes into the shops and straight onto people's backs."
While KU students may look to the Gap for fashion inspiration, Anouk Hanafiah, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, junior, said her peers looked to Paris, Milan and New York.
"Whatever's on the runway, they're wearing it." Hanafiah said.
Hanafia said that in Malaysia, deciding what to wear was more stressful for her than in America.
"Over there you're like, 'I can't wear this because I wore it last time I went clubbing.' she said.
Here, she said, people don't care what you wear.
Fashion indifference may be affecting students' schoolwork, said Uche Obiorah, Umuhaai, Nigeria, freshman.
"I think students would be more focused on their course work if they wore clothing suitable to the business they are going to do," he said.
Obiorah said that while he, too, wore jeans to class, he dressed up for test days.
"It helps me get in the frame of mind," he said.
"I wouldn't say it's so hard to adapt," Cohavi said. "How many countries are not
While international students are accustomed to dressing up, however, they said it had been easy to dress down.
familiar with jeans?"
Abs, on the other hand, has not changed her style. She said she has continued to wear mostly black clothing, as she did in England.
"I wouldn't say I've followed the fashion here, because I don't think there is any," she said.
and she developed two colleges in analysis — one with small-town students and one with students from cities. The former was comparable to the University in style, the latter more formal.
freshman, style at the University is not very different from home. She said in Malaysia, the style varied from region to region. She said she attended two colleges in Malawi
Fun is not how Cohavi would describe KU fashion. He said there was no specific fashion code in Lawrence. Although he has conformed to the style, he still is surprised by certain outfits.
"The girls wore little dresses to class," she said, "They're more fun."
"I can't even think about a student in a different country out on the street with sweats," he said. "Jogging pants are for jogging."
For some students, however, jogging pants are acceptable in many situations.
"I don't think fashion has actually hit KU yet," Abbs said.
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The Student Senate Transportation Board (KU on Wheels) will be conducting Route Hearings on
tuesday. March 18 at 5:00 p.m.
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Routes to be discussed include:
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OPINION
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CRAM LANG, *Editor*
SUSANA LOOP, *Managing editor*
KIMBERLY CRABTREE, *Editorial editor*
TOM EBILEN, General manager, news advisor
MARK OZMKE, *Business manager*
DENNIS HAUPT, *Retail sales manager*
JUSTIN KRUPP, *Technology coordinator*
JAY STENNER, Sales and marketing adviser
Friday, March 14, 1997
KU
City LAWRENCE
Julianne Donovan/ KANSAN
Editorials
Lawrence and the University need a joint city busing system
Wouldn't it be nice to hop on the bus to downtown Lawrence from McColum or to get on at Snow Hall and ride out to Wal-Mart and grab a few necessities?
Wouldn't it be even better if a regular KU bus pass gave you that option?
If KU on Wheels and the city of Lawrence decide to work together on a joint busing system, you may have that opportunity in the next few years.
Lawrence has been considering a public transportation system for several years, but it was not until this year that the plan seemed to become a real possibility.
Right now the KU bus system, run by KU on Wheels, and the Lawrence City Commission are considering combining KU on Wheels system with a city system.
Bob Grunzinger, coordinator for KU
Students must show their support for a city, campus joint bus system
on Wheels, said that the main concern was to be sure the city supported whatever system the University became involved with.
A combined busing system would benefit the KU community immensely. With a bus system that would run all around the city, students without cars would have easy access to shopping and entertainment in areas not within walking distance of campus. There would be more bus stops, reducing the need for many students and faculty to drive to school. Parking lots would be less crowded and campus roads less busy.
A combined busing system would also benefit the Lawrence community as a whole. As the city expands to the west and south, it becomes more difficult to get from one end of town to the other. Traffic is bad, and many of the roads are worm. A community bus system would reduce both problems.
In the coming months, the city commission will work with KU on Wheels to come to a final decision on the combined bus system.
As members of the KU community, we should show our support for a system which would greatly benefit the campus and the city. Stay abreast of the news on this issue, and let the city commission know what you think. With the cooperation and input of the KU community, a combined busing system can become a reality.
BEN SHOCKEY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Action must follow pothole gripes
Tired of having your car's alignment jarred every time you drive over a pothole on campus or on the Lawrence streets? Stop complaining to your friends and do something about it.
With wheel alignment jobs costing up to $60, the feeling of one half of your car clunking over a pothole is pretty fearsome and sickening. But during the ever-so-long Kansas winters, potholes seem unavoidable, so many drivers just deal with them, sweep a lot and complain to their friends when they get to their destination. But complaining to friends does no good, and friends can't do anything but join in the anger party, so start calling someone who can do something: the city or the campus parking department.
The campus parking department and the city of Lawrence realize that potholes are a nuisance to drivers and a
The next time you run over a pothole, don't be reactive become proactive.
danger to vehicles. Unfortunately, they are difficult to take care of during the winter, because a repaired pothole will often crack open again as soon as the next freeze occurs. Because of this, Rita Jordan, KU parking supervisor, said repairs weren't made until the last freeze has occurred before fixing potholes on campus. However, if the department receives complaints and the pothole is a significant danger, attempts are made to take care of the problem earlier. Connie Frazier, dispatcher for the street maintenance division of Lawrence Public Works, said the city tried to fix potholes within a few days
However, facilities operations vehicles don't just spend all day roaming the campus and Lawrence looking for potholes to fix. Although routine checking does occur, the best way to get a pothole fixed is to report its location. The old side remark, "call someone who cares" really is the best course of action in this case. Potholes occurring on campus can be reported to the KU Parking Department at 864-7275. To report a pothole off campus, you can call the city's pothole reporting line at 832-3456 and leave a message stating the location of the pothole.
regardless of the time of year, because it wanted as few cars as possible to sustain damage from the potholes.
So instead of creating a public disturbance next time you drive over a pot hole, do us all a favor and call it in. You could save someone $50.
KANSAN STAFF
KAREN CHANDLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NEWS EDITORS
LATINA SULLIVAN . . . Associate Editorial
KRISTIE BLASI . . . News
NOVELDA SOMMERS . . . News
LESLIE TAYLOR . . . News
AMANDA TRAUGHBER . . News
TARA TRENARY . . News
DAVID TESKA . . . Online
SPENCER DUNCAN . . Sports
GINA THORNBURG . . Associate Sports
BRADLEY BROOKS . . Campus
LINSDSE HENRY . . Campus
DAVE BREITENSTEIN . Features
PAM DISIMAN . Photo
TYLER WIRKEN . Photo
BRYAN VOLK . Design
ANDY ROHRBACK . Graphics
ANDREA ALBRIGHT . Wire
LIZ MUSSER . Special sections
AERICA VEAZEY . News clerk
ADVERTISING MANAGERS
ADVERTISING MANAGERS
HEATHER VALLER ... Assistant retail
JULIE PEDLAR ... Campus
DANA CENTENO ... Regional
ANNETTE HOVER ... National
BRIAN PAGEL ... Marketing
SARAH SCHERWINSKI ... Internet
DARCI McLAIN ... Production
DENA PISCOTTE ... Production
ALISON PIERCE ... Special sections
SARA ROSE ... Creative
DANA LAUVETZ ... Public relations
BRIAN LEFEVRE ... Classified
RACHEL RUBIN ... Assistant classified
BRIDGET COLLYER ... Zone
JULIE DE WITT ... Zone
CHRIS HAGHIRIAN ... Zone
LZ HESS ... Zone
ANTHONY MIGLIAZO ... Zone
MARIA CRIST ... Senior account executive
Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a university student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stafffer Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kim Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (lsullivan@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Columns
Limit spring break ills, follow this creed
ERIC WESLANDER
Ah. spring break
The time when all standards of decency head south for a week, when students across the country travel miles upon miles to bungee jump into moral deprivation.
The bass pumps, the neon glows and well-oiled flesh glistens in the blinding tropical sun.
Sensible college students grind the night away on the dance floor, dooL at the opposite sex and spend
obscene amounts of money in pursuit of the ever- elusive good time.
High school students wish they were in college and head south. College students then pretend they are still in high school, and somehow the whole thing never lives up to anyone's expectations.
Nevertheless, year after year, it's Daytona. It's Panama City Beach. It's South Padre, man.
Like zombies, people make the trip again and again, thinking that somehow this trip will be better than previous trips. They attempt to better prepare themselves with more beer, more money and less clothing. But guess what? It never really happens like it does on MTV.
So, for those relentless hedonists who refuse to realize that there is no such thing as a perfect week in paradise, I have created the spring breaker's creed. When you get about halfway to your destination, turn down the Spice Girls and repeat this to yourself.
I, the free-wheeling college student, do
solemnly swear that I will uphold the standards of good taste while enjoicing my spring break.
If I vomit, I will not buy a T-shirt commemorating the moment. Nor will I purchase any article of clothing displaying a top-10 list of any kind.
I will not use my automobile, my pectoral muscles or cereal malt beverages to impress high school,juniors and lure them to my stinky hotel room.
I will not scream "Woo-hoo0! Party! Spring break, man!" while hanging out of a 10th-floor window. I understand that such behavior leads my fellow spring breakers to believe that they are not having as much fun as I am. This, in turn, leads them to overcompensate by hanging out of their windows. I know that such contests are unsafe and unproductive.
I will not ignore excurciating pain in the quest of furthering my tan. When my skin starts to bubble. I will take some time off from the beach.
I will not pierce any part of my body nor will I get a tattoo of a cartoon character holding a beer can unless I really want to do so. I will not alter my body simply because everyone else whose name is on my airbrushed T-shirt does it.
I will not falsify accounts of my week. Even if it rains the whole week and the apex of social interaction occurs between myself and a good-looking gas station attendant somewhere in Mississippi, I will tell the truth when I return to Lawrence.
Finally, when the last beer has been bonged and it all comes to an end, I will realize that my life still has meaning. Therefore, painful as it is, I will eventually stop talking about my spring break.
Eric Westlander is a Floyds Knobs, Ind., sophomore in journalism.
Eighties child ponders future of today's youth
After the murder of Tupac and the Notorious B.I.G. and the deaths of other pop icons, I often wonder whether the children of the 90s will look back on their adolescence with nostalgia or with sadness
LATINA
SULLIVAN
It seems that each generation loses its innocence earlier than the previous one, but there always are those moments in which that innocence is recaptured and the generation can pass its "remember when" stories to the next. However, I'm afraid that the "remember when" stories of the children of the '90s will consist of hard-core survival stories.
So, as the weekend and the end of midterms approach, I
As children of the '80s, our parents were the children of the Civil and Women rights movements, the hippies and those who continued to fight for social rights of all people.
would like to refresh the memories of the children of the '80s and take you back to a time when it was safe to play in your yard, to be a child, to let your imagination take over and to not be bothered with the troubles of the world.
By the mid '70s, when we came along, our parents were tired of fighting, getting high and of whatever else they did in the '60s. They decided that it was time to take their roles as parents seriously.
The '80s was an era before Sega, Nintendo and SuperNintendo. We had Atari and PacMan, but if your parents were cheap and didn't understand why playing outdoors couldn't be as stimulating as playing a video game, then you had no choice but to take your Transformers, G.I.Joes (with the broken arms), Barbies, Strawberry Shortcake dolls and whatever else you could grab in your tiny arms outside.
And playing outside was the ultimate experience. For two or three hours, you were the president, the parent, the minister or the queen. You blew up the world while Barbie and G.I. Joe got together to create a family. And the yard was your oyster, you had a mud pie every once in while on a dare. You ate those wild strawberries that grew in the grass, you were as content as could be until you got sick. And you didn't dare tell your mom why you were ill.
The '80s can be remembered as a decade that had its ups and downs. Unlike the '90s, it allowed many of us to have a childhood, which was not marred by the murder of our pop icons, gang violence or drugs.
And when you weren't outside playing in the dirt or pouring salt on snails, you were watching television. You felt Arnold's pain when Abraham, his goldfish, died. You were in awe when the pre-Baywatch David Hasselhoff and K.I.T.T. faced K.A.R.R. And every Sunday evening, your eyes were glued to The Muppet Show as you sang along. You held your breath every time the Greatest American Hero tried to fly, and you wished that he would find those darn directions.
And the clothes, you begged for neon shirts and socks, Izod (sometimes with the recycled label) and button-down shirts and parachute pants. You could relate to the Fresh Prince, Will Smith, when he sang Parents Just Don't Understand.
As with any era, the '80s had its downside. It stripped away pieces of our naiveté. We inadvertently caught the assassination attempt on President Reagan's life. And in sixth grade, we were excited when our teachers let us watch the space shuttle Challenger lift off. After the countdown, our excitement turned into fear as the ship exploded.
And then came MTV and BET. You knew every Michael Jackson video by heart. And you tried to do the moonwalk but never got it right. You had the poster, the buttons, the purse and the doll (wait maybe that was just me). Anyway, your favorite Jackson video was *Thriller* after you realized that it wasn't that scary.
What will the children of the '90s remember?
LaTina Sullivan is a Memphis, Tenn., senator in English and Journalism.
Those were the days.
Animal rights must be considered in cloning
Letter
But like most people, Martin's approach was very human-centric. He only thought about the implications of cloning humans and ignored the issue of cloning other animals. What cloning really emphasizes is the need for compassion.
In his column on March 4, Michael Martin described how the recent cloning of an adult ewe emphasizes the need for human originality.
It is time we considered the ethics of cloning animals.
Scientists hope to use this new technology to clone animals for use in experimentation, agriculture and to genetically alter animals to produce drugs in their milk or grow organs for human transplantation. If these applications are realized, they will only lead to
an increase in the billions of animals enslaved and killed for humans use each year.
This trend leads us to see animals as objects to be manipulated and not as they really are—living individuals in their own right who are capable of feeling pain and emotion.
These applications may benefit humans, but they completely disregard the animals' perspective. We ignore the possibility that animals may prefer to live outside of a holding pen or lab cage. As a society, we treat animals as machines—for food production, for testing drugs, for producing chemicals and organs—designed for human use.
Some scientists suggest that production of genetically identical animals would reduce the number of animals needed in experiments. In spite of what they say, however, the only thing that will reduce the number of animals necessary for experiments is a reduction in animals experimenters.
As a society, we increasingly use animals with only a minimal regard for their interests.
By seeing animals only as machines, tools or objects available for human use, we define their worth only in terms of what they can provide for us and hardly ever in terms of what their lives might be worth.
We see oursels as distinct not only from animals, but from the whole nature; consequently, we misunderstand something fundamental about nature, humans and other animals. Treating and perceiving animals as something less than what they are will do all animals, including ourselves, an injustice.
Michael T. Schmitt Lawrence graduate student
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 14, 1997
5A
Pharmacists do more than sell medications
By Emily Vrabac
Kansan staff writer
The role of the pharmacist has evolved from the old perception of the scientist behind the counter who makes chemicals explode.
Alice Mellin/Kansan
Now pharmacists are educators and advocates for patients, speaking directly to patients about their medications.
Tricia Burlin, pharmacist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said pharmacists used to gather prescribed medication and sell it to patients, having minimal contact or interaction with the patients.
Now pharmacists are responsible for counseling patients about medication and ensuring that patients use the medication correctly to obtain maximum benefits, she said.
Educational requirements for pharmacy schools are also changing — pharmacy schools, including the one at the University of Kansas, are requiring students to complete a six-year program to obtain their doctorate in pharmacy, or Pharm.D. The bachelor's degree in pharmacy is being replaced with the Pharm.D. to give students more time in school, ideally so they can be exposed to more information. Burlin said.
CITY OF NEW YORK
Pharmacists now act as a go-between for patients and their doctors.
"If a student is taking medication that has a potential interaction with other medications they're taking, we call the doctor and discuss it to weigh the benefits and risks." Burlin said.
Pharmacists also are a reference for doctors. Buril said doctors often called pharmacists for information about specific drugs or their side effects.
"We're references for each other," she said.
Burlin said her purpose in educating students was to make sure they understood why they were taking the medication, in the hope that they would use it correctly and treat themselves effectively.
Chris Harmery Avey, pharmaceutical clerk at Watkins Memorial Health Center, takes medical products out to register them in the computer and later sort them on shelves.
While they are in school, pharmacists learn about drugs and their effects. They begin by learning the different drug classifications and then about specific medications and how each one functions in the body.
"We learn the physiology of how the body works, its disease states and how drugs work to combat those," said Julle Phillips, first-year pharmacy student from St. Charles, Mo.
Pharmacists have a basic understanding of medical conditions and how they affect the body.
"We take pathophysiology, which is the study of how disease affects the body and the course of disease in the body," Phillips said.
Burlin emphasized that the most important part of her job was communicating with students.
"I feel we create an atmosphere that makes them feel comfortable asking questions," she said.
New bar to open just in time for March Madness
Sports saloon plans to cater to both athletics and dancing
By Paul Eakins
Kansan staff writer
Most basketball fans don't have front row seats during the NCAA basketball tournament, but a new sports bar could provide the next best thing, just in time for March Madness.
Bleachers, 806 W. 24th St., will open at noon tomorrow for the Jawhaws' second game of the tournament.
Dannie Thompson, owner of Bleachers, said March Madness had given him the idea to open a sports bar, especially since there had not been a completely sports-oriented bar in Lawrence since the closing of Benchwarmers in 1994.
"There's no other really large place to watch games in Lawrence," Thompson said.
He said he thought Bleachers could be successful, especially in the coming weeks.
"I think we'll draw a big crowd with March Madness and all," he said.
The bar, formerly Langstons, which closed on February 15, will be able to fit as many as 350 people in the 7,000-square-foot bar, Thompson said.
Despite the bar's theme, it will be more than just a snorts bar.
Bleachers will have a dance floor with a disc jockey as well.
Adam Thompson, a DJ for Bleachers and Wichita senior, said he would play music at night after most of the games had finished or when it seemed like people were in the mood to dance.
"It depends on the vibe of the crowd on when they start dancing," said Adam Thompson, who is not related to Dannie Thompson.
Sarah Walker-Martin, Prairie Village sophomore and cocktail waitress at Bleachers, said that it could be hard for the bar to compete with other bars but that it would probably increase in popularity. She said March Madness provided the perfect outlet.
"Lawrence needs another bar where people go to actually watch the games," she said. "You can go sit, hang out, drink beer and watch."
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
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Do you want to be part of one of the most exciting organizations on campus? Student Union Activities is searching for motivated, interesting and knowledgeable people to join our team! SUA is responsible for producing quality recreational, social and educational entertainment.
Communications Organize SUA promotional material and inform the University community about SUA events. Coordinate the SUA Homepage. Assist with the organization of Union Fest. Support SUA events. Run weekly Communications Committee meetings.
Coordinator positions available include
Make more of it by spending more time on the beach or on the slopes and less time in an unfamiliar town with an unfamiliar mechanic. Come to Wendland Performance Services for an OIL CHANGE right here in Lawrence before you make the big road trip.
Feature Films Program contemporary and blockbuster films. Plan sneak previews. Work with Spectrum Films Committee to design SUA movie posters and calendars. Plan live satellite broadcasts of concerts, comedians and educational programs through Network Event Theater. Run weekly Feature Films Committee meetings.
SUA Coordinator applications are available at the SUA Box Office, Level Four in the Kansas Union. Applications due at noonFriday, March 21, 1997.
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Friday, March 14, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SANDSTONE Amphitheatre
7 Budweiser CONCERT SERIES
BUSH
bush
with special guest
Veruca Salt
ON SALE
Tuesday
MAROR 14
AY SPMI
BUSH
Sunday, May 4
7:30PM
bush
with special guest
Veruca Salt
ON SALE
TODAY
MARCH 14
AT 9PM
Sunday, May 4
7:30PM
PEPSI CONCERT SERIES
Janes
PRESENTS
ON SALE TOMORROW MARCH 15 AT NOON!
TINA
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JUNE 2
TICKETS AS LOW AS $15.00!*
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JUNE 10
ON SALE
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weezer & RED 5
STYX ON SALE TONIGHT ANCTION AT NONE Saturday, June 14
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STARRING ORIGINAL MEMBERS
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AND VERY SPECIAL GUEST Pat Benatar
SELECT RESERVED AND LAWN TICKETS AS LOW AS $15.50*
THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 22!
CHICAGO AND THE BEACH BOYS
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AT NOON
COUNTRY MART
FRIDAY, JUNE 6
KIDS UNDER 12 FREE LAWN TICKET WITH PAID ADULT
COMPLEMENTS OF COUNTRY MART!
NOTE! NEW SANDSTONE Amphitheatre TICKET LOCATIONS LISTED BELOW! Lawn Tickets For All Shows On Sale Now!
COMPLIMENTS OF COUNTRY MART!
For Group Rates Call (913)384-8940 x249
Tickets Available At
Tickets by Phone 24 Hours A Day (816)576-7900 ticketcentral
DICKINSON
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Pizza Theatre 3
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**National Out-of-State Tourists include:** Dickinson Theatres & AMF Bowling Centers - Belton (Baton Cinema 8), Leavenworth (PlaZA Cinema 6), opener Atria (Baton Cinema 9), Westfield (PlaZA Cinema 7), Emporia (Finishthills 1), Salina (Central Mall 4), Pittsburgh (Mall Cinema 4), Wichita (Mall Cinema 3, North Rock 6), Branson (Tablureock Cinema 4), Joplin (Mall Cinema 5), and St. Joseph (Lanham Music Outside of the Kansas City metro area charge by phone toll-free (800)771-3666
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Ticket outlets accept cash only. All tickets go on sale at NOON on Saturday unless otherwise noted. *Tickets may be subject to a convenience charge. All shows begin at 8:00 am, unless gates Open 6:00 minutes before show time. Parking lots open two hours before show time. We refunds and exchanges. Schedule subject to change. Performances are shine or shim. No cost; bottles, glasses, low chairs, cushions.
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DATE CONCERT
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JUNE 2 TINA TURNER CYNDI LAUPER
JUNE 6 CHICAGO / BEACH BOYS
JUNE 10 NO DOUBT, WEEZER & RED FIVE
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RESERVED SEATS ON SALE
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TOMORROW, MARCH 15 - NOON
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Antioch Thea ... E. Antioch Road)
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Red Birch Ridge E. E. 111th Street)
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Thelma Patterson Park, 1111 Main)
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CALCUTTA, India — An ailing Mother Teresa handed over her global mission yesterday to an Indian-born nun who converted to Roman Catholicism after being inspired by the works of the Nobel laureate.
The Associated Press
30 Lanham Music (2608 N. Bell)
Sister Nirmala, born into a priestly
29 Leavenworth Plaza Cinema 6 (3400 S. 4th Street Trafficway)
Bonner Springs
31 Bonner Springs
31 Sandstone Amphitheatre Box Office
(633 N. 130th Street)
Mother Teresa's successor chosen
P
Mother Teresa
was selected by a conclave of 120 nuns who deliberated for eight weeks before reaching a consensus.
*Springfield (Town & Country 6, Dickinson*
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*Salina (Central Mall 4*
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a half-century. "Pray, so that she can continue God's work."
"Now I am happy," said Mother Teresa, 86, who guided the mission for
Ticket outlets accept cash only
Sister Nirmala, now known as Mother Nirmala, immediately became head of the Missionaries of Charity, which has more than 4,000 nuns and runs 517 orphanages, homes for the poor, AIDS hospices and other charity centers around the world.
"Iam in dreamland right now," the 63-year-old Mother Nirmala said. "It's a big responsibility."
Yesterday's election is unlikely to change the character of the order. However, Mother Nirmala will have
Mother Teresa and her successor appeared on the second-floor balcony of Mother House, the mission's headquarters in downtown Calcutta. Behind them a cloth banner proclaimed: "We love our dear Mother Nirmala." Flowers and garlands were delivered to the front door, where the sisters were cloistered for the election.
Pope John Paul II had advised the nuns that they should be led by a woman of deep spirituality, which may have steered the conclave away from candidates with more administrative experience, le Joly said.
Born Nirmala Joshi into a family of Brahmins, the traditional Hindu priestly caste, Mother Nirmala is the daughter of an Indian army officer, who reportedly emigrated from neighboring Nepal.
"I don't know how far I will be able to carry out the work successfully," Mother Nirmala said. "I will try, and with the blessings of Mother and God, I will be able to carry it out."
to work hard to get the access to world leaders that helped Mother Teresa, winner of the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize for her work with the poor, raise millions of dollars.
But she was one of the first nuns to head a foreign mission, running posts in Panama, Europe and Washington, D.C., according to Father Edward le Joly, a Jesuit priest who is close to the order.
She was not among the leading candidates for the position, one of the most visible in the Roman Catholic church outside the Vatican, and few people outside the group even could identify her.
Most recently she was based in Calcutta and headed the group's contemplative wing, which deals with spiritual matters. That may have helped in her selection.
Mother Teresa, while still frail, would probably remain an influential voice.
"She will always be there as the Mother," said Sunita Kumar, a longtime friend of Mother Teresa's and one of the few outsiders who was privy to the deliberations.
Mother Teresa had said she no longer wanted to lead the order because she was too ill.
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Friday, March 14, 1997
7A
Mars life theory boosted
The Associated Press
Mars Earth Sun
WASHINGTON — A theory that microbes once lived on Mars is boosted by two new studies of a rock that was blasted away from the red planet and eventually landed on Earth.
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and at the California Institute of Technology said the new studies did not prove that Martian microbes once lived in the rock. But they remove one challenge based on the temperature history of the potato-size chunk of Mars.
The researchers have ruled out the high temperature hypothesis that would have made life impossible, said John W. Valley of the University of Wisconsin. "I still don't have final answers. There should still be skepticism."
Wisconsin scientists determined the range of temperatures the rock was exposed to by analyzing the ratios of carbon and oxygen isotopes.
NASA scientists last summer
claimed that small globules of carbonate found inside a Martian meteorite were the fossilized remains of microbes or bacteria that lived on the red planet more than 15 million years ago.
Based on a microscopic and chemical analysis of the globules, the NASA team theorized that the microbes lived and died in the rock, leaving behind organic chemicals and fossilized remains. The rock then was blasted from the Mars surface by a meteorite impact, spent thousands of years wandering in
space and then fell to Earth in the Antarctic. The rock was recovered from an ice field and identified by chemical composition as coming from Mars.
A major challenge to the theory has been that the carbonate globules formed by inorganic processes at temperatures of more than 1,200 degrees, far too hot for life.
But the new studies show that temperatures of the globules never exceeded 212 degrees - scalding, but still within the living range of known life forms.
Man imprisoned in bedroom
Caregiver's friends crack users, overrun 88-year-old's home
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Crack users took over an 88-year-old man's home, stole his cars and pension checks and kept him prisoner in his own bedroom, where he was found nearly starved to death amid rats and rotting food, police said.
"He was a hostage in his own house," said Officer Terrance White. "I'll never forget the look on his face."
George Sherrill was found in a barricaded bedroom Feb.28 when a city employee who had befriended him went to his home with police.She had become alarmed because he had stopped visiting her and she couldn't reach him.
Sherrill was hospitalized with dehydration, malnutrition and pneumonia.
The man said he had taken in an acquaintance's daughter to help him care for his wife of 50 years before she died of Alzheimer's disease last year.
"It was lonely to be there all by myself," Sherrill said. "I felt like I knew someone who I might be able to trust."
But the woman apparently opened his house to crack-smoking friends.
Police said Sherrill's home had no gas, no electricity and no phone service. He had dropped from 150 pounds to 93.
"They've been using the house for a crack house," White said. "He had a steady income. They would take him to the bank every month and make him withdraw money."
According to doctors, Sherrill's friendship with Kathy Hayden of Philadelphia's Bureau of Administration saved his life.
Hayden said she helped Sherrill sort out several hundred dollars in tickets on his cars two years ago. Since then, Sherrill had made a point
"I know they've taken everything I have. I don't have nothing."
George Sherrill 88-year-old hostage
of regularly stopping by to say hello, she said.
In January, the visits became infrequent and then stopped. She tried to visit his house several times but always met resistance from a woman who answered the door.
"I knew he would want to see me and this didn't make any sense," she said.
Hayden said she doubted the house could be made habitable again, but Sherrill said he still wanted to return.
Measure would alert people of HIV contact
"I know they've taken everything I
heard," he said. "I don't have nothing."
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — States would be required to alert people of possible contacts with HIV-infected individuals under a bill being advanced by a Republican congressman.
The measure also would create a national reporting system for the virus, require testing of anyone accused of a sex crime, require insurers to disclose HIV test results to applicants and allow disclosure of HIV status of children up for adoption.
Rep. Tom Coburn, R-Olda., said the provisions would protect those who weren't infected and help those who are learn their status quickly so they could take advantage of new, life-prolonging treatments.
Cobum, a physician, said the proposal would return sound medical practices to the nation's public health policy and curtail the spread of HIV.
The American Medical Association supports the measure.
But the Human Rights Campaign, a gay political group, said the bill would intrude on the authority of local public health officials and do nothing to help at-risk individuals change their behavior.
The bill would:
Require confidential, national reporting of new HIV cases to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. All states now report new AIDS cases, and 26 states report new cases of HIV.
Require states to notify people that they may have been exposed to HIV by a current or past partner. The CDC now requires states to establish procedures for partner notification for AIDS cases.
Require HIV testing for accused sexual offenders.
- Require insurers to reveal HIV test results to applicants and permit people to learn the HIV status of children they may adopt.
The Human Rights Campaign said evidence had shown that notifying partners was a costly and ineffective way of controlling the disease. It also questioned mandatory testing of accused sex offenders, noting that it takes at least six months after exposure for the virus to show up in the blood.
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The Lied Center of Kansas
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Elizabeth Streb
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Flying, bouncing & crashing off surfaces, like giant atomic particles in a super collider these daredevil performers catapult audiences into a new century of dance.
Tuesday
March 18, 1997
8:00 p.m.
The Lied Center of Kansas Student Tickets 1/2 Price
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS). Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); SUA Box Office (864-3477) and ticketmaster at (913) 234 4545 or (816) 931-3330.
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center New Directions Series.
LYRIC OPERA OF KANSAS CITY
Pinafore
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Financial Assistance provided by the Missouri Arts Council The Lyric Flies US Air
LYRIC OPERA OF KANSAS CITY
Pinafore
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MONDAY, MARCH 10, 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 8:00 PM
SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2:00 PM
STUDENT RUSH $4.00 WITH ID, ONE HOUR PRIOR TO CURTAIN.
Tickets $10-$50. Call 816-471-7344
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Financial Assistance provided by the Missouri Arts Council The Lyric flies U.S.A.
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Hill topics
Page 8A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
March 14, 1997
A house divided
Visits home may be difficult for students and family members
By Regina Bruntmeyer Special to the Kansan
For many students, a visit home can mean more than free laundry and someone else cooking the meals. It also can mean conflict.
Caleb Asher, Mound City, Mo., junior, found that out during a recent visit home. His father was out looking for him while he was in his parents' backyard talking to a friend until the early morning, he said. His father was unset.
Asher, who is 21, said he was accustomed to the independence he had found while attending the University of Kansas. But, he said, his father still treated him as if he were a high school student.
Asher found that the key to adjusting to life at his parents' home, however, was communication. Instead of becoming angry, Asher said he sat down with his father and talked about the situation.
Acting like an adult may be the best way to ease into weekends, summers and holidays at home with your parents.
Jim Kreider, clinical social worker at Counseling and Psychological Services, said students needed to show their parents they had grown up if they expected to be treated like adults.
Kreider said many factors could contribute to stress at home.
"One of the key things is that, when families are together, they interact day in, day out and do not notice the gradual evolution," Kreider said. "When children go to college, they face tremendous changes. But parents do not get to observe this."
Because parents do not see the student handling relationships, finances and class schedules, they may continue to treat the student like a child.
Caleb's mother, Jill Asher, said that when Caleb left home, it was a big adjustment.
"You know everything will change for your whole family," Jill Asher said. "You are still a family, but it dissolves into new forms."
These differences cause tension in visits.
"Students are accustomed to being independent," Kreider said. "At home, they feel like they have to account to their parents and feel patronized. They often get angry or avoid their parents."
Caleb Asher said independence should not keep students from following parents' rules while at home because it was still their house.
But he said, "Rules need to change to adapt to your college status."
Parents and students must recognize that the relationship has progressed to a new level before they can grow.
"Parents must realize that children are no longer children when going off to college," Kreider said.
Not only is a visit home sometimes difficult for students, but it also can be a big adjustment for parents.
Knowing that most parents want their children to succeed should help students relax at home.
"If parents are concerned, don't confirm their worst fears by having a big fight," Kreider said.
Jill Asher said parents were relieved and a little sad to see children grow.
wouldn't want them coming back a failure."
"Of course you're happy that your child can be independent," jill Asher said. "You
Caleb Asher said he had faced an unpleasant situation when he first came to the University because his parents had called his home in Lawrence to talk to him and he was not there. They tried calling again later, but he still was not there. When he finally returned and heard the numerous messages on his machine, he was angry because he had been visiting his grandmother in Odessa, Mo. He resolved the situation by explaining to his parents that he was not going to call them every time he left town.
Students should assume that their parents do not know how they've changed, so they should share information, Kreider said. He said the information can help parents to relax.
"When it feels like meddling, recognize it as concern." Kreider said.
Carrie Heinen, Valley Falls junior, said her parents had let go because she supported herself at school. She said that although her parents really didn't have control anymore, her relationship with them was good.
"I tell them everything." Heinen said.
"They don't get mad.
"We talk about stuff we never used to, like taxes." Heinen said.
parents had changed, too.
Students with siblings might face added stress because of changing family dynamics. Besides taking over rooms or closets, younger siblings can innocently cause the student aggravation.
"I lived by myself at school," Caleb Asher said. "When I put something down, I knew it would still be there the next time I reached for it. At home, your privacy is gone."
Caleb Asher said he had two younger sisters who were always excited to see him and who followed him around constantly. But he said he was not used to being around children. His younger brother is older than his sisters, but Asher said they didn't always get along.
"I get real short, real fast," Caleb Asher said. "I know they are excited to see me, so I try harder with them."
His mom agreed that that was one area he had struggled with.
Caleb may come home to talk,but one
"When it feels like meddling, recognize it as concern."
Jim Kreider
clinical social worker at Counseling and Psychological Services
Conflict Avoidance
Tips to avoid conflicts with family members:
Assume that parents don't know how you've changed. Tell them what is happening in your life.
Remember that what you may think is meddling is often just concern
Remember that your family continues to function in your absence.
Siblings will be excited to see you. Be patient with them.
Students may be surprised to see that the family continues to function in their absence. Kreider said some may feel as if they've been left on the doorstep.
family member may come in to interrupt and then another one follows," Jill Asher said.
"When you go home, life has changed," Kreider said. "Parents don't plan their lives around you anymore.
"Know these adjustments are weird and scary."
Jill Asher said that sometimes Caleb's visits brought a different version of the same problem.
"When the first one returns home, the younger siblings may be put on the back burner," Jill Asher said. "Families are hard to deal with sometimes."
She said it was difficult to know what was going to happen at home.
But she said, "It's always great when they come home."
home
and the
up with her
BUTTERY CHUNKS MUSIC REVIEW
Now that ska has about as much exposure as one of those Baywatch swimmers, it's uncool to admit you're still a fan of one of the ska-core bands responsible for bringing the scene to the masses. But with the Bos-
Mighty Mighty Bosstones: Let's.Face It (Mercurv)
The eight-
brand of pounding riff-rock with all the precision of a Gulf War smart bomb. The biggest difference is one of tone. This album is a little smoother than its choppy pre-
THE MINISTRY MINISTRY
BOBSTONES
MUSIC BY
stones fifth catchy fifth album, Let's Face it, a tolerant listener is reminded why the band had such a solid following from the beginning.
The commercially accessible Let's Face It doesn't have the urgency of earlier Bostones recordings, but it retains the energy, reminding us why ska/punk has gotten so huge.
piece band's music has been watered down a bit since its pounding debut, 1989's Devil's Night Out. Yet the eight-piece band's familiar formula remains: positive, clever lyrics set to bouncy, horn-tweaked punk rock and vocal Dickey Barrett's distinctive Tom-Waits-on-amphetamines rasp.
Helmet; Aftertaste (Interscope)
Helmet's fourth album isn't going to surprise anyone. Page Hamilton and crew continue to deliver Helmet's particular
helmet
decessors, Strap It On and Meantime.
Which isn't to say that *Aftertaste* is a subdued dish. Far from it. Instead, Helmet is putting a little red meat on the bones of their grooves and finding the sweet spot. This album doesn't have the same reckless abandon as the band's earlier releases, but that doesn't mean it it's boring. Rather, Helmet has learned focus.
Outhouse: Welcome (Mercury)
Kansas City-based Outhouse isn't afraid to wear its influences on its sleeve. The trio works up a noisy sweat, never forgoing the melodies on Welcome, their entertaining, major-label debut.
The album's sound fluctuates between self-described "dirty, filthy rock music," and the tuneful Replacements-Goo Goo Dolls-type thing. The members of Outhouse have obvious songwriting talents, but the band sounds as though it is desperately in search of its own identity. Welcome is a good album from a band that may be a few years away from great.
Shaking Tree: Shaking Tree (Gecko House)
Four KU students — including former
members of Turquoise Sol and Id Explosion — make up this light-hearted local band. Shaking Tree's self-titled debut album picks up where those bands left off, continuing the mix of various styles throughout its 50 mellow minutes.
Take some recycled Midwestern roots rock, throw in a violin, add rhythms desperate to induce dancing, and you've got an underwhelming, low-key 14-song album. I'm sure they're destined for cult status
among the millions who were brainwashed by Blues Traveler. If this sounds like your thing, they're playing at the Jazzhaus
When a b a n d ' s album is titled Virus, one can be certain its
tomorrow.
Margin of
ERROR:
Vir u s
(Tree-
house)
MANGO DE ARROJA
musicians have more on their minds than getting listeners to shake their respective booties. Lawrence's Margin of Error seems to specialize in lyrics about twisting, tearing and tugging and disease.
But the music is, for the most part, surprisingly orthodox and unadventurous guitar rock. One second the band creates a wall of noise, the next it is achingly quiet. Virus is an album that's difficult to classify, but fans of Sonic Youth could find it interesting.
— By Drue Kennedy and Jeff Ruby
INSIDE SPORTS
After half a semester of games, Retro-Active and Bottoms capture first place in the women's and men's Intramural Basketball Hill Championship. Page 3B
KANSAS
33-1
JACKSON STATE 14-16
78
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
64
AYHAWK BASKETBALL
KU vs.
FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1997
Kansas 78. Jackson State 64
KANSAS (33-1)
Pierce FG FT TP
Pierce 6-17 7-18 19
Filbert 8-18 4-17 18
Pauld 4-7 4-9 18
Haase 2-7 2-2 7
Vaughn 0-3 3-6 3
Williams 1-3 0-4 1
Plug 0-4 0-4 0
Thomas 2-7 0-5 5
Robertson 3-4 2-2 9
Bradford 0-1 0-1 0
Nomor 0-1 0-0 0
Branstrom 0-0 0-0 0
McGrath 1-0 0-2 0
Ransom 0-0 0-0 0
Total 27-72 21-31 78
JACKSON STATE (14-16) FG FT TP
Pulliam 10-22 0-2 0-8
Williams 2-8 0-0 6
Fairley 1-5 1-4 0-3
Draper 4-4 0-2 0-9
Hall 3-8 3-4 1-9
Harden 2-7 0-1 0-4
Bradley 0-1 0-0 0-4
Moton 1-2 2-4 4
Montgomery 0-0 0-0 0-0
Woods 0-0 0-0 0-0
Valentine 0-0 0-0 0-0
McKenny 0-3 0-0 0-0
Totals 23-65 6-11 64
SECTION B
Hattiee: Kansas 47, Jackson State 34-3. Point-
er: Indiana 26, Purdue 25, Wisconsin 24, D-Williams 22, Dr. McKenney 20, Okaas 3-13 (Robertson 1-1, Haase 1-3, Thomas 1-6, Loehner 1-2, Cox 1-2, Krohn 1-2, Jackson State 27 (Harden 8), Kansas 61 (Pollard 19). Assists: Jackson State 11 (Pulliam, Hall 3), Kansas 10 (Pulliam, Hall 4), Jackson State 26, Kansas 14: At 15,000
Game against Illinois State best of Cyclone's career
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Kelvin Cato picked a good time to have the best game of his career.
The junior center scored a career- high 29 points, had 12 rebounds and broke a Midwest Regional record with eight blocks, leading Iowa State to a 69-57 victory against Illinois State in
Illinois State in
IOWA STATE
CYTLOWS
the first round of the NCAA tour- nament yesterday. Dedric Willoughby added 21 points as the sixth-
Kansas guard Jerod Haase tries to deflect a pass. The Jayhawks defeated Jackson State 78-64 yesterday in the first round of the NCAA Tournament yesterday in Memphis, Tenn.
seeded Cyclones (21-8) earned a second-round meeting with Cincinnati tomorrow.
Cato established himself in the middle and was the game's dominant player.
His eight block came with about 14 minutes left and gave him one more than Temple's Tim Perry, Louisville's Pervis Ellison and Wake Forest's Tim Duncan, Cato's previous career high in points was 21.
Rico Hill led Illinois State (24-6) with 14 points, and Dan Muller added 12. Cato set a career high with an eight-foot jumper in the lane that gave the Cyclones a 52-50 lead with 6:13 remaining.
Illinois State tied the score at 53 on Skipp Shaefbauer's 20-foot jumper with 4:04 remaining.
But the Cyclones continued to pound the ball inside. Cato got free for a dunk, and his tap-in with just more than 3 minutes remaining gave them a 57-54 lead.
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Tony Gonzalez, the tight end-turned-power-forward, scored all five of California's points in the final minute yesterday, and the Bears beat Princeton 55-52 in the opening round of the NCAA tournament.
Blocked three-pointer turns Tiger's roar into whimper
The fifth-seeded Bears (22-8)
advanced to tomorrow's second round of the East Regional and will face fourth-seeded Villanova.
Princeton, which knocked defending national champion UCLA out in the first round last year, had a final chance but Gabe Lewullis' three-point attempt with three seconds left was blocked by Alfred Grigsby.
Gonzalez, whose aggressive play helped California overcome a 29-23 halftime deficit, gave the Bears the lead at 52-50 with a fade-away 12-foot side jumper with 58 seconds left
With 15 seconds left, Brian Earl scored on a backdoor cut, bringing the 12th-second Tigers (24-4) to within one, but Gonzalez made both shots on a 1-and-1 with 14 seconds left, making it 55-52.
California was playing its fourth game since losing leading scorer and Pac-10 player of the year Ed Gray to a broken foot.
5
KANSAS
35
The Associated Press
Kansas walking in Memphis
'Hawks avoid upset ready for Purdue
By Bill Petulla Kansan sportswriter
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Graceland started looking more like Waterloo for the Kansas men's basketball team yesterday as it outlasted Jackson State 78-64 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament at The Pyramid.
The pesky Tigers, who apparently didn't put much stock in the fact that a No. 16 seed has never defeated a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, were within seven points of the Javahaws with 16:44 remaining in the game.
Kansas, which received an animated tongue
TOM BROWN
lashing from Coach Roy Williams at the 15:52 mark in the second half, responded with a 16-5 run, holding off Jackson State and earning the right to play Purdue in the second round of the tournament.
"It wasn't the prettiest game," Williams said. "It was a very frustrating game at times, yet we
Roy Williams
were very active on the backboards."
So active were the Jayhawks on the backboards that Kansas outbounded Jackson State by a margin of 61-27. Kansas' rebounding surge was led by center Scot Pollard, who grabbed 19 boards.
"It was a team effort today of boxing out," Pollard said. "And some of it had to do with being in the right place at the right time."
The game was nip-and-tuck in the early going as Kansas couldn't hold a significant lead during the first 10 minutes. The Tigers, behind guard De Carto Draper's two three-point shots, tied the game at 15 with 11:54 remaining in the first half.
Kansas countered with a three-point basket by guard Billy Thomas, which sparked a 7-0 run. Forward Raef LaFrentz netted 12 points as the Jayhawks closed out the first half 47-34.
"I was really surprised that we weren't up for the game more than we were today, knowing that this could be our last game," center B.J. Williams said.
As with the first half, Kansas began the second frame sluggishly. Jackson State outscored Kansas 6-0 in beginning play, and guard Jacque Vaughn picked up his fourthoul at the 17:46 mark. During a timeout, Roy Williams staged a fierce sideline tirade.
"I did lose it," Williams said. "I didn't think we were very effective on the offensive end.
ATTHEGAME: More photos from the Kansas-Jackson State contest. Page 8B
We were missing shots from two and three feet."
Pollard said the speech was among the most fiery he'd seen at Kansas.
"On a scale of one to 10, that was an eight," Pollard said.
Evidently the Jayhawks were listening as they busted out of the timeout to a 20-5 run, held off a late Jackson State run and put the upset-minded Tigers away for good.
Several Kansas players saluted the effort and heart of the Tigers, a 36-point underdog.
"They did a great job of having pride and playing with a lot of emotion," Vaughn said.
Jackson State was paced by forward/guard Trent Pulliam. Pulliam scored 28 points, including a long-range display in the waning
moments, connecting on five three-pointers in the final 3:24.
For Kansas, forward Paul Pierce, Pollard and LaFrentz each finished the game with double digits in points and rebounds.
Pierce's 13 boards were a career high.
Pierre's 15 boards were a career high. Jackson State coach Andy Stoglin said one game plan for the Tigers was to hold Kansas to a perimeter game.
"The thing we tried to do was bring them away from the basket and keep this from being a physical game," Stoglin said. "Every time we took a shot around the basket, though, they would deflect it."
The Jayhawks swatted a season-high 13 shots, including six by Pollard.
Guard Jerod Haase, who had six assists and seven points, said the Jayhawks would need to play sharper if they wanted to advance in the tournament.
"We've just got to go out on the court and play a little better."
Jerod Haase Kansas guard
"We were a little bit flat," Haase said. "I could make a million excuses, but that won't do us any good. We've just got to go out on the court and play a little better."
Kansas will play Purdue, which defeated Rhode Island, at 1:15 p.m. tomorrow at The Pyramid. The game will be televised on channels 5 and 18.
Dance steps focus on defense
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
When No. 3-seed Kansas plays No. 14-seed Detroit Mercy at 8:30 tomorrow night, it will try to extend its home-court winning streak and all postseason aspirations.
The Jayhawks now have a 20-game win streak at Allen Field House, which ties a school record. A victory against Detroit Mercy would break the record.
Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon said the Jayhawks would concentrate on the defensive end of the court in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
"We have to keep working on what got us here, and that's our
defense," Dixon said. "If we can play our defense with a level of intensity that can't be matched, we'll be all right. Playing defense is in gaining momentum going into the later rounds, so we'll have to stay focused and start from there."
The Jayhawks had light workouts on Monday and Tuesday while the coaching staff gathered and prepared tapes for scouting Detroit Mercy. On Wednesday, Kansas returned to full practices to prepare for the tournament.
Kansas played its last game more than a week ago. The Jayhawks lost in the Big 12 Tournament semifinals 73-58 to Kansas State.
Kansas forward Jennifer Trapp
Tomorrow's lineup
See DANCE, Page 5B
Kansas (No. 3 seed, 24-5 overall)
Probable Starters
Probable Starts
G Tamecke Dixon, 5-9, Sr.
G Angie Halible, 5-10, Sr.
F Lynn Pride, 6-2, Fr.
F Jennifer Trapp, 6-1, Sr.
C Nakia Sanford, 6-4, Sr.
Detroit Mercy (No. 14 seed, 23-6
overall) Probable Starters
G Jocelyn Boyd, 5-4, Jr.
G Autumn Rademacher, 5-9, Sr.
F Stephanie Gray, 0-0, So.
F Shafarrah Hill, 5-9, Jr.
C Nina Rouser, 6-2, Sr.
Time: 8:30 tomorrow night
Place: Allen Field House
Radio: JHKJK, 90.7
Fans fail to flock to Field House
By Tommy Gallagher 'Kansan sportswriter
March marginal for women's tournament
Vanderbilt, the University of Washington and the University of Detroit Mercy will come to Lawrence with a limited fan base for first- and second-round games of the NCAA Tournament.
Each school will bring its band, cheerleaders and mascot. Aside
from that, friends, family and some school administrators will travel to Lawrence this weekend.
Kathy Anderson, Washington assistant director for basketball operations, said part of the problem in assembling a solid fan base was travel costs.
"Some teams have paid as much as $1,500 for a red-eye flight just to get to their first- and second-round site," Anderson said. "The price for some flights is just incredible. It's hard to bring along a lot of fans when the team is having trouble
getting there themselves."
Kansas' first-round opponent, Detroit Mercy, expects to bring the
Vicki Spina, Vanderbilt administrative assistant, said the team also would bring 100 people.
Despite being the closest team to Lawrence, Spina said the numbers were low because the men's basketball team qualified for the NCAA Tournament.
Anderson estimated that 100 people would follow the Huskies to Lawrence, she said.
See FANS,Page 5B
STORIES
Guard Tamecka Dixon goes up for a basket against Iowa State during regular-season play. Kansas plays Detroit Mercy at 8:30 tomorrow night in Allen Field House.
2B
Friday, March 14, 1997
SCORES & MORE
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
National Invitation Tournament At A Glance
All Times EST
First Round
Wednesday, March 12
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Confederate 71, Montana
Florida State 82, Syracuse 67
Michigan State 84, Washington 50
Wisconsin 98, Bowling Green 95
Pittsburgh 82, New Orleans 63
Notre Dame 74, Oral Roberts 58
Bradley 64, Draxel 51
Arkansas 101, Northern Arizona 75
Nebraska 67, Washington 63
Texas Christian 85, Alabama-Birmingham 62
North Carolina State 77, South Mississippi
Nevada 97, Fresno State 86
UNLY 68, Memphis 62
Hawaii 71, Oregon 61
Thursday, March 13
Miami (16-12) at Michigan (19-11), 7 p.m.
Tulane (20-10) at Oklahoma State (16-14), 8 p.m.
Second Round March 17 or 18 Sites and Times TR
Bradley (17-18) at Connecticut (15-14)
Pittsburgh (18-13) at Arkansas (18-12)
West Virginia (22-12) at Notre Dame (15-13)
Texas West Virginia (29-12) at N.Carolina St. (17-14)
Michigan St. (17-11) at Florida St. (17-11)
Nevada St. (19) at Nebraska (17-14)
Hawaii (21-7) at UNLV (21-9)
Miami-Michigan winner vs. Tulane-Oklahi
Third Round
Third Round
March 19, 20, or 21
Sites and T唐朝 78D
Connecticut-Bradley winner vs. Nevada-Neb-
Florida St.-Michigan St. winner vs. N.Carolina St.-West Virginia winner
Notre Dame Texas Christian winner vs. Miami-Michigan—Tulane-Oklahoma St. winner
Arkansas—Pittsburgh winner vs. UNLV-Hawaii winner
Semifinals At Madison Square Garden
New York Tuesday, March 25 Times TBA
Third Place
Connecticut-Bradley—Nevada-Nebraska winner vs. Florida-St-Michigan St.-N.Carolina St.-W.Va. winner
Notre Dame-Texas Christian—Miami-Michigan-tulane-Oklahoma St. winter vs.
Arkansas-Pittsburgh—UNLV-Wahai winner
Third Place
At Madison Square Garden
New York
Thursday, March 27
Thursday, March 27 Semifinal losers, 5 p.m.
Championship
Championship At Madison Square Garden
New York
Thursday, March 27
Semifinal winners, 7:30 p.m.
NCAA Basketball Tournament
At A Glance
All Times EST
EAST REGIONAL First Round
First Round
At Lawrence Joel Colseum
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Thursday, March 13
California 55. Princeton 52
Villanova (23-9) vs. Long Island University
North Carolina (24-6) vs. Fairfield (11-18), (n)
Indiana (22-10) vs. Collinwood (21-9),
Pittsburgh
Friday, March 14
Wisconsin (18-9) vs. Texas (16-11), 12:15
South Carolina (24-7) vs. Coppin State (21-8).
Joint Musem amer privativo galle
New Mexico (24-7) vs. Old Dominion (22-10).
Louisville (23-8) vs. Massachusetts (19-13).
Second Round
At Lawrence Jool Collisum
Winton-Salem, N.C.
Saturday, March 15
Saturday, March 15
N. Carolina-Fairfield winner vs. Indiana-Colorado winner, 12:15 p.m.
Boston, MA 02217
California (22-8) vs. Villanova-LIU winner, 30 minutes after game
It Pittsburgh Civic Ar
Pittsburgh
Sunday, March 16
At Pittsburgh Civic Arena Pittsburgh
New Mexico-Old Dominion winner vs.
S. Carolina-Coppi St. win, vs. Wisconsin
Texas win, 30 minutes after previous game
Texas winner, 30 minutes after previous game
Regional Semifinals
Syracuse, N.Y.
Friday, March 21
N. Carolina-Fairfield—Indiana-Colorado win-
s. California—Villanova-LIU winner
S. Carolina-Coppin St. —Wisconsin-Texas winner vs. MN-ODU —Louisville-Muass wind
Regional Championship
Regional Championship At The Carrier Dome Syracuse, N.Y. Sunday, March 23
SOUTHEAST REGIONAL
First Round At The Pyramid Memphis. Tenn.
Thursday, March 13
Arizona (19-9) vs. South Alabama (23-6), (n)
Kansas 78, Jackson State 64
Purdue (17-11) vs. Rhode Island (20-9)
Maryland (21-10) vs. College of Charleston
(20-3)
---
Charlotte, N.C.
Friday, March 14
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and/or blackout)
SPORTS WATCH
(All time Central)
Friday, march 14
4 a.m.
ESPN2 — Tennis, Davis Cup, final round, singles matches A and B, U.S. at Russia
CBS — NCAA Tournament cover-
10 a.m.
ESPN — PGA Golf, JCPenney Classic, second round, at Tarpon Springs, Flaga. (same-day tape)
6:30 p.m.
TNT — NBA Basketball, Charlotte
PRIME NCAA Hockey, Lowell at Boston College
ESPN—Presentations, NASCAR
Roche, in New York.
finals, first round, at Las Vegas
Georgia (24-8) vs. Tennessee-Chattanooga
(12-10) 12:30 PM
ESPN2 — PRCA Rodeo, national
(22-10,) 12:30 p.m. Illinois (21-9) vs. Southern California (17-10).
30 minutes after previous game
Marquette (26-6) vs. Providence (21-11), 7:40 p.m.
Duke (23-8) vs. Murray State (20-9), 30 minutes after previous game
Second Round
Kansas (33-1) vs. Purdue-Rhode Island win
Second Round
At The Pyramid
Memphis, Tenn.
Saturday, March 18
Maryland-Coll. of Clinton winner vs. Arizona-South Alabama winner, 30 minutes after
Duke-Murray St.—Marquette-ProVIDENCE winner vs. Georgia-UTC—Illinois-Southern Cal winner
At Charlotte Coliseum
Charlotte, N.C.
Sundav. March 16
Duke-Murray St. winner vs. Marquette-Provi-
Southern Cal winner, 30 minutes after previous game
Regional Semifinals
Kansas — Purdue-Rhode Island winner vs.
Louisiana,oul of Charleston — Arizona-South
Alabama
At Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center Birmingham, Ala.
Friday, March 21
Regional Championship
MIDWEST REGIONAL First Round
Regional Championhip
At Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center
Birmingham, Ala.
Sundav, March 23
At The Palace of Auburn Hills
Auburn Hills, Mich.
Thursday, March 13
Cincinnati (25-7) vs. Butler (8-9)
Iowa State (20-4) vs. Illinois State (24-5)
Xavier, Ohio (22-5) vs. Vanderbilt (19-11), (n)
CLA (21-7) vs. Charleston Southern (17-12),
At Kemper Arena Kansas City, Mo. Friday, March 14
Clemson (21-8) vs. Miami, Ohio (21-8), 12:25 p.m.
Tusa (23-9) vs. Boston University (25-4), 30 minutes after previous game
Mississippi (20-8) vs. Temple (19-10), 7:50 p.m.
miruits after previous game
Mississippi (20-8) to Temple (19-10), 7:50
Minneapolis (2-3) vs. Southwest Texas state
(16-12), 30 minutes after previous game
Minnesota (27-3) vs. Southwest Texas State
Auburn Hills, Mich.
Saturday, March 15
UCLA-Charleston Southern winner vs.
Xavier-Vanderbilt winner, 30 minutes after pre-
game.
Second Round
At The Palace of Auburn Hills
Auburn Hills, Mich.
At Katy
Kansas City, Mo.
Sunday, March 16
Cincinnati (26-7) va. Iowa St.-Illinois St. win
At Kemper Arena
Tula-Boston U. winner vs. Clemson-Miami
slipp-Temple winner, 30 minutes after previous game
Minnesota-SW Texas St. winner vs. Missis-
Regional Semifinals
At The Alamodome
San Antonio
Thursday, March 20
UCLA-Chicago Southern - Iowa-Vander-Bilt winner. Wisconsin - Iowa-Stillen. Illinois
Minnesota-SW Texas ST—MississippiTemple
winner win a Tuscaloosa-Boston U—Clemenson
Temple win a Baton Rouge U—Clemenson
At The McKale Center
Regional Championship
At The Alamodome
San Antonio
Saturday, March 22
Saturday, March 22 Semifinal winners
WEST REGIONAL
Boston College (21-8) vs. Valparaiso (24-6)
St. Joseph's (24-6) vs. Pacific (24-6)
Kentucky (30-4) vs. Montana (21-10), (n
12-19) vs. Virginia (18-12), (n
North Carolina Charlota (21-8) vs. George
First Round
At The Huntsman Center
Salt Lake City
Tucson, Ariz.
Friday, March 14
town (209), 2:42 p.m.
Uatch (28-3) vs. Navy (20-8), 30 minutes after
Uatch (28-3).
*wake Forest (23-6) vs. St. Mary's, Calif.* (23-7), 7:58 p.m.
Stanford (20-7) vs. Oklahoma (19-10), 30
Second Round
At The Huntman Center
Salt Lake City
Saturday, March 15
Boston College-Valparaiso winner vs. St.
Kentucky-Montana win, iowa-Virginia
winner, 30 minutes after previous game
At The McKale Center
Tucson, Ariz.
Sunday, March 16
Utah-Navy winner vs. N.C. Charlotte-George-
**Wake Forest-ST. Mary's win:** stuarton-Oklahoma winner, 30 minutes after previous
Regional Semifinals
Regional Semi-
At San Jose Arena
San Jose, Calif.
Thursday, March 20
Thursday, March 20
Kentucky-Montana—Iowa-Virginia winner vs.
Boston College-Valparaiso-St. Joe's
Utah Navy - N.C. Charlotte-Georgetown what
wake. Wake Forest-St. Mary-WSU
Semifinal winners
Regional Championship
At San Jose Arena
San Jose, Calif.
Saturday, March 22
THE FINAL FOUR
At The RCA Dome
Indianapolis
National Semifinals
East champion vs. Southeast champion Midwest champion vs. West champion
East champion vs. Southeast champion Midwest champion vs. West champion National Championship
Monday, March 31 Semifinal winners
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times EST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct GB
New York 47 17 .734 —
Miami 46 17 .730 ½
Orlando 34 28 .548 12
Washington 29 33 .468 17
New Jersey 18 44 .298 28
Philadelphia 16 46 .258 30
Boston 12 51 .190 34½
x-Chicago 55 8 ,873
Detroit 45 17 .726 9½
Atlanta 43 20 .683 12
Charlotte 41 20 .651 14
Central Division
Cleveland 34 27 .387
Indiana 30 32 .484 24%\
Milwaukee 26 36 .419 28%\
Toronto 22 40 .355 32%\
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| x-Utah | 46 | 17 | .730 | — |
| Houston | 43 | 21 | .672 | 3½ |
| Minnesota | 31 | 30 | .508 | 14 |
| Dallas | 20 | 41 | .328 | 25 |
| Denver | 18 | 44 | .290 | 27½ |
| 'San Antonio | 15 | 47 | .242 | 30½ |
| Vancouver | 11 | 54 | .169 | 16 |
Seattle 43 18 .705 —
L.A. Lakers 42 20 .677 1½
Portland 36 28 .563 8½
Sacramento 28 35 .444 16
L.A. Clippers 26 34 .433 16½
Phoenix 24 38 .387 19½
Golden State 23 39 .371 20%
x-cinched playoff spot Tuesday's Games
Chicago 117, Boston 106
Charlotte 98, Vancouver 92
Atlanta 106, Utah 99
Houston 103, San Antonio 79
Minnesota 104, Philadelphia 100
Miami 108, Milwaukee 93
Dallas 91, New York 83
Orlando 98, Denver 91
Toronto 105, Phoenix 101
Portland 109, L.A. Clippers 105
Seattle 93, Detroit 80
Cleveland 88, Sacramento 85
Wednesday's Games
Thursday's Games
Utah 117, New Jersey 102
Chicago 108, Philadelphia 104
Washington 104, Vancouver 82
Indiana 92, Atlanta 82
Orlando 96, Houston 95
L.A. Lakers 109, Golden State 10
Seattle at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Boston at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Detroit at Denver, 9 p.m.
Phoenix at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
Toronto at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
Friday's Games
Chicago at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
Charlotte at Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
Vancouver at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
Seattle at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Utah at Indiana, 7:30 p.m.
Washington at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.
Boston at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Portland, 10 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at a.L. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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9
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 14, 1997
3B
Winning is everything
Teams capture intramural titles for basketball
By Aerica Veazey Kansan sportswriter
More than 254 teams, 500 games and 2,500 players later, one group of men and one group of women can boast that they are basketball champions.
Retro-Active, the women's team sealed the Intramural Basketball Hill Championship by cheering the Rock Chalk Chant after its victory.
Bottoms, the men's team,
ended the season with an upset
Wednesday night at Robinson
Center.
Jan Madlock, assistant varsity volleyball coach and captain of Retro-Active, had gathered a team that was not so traditional.
Madlock said the team got together because most of its players were staff from the athletic department.
"I put up signs everywhere to see who wanted to play," she said. When the team finally came together, some of the members had other collegiate experience, including playing
for Wake Forest and Oklahoma. Since the beginning of the season, Madlock and the rest of the team had hoped to win the championship.
"We're all pretty competitive; we didn't get into it for fun. I like to win," she said.
"This was the closest game we've played," she said. "Except for the first game, which was a loss."
Retro-Active defeated Alpha Delta Pi by nine points in the championship game. The margin of victory impressed Madlock.
Meagan Leahy, Salina freshman and captain of the Alpha Delta Pi basketball team, was disappointed with the loss to Retro-Active. She attributed the loss to a lack of players.
"It would have been nice to have a bench," she said. "We also gave them too many fast breaks."
On the men's side, Bottoms squeaked passed Phi Delta Theta and won the championship.
Phi Delta Theta fraternity has won the Hill Championship the past three years. This year's loss in the championship game shocked the team.
was our senior year," he said.
Although the loss came as a surprise, Livermore wasn't bitter.
Men's hill champion
Bottoms
Nalsmith Hall #2
Bottoms
NEK Nitram
Phi Delta Theta 1
Phi Delta Theta 1
Ryan Livermore, Quincy, III,
senior and captain of Phi Delta
Theta, expressed his disbelief.
Men's hill champion
Bottoms
Nalsmith Hall #2
Bottoms
NEK Nitram
Phi Delta Theta 1
Phi Delta Theta 1
Mary Corcoran/KANSAN
Women's hill champion
Alpha Delta PI
Crossballers
Team forfeited
Retro Active
Alpha Delta PI
Retro Active
Women's hill champion
Alpha Delta PI
Alpha Delta PI
Crossballers
Retro Active
Team forfeited
Retro Active
Retro Active
" They played a good game," Livermore said of Bottoms. "It's a lot of games to play. Tonight we ran out of gas."
Hit with its first loss in the championship in three years, Phi Delta
"We expected to win. This
Theta still will be a factor in future tournaments, Livernore said.
"We're pretty confident we'll get [the championship] back," he said.
The co-captains of Bottoms, Manuy Ortiz, Condoado, Puerto Rico, second-year law student, and Ryan Kruse, Watertown, S.D., junior, were excited about the win.
"This was rewarding after a half-semester of this," Ortiz
said. "It was nice to win one that counts."
Since the start of the season, Kruse wanted the team to go all the way.
"We were in it for the 'W,'" Kruse said.
Even though Bottoms clinched the championship, the competition doesn't stop.
This weekend the team will compete in the 5-on-5 Speed Stick Regional Basketball Tournament.
KU to hold judo tournament
By Aerica Veazey
Kansan sportswriter
For the first time in history, the National Collegiate Judo Championship will be in Lawrence.
tomorrow at Robinson Center, 41 teams and more than 180 competitors from the United States and Virgin Islands will descend upon Lawrence to compete.
The local judo club has waited two years for this day.
Schedule
Last year, the championship was held in San Jose. Calif.
In 1995, the University of Kansas put in a bid to bring the tournament to Lawrence. Iowa State, Ohio State and Michigan State also were in the running.
Adrien Lewis, Springfield, Mass., senior and captain of the judo club, said competitors in the national tournament had to meet requirements.
"In order to compete in the National Collegiate Judo Championship, you have to be a third-degree brown belt,"
When: Tomorrow
When: Tomorrow
Where: Robinson Center gymnasiums
Time: Ceremonies begin at 8 a.m.
Admission: Free.
■ Competition is at 9 a.m.
■ Finals begin between 4 and 6 p.m.
he said. "The first place winner gets to go to the Olympic trials."
Since the club formed eight years ago, no one competing for Kansas has made it to the finals. Sensei Hikaru Murata from Tokyo started the judo club in Lawrence and was active in bringing the tournament to Lawrence.
"I sent over 600 invitations to clubs all over the United States. People recognized the University of Kansas," he said. "I'm so happy to see that the national sport of Japan is also a sport in the United States."
The Sony Co. and the Consulate General of Japan at Kansas City are helping to sponsor the tournament.
KU Participants
KU students participating in the National Collegiate Judo Championship tomorrow in Lawrence:
Eric Conyers, Merriam freshman
Todd Halstead, Topeka sophomore
Hyun Wanhoo, Korea senior
Josh Lester, Tulsa, Okla., senior
Adrien Lewis, Springfield, Mass.,
senior
Gabriel Rivera Velazquez, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Junior
Chad Trautman, Silver Lake senior
Brad Westbecker, Wellsville senior
"Judo is unlike any other martial arts," he said. "We have the task of mixing grace with sheer power."
Williams' prodigies Robinson, Stallings have bright future
Dean Smith has done his job almost too well.
The North Carolina men's basketball coach is known for coaching Michael Jordan and James Worthy to greatness in the NBA.
His basketball knowledge also has molded two of the game's finest college coaches in Rov Williams and Eddie Foeller.
Williams and Fogler were assistant coaches under Smith before they took head coaching jobs. This season both have had career years, leading their teams, Kansas and South Carolina, to the NCAA Tournament.
Williams, like his mentor Smith, also has passed his basketball knowledge on to his assistant coaches.
Steve Robinson and Kevin Stallings used to attend the NCAA Tournament as Kansas assistant coaches.
This season both Robinson and Stallings have led their own teams to the tournament.
After years under Williams' guidance, Robinson became head coach at Tulsa two years ago, and Stallings became head coach at Illinois State four years ago.
After leading Tulsa to the NCAA Tournament last year, Robinson's team is back in the tournament. The Golden Hurricanes will face Boston University in the first round of the Midwest region tonight.
Robinson showed his coaching abilities after facing major changes this season. Tulsa lost five seniors last season, and it moved from the Missouri Valley Conference to the Mountain Division of the Western Athletic Conference.
Athlon Sports magazine said in a preseason publication, "Tulsa may not fashion as impressive a record as it did last winter." Tulsa was 22-8 last year.
But Robinson and his Golden Hurricanes did not let that happen. Behind third team All-American senior guard/forward Shea Seals and the low post presence of sophomore forward Michael Ruffin, the Golden Hurricanes finished 23-9.
"They allowed me the opportunity to coach them." Robinson said.
Robinson has taken a couple of things with him from Kansas.
Tulisa's practice form is similar to the Jayhawks'.
Robinson said that after stretching and before practice drills, the team has a discussion time when they talk about offensive emphasis, defensive emphasis and the thought of the day.
Robinson said one thought of the day was, "Nothing great was ever achieved
without enthusiasm."
SPORTS REPORTER
Besides running practices, Robinson said Williams also taught him about being fair and honest with players and around programs.
Williams has earned my respect because he exudes class in his program. After I interviewed Robinson, I felt the same could be said about him.
REPORTER
ADAM
HERSCHMAN
Both Robinson and Stallings learned
about the importance of tradition while at Kansas. Robinson said.
One tradition Stallings has carried to Illinois State is winning. In his first four seasons, Stallings has improved his record each year.
Illinois State won both the Missouri Valley Conference regular season championship and the conference tournament. The Redbirds became the first team to achieve that in six years.
Stallings' first conference tournament victory clinched the team an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.
Sophomore forward Rico Hill is the Redbirds' top player. He averaged 18.9 points and eight rebounds a game.
Although Illinois State, 24-6, lost to Iowa State in the first round of the Midwest region in the NCAA Tournament yesterday, the team will be back. The team is young and will not lose a starter next season.
Unlike Smith, Williams and Fogler, Robinson and Stallings are not expected to take their teams deep into the tournament.
Provided there are no upsets, Smith probably will have to face at least one of his prodigies in the NCAA Tournament.
Williams has led Kansas to a No. 1 Southeast region seed and to a 33-1 record. Fogler's South Carolina club is 24-7 and a No. 2 seed in the East region.
The Jayhawks and Gamecocks could keep Smith's Tar Heels from advancing to the NCAA Tournament final.
Although Tulsa and Illinois State may not get far this year in the tournament, they're teams that are headed in the right direction. Robinson and Stallings are bright young coaches who should only get better in time.
In a couple of years Williams may have to worry about facing his two former assistant coaches, just like Smith will this year.
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4B
Friday, March 14, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hot Sooner bats are on the plate for Kansas
By Harley V. Ratliff
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team seems to be afflicted with a severe case of March Madness.
Kansas has stormed into the first month of spring by capturing nine of its last 11 games, including the last eight. The eight-game winning streak is the team's longest during head coach Bobby Randall's two-year tenure
Although the team has been playing better with each outing, the Jayhawks still have room for improvement, Randall said.
"I've been real impressed with both our hitting and pitching lately," he said. "For a while I thought we had hit a wall, but we've really started to grow again as players. However, we're still a little ragged around the edges, and there are some little things that need refinement."
Kansas will have a chance to make some of those improvements at 3 p.m. today in Norman,
Okla., when it begins the first of a three-game series with Big 12 Conference rival Oklahoma.
The Sooners (9-6) are considered one of the premier baseball programs in the Big 12 and have participated in two of the last three College World Series. Although the team slumped a little last year, Oklahoma won the National Championship three years ago.
Reliever Josh Wingerd said that a key to the Jayhawks' success would be the ability to carry winning momentum into a hostile environment.
"There's no question that we can do it," he said. "We just want to go in there and take at least two out of three games. It's going to be tough at OU. You've got all those fans yelling and screaming things at you."
Winged, who has been Kansas' best pitcher this season, will play a key role in shutting down the red-hot Sooner bats.
While Oklahoma has hit only 10
Baseball
home runs this season, the Sooners are batting .354 as a team and are on pace to break several other team hitting records. Catcher Javier Flores, who was first team All-Big Eight, is batting .500 on the season and has a 17-game hitting streak.
Freshman Mark Corson, who starts today, and seniors Aric Peters and Tim Lyons have been given the job of keeping Flores in check and the rest of the Sooners off base. If the pitchers can come through, centerfielder Justin Headley is confident the Kansas hitters can put runs on the board.
"We have really been swinging the bat well," Headley said. "We just want to keep the team in the game."
10
Kansas designated hitter Aaron Wilmes dives back to first base before Missouri first baseman Aaron Jaworowski can tag him. The Jayhawks will not be playing
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
at home again until after spring break. They face Oklahoma, considered one of the premier teams in the Big 12, today in Norman, Okla.
North Carolina's Dean Smith tough to prepare for and to beat
By David Droschak The Associated Press
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Matching wits with Dean Smith through the years often has been like solving basketball's version of a differential equation.
From the four-corners offense to zone traps to Smith's famous "blue team" of five subs coming off the bench at one time, rival coaches say his innovations made the Tar Heels tough to prepare for—and to beat.
"I found that practices leading up to a North Carolina game were very difficult, and it often took two days of preparation to be at your best," said former Virginia coach Terry Holland, who battled Smith in the early '80s when Michael Jordan was a Tar Heel
and Ralph Sampson was a Cavalier.
Vic Bubas, Duke's coach in the '60s, became Smith's biggest rival at the beginning of his North Carolina career. Bubas noticed consistency in Smith's teams from the start.
"They were willing to make that extra pass and do the things necessary fundamentally to be strong every year," Bubas said. "I thought they were always well-motivated, well-organized. ... So, there was this consistency with excellence."
In other words, Smith's teams often resembled his best traits — organization, drive and a competitive spirit. With this year's Tar Heels, Smith is on the verge of becoming the winningest NCAA basketball coach in history.
NCAA Coaches With Most Wins
The coaches with the most wins at NCAA Division I schools through March 12, 1997 (number of years as coach in parentheses):
876 (41) — Adolph Rupp, Kentucky, 1931-52, 1954-72
875 (36) — Dean Smith, North Carolina, 1962-present
767 (41) — Henry Iba, Northwest Missouri State, 1930-33; Colorado,
1934; Oklahoma State, 1935-70
759 (42) — Ed Diddle, Western Kentucky, 1923-64
746 (48) — Phog Allen, Baker, 1906-08; Kansas 1908-09; Haskell, 1909;
Central Mississippi State, 1913-19; Kansas 1920-56.
"What Dean has done will be very hard to duplicate," said Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski, Smith's biggest rival of the '90s. "There is no luck involved. He is well-prepared."
Smith and Krzyezwski have had their disagreements, but Krzyezwski
admitted that his Chapel Hill rival had made him a better coach.
"Dean has been here the entire time that I've been here, he's been the guy I've competed against the most. You better not miss a step or he'll hold you accountable for it," Krzzyzewski said.
Alamodome to be Big 12 championship site
"We have been pleased with the bids we received from a number of cities for the game, and we are really happy about the 1997 site. San Antonio offers a great atmosphere, many local attractions and a fine facility in the Alamodome."
The game will take place on Saturday, Dec. 6.
The TWA Dome in St. Louis held the first game between Texas and Nebraska and fell short of capacity, but it produced $500,000 in additional revenue for conference schools. Texas won 37-27.
game will be squarely on South land
Missouri's Joe Castiglione, the Big 12 director-of-athletics chairman, said, "The directors liked the idea of moving the championship to different geographical sites to offer increased exposure in new areas for the Big 12. We were very pleased with the support and the reception we had in the inaugural game in St. Louis last December."
SAN ANTONIO — The Alamodome was named yesterday as the site for the Big 12's football championship game between North and South divisions.
"We're excited about giving football fans in this region a chance to see one of the nation's premier championship games," said commissioner Steve Hatchell.
Capacity in the Alamodome is 65,000. ABC will televise the event, sponsored by Dr Pepper.
Softball team to play in Cowgirl Classic
That site fell in Big 12 North territory. The second
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team will try to continue its strong start to the season this weekend when it competes in the Oklahoma State Cowgirl Classic in Stillwater, Okla.
Last week, the team competed in the Hall of Fame Tournament in Oklahoma City and finished with a 3-1 record.
Kansas softball coach Tracy Bunge said she was pleased with several aspects of the Jayhawks' play, but the team sometimes made mental mistakes at crucial times.
The Associated Press
"I think we're a better team than what we looked like last weekend, and that's something we'll talk about in practice." Bunge said. "I'm looking forward to get us back on track. It will be a tough tournament, and it will be a good test to see if we can bounce back."
PARKER
10
Shannon Stanwlx
Among the teams Kansas (10-6) will compete against are Big 12 Conference rivals Nebraska (4-8) and Oklahoma State (17-7).
The other teams in the tournament are Wichita State, Mississippi and Southwest Missouri State.
Bunge said the team had been inconsistent at times but had shown itself capable of scoring runs and had two solid hitters in junior Sara Holland, who has been playing with a sore ankle, and Freshman Shannon Stanwix.
"She's still not 100 percent with the ankle, but she's a tremendously talented hitter with tremendous bat speed. It's unusual to see her get out," Bunge said.
Bunge said she was pleased with the progress of Stanwix, who hit two home runs in the Hall of Fame Tournament.
"It's exciting to see Shannon hitting the ball as hard as she is," Bunge said. "With her being just a freshman, she's only going to get better."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 14. 1997
5B
Booster allegedly paid players
University of Michigan, NCAA examining reports of violations
Associated Press
DETROIT — A University of Michigan basketball booster made cash payments to Wolverine players, the Detroit Free Press reported yesterday.
Two sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the newspaper that the payments were provided by Ed Martin. The sources said Martin had given money to Michigan players for years.
The sources said several current players had received money during the season and during summer breaks, but they did not know how many. Some received hundreds of dollars, sometimes during meetings with Martin outside the locker room at Crisler Arena, one source said.
Other players received cash in envelopes hidden inside cake boxes that Martin gave them, and he provided money to some players through their girlfriends, that source said.
The Free Press said it could not reach Martin for comment.
Reports earlier this week in the Free Press and the Detroit News identified Martin as a basketball program booster who allegedly tried to rent an apartment for a player and tried to buy plane tickets for players' relatives but was stopped from doing so by coach Steve Fisher.
In a report last week to the NCAA, Michigan cited Fisher and his staff for not reporting the actions of the booster. Besides noting Fisher's actions, Michigan told the NCAA it had cut ties to the booster and had imposed sanctions upon its basketball program.
Michigan has conducted dozens of interviews after hearing allegations about payments to players, but no one has admitted that any player received money from a booster, Michigan representative Walt Harrison said.
Traylor said the lease was a decision made completely by his aunt, Lydia Johnson of Detroit. She works as a machine operator for a Detroit steel
"We are committed to running a program that is above reproach and above suspicion," Harrison told the Free Press. "We will search out any solvent lead we have. Unless people come forward and allow us to interview them, we cannot investigate."
Fisher declined to comment, the newspaper said.
Earlier Wednesday, Wolverines forward Robert Traylor issued a statement saying neither he nor his aunt had done anything wrong in connection with the lease of a $47.906 vehicle.
The News reported that Traylor used the custom-built Chevrolet Suburban but did not register the vehicle with athletic department officials, as he would be required to do.
F
company. the News reported.
"She works two jobs, has great credit and selected the car for both of us to drive," Traylor said. "It is her money, and she should be able to spend her money as she wishes."
Jerry Bonanno, general manager of the Dearborn dealership where the Suburban was leased, said the lease payments exceed $700 a month without insurance.
Michigan officials said they would investigate the matter.
The Wolverines play Miami tonight in the first round of the NIT.
Texas Tech staffers fired, shuffled
Compliance officer stripped of duties following forfeiture
By Mark Bablneck The Associated Press
LUBBOCK, Texas — Even as Texas Tech reshuffles personnel and policies relating to the academic certification of athletes, officials will watch carefully an audit that could yield further adversity.
Four days after forfeiting 10 Big 12 victories and removing itself from consideration for the NCAA men's basketball tournament, the school on Wednesday stripped compliance officer Taylor McNeel of his duties.
Also being reassigned were academic counselor Michele Matticks and associate athletic director Alfonso Scandrett, the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal reported yesterday.
McNeel and Matticks had been responsible for the certification program that resulted in the basketball disqualifications.
The school had certified players Gracen Averil and Deuce Jones as eligible but found out during the Big 12 tournament last week that the players lacked necessary credits.
Kathy Jones — a former NCAA official who is now a consultant based in Overland Park — will assist internal auditors in a deeper inquiry into student certifications, starting with athletes now competing.
"In the weeks ahead, as we overhaul our current system of academic certification, it is possible that we will find additional instances of previous certification problems," said Texas Tech president Donald Haragan.
Women's basketball coach Marsha Sharp has said her team checked out cleanly as it heads into a first-round NCAA Tournament game tomorrow at Palo Alto, Calif.
Deuce Jones' father said he and his son were upset that the two D's that rendered the point guard ineligible were public. Release of college grades is a violation of federal law.
Nevertheless, Texas Tech had people who were responsible for and salaried to pay attention to every detail."
Donald Haragan
Texas Tech president
"I also hope that when he does get his degree in December that people don't associate the negative connotation and may cause him not to make $ \bar{X} $ amount of dollars," said Fred Jones, who discussed his concerns privately with Chancellor
John Montford on Wednesday.
Haragan announced the appointment of Texas Tech attorney Victor Mellinger as the acting compliance officer, taking over for McNeel.
There had been no firings related to the matter as of yesterday morning, but Montford said he expected some terminations once the dust settled.
Montford and Haragan said the NCAA policies that dictate academic eligibility issues were complicated and, in Haragan's words, difficult to keep up with.
He also said there could be other reassignments or firings.
"Nevertheless, Texas Tech had people who were responsible for and salaried to pay attention to every detail and directive that came down from the NCAA," Haragan said. "And this is where our system broke down."
Six athletes either have lost playing time or eligibility related to university administrative mistakes in the past year.
School officials should have phoned the NCAA office if they had questions about an academic certification issue, Montford said.
San Francisco has a chance at next SuperBowl
The Macarena is finally dead. Thank goodness for small miracles.
The Niners will defeat the Packers and head to the Super Bowl next season.
It looks like the San Francisco 49ers have finally found themselves a running back. The team signed unrestricted free-agent Garrison Hearst, who led the Bengals in rushing last season and was the third overall pick in the 1993 NFL draft. If Hearst can catch and Steve Young can stay healthy,
SPORTS REPORTER
Keep your eye on a battle that seems to be developing between Tiger Woods and Ken Griffey Jr. Tiger said baseball players stood around a lot and played an easy game. Griffey responded, "At least we can't take a can of soda onto the field with us." The two should be taking their battle to pay-per-wime time now.
Two of the worst spots to be in right now in the sports world:
MATT
WOODRUFF
1. Steve Bono's wife (or anyone related to him, for that matter).
2. Anyone coaching or playing for any team in the NCAA tournament besides the 'Hawks,
The far-out rumor of the week award goes to TNT announcers when they were discussing during the March 7 Bulls-Pacers game the possibility that, since Phil Jackson's contract runs out this season, Iowa State coach Tim Floyd may be coaching the Bulls next season. I'm not saying that Floyd isn't a great coach, but if the Bulls did get rid of Jackson, maybe that would show that even Chicago's management is tired of them winning all of the time.
■ How do the Texas schools expect us to believe they can handle the responsibilities of the Big 12 Tournament when they can't even handle their own athletes? As most of you saw, two Texas Tech players were suspended during tournament play after it was discovered that they were academically ineligible. This came after it was found that two football players finished the season despite carrying 0.00 grade point averages. Yeah, it's clear that the Lone Star State really has its act together.
March is a great month for sports, with NCAA action and major league baseball's opening day inching closer and closer. But it's also a time when the dreaded creature known as the midterm rears its ugly head. But, hey, don't frust. Spring break will be here in one week.
Comments? E-mail Matt at mwoodruff@kansan.com
TALKING BACK
The following are comments the sports desk received via e-mail. The Kansan sports desk can be e-mailed at sports@kansan.com if you have comments or suggestions.
■ Hey guys: The headline reads "Preparing for the Big Dance allows no team relaxation." Too bad the same can't be true of the person who put together the probable starters graphic under the picture. It would be great if Pollard were a junior but not at 6-1 and JV at 6-8.
Come on, let's get it right in these early games so that we can depend on you in the later, more crucial contests. NO RELAXATION.
In response to Spencer Duncan's column suggesting that the Big 12 Conference Tournament be abolished:
I suggest that whatever medication you've been taking needs to be
taken according to instruction.
The Big 12 needs a tournament. The Big Eight didn't since all conference teams matched up twice. Because of the division split, the tournament is needed to sort out the north and south.
One point for the tournament is the Big 10. They don't have a tournament. This year, a team such as Iowa will get hosed in the seeding or possibly be left out, just because it came on strong late and started slow. Also, Minnesota doesn't have a No.1 seed anchored down. A conference tournament win would secure that.
Anyone who thinks we should get rid of the conference tournament is a fool. Big 12 officials and those such as yourself who act as though the Big 12 is about money have no business even writing articles that have exposure to mass audiences. College basketball is a fan's game. As soon as you start regarding it as a moneymaker, you take it that final step toward making it professional. In that case, the players should be paid a salary. If that's where you're headed, fine. If not, quit writing articles with no sensible basis for their justification.
Have I missed baseball stories?
DANCE
said the team wanted to return to its winning ways.
Continued from Page 1B
"The loss against K-State really made us angry, to say the least," Trapp said. "For now, we just want to focus on getting past these two rounds to get to the Sweet Sixteen. We're going to play with a lot of emotion because we're ready to win again."
The Jayhawks will face a school making its first appearance in the NCAA Tournament.
Detroit Mercy has won 11 consecutive games, dating back to Jan. 30. The Titans had lost back-to-back home games against conference opponents Wisconsin-Milwaukee and Wisconsin-Green Bay before the streak started.
Five players average double figures in scoring for Detroit Mercy, a team that likes to run. Leading the Titans is forward Shafarrah Hill, who averages a team-high 14.1 points a game and shoots better than 40 percent from behind the three-point line.
The Titans swept the regular-season and conference titles in the Midwestern Collegiate Conference this season. They have played one Big 12 opponent this season, Texas, and lost 66-54. Kansas lost 82-72 to the Longhorns on Jan. 18 in Austin, Texas
"We need to work together because it's five players on a court that have to play good defense," Trapp said. "Even though it's a real general goal, it'll be important when we play some really tough teams who will constantly come at us at the offensive end."
While Detroit Mercy might try to win the game on offense, Trapp said Kansas had worked hard during the season to win games by playing tough defense.
largest crowd despite being much smaller than the other schools.
Detroit Mercy assistant coach LaTonya Tate said the school, which has an enrollment of about 7,500 students, will have between 100 and 150 people in Lawrence supporting the team.
Last year in the opening rounds of the tournament, more than 3,000 Southwest Missouri State fans drove to Lawrence when their team played its first-round game at Allen Field House. Also, more than 200 fans flew from Austin, Texas, to watch the Longhorns in the tournament.
Kansas recorded two of its top six attendance marks in school history during last year's tournament.
In a first-round game against Middle Tennessee State, the Jayhawks drew 5,279 people. In a second-round game against Texas, they drew 4,450 people.
Although no team falls within Kansas' geographical boundaries this year, ticket office associate Kathy Frederickson said Kansas had sold more than 1,000 all-tournament packages. The package includes tickets to both first-round games tomorrow and the second-round game on Monday night.
FANS
Continued from Page 1B
"Some teams have paid as much as $1,500 for a red-eye flight to get to their first and second-round site." Kathy Anderson Washington basketball staff
"We've done pretty good with our ticket sales so far," Frederickson said. "There are a lot of people that can go to the games on Saturday night but can't go to the game on Monday night. Those people might not buy the package for all three games, but we expect to sell a lot of tickets when the games are played."
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Pitcher holding out for Yankees
SAN DIEGO — The Cincinnati Reds are the latest to bid for the rights to Japanese star and righthanded pitcher Hideki Irabu.
The Reds are the ninth team to submit a trade proposal to the San Diego Padres, offering a package of players — including at least one with a big salary — for the rights to Irabu. Reds general manager Jim Bowden declined to discuss specifics Wednesday.
The Associated Press
One published report said the Reds would offer Pete Schourek, who is making $2.64 million this season and is coming off major elbow
BODIES
surgery. A baseball source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Padres were not interested.
REDS
New York Mets general manager Joe McIvaine, who has made a bid for Irabu's rights, said he was led to believe the Padres were going to finalize a deal for Irabu two to three days ago.
San Diego obtained Irabu's rights in January from the Chiba Lotte Marines of Japan's Pacific League, but the star right-hander has refused
to negotiate with the Padres. He has repeatedly said he would sign only with the New York Yankees.
On Tuesday, Irabu's agent faxed a letter to all major league general managers, saying the right-hander would return to Japan and sit out the season unless he's allowed to sign with the Yankees by March 18.
"We're still on the same schedule, trying to make some decisions and take some action this week if possible," Padres president Larry Lucchino said.
The Padres earlier told the Yankees they wanted shortstop Derek Jeter and $4 million for Irabu's rights, with the Yankees also getting San Diego shortstop Chris Gomez.
The Padres are now believed to be asking the Yankees for two prospects, power-hitting outfielder Ricky Ledew and right-hander
Rafael Medina, plus a substantial amount of cash.
Also Wednesday, union chief Donald Fehr sent management negotiator Randy Levine a letter threatening to file a grievance if Irabu is not allowed to sign with the Yankees.
When told Irabu has said it was his childhood dream to pitch for the Yankees, Bobby Valentine, now manager of the Mets, said: "If that's his childhood dream, then he's in for a rude awakening."
Today's Birthday (March 14)
Arles (March 21-April 19) — Today is an 8.
You're even smarter than usual. Don't let this
golden moment go to waste. Learn something
that will make you not only popular, but also
fabulously wealthy. This is not an impossible
dream. Even if it is, so what? Today is a great
day for impossible dreams.
Make the necessary changes in your domestic environment this year. That means either fix up your place or move. Make plans in March. Spend wisely in April. Make changes in June. Snuggle in July. Don't make waves in August. You're lucky at work in September. December's good for a career change. You're spurred into action in January. A surprise is to your benefit in February. Your self-confidence gets a boost next March.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7. Read through the paper again. You may find a going-out-of-business sale that meets your needs exactly. Make plans to do the garage sale early tomorrow morning, too. People will be getting rid of perfectly good stuff. They'll practically be throwing it away. Be there.
HOROSCOPES
Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is an 8. Today, you'll be a good enough salesperson to sell bubble bath to cats. You still have to remember to be appropriate and polite. That means you should behave like the most important person in the group you're approaching.
You're still smart, but the game is getting more complicated. You'll have to work harder to achieve the same amount of goodies you got easily yesterday. That's just the way it goes. No need to complain about it. One of your greatest assets is your poise.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 7.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 7.
You and your friends can have lots of fun today, but you need to get the work done, too.
That's the bad news. The good news is that you might get that promotion you've been wanting. Offer to do more work. But first, figure out what kind of work you want to do.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sep. 22) — Today is an 8.
Your boss or professor will have all kinds of new assignments for you today. You'll be racing around from early in the morning until quitting time, at least. Luckily, you're a well-organized person. Today, that's crucial.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is an 8.
Although there's still plenty of work to be done, it's not as difficult. This is amazing, because it might be exactly the same job you were working on yesterday. You're also in the mood to travel. Call a friend who lives far away and invite yourself over for the weekend.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7.
Your friends can help you get the money you need. Let them know how much you want. They'll either pitch in or help you make a valuable contact. This is a pretty good time to put money down on a house or apartment, too.
Have you outgrown the place you're in?
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is an 8.
You're not stuck doing tedious chores. Instead, you'll get to go on an intellectual adventure. Want to do a very good deed, too? Convince your antagonist there's an ethical standard that should be maintained.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9.
This is a pretty good day to ask for a raise. You might get a loan, too, if you need one. If you've already got all the money you want, put some more of it into your investments. The more you stash away, the richer you'll be down the road.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8.
You've already done most of the hard stuff for this week. A surprise works in your favor this morning. You'll get a chance later in the day to use information you've recently acquired. This evening is excellent for romance.
Plsces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8.
It looks like you want to buy something for the house, but you can't quite afford it. If you want to take out a loan, you shouldn't have any trouble. People will be bending over backward to lend you money. An unusual circumstance could work to your advantage.
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
1997-1998 University/Community Service Scholarship Award
From the Kansas and Burge Unions
As a result of the efforts of many students saving the furniture and art objects while providing invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire on April 20, 1970, insurance carriers decided to present the Kansas Union with a gift. Each year, the Student Union Activities Board awards around $1,200 to deserving students who have made significant contributions to the University and Lawrence communities.
Qualifications:
- Must be a undergraduate KU student this spring semester and enrolled in nine or more hours.
* Must be returning to KU for the Fall 1997 and Spring 1998 semesters.
* Must have demonstrated service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
* Academics and financial need will be minimal consideration.
Applications:
Available at the SUA Box Office, Level Four in the Kansas Union. Applications must be received by noon Friday, March 21, 1997 at the SUA office. For more information, call (913) 864-3477.
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The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan
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KU Q&A offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unaware. Please call KU Info at 8634636 or Headquarters at 812-2454 for more information.
SWM age 40's brown eyes & hair, country background, animal lover. Desires female for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P.O. Box 4215 Lawrence, KS 60449.
Stering Silver Jewelry For Gvs Gals & Gals,
hoover, naval rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Ete. Shop. 928 Mass.
110 Business Personals
110 Business Personals
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
GISTEM
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
120 Announcements
3 Years. +112% (curious?)
If you are a participant in the TIAA-CREF Retirement Program, please visit http://mcclaskey.interkan.net
120 Announcements
Need a 2-way ride to Daytona FL, also would like Call or leave message or mail by area. Call or leave message for Donna Z.
INDEPENDENT FILM AUDITION casting for feature film. All ages and experience levels: 9-5 Sat, March 15 in the Pine Rm. of K.U. Union. Call Jeff at 832-887-683.
KU, tebian, hisxual, transgender or unsure?
KU QA4 offers a confidential support group
Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. Call KU info at 864-3506
or Headquarters at 864-2434 for information.
NUDE RECREATION
North American Nudist Directory lists 100's of beach beaches, clubs, & resorts in your area and around the country. 24 hour contact: 1-612-479-8788
Men & Women needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research studies. Earn up to $1000/wk. 24 Hour info(2.5 minutes):1-812-787-4778.
NEED $$$$$$$$ ?
125 Travel
AAAiSpring Break '97. Cancun, Jamaica,
&Aa!!!! nights & air/fair @ 93. Enjoy
fly & wine Dirty Fries, No Cocoa & Best
Bars, & enjoy the accolade!! Endless Tourure
80-294-7007
A HOUSE IN BRECKENBROOK AVAILABLE
with water, electricity and reservations needed. Call Steve at 331-1065.
125 Travel
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Now hire all positions. Need AM/PM hours, 9'T or
10'T position. Apply within. 3141 Clinton Parkway
Lakefront
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MWF 3pm-6p to work with children age 18 mo-5 yrs. A.M. & B.M. Substitutes needed also-Call Rosemary 843-417.
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. 6 wk sum.
Instructor needs to fill in the Lake Quivira.
KS? Questions: Cell 294-4877.
Part-time delivery driver needed. Drugs free. Applic in person. Carquest Auto Parts. Call (866) 327-9451.
BabySitter needed. Monday-Friday in Eudora.
Have own transportation and provide
reference.
MAKE THE MONEY YOU DESERVE
Excellent profit potential with new company, get in before the growth explosion! Recorded message: 1-800-640-2374.
205 Help Wanted
Help wanted for after school care of a yr old, boy Car needed for picking up from school and some driving to baseball practice. M Th 3:40 - 4: Female pre-writes /references. 875/ week. 749-3043
Student hourly secretary. 8$/hr. 15$/hr. \wk.
Good computer skills. All applications can be picked up at the desk.
NANNY
Wanted 87 students. Lose 8-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough.Doctor recommended. Guaranteed. $30 cost. Free gift. 1-800-459-7591.
JON'S NOTES
Now hiring Fitness Instructor, M. W. F 6am to
12pm. Health & Fitness knowledge/Experience
referred. See Baird, 4,120 Clinton Prk. EOE
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in Picoono Mtns. of PA
and the surrounding beautiful
and special counselors
215-870-9700 or e-mail: ninetine@nondock.com
ALVAMAR NAUTILUS
Jo. Co. professionals seek a loving caring and
responsible Nanny to care for their infant daughter.
M : 8. f : m. to 6 p : m. References and background checked Cable Callen at Jackie at 6:57-01-96
Note taker needed for Chem 184 MWF 12:30-12:10;
Chem. 188 MWF 9:30-9:20. Must have completed
his or higher w/ an. A ann $10-$15 per lecture.
Call Nancy at 843-3485.
205 Help Wanted
Part time help needed calling on behalf of SADD. Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/hr plus commission, schedule you own hours. Come join our friendly team! Job duties include M-TH 4pm-1pm and fill out an application. EOE
Apartment Manager. Rapidly growing management firm is currently seeing out individual to join our management team. Experience preferred but will train right train person. Apply at first position. Inc. 1820 W, 8th or mail resume to PO. Box 1832 north KS. 69044
Babbette/sanny wanted, Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, on Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
own car, experience, and knowledge of child
development. Send letter, resume, schedule, and
reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Shurpe Flint.
**STUDENT WORK. up to $92.85. Net I'TO.拿
immediate PMT/FT' entry level openings in
Lawrence & JCOC. Flexible day, evening,
weekend schedules. All majors accepted. Co-OP &
scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Call my
JOCE office at (931) 83-28WK (1am-5pm)
A 24 hr diner w/bar & pool. Located at 1105 Mass in former Tin Pan Alley. Now hiring kitchen, service, & bar manager. Labors. Apply in person after 3 today. Bartenders & cooks all shifts.
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club, adj-
cate to campus has openings for banquet servers,
bartenders and hosts. Flexible hours, some day-
time and weekend availability preferred. Above
min. wage, employee meal plan in a professional,
and overtime pay at its average six nights.
Apply at 1265 Gread Ave
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 14, 1997
205 Help Wanted
LAKE SHAWNEE GOLF COURSE: Topeka
Opportunity for an individual who enjoys working with food preparation and customer service.
Lake Shawnee Golf Cafe has opportunities for the
careers of a golf instructor, trainer,
apply. Apply at Lakes Shawnee G.C., 411 SE East
Edge Rd., Topeka 267-2395.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/bgls/gta summer camp. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, watersports, gymnastics, softball, golf, art, computers, campers, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance Salary $150,000/GW/CW/176 Maple, Mphe, IL. 60099. 847-446-2444.
Food Service Supervisors. 2 positions available @ The Mass Server, Dail. To Bob's Smokehouse, 15-30 hours per week. Must have experience in food service & 1 year experience in supervising. $6.90-$4.00 per hour based on prior experience. Profit share bonus up to $1,500. Apply at Schumm Food Company business office @ 719 Mass. (upstairs above smokehouse).
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN. Deadline: 3/14/97.
Salary $6.50-12.5/hour. 20 lrs per week. Duties include install, configure & customize software products. Participate in system testing & applications library maintenance. Required qualification. Bachelor's degree plus 10 months of 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.systesting.com or send a programming example to Ann Riat, Computer Center, University of Kansas. EO/AA EMPLOYEE
Systems Specialist: Responsibilities include support for DOS-based degree auditing/report writing system written in C. Requirements include being an English speaker in C. Programming. Salary beginning at $30,000.
For position announcement, call (913) 864-4258.
Position available immediately. To apply: submit letter specifying qualifications and reasons for interest; a resume; names, addresses and telephone numbers of three references to Chair of the Board of Trustees; and names, 37 Strong Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60405. Materials received by March 26 will be given priority. EEO/AA
Corrections/Security: Detention Specialist.
Responsible for direct supervision of juveniles assigned to the Center. Complete paperwork as required, perform duties required of assigned post. Requirements: Over the age of 21. High School or equivalent academic study at the college level in adolescent development, psychology or related subject or have equivalent training courses in child development or caring for youth or both or one years experience as a child care worker or house parent in a facility serving children. Req. Bachelor's degree and resume and job history to FJAC, P.O. Box 1025, Topeka, Kansas. 66619. Applications will be accepted until March 21, 1997. Telephone (815) 828-0911/Fax (815) 828-0911
Seeking students majoring in social/human service fields for hands on experience & interdisciplinary credit working with children who have multiple disabilities and significant behavior disorders. Intensive training in behavioral programming provided. Staff will assist in the implementation of the program. Students will receive communication, self-help and functional living skills in a residential setting. Positions are live-in working five days on and off two days. Salary for 9 week program is $2,560 to $3,800 depending on assignment and work schedule. Prefer applicants who can communicate well. Related exp. Call 2827-8271 or 1-800-835-1043, ext. 232 or submit resume to: Human Resources, Heartspring, 2400 Jardin Dr., Wichita, KS 67219
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with position as faculty member. Please be candidate in candidate who will be at KU for next two years and will have no other job commitments. Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of academic interests in UNIVERSITY resources, highly computer literate (Macintosh), solid research skills, leadership and supervisory experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, interest in helping others. Must have Master's or equivalent in UNIVERSITY Union for an application. Will consider on first basis with final deadline for applications. Spm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
HELP WANTED — SOFTBALL UMPIRES
DEPARTMENT IS LOOKING FOR INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN WORKING AS THE SUMMER AND FALL LEAGUES.
TRAINING SESSIONS WILL BEGIN MARCH 15TH AND WILL CONTINUE DURING MARCH. ATTEND THESE SESSIONS YOU WILL ATTEND THESE SESSIONS LEAGUE PLAY BEGINS IN APRIL AND CONTINUES THROUGH OCTOBER. ANYONE INTERMEDIATE MUST GO TO SPORTS OFFICE AT 89-792 IMMEDATELY YOU WILL BE MAILED THE DATES AND TIMES OF THE TRAINING MEETINGS.
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
Inso Kansas City Corporation
Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 84112
Fax: (816) 753-8387
E-mail: hr-kc@lnso.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
Inso
CORPORATION
www.inso.com
205 Help Wanted
"Now hiring, restaurant worker, all positions, all shifts. Pay starting at $6.50 and up, depending on experiences and availability. Please apply in person or call 292-2330. You may pay between 2:00 and 5:00 M or call 292-2330."
JCPenney
Fine jewelry selling specialist job available.
Selling experience preferred; commission
par plan; part-time. Flexible schedule.
Some daytime available & required. Generous
employee discount plan
JCPENNY CO.
1801 W. 23rd. EOE/M/F/V/H
Juicers
Needs a few good Men for Male Night
Apply in person,
if you think you
have what it takes
Coming soon:
Mondays are Ladies night
Ladies only
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800) -733-2404
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's and alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
TO HELP US
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
235 Typing Services
Call Jack at 823-8484 for applications, term
inquiries or other questions. Satisfaction guaranteed. Makin' the Grade.
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/ior writer
Quality top quality paper for you; Call Donna @ 845-266-2960
---
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Jeep Wrangler Soft Top, Light Grey $200 B.O.B.
Call Jim @ 832-2743-274
G.E. heavy-duty W/D, extra large capacity,
white, $250 or best offer, #84-2297
Laptop-Toshiba 48DX2B-5X5. Color Display. 330 HD, 20mm memory,软件@ 864-17054
Macintosh Performa with color monitor and color writer. Call 838-8297 for details.
1990 FORD PROBE Excellent Condition:
1990 FORD PROBE Excellent Condition:
500 miles, highway mileage. Call 800-390-3901
or 800-390-3902 for details.
FINAL FOUR TICKETS- Two seats/six games.
FUNNY BOOK 10/25
(620)729-8468. Leave message.
(620)729-8468. Leave message.
Mintosht IIsi with high resolution monitor and lazer printer. Lots of software.
Call 331-2125 for details.
Get reprints of your favorite Jayhawk players and other Big 12 basketball players from The Sports Illustrated magazine available of most photos by Staff star documentors. Call StarInfo 816-234-4561 for details.
340 Auto Sales
www.supertoracum.com Pictures of pre-owned
phones. Call 1-800-845-ACTUR for more info. Ask for Pa-
phone 1-800-845-ACTUR
Light blue 1911 Chevy Corsica, A/C, AM/FM radio, very reliable, 4900 or best offer 843-2397.
'90 Toyota Terceil, manual trans., runs well.
$2,000, obo 884-6749
186 Mitsubishi Monitor 4WD. 4 spd. blac. a/c/95K. Good cond. Run well. $999. Call 331-8512.
360 Miscellaneous
THE CHAPMAN
USED & CURIOUS GOODS
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues. - Sat.
BUY • SELL • TRADE
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
405 For Rent
Summer Sub lease 3 BR, 1/2 bath, W/D, on KU bus rt. Rent #644/mo call 832-9986
Studio, 1-3 BIR, also 5 BR house all near KU. Call 841-9254.
1 new 1bdm. Locks of extras. $340. Great deal.
841-5659. Available immediately.
2 BDRM, 2 bath College Hill condo, W/d,
microwave, water pd. Avail Aug Rental $75.
Call (800) 236-4911.
Available now-3 bedroom. 1 bath. Washer/Dryer
fully equipped. On kbu Bus. Kitchen
available.
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
6 Bedroom house. Great location! Available for 1 year lease starting new fall. Filled in Fall of '98.
$ 3 be $1dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 4 be $2dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 6 be $3dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 8 be $4dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 10 be $5dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 13 be $6dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 16 be $7dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 19 be $8dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 22 be $9dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 25 be $10dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 28 be $11dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 31 be $12dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 34 be $13dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 37 be $14dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 40 be $15dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 43 be $16dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 46 be $17dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 49 be $18dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 52 be $19dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 55 be $20dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 58 be $21dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 61 be $22dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 64 be $23dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 67 be $24dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 70 be $25dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 73 be $26dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 76 be $27dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 79 be $28dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 82 be $29dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 85 be $30dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 88 be $31dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 91 be $32dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 94 be $33dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 97 be $34dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 100 be $35dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 103 be $36dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 106 be $37dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 109 be $38dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 112 be $39dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 115 be $40dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 118 be $41dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 121 be $42dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 124 be $43dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 127 be $44dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 130 be $45dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 133 be $46dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 136 be $47dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 139 be $48dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 142 be $49dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 145 be $50dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 148 be $51dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 151 be $52dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 154 be $53dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 157 be $54dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 160 be $55dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 163 be $56dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 166 be $57dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 169 be $58dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 172 be $59dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 175 be $60dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 178 be $61dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 181 be $62dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 184 be $63dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 187 be $64dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 190 be $65dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 193 be $66dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 196 be $67dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 199 be $68dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 202 be $69dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 205 be $70dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 208 be $71dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 211 be $72dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 214 be $73dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 217 be $74dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 220 be $75dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 223 be $76dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 226 be $77dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 229 be $78dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 232 be $79dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 235 be $80dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 238 be $81dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 241 be $82dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 244 be $83dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 247 be $84dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 250 be $85dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 253 be $86dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 256 be $87dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 259 be $88dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 262 be $89dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 265 be $90dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 268 be $91dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 271 be $92dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 274 be $93dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 277 be $94dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 280 be $95dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 283 be $96dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 286 be $97dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 289 be $98dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 302 be $99dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 305 be $100dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 308 be $101dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 311 be $102dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 314 be $103dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 317 be $104dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 320 be $105dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 323 be $106dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 326 be $107dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 329 be $108dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 332 be $109dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 335 be $110dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 338 be $111dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 341 be $112dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 344 be $113dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 347 be $114dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 350 be $115dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 353 be $116dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 356 be $117dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 359 be $118dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 362 be $119dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 365 be $120dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 368 be $121dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 371 be $122dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 374 be $123dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 377 be $124dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 380 be $125dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 383 be $126dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 386 be $127dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 389 be $128dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 392 be $129dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 395 be $130dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 398 be $131dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 399 be $132dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 402 be $133dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 405 be $134dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 408 be $135dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 411 be $136dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 414 be $137dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 417 be $138dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 420 be $139dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 423 be $140dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 426 be $141dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 429 be $142dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 432 be $143dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 435 be $144dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 438 be $145dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 441 be $146dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 444 be $147dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 447 be $148dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 450 be $149dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 453 be $150dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 456 be $151dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 459 be $152dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 462 be $153dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 465 be $154dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 468 be $155dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 471 be $156dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 474 be $157dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 477 be $158dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 479 be $159dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 482 be $160dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 485 be $161dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 488 be $162dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 489 be $163dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 492 be $164dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 495 be $165dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 498 be $166dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 499 be $167dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 502 be $168dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 505 be $169dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 508 be $170dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 511 be $172dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 514 be $173dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 517 be $174dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 520 be $175dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 523 be $176dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 526 be $177dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 529 be $178dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 532 be $179dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 535 be $180dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 538 be $181dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 541 be $182dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 544 be $183dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 547 be $184dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 549 be $185dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 552 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 555 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 558 be $188dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 561 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 564 be $185dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 567 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 569 be $188dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 572 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 575 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 578 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 581 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 584 be $185dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 587 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 589 be $188dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 592 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 595 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 598 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 599 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 602 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 605 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 608 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 611 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 614 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 617 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 619 be $188dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 622 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 625 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 628 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 631 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 634 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 637 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 640 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 643 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 646 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 649 be $188dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 652 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 655 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 658 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 661 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 664 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 667 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 670 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 673 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 676 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 679 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 682 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 685 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 688 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 691 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 694 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 697 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 699 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 702 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 705 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 708 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 709 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 712 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 715 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 718 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 721 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 724 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 727 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 729 be $189dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 732 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 735 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 738 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 741 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 744 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 747 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 749 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 752 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 755 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 758 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 761 be $186dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $ 764 be $187dm寓. 3 bkls from campus. 3 bkls from downtown. Big space; hardwood house. W/
Kitchen, laundry, game room. $
8BR houses for rent. April Aug 1
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG.1
Call (803) 642-5900 & deposit. Call
Jim Edwards @ (913) 642-5905.
CHEAP SUMMER SUBLEASE. $171/mo. + / 17
through July 51. Huge savings on
Huzeh house $887/mo. for BREW.
$26/mo. for COOKING.
Condo for Sale 3 bdrm, 2 bath, washer/dryer,
on bus route. Best view in Lawrence. Assume
FHA Loan, 970,000 OBO. Call to view 832-3081.
FURNISHED 3 BR APT, 2 BATH, W/D, AC/
BALANCE 19.50/sq ft.
/m²/cafe; calls: (444) 748-1298
/mo; call events: (444) 748-1298
Get a group 7 Available for fall 9.9dbm or 8.1dbm
on community areas,
laundry facilities, 81.9STAR (74.9STAR)
Great old house!!! Seven bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 3 living areas, 2 kitchens, all utilities paid. Next to stadium. Available August 1st. Call 843-8217.
Studio 1 & B Bedrooms. Available for summer and fall. All locations close to campus, on bus route 429.
Sublease 2 BR, 2 Bath Apt. at Tuckaway. Pool,
security, fireplace, veranda, LARGE. Will give
you deposit upon approval 843-1499
Available April 28th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Mendowbrook Apt. Fireplace, good view.
$400/month Call 864-3038 (DAY) Ask for Kerry
SUMMER SUBLEASE-
Spacious 1 BR. on KU bus route. Pool. A/C.
Call 841-7408.
SUMMER SUBLEASE-
- Bath in $3
- Designer Interior
- 3 Bed, 2 Full Bath
- On Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- No Pets
South Point
PARK VILLAS
- Built in '95
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- 1, 2, 3, 4 Bedroom
* On Bus Route
* Pool & Volleyball Court
* Pets Welcome
* Hot Water & Trash Paid
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury.
Live in Luxury.
* 1,2, & 3 Bedrooms
- Washer/Dryer
- Built-in TV Alarms System
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
405 For Rent
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
HARPER SQUARE
APARTMENTS
- 1 BR425.00
CALL 832-9918
- 2BR 610.00
- 2BR 610.00
* 3BR 725.00
- Washer/Dryer
Awesome 2-bedroom apartment for summer
next door to Yellow Sub. Have you ever
seen the T.V. show Friends? This apartment is
just as cute. $480/mo + electric, call 841-8178
2 *BR* from $440
Jezuzu in each apt.
Sk IU kku room rent
Private residence
Pd cable TV/Vites
On site management
Ouadheit 25 (bcl) C81-141-185
- New in 1996!!
Spacious Apartments and Townhouses for rent.
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher Avail.
Central Air - Closer to Campus
Studios 1,2,3 & 4 bedrooms
Call: LCA Apartments
S11-5164 (707) m
747-8186 for hotel
"Comfortable apartment house!"
LCA
Naismith Place
Call for Appointments
4:15-6pm Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
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Mackenzie Place, 1231 Kentucky. New leasing for Aug. 1. Great Location! Luxury lamps, close to shopping centers. Refrigerator, dishwasher, kitchen appliances, 2 decks or porch/patio. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-180-186.
On KU Bus Route
Low $350 per month for nice spacious quiet 2 BR apts, A/C appliances, C/A bus route and pool. Low utilisé! No pets. 1 yr leases beginning in May, June, July or Aug. Spanish Credit Apt. 611-8888
Private Courtyard
- Townhomes and
Townhomes and Residential Homes
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
COLONY WOODS
1301 W.24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
Fireplace, one-car garage
TRAILRIDGE
331-2332
- 2,3,4 bedroom townhouses available
Hawthorn Place
3HotTubs
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
- Near shopping areas
- Small pets welcome w/deposit
- Bus Stop
- Walking distance to New Life Fitness Center
- Swimming Pool
CALL 843-7333 FOR MORE INFORMATION OR STOP BY 2500 W. 6TH ST.
1,2 & 3 Bedrooms
HIGHPOINTE
APARTMENT HOMES
Washer/Dryer Alarm System Clubhouse & Swimming Pool Workout Facility Basketball Court
405 For Rent
NOWLEASING
Call First Management 841-8468
SUMMER GUELEASE; avail. mid-May three May
13. 31 pecious bbm 3 abpm, 2 full baths, living/dining
fully equipped kitchen, big closet, cats ok. $600
+ utilities. Maint rent free. Call 837-6817.
GATEWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 841-8468.
NOWLEASING
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
10-Month Leases Available!
--equestrian and martial services oriented community. Studies 1,2&3 Bdm Ants
Apartments
Holiday Apartments
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
Park25
- On KU Bus Route
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1&2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
meadowbrook FALL'97
--equestrian and martial services oriented community. Studies 1,2&3 Bdm Ants
MOVE IN NOW...
Tropical Island
One Month Free Rent
843-2116
11th and Miss
Berkeley Flats(EHF)
One Month Free Rent On lease through July 31 1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment Call or stop by today
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to come see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
Move In Now..
FLATS
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
*2 Bedroom $400-$445
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
water paid
211 Mount Hope Court #1
Leasing for Summer & Fall
For more Info, or Appt.
Studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts.
2 & 3 Bdrm. Townhouses
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
call or stop by today
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly, service-
841-7726
- 2 Pools
Shannon Plaza Apartments
3 Bus Stop:
- 2 Volleyball Areas
- 3 Bus Stops
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat. 1-4 Sun
JUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1408
tenn. a student housing alternative. Open
& diverse membership, non profit operation,
democratic control. $39-130 per dum. wiki dinners.
/D/ #dile, Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop
814-984-068.
405 For Rent
PINNACLE WOODS
1*23' br. luxury apt. homes
5000 Clinton Pkwy.
1/4 ml. west of Wakarusa
All new - 865-5454
Quail Creek Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive 843-4300 Call for Appt.
"In a busy, impersonal world,
we provide good old-fashioned personalized service."
Managed & maintained by Professionals
430 Roommate Wanted
3-rooms for rent. Nice house. Good price. Please
call 749-2886.
1 roommate wanted to share house. $80/mth.
2 roommates from blocks from campus. Small
OR. Friendly. 76-8300. 76-8300.
Female Sem. Sublease needed middle of May to reach campus. Apply by June 15 on KU bus route. Close to campus, Call 832-804-6841.
Non-smoking females needed immediately to non-smoking Bentley apartment, close to campus Furnished 8 bed apt, close to campus
2 Females to share 5 bedroom luxurious home,
$250/mo. +/mo. +/all amenities, 1/2 mile from
Campus, no pets, W/D., A/C, Call 865-5625
Pre-prenatal lives in Lawrence area seeks another gay/girl friendly person share a townhouse/duplex with non-smoker, social drinker and is willing to help you with two. If interested please call (913) 371-1288.
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form before and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on used 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 gaps lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Credit, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused夕乡。Returns on cancelled ads that were not a bye by check or with cash are not available.
no unused days. Refonds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Blind Box Numbers:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
| Man. of insertions: | Cost per line per day | 1X | 2-3X | 4-7X | 0-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 3 lines | 2.30 | 1.80 | 1.20 | 1.00 | 0.80 | 0.65 | 0.60 |
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| 8+ lines | 2.00 | 1.10 | 0.90 | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.45 | 0.45 |
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days =$18.00 (4 lines X 90s per line X 5 days).
Classifications
140 last 8 found 369 for sale
225 help wanted 340 data sales
225 professional services 369 mileslaneen
225 other needs
105 personaol
110 businesspersonaol
129 anunciocomments
138 articulamentool
ADS MUST FOLLOW KAMSA POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1 | | | | | |
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Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ed begins:___ Total days in paper___
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Account number:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
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Familiar the following if you are charging an ad:
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hait, Lawrence, KS. 66845
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Friday, March 14, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas vs. Jackson State: At the game
KANSAS
31
Center Scot Pollard slams the ball for two points in the Jayhawks' win against Jackson State. The Jayhawks will play again at 1:25 p.m. tomorrow against Purdue.
JACKSON
50
Above: Forward Reef Lafrentz resists pressure from Jackson State University's defender.
ROUND
Left: Kansas coach Roy Williams yells at his players in the second half of yesterday's game.
Union Technology Center
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Show pride in your achievement with personalized Graduation Announcements (Ready Within 72 Hours) Gowns, Caps & Tassels and
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Grad
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at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road 843-3826
Basketball: Men's team defeats Purdue, heads to the Sweet 16. Page 1B
St. Patrick's Day: Green beer, parade highlight today's festivities. Page 8A
****************3-DIGIT 6664
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
ADVERTISING 864-4358
MONDAY, MARCH 17. 1997
SECTION A VOL.103.NO.119
Quick LOOK
Henley enters plea of no contest to charges
June Henley, former KU running back, pleaded no contest Friday in municipal court to driving under the influence. His sentencing hearing was postponed until April 11. Henley was arrested Oct. 24 last year. Charges of speeding, driving without a valid license and no proof of insurance were dropped.
KU student arrested in hit-and-run Friday
A KU student hit a 37-year-old Lawrence man with his car about 2:20 a.m. Friday in the 2400 block of Ousdahl Road.
Todd Zimmerman, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, was arrested Friday morning after Lawrence police found his vehicle a few minutes after the hit-and-run.
(USPS 650-640)
The victim reported that he was clipped by a southbound Isuzu Rodeo as he was walking across Ousdahl Road, Lawrence police said. The car then swerved to the left side of the road and onto the curb, the victim said.
The vehicle went through a wooden fence into a yard and destroyed a mailbox, police said. The damaged car was spotted later in a parking lot in the 1500 block of West 25th Court. Police said that alcohol was believed to have been a factor in the incident.
Zimmerman was released from the Douglas County Jail Friday morning on $600 bond.
—Kansan staff report
Kansas universities make admission harder
WICHITA — High school freshmen planning to attend a state university in Kansas must, beginning this fall, take courses aimed at preparing them for college.
Under the new rules, Kansas universities will require students to meet state minimum standards for a high school diploma and to take another year each of math, computer science and science, including physics.
Education officials have made the preparatory curriculum changes, but the list of high school courses needed to meet the new admission standards falls short of a recommendation by the National Commission on Excellence in Education.
But students failing to meet those standards can still get into a state university with a decent ACT score, a ranking in the top third of their graduating class or just some good luck.
Passage of the legislation removed Kansas' peculiarity as the only state university system in the nation without admission standards. But Kansas' standards are among the weakest anywhere.
Retired Soviet spy ends silence about espionage
WASHINGTON — Breaking decades of silence on perhaps the most sensational espionage case of the Cold War, a retired Soviet spy says that Julius Rosenberg helped organize a 1940s espionage ring for Moscow but was not directly involved in stealing U.S. secrets about the atomic bomb.
Rosenberg and his wife Ethel were executed in 1953 for what some called the "crime of the century"—helping the Soviet Union get blue-prints for the atomic bomb in World War II. The only Americans ever executed for spying, the Rosenbergs, died insisting they were not guilty.
The new twist in the long-argued story of treachery comes from Alexander Feklisov, 83, a retired KGB officer who has stepped forward with a detailed account of the Rosenbergs' role. Feklisov said that he held clandestine meetings with Julius Rosenberg in New York from 1943 to 1946 and claims to be the only Soviet intelligence officer still alive with firsthand knowledge of the Rosenberg case.
—The Associated Press
Pablo Picasso
"It's like being in between two cultures when you can't quite blend in with one or the other. Sometimes I think my life would be much easier if I had never come here."
Ulviye Emirzade Cyprus graduate student
A clash comes from international students' obligations to return home and their desire to stay in the United States. Students turn to higher education, pursuing degrees that may never be used. By graduation, students have reached a
Conflict of Interests
Story by Eric Weslander Illustrations by Mitch Lucas
T
hey came to the Clinton County Jail in Plattsburg, Mo., every Saturday morning. Hotel Morning Cafe, Francisco
ing. Hamel Mesin's friends, many of them fellow international students, showed their IDs and, in pairs, went to tell Mesin of the latest happenings at the University of Kansas.
Known to his friends as Mamush, Mesfin was waiting for the verdict on his deportation to Ethiopia.
9.
"They are doing a great job to keep my spirits up," said Mesfin, who had lost weight from eating the jail's food. "There are so many great people out there, and I'm very, very, extremely grateful."
--tion to Ethiopia.
International students are a closely knit group. They need to be. They easily can get caught up in the worldwide competition that aims to lure students to foreign shores with promises of creating better lives back home. But they also get a taste of the United
Only through thick glass and only for five minutes at a time, friends offered the former KU junior glimpses of his past life.
But once they get a taste of the United
See CONFLICT OF INTERESTS, Page 5A
Revue gives $30,000 to United Way
New tally breaks donation record
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
Mission accomplished—the curtain for the 48th Rock Chalk Revue fell Saturday at the Lied Center.
This year the living groups involved in the revue completed 34,390 hours of community service and donated $30,000 to the United Way of Douglas County.
"We broke the record this year," said Andrew Schauder, community service coordinator and Green Bav. Wis., junior.
Last year the living groups donated $27,000 and completed 30,000 hours of community service.
Following the final curtain call, the revue's advisory board presented awards.
The check was presented on stage to United Way staff members.
Pi Beta Phi and Phi Gamma Delta's Accidentally Midnight swept the awards with the best overall show, best actress, best supporting actor and best original music. They tied for best use of set with Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Nu for Song Wars.
Revue winners
Best Overall Show
Allison Doubleday, Lenexa sophomore and winner of the best actress award, said that she owed her success to the whole cast.
Bio Overall Show
Accidentally Midnight by Pi Beta
Phi and Phi Gamma Delta
Best Actress
Trey Hohman (Song Wars by Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Nu)
Allison Doubleday (Accidentally Midnight)
Best Actress
1978
GR Gordon-Ross / KANSAN
Best supporting Actor Chris DeTray (Accidentally Midnight)
Best Supporting Actress
Best Supporting Actor
Best Supporting Actress
Julie Rashid (The Precious Spotlight by Delta Gamma and Delta Upsilon)
"I feel very flattered, and I am very happy, but it's the whole show that deserved the award," Doubleday said. "I wouldn't have been able to win the award if the rest of the cast didn't support me."
Allison McConachie, Maggie Brophy, and Chris DeTray celebrate as PI Beta Phi and PH Gamma Delta are selected as the overall winners at Rock Chalk Revue Saturday night.
Gamma Phi Beta and Phi Delta Theta received the award for best production for their show *The Family Jewels*. Trey Hohman, Topeka senior, won the Best Actor Award for *Song Wars*. Julie Rashid, Potomac, Md., senior, received the award for best supporting actress for her role in *The Precious Spotlight*. Chris DeTray, Bucy sophomore, was awarded best supporting actor for his role in *Accidentally Midnight*.
Alpha Delta Pi and company won the best costume award.
"That was really great," sato Krista McGlohon, Topeka senior and Alpha Delta Pi cast member. She said that members resized the costumes for new male cast members nine days ago after their previous partners Pi Kappa Alpha were removed from the revue.
After several months of intensive preparation, students in the revue said that they would miss the time they worked together for the show.
Delta Force offers kegs along with candidates Coalition wants more student involvement
By Dave Morantz Kansan staff writer
Delta Force's campaign kick-off party Saturday night looked more like a scene from Animal House than a typical campaign party.
The party was part of a non-traditional Student Senate coalition's attempt to bring sweeping changes to the Senate.
Two bands played to a packed house while candidates and campaign supporters huddled around the kegs.
And yes, alcohol is allowed at campaign functions as long as no city or University ordinances are broken, said Chad Perlov, elections commissioner.
Delta Force, led by Jason Fizell, Olathe junior, and Matt Caldwell, Lawrence junior, will oppose the Unite coalition in the campaign for Senate elections on April 9 and 10.
Despite the fact that Delta Force only offers 37 people for 65 seats, Fizell said he would prefer a smaller group of dedicated candidates rather than a full coalition of candidates picked simply to fill an open seat.
Fizell is running for president and Caldwell for vice president. They will face Unite campaign candidates Scott Sullivan and Mike Walden, Leawood juniors, and independent candidates Michael Yaghmour, Pittsburg junior, and David Hennessy, Ballston Lake, N.Y. junior.
The coalition held the house party as an effort to reach out to students who traditionally were not involved in Senate. Fizell estimated that more than 250 people had attended the party at a coalition member's house at 1236 Louisiana St. Caldwell said that IDs of those wanting to drink had been checked at the party.
Caldwell said that some of Delta Force's key issues included a consolidated city and University transportation system that would not involve KU on Wheels, student-escorts to walk people to and from cars and campus buildings late at night, campus-wide recycling, a re-evaluation of linear tuition, improvements to Robinson Center, the construction of a new child-care facility with financial help from the administration and the adoption of a proactive stance against the South Lawrence Trafficway.
But most importantly, Delta Force wants input and involvement from people who have not traditionally participated in Senate activities, Caldwell said.
"I realized that I can't complain about Student Senate if I'm not going to do anything about it," said Whitney Black, Wichita junior and candidate for an off-campus seat.
Campaign supporters said that they were impressed with the attitudes of the members of the Delta Force.
"One of the things that strikes me is we have so many people actually helping with the coalition," said Danielle Rand, Lawrence senior and campaign supporter. "It shows that it's more than just résumé candy."
TODAY
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 7A
Features ... 8A
Scoreboard ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 4B
Classifieds ... 7B
MOSTLY CLOUDY
High 62° Low 41°
Weather: Page 2A
2A
Monday, March 17, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
V
QuickINFO
WEATHER
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
62
Mostly cloudy and slightly warmer.
TUESDAY
48
CAMPUS EVENTS
43
Scattered showers and thunder storms.
WEDNESDAY
46
Clearing skies and partly cloudy.
33
معرفة الاتصال
باللونية والكاملية
المباشرة والمنفذة
المباشرة والمنفذة
Assemblages featuring artwork by Karen Jacks and Ardyas Rambeng will be the Phoenix Gallery, 919 Mass. Street. For more information, call 843-0800.
ON CAMPUS
International Student Services and Legal Services for Students will sponsor an Income tax workshop for international students at 3 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Daphne Johnn at 864-3617.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at the Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the Rev. Raymond May at 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call the Rev. Raymond Mav at 843-0357.
**KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson. For more information, call Adam Cannon at 842-9112.**
International Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Colvard at 841-1010.
KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Pannir at 864-7736.
The Orthodox Christian Fellowship will pray Great Compline at 6:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel. For more information, call Andreas Andreou at 864-6520.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have the Fundamentals of Catholicism at 7 onight at the St. Lawrence Center, 1831 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
The Orthodox Christian Fellowship will sponsor a presentation by the Rev. John Mack on The Divine Services: Vespers, Orthros and the Divine Liturgy, at 7:30 tonight at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andres Andreau at 864-6520.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's checkbook, credit cards and miscellaneous items were stolen between 1 and 8 a.m. March 7 from a car in the 3800 block of Clinton Parkway, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $30.
A KU student's car stereo, money and miscellaneous items were stolen
between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 10 a.m.
Wednesday from a car in the 1900
block of Stewart, Lawrence police said,
items were valued at $770.
A KU student's driver's side window was broken, and radar detector was stolen between 2:30 p.m. Tuesday and 11 a.m. Wednesday from a car in
Weston Square, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $200.
A KU student's car stereo, radar detector and miscellaneous items were stolen between 4:30 and 4:47 a.m. Thursday from a car in the 1900 block of Stewart, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $956.
Teen claims he's victim of gang violence
Kansan staff ; report
A Central Junior High student told Lawrence police that he was the alleged victim of a gang retaliation Thursday.
Police said that the 15-year-old boy was walking in front of the school about 3 p.m. when a gold car pulled up beside him. The student said that
several older boys came out of the car and ran after him. He said that one boy kicked him in the knee, and then two others held him on the ground and another hit him in the face.
The victim said that the incident was retaliation for a comment he made about gang members when he was a student at West Junior High last year.
a witness told the police that several older boys ran out of a yellow Cadillac and hit the victim.
A yellow Cadillac was spotted by Lawrence police officers later in the afternoon on the KU campus. They stopped the car behind Summerfield Hall. Police talked to the five boys in the car, who were described as 16 to 18 years old.
Police are reviewing the incident.
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
Wants YOU!
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Coordinator positions available include:
Do you want to be part of one of the most exciting organizations on campus? Student Union Activities is searching for motivated, interesting and knowledgeable people to join our team! SUA is responsible for producing quality recreational, social and educational entertainment.
Communications Organize SUA promotional material and inform the University community about SUA events. Coordinate the SUA Homepage. Assist with the organization of Union Fest. Support SUA events. Run weekly Communications Committee meetings.
Feature Films Program contemporary and blockbuster films. Plan sneak previews. Work with Spectrum Films Committee to design SUA movie posters and calendars. Plan live satellite broadcasts of concerts, comedians and educational programs through Network Event Theater Run weekly Feature Films Committee meetings.
SUA Coordinator applications are available at the SUA Box Office, Level Four in the Kansas Union. Applications due at noonFriday, March 21, 1997.
For more information, call SUA at 864-3477 SUA Homepage: http://www.ukans.edu/~sua
Coordinators receive $1,000
scholarships
TV TONIGHT
MONDAY PRIMETIME MARCH 17, 1997 © 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 In the House Moesha (R) ♡ Moesha (R) ♡ Xane: Warrior Princess (R) ♡ Mad Abo. You Bzzz ♡ Cope ♡ LAPD
WDFA 4 Melbourne Place in Stereo (R) ♡ Married. ♡ Pauly ♡ News ♡ News ♡ H. Patrol Cheers ♡ Extra R
KCTV 5 Cosby (R) ♡ Raymond Cybill (R) ♡ Ink (Stereo) Chicago Hope in Stereo (R) ♡ News ♡ Late Show in Stereo (R) ♡ Seinfeld R
KS06 7 St. Patrick's Day Parade (R) News Plus News Plus News Plus News Plus
KCPT 7 How Serious is This? (Stereo) Soul of the West MotorWeek Charlie Rose in Stereo
KSMT 8 Fowxworth Mr. Rhodes "Born Exile Tix" (1997, Drama) Gina Philips News Tonight Show in Stereo Late Night R
XMBC 9 Spy Game in Stereo "Lies He Told" (1997, Drama) Gary Cole, Karan Silas. News Roseanne Rosanna "MA*SHA" KTWU 1 Riverdance - The Show in Stereo Danny Boy Sun or Shadow People-Here Business Ppt. Charlie Rose in Stereo
NBWB 2 Cozy (R) Raymond Cybill (R) Ink (Stereo) Chicago Hope in Stereo Late Show in Stereo Late Late
KTKA 9 Spy Game in Stereo "Lies He Told" (1997, Drama) Gary Cole, Karan Silas. News Seinfeld Married... Nightline
CABLE STATIONS
AAE 2 Biography: Sophia Loren Poirot "Double Sin" Miss Marple (Part 1 of 3) Law & Order "The Troubles" Biography: Sophia Loren
CNBC 1 Equal Time Hardball Rivera Live Late Night in Stereo Charles Grodin Rivera Live R
CNN 4 Prime News Burden-Proof King Live King World Today Sports Illus. Moneyline Showbiz
COM 4 "A*HRS." **** (1982, Comedy - Drama) Nick Note On Delivery Dream On Daily Show Comic Relief Tick Sat. Night
COURT 4 Prime Time Justice Trial Story Cochran and Grace Prime Time Justice Trial R Trial Story R
CSPN 2 Prime Time Public Affairs U-Boot War-Gray Wolves Prime Time Public Affairs R
DISC 9 Wild Discovery: Meany Earthlights Wild Discovery: Meanest Earthlings R
ESPN 1 College basketball: NIT Second Round Women's College篮球: NCAA Tour, Second Round Sportscene Women's College basketball
HIST 8 Crusades (R) (Part 1 of 4) Victory at Sea Battle Line Men in Crisis Perspectives Year by Year "163" CRusades (R) (Part 1 of 4)
LIFE 1 Unsecured Mysteries "Prison of Secrets" (1997, Drama) Stephanie Zimbazal Final Take Intolerate Por Unsolved Mysteries
MTV 1 Indie Outing Prime Time (In Stereo) Road Rules Daria Singled Out Loveline (In Stereo) Altern.Nation
SCIFI 1 Tekwar (In Stereo) Forever Knight (In Stereo) V (R) in Stereo Time Trax (R) in Stereo Tekwar (R) in Stereo
TLC 3 Extreme Machines Legends of History "Vikings" Survive in the Sky Extremes Machines R Legends of History "Vikings"
TNT 2 WCW Nitro (Live) Adventures of Roob Hood WCW Nitro R
USA 4 (6.57) World Wrestling Federation Monday Night Raw Female Nik娜 "Nilika" Wings Wings Silk Stalkings "Crime of Love"
VHI 5 Storytellers (R) Selena Dance Bandstand Sex Appeal Crossroads Soul of VHI
WGM 1 Praeseason Baseball: White Sox vs. Phillies News (in Stereo) Wiseway La "Crame d'Amore" In the Heart of the Night
WTBS 1 "Raiders of the Lost Aark" **** (181, Adventure) Harrison Ford, Karen Allen "Jaws" **** (1975) A great white shark terrorizes a New England resort town.
PREMIUM STATIONS
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Monday, March 17, 1997
3A
Improved rec center reopens
New facilities open to public
By Paul Eakins
Kansan staff writer
CARS
Aspendale
KU students and Lawrence residents have an improved place to exercise for free, after the reopening of the East Lawrence Recreation Center, 1245 E. 15th St., on Saturday.
Lawrence children enjoy the new facilities at the East Lawrence Rec Center, 1245 E. 15th St. The mayor and the city commissioners were present for the center's opening.
Among the improvements are handicapped-accessible facilities, a game room and a regulation-size gym with a wood floor.
There is a lack of gym space in Lawrence, which is why the gym was an important part of the project, said Kathy Fode, recreation superintendent and project manager for the center.
"We've needed a big, regulation gym like that for a long time," Fode said.
She said that the $2 million project had been delayed by bad weather.
"Any public facilities are open for anyone to use," DeVictor said.
Fred DeVictor, director of Lawrence Parks and Recreation, said that although the center had a youth and neighborhood emphasis, KU students could use it as well.
The center will be open from 6:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday and 12 to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
The gym will be used some evenings for events such as city league basketball and volleyball but generally will be open for free play during
the dav. Fode said.
Patrick Scaly, Lawrence sophomore, said that because Robinson Center didn't always have space for
open-court basketball games, he and other KU students would use the center's gym.
"The more basketball courts, the better," he said.
East Lawrence Recreation Center's facilities:
Center Features
Commons area with games, including pool, football and ping pong.
New regulation gym with wood floor.
New fitness and cardiovascular machines and a weight room.
Multipurpose room, the old gym, with SportCourt flooring for activities such as dance, aerobics, volleyball and youth basketball.
Expanded restrooms with showers and locker rooms.
A meeting room and kitchen that can be rented for group use.
Dean candidate has lot to offer
By Ryan Koerner
Special to the Kansan
The School of Journalism is a new step closer to naming a new dean.
John Maxwell Hamilton, the final dean candidate to visit the University of Kansas, arrived in Lawrence yesterday. The other finalist, James Gentry, visited the University last week.
"I understand John has a very high energy level," said Tim Bengtson, associate journalism professor and chairman of the dean search committee. "He has the ability to get the job done because he has a commit-
Hamilton has a bachelor's degree in journalism from Marquette University and a master's degree in journalism from Boston University. He received a doctorate degree in American civilization from George Washington University in 1983.
Hamilton has written four books and worked in all areas of the media. Bengtson said.
Hamilton has served in the U.S. Agency for International Development, on the staff of the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee and at the World Bank.
"He has had a rich career," Bengt-
son said. "I'm pleased to say that after visiting with him, his interest in this opportunity seems to keep growing."
Hamilton heads the Manship School of Mass Communication at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La., which offers five sequences of study to more than 600 students.
Hamilton's meeting with students will be held at 10:30 a.m.
Hamilton will be in Lawrence until Tuesday afternoon. During his visit he will meet with faculty and students of the school, members of the dean search committee and University administrators.
Tuesday in 303 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Gerry Cain, Kansas City, Mo., representative of the University's graduate program, and Carlyn Foster, University City, Mo., junior, and a representative of the undergraduate program, will host the meeting.
Foster said that she felt it was important for the candidates to meet with students because the students will be directly affected by the appointment of a new dean.
"It's important for the students to know they have a say in the selection process," she said. "More often than not decisions like this are made without students' input."
Those unaware of Student Senate soon could be
Kansan staff writer
By Dave Morantz Kansas staff writer
It's Student Senate Awareness Week, and from now until the elections on April 9 and 10, avoiding student senators and candidates will be like trying to tune out news of the men's basketball team.
At 5:30 p.m. tomorrow, Chancellor Robert Hemenway and Gray Montgomery, student body president, will hold a town-hall meeting in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Hemenway and Montgomery will field questions from students in an open forum.
Today senators will sell limeades in front of Wescoe Hall in celebration of St. Patrick's Day. Cups will cost 25 cents, and proceeds will be donated to the United Way of Douglas County.
Senators will hold a pie-throwing
contest from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Wednesday in front of Wescoe Hall.
Students and senators can throw
pies at members of the Student Senate
Executive Committee.
And from 2 to 5 p.m. Thursday, Montgomery and Jamie Johnson, student body vice president, will take calls and questions about Student Senate on KJHK.
This is the second year of the awareness week. But Kevin Lafferty, StudEx chairman, said that this year's event would be much more extensive than last year's.
Although Student Senate Awareness Week is supposed to build interest in the elections, Montgomery said that its primary purpose was to show students what Student Senate had done this year.
STUDENT SENATE
s week
awareness week
time to reflect on what we've done," he said. "It also allows coalitions to say what they'll do. It does make for a very nice transition."
Montgomery said that some of Senate's biggest accomplishments this year included a proposal to improve academic advising, the creation of the Student Environmental Advisory Board and the expansion of parking on Daisy Hill.
This year also has had some disappointments, he said. These include the failure to give students access to faculty evaluations and the Kansas Legislature's refusal to give the University enough money for maintaining and
purchasingtechnological equipment.
Some students think that Senate should do a better job of reaching out to the campus all year long rather than just this week and during elections.
"I don't think there's much of a connection between what students want and what Senate's doing," said Phil Cauthon, Lawrence junior. "I've never been asked by any student senator about what I want."
But one senator said that the awareness week gave students an opportunity to let senators know what they wanted.
"Any exposure students get to Student Senate will make them better aware of the issues when elections come around," said Kevin Yoder, Hutchinson junior and Interfraternity Council senator.
10.25m (33ft)
Andrel Irasny / KANSAM
KU civil engineers put their knowledge into practice while building a concrete canoe for the Midwest regional championship, April 25 and 26.
Engineers to sail in concrete canoe
By Nicholas C. Charalambous
Kansas staff writer
When it comes to building a concrete canoe, a dedicated team of KU civil engineering students are hoping they won't get that sinking feeling.
The team's 12 members were hard at work Saturday morning in Learned Hall, prodding, kneading and smoothing concrete over the canoe's Styrofoam mold.
Team members said that they were confident the boat would float.
That's because it's made of no ordinary concrete, explained Chris Wilkens, St. Louis, Mo., senior. It's perilite, mined from volcanic rock, which blows up like popcorn when cured in an oven. At 47 pounds per cubic foot, it's lighter than water.
The team's success depends on the hull design and on how strong the paddlers are. This year's boat, at 19 feet, is longer and more streamlined than last year's, so team members expect it to go faster but at the expense of some maneuverability.
The canoe's Styrofoam mold is covered with a sheet of plastic to make it watertight. Concrete is applied over three layers of wire reinforcement to make the shell.
Now all the engineering students have to do is sand it, seal it and paint it.
The construction of the concrete canoe began six weeks ago, after an eight-week design phase. The project takes 1,000 hours from start to finish, Wilkens said.
The team likes to use previous years' canoes for practice. The 1995 concrete canoe sank in the wake of a speed boat on the Lake of the Ozarks.
"We got the bright idea to take the old canoe, a tie a rope to it, and pull people about in it," Wilkens said.
There's also an academic element, so it isn't all fun and games. The students have to write an academic paper, prepare an oral presentation, and construct a display that includes pictures and a small cross section of the boat, which will be set inside a trailer home that has been ripped apart by a tornado.
If they float past the competition at the Midwest regional event, the team will go to the national championships in Cleveland, Ohio.
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
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CRAIG LANG, Editor
SUSANNA LLOP, Managing editor
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TOM EBILEN, General manager, news adviser
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Editorials
Students should play active role in City Commission election
An talk, no action. Ironically, the University of Kansas is full of politically aware, opinionated and diverse students, but has a dramatically low voter turnout rate.
Of all voters registered in Lawrence, only about one-fifth voted in the primary elections last February. Because of the large number of students in a town like Lawrence, the KU student body could have a major impact on the upcoming April City Commission elections.
Many students do not register to vote for City Commission and School Board elections because they are apathetic to the issues dealt with by these boards.
Unfortunately, many students fail
City Commission elections are April 1. Students should get out and vote.
to realize that issues that affect Lawrence also affect students.
Whether it is problems with parking, game day traffic, potholes or public transportation, students are the first to complain but are no where to be found when it comes to having these problems remedied.
Sometimes, people are not satisfied because they feel that even if they complain about a problem, it won't be remedied.
But there is a wav to get your voice
heard and that is to get involved with city elections. That begins by registering to vote.
Registering has been made extremely accessible to all students at locations on and off campus.
You don't have to be political science major or involved in politics to be concerned with decisions that are made in Lawrence.
Unfortunately, what students don't realize is the influential role that they could play in making Lawrence an easier place to live.
At one voting location on campus, an estimated 25 students voted.
However, students can only be heard if they speak up. It all begins by getting involved.
CATHY PIERCE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Revue takes more time than money
Spending caps often have the facade of being the panacea that will bring equity to competition. Some students argue that limiting the money spent on Rock Chalk Revue will benefit groups with smaller budgets.
However, lavish and expensive submissions is not how a group is selected. Any living group can submit a notebook no matter how much money it spends creating it. Organization, not money, is the primary obstacle that prevents groups from getting involved in Rock Chalk.
Reagan Judd, executive director of Rock Chalk, said that the main criteria when judging Rock Chalk entries was the content. Judd indicated that color copies, computer programs and professional recording studios were all superfluous expenses that did not automatically get a group selected.
Although there are some expenses for creating submissions, this money is
Residence and scholarship halls can help add diversity to the Rock Chalk Revue.
generated through fund raising, Judd said.
Many students feel that Rock Chalk is just a Greek event. But this is a misconception that must be clarified if Rock Chalk is to have more diversity in the future. Rock Chalk is open to groups such as scholarship halls and residence halls. Judd said that Rock Chalk seemed to be geek-dominated because greek chapters have had more success organizing their members.
Students in residence and scholarship halls who want to participate in Rock Chalk should not view money as a barrier. Instead, they should focus on finding out what it takes to plan a Rock Chalk notebook and on coordinating an effort to join Rock Chalk. Judd said that many low-budgeted entries had been accepted in the past.
If more residence and scholarship halls successfully coalesce, their potential would be great. Residence and scholarship halls have access to thousands of students with diverse ranges of talent. Although it is difficult
to organize these groups because of their size, these groups could exert a dominant influence on Rock Chalk.
The real barrier is the challenge of organizing non-greek groups. By mobilizing residents to create Rock Chalk submissions and participate in fund raisers to pay for expenses, residence and scholarship halls would decrease the Greek homogeneity that exists in Rock Chalk.
Judd said that the only thing that is expensive about putting together a Rock Chalk notebook is time and effort.
KANSANSTAFF
LATNA SULJIAN . . Associate Editorial
KRISTA BLASH . . News
NOVELDA SOMMERS . . News
LESLEY TAYLOR . . News
AMANDA TRAUGBER . . News
TARA TRENARY . . News
DAVID TESKA . . Online
SPENCER DUNCAN . Sports
GINA THORNBURG . Associate Sports
BRADLEY BROOKS . Campus
LINDSEE HENRY . Campus
DAVE BRETTENSTEIN . Features
PAM DISIMAN . Photo
TYLER WIRKEN . Photo
BRYAN VOLK . Design
ANDY ROHRBACK . Graphics
ANDREA ALBRIGHT . Wire
LZ MUSSER . Special sections
AERICA VEAZEY . News clerk
NICK ZALLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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how to submit letters and guest columns
Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown If a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staufer-Filh Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kim Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (lisuillian@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Service to country should be respected
Columns
Whenever I stumble upon a class that integrates real-world issues into the lecture, I am compelled to fall to my knees and praise the professor.
This recently happened in a class which is geared toward reality, rather than pure theoreticalum-iumbo.
SABRINA
STEELE
The discussion pertained to the elusive question of what to do with a large military now that the evil Soviet Empire has been destroyed, thus ending the Cold War. This topic bothers me particularly because of President Clinton's desire to cut the Defense Department budget and partially because of my friends in the
military who would be impacted by such cuts.
While strolling along Jayhawk Boulevard recently, I overheard a mind-boggling snippet of a conversation. A young man was sauntering along ahead of me discussing a band he recently heard. This guy was wearing a t-shirt that eloquently stated "Life's a (expletive)," and his hair was a lovely shade of fuchsia. Another student walked by wearing a Naval Reserve Officer Training Corp (ROTC) uniform. "Mr. Fuchsis" remarked that "Mr. Uniform" was stupid for volunteering to die.
But Mr. Uniform didn't volunteer to die, rather, he agreed to put his life on the line in defense of his country. And his valiant behavior is not stupid. What has come of our country when the heroic efforts of men and women like Mr. Uniform are deemed stupid by the yahoes these soldiers are trained to defend? Granted, our military protects the rights of people like Mr. Fuchsia to insult, besmirch and slander the government, the military and the country in general.
However, I find it repulsive that this gentleman would denigrate the entire military force into one
group of suicidal volunteers. It isn't as though they volunteered to jump out of a plane onto a field of landmines. What type of contribution will Fuchsia-boy make to his country, his town or his world?
The patriotic train of thought encouraging public service has been forced off track. The Me Generation of the 1980s has created a new troop of selfish individuals concerned primarily with the advancement of themselves.
Students in the ROTC program are training to be the soldiers and officers of tomorrow. Their reasons for signing up may not be entirely based upon the idealistic notions of patriotism and public service, but these motives still exist. Unfortunately, the lessons these soldiers are learning are not emphasized in today's depraved society.
An extraordinary article in a recent edition of The Washington Monthly, entitled GI's: Not Your Average Joes, expounded upon the myriad reasons citizens sign up to become soldiers. Educational opportunities, a stable salary and training skills are the benefits proffered in the "Be all that you can be" advertisements.
The real benefit to the country lies in the principles that will be instilled in each successful recruit. Ethical and moral standards surpassing those of our licentious civilian society are strictly enforced. As the author points out, character building and leadership are central to military training. These skills and values are not specifically taught in public education, which may partially explain the mass of apathetic degenerates in society.
I long for the days when people respected the values of service to their country, held sacred the ethical ideals of the military and honored our country by removing their caps as a flag passed by in a parade.
Sabina Steele is a Overland Park sophomore in journalism.
ABC has other reasons for letting Ellen out closet
I will say it now, loud and proud, without a trace of homophobia intended: I don't care if Ellen comes out of the closet.
I don't care if she stays in the closet. I don't care if she gives birth to a closet. She could set herself on fire, skydive with a flaming closet attached to her rear end and scream her news to the whole world from above. I would continue to greet her with complete apathy.
In September, it was leaked to the media that Ellen DeGeneres' character on her ABC show *Ellen* might eventually reveal her homosexuality.
JEFF
RUBY
Ever since, there has been more press on the issue than leftover corned beef in John Madden's ridge.
Would she come out? Or, more likely, would her lesbianism be stifled by Walt Disney Television, the show's production company?
After all, this is a corporation so conservative,
they get antsy when the guy inside the big Mickey
Mouse costume at Magic Kingdom has traces of a
goatee.
Gay and lesbian groups have cited Ellen's eventual revelation as a landmark moment, because it would make her the first homosexual lead in a prime time show. This would be the biggest advance in minority themes on television since Bill Cosby became the first black man in a lead role, in 1965's Ipson.
But as time passed, it became apparent ABC's Ellen dilemma was no longer a dilemma, but an opportunity. It was no longer about minority acceptance, and instead about how to parlay homosexuality into as much money as possible. The eventual episode now reeks of a rotten publicity stunt.
My first instinct is to agree. There are plenty of openly gay people everywhere. Why shouldn't there be a TV show about one? In a TV world saturated with far-fetched Urkels, Kramers and Suddenly Susans, a bit of reality would be a welcome change.
The network has combined with the media to create a controversy, an "event," where most people were willing to simply accept a lesbian star as an appropriate change. And people like me — those who have nothing for the show, but nothing against it either — lost interest quickly.
Now ABC's money-grubbing schemes have been confirmed: The network recently announced Ellen's coming out show in April will be sprinkled with celebrities such as Melissa Etheridge, Oprah Winfrey and Laura Dern. DeGeneres herself couldn't have imagined such a star-studded event when she pitched the idea last June.
The more press this issue gets, the more homosexuality is made to seem abnormal and deviant. Should it be such a big deal? If we treat this as a crucial moment then it seems obvious we haven't come very far in our attitudes toward different lifestyles. But when "coming out" on television leads to a media frenzy, it becomes apparent that maybe we haven't.
"Why is it so difficult? Why can't we just come out and say who we are?" asked David Tomb, a gay member of the audience who watched the taping of the show.
No kidding.
Making Ellen a lesbian — and lengthening the process of revealing she's a lesbian — has created tremendous controversy for ABC. And as we all know, controversy equals ratings. And ratings equal money.
No kidding.
But that wouldn't be lucrative. I scold ABC for managing to profit money while disguising itself as genuinely concerned for gay rights.
ABC's prolonged "outing" of Elen has its heart in the right place, but it also has its hand in the cash register.
Jeff Ruby is a Wichita graduate student in Journalsm.
Letters
Editorial brings out interesting points
I think Meredith Toenjes did an excellent job summarizing the emotional reaction of many people to the premarital counseling bill. Phrases like "invasion of privacy" seem to be common responses to the topic.
Toenjes beautifully captures the ideology of marriage in her statement. "Marriage is a private institution, a covenant between two people who, ideally, plan to spend the rest of their lives together."
However, I find it interesting that she expresses concern that this bill would practically amount to having a state inspector question any couple's love and commitment.
All states now have the full, legal right to question love and commitment, and furthermore practice their right to ban non-sanctioned partnerships. This is a reality for the homosexual community.
J. Hall
Alpine, Utah, graduate student
Perhaps, if any good has come from the proposed bill, it is that it will create an appreciation for the freedoms and rights that many heterosexuals take for granted.
I encourage everyone who feels that this bill is unfair to consider for a moment that this situation is already a reality for many couples.
Discourse should be conducted with respect
We are the members of KU Queers and Allies: LesBIGay-Trans Services of Kansas, as well as representatives from other student organization. We are writing today to speak out in opposition to the Feb. 21 bombing of a lesbian nightclub in Georgia.
Extremist violence has become frighteningly prevalent in the United States over the last
several years, as manifested by the burning of Black churches, the Oklahoma City bombing , other bombings and shootings at clinics providing abortion services and other hate attacks across the country. We believe that these crimes disrupt our ability to have meaningful dialogues and draw strengths from our differences as well as what we have in common.
We also believe that it is necessary for all communities to stand together in opposition to hate rhetoric, and we call for The University Daily Kansas to offer better national coverage of hate crimes. We do realize that some groups on campus have differing opinions on issues; however, we do agree that all discourse should be conducted with respect for individual opinions without violence.
■ Chris Hampton,
Lawrence graduate student,
and other supporter of KU
Oueora and Allies
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 17, 1997
5A
As U.S. universities compete for international enrollment, some students wonder if a conflict exists between the business goals of universities and students' best interests.
Continued from Page 1A
States, many international students say, their plans to return home change. Their appetite for the freedom, the technology and other American comforts can only be satiated by remaining in the United States.
The problem is that international students can stay only as long as they are paying, degree-seeking customers of academia. The problem can lead to desperation; but more likely, it leads to additional degrees of increasingly questionable value to the students.
--have some of Cvorus in me."
The University launched a campaign last semester to attract unprecedented numbers of international students. KU representatives have visited numerous embassies in Washington, D.C., and have begun tc produce brochures and posters targeting international audiences.
In five years, the University wants to have an increased presence in a field dominated by schools in California, Florida and New York.
With 1,700 international students, the University is not even close to being competitive. To compete, the University needs to use its promotional materials to establish a constant presence in many countries, said Gerald Harris, director of KU International Student Services.
"There is a major competition going on for international students," Harris said. "Fewer and fewer students are coming abroad, and the competition for those students is getting worse all the time."
A 1996 report released by the Institute of International Education indicated that, although a record 453,787 foreign students entered the United States during the 1995-96 school year, the rate of increase had slowed. The percentage of international students studying in the United States had decreased from 40 percent in the early 1980s to 32 percent last year. U.S. proponents of international education knit their brows when they see that countries such as Australia and Great Britain are attracting an increasing share of foreign students.
--have some of Cvorus in me."
Like losing a market share in any business, losing this share of international students means losing money. International students bring more than $7 billion annually to the United States, of which more than $7 million is spent at the University.
As other countries cut into the revenue and talent pool created by international students, U.S. universities push harder for foreign students' attention.
International students are good for the economy and good for the quality of research, administrators say. But somewhere beneath the market studies and recruiting campaigns is the plaintive voice of the students whose lives are changed permanently, some for better but others for worse, by coming to the United States.
--have some of Cvorus in me."
David Cohavi, president of the KU International Student Association, was one of the students waiting in a hallway of the Clinton County Jail to console Mamush.
Cohavi, who is from Israel, does not know much about Immigration and Naturalization Services' many regulations, but he knows that someday he could be in Mamush's situation. When he learned Mamush's imprisonment for an expired visa, Cohavi immediately paid a parking ticket to ensure that he would not draw attention to himself. Mesfim was denied a stay of deportation several weeks after Cohavi's December visit and was sent to the INS long-term holding facility in El Paso, Texas.
Cohavi said the constant stream of visitors to the Missouri jail had shown that international students were a close group.
"It's like a miniature community," he said. "You look to the right and the left, and you see people from all over the world. There is something very bonding about being an international student."
Many of these students say they are stuck somewhere between two cultures. All are students who have decided to travel far from home and must now face unforeseen consequences of U.S. study.
10
合
--have some of Cvorus in me."
If Ulivie Emirizade had never come to the United States, the 23 year old would be married, have children and live in Cyprus, her home country.
"I was supposed to leave and go home." Emirzade said. "I wasn't ready to go back. I thought if I went home, I would not be able to come back to the United States."
Slowly, she realized that she wanted to use her U.S. education in the U.S. job market.
--have some of Cvorus in me."
The frustration of other international students is evident. For at least four years, they see the bounty U.S. industry has to offer. But they are not citizens, and the job market officially is closed to them.
Aside from marrying a U.S. citizen, the only way a student with an F-1 student visa, the most common type of student visa, can get a permanent job in the United States is if an employer will certify that the student is the only person in the United States qualified for the job. That may pave the way for outstanding researchers and scholars, but most international students eventually have to face the fact that they must return to their home countries.
Instead, she is a graduate student in Kansas, pursuing a master's degree and a career in advertising. The sophisticated technology and high quality of instruction in the United States has resulted in an education she never could have received in Cyprus, a small Mediterranean island with a struggling economy.
Here, Emirzade enjoys a fast-paced, American life. She worked as a resident assistant in McCollum Hall and became absorbed with her studies, earning a double major in psychology and journalism.
Kamal Nasser, Bothelehm, West Bank, junior, said, "You can't quit school, work for four months at Pizza Shuttle, then go back to school. You have to be studying if you want to stay in this country, and you can't do anything else."
Emirzade tells of her older friends who left Cyprus and then decided they never would return. They were selfish she once thought. They were abandoning a country that needed their help. When she came to the United States in 1990, she was confident that she would return someday to Cyprus. By the time she graduated, her plans had changed.
She decided, as many students do, to seek another degree to prolong her stay in the United States.
Now, in the comfortable, four-bedroom apartment Emirzade shares with three Americans, the flag of Cyprus hangs on one wall, and an American flag hangs on the other. She is somewhere between being an American and a Covriot, and she knows it.
"Here . . .," she said and paused. "I feel that I don't completely belong here. I still
"If I go back, I will not be able to get a job that will justify my education."
Ozel Soykan Cyprusgraduate
When she graduates, Emiratez will try to get a job close to, if not in, the United States, despite the improbability of obtaining a work visa. If she cannot find a job, she might pursue another degree. Or, she may return to Cyprus, where she feels more out of place each time she visits.
"When I go home, it feels different. I have different ideas; different perspectives, a different way of looking at things," she said. "It's like being in between two cultures when you can't quite blend in with one or the other."
"Sometimes I think my life would be much easier if I had never come here."
---
Bob Nicholson is director of University Admissions Connection, a San Franciscobased organization that, for a charge, provides counseling for students hoping to study in the United States.
"We are the world center for business and have the most up-to-date technology," he said. "Our teaching approach is humanistic and caring, and we allow for individuality."
The ideal situation would be to nurture the students while they are in college, then send them back to their countries, leaving them enriched by an American education, he said.
More often than not, instead of being satisfied with the experience, students are left hungry for more of what the United States can offer.
"Upon graduation, many students have accepted the United States as their second home and would like to seek employment here," Nicholson said. "It is very difficult to obtain a work visa, and we cannot assist in this area."
Harris, whose office provides seminars and workshops for students who are about to leave the United States, has seen many of these students do whatever it takes to stay.
Therefore, the students stay in school, enrolling in graduate or postgraduate programs that extend their visits to the United States by three, four, five years or longer.
"If they don't want to go home, persistence in the U.S. educational system becomes the only avenue open to them," he said.
Unfortunately, more degrees can mean even more alienation for international students such as Ozel Soykan, who received a master's degree in business administration from the University in 1996, and who now works temporarily for a Kansas City, Mo. cable provider. Soykan, who also is from Cyprus, is using the 12-month, practical-training period international students receive after graduation.
"If I go back, I will not be able to get a job that will justify my education," he said.
---
Of course, not every student who comes to the United States falls in love with the country and attempts to stay for as long as possible. For Moussa Sissoko, a doctoral student from Bamako, Mali, the United States is too impersonal.
"Americans are very cautious with foreigners," he said. "There is no eye contact; people just walk head down."
Because Sissoko prefers the friendly nature of his home country, he plans to return to Mali permanently when he finishes his U.S. education.
"I have never felt that the United States is my home," he said. "I do not act here as I would act at home."
Even Sissoko, however, realizes the standard of living advantages the United States has compared to many parts of the world.
"This is the top; there, we are still lagging behind," he said. "You get angry at yourself and your people. Here, things go so swiftly."
---
U. S. universities show no sign of slowing down the race to pump up international enrollment. Higher education is in many ways a business, and business must go on.
But, in all this business, are the students forgotten?
At the University, which will recruit and campaign extensively during the next five years, opinions varied.
George Woodyard, former dean of international studies and professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said, "I think KU does a good job in terms of accommodations for the international students and their needs. To imply that there is a commercializing process going on at this University would be amissstatement."
Students often will answer the question differently.
"They don't think on a personal level." Emirzade said of higher-education officials. "They think 'We'll bring them here, and we can take their money,' but they don't think about how it changes a person's world."
In a way, Emirzade is a victim of her own desires.
"It all goes back to the fact that this is a capitalistic country," she said. "Profit margin is everything, and you have to give up certain things for that. I guess this is just part of the system here."
---
▶
LUAU Safe Break '97
Come play Carnival Games!
Monday, March 17 & Tuesday, March 18 Wescoe Beach 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
- Free Safe Break packets with condom—sunscreen—key chain—safer sex info
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Sponsored by Association of University Residence Halls, Association of Worksite Health Promotion, BACCHUR Center for Community Outreach, Center for Peer Health Promotion, Counseling and Psychological Services, DCCCA, Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, GAMMA, Kansas Highway Patrol, KU Police Department, Planned Parenthood, SafeRide, Student Housing, Student Union Activities, Watkins Health Center.
---
Building better health for you
POLICE
Leah L. Luckeroth
M. D., Univ. of Kansas, 1986 Board Certified in Internal Medicine
From the beginning of student health services in 1906—to the opening of Watkins Hospital in 1932 (a gift from Elizabeth Miller Watkins)—to the opening of Watkins Health Center in 1974—there has been a history of changing to meet the health care needs of KU students.
When students voted for the current expansion and renovation, it furthered Mrs. Watkins' belief that the future
"depends on the proper care of your health."
As we continue the legacy of building better health for you,we invite you to come see the progress.
Caring For KU Watkins Since 1906
6A
Monday. March 17, 1997
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$10 Entitles you to a year's worth of discounts. Pick up your card March 17-21 outside the Kansas Union or on Wescoe Beach.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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"Brindisi is completely saturated," Mayor Lorenzo Maggi warned before meeting with Italian Premier Romano Prodi.
AUSTRIA HUNGARY ROMANIA BULGARIA Adriatic Sea MONTENEGRO Tirana ITALY Macedonia ALBANIA BERGER Anguine Sea AREA OF DETAIL
Chaos governs Albanian regime
Exodus offsets peace appeals under new rule
The Associated Press
TIRANA, Albania —A crowd of about 2,000 people gathered in Skanderberg Square waving flowers and holding posters with anti-violence slogans to mourn those who had died in the anti-government protests that began in December.
Across the Adriatic Sea, Italian authorities said that their ports had more than 4,000 Albanian refugees.
The EU meeting had been delayed because of false rumors about the resignation of Albanian President Sali Berisha. His resignation is virtually the only demand that unites insurgents who have ransacked government armories in recent days and seized weapons.
only agree to send a high-level evaluation mission today. They also agreed to send food and other humanitarian aid as soon as conditions stabilize.
Nurie Rica, 45, said that it was the first time her 3-year-old grandson Jurgen had been outside since shooting began in Tirana last week and a new government was formed. She said that she had faith in the
new government "because it's a coalition for reconciliation."
Officials, bracing for more Albanians, were trying to figure out how to cope with them.
But the appeals for peace were offset by continuing chaos and exodus in other parts of the region.
In the port of Durres, about 25 miles west of Tirana, police fired on a mob trying to get on the docks to commandeer a vessel to take them to Italy. Four people were injured, hospital officials said.
In the southern port of Saranda, a witness identifying himself as Aslan Godo said that a torpedo boat, snatched by about 100 former officers and sailors from the nearby naval base, was heading for Italy.
Another TV statement yesterday said that the government was trying to establish links with the councils that have taken control of many southern cities. State broadcasting has become the only viable way for messages to reach insurgents because regular communications links have been disrupted.
An attempt by 30 armed insurgents to hijack a commercial ferry off the coast of Saranda failed, Greek coast guard officials said.
Early yesterday, an Albanian military vessel carrying about 500 Albanians ran agroread about a mile off the port of Brindisi, Italy.
European Union foreign ministers in the Netherlands, who were asked by the Albanian government to supply troops to restore order, could
"We can't throw them into the sea," Prodi said.
1 out of 4 of your classmates will get an STD.
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March is Women's History Month
International Women Students
Reflect on their KU Experience
This special program will focus on the roles of women, relationships and cultural differences.
Panel: International Women Students Moderator: the Director of International Student Services
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
English Room, Kansas Union
7:00 p.m to 9:00 p.m.
Wi
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center,
conservation center, Jacksonville, Florida. For more information,
contact Jennifer Joseph at jessica.joseph@twc.org.
We the Students, Faculty and Staff of the Urban Planning Program Support
Dwane P. Jensen
Lorrie Stelz
Daniel Scheid
Dayna Anderson
Budi Doelrachman
Kevin Jeffries
Patrick Himmelberg
Matt Henry
Cade Hobbick
P.F. Dale
Kirk McClure
Alan Black for City Commission
Steve Williams
Amy Hester
Darci E.A. Rudzinski
Amanda Gladhart
Gera Elliot
David Dunne
Kyle Mieras
Suzy Pfluger
Corinne Donahue
Linda Zacher
Kelli Cochran
Tyler Theis
Robert Leeman
Chris Allison
Jani Goldman
Adam Argo
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Linnea Pearson
James M. Mayo
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 17, 1997
7A
Card game Magic focus of a New York lawsuit
School activities upset parents
The Associated Press
BEDFORD, N.Y. — A dispute over a game has turned into a lawsuit, which accuses a school district in New York of promoting satanism and occultism.
three families said that they had their religious freedom infringed upon at an assembly featuring a man dressed up as Abraham Lincoln, a science class studying the leftover evidence of an owl's lunch and a history lesson in a cemetery.
Bruce Dennis, supervisor of the Bedford Central School District, said that the lawsuit was a threat to schools everywhere.
Today, several parents plan to join the schools' defense against the 1996 federal court lawsuit by filing a friend-of-the-court brief. The next hearing in the case is set for April 25.
"We can't take apart the science or English curriculum because something seems to go against some part of a particular small group's belief system," said the Rev. Paul Alcorn, a minister who has two children in the schools.
"We would dismantle public education in this country. Maybe that's what they're trying to do." Alcorn said.
The dispute stems from a game
called Magic: The Gathering that children started playing in 1995 in Westchester County.
The Dungeons & Dragons-like strategy game, played with collectible trading cards, involves the supernatural. Some of the cards are lurid depictions of demons, and one shows a woman about to be sacrificed.
it's straight from Satan," said Mary Ann DiBari, a plaintiff who has 11- and 13-year-old granddaughters in the schools. "Human sacrifice, devil worship, spells."
A club was allowed to play the game on school grounds but not during class. Players and the school district said that it was a math game.
The lawsuit said that by allowing the game on school grounds, the district officially promoted and endorsed an occult activity and promoted satanism and occultism, pagan religions and New Age spirituality.
Besides the card game itself, the lawsuit said that:
**Third-graders were told to vener-
Third-graders were told to venerate pagan gods when a teacher had them make Hindu "idols." The teacher, Jackie Reizes, held up a paper elephant mask at a parents' meeting and said that it was the idol referred to in the suit. She added: "I think this speaks for itself."
On an excursion to a cemetery, fourth-graders were instructed to
"It's straight from Satan. Human sacrifice, devil worship, spells."
Mary Ann DIBarl grandmother of students
lie on the graves of dead children. The school district's lawyer Warren Richmond said that a volunteer was asked to lie on a grave to show how much smaller people were in the 18th century.
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
A man dressed like Lincoln frightened some children when he said that Lincoln believed in ghosts. "It was just a fellow who gave a speech on Abe Lincoln," Richmond said.
Third-graders were forced to study owl pellets, the regurgitated bones and feathers of the birds' prey. It was just a science experiment.
"The allegations in the complaint have seriously distorted what are really very normal educational practices," Richmond said.
The Associated Press
Clinton's trip began a day later than planned to let her spend time with President Clinton, who is recovering from knee surgery. She left after he returned to the White House from Bethesda Naval Hospital, where he underwent surgery Friday to reattach a torn tendon.
ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE, Md. — Hillary Rodham Clinton left yesterday for Africa and a tour that she hopes will highlight the nation's interest in the continent's people.
First lady travels to Africa
Last week Clinton said that she expected the trip to broaden Americans' awareness of the need to engage with Africa.
"Instability in Africa, whether it is rooted in war, in terrorism, in organized crime, in disease ... touches us too." she said.
Hillary Clinton
Clinton and her daughter Chelsea were bound first for Senegal, where they planned to visit Goree Island, once the hub of the slave trade to
America. And then they are headed to South Africa.
During her two-week tour, Clinton will highlight efforts under way in Africa to promoted education and health care for women and children. She also will stop at the war crimes tribunal in Tanzania that is investigating mass slaughter in Rwanda.
Other stops will be in Zimbabwe, Uganda and Eritrea.
President Clinton also has international travel on his schedule this week. He leaves Wednesday for Helsinki, Finland to have a summit meeting with Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
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Stop by Independent Study's Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, North of the Kansas Union.
Pick up a catalog or call 864-4440 for information. Enroll any week day of the year 8am to 4pm.
Student Senate Awareness Week
Town Hall Meeting with the Chancellor and the Student Body President
Tuesday, March 18 5:30 in the Kansas Room of the Union
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Hilltopics
Page 8A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
March 17, 1997
St. Patrick's Day!
---
By Ann Marchand Kansan staff writer
Today is the day when those not wearing green should be prepared to feel a pinch: St. Patrick's Day.
Today is the day when bars will be filled by 10 a.m. with patrons clamoring for green beer.
Today is the day when a parade downtown will prompt residents to dance and be merry in all shades of green.
Today is the day when leprechauns sprout, the Irish will be kissed and shamrocks
It is also the day when every thing will be green, including the limeade sold by Student Senators on Wescoe Beach.
All this in honor of that elusive man, Saint Patrick.
Chris Coburn, Wichita junior.
couldn't really explain why the nation went crazy on March 17.
"I know it has something to do with the Irish," he said.
Michelle Dennard, Chapman junior, said St. Patrick's Day was a popular holiday because people liked it.
"It's tradition," she said. "It gives people an excuse to drink green beer and wear clovers." In fact, St. Patrick's Day is a holiday steeped in history.
While a slave herding sheep, Patrick had a lot of time to think about religion. He began to have dreams and visions which, he claimed, were divinely inspired.
At 22, Patrick managed to escape Ireland and went to Gaul, which is now France. While
there, he devoted his life to Christianity and became a bishop. He was sent to Ireland
Irish Ale
Irish Ale
sionary by Pope Celestine I, where he remained until his death in the mid-fifth century. By the time he died, Patrick was said to have founded over 300 churches and baptized over 120,000 people.
The Irish were in awe of this man, who not only brought them Christianity but also helped them become literate through his writings. As time wore on, legends about his life began to spread.
One such legend, which can be traced to the seventh century, was that St. Patrick saved Ireland from snakes by driving them into the sea.
Another legend is that he demonstrated proof
of the existence of the Holy Trinity by showing unbelievers the shamrock, a small plant which is plentiful in Ireland. Patrick claimed that the plant, which has three leaves from one stalk, represented three persons — the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit — in one God. But he could not explain the four leaf clover.
In honor of Patrick, who was later deemed a saint, the Irish declared the shamrock as their national flower and March 17 as the St. Patrick's Feast Day.
To many, the day is a great time to feast.
Bagel & Bagel, 1026 Massachusetts St., will sell green bagels to celebrate the occasion.
Lisa Limanni, manager of Bagel & Bagel, said that all the chain's stores in the Kansas City and Lawrence area offered the tinted bags Friday through today at the same price as other bagels they sell.
Shannon Norwood, manager of Molly McGee's, 2429 Iowa St., said that the restaurant would offer traditional Irish food and atmosphere for lunch and dinner.
"We're running corned beef and cabbage with new potatoes Saturday.
Sunday and Monday," she said.
"We're also having bag-
pipers from the Topeka
area on Saturday night."
Free State Brewery, 636 Massachusetts St., will also celebrate the day in style.
"We don't serve green beer,but we do have traditional Irish food specials," said manager Alex Hamilton
various Irish dishes, including corned beef and lamb stew.
"We have corned beef and cabbage, we have green beer delivered by the lep-
beef and lamb stew. Rick Renfro, a partner at Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., claimed that the bar had all the bases covered.
♣
Diners at Free State may select from
rechaums, and we are on the parade route," he said. "You've gotta get here about 9:30 to get a seat."
Renfro would not discuss the source of the bottled green beer, which is the same price as regular beer, except to say that he believed it would be superior to the green beer sold other places.
"It's not the food dye kind, because that would stick to your teeth. Our beer keeps your teeth white."
&
Harbour Lights, 1031 Massachusetts St., will have green beer as well. But according to assistant manager Johnny Kayaian, those wanting to sample the beer while they watch the parade should arrive early.
The bar will open at 9 a.m. today. It usually opens at 2:30 p.m.
"We're going to have all of our Irish-influenced beverages on special, and we're adding green food coloring to the domestics," Kayaian said. "There's no extra charge for that."
Norwood said that Molly McGee's customers preferred undived beer.
But at least two places in town will not feature green beverages.
"The majority of our customers want it without the green dye," she said.
And Troy Clifton, manager of Louise's Bar Downtown, 1009 Massachusetts St., said the staff had learned from previous mistakes with green dye.
"We did it before in the past, but everything got stained and it was just a big mess," he said.
Retailers said that St. Patrick's Day was not typically a major sales event.
Joe Flannery, president of
Weaver's 901 Massachusetts St.
said the holiday was important to him because of his Irish heritage, but the store would not have any special events to celebrate it.
"We don't have any special promotions planned, but we always celebrate them."
Weaver's are of Irish descent," he said. "It's one of our favorite holidays, but we celebrate it in our individual ways."
"It's just not a big gift-buying holiday," said Marci Shalz, sales associate at The Etc. Shop, 928 Massachusetts St.
But those not buying gifts still have grand plans to celebrate.
"I'll definitely load myself up with some green and get myself some green bottled beer and
drink it up," said Clint Rexford, Meade junior. "Green is the best color in the universe, and everyone should experience it."
Coburn said that he planned to go to Kelly's,
Journ said that he planned to go to Keny's, an Irish pub in Westport, if the lines weren't too long.
weren 100 tong.
Denise Williams, DeSoto freshman, said she planned to spend the day in a different way.
"Im in the 'Women of KU' calendar, and I'll be busy with that," she said. "I haven't picked out my swimsuit yet, but if I find a cute green one I'll probably wear it."
Some students will be more subdued throughout the day.
"The only time I really celebrated it was my senior year in high school, when I was in Chicago and the river was dyed green," said Andrea Cozad, Lansing sophomore.
Kara Heitz, Topeka senior, said that St. Patrick's Day in the United States was definitely a different experience than it was in Ireland.
"It's a very Americanized holiday," she said. "It's a chance for Irish-Americans to celebrate being Irish, but in Ireland they celebrate being Irish every day."
Heitz has been in Dublin, Ireland, the past two years on St. Patrick's Day. She said that last
versity College of Dublin, the holiday was much more commercialized than the year before.
"In 1994, it really wasn't that big of a deal," she said. "But last year they had a huge parade and a huge carnival, and the celebration in Dublin probably rivaled the ones in Chicago and Boston."
She also said the attitude of the Irish toward the holiday of their patron saint was less exuberant than she had expected.
pretty big party," she said.
"It's nothing like the Fourth of July here or anything, but it's still a
she sait
"Mostly it's
just a good
day to relax.
It's a bank
holiday, a
day you
don't have
to go into
work, and a
chance to get
drunk all day."
KissMe
I'm Irish
+ +
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Erin Go Bragh!
News of the WEIRD
Medical Breakthroughs: In February, surgeons removed a cataract from the eye of the National Zoo's 6-foot-long Komodo dragon, Muffin, in the hope that she could better see how studyd the male, Friendly, was and thus would mate with him. And in January, doctors in Johannesburg, South Africa, performed spinal surgery on a 10-foot-long python, which had been run over by a car. (Contrary to what our eyes tell us, the python has 306 vertebra and 268 ribs.) And in Jackson, Mich., in February, veterinarian Timothy England fitted a stray rooster with artificial legs after he had to amputate his natural ones because of frostbite.
Gas in the News: In Hanesville, Wis., police responded to a 911 call in December regarding a domestic disturbance, which began, the wife said, when the husband inappropriately passed gas as they were tucking their son into bed. And in January in Perth, Australia, John Douglas Young, 47, was convicted of a child-abuse charge for attempting to hire two boys for $5 each to pass gas in his face. According to Young, he wanted to masturbate
later to the mental picture of the encounter. (Young's unsuccessful defense was in part to recite a long list of movies, literature and TV shows, like Benny Hill in which gas-passing was a popular theme.)
In March, Ms. Nadean Cool won a settlement of $2.4 million in her lawsuit in Appleton, Wis., against her former psychotherapist, Dr. Kenneth Olson. She claimed that he had first persuaded her that she had a multiple-personality disorder (120 personalities, including Satan and a duck) and then billed her insurance company for group therapy because he said he had to counsel so many people. Olson, seeking greener pastures for his psychotherapy business, has since moved to Montana.
In October, the Washington Supreme Court reversed the conviction of Benjamin Hull on a technicality. Hull had been found guilty of defrauding the state worker compensation office. He admitted that he had gotten a friend to help him blast a hole in his left leg below the knee with a shotgun, but insisted it was not to get compensation (he received $60,000). He said it he did it because the knee has been painful to him since 1973 after he injured it in an accident. Five years earlier, he had tried to take the leg off with a chain saw, but got only part-way through because the saw kept mal-
CREME DE LA WEIRD
functioning.
In January, the Australian Medical Journal reported a case of lead poisoning by an electrician who chewed electrical cable to satisfy his nicotine urge when he was forced to work in no-smoking buildings. The man said he chewed almost a yard of cable a day for nearly 10 years because it had a sweet taste, especially near the center.
Larry Doyen, 22, was hospitalized in December after chaining himself to a tree just outside the town of Mexico, Maine. He was rescued by the state warden service after spending two weeks with the tree. It was the third time he had done that in recent months.
In November, a 50-year-old man was arrested in Albquiere, N.M., on a complaint by his 13-year-old stepdaughter that he made her perform a series of bizarre acts. The acts were written on index cards and were supposedly to toughen her in her quest to get a learner's driving permit. According to the complaint, the girl was allowed to drive the truck until the man turned up an index card with an instruction, which she had to follow before driving some more. Among other things, the cards called for her to stand naked in the glare of the truck's headlight; and staud told to a bar with a ball in her mouth.
FEUDS
Continental Airlines filed a lawsuit in November in Newark, N.J., against Deborah Loeding. The airline said she endangered passengers in order to get revenge on her ex-husband, who is a pilot. Ms. Loeding had baked him some bread, but unknown to him, had laced it with marijuana so that he would fail the airline's drug test and get fired, which did happen. He was reinstated when the airline learned what happened.
In October, a judge in Baton Rouge, La., abruptly called a mistrial in the 8-year-old lawsuit filed by Mary Ann Turner, now 56, against ex-husband and anesthesiologist Alan Ostrowe, proclaiming that her testimony was over theatrical. According to Turner, when she was hospitalized for birth-canal surgery in 1972, Ostrowe, without her permission, persuaded the surgeons to remove her clitorial hood because, according to the couple's eldest son, his father needed to control his mother's sexuality to compensate for his sexual inadequacies.
In Jakarta, Indonesia, in January, Reuters news service reported that a 29-year-old woman, upset with her unfaithful boyfriend, identified only as TU, went to the crowded karaoke bar where he worked and released a half dozen cobras on the premises.
Pitt understands the seriousness of new movie role
The Associated Press
NEW YORK—Brad Pitt took playing an Irish terrorist in *The Devil's Ounn* very seriously.
"I'm playing a Catholic kid from Ireland," Pitt says in the latest Rolling Stone magazine. "I'm speaking for this situation that has gone on for years. I felt a huge responsibility for that. So I'm not just going to sit there and say, 'Oh, I'm Irish! Give me a Guinness.' I'm not going to make leprechaun jokes."
Pitt denied that there was any bad blood between him and Harrison Ford, who co-starred in the movie, despite numerous stories about alleged behind-the-scenes squabbling.
"He's absolutely cool," Pitt said of Ford. "Look, it was tough. It was the hardest film I've ever been on. But as for reports about out-of-control egos and people hiding out in trailers, that just wasn't the case. It was everyone trying to make the best movie they could under the circumstances."
---
The Devil's Oun is the story of an Irish Republican Army terrorist befriended by a New York City policeman.
---
INSIDE SPORTS
While the women's basketball team stays and plays in Lawrence, the men's team travels and faces new experiences in Memphis, Tenn., on and off the court. For more photos of the basket ball teams, see Page 8B.
KANSAS
34-1
PURDUE
18-12
5
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
61
JAYHAWK BASKETBALL
MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1997
SECTION B
KU VS.
BOILEMAKERS
BOILERMakers
Kansas 75, Purdue 61
KANSAS (34-1)
Pierce FG FT TP
LaFrenz 8-20 4-5 19
Poland 3-14 4-7 18
Hase 1-5 4-7 12
Vaughn 3-8 0-5 12
Williams 0-5 0-0 9
Thomas 3-4 0-0 9
Pugh 1-3 0-0 2
Ridartson 1-3 0-0 2
Toole 2-82 | 14-1 | 75
PURDEM (18-12) FG FT TP
Robinson 5-13 0-0 11
Cardinal 3-8 3-4 9
Miller 6-9 3-5 15
Eldridge 2-6 0-0 5
Austin 4-18 0-0 17
McQuay 1-2 0-0 9
Cornell 0-5 2-2 2
Barnes 0-5 2-2 2
Glikvely 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 21-61 16-20 61
Haffner: 163, Murphy 36, Purdue 26, 3-Point goals:
Purdue 31; Kansas (Robinson) 4, Eldridge 4, Austin
5; Oklahoma 3, Mason 3, Gore 3, Austin 3,
1-Pierce 0-1, Hasse 1, Robertson 0-1),
1-McCarthy 0-1, Robinson 0-1), Murphy 36,
Robinson 10, Miller 10, Murphy 45, Perle (12)
Aalsist: 181 (Miller, Austin 3), Kansas 16
(Vaughn 9), Total fouls: Purdue 18, Kansas 18
KU vs. UDM
TITANS
Kansas 81. Detroit Mercy 67
KANSAS (25-5)
Pride FG FG FT TP
Trapo 5-8 4-4 14
Tampa 5-8 4-4 14
Sanford 2-5 4-4 8
Haliburk 5-14 1-2 13
Dixon 7-15 5-6 21
Oakland 1-5 5-6 21
Grazer 4-7 0-0 1
Reed 0-1 0-0 0
Raymont 2-6 0-0 0
Scott 0-1 0-0 0
Fletcher 1-1 0-0 2
Wiley 0-0 1-2 1
SANTA CLARA (23-7) FG FT TP 18
Rademacher 2-2 0-0 5
Gray 0-2 1-2
Rossetter 1-4 0-2 2
Boyd 4-9 3-4 11
S. Hill 6-14 0-2 15
Thome 4-9 1-1 9
J. Hill 9-18 2-2 24
Banks 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 26-64 7-13 67
Halftime: Kansas 36, Detroit Mercy 28, 3-Point
Halftime: Missouri 19, Minnesota 20, 4-Point
1. S-Hickey 5, H-Hickey 4, H-Hickey 7 (Prize 14),
Halibble 2, Dixon 7, Dixon 24, Rayman 2, Foulden
1. Dixon 10, Dixon 13, Kelley 16, Kansas 49 (Ganford 13), Assists: Detroit
Mercury 13 (Boyd 7), Kansas 17 (Dixon, Halibble 1)
Total foults: Detroit Mercy 19, Kansas 16. A:
Women's game notes
The Kansas women's basketball team set a new record for most consecutive victories at Allen Field House with 21 on Saturday when it defeated Detroit Mercy 81-67. The old record of 20 was set on Jan. 21, 1996, when Kansas defeated Oklahoma State. The record was tied on March 1, 1997, when the Jayhawks defeated Oklahoma.
The victory on Saturday marked the second consecutive year and fifth time overall that the Jayhawks have advanced to the second round of NCAA Tournament play.
Kansas point guard Tamecka Dixon recorded her 22nd consecutive double-figuring game with 21 points against Detroit Mercy. Dixon, who earned second-team Associated Press All-America honors last week, has led the Jaya-hawks in scoring all season, averaging 21 points per game.
Kansas guard Angle Halebib recorded her seventh-consecutive game scoring in double figures Saturday with 1.3 points.
The victory against Detroit Mercy was Kansas coach Marian Washington's 41st postseason victory. Washington's overall coaching record stands at 457-257, but her postseason record is 41-25.
Kansas vs. Vanderbilt
Kansas (No. 3 seed, 25-5 overall)
Probable Starters:
G Tamecka Dixon, 5-9, Sr.
G Angie Halbleib, 5-10, Sr.
F Lynn Pride, 6-2, Fr.
F Jennifer Trapp, 6-1, Sr.
C Nakia Sanford, 6-3, So.
Vanderbilt (No. 6 seed, 19-10 oll) Proble Starters:
G Palge Redman, 5-10. So.
G Michelle Palmisano, 5-9. So.
F Nettle Respondek, 5-10. So.
Fa'Nehea Hillom, 6-2. Jr.
C Angela Gorsica, 6-7. Sr.
Time: 7:08 tonight
Place: Allen Field House
TV/Radio: KJHK-FM, 90.7
Sweet 16 bell tolls for 'Hawks
MILLER
52
KU
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
Kansas guard Joran Hase tangles with fellow teammate Scott Pollard and Purdue's Brad Miller Saturday at the Pyramid in Memphis. The Javahyls defeated Purdue, 75-61, in the second round of the NCAA tournament.
Purdue can't repeat history; Kansas wins
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Down with déiayu.
Despite losing to Purdue in the third round of the NCAA tournament on Mar. 24, 1994, the Kansas women's basketball team would not
repeat history as they staved off the Boilermakers 75-61 Saturday at The Pyramid in Memphis, Teen.
For the Jayhawks, who have posted 14-point victories in each of their victories so far in the tournament, it's on to Birmingham, Ala., to take on Arizona. The Wildcats defeated the College of Charleston 73-69 Saturday.
"We're very happy that we've accom-
The Jayhawks answered with a tightly guarded three pointer by guard Jacque Vaughn.
pushed two of our six steps," Kansas guard Ryan Robertson said. "We've answered the bell and the challenge 34 times this season."
Following Vaughn's clutch trey, the Boilermakers were never able to crack the Jawhawks lead.
Although Kansas was able to bury the Boilermakers in the waning moments, Purdue took a one-point lead, 53-62, with 9 minutes, 54 seconds remaining in the game.
"I think the biggest factor in the game was when it was 53-52, and we didn't panic," Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams said. "Jacque made a big three. All of a sudden, we got better on the defensive end of the floor."
As expected, the game started out as a dog fight.
The Boilermakers jumped out of the gate to take a 4-2 lead at the 19-minute mark.
"We felt we had the momentum going into the half."
Paul Pierce Kansasforward
Kansas took the lead on two free throws by Vaughn and didn't trail for
the remainder of the first half
Despite maintaining a 24-21 advantage on the boards at the first half and a 45-38 margin for the game, Williams said that he was disappointed with the Jayhawks' rebounding effort.
"I was shocked to see that we had more rebounds than they did," Williams said. "I thought that they did a much better
job on the boards than we did."
Job on the boards than we did. The first half ended with LaFrentz tipping in a miss by guard Jerod Haase with four seconds remaining.
Thomas gets boost from past
See SWEET16. Page 5B
Immediately following LaFrentz's basket, Vaughn swiped an errant Purdue inbound pass and sank a 15-foot jump shot as the buzzer sounded to give Kansas a 10-point lead, 36-26.
Childhood mentor helps guard shine
Kansan sportswriter
By Bill Petulla
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Seven seconds remained on the shot clock with 6 minutes, 52 seconds left in the game. Kansas clung to a dwelling seven-point lead against Purdue on Saturday. Jayhawks guard Jacque Vaughn streaked towards the basket, drawing the double team.
"I saw Jacque penetrating, and the coaches teach us when
you see him penetrating to get to the open spot," guard Billy Thomas said.
Thomas found the soft cushion in the Purdue defense, took the pass and smoothly sank the shot.
Kansas 69, Purdue 59. The dagger in the Boilermaker's heart delivered.
But beyond the court—only about 10 feet away—sitting behind the Kansas bench in the front row, might be the reason Thomas sank key shots.
In fact, sitting in the front row with her niece and nephew just might be the reason Billy Thomas is on the basketball
court. period.
Melissa Flournoy of the Lighthouse Education and Enrichment Center in Shreveport, La., along with her niece Tallie, 9, and nephew Alex, 11, drove six hours to watch Thomas help Kansas move into the Sweet 16.
"I'm kind of like his aunt," Flournoy said. "I've known Billy forever, and I helped get him in to Loyola Prep."
Thomas hails from a low-income district in Shreveport, which some call "The Bottoms." Under Flournoy's direc-
See THOMAS, Page 5B
GO KANSAS!
REVEPORT LOVES#12
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
Expressing their support for Kansas' Billy Thomas, Alex Flounroy, 11, Tallie Flounroy, 9, and Melissa Flounroy hold up signs they made and brought from Shreveport, La. Melissa Flounroy (right) played a very vital part in Billy's life in high school.
'Hawks to face Commodores tonight
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
When No. 3-seeded Kansas women's basketball team plays No. 6-seeded Vanderbilt tonight, two teams with contrasting styles will battle for a spot in the NCAA Tournament's Sweet 16.
The Jayhawks have speed and quickness, which forces opponents' turnovers. The Commodores have height and play a matchup-zone defense that smothers opponents in the post area.
Kansas guard Angie Halbleib said that it would be important for the Jayhawks to hit shots from the perimeter.
"We've seen zone defenses for two-thirds of the season, so we know how to handle it," Halbleib said. "The zone is going to open some outside shots, so we're going to have to knock those shots down."
Vanderbilt women's basketball coach Jim Foster said that his team worked hard to execute what it does best.
"You always do what you're good at, and we have pretty good three-point shooters," Foster said. "Obviously, we had to incorporate that into our offense. We've led the Southeastern Conference in three-point shooting all six years I've been here, so it's nothing out of the ordinary for us."
Inside, the Commodores are anchored by 6-foot-7 center Angela Gorsica, who averages 6.9 points and 6.2 rebounds per game.
She ranks third in the country with 3.7 blocked shots per game.
In a first round game against No. 11seeded Washington Saturday night, Vanderbilt's defense was nearly flawless.
"It's not legal what you need to do to slow her down," Foster said. "We play against some great guards every year in our league. We've seen players of this ability. We know how good they can be and what they can do. I think Tamecka no exception to that."
However, Foster said that a repeat performance against Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon would be difficult.
The Jayhawks are coming off an 81-67 victory against Detroit Mercy in the first round Saturday night in the Allen Field House.
Kansas went on a 12-0 run early in the first half and never relinquished the lead.
With the help of three steals by Dixon, Kansas outscored the Titans 9-0 in the first 45 seconds of the second half, extending what had been a sizable lead to a comfortable 45-28 advantage.
Dixon said that the long layoff combined with tournament play made the team nervous in the first round.
"The they came out with a lot of intensity and played us tough," she said of Detroit Mercy. "There were a lot of butterflies because it was the first round of the tournament, but now we're past that. It's not going to get any easier from here, so we have to learn from this and move on."
13
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Center Nakia Sanford celebrates as Kansas defeats Detroit-Mercy 81-67 Saturday night. Sanford had eight points, 13 rebounds and two steals in the victory.
2B
Monday, March 17, 1997
SCORES & MORE
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NCAA WOMEN'S TOURNAMENT Second Round
At Coors Events and Conference Center Boulder, Colo. Sunday, March 16
Stephen F. Austin (28-4) vs. Colorado (22-6)
(N)
At Assembly Hall Champaign, Ill.
Sunday, March 16
uke (19-10) vs. Illinois (23-7) (n)
Storrs, Conn.
Monday, March 17
wuhan, China
Iowa (18-11) Connelly (31-0) 9:36 p.m.
At Thompson-Boling Arena
Knoxville, Tenn.
Mondez, March 17
Oregon (22-6) vs. Tennessee (24-10), 7:36
Regional Semifinals
Cerver-Hawkeye Arena
iowa City, Iowa
Saturday, March 20
Stephen F. Austin-Colorado winner vs. Oregon-Tennessee winner
iowa-Connecticut winner vs. Duke-Illinois win
Regional Championship
Carr-Hawkeye Arena
Iowa City, Iowa
Monday, March 24
EAST REGIONAL
St. Joseph's 70, Kansas St. 52
Alabama 94, St. Francis, Pa. 50
*A* Forin Special Events Center
Austin, Texas Saturday, March 15
At Charles E. Smith Center Washington Saturday, March 15
Notre Dame 93, Memphis 62
Texas 66, SW Texas St. 38
*Charles E. Smith Center*
Saturday, March 16
Tulane 72, UC Santa Barbara 69
George Washington 61, Northwestern 46
North Carolina 81, Michigan State 71, OT
A Coleman Seminary
Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Sunday, March 16
Sunday, March 16
St. Joseph's (26-4) vs. Alabama (24-6) (n)
At Erwin Special Events Center
Austin Texas
Austin, Texas
Monday. March 17
Tulane (27-4) vs. George Washington (26-5),
8:09 p.m.
Notra Dame (28-6) vs. Texas (22-7), 3:59 p.M.
At Charles E. Smith Center
Washington, D.C.
Monday, March 17
Regional Semifinals
Carolina Coliseum
Columbia, S.C.
Sanderson-Mar 20
Saturday, March 22
North Carolina (29-2) vs. Tulane-Georgi
Notre Dame-Texas winner vs. St. Joseph's-
Albenea winner
Regional University
Carolina College
Columbia, S.C.
Monday, March 24
WEST REGIONAL
First Round
At The Georgia Coliseum
Attenua, Ga
Arizona 76, Western Kentucky 54 Georgia 91, Eastern Kentucky 55
At University Hall
Charlottevine, va.
Friday, March 14
Friday, March 14
Utah 66, Iowa State 57
Virginia 96, Troy State 74
Stanford 111, Howard 59 Texas Tech 47, Montana 45
At Allen Field House Lawrence, Kan.
Vanderbilt 74, Washington 62 Kansas 81. Detroit 67
Second Round
At The Georgia Coliseum
Athena, Ga
Charlottesville, Va.
Sunday, March 16 Georgia 80, Arizona 74 At University Hall
Virginia 65. Utah 48 At The Mapes Pavilion
Stanford, Calif.
Monday, March 17
Stanford (31-3) vs. Texas Tech (20-6), 12:08
At Allen Field House
Vanderbilt (19-10) vs. Kansas (25-5), 8:08
Regional Semifinals
Stanford-Texas Tech winner vs. Virginia (23-
Regional Seminara
Adams Fieldhouse
Missoula, Mont.
Saturday, March 23
Georgia (24-5) vs. Vanderbilt-Kansas winner
Saturday, March 22
Adams Fieldhouse Missoula, Mont.
Live, same-day and delayed national TV
sports coverage for Monday, March 17
(schedule subject to change and oil
unit)
SPORTS
WATCH
Semifinal winners
All times Eastern MONDAY, MARCH 17
7:30 p.m.
ESPN — College basketball, NIT tourn-
ment, second round game, West Virginia at North Carolina State.
ESPN2 — Women's NCAA basketball
tournament, second round game, Oregon at Tannesse.
WGN — Exhibition baseball, Philadelphia
WGN — Exhibition baseball, Philadelphia vs. Chicago White Sox, at Saratoga.
ESPN — Women's NCAA basketball tournament, second round game, Iowa at Green Bay
ESPN2 — Women's NCAA basketball tournament, second round game, Notre Dame at Taxas.
ESPN — Women's NCAA basketball tournament, second round game, Texas Tech at San Antonio
MIDEAST REGIONAL
Auburn (22-9) vs. Louisiana Tech (30-3) (n)
1. Louisiana Tech 57-46
2. Auburn (22-9) vs. Louisiana Tech (30-3) (n)
First Round
At ODU Fieldhouse
Norfolk, Va.
Friday, Jan. 14
Purdue 74, Maryland 48
Old Dominion 102, Liberty 52
At Thomas Assembly Center
Aubur ua, Louisville 65
Louis's Tech 94, St. Peter's 50
At The Maravilh Assembly Center
Friday, March 14
Southern Cal 68, San Francisco 55 Florida 92. Fla. International 68
At The O'Connell Center Gainesville, Fla.
Saturday, March 15
Southern Cal (20-8) vs. Florida (22-8), 8:08
Second Round At ODU Fieldhouse
burn (22-9) vs. Louisiana 10(3)-(n)
At The Maravilh Assembly Center
Baton Rogue, La.
Old Dominion 69, Purdue 65, OT
At Thomas Assembly Center
Ruston, La.
Sunday, March 16
Marquette (21-9) vs. LSU (24-4), 9:08 p.m.
The Mt. Olive College
Marquette 70, Clemson 66
LSU 88, Maine 79
Regional Semifinals
Mackey Arena
W.Lafayette, Ind.
Saturday, March 22
Gainesville, Fla.
Monday, March 17
NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament
Southern Cal-Florida winner vs. Auburn-Louisiana Tech winner
Old Dominion (31-1) vs. Marquette-LSU win
North Carolina 73, Colorado 56 California 75, Villanova 68
Second Round
At Lawrence Jol Coliseum
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Saturday, March 15
At Pittsburgh Civic Arena
Pittsburgh
North Carolina (26-6) vs. California (23-8)
Coplin State-Texas winner vs. Wilson (25-
40)
Regional Semifinals At The Carrier Dome Syracuse, N.Y. Friday, March 21
Louisville 64, New Mexico 63
Coppin State (22-8) vs. Texas (17-11)
Regional Championship
At The Carrier Dome
Syracuse, N.Y.
Sunday, March 13
Cup winner, Coppin St.
SOUTHEAST REGIONAL
North Carolina-Cal winner vs. Coppin St.
Texas - Lousville winner
First Round
At The Pyramid
Memphis, Tenn.
Thursday, March 13
Kansas 78, Jackson State 64
Purdue 83, Rhode Island 76, OT
College of Charleston 75, Maryland 66
Arizona 85, South Alabama 57
At Charlotte Colisee
Charlotte, N.C.
Friday, March 14
Providence 81, Marquette 59 Duke 71, Murray State 68
Second Round
At The Pyramid
Memphis, Penn.
Saturday, Teen.
Kansas 75, Purdue 61
Arizona 73, College of Charleston 69
At Charlotte Colleum
Charlotte, N.C.
Sunday, March 16
At Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center
Birmingham, A.U.
Friday, March 21
Providence 96, Duke of
Tennessee-Chattanooga 75, Illinois 63
Providence (23-11) vs. Tennessee-Chattanooga (24-10)
Regional Championship
At Birmingham-jefferson Civio Center
Birmingham, Ala.
Sundav.March 23
MIDWEST REGIONAL First Round
Kansas-Arizona winner vs. Providence-Tennessee-Chattanooga winner
First Round
At the Palace of Auburn Hills
Auburn Hills, Mich.
Thursday, March 13
At Kemper Arena Kansas City, Mc. Friday, March 14
Cincinnati 88, Butter 69
Iowa State 69, Illinois State 57
Xavier, Ohio 80, Vanderbilt 68
UCLA 109, Charleston Southern 75
Clemens 86, Miami, Ohio 52
Tulsa 81, Boston University 52
Temple 62, Mississippi 45
Minnesota 78, Southwest State 46
Second Round
At The Palace of Auburn Hills
Auburn Hills, Mich.
Detroit, Michigan
Aktemper Arena Kansas City, Mo. Sunday, March 16
Iowa State 67,Cincinnati 66 UCLA 96,Xavier,Ohio 83
Clemson 65, Tulsa 59
Regional Semifinals
At The Alamodome
San Antonio
Thursday, March 20
UCLA (23-7) vs. Washington State (22-8)
Minnesota. Tiemper winner vs. Clensson (22-9)
UCLA-Iowa State winner vs. Minnesota-Temple-Clemson winner
At The Alamodome San Antonio Saturday, March 22
WEST REGIONAL
First Round
At The Huntsman Center
Salt Lake City
Thursday, May
Boston College 73, Valparaiso 66
Virginia 60 St. Joseph's 75, Pacific 65 Kentucky 92, Montana 54 Iowa 73, Virginia 60
North Carolina Charlotte 79, Georgetown 67
Utah 75, Navy 61
Tucson, Ariz.
Friday, March 14
At The McKale Center
Wake Forest 68, St. Mary's, Calif. 46
Stanford 80, Oklahoma 67
St. Joseph's 81, Boston College 77, OT
Kentucky 20
Sunny, March 18
Utah 77, North Carolina Charlotte 58
Wake Forest (24-6) vs. Stanford (21-7)
Angeles Browns At San Jose Arena San Jose, Calif. Thursday, March 20
Kentucky-St. Joseph's winner vs. Utah—Wake Forest-Stanford winner
Kentucky (32-4) vs. St. Joseph's (26-6)
Utah (28-3) vs. Wake Forest-Stainford winner
regional champion
At Sam Joe Arena
Saturday March 22
*S.J. Johnson* - winner
THE FINAL FOUR
At The RCA Dome
Saturday, March 29
East champion vs. Southeast champion
Midwest champion vs. West champion
National Championship
Semifinal winners
KANSAS BASEBALL
Kansas-Oklahoma Linescore Sunday, March 16, 1997
At Norman
Kansas 005 007 000—12 15 4
Louisville 010 101 003—14 14
Ukraine, Winged (6), Bailey (9), Philbrook (9)
and Dimmick, Sackford, Pascus (5), McCulart (6), Amundson (7), Reyes (9) and Betts. W—Reyes (1-0), L—Bailley (2-1), HR—Kansas, Wilmes (1), Oklahoma, Bookout (4),
Noles (1).
Kansas-Oklahoma Linescore Saturday, March 15, 1997
**Game 1**
Kansas 103 001 000—5 9 1
Oklahoma 605 000 0x1—16 2
Corson, Williams (2) and Dinnick, Frank (8).
Andra and Flores. W—andra (3-2) L—Corson (2-2). HR—Oklahoma, Bookout (2).
Kansas 001 001 130—6 12 2
Dalmatia 001 040 30x—7 12 2
Peters, Good (6) and Dimmick. G, Pascucki, 6) McCurtain (7), Geary (8) and Flores. W—Olsen (3-0). L—Peters (2-2). HR—Oklahoma. Bookout (3).
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Recycle your Daily Kansan
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 17, 1997
3B
National Collegiate Judo Championship
KANSAI
John Head / KANSAN
Gabriel RiveraVelazquez, San Juan, Puerto Rico, junior, prepares to engage his opponent during an interstate judo tournament.
Velazquez was one of eight KU students to participate in the National Collegiate Judo Championships held Saturday at Robinson Gymnasium. It was the first time in history that the championships have been held in Lawrence. Last year the competition was in San Jose, Calif.
Of the eight Kansas competitors, only one placed. Adrien Lewis, Springfield, Mass., senior, finished fourth. Only the top three finishers receive medals.
Competitors in the tournament were required to be third-degree brown belts. The competition included participants from all across the United States.
Kansas track team fares well at first meet of season
Kansan staff report
Kansas heptathlete Candace Mason started her 1997 outdoor season with a first-place finish in the Gold Heptathlon at the College Station Relays at Texas A&M March 13th and 14th.
the 800-meter run.
Mason set personal season-best marks in the high jump and the long jump. She set a career best in the 800-meter run.
Kansas Amber Mounday also performed well in the Gold Heptathlon, finishing sixth in the event. Mounday finished third, right behind Mason, in
Kansas Mandy Schroeder and Heidi Lundervold competed in the Bronze Heptathlon, finishing seventh and eighth respectively.
Schroeder placed first in the javelin with a throw of 11.3 feet 5 inches.
Returning All-American Mike Evers competed in the Gold division for Kansas, placing second in the discus and third in the 110-meter hurdles.
The rest of the Kansas track-andfield team will open its season on March 20 at the Emporia State University Spring Twilight in Emporia.
Final standings
College Station Gold Heptathlon
1. Candy Mason, Kansas, 5,223
2. Cecil Hudson, Texas A&M, 5,075
3. Kerry O'Bric, Baylor, 4,893
4. Amy Bippert, Angelo State, 4,890
5. Katie Ollendick, Virginia Tech, 4,887
6. Amber Mounday, Kansas, 4,868
7. Jamie Hall, Utah State, 4,728
8. Brandi Smith, VirginiaTech, 4,661
9. Jayme Hendrian, Utah State, 4,268
10. Jennifer Hoppe, Stephen F. Austin
State, 3,902
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Kansas women's tennis dominates Texas Tech, 7-2
Kansan staff report
On the fourth leg of an eight-stop road trip, the Kansas women's tennis team picked up a 7-2 victory over the Texas Tech Red Raiders Saturday. Kansas won five of six singles matches and took the doubles point 2-1.
Texas Tech dual results
Christie Sim, Kansas, def. Eva Egulenr, 6-1, 6-2 Brooke Chiller, Kansas, def. Amanda Earhart, 7-5, 6-0 Kris Sell, Kansas, def. Lakshmi Ravindra, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 Blanca Kirchhof, Kansas, def. Sarada Ravindra, 6-2, 6-1 Amy Trytek, Kansas, def. Misty Meyer, 2-6, 6-1, 6-3 Christine Van Regenmorter, Texas Tech, def. Maria Abatjoglou, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3
Singles
Eguigren/Earthart, Texas Tech, def. Chiller/Tytek, 8-6
Sim/Sell, Kansas, def. L. Ravindra/Carrie Helbing, 8-6
Kirchhof/Atabatoglou, Kansas, def. Meyer/Van Regenmorter, 9-8
Softball trip cut short after weather delay
Doubles
Jayhawks return early with one win, one loss at OSU Cowgirl Classic
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
After traveling to Oklahoma and being greeted by 35-degree temperatures and wind chills in the teens, the Kansas softball team was forced to alter its plans once again.
Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said that the coaches involved in the tournament decided
OSU Cowgirl Classic to Saturday because of Friday's inclement conditions.
The decision forced Bunge to make a judgment call about how many games the team would play.
Julia True
"I had to kind of make an executive decision about how long to stay."
Bunge said. "With spring break coming up and with some of the girls having to move their mid-terms up to this week, I decided, for academic reasons, to return on Saturday night."
The team split two games Saturday, defeating Wichita State 5-4 and falling to Nebraska 3-0, which brought its overall record to 11-7.
Julie True
Against Wichita State, the team scored two runs in the bottom of the seventh to pull out the victory when outfielder Jennifer Funkhouser drew a walk with the bases loaded, and outfielder Julie True hit a two-out RBI single to drive in the winning run.
The loss to Nebraska came despite a two-hit.
KU SOFTBALL
10 strike-out pitching performance by Sarah Workman.
"I was pleased with the way that Sarah pitched all day," Bunge said. "Unfortunately we gave up three unearned runs, and we weren't able to execute defensively."
Bunge said that inconsistency has cost the team some games she thought they should have won.
"We're finding a way to give away ball games," she said. "Nebraska didn't really beat us, but we gave it away. We have to be more consistent."
Bunge said that the team had not been able to put all three phases of play—offense, defense and pitching—together in a game. But she was pleased most with the offensive aspect.
"Sara Holland continues to hit the ball hard," Bunge said. "True has been on the ball, and Katie Malone looked very good this weekend. It's good to see the middle and bottom of the order in a groove so you don't have to always reyv on the top of the order."
Bunge said that she continues to be impressed with the power of Shannon Stanwix, first base, who has hit three home runs this season.
"She hit one that I thought had no chance because (Oklahoma State's) fences are way out there." Bunge said. "But she hit one to almost dead center field that hit the fence about a foot from the top, and that was against the wind. She's got a lot of talent, and she's just now beginning to settle in."
The team will be back in action March 20 when they compete in the AT&T Wireless Services Capital Classic Tournament in Sacramento, Calif.
Baseball's winning streak ends with three losses to Sooners
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
Eventually, all good things must come to an end.
With the help of an impressive offensive showing, the Oklahoma Sooners put an abrupt halt to the Kansas baseball team's eight-game winning streak.
The Sooners swept the Jayhawks (14-8, 4-5), winning 11-5 and 7-6 on Saturday and taking yesterday's game 13-12 during this weekend's Big 12 Conference matchup in Norman, Okla.
After Friday's game was postponed because of cold weather, the Sooners' bats warmed up on Saturday. Oklahoma put the Jayhawks away with a six-run first inning and five-run third inning in the first game
"We played our hearts out. We just didn't get the results we wanted."
of a doubleheader, which the Sooners won 11-5. Kansas was able to score five runs off nine hits but was never able to shake off Oklahoma starter Jeff Andra, who pitched the Sooners' first complete game in nearly two years.
Bobby Randall Kansas head baseball coach
After losing both games of Saturday's doubleheader, the Jayhawks tried to rebound yesterday.
Baseball
Mark Corson (2-2) took the loss. The Jayhawks' luck did not get any better as the day progressed.
Kansas, paced by home runs from Aaron Wilmes and Les Wailrdon, held a commanding 12-4 lead after six innings. However, the game was far from over.
Despite scoring three runs in the eighth inning, Kansas lost the second game 7-6. The Jayhawks couldn't overcome the offensive barrage of the Sooners' Casey Bookout. Neither starter Aric Peters (2-2) or reliever Jake Good could contain the Oklahoma designated hitter, who victimized the Jayhawks with two runs, four hits, four RBI and his second home run of the afternoon.
With only three outs left and down by seven runs, the Sooners mounted a comeback. Oklahoma sent 12 men to the plate and scored eight runs off Jayhawk relievers Josh Wingerd, Josh Bailey and Rusty Philbrick
in the bottom of the ninth inning and captured the series finale 13-12. The Sooners' biggest shots came from Bookout, who doubled twice in the inning, and pinch hitter Jade Noles' grand slam. Kansas coach Bobby Randall said that yesterday's loss was particularly disappointing.
"It was a heartbreaking loss, but there is a lot of the season left," Randall said. "We played our hearts out. We just didn't get the results that we wanted."
The Jayhawks are back on the road this week, traveling to Fayetteville, Ark., for a two-game, mid-week series with the Arkansas Razorbacks.
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Today's Birthday (March 17)
What a lucky break to be born on St. Patrick's Day. This year you'll be lucky in love too. Learn about money through experience in April. Cut expenses; don't spend too much. May and June are OK, but July's the most fun. That's when you'll fall in love. You're pushed to take action with a partner in September, but it should work out well.
Ask for your raise in December. A group helps you solve an unusual problem in February.
You have less blairney in your system than just about anybody you know. You never tell lies, but you do enjoy a good story. You enjoy a good party too. It might even be fun to have one at your house tonight. That way you don't have to drive home.
HOROSCOPES
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 3.
You may be blessed with the kind of friends who are always in the mood for a party. Today they also have a magnificent reason. It may be hard to get anything else done, but that's OK. Nobody expects any more of you except maybe a few sentimental songs.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 2.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Today is an 8.
This is amazingly enough—a pretty good day for you to ask for a raise. That's especially true if your boss happens to be Irish. Everybody will be in a riotously good mood today. Approach an older person with an outlandish request, and it just might be granted.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 10.
You should be in a marvelous mood. This is a fine day to celebrate being sentimental and warm-hearted. It's a marvelous evening for romance. You and your sweetheart could stop by your favorite tavern for a while but be sure to save plenty of time for yourselves in private.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 1.
If you go out to lunch with the gang, don't feel compelled to buy drinks for the house. On St. Paddy's Day, that can get costly. There's also something else that needs doing. If you forget, a kind and generous woman is bound to bring it to your attention.
What a marvelous day for a party. If there's any work to be done first, you and your friends
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 1.
can do it in no time at all. You feel like working together, playing together and eating lunch together. You may not want to break up the fun until late tonight. And why should you?
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Today is a 3.
Although it's a holiday for some, it's a workday for you. You might as well do it on purpose. Offer to cover for a friend. This could win you lots of brownie points. Try the same trick on your own true love. Offer to do some odious chore just to be nice.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6
You have a talent for making things grow. Today, you'll be able to get a popsicle stick to sprout. If you get pregnant today, you'll have quintuplets. You get the picture. Whatever you begin now will flourish. Better put more money into your IRA.
Although you're in a party environment, you may not be in a party mood. You've got other things on your mind—jointly held finances—and your home. But there's no need to worry. If you move quickly, you chances
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a O.
of success are good.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Todav is a 4.
Aquarlus (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 2
You're smart and sensitive,
warm and loving. Doesn't sound
like you? Of course, it does. If
your roommate or your spouse
gives you any flak about it, tell
them it's a phase you're going
through. Today, it's OK to let
somebody know you care.
You're working hard and making a lot of money. What are you, an Irish pub owner or something? You're either working with your mate, or if you're single, you're about to fall in love with one of your co-workers. Not a bad deal but not all that easy either.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 1.
This is a Piscean holiday.
Tonight there could be an outpouring of caring, love and good vibes, the likes of which you haven't seen in quite a while.
Make sure you're next to the perfect person when it happens
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
Did you know? Kansas ranked 3rd in the nation for recycling... from the bottom.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 17,1997
58
SWEET 16
Continued from Page 1B
"Those were two huge plays," forward Paul Pierce said. "We felt we had the momentum going into the half."
Despite controlling the momentum going into the intermission, Purdue quickly cut into the Jayhawks' 10-point lead. Forward Brian Cardinal and center Brad Miller led the Boilermakers charge as Purdue muscled it's way to the 63-52 lead with 9:54 left in the game. Vaughn's three pointer, along with guard Billy Thomas' two strikes from beyond the arc, sealed the victory for the Jayhawks.
Thomas finished the game with nine points, 3 for 4 from the three-point line.
"Everybody on this team has a role." Thomas said. "And I was just fortunate enough to step up and hit a few shots."
Vaughn, who has yet to miss the third round of the NCAA Tournament, expects the Jayhawks to improve from their first two games.
"Hopefully we can build on this game," Vaughn said. "Hopefully we can just continue to build momentum as we go further in the tournament."
Purdue guard Chad Austin, who led the Boilermakers in scoring, said that the Jayhawks' experience gave Kansas an edge.
"It was a tough game because they are such a veteran team," Austin said. "It was a combination of things: Kansas playing such good defense and the way they played with pressure."
Despite fighting a cold and having a 100-degree temperature on Friday night, Vaughn scored 12 points and dished out nine assists. Vaughn said that regardless of the illness he wasn't sitting out an NCAA Tournament game.
"Unless Coach would have hand-cuffed me and left me in the locker room, I was going to fight him until I got out there," Vaughn said.
THOMAS
Continued from Page 1B
tion, Thomas got involved in the Lighthouse Education and Enrichment Center, and she guided him to one of the premier high schools in Shreveport. Thomas flourished at Loyola Prep, averaging 28 points a game, and then Kansas recruited him. The rest is history.
"She's been a friend of mine since I was in the fourth or fifth grade," Thomas said. "I really can't express what she's meant to me."
Flournoy said that she tries to make at least one of Thomas' games a year. By selecting Saturday's Kansas-Purdue game, he got to witness perhaps Thomas' finest clutch performance.
Thomas scored all nine of his points by shooting 3 of 4 from beyond the three-point arc. With
first-team All American forward Raef LaFrentz sitting on the bench with four fouls, Thomas drained two three pointers in the final seven minutes to hold off the Boilermakers upset bid.
And no one cheered louder than the Flournows.
"We've shot baskets ab.ny house," Alex Flournoy said, "Kansas is my favorite team."
"Yeah, mine too," chimed in his younger sister, Tallie Flournoy.
"There'll be quite a few to watch Billy in Birmingham," Melissa Flournay said. "Billy has quite a fan club."
Melissa Flournoy said that Thomas' supporters would increase by the next game, which will be played on Friday in Birmingham, Ala., against Arizona.
And beyond Birmingham?
"We're going to go to watch Billy ii Indianapolis in two weeks," Melissa Flournoy said.
2
12
Kansas' Billy Thomas fends off Purdue's Michael Robinson in an attempt to complete a pass.
Colts head to Kentucky Derby
HALLANDALE, Fla. — Pulpit and Captain Bodigit are headed for Kentucky but not in the roles expected of them before the Florida Derbv.
By Ed Schuyler, Jr.
The Associated Press
Instead of the all-conquering hero, Pulpit now is a once-beaten colt with questions to answer.
Captain Bodigit is the winner of the Florida Derby, a major stepping stone to the Kentucky Derby, and an experienced colt to be reckoned with.
Pulpit, who finished second in the Florida Derby Saturday at Gulfstream Park, will be shipped Tuesday to Churchill Downs, where trainer
Frank Brothers' stable will be based. The Claiborne Farm colt is expected to start in the Blue Grass April 12 at Keeneland.
Captain Bodigit will be sent to Keeneland April 1 for the Blue Grass, which would be his third straight race against Pulpit.
When Pulpit won the 1 1-16-mile Fountain of Youth Feb. 22 at Gulfstream, Captain Bodgit finished a fast-closing third, two lengths back after having been 21 lengths off the lead after a half mile.
The farthest off the lead Captain Bodigit was in the Florida Derby was 10 1/2 lengths. At end of the 11/8 miles, he was 2 1/2 lengths ahead of
Pulpit. It was the first win in three starts this year for the Team Valor colt but his sixth victory in nine career starts. He finished third in each of his losses.
"The last time (at the Fountain of Youth) he got a little too far back," trainer Gary Capuano said. "He probably ran a better race last time with what he had to overcome."
The Kentucky Derby picture will take shape in the next four weeks, with the running of the Jim Beam on March 29 at Turfway Park, the Santa Anita Derby on April 5 and the Blue Grass, Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park and Wood Memorial at Aqueduct on April 12.
Cardinals' pitcher gets six-game suspension
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Honesty probably was not the best policy for St. Louis Cardinals pitcher T.J. Mathews, who received a six-game suspension for throwing at a Cincinnati Reds player.
The Associated Press
ST LOUIS
CARDINALS
"I definitely think it's real excessive," manager Tony La Russa said.
don't think President Coleman has had enough time to look at everything that was involved and not involved."
La Russa said
Bass says that Mathews, 27, hasn't decided whether to appeal the suspension, which was handed down Friday and includes a $2,000 fine, but said that he hoped his pitcher would. General manager Walt Jocketty said that the team likely would pay Mathews during the suspension, which begins April 1, the date of the regular-season opener at Montreal.
"The punishment already is severe enough. Jockettie said.
Mathews refused an interview request before yesterday's exhibition game against the Toronto Blue Jays. La Russa did enough talking for his pitcher, who led Cardinals relievers with 83 2-3 innings in 60 games last year, mostly as a setup man. He was 2-6 with six saves and a 3.01 ERA.
"Hopefully when some of the things are explained, there will be some kind of a modification," La Russa said. "If not, that definitely sets a precedent. When you hit somebody in the butt, you're out six days."
Mathews plunked Cincinnati Reds Bret Boone with a pitch on Wednesday, after throwing one behind Boone.
"I felt like hitting somebody, so I hit somebody," Mathews said, admitting his intent. "They're a pretty arrogant team. I don't like that at all."
Cincinnati's Deion Sanders, who came out of the dugout to yell at Mathews, was not penalized. La Russa was mad about that, too.
The Cardinals' Brian Jordan was grazed by Scott Sullivan's pitch in the sixth inning, and St. Louis' Tom Pagnozzi was hit on the right wrist by Mike Remlinger in the seventh.
La Russa said that Pagnozzi nearly got beamed when he ended up getting hit on the wrist.
La Russa also said that Mathews became incensed.
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'I Want My Goodbye Back' "Heart Half Empty"
Opening Entertainment
JILL WARREN & The Kanzans
Friday, Apr. 11
7:30 P.M.
Ottawa Municipal Auditorium
Tickets $158/17819 - Available at OMA only
3rd & Hickory, Ottawa, KS - 12:30-6:30pm M-F
INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS: 912-342-8810
CORPORATE SPONSORS:
South Star Chrysler - Kilnough Construction
INTRUST Bank of Ottawa - Midwest Cabinet Co.
Bill Burks, D.D.S. - Lamb-Roberts Funeral Home
Ottawa University Alumni & Development
Cook's Service
Ty Herndon
Mohammed Sultan
Ty Herndon
"She Wants To Be Wanted Again"
"What Mattered Most 'Living In A Moment'
"I Want My Goodie Back" "Heart Half Empty"
Opening Entertainment
JILL WARREN & The Kanzana
Friday, Apr. 11
7:30 P.M.
Ottawa Municipal Auditorium
Tickets $15/817/199 - Available at OMA only
3rd and Hickory, Ottawa, KS 12:30-5:30pm M-F
INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS - 913/242-8810
CORPORATE SPONSORS —
South Star Chrysler - Killigan Construction
INTRUST Bank of Ottawa - Midwest Cabinet Co
Bill Burks, D.O.S. - Lamb-Richards Funeral Hom
Ottawa University Alumni & Development
Cook's Service
NATURAL WAY
• NATURAL BODY CARE
• NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
• 820-822 MASS. • 841-0100
www.cjnetworks.com \ natural way\
We Buy, Sell,
Trade & Consign
USED & New
Sports Equipment
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SPORTS
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
SPRING BREAK IS ONLY 9 DAYS LONG.
SPRING BREAK SPECIAL Wheel Balance & Tire rotation $15.95 Lube, Oil and Filter $14.95
Make more of it by spending more time on the beach or on the slopes and less time in an unfamiliar town with an unfamiliar mechanic. Come to Wendland Performance Services for an OIL CHANGE right here in Lawrence before you make the big road trip.
WENDLAND
Performance Services
720 E. 9th St.
(913) 841-8358
W
---
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EYE
The EyeDoctors OPTOMETRISTS DRS. PRICE, YOUNG, ODLE, HORSCH P.A. AND ASSOCIATES 2600 Iowa St. * Lawrence * 913-842-6999
6B
Monday, March 17, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
100
NATURALWAY
NATURAL FRENCH CLOTHING + NATURAL BODY CARE
• B20-822 MASS + B41-0100
$ 5 Off
Hair Design
not valid with any other offer
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841-6886
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With Raef its nothing but net...
With the Kansan its everything and the net.
Your NCAA Tournament Information Guru.
Find out about all the action in the Sports Section.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The Kansas women's rowing team swept each of their races against Creighton Saturday on Lawrence's Kansas River.
The competition was the team's first for the spring season.
Women rowers win all races against Creighton this weekend
Kansan staff report
Kansas placed first and second in the Varsity Eight race.
The first place team finished with a time of 6:13.2.
The Jayhawks also took the top two spots in the Freshman Eight race.
The first place team had a time of 6:11.2. In the Varsity Lightweight Eight, Kansas grabbed the top spot with a time of 6:34.1.
Varsity Eight
Varsity Eigh
1. Kansas A 6:13.2
2. Kansas B 6:23.4
3. Creighton B 6:44.4
Freshman Eight
The races were all shortened because of the cold weather.
Varsity Lightweight Eight
1. Kansas A 6:11.2
2. Kansas B 6:30.5
3. Creighton B 6:36.6
Kansas will be back in action March 2 when it travels to Tulsa, Okla., to take on the University of Tulsa in a dual regatta.
"Of course, we are very happy that Cecil has chosen to remain a Yankee," Steinbrenner said in a statement. "He is one of the game's premier players and will be an integral part of our drive to repeat as world champions.
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
"The Yankees have nothing but the highest respect for Cecil Fielder and for what he has accomplished," he said.
As it stands now, Fielder will be eligible for free agency after this season.
TAMPA, Fla. — Cecil Fielder decided to stay with the New York Yankees, dropping his trade demand at 10:59 p.m. Saturday—one minute before he would have become a free agent and lost a $7.2 million salary.
Kansan Classified
Under baseball's rules, Fielder had until March 15 to drop the trade demand. If not, he would have instantly become a free agent and forfeited his 1997 salary.
Men and Women
The Associated Press
Fielder, however, did not get the contract extension he sought although it remains a possibility for the future. Agent Bob Gilhooley and Yankees owner George Steinbrenner talked during the day about a new deal and did not reach agreement.
Player drops demand after Yankees call bluff
100s Announcements
But Friday's Yankees proposal that Fielder cut his 1997 salary in return for adding another y ear apparently did not go over well with his side. Instead the Yankees called Fielder's bluff and were right.
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan
200s Employment
There had been reports that Steinbrener was thinking about giving Fielder a three-year extension for $21 million or a two-year deal at $14 million.
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
X
will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
300s
Merchandise
Classified Policv
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to ad-
400s Real Estate
tise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
A
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
I
105 Personals
KU Q&A offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unaware. Please call KU Info at 843-506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
SWM age 40's brown eyes & hair, country background, animal lover. Desires female for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P.O. Box 44115 Lithia, KS 69044.
110 Business Personals
Silver Sterling Jewelry For Gays & Gals.
Hoope, rings with nails; toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc. Shop. 928 Mass.
HEALTH CENTER
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
864-4358
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
120 Announcements
864-9500
Need a 2-way ride to Daytona FL, also would like to meet people from Tampa or near by. Call. Area is in the northwest of Florida.
3 Years. +112% (curious?) If you are a participant in the TIAA-CREF Retirement Program, Please visit http://mclasclek.interkan.net
Gay, leshian, bisexual, transgender or unuse? KU QA offers a confidential support group Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. call KU Info at 843-3560 or Headquarters at 841-3454 for location.
FAST FUNDRAIRER - RASE $500 IN 5 DAYS,
GREEKS, GROUPS, CLUBS, MOTIVATED
INDIVIDUALS, FAST, EASY - NO FINANCIAL
OBLIGATION (800) 1602-1892 EXT. 33
NUDE RECREATION
North American Nudist Directory lists 100% of nude beaches, clubs, & resorts in your area and offers a full range of amenities.
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
841-2345 • 1419 Mass.
24 hrs. Free
120 Announcements
NEED $$$$$$$$$ ?
Kansan Ads Pay
**men** & **women** needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research studies. Earn up to $1000/wk, 24 Hour info(2.5 minutes): 6:413 879-4777.
125 Travel
男士厕所
女士厕所
A HOUSE IN BRECKENRIDGE AVAILABLE
POWERSHIP FOR SERVICE AT 381-7950
calls Steve at 381-7950
phone: (212) 456-7890
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babyshower needed. Monday-Friday in Eudora.
Must have own transportation and provide
transportation to and from home.
Desktop Publisher. Full-time days. Exp in
the following offices: BHP Billiton
Copy Co. 228, Nairim & Fax 852-2063.
Now hire cooks, utilities hot and cold prep. No
work on-site. Enroll in Applies. In person.
Stockade Stockade 1015 Iowa.
Part-time delivery driver needed. Drugs free time. Apply in person. Carquest Auto Parts.
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. @ 6 wk campground recreation park. Lake Quivira, SQ. Queensboro. (800) 291-7455.
Student hourly secretary $/5,hr 15,hrs./wk. Good computer skills. Applications can be picked up at any location on campus.
Green Valley Day Care needs assistant teacher MWF 30-6pm to work with children age 18-59s. A.M. & P.M. Substitutes needed also-Call Rosemary 843-417.
ALVAMAR NAUTILUS
Apartment Manager. Rapidly growing management firm is currently seeking out individual to join our management team. Experience preferred but will train right person. Apply at first management Inc. 1820 W. 6th or mail resume to PO. Box 1832 north KS 68044
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in Poinsot Mtns. of PA
Over 40 activities - Seeking general
training for outdoor enthusiasts.
318-887-9200 or mail ninetreesand.com
Now hiring *Wine Instructor*, M.W.F. 5am to
8pm, Room A-103, 24th Floor, EOE
preferred. See Becky, 4104 Clinton Floor, EOE
Part time help needed calling on behalf of SADF. Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/hr plus commission, schedule your hour. Come join our friendly team and get involved with M-ETH 4pm-10pm and fill out an application.
*Now hiring, restaurant worker, all positions, all shifts, Pay startting at $6.50 and up, depending on experience and availability. Please apply in person or call 212-749-3230, day between 2.00 and 5.00 P.M. or call 492-2330.
Babysitter/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
Daycare. Job location: Los Angeles Starting now.
Full time over time. Muskus own car, experience, and knowledge of child
care. Required: Master's degree, and reference to Blind Box 10. 119 Staffer Flight.
STUDENT WORK - up to 10:25 NAT! JCO has immediate PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JOCO. Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Con. Apply call our JOCO office at i391.9381.WORK (10am-5pm)
Rewarding, exciting summer for sophomore and older college students counselling in the Colorado Mountains. Explore activities, natural science and many outdoor programs. Natural Sanborn West Camps. P.O. Box 627. Fax: 801-543-6792.
A 24 hr dinner w/bur. & pool. Located at 1105 Mass in former Tin Pan Alley. Now hiring kitchen, service, & bar managers. Labors. Apply in person after 3 today. Bartenders & cooks all shifts.
T.J's
205 Help Wanted
Helped wanted for after school care of a 9 yr. old boy. Car needed for: pickup from school and some driving to basketball practice. M-Th 3:40-7. Female preferred w/ references. $7/week, 789-3043.
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club, adjacent to campus has openings for banquet servers, bartenders and hosts. Flexible hours, some daytime and weekend availability preferred. Above enrollment, employer plans in a professional, upscale facility, facility staffs average six hours. Apply at 126 Oread Ave
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education advisement in the University Placement Center. 20 wr/hr, $70/hr, startning August 1997. Application deadline: September 30th. Complete job description at 110 Burge Union, or see www.ukans.edu/~up/job.html
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education advertisement in the University Placement Center. 20 lrs/wk, $7.00/hr., starting August 1997. Application deadline April 11th. Pick up complete job description online at ukans.edu or see www.ukans.edu/~pce.lobs.html
APPLY AT MANPOWER
211 E. 8th
749-2800
PART TIME DATA ENTRY
Manpower is now accepting applications for individuals to work part time. You are able to be able to work from home with your consistent schedule 8:40am-10:45am; 11:45am-3:15, 3:15pm-5:30, 3:15pm-6:15, 4:15pm-5:15. STARTS
Corrections/Security: Detention Specialist.
Responsible for direct supervision of juveniles assigned to the Center. Complete paperwork as required by the Board of Regis- tirements: The over age of 21. High School Diploma or its equivalent. Three semester hours of academic study at the college level in adolescent development. Completion of an equivalent training courses in child development or care for youth or both or one year experience as a child care worker or house parent in a facility service setting. Experience in resume and job history to FJAC, P.O. Box 1025, Topeka, Kansas. 66519. Applications will be received by telephone no. 21, 0917. Telephone (913) 812-6591/FAX (913) 822-6591.
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with possibility of renewal for next academic year. Interested students must have experience in years and will have no other job commitments. Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community experience, ability to work with Macrodata solid research skills, leadership and supervisory experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, interest in helping other. Must be a graduate student in Union for an application. Will consider on first basis come with final deadline for applications. 5pm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
HELP WANTED - SOFTBALL UMPIRES -
THE LAWRENCE PARKS AND RECREATION
DEPARTMENT IS LOOKING FOR INDIVIDUALS
WHO ARE INTERESTED IN WORKING AS
A SOFTBALL UMPIRES DURING THE SUMER
AND FALL LEAGUES.
TRAINING SESSIONS WILL BEGIN MARCH 15TH AND WILL CONTINUE DURING MARCH. ALL INTERESTED INDIVIDUALS WILL BE JOINED LEAGUE PAY BEGINS. IN APRIL AND CONTINUES THROUGH OCTOBER. ANYONE INTERESTED SHOULD CONTACT THE ADULT AT (713) 269-8400 YOU WILL BE MAILED THE DATES AND TIMES OF THE TRAINING MEETINGS.
中
$ HIRING NOW $
f-e-r
HIRING NOW
for
SUMMER JOBS
in Topeka for presen
office and warehouse.
Apply today!
KEY Staffing
400 SW Croix, Topeka
267-9999
SUMMER JOB!
Key is hiring now for full-time jobs that will start in the
SUMMER JOBS!
summer. Many positions available in Torkee for production, retail
205 Help Wanted
Wanted 87 students. Lose 8-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough. Doctor, recommended. Guaranteed. $30 cost. Free gift. 1-800-435-791.
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week
Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
SPECIAL JOBS FOR SPECIAL LIFEGUARDS
For an unusually rewarding legged experience, join the Activity Therapy. Liaquafarst at Men's Hospital.
If you're a high school graduate with WSI certification and lifeguard experience, you could spend your summer working for the #1 behavioral healthcare organization in the U.S.
For more information, call Roger Nylter, Activity Therapy Surgeon, (913) 350-5248, or apply in Human Resources, Tues - Fri 8:30-11:00am and 1:30-4:30pm.
MENNINGER
5800 SW 6th Street
Topeka, KS 66606
(913) 350-5000
EO/AA Employer
0
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
$
Inso Kansas City Corporation
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
Inso Kansas City Corporation
Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64112
Fax: (816) 753-8387
E-mail: hr-kc@inso.com
205 Help Wanted
Inso CORPORATION
205 Help Wanted
205 Help Wanted
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach: swim, diving, sports, martial arts, tactics, riffley, archery, tennis, golf, sports, campers, camping, crafts, dramatics, or Ridgeline, basketball, maintenance, GW/179 more or older, been on the camp, GW/179 Maple, Ll, ID, 60039 849-746-4444.
Food Service Supervisors: 2 positions available @ the Mass Street Dell & Buffalo Halo Smokehouse. 15-30 hours per week. We have 2 years experience in food service, superviseing, $6.50-$7.00 per hour based on prior experience. $6.50-$7.00 per hour bonus up to $8.00. Apply to Food Service Supervisor at Office 703. Mounts (upstairs above smokehouse).
205 Help Wanted
A wide range of benefits include:
KELLY SERVICES AND SPRINT TELECENTERS INC.
BE A PART OR OUR WINNING TEAM!
Build your career with one of the fastest growing direct marketing companies in the nation. Full and Part-time positions available.
- Vacation & Holiday Pay
40 TR Stock Options
Career Advancement
。
- Tuition Reimbursement Program
- Professional Work Atmosphere
Requirements for these positions include excellent
Requirements for these positions include excellent oral & telephone communication skills, basic computer experience, sales and./or customer service skills.
To join the team, all Kristin at 749-2782 for an interview.
KELLY Services
Stay ahead of the Job Crowd!
Make sure you get that job now! Register over we can keep you busy with clerical,
---
great summer the break and over the summer secretarial.
accounting or other office support jobs in the Kansas City metro area.
To schedule an appointment over break, call Shelley or Michelle at:
913-491-3491
Or contact us on the web at :
www.employbts.com
BTS BUSINESS TEMPORARY SERVICES
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 17,1997
7B
/ 205 Help Wanted
LAKE SHAWNEE GOLF COURSE-Topeka
Opportunity for an individual who enjoys working with food preparation and customer service.
Schedule a visit to the club to enthuse individuals. A thirty days available.
Apply at Lake Shawnee G.C., 4141 SE Edge Rd, Topeka 267-298.
JC Penney Fine jewelry selling specialist job available
Selling experience preferred; commission
pay plan, part-time. Flexible schedule.
Some daytime available & required. Gener-
ous employee discount plan
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800) - 733-2404
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 1391
842-5116
International Consulting
16 East 54th 942-3110 Free Initial Consultation
H.M.C.
THE MUSEUM OF CHINA
OF
Heathman & Kelly
DUITRAFFICMINIMAL/PERSONAL INJURY
Call for a Free Consultation
James C. Heathman or Melissa A. Kelly ATTONGE AT LAW
913-267-0055 or
Toll Free: 888-834-4LAW (529)
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 833-8444 for applications, term paper jacki for dissertations, documentation, etc. Call Joanne at 212-765-9010 for assistance.
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/ later
training at top quality payoff you for. Call
Danna @ 843-760-1258
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
X
1990 FORD PROBE Excellent Condition: 5-
missing clutch and throttle call. Mileage: 3690 until
mid-331 and 2365 until mid-334.
Soft Top for Jeep Wrangler. Light Gray. $200
B.O.B. Call Tm @ 833-2743
Macintosh Isl with high resolution monitor and lazer printer. Lots of software.
2 TICKETS TO SOUTH EAST REGIONAL
CHAMPSONSHIP FOR SALE 1,268
900-877-4345
Need Energy? Try our 100% natural product. It gives you a tremendous natural lift and mental sharpness to side effects. Great before study exercise. Dependable Herbalist Callio $91-369-3048
106 Mitchell Sinhui 4WD 4, pdck. a/c /n.
95K. Good cond. Run well. Warm 399. Call 331-352.
340 Auto Sales
superiorforacura.com. Pictures of pre-owned vehicles on the web. Various makes and models. Call 1-800-875-ACURA for more info. Ask for Pat.
90 Toyota Tercell, manual trans., runs well.
$2,000, obo 3847649
1984 Honda Accord LX. AC, cruise control, rusty but runs great. Extremely reliable. $1100 OBO. Call Jai at 841-4287.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Studio, 1-2 BR, also 5 BR house all near KU. Call 841-8254.
Summer Sub lease 3 BR, 1/2 bath, W/D, on KU bus rt. Rent $648 /mo call 829-9888
2 BDRM, 2 bath College Hill condo W/d,
water pd. water pa! Avail Aug Rental $75
(913) 843-6880
Available now~3 bedroom, 1 bath. Wash/Dryer.
equipped kitchen. On KU bus route. Call 841-652-7960.
1 BDRM apartment available for summer sublease. Inexpensive, furnished, close to Fraser
405 For Rent
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG. 1
Price range is $295-$450, & deposit.
Hm Edwards @ (813) 668-3158
CHEAP SUMMER SUBLEASE $171/room. + 1/2
units. Cool roommates. Avail. through July 31.
Cost: $95/room.
Condor for Sale 3d8mm, ibmth, washer/dryer, on
eBay at www.condor.com.
Priced at $19,000. OBO. Call to view 323-756-6500.
FURNISHED 3 BR APT. 2 BATH, W/D, A/C.
BALCONY, ON BUS ROUTE, NCEAM CAMP.
Got a group? Available for fall. 9 bdrm or 6 bdmr home. Well maintained. Nice common areas, laundry facilities. 841-STAR (7382).
Great old house!!! Seven bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 3 living areas, 2 kitchens, all utilities paid. Next to stadium. Available August 18. Call 831-4573.
STUDIO, CLOSE TO CAMPUS, ON BUS ROUTE,
电话:CALL 8250 for more information.
电话:CALL 8250 for more information.
Studio 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Available for summer & fall rentals. Located on a quiet, round-out route. Range route: Call 841-3150 for more info.
3 *se* 8bdm house. 2 *blks* from campus. 3 *blks* from
b downtown. Blk *qdesign*. 16 *blks* from campus. 1 Call 847-501-
1988.
South Pointe
PARK VILLAS
Sublease 2 BR, 2 Bath Apt. at Tuckaway: Pool,
security, fireplace, veranda, LARGE. Will give
you deposit upon 943-149-849
Avail Aug 1.
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
Summer lease for a bromm, 1 qtr./8 lb. Avail.
Marine grade ice pack to compress to compa-
gage A/C. Washer & dryer, Low vent. C仓.
8 BR houses for rent.
1 wall. Aug 1
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Pavilion Awdop Bkt. Fireplace, good
view, $400/month Call 864-3638 (DAY) Ask for Kerry
- Built in '95
Low $55 per month for niced spaces 2 BR apts, APCA, C/A bus route and pool. Low utilities! No pets. 1 yr leases beginning in May, June, July or Angle. Spanish Crest Apk. 914-868-001
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
Tenn. a student housing alternative. Open &
diverse membership, non-profit operation, de-
ministral control. $180-240 incl. wk dy dinners, Utl.
W/D, cable. Close to campus & Maks. Call or stop by
841-0484.
5 Bedroom house. Great location! Available for 1 year lease starting next fall. Painted in Fall of '96. Kegerator included. Call 843-5217.
NOW LEASING
GATEWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 841-8468.
- Designer Interior
- 3 Bed, 2 Full Bath
- On Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- No Pets
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1. 2, 3, 4 Bedroom
On Bus Route
Pool & Volleyball Court
Pets Welcome
- Hot Water & Trash Paid
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Tuckaway
405 For Rent
Live in Library.
1. 2, & 3 Bedrooms
Live in Luxury.
SUMMER SUBLEASE-
Spacious 1 BR. on KU bus route. Pool. A/C.
Call 841-7498
- Washer/Dryer
- Built in TV
- 2600 W. 6th 838-3377
- Alarm System
HARPER SQUARE
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
- 1 BR425.00
APARTMENTS
3BR 725.00
PINNACLE WOODS
- 2BR 610.00
• 3BR 735.00
1 BR 425.00
2BR 610.00
1*2*3 br. luxury apt. homes
Call for Appointments
4:15-6pm Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
leasing for summer and in
2 * BF from Janda in april
4 * tbc to KU bus route
5 * tbc to KU bus路线/petrols
6 * Pid Tour Bus
7 * basketball court/Park
8 * basketball court/Cb
Cuaighla A Bf Cb, Cl 1-1815
- Washer/Dryer
CALL 832-9918
1st Month Free — 865-5454
Naismith Place
- New in 1996!!
- Alarm System
- 2,3,4 bedroom townhouses available
OLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
1&2Bedrooms
- Near shopping areas
- Pux Sten
- Small pets welcome w/ deposit
* Walking distance to New Life Fitness Center
TRAILRIDGE
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- Small pets welcome w/ deposit
- Laundry facility
- Swimmina Pool
VILLAGE SQUARE apartment
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
- Close to campus
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Swimming pool
HIGHPOINTE APARTMENT HOMES
Washer/Dryer Alarm System
1,2 & 3 Bedrooms
- On bus route
Clubhouse & Swimming Pool Workout Facility Basketball Court
Call First Management 841-8468
On KU Bus Route
NOWLEASING
Holiday
*2 Bedroom $400-$445
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
3 Hot Tubs
ExerciseRoom
FLATS
M-F10-6 SAT10-4 SUN12-4
405 For Rent
Leasing for Summer & Fall
Holiday Apartments
Move In Now...
One Month Free Rent
On lease through July 31
1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment
Call or stop by today
211 Mount Hope Court #1 For more Info, or Appt.
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
843-2116 11th and Miss Berkeley Flats
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
One Month Free Rent
MOVE IN NOW...
LCA
water paid
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
841-7726
Shannon Plaza
Spacious Apartments and Townhouses for rent.
Washers/Yorker, Dishwashing Avail.
Central Air- Closet to Campus
Studio 1,2,3 & 4 bedrooms
Call: LAK/Apartments
S31-2pls (707) am
646-589-3232
"Covenanted affordable housing"
Apartments
Carson Place
"Apartments Designed for Your Lifestyle"
Chamberlain Court
Oread Apartments
Bradford Square
1425 Kentucky
1425 Kentucky
Abbotts Center
Hawthorn Place
Abbotts Center
- Heritage Place
- Highpointe
Call for an appointment
"No one lives above or below you"
841-8468
Lorimar & Leannamar Townhomes
Our townhomes are 2 levels
Leasing for Sum/Fall 97
1, 2, 3 bdmr/2 bath
4 bdmr/3 bath
Call 841-7849
Sunrise
Office hrs 9am-5pm M-F
Sunrise Apartments Signing now for fall
- Garages (village)
- Free Cable TV (Place)
• Luxurious Town Homes
• On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8460
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
Park25
Apartments
Currently Leasing For Fall '97 10-Month Leases Available!
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
- We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as *nacious* 3 bedroom townhomes.
- On KU Bus Route
- Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
West Hills APARTMENTS
--closets in a friendly, service oriented community.
Station 4, OCF Building, Suite 20
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall'97
405 For Rent
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
(no pets, please)
OPEN HOUSE
No Appointment needed
Mackenzie Place, 1135 Kentucky. Now leasing for Aug. 1. Great Location! Luxury apartments, close to grocery stores, dryer, oven, kitchen appliances, 2 beaks or parch/patio. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-168-100.
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30-4:30
MASTERCRAFT
WALK TO CAMPUS
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
Campus Place
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Regents Court
19th & Mass • 749-0445
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Mon - Pri 8am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
Af some locations
Equal Housing Opportunity
meadowbrook FALL '97
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to see see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like atmosphere.
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
LARGE apartments with Big
1
Studios,1. 2&3 Bdrm.Apts.
2&3 Bdrm.Townhouses
- 2 Pools
- Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat. 1-4 Sun
- 2 Volleyball Areas
- 3 Bus Stops
405 For Rent
Hawthorn Place
- Townhomes and Residential Homes*
Fireplace, one-car garage
◆ Private Courtyard 331-2332
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
"In a busy, impersonal world.
we provide good,
Quail Creek
QUAQUIN
service."
Managed & maintained by Professionals
430 Roommate Wanted
Summer room apartment w/ wanted for furnished, 4-bedroom apartment w/ wi-fi, A.C.洗衣/dryer, pool, kitchen, bedroom, bath.
Now to schedule an ad:
2 Females to share 5 bedroom luxurious home,
$350/mo. all amenities, 1/2 mile from
the beach, pets W/ DL;
Non-smoking female needed immediately to furnish, furnished 2 bedroom, close to campus
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX
KANSAN
Female Sum. Sublease needed middle of May to
end of July. May paid +$230/mo plus 1/3 meal. W/
on KU buses. Close to Campus. Call 832-824
pre-op transsexual lives in Lawrence area seeks another gay/gay friendly person to share a townhouse or social drinker preferred. Bills will be divided by two. If interested please call (913) 731-1268
Ads chosen in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
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105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
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140 host & tenant
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66845
8B
Monday, March 17, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas basketball: A cross section
24
POLLARD
31
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
I will never forget the day I met him. He was a man of great intellect and leadership. He was a man of great accomplishment. He was a man of great passion. He was a man of great integrity
Above: Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn stretches to block Purdue's Jaraan Cornell during the Jayhawk's game with the Boilermakers Saturday at the Pyramid in Memphis, Tenn.
Left: Center Scott Pollard addresses Kansas basketball fans Saturday night. A pep rally was held for the returning team after the women's basketball game in Allen Field House.
Far left: Forward Jennifer Trapp, attempts to score despite defensive efforts by Detroit Mercy's forwards Crystal Thorne (left) and Autumn Rademacher. The Jayhawks overcame the Titans by a score of 81-67.
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
he omega
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
1316257192025
Above: Taking advantage of a free day Friday, Kansas center Scot Pollard compares Elvis Presly's Cadillac with that of his own Cadillac which he has named "Mavin". Pollard and the rest of the team toured Elvis' Graceland on Friday afternoon. The Jayhawk was spotted at several places in Memphis, Tenn., the entire weekend, including a Jayhawk sticker found on Elvis' grave at Graceland.
Right: Kansas forward Paul Pierce struggles for possession of the ball with Purdue's Brad Miller Saturday in Memphis, Tenn.
Far right: Guard Lynn Pride, goes up for a lay-up against Detroit Mercy guard Shafarrah Hill. Pride was responsible for 15 points and 3 rebounds to help in the Jayhawks' victory.
KANSAS
34
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
COND ROUNDERS VANDE WASHINGTON
V
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Basketball: Kansas women ousted by Vanderbilt, 51-44. Page 10
Parking: Ad hoc group has been appointed to study parking proposal. Page 3
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
****************3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PD BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
TUESDAY. MARCH 18, 1997
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.103.NO.120
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Supreme Court upholds illness responsibility law
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court let stand a Florida law yesterday that makes it easier to sue tobacco companies to recover Medical money spent treating smoking-related illnesses.
The justices turned down industry arguments that the measure unlawfully seeks to stack the deck in the state's favor.
Florida is one of about 20 states that have sued tobacco companies in attempts to get reimbursed for Medicaid funds spent to treat smokers. Mississippi's claim is scheduled to go to trial in June, while a trial in the Florida case is expected to begin in August.
Florida's claim is aided by a law, believed to be the only one of its kind in the nation, that aims to help the state recover money from anyone believed responsible for a Medicaid patient's illness.
The 1994 measure was aimed at the tobacco industry, according to those who challenged it in court—including cigarette maker Philip Morris and Associated Industries of Florida, a business group.
Philip Morris lawyer Gregory G. Littie noted the action was not a ruling on the merits of the law, and he said his company could renew its challenge after the trial if necessary.
Judge refuses to delay McVeigh bombing trial
DENVER — The judge in the Oklahoma City bombing case yesterday refused to delay Timothy McVeigh's trial despite a stream of news stories about his purported confession.
U. S. District Judge Richard Matsch said jury selection would begin as planned March 31.
The stories about McVeigh appeared in recent weeks in The Dallas Morning News, Playboy and Newsweek.
"I have full confidence that a fair-minded jury can and will be empaneled and that those selected will return a just verdict based on the law and evidence presented to them." Matsch said.
"Judge Matsch has addressed these issues, and we'll hope he's right." Jones said after the ruling.
McVeigh's lawyer, Stephen Jones, had asked Matsch to dismiss the charges or delay the trial.
Matsch noted the story had been reported extensively in the two years since the bombing. Nearly 1,000 prospective jurors have been summoned, and Matsch expressed confidence that careful questioning could produce an impartial jury of 12 members and six alternates.
man crashes fuel-laden truck into abortion clinic
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. — A man wearing a crash helmet and earplugs smashed a pickup full of propane tanks and gasoline cans into an abortion clinic early yesterday. The fuel did not explode, and no one was inlured.
After driving through the front doors of Family Planning Associates about 2:15 a.m., the man got out and tried to ignite gasoline that had been poured on the outside of the pickup, police Sgt. Bill Henry said. A security guard stopped the man and held him until officers arrived.
Some gasoline burned briefly but caused no major damage to the building, which was empty.
The Associated Press
Peter Andrew Howard, 44, of Bakersfield was jailed for investigation of terrorism with an explosive device at an abortion clinic and attempted destruction of an explosive device. Howard, a nurse who left his job at a hospital in December, has picketed the clinic in the past, the sergeant said.
Henry said the truck bed contained three five-gallon bottles of propane and a dozen five-gallon cans of gasoline.
BSU stands to lose $5,800
Former vice president says group can make do with less
By Dave Morantz
Kansan staff writer
The saga of the Black Student Union's financing continues.
After fighting to keep its block allocation status and seeing almost $10,000 cut from its budget allocation, a former BSU vice president recommended at last week's Student Senate meeting that another $5,800 be slashed from the organization's budget.
Dion Jones, St. Croix, Virgin Islands, sophomore, off-campus senator and finance committee member, said after serving as BSU's vice president last year, he believed the $5,800 could be better
spent on other University organizations.
"I don't think it would have been fair for me to sit there and not say anything when other organizations needed the money more than BSU," he said. "You're not going to, see a decline in what BSU does."
Jones used Hilltop Child Development Center and KU Legal Services for Students as examples of organizations in dire need of money.
The debate about BSU's Senate financing began last semester. After discovering the organization had overspent its account by $420 and had not included the Student Senate logo on some printed materials, the Senate finance committee recommended the full Senate not renew BSU's block-allocation status.
Block-allocation status allows an organization to receive a lump sum from Senate each year and use it at the organization's discretion. Other groups must apply for line-item allocation, forcing them to ask Senate for specific amounts of money for specific events.
In the final Senate meeting last semester, the full Senate rejected a bill that left BSU off a list of groups recommended for block-allocation status, sending the bill back to the finance committee.
In its first meeting this semester, the committee reversed itself and narrowly recommended reinstating BSU's block-allocation status. After deliberating on the amount of money to allocate to each of the 17 groups, the committee recommended BSU receive $20,800,
almost $10,000 less than the
$30,500 the group had requested.
Last week when the full Senate received a budget bill stating how much money organizations would receive, Jones recommended reducing BSU's budget to $15,000. That forced Senate to send the bill back to the finance committee and make a change before Senate could vote on the bill.
The finance committee will discuss the bill at its next meeting on April2. The full Senate will vote on the bill April9.
Julius Williams, BSU adviser, said the organization would have no comment until it designated a representative to speak about the issue.
Kelly Huffman, Bellevue, Neb., junior and finance committee chairman, said although he supported the decrease, he was surprised Senate had considered
Jones said the finance committee originally had reduced BSU's request by almost $10,000 because the organization had asked for more than $6,000 for a computer printer and more than $5,000 for salaries of executive officers.
"After the fiasco last semester, I didn't think slashing some of BSU's budget would be considered," he said.
Jones said he also did not think BSU needed almost $5,000 to sponsor Def Comedy Jam, an event he believed an organization like Student Union Activities could pay for.
"If they give me $6,000 for a printer, I'm going to spend $2,000 for a printer and put the rest into the budget," Jones said. "I know the type of programming BSU does, and I really don't believe it will hurt the organization in any way if they had $15,000 or $20,000."
THE BOYS' BASKETBALL TEAM IS COMING TO THE PARK ON SUNDAY, JULY 14. THEY WILL BE IN THE HIGH SCHOOL LEAGUE. FOR MORE STORIES, GO TO WWW.BASKETBALLSPORTS.COM
Forwards Jennifer Trapp, Shelly Canada, guard Erin Reed, and forward Patience Grayer show their disappointment at the KU women's 51-44 loss against Vanderbilt, Monday night. With this loss the women have ended their season with a 25-6 record.
Vanderbilt halts Kansas women
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
For the Kansas women's basketball team, the first home loss of the season couldn't have come at a worse time.
The Jayhawks' season, as well as the careers of five seniors, ended with a 51-44 loss to Vanderbilt in the second round of the NCAA Tournament last night at Allen Field House.
"It's pretty tough," Trapp said, crying. "You really work for 4 1/2 years of your life for this. I have no regrets. I love this university. We've had a lot of success here, and we've had a good season."
Other Kansas seniors include guards Tamecka Dixon and Angie Halbleib and forwards Patience
Kansas forward Jennifer Trapp said dealing with the end of her college basketball career would not be easy.
Graver and Shelly Canada.
"These girls competed when there weren't even people in the stands," Washington said. "I feel so badly for these girls because they wanted to win this so much. They came to Kansas when we were still building, and they've left a lot of wonderful things for young players."
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said this senior class would always be remembered.
Candle display promotes smart decision-making
Greeks fight drunken driving with Safe Break Week festivities
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
KU sorority and fraternity members lit candles last night, hoping to raise awareness about the dangers of drunken driving before spring break.
Todd Hupe, Highlands Ranch, Colo., freshman and organizer of Safe Break Week for Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol, said five executive members from GAMMA had placed sand bags with candles near the houses of Sigma Nu, Kappa Alpha Theta, Chi Omega and Alpha Gamma Delta last night.
Anne Donohue, president of GAMMA and Omaha, Neb., junior, said 25 sand bags with candles were placed at each spot.
"It's symbolizing 25 people who died in alcohol-related incidents." Donohue said.
Last year, 25 individuals between the ages of 18 and 24 died in drunken-driving accidents in Kansas. Donohue said.
GAMMA Safe Break Week is March 16-18. Donohue said GAMMA intended to call students' attention to the risk of drunken-driving accidents before they left for spring break. This year is the first time the group lit candles symbolizing the deaths of victims of drunken-driving accidents.
GAMMA also organized a barbecue and a volleyball tournament on Sunday and a Safe Break Week campaign fair on Wescoe Beach that runs through today.
They will be having their version of the game show Singled Out tomorrow from 4 to 5 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Also tomorrow, 33 greek social chairpersons will wear Dead Day T-shirts, Donohue said. The black shirts read "I'm dead" on the front and "Last year in Kansas over 400 people died in alcohol-related accidents" on the back.
Hupe said he wanted the T-shirts to send a message to the rest of campus.
"we hope a lot of people read it," Hupe said. "We are trying to stimulate people into thinking."
State Senate debates abortion bill
Act would require in-person advising
By Ann Marchand Kansan staff writer
The abortion debate has reared its ugly head once again in the Kansas Legislature.
following last year's vetof the proposed law known as the "Woman's Right-to-Know Act of 1996," abortion opponents have weakened the bill this year and reintroduced it in the hopes it will pass this session. It has passed in the House and awaits consideration in the Senate.
"My first thought about it was that it was the most condescending and patriarchal thing that I have ever read," said Sarah Deer, Wichita law student and member of the Pro-Choice Coalition. "I think it's really insulting."
But some are concerned about the bill's intent.
Kansas law now stipulates that before a woman has an abortion, she must be notified at least eight hours prior to the procedure of the risks of the procedure and of alternatives to abortion.
Many clinics comply with the law by mailing the information to the woman before her appointment, and it is the woman's responsibility to read the information.
That means a woman who wanted to spend only one day at the physician's office would meet with the physician in the morning and would have the procedure in the late afternoon.
But the act would require the woman be informed in person about the facts concerning abortion, possible alternatives and available options eight hours before the procedure would be performed.
Tamara Morris, vice president of marketing for Planned Parenthood, said the act would place unnecessary barriers on women in rural communities.
"In a state like Kansas, where there
Ages of women requesting abortions in the Kansas City area:
35 and older 9
17 and younger 8
30-34 12
20-24 38
25-29 19
18-19 14
See STATE, Page 2A
SOURCE: 1994 study by Planned KANBAN Parenthood of Mid-Missouri and Eastern Kansas
TODAY
INDEX
Television ...2
Campus ...3
Opinion ...4
World News ...6
Horoscopes ...7
Classifleds ...9
Basketball ...10
OVERCAST
High 51°
Low 44°
Weather: Page 2
4
农
6
2
Tuesday, March 18, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
C
WEATHER
QuickINFO
ON CAMPUS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
51
44
89
Still cloudy and cooler yet.
WEDNESDAY
33
62 33
Warmer and partly cloudy.
THURSDAY
ON CAMPUS
73
41
目录
Much warmer and mostly sunny.
**OAKS Nontraditional Student**
Organization will have a brown bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at Alove A in the Kansas Union.
Contact: Janice Beaco, 843-6532.
Psychology Club will feature Doug Denny at 11:30 a.m. today at the Parlor Room in the Kansas Union.
Epicopac/Lutheran Campus Center will worship with Eucharist at noon today at Dorfschap Phone: Contact the Ray, Joseph S. T. Allard, 834-802-801
Office of Study Abroad will have a meeting about Australia/New Zealand study abroad at 4 p.m. today at 105A Lincoln Hall, Call 864-3742.
Office of Study Abroad will have a meeting about Great Britain/Ireland study aboard at 2:45 p.m. today at 105A ILLINO Hallcast, Bk4 3742-3743.
St Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a Health Science Discussion Group at 4 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. Contact Mitchell, 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today
at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact: the Rev. Raymond May, 843-0357.
■ KU Fencing Club will meet from 5 to 7 tonight at 212 Robinson Center. Contact: John Hadden. 832-993-6863.
National Association for Anoxia and Eating Disorders will support a sponsor group from 5:30 to 6:30 tonight at 327 Fresher Hall, Hostick & Calcagne, 865-5757.
KU KI Alkido Club will meet at 5:30 tonight at 207 Robinson Center. Contact: Jill Woodworth, 864-1798.
KU Environns will meet at 6 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Contact Mack Calwell, 839-3124.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 8 tonight on the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Contact Brady Ave. 894-8088
KU Science Fiction and Fantasywriters' workshop will meet from 6 to 8 tonight at Able F in the Kansas Union, Conn. David Mckee Allen, 822-1990
School of Business will feature Human Resources Management Association
at 6 tonight at 403 Summerfield Hall. Contact: Brenda, 832-2311.
*Inspirational Gospel Voices will practice*
*Hall Contact: Kendra Evans, 844-8101*
*Hall Contact: Kendra Evans, 844-8101*
KU College Republicans will meet with the KU Libertarians at 6:30 tonight at 100 Smith Hill. Contact: Ryan Kaffman, 832-727-232.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor Mother-Daughter Relationships from 7 to 8 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas University. Call 864-3552.
**KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 7**
tonight at 1204 Oread Ave. Contact:
Brian Cowan 832-1548.
KU Yoga Club will meet from 7 to 8:30 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Steve, 749-2401.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at the Sunflower Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Lori Hauwell. 841-5852.
AIESEC will meet at 7:10 tonight at 2023 Haworth Hall. Contact: Jen Boston, 864-3304.
STATE
Continued from Page 1A
are probably three abortion providers in the entire state, and most of them are in the eastern third of the state, you're putting an extra burden on these women who have to travel a long way, arrange for child care, get a hotel for an extra night," she said.
The chief author of the legislation,
House Speaker Pro Tem Susan
Wagle, R-Andover, did not return
calls seeking comment.
Proponents of the bill, including
55 Republican sponsors, hope the extra time will persuade women not to have an abortion.
Deer said that idea was unfounded.
"I think that women who come to the clinic have already wrestled with these issues and their decision," she said.
The bill passed the State House of Representatives and now will be considered in the Senate. If it passes, it will go to the desk of Gov. Bill Graves for signature or veto.
"I think we're all waiting to see what's going to happen in the Senate," said State Rep. Troy Findley, D-Lawrence.
State Rep. Tom Sloan, R-Lawrence, opposed the bill but said the bill probably would pass in the Senate.
"I think that the Senate is much more conservative this year than last year," he said.
Graves has not indicated whether he would veto the bill if it passed the Senate. His press secretary, Mike Matson, said the governor would not make a decision on the act until it landed on his desk.
"We'll wait and see what comes out of the legislative process first. Obviously, there's a long way to go on this measure," he said.
TUESDAY PRIMETIME MARCH 18, 1997
©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 Moesha ★★★ SocIStodes Burning Zone "Critical Mass" Hercules: Legendary Jmys. Mad Abo, You Bzzzl Cops ★★★ LAPD
WDFA ★★★ Kalifornia" ★★★ Drama I Kind Pill (in Stereo) News ★★★ H Patrol Cheers ★★★ Extra ★★★
KCTV 5 Promised Land "The Outrage" "Childhood Sweetheart?" (1997, Drama) Melissa Gilbert. ★★★ News ★ Late Show (in Stereo) Selfield ★★★
KS01 (6:20) Lawrence City Commission Meeting (Live) Lawrence News Plus
KCPT 7 John Testh: The Avon Concert (in Stereo) Riverdance – The Show (in Stereo) Business Rpt. Charlie Rose ★★★
KSNT 3 Mad Abo, You Something So Fraser (R) ★★★ Caroline Dateline (in Stereo) News Tonight show (in Stereo) Late Night ★★★
KMBC 3 Rosanne ★★★ Ellen (R) Home Imp. Spin City ★★★ Practice "Trial and Error" People-Here Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo) M"A'SH★★★
KTUW 1 Danny Kaye: A Legacy of Laughter: Masters Jackie Mason: Look Who's Laughing ★★★ Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo) WIBW 1 Promised Land "The Outrage" "Childhood Sweetheart?" (1997, Drama) Melissa Gilbert. ★★★ Late Late ★★★
KTKA 3 Rosanne ★★★ Ellen (R) Home Imp. Spin City ★★★ Practice "Trial and Error" News Selfield ★★★ Nightlife ★★★
CABLE STATIONS
AAE 2 Biography: Henry Fonda "Didstid & Passco: An Advancement of Learning" (1996) Law & Order "Secutitate" ★★★ Biography: Henry Fonda
CNBC 4 Equal Time Hardball Rivers Live Late Night (in Stereo) Charles Grodn Rivers Live(R)
CNN 4 Prime News Burden-Proof Larry King Live Today ★★★ Sports Illus. moneyline ★★★ NewsMight Showbiz
COM 4 "Ghostbusters" ★★★ (1998, Comedy) Bill Murray, Dan Akryoud. Dream On Daily Show Comic Relief Tick ★★★ Sat. Night
COURT 4 Prime Time Justice Trial Story Cochran & Grace Prime Time Justice (Stereo) Trial Story (R)
CSPAN 4 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
DISC 2 Wild Discovery "Predators" Mystery Univ. World U-Boot Wars-Slaaughter Wild Discovery "Predators" Mystery Univ. World
ESPN 4 College Basketball: NIT Second Round College Basketball: NIT Second Round – Teams TBA Sportscenter ★★★ Sweet 16
HIST 5 Crusaders (R) (Part 2 of 4) Great Ships "The Clippers" History Undercover Year by Year "1928" ★★★ Crusades (Part 2 of 4)
LFE 1 Unsolved Mysteries "Child of Rage" (1992, Drama) Mel Harris, Daint Schultz Living Mysteries Unsolved Mysteries
MTV 5 Prime Time (in Stereo) Unplugged (in Stereo) World Tour Singled Out Loveking (in Stereo) Altern.Nation
SCFI 7 Tekwar (in Stereo) Forever Knight (in Stereo) VRLS (in Stereo) Time Tux "Photo Finish" Tekwar (in Stereo) Tekwar (in Stereo)
TLC 3 Treasures America Legends of History Survival in the Sky (R) Treasures America Legends of History (R)
TNT 2 NBA Basketball: Seattle SuperSonics at Chicago Bulls (Live) Inside-NBA "The Hunchback" (1997, Drama) Mandy Parkinson.
USA 4 Murder, She Wrote Boxing: Chris Bryd vs. Bert Cooper (Live) Wings ★★★ Wings ★★★ Silk Stakings (R)
VH1 5 Blockbuster Entertainment Awards Reel Nominee (R) Sex Appeal Crossroads ★★★ Soul of VH1
WGN 7 Hercules: Legendary Jmys, Xena: Warrior Princess ★★★ Hmooner News Wiseguy "A Rightful Place" In the Heat of the Night
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 18, 1997
3
Bettors don't fear the law
By Kevin Bates Kensan staff writer
March Madness is in full swing, and students are betting on their abilities to pick the winners.
Across campus, students are forking over a few dollars to fill out an NCAA basketball tournament bracket and entering themselves in betting pools. But most do not appear to care that the whole business is against the law.
"Ive either run one or been in a pool since I was about 12," he said. "It worries me about as much as getting a cold."
Mike, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, who did not want his last name used, said he didn't think twice when he decided to enter a pool.
Brandon, Derby sophomore, who also did not want his last name used, said he also had bet on college basketball since high school and did not worry about the law.
"It's really no big deal," he said. "It's just a friendly bet between friends. I think the police have a lot worse things to worry about than investigating NCAA pools."
Brandon said betting on basketball proliferated on campus.
"You can find pools in any dorm and any office you look through," he said. "Obviously, they're not well-publicized, but anywhere you look, you should be able to find one."
"A bet's a bet in the state of Kansas," Keary said. "If we get word of something that's going on, we have to investigate and take appropriate action."
KU police Sgt. Chris Keary was a $2 bet was just as illegal as organizing a pool and keeping track of 50 entries.
Keary said that while gambling increased during national tournament time, KU police didn't look into it heavily.
"I'm sure it happens quite a bit," he said, "but we don't get very many complaints. We looked into one last year, but no bets had been placed."
Quang Lam, Lansing senior, said he didn't worry about getting in trouble for placing a friendly wager.
"It doesn't really bother me." Lam said. "Everybody and his brother does it."
Lam said he organized a pool for this year's tournament and charged $5 per bracket entered.
"It's usually only one or two dollars to enter," Lam said. "This one's for the high rollers."
Mary Horsch, director of communications for the attorney general of Kansas, said people entering in tournament pools usually did not suffer consequences
Everyone knows it happens a lot, but it's one of those crimes that are difficult to prosecute, "she said.
Ad hoc group studies parking
By Stephanie McDuff Kansan staff writer
University officials have yet to make final decisions about ways to improve campus transportation and parking problems, despite many proposals.
A decision is expected in early April after Chancellor Robert Hemenway reviews the final recommendations of a special ad hoc committee.
Hemenway created the committee to review the many proposals and opinions brought forth in an effort to solve parking and transportation problems at the University.
Proposals include the construction of a parking garage near the Kansas Union, placing gates around certain parking lots on campus, reconfiguring existing parking lots, constructing a visitor's center and implementing a park-and-ride shuttle service.
The committee met yesterday afternoon to review the information it had received and discuss possible recommendations for the chancellor, said Tom Mulinazzi, associate dean of engineering and committee member.
The committee plans to meet again after spring break to finalize the proposal by reviewing both public input and recommendations made by the parking board, Student Senate and the University Council.
In its report, the parking board told the committee it would support the construction of a new parking facility at the north end of campus. The board voted not to support the creation of a shuttle system proposed in the Campus Access Proposal.
"Why spend millions of dollars on 18- to 20-year-olds to shuttle them around?" said Morris Faiman, member of the
parking board and professor of pharmacology and toxicology.
The Student Senate report called for the construction of a $10 million parking garage north of the Kansas Union. Senate also asked that additional surface lots be built and that gated lots be implemented near the core of the campus. Senate voted to support the proposed campus shuttle system.
The University Council said it would support the restripping and reconfiguration of existing lots to gain more parking spaces.
The council did not favor the proposed shuttle service or the concept of gated lots, but it was in favor of a visitor's center at Templin Residence Hall that would need a shuttle service connecting to the main campus.
The council was divided on the issue of the five-level garage being built near the Kansas Union.
Waving o' the green
ALEXANDRA
Sarah Jordan, this year's St. Patrick's Day parade queen and Ottawa sophomore, waves to the crowd along the parade route. The parade traveled down Massachusetts Street yesterday afternoon.
GR Gordon-Ross/KANSAN
Action comes first for dance group
By Amanda Arbuckle
Kansan staff writer
Streb's dancers slam their bodies against walls, perform suicide dives off platforms and plummet to the floor with bone-crushing abandon.
These fearless performers are no strangers to broken noses, fractured wrists and sprained fingers.
"I expect my dancers to have brave hearts," said Elizabeth Streb, creator of Streb/Ringside. "Their work forces them to meet their demons every day."
StrebRingside will be performing at the Lied Center tonight at 8 p.m. Tickets are available through the Lied Center and Murphy Hall-box offices. They cost between $9 and $11 for students.
Streb, who described traditional dance forms such as ballet and modern as "elitist," wanted to create an art form where the focus was on the action, not the dancer's body.
"Action is narrative — it's real," Streb said. "When a tree falls, it doesn't Swan Lake on its way down."
Streb coined the term "pop action" to describe her work, which critics have described as a meshing of ultraathletic ballet, slam dancing and circus-style acrobatics.
The only sound that accompanies Streb's works are the noises of bodies crashing into mats and dancers yelling to avoid crashing and landing on one another.
"Music is the true enemy of dance," Streb said. "Dance skipped a huge step in its development by borrowing from another art form. The action, not the music, tells you what the timing is."
Angela Arnold, Columbia, Mo., junior, experienced Streb's pop action when Streb held a clinic with the Crimson Girls.
"She made me do things I had never thought were possible, and I had to use muscles I didn't know I had," Arnold said. "Basically, we rolled around a lot and threw ourselves on the floor. I was sore for the next three days."
Streb said that of everything she's created, her favorite piece is always her next one.
[Image of people in a gym setting]
"I don't care about what I've already done," Streb said. "If I thought about them too much, I'd probably ditch them all."
James Grau / KAN$AN
New York choreographer Elizabeth Streb gives members of the KU Crimson crew a lesson in balance. Streb's company, *Streb/Ringside*, which has done pieces for MTV, CNN and World News Today, will perform,tonight at the Lied Center.
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
CRAIG LANG, Editor
SUSANNA LOOP, Managing editor
KIMBEHLY CRAFTER, Editorial editor
TOM EBILEN, General manager, news adviser
MARK OIZMEK, business manager
DENNIS HAUPT, Retail sales manager
JUSTIN KNUPP, Technology coordinator
JA YSTEENER, Sales and marketing adviser
Tuesday, March 18, 1997
SO, TECHNICALLY,
THE VICE PRESIDENT
IS NOT ON FEDERAL
PROPERTY WHEN HE
MAKES THESE CALLS.
Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Editorials
Student groups bring diversity, and they need financial support
Some fees that students around the nation pay above and beyond tuition seem to be coming under fire lately, for the wrong reasons.
Two law students from the University of Wisconsin-Madison are questioning the legality of having to pay a fee that goes toward financing student groups, and they've filed a federal lawsuit against their school. They claim that because they don't agree with some of the groups that the money is supporting, they shouldn't have to pay the fee.
But this lawsuit really seems like a combination of ignorance and discrimination.
bination of ignorance and discrimination! Every semester at the University of Kansas, students pay a $23 activity fee to Student Senate to finance recognized student groups. That money goes toward a number of student organizations—the Black Student Union, KU Environs and Hispanic American Leadership Organization to name a few.
These organizations contribute to the
Organizations provide a way for students to get an education outside of class.
diversity of the University community and need to be financed. Without financing by the student-generated fee, these organizations would have trouble sponsoring activities to support their causes.
A university needs to be more than a place where people go to classes and listen to professors. Extra-curricular organizations give students the ability to get involved and become educated about various issues outside the classroom.
The argument for not paying activity fees just because one doesn't like a few of the groups is ludicrous. This complaint would be parallel to a person objecting to pay taxes for education because he or she doesn't have school-age children. Everyone needs to pay for education for
the benefit of all citizens.
The situation at the University is the same — $23 isn't a lot to ask for an attempt at diversity and extracurricular education.
Instead of whining about having to pay fees, students might actually try to investigate where their money goes. They should go to a few speeches and various events, then judge whether the money supports a good cause.
But the lawsuit against the University of Wisconsin-Madison may not even be a protest to student-financed groups in general. Specifically, these students had problems financing certain women's and homosexual activist groups.
Instead of being a lawsuit that is fueled by not wanting the University to overcharge students with numerous fees, the students filing the lawsuit seem to want to discriminate against women and homosexuals. That's an education no one wants.
IAN RITTER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Celebrate women's achievements
During the past 100 years, the women's movement has made some of the most revolutionary accomplishments in history. Unfortunately, it often has gone unnoticed.
But the feats accomplished by the women's suffrage movement are being celebrated all this month during National Women's History Month.
Since the passing of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote, women have been an integral part of politics. After Eleanor Roosevelt took an aggressive role as a woman in politics, first ladies have followed her example and have taken advantage of their position to involve themselves in various causes. These women shattered the stereotype of the passive wife and worked for an image of equality.
Though still striving for equality,
This month, the University has organized events to highlight such triumphs.
women have become some of the most powerful people in business, athletics and education. The triumphs of the women's movement have allowed women to obtain the leadership roles men have been given throughout history. Someday, a woman may actually become president herself.
To acknowledge these triumphs and celebrate the success, the University of Kansas has dedicated several lectures to women's topics. Information for any events concerning National Women's History Month is available at the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center in
We also should acknowledge the feats that contemporary women are accomplishing every day in the home, the workplace and society.
115 Strong Hall. Students should attend these lectures and realize the contributions women have made to our culture.
Whether it be attending a lecture, reading a Maya Angelou novel or attending a women's NCAA basketball tournament game, we as students should recognize the obstacles women are overcoming and celebrate the success of the obstacles they have already overcome.
Although March may be the only month officially dedicated to women, the celebration of the tenacity of women and the acknowledgement of the women's movement should not be forgotten come April 1.
KANSAN STAFF
NEWS EDITORS
CATHY PIERCE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
LA TINA SULLYAN ... Associate Editorial
KRISTIE BLASI ... News
NOVELDA SOMMERS ... News
LESLEY TAYLOR ... News
AMANDA TRAUGHBER ... News
TARA TRENARY ... News
DAVID TESKA ... Online
SPENCER DUNCAN ... Sports
GINA THORNBURN ... Associate Sports
BRADLEY BROOKS ... Campus
LINDESE HENRY ... Campus
DAVE BRETTENSTEIN ... Features
PAM DISHMAN ... Photo
TYLER WIRKEN ... Photo
BRYAN VOLK ... Design
ANDY ROHRBACK ... Graphics
ANDREA ALBRIGHT ... Wire
LZ MUSSER ... Special sections
AERICA VAZEY ... News clerk
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JULIE PEDLAR ... Campus
DANA CENTENO ... Regional
ANNETTE HOOVER ... National
BRIAN PAGEL ... Marketing
SARAH SCHERWINSKI ... Internet
DARCI McLAIN ... Production
DENA PISCIOTTE ... Production
ALLISON PERCE ... Special sections
SARA ROSE ... Creative
DANA LAUVETZ ... Public relations
BRIAN LEFEVRE ... Classified
RACHEL RUBIN ... Assistant classified
BRIDGET COLLER ... Zone
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
all letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all suomissions. For any questions, call Kimberly Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (isullvan@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
According to a recent but far from scientific survey taken by me and consisting of about 10 students — deadlines, man — it appears that 80 percent of the student population is planning to go to Florida for spring break.
Spring break at home has fun possibilities
Column
But out of the 80 percent that plan to go to
Forking, a tall stature per centage will actually make it. If you're one of these people, you might think that you're on your way to the land of MTV Spring Break and cranky retired people. But don't get too excited until you're actually staring at Jenny McCarthy in the flesh. Then get excited.
ROBERT
BISHOP
I don't know what setbacks you may endure, but they probably will involve a lack of cash.
Maybe the used music merchandisers will not buy the Nelson and Warrant CDs you've been holding on to for all these years because of a misguided belief that hair metal isn't dead. Maybe you don't have enough time to perfect your pan-handling technique.
Maybe you're having trouble hawking your liver, kidney or other non-essential body parts. Whatever the problem, it all comes down to this: you're going to have to settle for a cheaper, Jennless adventure.
Trust me, there are adventures to be had on a showing budget. You could take a scenic trip to Cawker, Kan., to bask in the ambience of the World's Largest Ball of Twine. I hereby guarantee that as soon as you behold this eighth wonder of the world, you'll say: "Man. That's a big ball of twine."
While looking at all that cool stuff, you can relive the carefree days of youth — running around, fantasizing about blowing up stuff and killing people. You also can ponder the irony that all the macho kids that were playing with Snake Eyes, Destro and the like essentially were playing with dolls.
And don't forget to stop by the World's Largest Ball of Twine Official Gift and Souvenir Shop to pick up some goodies for your friends, who have promised to bring you back jenny in exchange. Peruse their fine selection of twine bracelets and
Can't make it to Cawker or Kansas City? Don't count out the library. That's where you can use your imagination to take a trip to all sorts of exotic locales and have crazy adventure upon crazy adventure, all without leaving the comfort of your chair. You can be a wily young cabin boy who must defeat a horde of angry pirates and get back the stolen treasure.
You can be a sailor witnessing his captain going bonkers while attempting to get his revenge on a great whale. You can even be a guy called Humert Humbert, who has lots of steamy sex with a 13-year-old. Hot stuff, I tell you.
twine necklaces. You know, stuff you can't get anywhere else. One last word of advice for this sojourn: beware the World's Largest Cat. He's mad and he wants his twine back.
It is possible, however, that you need culture and intellectual stimulation. It is not likely, but it is possible. If this is the case, proceed directly to Kansas City and check out some of its outstanding museums. Don't miss G.I. Joe: Reporting For Dutu at the Toy and Miniature Museum.
There are so many things for you to do. And about half of them are worth doing. Still, you might be too depressed about your canceled Florida journey to do anything but sit around the house watching Jenny at spring break on MTV without you.
You'll be sitting alone in your house, steadily getting drunk and ordering pizza. Lots and lots of pizza. Just remember, money was the reason you couldn't go in the first place, so try to do this economically. Drink Hamm's and remember that Hamm's never collects coupons.
Robert Bishop is a Wichita senior in English and film.
Letters
Plastic soda bottles do more harm than good
First, our university has an aluminum can recycling program that profits when our cans are sold to recycling companies. That money eventually goes back into the University — a benefit for you and I.
As some of you may have already noticed, our aluminum can pop machines are gradually disappearing, while plastic bottle pop machines are mysteriously replacing them. I'm writing to urge students to boycott the plastic bottle pop machines.
Second, the plastic bottles are made from virgin plastics, which cannot be recycled. Therefore, no one profits from it other than the companies that dumped large quantities of it on the market at a low price. Companies that manufacture pop bottles out of recycled PETE, a type of plastic, cannot keep up with the low price of virgin plastics. The plastic bottles will add to the amount of garbage to be picked up, thus incurring higher waste removal costs — a cost for you and L.
Third, you are getting less quantity for more money. We can buy a 12-ounce can of pop for 50 cents, compared to a 20-ounce bottle for one dollar. You do the math.
Let's join other universities in the boycott of plastic bottle pop pending machines. Contact KU Environics if you're interested in forming a committee. Call the vendors and tell them what you think. The number for Pepsico is (800) 433-COLA. You can call Coca Cola at (770) 989-3000, or e-mail the company at http://www.cocacola.com/co/e-queries.html
Amy Smith Bonner Springs senior
We are getting ripped off in several ways, not to mention the damage we are doing to the earth. Buy and recycle aluminum pop cans -- boycott the plastic.
Administrators don't seem to care about kids
A smaller, 200-child care center is not the answer. That's not even a compromise. I guess the University administration has had too many other projects to worry about.
Hilltop is not a priority simply and obviously because it doesn't rake in a profit, like the addition to Allen Field House and Memorial Stadium will.
And let's not forget the profit
The administrators can't afford to support some of the cost for a bigger, more sanitary child care center, yet a parking garage plan is slapped down on the table and gobbled up. I wonder why.
Unfortunately for the children, Hilltop doesn't cash into any uppity, chancellor-brand pockets. It only benefits students and faculty and provides a caring environment for children. And a college that benefits the student/faculty body, which is the blood flow, is inconceivable in some patriarchal, fascist minds.
I'm insulted and disappointed by Provost David Shulenburger and the other mighty administrators, and I'm sure I'm not alone. I don't think the administration realizes how powerful this student/faculty body can be.
It couldn't be because the University is money-hungry and could really care less about students, faculty and their children.
that will be gained from the 1,000-car parking garage that will rip out a couple of houses by the Kansas Union. I didn't hear or see any compromises on that project. So I guess parking spaces are more important than children and their families.
Macheil Collier Lawrence senior
It couldn't be because administrators are slightly sexist and want to make it harder for women to go to school.
Administrators do care about students when the project will dish out profit in the long run.
Our government owes no one an education
This is in response to Laura Wexler's editorial and Amy Miller's cartoon published on March 12. They incompletely understand the issues involved and are making fundamentally wrong assumptions.
The first incorrect assumption is that education is a right guaranteed by the government. This society does not require its government by law to provide citizens an education. The law requires government to provide citizens the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Society often asks government to go beyond just protecting these rights by supporting educational institutions. This is only because such a large endearor needs support from a large organization.
Education is not a right that government must provide. Education is a privilege that the individual is entitled to earn by individual effort. Government holds the door open, but the individual must walk through on his or her own strength.
The second incorrect assumption is that government is a source of money. Government generally has no money of its own and does not generate income. Government collects and spends taxes. Taxes are monies belonging to us taxpayers even after government has collected it. Educational aid and child care are no more government responsibilities than government support of education institutions. Government provides them because of the generosity of society.
I may decide to support the subsidy. But I want to be asked, not told. The level of aid is what society has decided to give after ample opportunity to balance priorities. Society decides by vote. Compaigning for the center is a better use of energy than brow-beating the administration.
Dean Mielke
Mankato, Minn,
graduate student
I will urge that you increase pay heavy taxes. Asking government to pay for education aid or child care with my taxes is the same as asking me to subsidize care for children that are not mine. It may be a worthy cause, but it is still a subsidy. You may also use the word "charity."
Technological gains shouldn't be feared
I have never been mad enough to write about one of the articles in the University Daily Kansan. But after reading Colin Gotham's column on technology, I felt sick.
I am tired of people speaking of technology as if it is something to fear or suppress.
Technology is the only reason that we are able to live past 30 years of age. It is the only reason we are able to communicate with people farther than shouting distance.
Gotham speaks of technology enslaving us and how sad it is that computers are a reality. He and many others in light of the cloning phenomenon have stated that our steps toward godlike status are scary.
If aiming toward a better understanding of our universe in order to live more comfortable and longer lives is bad, then I do not want to be good.
Luka Yovetich
Littleton, Colo., senior
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 18, 1997
5
Female international students face challenges at University
By Umut Bayramoglu
Kansan staff writer
Afsheen Kodvawala has been facing challenges as a female international student at the University of Kansas since December. Kodvawala is a Muslim from Pakistan and covers her head with a scarf for religious reasons.
One day when she was watching television in the Kansas Union, a male student approached her and tried to take off her scarf, telling her she would look prettier without it.
Women's HISTORY MONTH
Kodwala wala is one of 609 international women students on campus. Her experience is just one example of the difficulties international women face at the University.
Barbara Ballard, director of the center, said the program would focus on the roles of women, relationships and cultural differences.
"I think it's a perfect time to focus on the diversity of women," she said. "We have a large population of international women students at KU.I wanted to make sure that they were recognized."
To honor Women's History Month, Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will present a panel of international women students at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the English Room in the Kansas
Daphne Johnston, associate director of international student services and panel moderator, said she hoped to
Union.
raise awareness of diversity on campus with the program.
"The main purpose of this program was to share information about the international women student population here," she said.
"American students would learn how life is different for international students," she said. "Also, other international students would get a sense of support from peers."
For more information about the program, contact Jennifer Joseph at 864-3552.
'Hawks hawk more items in spring
By Mike Perryman Special to the Kansan
Students getting ready for spring break often need cash — fast. One way to get it is to sell possessions to local shops.
Jayhawk Pawn and Jewelry, Play It Again Sports and The Love Garden are among the resale businesses where students try to unload their goods.
At Jayhawk Pawn and Jewelry, 1804 W. Sixth St., students can receive up to 25 percent of an item's wholesale worth.
"Students are often too proud to ask parents for loans, so they come to us," said Thad Petry, Jayhawk Pawn and Jewelry store clerk of
seven years.
Pawn shops are not the only source of cash for students. Some go to music stores such as The Love Garden, 936 1/2 Massachusetts St., and Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts St., to sell CDs and vinyl records.
"I sell a lot of CDs to music stores and pawn shops to acquire a little extra cash, and I can usually use the extra money to buy books," said Dan Curry, Overland Park junior.
Curry said the spring semester was often more costly than the fall because winter break was short, leaving students little time to make money and to recover from fall-semester expenses.
Students find other ways to convert stuff in the closet into cash, such as
selling books to stores like Dean's Books. 1115 Massachusetts St.
"People read more in the winter because of the lack of daylight and good weather conditions for outdoor activities," said Dennis Rosebaugh, owner of Dean's Books. "They sell their books when spring and nice weather come around."
At Arizona Trading Co.,734 Massachusetts St. , there is a market for many types of clothing and shoes.
Clothing and sports equipment are other items students sell.
"People come in pretty regularly, but definitely right before spring break, students come in to sell clothing and receive money that they use for things like gas for road trips and such," said Shelley Lane, store clerk
at Arizona Trading Co.
Josh Hoover, also a manager at Play It Again Sports, said he had seen students try to sell some interesting items.
Jonathan Coachman, manager of Play It Again Sports, 1029 Massachusetts St., said spring semester brought with it a large selection of sports equipment sold by students.
The amount of items students sell to Play It Again Sports in the spring is about double that of the fall, he said.
"We've had people call up or come in wanting to sell us stereo equipment and even smoking paraphernalia. They think we're a pawn shop or something," Hoover said. "It's hilarious, some of the stuff you see people trying to sell for some quick cash."
"Unburied since 139"
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Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
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Private Park $^8$ 4:10, 7:10, 9:40
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Empire Strikes Back $^{G}$ 4:00, 7:00, 9:50
Vegas Vacation $^{G}$ 4:20, 7:20, 9:30
Marvin's Room $^{G}$ 13, 7:00, 9:30
Fools Rush $^{H}$ 13, 7:10, 9:50
Love Jones $^{K}$ 4:10, 7:10, 9:40
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The Bagel, Coffee & People Place
Massachusetts 23rd & Kasold
1026 Massachusetts 3914 Clinton Parkway
913-838-9494 913-838-3600
Get Ready for TOURNEY TIME!
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SPRING BREAK IS ONLY 9 DAYS LONG.
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Make more of it by spending more time on the beach or on the slopes and less time in an unfamiliar town with an unfamiliar mechanic. Come to Wendland Performance Services for an OIL CHANGE right here in Lawrence before you make the big road trip.
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With Raef its nothing but net...
With the Kansan its everything and the net.
Your NCAA Tournament Information Guru. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Your NCAA Tournament Information Guru. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Find out about all the action in the Sports Section KANSAN
As a result of the efforts of many students saving the furniture and art objects while providing invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire on April 20, 1970, insurance carriers decided to present the Kansas Union with a gift. Each year, the Student Union Activities Board awards around $1,200 to deserving students who have made significant contributions to the University and Lawrence communities.
Service Scholarship Award
1997-1998 University/Community
From the Kansas and Burge Unions
- Must be a undergraduate KU student this spring semester and enrolled in nine or more hours
* Must be returning to KU for the Fall 1997 and Spring 1998 semesters.
* Must have demonstrated service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
* Academics and financial need will be minimal considerations in application reviews.
Qualifications:
Available at the SUA Box Office, Level Four in the Kansas Union. Applications must be received by noon Friday, March 21, 1997 at the SUA office. For more information, call (913) 864-3477.
Applications:
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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what film?
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what do they call a whopper?
find out at council
london $414
tokyo $654
amsterdam $575
what film?
Le big mac!
what do they call a whopper?
find out at ouncil
london $414
tokyo $654
amsterdam $575
Student fares, may require an International Student ID card. Tapes are not included and may range from $6-533.
Fares are subject to change
Council Travel
622 West 12th Street,
Lawrence, KS
Tel.: 913-749-3900
travel:
real life flicks!
Red Lyon Tavern
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944 Mass. 832-8228
RESUMES
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TRANSCRIPTIONS
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
Looking for something?
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For all your repair needs"
*Import and Domestic
Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
Check the Kansan Classifieds!
Being drunk is not a license to rape.
Have a SAFE Spring Break.
Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program a program of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall, 864-3552
NATO is a concern in U.S.-Russia talks
WASHINGTON — In presummit talks at the White House yesterday, President Clinton tried to persuade Russia's foreign minister to lower resistance to NATO expansion. But in Moscow, Russian President Boris Yeltsin said, "We can't move any further."
The Associated Press
The aim of Clinton's meeting with
Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov was to assuage Yeltsin's anxieties about NATO in advance of the two leaders' two-day summit in Helsinki, Finland. But Primakov
Silverton
But Primakov emerged from the
one-hour session saying, "Russia will not change its position on NATO."
And in Moscow, Yeltsin urged Clinton to make concessions.
"Our diplomats have made enough concessions to the United States," Yeltsin said.
Even so, the two sides are working on a new relationship between Moscow and NATO, one White House press secretary Mike McCurry said would be made politically but not legally binding.
Talking to reporters in the White
PAPERWORK
House driveway, Primakov said it was a great honor to be received by Clinton,who was in convalescence from knee surgery and not disposed to receive foreign visitors.
Yeltsin
Meanwhile, in a Kremiln interview, Yeltsin said he did not want a return to the Cold War or a world in which the United States would command everyone else.
Several concessions were on the agenda for Clinton's talk with Primakov upstairs at the White House. These included a charter that would give Russia more participation in NATO proceedings, joint peacekeeping operations like the one in Bosnia, and promises NATO would not deploy Western troops in substantial numbers on the soil of new members for the foreseeable future.
Last week, Yeltsin said Clinton had told him on the telephone he and the United States were interested in compromise.
Clinton's knee injury, surgery and post-operation pain caused him to delay the start of the two-day meeting with Yeltsin in Helsinki from tomorrow to Thursday.
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Board certification means they've had additional training in a specialty area and passed a comprehensive examination. Areas of specialty training include internal medicine, family practice, gynecology, emergency medicine, and pulmonary disease.
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Student Senate Awareness Week
Town Hall Meeting with the Chancellor and the Student Body President
Tuesday, March 18 5:30 in the Kansas Room of the Union
Real World Experience
National recognition doesn't come to those who wait around.
We're firm believers in doing the job right the first time. That's why we take challenges and turn them into opportunities. It's your turn.
The University Daily Kansan is accepting applications for the positions of
Business Manager* and Editor
for the both the Summer and Fall 1997 semesters.
Applications may be picked up at The Kansan Business Office 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Deadline for Business Manager and Editor application
submission is
Friday, April 4, at 12:00 p.m.
*The Business Manager is responsible for the entire operation of The Kansan advertising department.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 18, 1997
7
Today's Birthday (March 18)
This year your lesson involves love, work, money and travel. Sound good? it's up to you. Your concerns about money right now can be handled with support from somebody you love. It'll also help to find another job. An older person gives great advice in April. Romance and work dominate July and August. A partner spurs you to take action toward your destiny in September. A lucky break in December advances your career. Private papers come through in February. Rely on love next March.
Arles (March 21-April 1.9)
Today is a 4.
The compulsion to finish up last year's projects is getting intense. This is natural. The new ideas in your head already are starting to pile up. You may also be getting more nagging than usual from your spouse. Just do what you said you'd do.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Your sweetheart has a good idea early this morning. Go along with it. You and your friends need to wrap up your projects as soon as possible. This is a good night to clean out your closets. In the process, you'll find something you thought was lost forever.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 5.
What happens when you add water to fire? It depends on how you do it. You either put the fire out or you get steam. This affects your money, so pay attention. Go for the latter option. In other words, a combination of compassion and enthusiasm will work.
HOROSCOPES
Cancer (June 22-July 22) Today is a 6.
Today is a 6.
This is a pretty good day for you, but temptations abound. For example, you could get into trouble at the mail. Don't buy merchandise just because it's on sale. You know that it's not saving if it's stuff you don't even need. Take care.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7.
Do your homework early this morning. You may run into some tough questions later on in the day. A friend may miss your lunch date if you don't call ahead with a reminder. Don't be too upset. Later this evening, you could be too insight.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7.
The pace is beginning to quicken. Your attention is being drawn to jointly held finances. This condition holds through income tax season, so you might as well start getting geared up. Sharpen your pencils. By the way, it looks like you're on the right path.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
tonight is the best time to approach the subject.
Focus entirely on your work today. Don't even go out to lunch, if possible. You'll have a lot more time for fun and games in a couple of days. Use that as your motivation and your reward. You'll get a bonus for your efforts.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6.
Get all your major business done before noon today to take advantage of the beneficial phase. The same thing that's easy this morning could become difficult by afternoon. If you need more money, later
The bad news is that you don't get to procrastinate any longer. If you're buying or selling, do it early. The good news is that you have permission to take a drive tonight. The farther you can get, the better. Just for the fun of it.
Segittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7.
The coming phase will be one in which domestic projects take precedence, so you might as well begin one. If you've been planning this for weeks, you're ahead of the game. Your partner can be a big help, too. Carefully consider his or her advice.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6.
You might be able to talk your boss into giving you a raise today if you go about it properly. Put in the effort. You and a Leo argue all the time, but you need each other. If you don't already know that, it should soon become obvious.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6.
Today a person you love could give you some money. Maybe your cousin's going to pay back that five bucks you loaned him. This afternoon, you should concentrate on a job that needs to be done. Your kindness will not go unnoticed.
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
Women's tennis rallies through adversity, injury
By Andy Rohrback
Kansan sportswriter
Flexibility is the key for the Kansas women's tennis team at this point in the season.
After opening Big 12 Conference play with an 8-1 loss to Baylor, the Jayhawks overcame an injury-ridden roster and beat Texas Tech 7-2 on Saturday.
"In the past, we haven't really been able to change and adapt our game," said Kansas head coach Roland Thormqvist. "At Texas Tech, we were able to do what we needed to win. That was probably the best-played match of the year for our team."
Kansas had to shake up its lineup before the Baylor meet because freshman Julia Sidorova was sidelined with a back injury she suffered during a match against Utah on March 9.
Sidorova, who normally plays the No. 4 or No. 5 spot in singles competition, had to be replaced by senior Amy Trytek, who saw her first singles action of the season.
"It was great to even get a chance to come back in," Trytek said. "I haven't played singles at all lately. I need more matches."
Although Trytek lost her match at Baylor, she was successful at Texas Tech, as was the
rest of the Kansas team.
"Everybody found a way to win," Thornqvist said.
Junior Christie Sim, playing at the No. 1 spot in place of injured Kyle Hunt, also is becoming more comfortable with her new position, Thorqvist said.
"I think she's growing," he said. "Like any individual sport, it's a thing where you have to be able to grow and adjust with your task."
The Jayhawks will play next March 25 against Stanford, a meet that will mark the fifth stop in an eight-meet road trip.
Thornqvist said the meet could be the most difficult point in the season.
"If Stanford has everyone healthy, they could be the best team ever assembled in women's college tennis history," Thorqvist said.
The team will play its first meet at home on April 2 against Nebraska. The meet is scheduled for 2 p.m. at the tennis courts near Robinson Center.
Thornvist said it was always better to play at home.
Elvis can't help falling in love with KC
"Sleep in your own bed, and have your friends watching you play — there's nothing like playing at home," he said.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs called a news conference yesterday to introduce quarterback Elvis Grbac, who has reached an agreement in principle with the team but has not yet signed a contract.
Grbac, who played for San Francisco last season, was an eighth-round draft choice of the 49ers in 1993 and has been the backup to Steve Young ever since. He had made no attempt to hide his feelings that he deserved to be a starter.
"It came down to the fact Elvis was ready to be a starting quarterback," Grbac's agent, Jim Steiner, said when the tentative deal was announced during the weekend.
THE SPIRIT OF LOVE
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Fest
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March 10-12, 1997
10:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.
Grad Fest 9
Thanks for shopping with us through the years
R
only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent Road
Jayhawk Bookstore
843-3826
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Searching for a clue on how to interview correctly?
ue
ew
Plan on attending, it's free!
"Interviewing Strategies Workshop"
Tuesday, March 18 - 7:00 pm
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
A panel of Human Resources professionals from a variety of different professions will be on hand to discuss the keys to success in interviewing in their respective career fields.
Find out what it takes to be successful in the interviewing process.
Sponsored by the University Placement Center
110 Burge Union
phone: 864-3624 email: upc@ukans.edu
www.ukans.edu/~upc
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STUDENT TRAVEL
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
STA Travel is the world's largest travel organization specializing in low-cost travel for students.
PSST! Got the urge to travel?
STA Travel has great student airfares to destinations around the world. Go shopping on our website for current student airfares.
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* Packages for 18-34 yrs.
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KU Hillel Foundation presents:
David Duke
Leonard Zeskind
Its Impact on Mainstream Politics Culture and YOU!
March 19, 1997, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union, Alderson Auditorium
WHITE SUPREMACY:
Sponsored by KU Hillel, Student Senate, Multicultural Resource Center. Ecumenical Christian Ministries, Office of Equal Opportunity and the Political Science Department
HILLEL
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Tuesday, March 18, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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*See in store display for qualifying merchandise.* Blade Runner by Rollerblade® products do not warranty © 1987, Rollerblade, Inc.© designates a U.S. registered trademark of Rollerblade, Inc.
9
28
Jayhawks hope to get back on track against Razorbacks
Outfielder Les Walrond receives congratulations from his teammates after crossing home plate.
Tonight is a chance to restart win streak
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team had been on a roll — until last weekend.
The Jayhawks, whose eight-game winning streak was snapped by the Oklahoma Sooners, will try to get back on the winning track tonight when they play the Razorbacks in Fayetteville, Ark.
Kansas (14-9, 4-5) was defeated by Oklahoma in the series finale on Sunday. The Jayhawks at one point had an eight-point lead. The game slipped away when the Sooners scored eight runs in the bottom of the ninth.
"We had two real tough losses, but Sunday's loss hurts deep," Randall said. "Our guys left their hearts on the field."
Kansas head coach Bobby Randall said the loss was difficult, but his players had given it their all.
Despite being swept in the threegame series to Oklahoma, Kansas continued to play well offensively, Randall said.
He said his team would use the loss as a learning experience and would continue to improve.
"Oklahoma was a difficult place to play — no lead is really safe with the way the wind blows there," Randall said. "But when you play on the road, you have to play a little harder and a little better."
sistencies. Arkansas head coach Norm Debryn said his team had yet to put together a complete performance.
With Arkansas, the Jayhawks face a team that has struggled with incon-
"We're a club that has been very inconsistent," Debriyn said. "Our pitching really hasn't come to the front, but we've been able to score runs — some of the time."
Two newcomers, freshman Rusty Philbrick and junior college transfer Josh Bailey will start for Kansas. Philbrick (1-0) will have his second start of the season.
"He continues to get better and better," Randall said. "We are hoping to get five of six innings out of him. Rusty's got really good stuff and keeps coming at you."
Despite his lack of collegiate experience, Randall said he had full confidence in his young pitcher.
Kansas divers strive to place in qualifying championship
Three Kansas divers participated in the NCAA Zone D diving championships this weekend.
Kansan staff report
Freshman Kelly Norton,
sophomore Deanna
Beiswanger and junior
Brian Humphrey traveled
to College Station, Texas,
to take part in the championship,
which is a Midwest qualifying meet for the NCAA championships.
The meet was Norton and Beiswanger's first experience at an NCAA-caliber meet, Kansas diving coach Don Fearon said.
"The competition was extremely long," he said. "The competition was the cream of the crop and a learning experience."
In the three-meter competition, Norton placed 28th and Beiswanger 30th.
Beiswanger placed 23rd in the one-meter, and Norton was 34th.
In the men's competition, Humphrey missed qualifying for the NCAA championship by one spot in both the one-meter and three-meter.
Humphrey placed fourth in the one meter, missing the third spot by three-tenths of a point.
Humphrey also missed the three-meter competition spot by 14 points, finishing fifth.
Overall, Fearon said he was pleased with the divers' performances.
Kansan Classified
100s Announcements
1015 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
120 Travel
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
225 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
366 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Classified Policy
400s Real Estate
will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to ad-ver
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Y
tary "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
100s Announcements
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
105 Personals
KU QA®A offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unsexual. Call KU info at 864-3560 or Headquarters at 814-2345 for more information.
SWM age 40's brown eyes & hair, background backdrop,可爱卧室. Loves desirare for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P.O. Box 44215 Lawrence. KS 65044
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110 Business Personals
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Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
Gey, lebian, bixeau, transgender or unquere? KU Q&A offers a confidential support group Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. Call KU info at 643-3500 or Headquarters at 824-2424 for location.
120 Announcements
Recycle the Kansan
120 Announcements
FAST FUNDRAIER - RAISE $500 IN 5 DAYS,
GREENS, CLUBS, GROUPS, MOTIVATED
INDIVIDUALS, FAST. EASY - NO FINANCIAL
OBLIGATION (800) 862-182 EXT. 33
NUDE RECREATION
NUDE CREATION
North American Nudist Directory lists 100's of beach beaches, clubs, & resorts in your area and around the country. 24 hour information: 6-182-779-878
A HOUSE IN BRECKENKEN AVAILABLE
with furnished rooms and reservations needed, call Serve 31-8175.
125 Travel
NEED ㅎㅎㅎㅎㅎ ?
Men & Women needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research studies. Earn up to $1090/wk. 24 Hour Info(2.5 minutes):1-819-8737-4771.
Mountain Smith Tour Pack, green/black, Mon
Mountain Smith Tour Pack, green/black, Mon
怕 863-533 493 or 749-720
200s Employment
男 女
140 Lost & Found
Babysitter needed. Monday-Friday in Eudora
Must have own transportation and provide
transportation for children.
205 Help Wanted
DRIVERS, PACKERS, HELPERS Wanted.
Excellent to make good money in K. E. area,
cook for restaurants in K. E. area.
Fry-Wagner Moving and Storage,
Call Dairin Baldwin (912) 61-0090 ext. 258.
SUMMER JOBS
PART TIME METER READER CITY OF LAWRENCE
Reading water meters & accurate recording of amounts of water consumed. HS Grad/GED.
Valid driver licenses. Must provide own vehicle. B4. 42-1. 40 hr. 20hrs, flexible schedule. Com-
mmercial parking. 80% in Appin Inlet 97% in Admin Inlet Floor, City Hall, 6 E. 6th St., Lawrence, KS 60044 M/E/F/D/W
205 Help Wanted
Spring Help for tree service. Start Spring Break
spring help until summer. Apply in person
854 Maple 7th at # 1240 North Main Street,
ALVAMAR NAUTILUS
Help wanted for after school care of a yr old boy. Car needed for picking up from school and some driving to baseball practice. M Th: 30-4: 70-Female preferred w/references. 875, week 794-3043.
Now hiring Fitness Instructor, M.W. Fam at experience required. Apply by email or telephone. Preferred. See Becky's Clinton Poll report.
AUSTRALIA-EMOYMENT Student jobs, teachers, professional, skill trades, Working/Adventure hols. 18+, M/F, single/married, Detailed legal employment and travel instrustion.
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in Pocono Mtns. of PA
Over 40 activities - Seeking general and specialist counselors
125-89-9700 or e-mail: pneree@pon.com
Part time help needed calling on behalf of SADF.
Work 15-20 hours a week. $40/hr plus commission,
schedule your own hours. Come join our friendly
atmosphere!! Come to 619 Mass. Suite IB. M-TH
4pm-10pm and fill out an application EOE
"Now hiring, restaurant workers, all positions, pays. Starting at $8.50 and up, depending on experience and availability. Please apply in person or call between 2:00 and 5:00 P.M. for phone number 492-333-2931.
Apartment Manager. Rapidly grow manage-
ment team. Provide training on join our management team. Experience preferred but will train right person. Apply at first management faclite. Req: bachelor's deg or manage resume to USC, 60403.
BabySitter/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
and weekends. Full time over summer. Must have
own car, experience, and knowledge of child
care. Must be vaccinated. Must be blinded to
Blind Box 10, 119 Shaffer Flat.
Rewarding, exciting summer for sophomore and older college students counselling in the Colorado School of Law. Participate in activities, natural science and many outdoor programs. Write: Sandor Western Camps, P.O. Box 2049, Colorado Springs, CO 80017.
**STUDENT WORK- up to $10.35 NAT I CO.'s**
Preferred PT/FT entry level openings in
Lawrence & IOCO. Flexible day, evening,
weekend schedules. All major acceptors. Co-OP &
scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Apply call our
IOCC office at (913) 831-WORK (14am-5pm)
Brookcreek Learning Center is bring part-time teaching instructors. M-F a m- 2 a m (toodler) and M-F F-5 p.m. (preschool). Opportunities include experience in an early intervention inclusion classroom program. Complete applications 855-0222. For more information call 855-0222. AA/EOE
205 Help Wanted
Wanted 87 students. Lose 8-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough.Doctor recommended.Guaranteed $39 cost. Free gift. 1-900-435-7591
Graduate Assistant Position to work with elementary and secondary education admission in the University Placement Center. 20 hrs/wk, $7.90/hr, starting August 1997. Application deadline June 30. Complete job description at 110 Burge Avenue, or see www.ukans.edu/~ucp/jobs.html
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education admission in the University Placement Center. 20 hrs/wk, $7.00/wk, starting August 1997. Application deadline April 11th. Pick up complete job description or see www.ukans.edu/~puc/jobs.html
Seasonal part time position to club empluses for adult softball leagues and assist in supervision of leagues. 30-40/wk starting in April. $8/74hr. Must be able to become registered ASA Softball Official. Applicate by 3/28/97 Admin. 2nd Fee. E. G. Shirley, L. Lawrence, K604. 8004 M/E/F/D
LAKE SHAWNEE GOLF COURSE- Toneka
LAKE SHAWNEE GOLF COURSE- Topeka
Opportunity for an individual who enjoys working with food preparation and customer service.
Lake Shawnee Golf Gaf has opportunities for the
ownership of a variety of hours available.
Apply at Lake Shawnee Gaf, C.C., 410 SE East Edge Rd. Kt764-2753-296.
ADULT SOFTBALL UMPIRE SCHEDULER
LEAGUE SUPERVISOR
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water-skiing, gymnastics, camp, scuba diving, computerers, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $3,400-$5,200 per week. C/WC 191 Maple, Nl. IID 8008. #LU080976
PART TIME DATA ENTRY
MAINTENANCE WORKER/LANDSCAPE
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Seasonal worker to provide landscape maintenance for city's parks and public right of ways. $75./hr. Season is now through November. Valid Driver's License required. Ability to operate a vehicle. Submit application by 3-97 to Admin. Serv. 2nd Floor, City Hall. E. 6,th. Law. KS.60044. KS.60044.
APPLY AT MANPOWER
211 E. 8th
749-2800
205 Help Wanted
Manpower is now accepting applications for individuals to work part time. Must be able to work 9am-5pm and/or have your consistent schedule 8:45-10am; 11:45-3:15; 11:35pm-7:15pm. STARTS at 2:15pm.
Desktop Publisher. Full-time days. Exp. in
database management at
Copy Co. Z24 and Naimihim or fax RD 653-789-0144.
Food Service Supervisors. 2 positions available @ The Mass Dell Deli & Buffalo Bufalo & Smokehouse experience in food service & 1 year experiences in supervising: $6.50/$0.70 per hour based on prior experience. Profit share bonus up to $1,000. Apply to USAT (assistance office) at 791.799. Mounts (assistance above mokhouse).
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with interest of renewal for next academic year. Interested in candidate who will be at KU for next two years should apply by May 20th. Student boury position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community resources, highly computer literate (Macintosh), experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, interest in helping other. Must be Lawrence resident. Come by KU Info. 420, for an application. Will consider on first visit only for applications for 5pm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
Now hiring cooks, utilities hot and cold prep.
experimental necessary. will train. in person.
apply for position.
205 Help Wanted
Part-time delivery driver needed. Drugs free.
Part-time delivery applicant in Carquest Auto Parts.
Phone: (212) 548-3700
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. 6 wk sum.
Instruction: mmwr Lake Quivra, RQS, Questions Call 298-7467.
Budget Officer Salary: $40,000 (minimum)/fiscal year. Deadline: Applications accepted until position filled. Required qualifications: 1) Proven ability to successfully manage multiple responsibilities. 2) Experience managing a diverse staff. 3) experience with (3+ years) University of Kansas fund accounting and payroll systems. 4) Bachelor's in communication, interpersonal, and leadership skills. 6) Ability to present both oral and written reports in a clear and concise manner. Contact Annel Engel at Networking and Telecommunications, 1768 Eagle Road, Lawrence, KS 8903, 9103-894-910 for a complete job description and application procedures. EO/AA.
KELLY SERVICES AND SPRINT TELECENTERs INC BE A PART OF OUR WINNING TEAM! Sprint.
Build your career with one of the fastest growing direct marketing companies in the nation. Full and Part-time positions available.
A wide range of benefits include:
- 7/8 hr Base salary plus Bonuses
* Vacation & Holiday Pay
- Paid Training
- Vacation & Holiday Pay
- Tuition Reimbursement Program
- Taiton Memorials Program
*401K Stuck Options
- 401K Stock Options
- 401K Stock Options
• Career Advancement
- Professional Work Atmosphere
Requirements for these positions include excellent oral & telephone communication skills, basic computer experience, sales and/or customer service skills.
To join the team, call Kristin at 749-2782 for an interview.
KELLY Services
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 18, 1997
9
205 Help Wanted
HIRING NOW for
HIRING NOW $
for
SUMMER JOBS!
Key is hiring now for full-time jobs that will start in the summer. Many positions available in Topeka for production, retail, office and warehouse.
Apply today!
KEY Staffing
400 SW Croix, Topeka
267-9999 $
Earn cash on the spot $20 Today new donors Up to $40 this week Donate your life saving plasma Walk-ins welcome! NABI Biomedical Center 914 W. 52th 740 E750
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
JCPenney
JCPenney Fine jewelry selling specialist job available.
Selling experience preferred; commission pay plan; part-time. Flexible schedule. Some daytime available & required. Generous employee\discount plan
JCPENNY CO.
1801 W. 23rd. EOE/M/FV/H
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
Inso Kansas City Corporation Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64112
Fax:(816) 751-9387
Fax:(816)753-8387
E-mail:hr-kc@inso.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
CORPORATION www.inso.com
Inso
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800) - 733-2404
Dissertations Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3Day touraround
225 Professional Services
205 Help Wanted
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID& a alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
TRAFFIC DEFENSE
К. К.
К. К.
James C. Heathman
Heathman & Kelly
DUI/TRAFIC/CRIMINAL/PERSONAL INJURY
Call For a Free Consultation
or Melissa A. Kelly ATTORNEYS AT LAW
235 Typing Services
913-267-0055 or
Toll Free: 886-834-4LAW (529)
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/laser printer will create top quality paper for you. Call Deanna @ 842-2864.
Call Jacki at 823-8844 for applications, term
and contact. Call the Savings
satisfaction guarantee. Makin' the Grade.
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
Soft Top for Jeep Wrangler. Light Gray. $200
B.O.B. Call Tim @ 326-2743
FINAL FOUR TICKETS—two seats/six games.
(reasonable offer only. Call (602) 815-8486 or
seasonal offer only.)
Two tickets available for the seminal and final
tournament in the national tournament. Call Randall at 803-283-6986.
Need Energy? Try our 100% natural product. It gives you a tremendous natural lift and mental alertness, so side effects. Great before study period. Independent Herbalife Distributor Call 913-389-3094
2 TICKETS TO SOUTH EAST REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP FOR SALE CALL 1-205-323-9269
340 Auto Sales
*90 Toyota Tercel, manual trans., runs well*
$2,000, obo 8647-6749
1900 FORD PROBE Excellent Condition: 5-
1900 and 331-2652 after.
mail: Calls 865-3830 until
6pm and 331-2652 after.
www.superlucaracu.com Pictures of pre-owned
phones at www.superlucaracu.com
Call 1-800-462-ACURA for more info. Ask For Pak
186 Mitchell Susenhall 4WD, 4 dpk, black, a/c
95K. Gooch cond. Run well. $$. Call 331-815
$$.
1884 Honda Accord LX. AC, cruise control, rusty but runs great. Extremely reliable. $1100 OBO. Call Jill at 911-4267.
Stay ahead of the Job Crowd!
Recycle the Kansan
205 Help Wanted
---
Make sure you get that job nowl Register over we can keep you busy with clerical,
great summer the break and over the summer secretarial.
accounting or other office support jobs in the Kansas City metro area.
To schedule an appointment over break, call Shelley or Michelle at:
913-491-3491
Or contact us on the web at :
www.employbts.com
BTS BUSINESS TEMPORARY SERVICES
Studio, 1-3 BR, also 5 BR house all near KU. Call
411-8254.
405 For Rent
2 BDRM, 2 bath College Hill condo. W/d.
microwave, water pd. Avail Aug. Rent $775. Call
(913) 583-4386.
400s Real Estate
Summer Bub lease 3 BR, 1/2 bath, W/D, on KU bus rtl. Rent #mm. b4 - call 839-9668
Available now-3 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer/Dryer.
Fully equipped kitchen. On KU bus route. Call 841-
846-2078.
1 DBRM apartment available for summer autumn,
recovery, furnished, closed to Fraser
Call 628-579-3600
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG. 1.
Bristol University, deposit. Call
Jim Edwards (803) 649-3159.
Kvani Aug 17.
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
CHEAP SUMMER SUBLEASE. $171/mo. + 1/7 utilities. Cool roommates. Avail. through July 31.
Huge house! $838-498. Ask for Bret.
FURNISHED 3 BR APT-2 BATH W/D/A.
BALCON, ON BU ROUTE, BAH C/W.
BALCON, ON BU ROUTE, BAH C/W.
Condo for Sale 3bdrm, Bhath, washer/dryer on busi route. See layout in View A, Amnibankable building. For more information, call (866) 250-9144.
Got a group? Available for fall. 9 bdrm or 6 bdrm home. Well maintained. Nice common areas, laundry facilities. 841-STAR (7827).
STUDIO, CLOSE TO CAMPUS, ON BUS/ROUTE.
Call 841-2590 for more information.
Call 841-2590 for more information.
Studio i&2 Bedrooms Available for summer & fall. Some locations close to campus, on bus route, reasonable rentals. Call 941-1155 for more info.
Summer lease for a room apt. 1, lift 3/bath. Available from May 31 to mid August. Close to campus.
C/A. Washers & dryer. Low rent. Call 749-7871.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
Tenn. a student housing alternative. Open &
diverse membership, non profit operation, democratic
control. $180-240 incl. wk dwellings, UWI,
W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by
841-0484.
SUMMER SULEASE
Spaciale 1 BR. on KU bus route. A/C
C/W 1 BR. on KU bus route. A/C
GATEWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 841-8468.
NOWLEASING
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury.
- 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
- Washer/Dryer
- Built-in TV
- 2600 W. 6th 838-3377
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
HARPER SQUARE APARTMENTS
1 BR 425.00
- 2BR 610.00
- 2BR 610.00
3BR 725.00
- Washer/Dryer
- Alarm System
- New in 1996!!
CALL 832-9918
low testing for summer and ti
2 BHF from 8440
1 book to BHF route
1 tik to bus route
Pc callle TV/Pts
Pc callle TV/Pts
Basketball court/Pts
Ousdath & SChl 841-1815
---
Naismith Place
Spacious Apartments and Townhouses for rent.
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher Avail.
Central Air, Clear to Campus
Studios 1,2,3, & 4 bedrooms
Bedrooms 5, 6, 7, 8,
383-315 (757) am
749-3794 after 4pm
"Convenient affordable housing"
Call for Appointments
4:15-6pm Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
LCA
Indoor/OutdoorPool
1&2Bedrooms
PLS
OLONY WOODS
1301W, 24th & Nalsmith
963-5331
Kansan Ads Work for YOU
Exercise Room
W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
3 Hot Tubs
M-F10-6 SAT10-4 SUN12-4
OnKUBus Route
405 For Rent
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Meadowbrook Apt. Fireplace, good view.
$400/month Call 864-3038 (DAY) Ask for Kerry
HIGHPOINTE APARTMENT HOMES
Clubhouse & Swimming Pool
Workout Facility
Basketball Court
1,2 & 3 Bedrooms
Washer/Dryer Alarm System
NOWLEASING
Call First Management 841-8468
PALM TREE ISLAND
Holiday Apartments
Leasing for Summer & Fall
*2 Bedroom $400-$445
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
211 Mount Hope Court #1
For more Info, or Appt.
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Move In Now...
One Month Free Rent
On lease through July 31
1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment
Call or stop by today
843-2116
11th and Miss
erkelley Flats
FLATS
MOVE IN NOW...
One Month Free Rent
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
water paid
call or stop by today
841-7726
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
Shannon Plaza Apartments
Lorimar and Leannamar Townhomes
(our townhouses are two levels)
Leasing for Summer/Fall '97
1, 2, 3 bdm/2 bath, 4 bdm/3 bath
*Washer/Dryer*
*Dishwasher*
*Microwave*
*Fireplace*
*Celling Fans in every room*
*Cable in every room*
*Walk-in closets*
*cable paid*
Lorraine-4801 Cherry Dr.
Lennamna-4801 Wimbledon Dr.
Call 814-7849 Office 9-5M-F
"No one lives above
THE ORIGINAL LEGACY EDITION
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
10-Month Leases Available!
Park25
Apartments
- Voleybail Court
- On KU Bus Route
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
the fall semester on very large 1 & 2
bedroom, apartments, as well.
405 For Rent
spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
complex with a tradition of established excellence!
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
Low $35 per month for nice specsquel low 2 BR bureaus, A/C, bus route and quiet. Low utilities! No pets. 1 yr lease beginning in May, June, July or Angus. Cruel Grant. 841-8680.
--oriented community.
Studios,1. 2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts.
PINNACLE WOODS
1*2*3 br. luxury apt. homes
ALL NEW
ALL NEW
1st Month Free----865-5454
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall'97
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30-4:30
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
(no pets, please)
Visit the following locations
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
No Appointment needed
MASTERCRAFT
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
MASTERCRAFT
842.4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
405 For Rent
Mackenzie Place. 113 Kentucky, New leasing for Ang. 1. Great Location! Luxury apts, close to campan, all AIB BED Microwaves, drier/dryer, all ECO SAMSUNG, inverter, energy efficient. Call 749-1686.
Hawthorn Place
Townhomes and Residential Home
- Fireplace, one-car garage
◆ Private Courtyard
331-2332
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to come see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like
---
meadowbrook
FALL'97
Meadowbrook
- 2 Pools
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly, service-
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
- 2 Volleyball Areas
- 3 Bus Stops
Studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts.
2 & 3 Bdrm. Townhouses
How to schedule an ad:
15th & Crestine
842-4200
8:5:30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat. 1-4 Sun
Summer roommate wanted for furnished, 4-bedroom apartment w/ lft. AG,洗衣器/dryer, pool table, desk, printer.
430 Roommate Wanted
Female Sem. Sublease needed middle of May to
begin with new lease plus 1/2 or plus 1/3 on
KU bus route. Close to campus 863-864
- 863-864
Non-smoking female needed immediately to camp $60/mo + 1/2 utilities ($60) for close to campus $700/mo + 1/2 utilities ($60) for close to campus.
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
2 Females to share 5 bedroom luxurious home
$250/mo. + 1/suit! + all amenities, 1/2 mile from Campus, no pets, W/D, A/C, Call 865-5235
Pre-op transsexual lives in Lawrence area seeks another gay/gay friendly person to share a town-house desk. Will be married, social driver Bills will be divided by two. If interested please call (913) 371-1236
1 roommate need to sublease ASAP till August.
6 BR house, hardwood floor; 3 chairs, 3 baths.
Washer/Dryer/Pets OK. Very Clean.$200/mth + 1/ utilizes Call 441-7472.
a nameran offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid,
charged on MasterCard or Visa.
You may mail your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the *Frasan office*. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa Account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified Information and order form
General post-mortem information:
1. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the ad rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
References:
When cancelling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Fees on cancled ads that were pre-paid by cash or with check are not available.
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$11.00 (4 lines X 96 per line X 5 days).
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
165 personal
128 business persons
118 anneau.comments
130 entertalmont
148 last & found
235 help unused
235 professional services
235 typing services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KAMSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form • Please Print:
370 want to buy
495 for rent
433 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
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Date ad begins
Please print your ad one word per box:
Name:
Address:
Total days in paper.
_Classification:
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Print exact name appearing on credit card:
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Staulfer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60045
---
1. 2023-09-10
图 1 图 2 图 3 图 4 图 5 图 6 图 7 图 8 图 9 图 10
1
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Men's NCAA regional semifinal basketball game against Arizona Friday will begin at 6:55 p.m. at the Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center in Birmingham, Ala.
VANDERBILT
20-10
KANSAS
25-6
511
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
4 4
JAYHAWK BASKETBALL WOMEN'S
PAGE10
TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1997
KU VS. VANDERBILT
Vanderbilt 51, Kansas 44
KANSAS
Dixon 7-26 7-FT TP 32
Pride 7-26 7-FT 7-7
Tripp 2-5 0-0 4
Halibable 2-11 0-0 4
Raymant 2-5 0-0 4
Ogren 1-2 0-0 2
Sanford 0-1 1-2 1
Reed 0-0 0-0 0
Canada 0-0 0-0 0
Baltimore 17-81 8-9 44
VANDERBALT FG FT FT TP
Palmiano 6-12 4-7 16
Redman 6-15 4-8 9
Ottoman 1-3 4-8 6
Respondel 3-8 2-6 11
Hillman 7-14 4-19
Josely 1-7 4-19
Hammond 0-0 0-0
Gorstica 1-4 0-4
Holmes 1-4 0-4
Totals 18-54 7-12 51
Hattiftime: Kansas 6-24, Vanderbilt 23-3 Point
gave; Vanderbilt 6-20 (Redman 3-1), Palmanso
gave; Palmanso 6-19 (Redman 3-1), Dixon
(12-1), Pride 1-2, Hallebelle 0-5); Fouled out:
Trapp. Rebounds; Vanderbilt 14 (Palamiano 8),
Kansas 14 (Dixon 7). Assists; Vanderbilt 8 (Red-
man 3-1), Palmanso 7 (Redman 3-1). Total fouls
Vanderbilt 12, Kansas 15, A: 4,200.
The Jayhawks' school record of 21 consecutive home wins came to an end last night. The record started on Jan. 21, 1996, with a victory against Oklahoma State. Last night's loss was the Jayhawks' first home loss this season.
Women's game notes
Last night's game was the first time this season that only one Jayhawk scored in double figures. Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon had a team-high 22 points.
- Kansas guard Angie Halbleib scored only four points in a two-of-11 shooting performance last night. She had scored in double figures in seven consecutive games prior to last night's game
Vanderbilt assistant coach Kelly Stallworth is familiar with Kansas basketball for two reasons. She is the sister of Kansas assistant men's basketball coach Matt Doherty, and their sister, Lisa, played for the Jayhawks from 1985 to 1988.
Kansas had been one of eight schools with both its men's and women's basketball teams still alive in the NCAA Tournament. Now, just four teams remain in that group — Texas, Utah, Stanford and North Carolina.
New coach leads UCLA into spotlight, semifinals
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
A young, idealistic nobody, he was given the nearly impossible task of
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — There were times early in the season when UCLA coach Steve Lavin wondered how things could get any worse.
I still nobody, he was
replacing a coach who was fired two weeks before the season began. His team was a cocky bunch that promptly lost three of its
UCLA
first six games, then followed it up a few weeks later with a 48-point loss, the worst in UCLA's storied history.
The second-seeded Bruins (23-7) will play sixth-seeded Iowa State (22-8) on Thursday in San Antonio, Texas. The Cyclones beat No. 3 seed Cincinnati 67-66 in Saturday's other second-round game at the Palace.
But somewhere in the mess, something unexpected happened: That arrogant group of 14 guys somehow became a team. Now the Bruins are on their way to the semifinals of the Midwest Regional after beating Xavier 96-83 on Saturday.
NCAA PRODU
After their miserable start, the Bruins are playing their best basketball since winning the NCAA title in 1995. They've won 11 straight, and 20 of their last 25. Against Xavier, Cameron Dollar was the only starter who didn't score in double figures, and he finished with nine.
lowa State coach Tim Floyd wouldn't disagree. The Cyclones have played No. 1 Kansas three times this season, and Floyd thinks UCLA is just as good. "They're as talented as anybody we've played all year," Floyd said. "Including Kansas."
—The Associated Press
Senior guard Angie Halbleib fights Vanderbilt junior forward Lisa Ostrom for a rebound in the Jayhawks' 51-44 loss to the Commodores in the second round of the NCAA tournament last night at Allen Field House.
Season ends as'Hawks lose to Vanderbilt
The No. 3-seeded Kansas women's basketball team's season ended with a 51-44 loss to No. 6-seeded Vanderbilt in the second round of the NCAA Tournament last night at Allen Field House.
By Tommy Ganagher
Kansan sportswriter
It was the first home loss for
K an s a s women's basketball coach Marian Washington said the team must remember what it accomplished
the Jayhawks this season. It was also the final game for five seniors — g u a r d s Tamecka Dixon and Angie Halbleib and forwards Jennifer Trapp, Patience Grayer and Shelly Canada.
this season despite the season- ending loss.
"It wasn't that we didn't have any good looks. It's that we just didn't hit them."
Dixon scored 14 of Kansas' 20 second-half points, including all but two of the Jayhawks' points during the last 15 minutes of play.
"It's always difficult to remember the good things that happened to you when you wanted something so badly." Washington said. "This team has etched themselves into the record books. They won the last Big Eight and the first Big 12. That's an incredible accomplishment for one team."
From start to finish, last night's game was dominated by defense.
Those points came from a layup by forward Suzi Raymant with less than a minute to play.
"They did what they had to do to win the game," Washington said. "They slowed down the pace of the game, and they got some key offensive boards when they needed them."
Washington said Vanderbilt had a good game plan for Kansas and executed it properly.
Vanderbilt held Kansas to season-lows for total points (44) and shooting percentage (27.9 percent).
The Jayhawks were just 17-for-61 from the floor, including 6-for-28 in the second half.
Dixon said the problem was
TameckaDixon Kansas guard
making the open shot when it counted most.
"It wasn't that we didn't have any good looks," Dixon said. "It's that we just didn't hit them. We just happened to pick the wrong time to not hit the open shot."
Dixon recorded team-highs with 22 points, seven rebounds and four steals.
She was seven for seven from the free-throw
line and one for one from behind the three-point line. She ended the game 7 of 26 from the floor.
half, Vanderbilt seized the Jay-
hawks' momentum.
Vanderbilt women's basketball coach Jim Foster said timely shooting and solid team defense was critical to winning the game.
"We got some good shots because we were persistent and methodical," Foster said. "We're a very good defensive team, and we have been throughout the year. Not often is 51 points enough, but it was tonight."
The Commodores took a 39-35 lead with more than seven minutes left to play. Kansas then rallied behind Dixon, who singlehandedly led the Jayhawks on a 7-0 run during the next three
The game was back and forth during the first half. Kansas held the Commodores to 27.6 percent shooting, including 4-for-12 from behind the three-point line.
After a 42-39 lead with five minutes left to play, Kansas went dry, and the Commodores took the lead for good. Vanderbilt went on a 12-2 run, finishing the game and leaving Kansas players, coaches and fans to
Midway through the second
ponder what could have been.
"I felt that if we could have picked up some momentum that this was our shot," Washington said. "With some quickness outside and the experience of our senior class, I felt that would keep us in a lot of ball games."
32
Tvler Wirken / KANSAM
Kansas' T.J. Pugh rises above Purdue's Brad Miller for a shot during the Jay hawks' victory against the Boilermakers Saturday in Memphis, Tenn.
1
Kansas hopes to gain momentum in Sweet 16
'Hawks shrug off criticism about uninspiring play
By Bill Petulla Kansan sportswriter
Flat, off rhythm, sluggish or not in sync.
The Kansas men's basketball team was called all of these things and more last weekend. The Jayhawks, who were favored by 36 points against Jackson State on Thursday and were predicted to blast Purdue by 16 points on Saturday, won both games by 14 points.
The critical assessment, however, was issued not only by the media but also in the Jayhawks' locker room.
"Everybody realizes that we didn't play our best basketball," Kansas guard Jerod Haase said. "But the bottom line is that we did win, and that says a lot in this tournament."
Win, yes, but many Jayhawks think they can improve on their crusade to the Final Four.
"By any stretch of the imagination, we didn't play our best here," guard Ryan Robertson said. "And to win a national championship we're going to have to elevate our play."
The Jayhawks aim to follow in the footsteps of the 1995 National Champion, UCLA. The Bruins played shuggily early on in that year's NCAA Tournament. Despite manhandling a woeful Florida International squad, 92-56, UCLA nearly was sent home by Missouri in the second round.
Trailing by one point to Missouri, Bruins guard Tyus Edney drove the ball the length of the court and scored a layup over the outstretched hand of Tigers guard Jason Sutherland at the buzzer, lifting UCLA to a 75-74 victory.
Arizona, a No. 4 seed, barely skated past its first-round opponent. No. 13 seed South Alabama.
Fortunately for Kansas, many questions surround the moment of the Jayhawks' next opponent. Arizona.
The Wildcats needed an overtime to defeat the College of Charleston on Saturday, 73-69. Following the game, Arizona coach Lute Olson said you could never count his team out.
The Wildcats trailed by 10 points with 7:31 remaining in the game. Arizona rallied and took advantage of several South Alabama turnovers and went on a 22-4 run that closed the game.
Arizonia guard Miles Simon said despite playing the No. 1 team in
"This is a competitive group of guys," Olson said. "And they're not going to quit."
1
"I don't think that anybody's going to back down and be scared. Expect a great game next week"
Miles Simon
Arizona guard
"I don't think that anybody's going to back down and be scared," Simon said. "Expect a great game next week."
the nation, the Wildcats won't get rattled.
Kansas will play Arizona at 6:55 d.m. Friday in Birmingham, Ala.
Although various publications may blast Kansas for its sluggish play in the first two rounds, Robertson said the criticism wasn't unfair.
评
"Every time that you step out on the court you're going to have people question your ability." Robertson said. "We've accomplished two of the six steps we need to take, although we didn't play our greatest basketball."
7
1504
Town hall: Chancellor hears students' views on campus issues. Page 3A
Softball: Freshman first-baseman shows promise in debut season. Page 3B
*******************3-DIGIT 666
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HE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
SECTION A VOL.103,NO.121
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1997
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Trafficway hearing set for last day of March
The date of the South Lawrence Trafficway lawsuit in the U.S. District Court of Kansas has been set.
The case is scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m. March 31 at the courthouse in Kansas City, Kan. Judge Tom Van贝ber will preside.
In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs want to stop Douglas County from buying land or beginning construction of the South Lawrence Trafficway until the completion of the Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement by the state. The trafficway is to pass through the Haskell Indian Nations University wetlands.
The plaintiffs said that the National Environmental Policy Act process has been illegally circumvented by county, state and federal officials and organizations.
Kansan staff report
Weather service warns of worst floods in decade
WASHINGTON The National Weather Service issued an alert yesterday warning that heavy snow in the upper Midwest and Rocky Mountains and rain-saturated soil elsewhere were likely to lead to the most widespread flooding in a decade.
Lethal flash floods also are expected in many areas, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
A representative of the administration pointed to heavy rains in the West and the East and said that the country's midsection had been saturated since February.
The administration predicted record-breaking floods on the Red River in North Dakota and northwestern Minnesota and the James River in South Dakota.
The Great Lakes region.
Other areas at risk:
Western Nevada and the Sacramento and San Joaquin river systems of California because of the melting of deep snow in the central and southern Sierra. Six weeks of mostly dry weather has significantly reduced the risk of flooding in much of the far West.
The Great Lakes region.
The southeastern United States from eastern Texas through South Carolina with the exception of Florida and southern Alabama and Georgia.
The CIA now believes that demolition of about 1,400 Iraqi rockets containing chemical agents in a shallow sand pit south of Khamisiyah took place on two days, March 10 and 12, 1991, rather than on March 10 only.
CIA representative Carolyn Osborn said that this raised the possibility that the cloud of gases created by the explosions was smaller and covered a narrower area than if all 1,400 rockets had been demolished at once, as previously believed.
WASHINGTON — Fallout from U.S. Army demolition of an open-air Iraqi chemical weapons storage site after the 1991 Gulf War may have been less widespread than previously believed, CIA officials said yesterday.
The CIA is seeking veterans who only now may realize they were at the Iraqi rocket pit before or after the demolition. They could help investigators piece together a fuller picture of what happened there and how large an area may have been exposed to fallout from the demolition.
---
Chemical weapons fallout less widespread
The Pentagon acknowledged for the first time in 1996 that the demolition work could have led to inadvertent exposure of U.S. troops to poison gases. Although there is no proof, some veterans believe these exposures may explain the mysterious Gulf War illnesses suffered by thousands.
—The Associated Press
---
UV or not UV?
Despite continued warnings on the dangers of ultraviolet rays, students flock to the tanning parlors in search of the perfect tan — especially before spring break.
THE DANGERS OF TANNING
Ultraviolet light from the tanning bed lamps stimulates the production of melanin in the skin.
Skin cells secrete melanin to protect the skin against the UV rays.
The UV light not blocked by the melanin penetrates the skin, damaging DNA and fostering cancer development.
Story by Emily Wrabac · Illustration by Andy Rohrback
R regina Bruntmeyer stands at the front counter of the Sun Deck tanning salon and skims the paper on the clipboard in front of her.
She signs her name at the bottom of the page and hands the clipboard to the attendant behind the counter.
Not to worry. The Lawrence graduate student isn't signing her life away.
Orisshe?
Right above her signature are the words: "Tanning has been proven to cause skin cancer and premature aging of the skin."
The attendant ushers Bruntmeyer to a tiny room with plum-colored carpet and a fake fern on the wall. Bruntmeyer sizes up the beige metal SonnenBraune tanning bed, which consumes most of the room. She's ready to shut herself in between the long, narrow ultraviolet bulbs for the sake of looking healthy.
The UVA rays in Bruntmeyer's taming bed can cause cancer and skin leathering, effects she won't see for 20 years, says Julie Francis, public health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center. But, she adds, "College students don't care about what happens in 20 years."
Melanoma, the most severe form of skin cancer, is the fastest-growing type of cancer in the United States, increasing at a rate of 4 percent per year, according to the American Cancer Society.
Because of tanning risks, the Kansas Board of Cosmetology requires salons to post warning signs and display state tanning-bed regulations. New tanning
Thev should.
salon customers must sign a waiver, as Bruntmeyer has, to ensure that they know the possibilities of burning and adverse health effects.
Of course, not every person who tans will get skin cancer. But there is one guarantee that comes with tanning: Premature aging of the skin, or skin leathering, occurs when the skin is exposed to ultraviolet rays. It's a look that will last a lifetime.
You can take that to the bank, many health care sources say, along with the $360 million that the industry of massage parlors, tanning salons and saunas pulls in each year. The industry has more than 4,300 establishments nationwide, according to 1992 statistics from the U.S. Commerce Department's Bureau of Census.
"A big problem in our society is trying to equate fitness and health with appearance," says Randall Rock, chief of staff at Watkins. "Tanning, unfortunately, is given importance."
Despite FDA and individual state warnings, most people view tanned skin as healthy. That irony exists partly because tanning beds are located in athletic clubs, Francis says.
Another reason for the popularity of tanning is that retailers and manufacturers tout the beds as "safe" because they do not emit the ultraviolet rays that cause sunburn.
Several Lawrence health clubs have tanning beds, including Body Boutique, 925 Iowa St., and Total Fitness Athletic Center, 2108 W. 27th St.
"It's like putting a smoking room in a fitness center." she savs.
"There is absolutely no evidence that tanning beds cause cancer — none," says Bill Cook, a Birmingham, Ala., tanning bed retailer who ships orders worldwide. "The best thing you can do to keep from burning is to have a good tan."
But just because skin doesn't burn, it doesn't mean that there is no cancer risk. The UVA rays that the tanning beds emit affect the deeper layers of skin, so their effects don't show up until later, Francis says.
But is it safe?
The industry counts on clients who agree with taming bed retailer Cook's assertions. But cancer statistics show otherwise.
"The real problems are going to come down the road for young people who started tanning early," says Ned Garrigues, chief of plastic surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center. "I wish the average American had more foresight to know what we're doing to our bodies."
Recent studies in Sweden further quantify the relationship between using tanning beds and developing melanoma. In that study, people who used tanning lamps one to three times a year had twice the risk of developing melanoma as those who did not use them. People who used tanning lamps four to 10 times a year had quadruple the risk, while those who used them more than 10 times a year had seven times the risk of developing melanoma.
See RAYS, Page 5A
The lifetime risk of melanoma is about
Classes won't be canceled
National basketball title won't bring KU to halt
Stephanie McDuff Kansan staff writer
But, one thing is certain for fans — classes will not be canceled at the University of Kansas if its basketball team brings home the national title. The championship game will be played March 31.
With the NCAA basketball championship game still 12 days away, it is unclear whether the Jayhawks will advance to the final rounds of the tournament.
The last time Kansas won the national basketball title, in 1988, classes were canceled the next day.
"It's not a clear-cut call like in '88," said Elaine Sharp, professor of political science. "In '88 it seemed like the right thing to do."
Now, she said, it is hard to know if the same circumstances should apply. Sharp said that in '88 the team was not expected to fare as well as it did. The same cannot be said for this year's basketball team, which is expected to go far in the tournament.
The day of celebration in 1988 was not the only time in Jayhawk history that school was canceled because of big victories on the basketball court. Classes also let out for half a day in 1991 when the Jayhawks made it to the tournament's Final Four.
"I thought the half day off was great," said Kate Blath-
wick, St. Louis, Mo., graduate student.
Blatherwick, who attended the University as an undergraduate in 1991, said that the time off allowed some students to show support at a welcome-back rally for the team.
The chancellor announced his decision not to cancel class in his weekly administrative group meeting on March 10, said Tom Hutton, director of University Relations.
Hutton said that the chancellor explained his decision by saying that a survey of past tournament winners had been taken and that few universities had canceled classes following a national title.
After last year's championship game, the University of Kentucky did not cancel classes either, said Joe Burch, Kentucky's vice president of university relations. A celebration for the team was held the evening after the Wildcats' victory in New York.
Another reason the chancellor gave for not canceling classes was that he believed nothing should interfere with academics at the University, including a national basketball title.
Hutton said that the chancellor told the group it was the students' responsibility to make the adult decision whether to attend classes following a victory in the finals.
TODAY
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Television ...2A
On Campus ...2A
On the Record ...2A
Campus News ...3A
Opinion ...4A
Features ...6A
Sports ...1B
Horoscopes ...4B
Classifieds ...5B
Two fraternities to be alcohol-free by 2000
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Nu fraternities will ban alcoholic beverages from their houses starting in the year 2000.
Just like residence halls on the KU campus, the two international fraternities will not allow members of the two chapters to consume alcoholic beverages in their houses. Guests in those houses will also need to abide by the substance-free policy.
Phi Delta Theta's General Council and Sigma Nu's Governing Board adopted the alcohol-free policy in their meetings this winter.
Robert Biggs, executive vice president of Phi Delta Theta International Headquarters, said executive members of the
international fraternity judged that alcoholic beverages were not an essential component of the fraternity life.
"The objective of this policy is to return to our principles," Biggs said. "We stand for fellowship, academic excellence and leadership development."
Phi Delta Theta already has eleven chapters that have alcohol-free policies, but this time, the international fraternities mandated the policy to all chapters across the country.
If a chapter violates the policy, the international fraternities either will close the chapter or remove members, depending on the degree of violation.
The international fraternities will award grants to chapters who take the lead in removing alcoholic beverages earlier than the year 2000, Biggs said.
The grants would be intended to upgrade educational capabilities in those facilities and to make structural improvements to the houses.
Bill Nelson, associate director of Organizations and Activities Center, and coordinator of Greek Programs, said that people have been increasingly aware of the substance-free policy across the country.
"I believe some groups will follow the two fraternities," Nelson said. "They are leaders of interfraternity world."
Al Boulware, St. Joseph, Mo., junior, said that because his chapter members were used to having alcohol in their houses, it would take a while to remove it.
"It has to be gradual change," Boulware said. "We hope we will take a progressive step because grants will definitely help."
"The objective of this policy is to return to our principles...We stand for fellowship, academic excellence and leadership."
Robert Biggs executive vice president of Phi Delta Theta
4
2A
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
WEATHER
QuickINFO
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
63 40
CAMPUS EVENTS
40
الهجرة في الملكية العربية السعودية
Warm and partly cloudy.
THURSDAY
70
41
Much warmer and mostly sunny.
SATURDAY
71
43
43
Mostly sunny again. Very dry and warm.
Assemblages featuring artwork by Karen Jacks and Ardys Ramberg will be at the Phoenix Gallery, 919 Massachusetts St. from March 1 to April 15. For more information, call 843-0800.
Office of Study Abroad will have in informa- onment meeting about Western Chim-化ization study abroad at 11:30 a.m. today in 105A Uppinck Hal. For more information, call Alison Lusk at 864- 7810.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will present the University Forum entitled "Elijah - the coming musical extravaganza at KU" from noon to 1 p.m. today at the ECM at 1204 Aroad Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
Ninth Street Baptist Church will sponsor a mid-week prayer and Bible study at noon and at 7 ontnight at 847 Ohio St. For more information, call 843-5828.
International Programs will have an informational meeting about Fulbright and Graduate Direct Exchange Grants for 1998-99 from 12:30 to 1:20 p.m. today at Alove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hodgie Bricke at 864-1414.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at the Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the Rev. Reynold May at
ON CAMPUS
843-0357
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Australia New Zealand study abroad at 4 p.m. today at 105A Lippincott Hall. For more information, call the office at 864-3742.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate礼堂 at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crenshaw Drive, New York, NY 10029; on the Rev. Raymond M. Bardus, 814-8357.
KU Tae Tuw Do Club will meet from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson. For more information, call Adam Capron at B42-9112.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 6:15 p.m. today at the Hawk's new in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Shawn Rieger at 1-855-402-3986
Amnesty International will meet at tonight at Alcove B in the Kansas Union For more information, call Andrew Humphrey at 864-1731.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor "International Women Reflect on Their KU Experience" from 7 to 9 tonight at the English Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call the center at 864-352
KU Queens and Allies' support group for LesBiGayTrans will meet at 7 tonight. Call KU Info at 834-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for location and more information.
KU Sailing Club will men at Rangoon the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Chris at 864-1125.
Proponents of Animal Liberation will meet at 7 onight at the candy counter in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Laura Ford at 864-6560.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have scripture study at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Center at 1831 Crescent Road. For more information, call Karen at 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a Human Services Committee Meeting at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Center at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Jenny at 843-0357.
CHI Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:30 on tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Steve Swanson at 542-1101.
Jayhawker Campus Ministry will meet at 8 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Rebecca Hupo at 749-7996.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8:30 ontion at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ch:is Witswell at 864-6408.
ON THE RECORD
A car reported stolen to the KU police on Sept. 20, 1994, was discovered at 5:30 p.m. Monday parked in the 1000 block of Emery Road. No damage had been done to the car. Police contacted the owner, who already had purchased another car, Lawrence police report.
Walgreen's Drug Store, 400 W. 23rd St., reported receiving a phone call at 5:30 p.m. Saturday from a man who said his roommate was going to rob the store with a shotgun. The man refused to leave his name. The store wasn't robbed, Lawrence police reported
A KU student's silver Trek mountain bike and bike equipment were stolen between
noon and 1:30 p.m. Friday from a bike rack north of Malott Hall. The items were valued at $1,550. KU police reported.
A blue parking permit valued at $75 was stolen from a KU student's car between 12:50 and 2:40 p.m. Friday in Sunnyside parking lot. KU police reported.
A Kenwood AM/FM compact disc player, two amplifiers, four speakers and a speaker box were stolen from a KU student's car between 1:30 and 8 p.m. Monday in the Burge Union west parking lot. The dashboard and steering column also were damaged. The stolen items were valued at $2,100, and the damage was estimated at $200, KU police reported.
"Unnamed since 1923"
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Massachusetts 832-8228
"Universal since 1993"
U
THE NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Kansan needs U.
The niversity Daily Kansan is looking for new faces to fill their fall advertising staff. If yo want some val able experience and a chance to meet some great people, j st stop by and pick p an application in room 119 Staffer Flint. Then fill it o t and drop it off by T esday, April 8, 1997 to be a part of the nation's top st dent newspaper.
TV TONIGHT
WEDNESDAY PRIMETIME MARCH 19, 1997
© 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 Sentinel "Spare Parts" (R) ★ Star Trek: Voyager (In Stereo) Babyton 5 "The Long Night" Mad Abo. You Bzzz! Cops ★ LAPD
WDAF 3 Beverly Hills, 90210 ★ Five of Five (In Stereo) News ★ News ★ H.Patrol Cheers ★ Extra ★
KCTV 6 Nanny(R) ★ Temporarily Feda "Crash and Burn" ★ EZ Streets (In Stereo) News ★ Late Show (In Stereo) Seinfeld ★
KS06 8 Checkin Check ★ SL Patrick's Day Parade (R) News Plus News Silhouettes News Plus
KCPT 7 A Laugh, a Tear, a Mitzvah ★ Viewer Suprise Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
KSNT 1 Newraday ★ Chicago Sona Wings ★ Just Shoot Prince Street (In Stereo) News Tonight Show (In Stereo) Late Night ★
KMBC 3 Grace Under ★ Coach(R) ★ Carey Arsenio ★ Primetime Live ★ News Roseanne ★ Rosanne ★ M"A'SH ★
KTUW 1 Israel Philharmonic Orchstra 60th Gala A Laugh, a Tear, a Mitzvah People-Here Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
IBWU 1 Nanny(R) ★ Temporarily Feda "Crash and Burn" ★ EZ Streets (In Stereo) News ★ Late Show (In Stereo) Late Late ★
KTKA 1 Grace Under ★ Coach(R) ★ Carey Arsenio ★ Primetime Live ★ News Seinfeld ★ Married... Nightline ★
CABLE STATIONS
AAE 2 Biography: Sidney Polet American Justice 20th Century(R) Law & Order "Misconception" Biography: Sidney Polet
CNBC 4 Equal Time Hardball Rivera Live Late Night (In Stereo) Charles Grodit Rivera Live(C)
CNNN 3 Prime News Burden-Proof Larry King Live World Today Sports Illus. Moneyline Newstick Showbiz
COM 4 Dirty Rotten Scoundrels* ★★(1988, Comedy) Steve Martin, Michael Calne, Dream On Daily Show Comic Relief Tick Sat. Night
COURT 7 Prime Time Justice Trial Story Cochran and Grace Prime Time Justice(R) Trial Story(R)
CSPAN 4 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs
DISC 2 Wild Discovery "Super Huns" Discover Magazine(R) U-Boot Wars-Defeat Wild Discovery "Super Hunes" Discover Magazine(R)
ESPN 1 College篮球: NT Quarterfinal College篮球: NT Quarterfinal - Teams BTA Sportscenter Sweet 16
HIST 5 Crusades(R) (Part 3 of 4) True Action Adventures Weapons at War(R) Year by Year"1934"(R) Crusades(R) (Part 3 of 4)
LIFE 3 Unselved Mysteries "Star"(*1993), Drama Jenny Garth, Ted Wass. Living Mysteries Unsolved Mysteries
MTIV 4 Prime Time (In Stereo) Real World(Jenny M. Singled Out Loveoline (In Stereo) Altern.Nation
SCRI 4 Tekwar (In Stereo) Forever Knight (In Stereo) Sightings(R) (In Stereo) Time Trax "One on One" (In Stereo) TLC 3 SeaTek(R) Pop Science Cleopatra: The Last Pharaoh Survival in the Sky(T) SeatKet(R) Pop Science Cleopatra: The Last Pharaoh
TNT 4 Inside the Academy Awards "Gone With the Wind" ****(1939, Drama) Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh.The Civil War forces a Southern bell to face reality.
USA 4 Murder, She Wrote "Breaking the Wind:" The Grey Lougous Story"(1997) Wings Wings Slik Stalking(S)
WH1 5 Music Videos Archives(B) B-Track Flash Selena(R) Sex Appeal Crossroads Soul of VH1
WGN 1 Sister, Sister, Sister Jamie Foxx Waysnays News (In Stereo) Wiesegau (In Stereo) In the Heat of VH1
WTBS 1 NBA Basketball: Indiana Pacers at Atlanta Hawks.(Live) Insede-NBA "The Dirty Dozen" ***1/6(1967, Adventure) Lee Marvin.
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 2 "Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls" ★(1995) Tales-Crypt Tracey takes Larry Sanders "Down Periscope" ★(1998) PG-13 Real Sex 17
MAX 2 Friddy the 13th Part 3* ★(1982, Horse) R "Hard Justice" ★(1995) David Bradley,R "The Sky Above, the Mud Below" (1961) "Skil Degree"
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
3A
White supremacy to be addressed
By Umut Bayramoglu
Kansan staff writer
Whether they notice sidewalk messages on the way to class in Wescoe Hall or witness Fred Phelps' demonstrations outside the Lied Center, many KU students come in contact with extremist politics during their college years.
Tonight, Leonard Zeskind, a KU alumnus and an internationally recognized expert on far-right political and social movements will speak at 7:30 p.m. at the Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Zeskind's presentation titled "White Supremacist Impact on Mainstream Politics, Culture and You," will
include a discussion of the current trial of the alleged Oklahoma City bombers and its meaning for the white supremacist movement.
Carrie Fleider, director of the KU Hillel Foundation, the main co-sponsor of the event, said that organizers knew of Zeskink because he had served as a consultant for Hillel.
"We decided to make use of this international expert that is actually not far from our campus," she said.
Fleider said that Zeskind's speech would be a learning experience for KU students.
"This is an issue that people usually don't like talking about," she said. "But it's important to talk about it openly, so we can deal with it."
Fleider said that Zeskind would talk about a broad range of topics related to the extremist right.
"It's important that KU students are able to understand that homophobia, anti-Semitism and religious extremism undermine the democracy and pluralism," she said.
Zeskind is currently the president of the Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights Inc., a nonprofit organization based in Kansas City, Mo. He has written on issues related to racism, anti-Semitism and neo-Nazi groups in North America and Europe for nearly 20 years.
From 1985-1994, Zeskind served as research director for the Center for Democratic Renewal, formerly the
national Anti-Klan Network.
Evan Heimlich, program assistant for the Multicultural Resource Center, a co-sponsor of tonight's presentation, said that it was important to study the positions opposing multiculturalism.
"Whenever you have an extreme, it tends to pull the mainstream toward it." he said.
Heilmich said the atmosphere at the University concerning white supremacy issues accommodated intolerance.
"I have no idea if white supremacists are organized on campus," he said. "I'm much more concerned with what to do to counter the influence of that kind of talk."
Student Senate sponsors a town hall meeting
Chancellor answers students' questions
By Dave Morantz Kansan staff writer
In last night's open-forum town hall meeting, Chancellor Robert Hemenway and student body president Grey Montgomery fielded questions about issues ranging from the future of a new University child care center to
the University's position about the South Lawrence Trafficway
About 25 people attended the meeting at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
Unlike the last town hall meeting, most of those attending last night were not associated with the Senate. Student Senate sponsored the meeting as a part of Student Senate Awareness Week.
It was the the second such meeting of the semester
While Hemenway responded to most of the audience's questions
smoothly, his speech became circuitous when the topic switched to negotiations between graduate teaching assistants and the administration.
He described the role of GTAs as a difficult balancing act.
"They are teaching students at the University of Kansas, and they themselves are students at the University of Kansas," Hemenway said. "It's a challenge to figure out how to enable a GTA to fill both of those roles."
uate student and GTA, pushed Hemenway to declare his position in the negotiations.
Hemenway said, "The University has signed an agreement not to discuss in public the details of the contract. I can't discuss that because that is part of the negotiations."
But Kip Curtis, Lawrence grad-
After the meeting, Curtis said Hemenway's response was unacceptable.
"I think it was absolutely inadequate," he said. "As I understand it, they've agreed to nothing."
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4
OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
-
CRAIG LANG, Editor MARK OZIMEK, Business manager
SUSANNA LOOF, Managing editor DENNIS HAIPT, Retail sales manager
KIMBERLY CRABTREE, Editorial editor JUSTIN KNUPP, Technology coordinator
TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser JAY STEINER, Sales and marketing adviser
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
About time... these things are getting expensive!
NEW YORK POST
TV Networks to Sponsor Candidates' Airtime
PEROT
MB
Editorials
Free television time could help in quagmire of campaign reform
At the conclusion of recent elections, outcries for campaign reform are heard as the expenses of political campaigns are tallied. Most people acknowledge the corruption and inequalities that exist in campaigning for public office, but few offer real solutions.
Recently, President Clinton recommended the allocation of free television time for political candidates. Although free television time is not a panacea for cleaning up political campaigns, it can, if used correctly, help to level the playing field among candidates and promote public confidence that real campaign reforms are being attempted.
Allocating free air time to national candidates would give more candidates an opportunity to promote themselves and their political agendas.
However, this proposal should be limited to congressional and presidential
Free air time will give more candidates an opportunity to express political stance.
candidates, and the amount of airtime per day for each candidate should be limited. A non-partisan committee could decide who qualifies as a contender for each race, and the networks could decide how much airtime they could afford to donate to candidates.
The primary argument against free television time is that it will not clean up campaigns. Although candidates would not have to seek contributions for television spots, they still may receive controversial campaign contributions.
Ideally, free television may cut some of the special interest graft that candidates specifically use for television spots. In addition, all national candidates, even those with low campaign budgets, would have equal amounts of television time. Lower-budgeted candidates may use money reserved for television spots on other areas of campaigning that they may not otherwise have been able to afford.
Clinton's proposal of giving political candidates free television time will not solve the complex problems within political campaigns. But it can serve as a crack in the infrastructure of corruption that permeates many campaigns. This measure may level the playing field among candidates and give lower-budgeted campaigns a better means of competing. Something must be done to reform political campaigns, and perhaps this proposal will start this much-needed process.
NICK ZALLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Drivers should obey road rules
Too many drivers ignore the rules of the road when traveling on the highway.
Fast drivers are supposed to pass on the left, the "fast lane." Those who cannot, or will not, drive as fast as the speed limit allows should keep to the right. The f.lailure to do so leads to hard feelings and danger on the highway.
People who drive under the speed limit are not necessarily being unsafe, unless they drive so slowly that they impede traffic. However, slow drivers who feel that they must drive in the left lane, with no regard to people wanting to pass them, create problems.
People who wish to pass drivers in the left lane face either the impoliteness of passing on the right side or driving behind the slow drivers for miles in hopes that they will get the message and switch lanes.
Driving responsibly can reduce potential snags in cross-country travel.
Sometimes, these confrontations lead to a shaken fist or a few shouted words as the speedier driver passes. In some cases, however, the consequences can be more dire, causing accidents as the failure to follow simple rules of the highway creates confusion in a potentially dangerous environment of moving vehicles. In either case, the problems can be avoided by following driving guidelines.
ing any sort of good example. Rather, they create a hazard that could easily be avoided. Driving in the correct lane ensures that other drivers will know how to react to them at any speed, and with the adherence to all other traffic laws, can make highway travel a better experience for everyone.
Slower drivers should stick to the right lane. By creating a confusing and unnatural situation in traffic when driving in the left lane, they are not standing their ground against speeders or show-
The already unwelcome task of driving long distances on a highway is compounded by slow drivers in the left lane. If these drivers stuck to the right lane, faster drivers not be forced to drive close behind, desperately trying to get the slower individual to switch lanes. In addition, confrontations, confusion, and accidents would be reduced. Only by driving responsibly and following the rules of the road can potential snaps in cross-country travel be smoothed out.
GERRY DOYLE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSANSTAFF
LA TINA SULLIVAN ... Associate Editorial
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
No, it's not designed to take you to a higher level of learning or to refine your skills in a particular subject. Nor is college a resume accessory or even a social outlet.
ELENA MACALUSO
Students help others during college years
I think I've discovered the real reason behind college.
Columns
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kim Crabtreat (option#i@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (lusillian@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Instead, college is really an endurance test. In the end, it is fulfilling. However, at times it can seem like a lesson in self preservation.
Even the course titles seem a bit inaccurate. Why don't they name them what they
really are? How about "Theories in Convolution" or "Brain Melting 101?"
College can throw a blow to your self-esteem. It can cause you to question your ability in subjects you thought you were somewhat proficient in. In subjects that you find challenging anyway, it can cause you to question if you have any abilities.
College can cause you to reflect on your choices and your decisions. College also can cause you to re-examine your goals and your means of attaining them.
College can make you really miss that job, that boyfriend or girlfriend or the family you left behind to pursue your goals.
College can also cause you to re-think the decision that you made to leave that job, that boyfriend or girlfriend or that family that was really bringing you down.
College may make them seem not so bad after all.
College can make you yearn for school days past. Days when you pasted funny shaped pasta
on colored construction paper with no particular design in mind. Days when your big thrill was leading the class in the recital of the ABC's or the salute of the American flag.
Days when you sang songs like *Puff the Magic Dragon*, your innocence still intact so that you weren't reading double entendre into the song.
Days when intense reading was Charlotte's Web or Laura Ingalls Wilder books (well, most of them anyway).
They are your classmates who give you words of inspiration out of the blue, who make you see the good and who will take time to listen to the bad.
But you know what you discover when you are down? There are people around you to pick you back up. You have to become a little less absorbed in your troubles to notice those people, but they are there.
Days when you were certain that long division, adverbs and spelling words like Mississippi were the road to your demise.
They are the far-away person who leave just the right message on your answering machine, just the right corry e-mail or who send just the right funnv gift in the mail.
It's funny how the bad times often make you realize all of the good things you have.
They are the neighbors who call you from work, check on you daily and even make dinner for you to assure themselves that you are taking care of yourself.
So if you feel down about school remember that there are usually others who want to help.
Elena Macaluso is a Sacramento, Calif., graduate student in Journalism.
Prejudice is a symptom of ignorant assumptions
"I would kill my sister if she married any Black man," said a horribly prejudiced Korean American. "What?" cried a shocked African American.
"Marrying a Black man, my sister's life would be miserable since Black people are lazy and cannot succeed in society," replied the Korean American.
The African American could not believe that his Korean friend thought of African Americans that way. The African American regarded the Korean as a pretty close friend until this conversation, but there was no friendship from that point on.
I offer this anecdote as one example of prejudice, but there are countless others. Everybody, including me, is more or less prejudiced against someone.
NAMKYU
PARK
Let's look at my own ethnic group first. Some Koreans are extraordinarily brilliant, but others are unbelievably idiotic. Whatever your ethnicity may be, I am sure the same is true for your group. Some African- or European-American people are extraordinarily brilliant, while others are unbelievably idiotic.
This was an excerpt of a message posted on the Internet page by the African American, who wanted to understand why some Koreans are prejudiced against African Americans. The address of that page is soc.cul.korea
Where does it come from? I say prejudice mostly comes from ignorance. The discussion of prejudice needs to involve a lot of related issues, but I am going to simplify this discussion by focusing on ignorant assumptions that prejudiced people hold.
The prejudiced assume that they are superior to members of the other group. This is an ignorant assumption because no members of one group are superior or inferior to members of another.
Some well-known, but prejudiced scholars have
even attempted to prove ethnic superiority or inferiority. Instead of presenting their complex and distorted arguments, they need to explain the diverse phenomena represented in different groups of people. Intelligence is not determined by ethnicity. If you are not convinced, look again at the members in your own ethnic group.
The prejudiced assume that members of one group are inherently different from them. This also is an ignorant assumption because our differences come not from our nature but from our environment. If I had been raised in a different environment, I would be different from what I am today. Fact, I am becoming a somewhat different person just by living in this country. But in spite of my differences from others, as a human being I am basically the same as others. I need to eat just like you. I need to love or to be loved just like you. I need clothing to protect my body just like you.
My differences are no more than superficial. Everybody is inherently, that is, biologically, the same.
The prejudiced assume that their group has a proprietary claim on privilege, power and prestige. Looking at human history, some once-powerful ethnic groups have lost their power, and other ethnic groups have taken over their role. For example, within the last decade alone, South Africa has gone from being a nation completely dominated by a white minority to being a nation that operates on a more level playing field. The fact that a native, Nelson Mandela, has become a political leader marks this dramatic change. Power does not necessarily stand still.
No one can predict with precision the flow of power, but it certainly is changing all the time. I understand that we all choose our own ways of thinking.
But I am sure that you don't want to be part of an ignorant group of people.
Namkyu Park is a Chongju, South Korea Ph.D. candidate specializing in teaching English as a second language.
WACILITY Chicago Tribune
FRIGHT SIMULATOR
MAYDAY!
MAYDAY!
GAME
P. SALINGER
Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
Risky rays
5A
the beauty of the "perfect tan" lures many students to artificial tanning methods such as tanning beds. These beds have their risks, but for many, the benefit of brown outweighs the risk of the rays
Continued from Page 1A
one in 90, according to the American Cancer Society, and that rate is on the rise. Survival rates range from 14 to 90 percent, depending on how widespread the cancer is when it is detected.
Not all skin cancers occur later in life.
"We do diagnose and initially treat some students every year for skin cancer," says Watkins chief of staff Rock. "But because the effects of tanning are delayed, we don't see a lot of it."
Although no one goes to Rock because of wrinkled skin, premature aging of the skin is another consequence of tanning time. The damaged underlayers of the skin begin to show through as time passes, and the skin acquires wrinkles and a leathery appearance.
At the Med Center, Garrigueus has seen firsthand the effects of sun damage. What's more, he is beginning to see younger patients who want cosmetic facial surgery because of ultraviolet damage.
He says tanning beds — available at the flip of a switch — have allowed sun worshippers to tan at their own convenience.
The result is more severe and more widespread tan damage. Garrisons says.
Despite the fact that risks seem severe and evident, tanning continues to expand as an industry. The FDA and individual states have taken steps to ensure that salons are as safe as possible, instead of attempting to combat the idea altogether.
The FDA regulates the time spent in the bed, and all manufacturers put schedules on all beds.
In Kansas, salons are also regulated by the State Board of Cosmetology. Salons must post a notice in a visible spot that requires each salon to have a trained operator in the building at all times. The same notice tells patrons to wear protective eyewear and warns them that tanning may cause skin cancer or premature aging of the skin.
At The Sun Deck, 701 W. Ninth St., potential patrons must fill out a form that notes their skin type and whether they are prone to sunburns.
"People don't realize there's so much more to that than a golden tan."
Julio Francis health educator at Watkins
"If you burn outside, you're going to burn in the bed too," says Melissa Allen, Lawrence sophomore and Sun Deck employee.
Allen adds that if patrons have had a major sunburn or burn easily, the salon starts them with shorter tanning sessions.
The staff suggests a length of time for each tanner. The maximum time allowed by the manufacturers is 20 minutes. For new tanners, the staff recommends between five and 10 minutes for those who burn easily.
If they choose to go longer, we tell them it's at their own risk," Allen says. "We give short tans free, sometimes, so they know we're concerned."
"If they don't really counsel with you about your skin type, go find someplace else." Cook says.
Cook, the tanning bed retailer, says that good salons make recommendations like those at the Sun Deck.
The form at the Sun Deck also lists the Board of Cosmetology's warnings. It cautions that tanning has been proven to cause skin cancer and premature aging of the skin. Patrons sign below that statement.
Employees are also aware of the potential results of tanning.
"Any risks you're going to have from too much sun exposure, you're going to have from tanning inside." Allen says. "As long as you do it in moderation, it's okay."
Sonia Bobski, Shawnee freshman, has been tanning for about three years. She
"I've never been concerned about it," she says. "I have olive tone skin, so I don't burn easily."
says she tanned in the spring so that she would look tan when it came time to wear shorts.
She admits that she has burned in tanning beds when they have new bulbs, but she took a few days off to let the sunburn cool down before returning to the beds.
Bobski says she plans to tan for a couple more years, but she admits that she's concerned about the long-term effects.
"I'm kind of concerned about getting wrinkles," she said. "I see all these old ladies coming in there, and I wonder why they keep doing it."
What looks good?
The idea of a "healthy" tan dates back to the middle of this century. A white, creamy complexion used to be a sign of affluence. Before the 1940s, tanned skin was considered the mark of being a common laborer, and upscale people wanted to distinguish themselves by avoiding the sun.
The "healthy" tan continues to be the desired image today, so much so that manufacturers have invented ways to tan year-round without ever going outside.
Then, during the 40s, a tan became a sign of leisure time spent outdoors. The implication was that if people had time to spend outdoors, they must be healthy.
"People don't realize there's so much more to that than a golden tan," said Francis, health educator at Watkins. "Any suntanning or burn is your skin trying to protect itself."
Back at the Sun Deck, the attendant shows Bruntmeier how to work the tanning bed. Push the button on the wall behind the bed, and the computer at the front desk will shut the bed off when the time is up, she tells Bruntmeier.
"Make sure you wear the goggles," the attendant adds. "The beds close down as far as you want. You don't need to roll over."
The attendant leaves. Bruntmeier closes the tanning bed, enveloping herself in an artificially sunny world. The bed hums as the ultraviolet rays bombard her skin.
AEXS
Regina Bruntmeyer, KU grad student from Mound City, Mo., fills out the required consent form at The Sun Deck tanning salon before she is able to use one of the tanning beds.
Keeping safe from skin cancer
Avoiding sun-induced skin damage
■ Spend as little time in direct sunlight as possible
■ When you must stay outside for a long period of time, cover your skin. Wear flovent hats and long-sleeved shirts.
Use a sunscreen with a high sun protection factor. After swimming or sweating, reapply the sunscreen.
Avoid the use of artificial tanning beds and pills. Tanning creams do not cause UV damage. Look for a cream that contains dihydroxyacetone, the tanning agent approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
Recognizing the early signs
Look for the following changes in the pattern of moles and freckles on your body:
Color. A mole may change from brown to black.
- Texture. A flat mole may become raised.
- Shape. The contour of a mole may change from smooth and round to rough and irregular.
- **Size.** A small mole or freckle could turn into a large one.
- **Sensation.** A mole may suddenly become sensitive to the touch.
Bleeding. Minor trauma such as a bump or scrape may cause the mole to bleed.
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. Downtown 843-0611
orls
Vereinsbank am 19.03.2018
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
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MASTERCRAFT
Campus Place
12th & Louisiana • 841-1429
Regents Court 19th & Mass·749-0445
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ONOR
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EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
A Dramatic Collage of Women's Voices
In Celebration of
Women's
history
LIVE NEAR CAMPUS!
[ ]
Reserve Your Apartment Today!
Don't miss this evening of readers theatre celebrating the voices of women past and present. This collection of literature, poetry, and monologues serve as a reminder of the rich diversity that makes the voices of women unique. Share in the struggles and triumphs of these women and the contributions that they made to their communities
842-4455
8:00 p.m.
Thursday, March 20, 1997
200 Smith Hall
(Across from the Kansas Union)
Directed by: Suzanne Grachek
Performed by: Betsy Atkinson and Louise Flory
Co-sponsored by The Commission on the Status of Women, The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, and Student Senate.
co-sponsored
KU Hillel Foundation presents:
David Duke
Leonard Zeskind
WHITE SUPREMACY:
Its Impact on Mainstream Politics Culture and YOU!
March 19, 1997, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union, Alderson Auditorium
Sponsored by KU Hillel, Student Senate, Multicultural Resource Center. Ecumenical Christian Ministries, Office of Equal Opportunity and the Political Science Department
HILLEY KANSAS UNIVERSITY
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF NASSAU
SENATE
"Univered since 1940"
944 Mass.832-8228
Red Lyon Tavern
Learning Through DIVERTITY Multicultural Resource Center
what film?
Le big mac!
what do they call a whopper?
i find out at oounoil
london $414
tokyo $654
amsterdam $575
Student fares, may require an International Student ID card. Taxes
$6-33. Fares are subject to change
Council Travel
Council Travel
622 West 12th Street,
Lawrence, KS
Tel : 913-749-3900
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travel:
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University Daily Kansan
Organizations have scholarships for some of the strangest things, which leave people asking,
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
100
6A
Hill topics
and agbuja
col4na
'You got money for that?'
Story by Mark McMaster • Illustration by Blake Walles
Just because you have a low grade point average, obscure interests and no personality does not mean that you are ineligible for scholarships. In fact, there are a plethora of unusual academic awards out there for just about every variety of scholar. All it takes is a search. Here are a few examples, which can be found in guides such as The Scholarship Book by David Cassidy and Peterson's College Money Handbook.
Do you strive to be a great athlete, yet colleges aren't recruiting you? Maybe you've chosen the wrong sport. The Professional Bowlers' Association Billy Welu Memorial Scholarship gives $500 awards to students who represent their college on the school bowling team. If bowling isn't your thing, perhaps the Western Golf Association Evans Scholars Foundation can offer assistance. If you've been a caddie on a participating course for two years or more, the foundation might pay your tuition through college.
In academics as well as sports, a great way to maximize your scholarship potential is to choose a less-popular specialty.
It may be hard to get a scholarship to law school, but not in other occupations. For example, the National Association of Animal Breeders offers $10,000 scholarships for students pursuing a career in "bovine breeding and physiology with emphasis on artificial insemination." For students who don't wish to deal with cows that intimately, the association also gives scholarships in animal genetics and agricultural market research.
Another choice is the American Board of Funeral Service Education Scholarship which gives over 70 awards each year for, yes, the lively field of funeral service. However, applicants must have completed a semester in the major - presumably to weed out people who are not genuinely interested in funeral service.
On the other hand, maybe you have already devoted your life to the study of "lighting design." If so, consider the Landscape Architecture Foundation William Locklin Scholarship. The foundation offers this award to promote their goal of demonstrating "the importance of 24-hour lighting in landscape designs." A noble goal, indeed.
For those with artistic aspirations, there are many scholarships that might not attract too much competition. Students especially interested in blacksmithing, needlepoint or basketweaving may apply to the Haystack Mountain School Of Crafts Scholarship Program, which helps with tuition at that institution. Also honoring young artists is the American Accordion Musical Society Contest, which awards up to $250 for musicians that compose a serious piece of music of six minutes or more for the accordion.
The Norwich Jubilee Esperanto Foundation offers grants to students who wish to further their study in Esperanto, the international language. To qualify, you must be fluent in Esperanto, an artificial language invented in 1887 by Polish scientist Ludwik L. Zamenhof, and spoken only by a small, devoted group spread throughout the world. The group, among other things, operates Esperanto-speaking nude beaches and compose rap music to promote the language.
Possessing some strange trait may also help you qualify for additional awards. The John Gatling
Scholarship Program guarantees anyone with the surname "Gatlin" or "Gatling" $6,000 a year at North Carolina State University, provided they meet minimum admission requirements.
But some scholarships may have limited their applicant pool too much. The Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence organization gives up to nine scholarships to students who can prove that an ancestor signed that document. The Ladies of Northants Scholarship is for a woman over the age of 40 who has emigrated to Northamptonshire, England, from the United States and plans to pursue a career in nuclear engineering. In case too many aspiring nuclear scientists apply, preference is given to those living in the village of Podington.
Perhaps the most unusual, though, is the International Onexioca Founders Memorial Award which honors the memory of Hernesto K. Onexioca. To qualify you must have the name Onexioca, yet not be related to Hernesto by blood or marriage and have been born on January 1.
Sometimes a tragic event in the family can mean additional scholarship money. If your parent was
Silly scholarships
Hard up for some cash? Don't exactly have a stellar scholastic record? Not to worry. The following are some organizations that give out money — if you meet certain requirements.
Professional Bowlers' Association Billy Welu Memorial Scholarship
National Association of Animal Breeders
American Board of Funeral Service Education Scholarship
Landscape Architecture Foundation William Locklin Scholarship
Haystack Mountain School Of Crafts Scholarship Program
American Accordion Musicological Society Contest
The Norwich Jubilee Esperanto Foundation
John Gattling Scholarship Program
- Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence
The Ladies of Northants Scholarship
International Oenicoxa Founders Memorial Award
Renovation Department of Military Affairs—
International Onexloca Founders Memorial Award
Pennsylvania Department of Military Affairs—
Bureau of Veterans' Affair
the victim of an armed conflict or terrorist attack, and if you have lived in Pennsylvania for five years, are aged 16 to 23 and demonstrate financial need, the Pennsylvania Department of Military Affairs—Bureau of Veterans' Affairs could have a $4,000 scholarship with your name on it.
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
One student thought the criteria for some of these awards were unfair.
"Just because you're a lefthanded pomeranian breeder from Tonganoxie doesn't mean you deserve your own scholarship," said Marisa Crowther, Three Rivers, Tex., sophomore. "It seems like they could find better qualifications for these scholarships. Probably there's just a bunch of rich old philanthropists who get a kick out of creating their own scholarships for obscure things."
Even Misti Spann, a student advisor at the University Scholarship Center, admits she finds many scholarships ridiculous. However, she says that few students apply for these scholarships, making them a great opportunity for students who take the time to search them out.
"I'm sure there's a scholarship for everybody out there," said Spann, a Lawrence sophomore. "There's a lot of money that is going to lessqualified people because nobody applies."
Of course, the scholarships listed above are only the most unusual ones—there are many others that students with more mainstream hobbies and interests might qualify for.
Spann suggested that students interested in applying for scholarships begin at the bulletin board across from the Scholarship Center office at 33 Strong Hall. The board lists a wide range of awards for which the center has applications.
Students can also find information about scholarships they may be eligible for by using a search service, such as fastWEB! available free to internet users at www.fastweb.com. Using this service, students enter information about themselves, and then receive a list of scholarships that match those characteristics.
The Scholarship Center also offers a similar service, called CASHE, for a $12 fee.
So begin your search for scholarships, brush up on your Esperanto vocabulary, and begin composing your magnum opus on accordion. The money soon will be rolling in.
NIGHT Life
WEDNESDAY
Doctoral recital: Rob Reid, conduction, University Singers; Terri Teal, conduction, Women's Chorale; 7:30 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church. Free.
Cake, Dieselhead, and Danger Bob, 8 p.m. at The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Cost: $12.50.
*Pamela Bruner, 8 p.m. at Nouvelle Dell 129 E. 10th St. Free.*
THURSDAY
Hampshire St. Cost; $8 advance tickets
Adrian Legg and Richard Johnson, 8
p.m. at the Bottleneck, 737 New
Doctoral Lecture-Recital: Russell Guyyer, conducting; 7:30 p.m. at
buyer, conducting. © print Swarthout Recital Hall. Free
Marvin Hunt, 9 p.m. at Nouvelle Deli,
129. F, 10th St., Free
Low, The Dirty Three and T-shirt, 9 p.m.
at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire
St. Cost: $8 advance tickets.
FRIDAY
LAB Jazz Trio, 6 to 8 p.m. at Nouvelle Deli, 129. E.10. St. Ft.
Sister 7, 9:30 p.m. at The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $5 and
$6.
SATURDAY
Java Junkies, 10 p.m. at Nouvelle Dell,
J29 E.10th St. Free.
Shiner, Catherine, Fragile Porcelain
SUNDAY
Swing Set, 8 p.m. at the Bottleneck,
737 New Hampshire St. Free.
Mice, and Prudentall, 9:30 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
Cost: $5 and $6.
MONDAY
Open Mic, 8 p.m. at the Bottleneck,
737 New Hampshire St. Free.
TUESDAY
Dan Newman, 8 p.m. at Nouvelle Deli,
129 E. 10th. Free.
Sweet & Low Orchestra and Phil Cody,
8 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New
Hampshire St. Cost: $2 and $3.
ADT
MESATRIAL
A judge has granted Cleveland Indians pitcher Jose Mesa a separate trial from his co-defendant on sex and weapons charges.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Thomas Curran ruled on the motion by Mesa's attorneys during a pretrial hearing.
Mesa's attorneys told the judge that David Blanzo, Mesa's co-defendant, intended to testify in his own defense against a weapons count. Mesa is scheduled for trial March 31, so the Indians don't know whether the reliever will be available for questioning. No Court Scotland.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
The team is expected to ask major league
.
baseball this week for permission to replace Mesa with another pitcher on the 25-man roster while he is on trial.
ST. LOUIS RAMS RELEASE PUNTER
The St. Louis Rams have released veteran punter Sean Landeta at his request. Landeta, 35, said Monday he was hoping to sign with another team. He asked to be
released after it became clear that Coach Dick Vermell and special teams coach Frank Gansz were looking for a younger kicker.
FREE-AGENT TALKS
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1997
Free-agent cornerback Cris Dishman began talks with the Washington Redskins after the Pittsburgh Steelers withdrew an offer that included a $2.5 million signing bonus.
The four-year offer included a salary of $300,000 this year. It would have cost the Steelers $925,000 against the salary cap this year.
Dishman, who played with Houston last year, met Tuesday with Redskins officials. Washington cor-
are also free agents, and the Steelers are looking at Carter.
ers
Steelers cornerback Rod Woodson, also a free agent, met with Chicago Bears officials who are concerned about his right knee. A ligament was torn in the opener of the 1995 season.
SECTION B
Fast BREAKS
Michigan University hires Kansas law firm to probe
ANN ARBOR, MICH. — The University of Michigan has hired an Overland Park law firm to investigate allegations of impropriety in its men's basketball program, University President Lee Bollinger said.
Bond, Schoeneck & King, which specializes in investigating programs facing potential NCAA sanctions, will investigate whether a Detroit man gave cash and gifts to players.
Bollinger said Monday that he and athletic director Joe Roberson have discussed the idea of retaining an independent organization to examine the allegations, and that hiring the firm was an appropriate step.
The university released a report earlier this month saying an unidentified booster was responsible for two minor violations of NCAA regulations and had been barred from further contact with Michigan athletics.
Last week, the Detroit Free Press, citing anonymous sources, said Eddie Martin had given players cash and other imperious gifts for years.
Martin has refused most interview requests, but he told The Detroit News in a recent interview that he gave food and gifts to young athletes because he likes to help kids.
Tommy Amaker new coach for Seton Hall basketball
SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. — Tommy Amaker, the star playmaker for Duke who became an assistant coach with the Blue Devils, was hired today as Seton Hall's basketball coach, succeeding George Blaney.
Seton Hall President Robert Shearan had said he was seeking a coach committed to academic integrity and who has experienced success at the Division I level.
Seton Hall said Amaker's appointment is to be announced today at a news conference.
He played at Duke 1983-1987, going to the NCAA tournament all four years.
Amaker was an assistant coach at Duke for seven years before being promoted to associate coach two years ago.
Blaney was ousted after a 38-48 record in three seasons. He had losing records in his final two, finishing with a 10-18 mark this season.
He was an honorable mention All- American his senior year and received the Henry Iba Corinthian award for the nation's best defensive player in 1987.
CHRISTIANSBURG, VA. — A Virginia Tech track athlete testified that he was chased and beaten by a pack of football players and suffered a broken collarbone when a wide receiver hit him with a cane.
But in the first trial of a football player accused in the case, Montgomery County Circuit Judge Ray Grubbs dismissed the attempted malicious wounding charge against the receiver, Angelo Harrison.
Track athlete says that football players beat him
Three football players testified that Harrison was not involved in the beating of spinner Hilliard Sumner. And three prosecution witnesses said it was too dark to identify who took part in the Aug. 31 attack on the Virginia Tech campus.
Harrison, who was charged with a felony, was suspended for about half the season. Six players charged with misdemeanor assault and battery were suspended for one game.
Several witnesses testified that Summer was chased after he interceded in a fight between another track athlete and a football player. The fight broke out after a dance at the student union and stemmed from a feud between the track and football teams.
Coach says other players also did well
HAYES
—The Associated Press
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
Guard Angle Halbleib, the most prolific three-point shooter in Kansas women's basketball history, made the GTE Academic All-America team for the second-consecutive year.
She was a third-team selection.
Halbleib has a 3.82 cumulative grade point average, including a 4.00 GPA during the fall 1996 semester. She will graduate in May with a major in math education and a minor in physics.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said the academic accomplishments of other players, such as guard Tamecka Dixon and forward Jennifer Trapp, cannot be ignored.
"Tamecka is a Jayhawk scholar, and so is Jennifer," Washington said. "My players have done a great job in the classroom as well on the court. I don't think you can ask for anything more from these young women."
First Team
Halbleib holds Kansas career records for three-point shot attempts (658) and three-point shots made (238). She was the Jayhawks' second-leading scorer this season, averaging 11.9 points per game.
■ Kathleen Courtney, Holy Cross,
3.86 Mathematics
Another player from the Big 12 Conference, Iowa State forward Jayme Olsen, made the GTE Academic All-America team.
Olson was a first-team selection with a 3.90 GPA in psychology. She helped the Cyclones make their first-ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament, posting team-highs of 17.7 points and 7.1 rebounds this
For the second-consecutive year, Kansas guard Angie Halbleib has made the GTE Academic All-America team. Halbleib has a 3.82 cumulative GPA and will graduate in May. Halbleib was the Jayhawks' second leading scorer this season, averaging 11.9 points per game.
Jennifer Howard, North Carolina State 4.0, Communications
Mary's, 3.94, Mathematics
Michelle Palmisano, Vanderbilt, 3.99, Biomedical and electrical engineering
Jayme Olson Iowa State 3.90 Psychology
Sheila Danker, New Hampshire, 3.38, Economics and political Science
Lisa Davies, Southwest Missouri State, 4.0, Communication science disorders
Angela Drake, Toledo, 3.64 Elementary education
Ashley Moore, Campbell, 4.O. Accounting
Carrie Templin, Kent, 3.92,
Speech pathology and audiology
Third Team
Kim Brandl, Southern
Methodist, 3.76, Liberal Arts
Angle Haibleb, Kansas, 3.82
Korie Hilde, Duquesne, 3.33,
Communications
Communications
Communications Heather Newlon. Memphis.
Heather Newton, Memphis 4.00, Pre-physical therapy
Michelle Ratay Northwestern 3.46 History
season.
"Jayne's a great representative for Iowa State, and someone we can all
Iowa State women's basketball coach Bill Fennelly said Olson was someone that other players should emulate.
be proud of," Fennelly said. "We know that she's the kind of person we can build a program around. I'm proud of what we were able to accomplish this year, so I'm looking forward to coaching Jayme for one more year."
North Carolina State forward Jennifer Howard was named the GTE Academic All-American of the Year. She will graduate in May and currently has a cumulative 4.00 GPA in
communications.
Vanderbilt guard Michelle Palmisano made the first team with a 3.99 cumulative GPA. She is majoring in biomedical and electrical engineering, and will also graduate in May.
She had 17 points, eight rebounds and five steals in a 51-44 defeat of Kansas in the second round of the NCAA Tournament on Monday night.
Vanderbilt women's basketball
coach Jim Foster said that some people often forget to mention the scholar in scholar-athlete.
"When you look at my team, they're a bunch of students who work hard at everything they do." Foster said. "They are very disciplined, and it shows up in the classroom and on the court. I'm just as proud about what they do for their teachers as what they have done for me."
'Hawks play through pain
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas men's basketball guard Jerod Haase has a nagging back injury. Haase's backcourt mate, Jacque Vaughn, is suffering from bronchitis. It likely would be in their best interest to rest their aches and pains.
But this is the NCAA tournament. The Jayhawks have a date with Arizona at 6:55 p.m. on Friday in Birmingham, Ala. For now, rest and recuperation will have to be put on hold.
Fortunately for the Jayhawks, Haase's back is gradually improving, and Vaughn's illness likely will be reaching the end of its cycle.
"Jerod's back is better," Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams said. "Jacque doesn't have his appetite back or his energy level back to where we want it to be. Hopefully, each day it will get better."
Haase's tender back is just one more in a list of aches he has endured this season. It was revealed on Feb. 5 that Haase has a broken scaphoid bone in his right hand.
Williams said both Haase and Vaughn practiced for one-half to two-thirds of practice Monday night.
Haase said the recent back injury shouldn't hinder his performance on Friday against third-round opponent, Arizona.
"It's been pretty good," Haase said. "I don't think it's anything that's going to affect me too much."
Williams said that despite Haase's string of injuries this season, his fortitude is crucial
Roy Williams men's basketball coach
"I think there's still some fuel left in his tank."
to the Jayhawks' title run.
Like Haase, Vaughn has opted to play through his aliment. Following last Saturday's game against Purdue, in which Vaughn played with a fever, he was asked what it would take for him to sit out.
"At the end of the game I want Jerod Haase on the court because he can guard anybody," Williams said. "I think there's still some fuel left in his tank."
The second-team All-American said Coach Williams would have had to chain him down in the locker room.
Despite his illness, Vaughn dished out nine assists and netted 12 points, including a three-pointer that put the Jayhawks back in the lead in the victory against the Boilermakers.
Bronchitis customarily takes seven to ten days before it's out of the body.
While seniors Vaughn and Haase recover from their ailments, sophomore forward Paul Pierce has come to center stage. Pierce has lead the Jayhawks in scoring in each of Kansas' five postseason games.
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
"Somewhere it said, 'A baby will lead them.' Maybe that's what's happening right here," Williams said.
KANSAS
31
ACKSON
26
KANSAS
45
Center Scot Pollard dunks and forward Raef LaFrentz looks up as the Jayhawks add to their win against Jackson State in Kansas' first game of the NCAA tournament in Memphis, Tenn. Kansas will play at 6:55 p.m. Friday in Birmingham, Ala., against Arizona. Kansas will be making its fifth consecutive trip to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament.
SAN DIEGO — Without so much as throwing one of his vaunted fastballs, Hideki Irabu apparently will return to Japan and sit out this big-league season.
Prima donna baseball player says he'll take Yankees or bust
"We're leaving Wednesday," agent Don Nomura said. Nomura said he and Irabu, whose fastball has been clocked at close to 100 mph, were booked on an All Nippon Airways flight to Tokyo.
The Associated Press
Last week, Nomura faxed a letter to all major league general managers, saying his client would sit out the season unless he was allowed to sign with the Yankees by today.
The San Diego Padres, who own Irabu's rights, don't anticipate a deal by today with the Yankees or anyone else.
Nor are they broken up about their failed attempt to land the right-hander described as the Nolan Ryan of Japan because of his 1,111 strikeouts in 1,101 2-3 innings spanning eight seasons.
Club president Larry Lucchino said the Padres would resolve the Irabu situation at their pace, not Nomura's.
San Diego obtained Irabu's rights in January as part of an arrangement with the Chiba Lotte Marines of Japan's Pacific League, but he has refused to negotiate with the Padres. Irabu said it was his childhood dream to pitch for the Yankees.
1
2B
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Some golfers say Ryder Cup selection wrong
By Ron Sirak
Associated Press Golf Writer
ORLANDO, Fla. — European players want to keep the Ryder Cup so badly they apparently will change the team selection process in midstream to ensure having the strongest possible squad in Spain this September.
A ballot will be conducted among the European PGA Tour players in the next seven to 10 days asking if they support doubling the number of captain's choices from two to four and reducing the number of automatic qualifiers from 10 to eight.
European tour spokesman Mitchell Platts said yesterday that the decision to hold the vote came after a players' meeting last week at the Portuguese Open at which
there was strong sentiment to change the selection process.
Platts said that the result of the voting would be passed to the European Ryder Cup committee, which would make the final decision.
One possibility is a compromise in which captain Seve Ballesteros would get three picks.
As things stand right now, those not on the European team include Nick Faldo, Jesper Parnevik, Jose Maria Olazabal, Bernard Langer, Sandy Lyle and Ballesteros.
If the change is made the loser would not be the U.S. players, who want to play the best Europe has to offer, or the fans, who want to see the best competition possible.
their tour and passed on the bigger money and better courses in the United States just to make the Rvder Cup team.
Getting the shaft would be two Europeans who remained loyal to
Right now those two players — Nos. 9 and 10 on the qualifying list — are veterans Paul Broadhurst and Sam Torrance.
The European PGA Tour has yet to contact the PGA of America about a change in the selection.
But the timing of the vote means that the issue likely will come up when a scheduled meeting between the U.S. and European Ryder Cup committees is held at the Masters next month.
It also is likely the response from the United States will be that the European selection process is a European matter.
"What if they change the rules in midstream?" U. S. captain Tom
Kite said. "Well, I don't think about their team. I have enough to worry about thinking about my team.
"I think I could take the top 12 off the list right now and have a very strong team. If our guys play the way they should, we will be very, very tough no matter who they put out there."
Ballesteros pushed for increasing the number of captain's choices in 1995 and lost.
He is pushing even harder this time, in part because it means so much to him to retain the cup in his native Spain, the first time the Cup has been contested on the European continent.
"The most important thing in the Ryder Cup is to have the best team," he said. "What do you want me to do — resign?"
That is not likely a real threat but it is a strong message to the tour players of how Ballesteros wants them to vote.
The last-minute scrambling by the Europeans raises the question of whether there should be qualifying for the Ryder Cup teams at all. Maybe both sides should just pick their 12 best and go at it.
Many of Europe's top players feel that way. One advantage for them is that they can play in the U.S. and still make the European Ryder Cup team.
But it would hurt both tours to eliminate a qualifying process.
European players could abandon their tour and play in the United States.
And the competition among Americans for the top-10 spots spurs players to compete in a cou
ple more tournaments in a Ryder Cup year and makes those last few tournaments more exciting.
One of the great rounds of 1995 was the 63 Brad Faxon shot in the last round of the PGA Championship at Riviera to finish fifth and make the Ryder Cup team.
The final, sad irony of all of this is that if anyone else were captain of the European team and selected Ballesteros as a captain's choice it would be viewed as a proper reward to a deserving player in the twilight of a great career that revitalized European golf.
But there is virtually no way Ballesteros can pick himself, denying fans — and golf — the one true captain's pick who deserves to play at Valderraign, Spain.
"SINGLED OUT"
Thursday At JOHNNY'S
ANIMATT
Just like the TV show we all know and love, "Singled Out", the regional tournament is sponsored by Miller Lite and 98.9, The Rock. Sign up early and test your luck between 10pm and Midnight with Murphy from the morning show and get "Singled Out".
$1.25 Miller Lite
bottles & draws
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
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technology
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- Keyboard
913-864-5690
GRADUATING STUDENTS
center
If you missed the Grad Fair don't worry The Only Official Graduation Regalia is still available...
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- (603e) 16/1.2GB/CD
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Monday - Friday April 14-25 from 10am-3pm at gates 22 & 23 North end of Memorial Sta
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For more info call KU Concessions at 864-3515
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Welcome to their world.
the debut album on Mercury Records featuring "Welcome," "Familiar" and "Bleed"
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
31B
Freshman swings into first season
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
What do Kansas associate athletic director John Hadl, Kansas linebacker Jason Thoren, and ex-Kansas standout pitcher Luann Stanwix Metsker have in common?
The most obvious is they have all been involved in Kansas athletics.
The not-so-obvious tie is that they all are related to freshman Shannon Stanwix, who is performing well enough to start at first base during her first year on the Kansas softball team.
Stanwix has a .315 batting average, has scored 12 runs and has driven in 14 runs this season.
But her most impressive number is the .759 slugging percentage she carries because 14 of her 17 hits this season have been for extra bases.
"I'm very pleased with the way she's swinging the bat," Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said. "It's exciting to see her hitting the ball as hard as she is."
Bunge said that as a freshman, Stanwix will continue to get better and better.
"It's tough to make the transition between high school and Division I (collegiate sports), and she's handled it very well," Bunge said. "I think she's just now beginning to settle in and forget about being a freshman."
Stanwix said she was pleased with the way things had started, but that there was still a lot of work to do and many adjustments to be made.
"Personally I'm pretty pleased with the progress I'm making, but I still have a long way to go," Stanwix said. "The whole game has jumped up another level (from high school), and I'm still getting used to it."
Stanwix, a Lawrence native, said she had received plenty of advice and coaching before her arrival at Kansas from her cousin Luann Metsker, who pitched from 1978-81 and still ranks in the top five in three career pitching categories.
"Luann was her first coach and coached her for eight years," said Linda Stanwix, Shannon's mother. "I think that definitely helped her. I think, in her heart, she knew (Kansas) was where she wanted to go, and I think with her cousin playing there it helped make up her mind."
Among the other reasons was the University of Kansas' nursing program. Shannon Stanwix plans to pursue a career in the medical field
after her softball career is finished.
"Right now, because of softball, I'm not able to take some of the classes I need to," Stanwix said. "I'm taking classes in community health, and once softball is over, I'll get into nursing."
Shannon Stanwix said that it had been tough being on the road so much this season and that she was looking forward to playing in the home opener on April 2 against Wichita State.
"Right now it feels like Oklahoma is our home field," Shannon Stanwix said, referring to the fact that Kansas has played in Oklahoma for three of its four tournaments this season. "It will be really great to get back home and see some familiar faces up in the stands."
Shannon Stanwix said she felt that the team is even better than its 11-8 record indicates, and that if the players can put everything together, they have a good chance of knocking off Oklahoma as the Big 12 Conference Champions.
B
"I think we have just as good of a shot as anyone," Shannon Stanwix said. "If we can put all three phases of the game together — offense, defense, and pitching — then we have a very good shot."
First baseman Shannon Stanix prepares to field a ground ball during the Kansas women's softball practice yesterday.
GR Gorden-Ross/KANSAN
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944 Mass. 832-8228
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$3 small I topping
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704 Mass.
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1012 Mass, Suite 201
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
LUNCH • DINNER • LATE NIGHT
--any pizza
*A LAWRENCE TRADITION SINCE 1984*
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
DELIVERS
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The University of Kansas
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PIZZA SHUTTLE 50¢off
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Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS
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Now Leasing For Fall & Summer
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Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom)
Call Pat today 843-1116
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Wearing nothing but a smile...
New Girls
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TERRAPLANE BICYCLES & GOODS
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HOROSCOPES
Todav's Birthday (March 19)
116.230
This year's about work and money. You need to work smart. The same goes for what you do with the money. Great wealth can be yours in April. Don't spend it all in one place. Your health improves in August. Be strengthened by constructive criticism in September. Take a leap of faith to follow an opportunity in December. Find your dreams in January. A transformation produces beneficial results in February.
Arles (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 6.
If your job has anything to do with advertising, which it should, you'll do very well today. You can express ideas in the fewest possible words. An older friend will teach you something that will improve your presentation, if you'll sit still long enough to listen.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 10.
Your assignment isn't quite finished, but your friends are bugging you to come out and play. Use them as motivation. Also, let them know what you're up against. One of them could come up with an ingenious solution to the problem. Be willing to try anything.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 5.
You may want to have a private conversation this morning. This afternoon has several difficult moments, but they may not affect you directly. It looks as though your sweetheart and a friend are having a spat. Be the objective third party.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) Today is a 7.
For the last few weeks or so, you've been learning about other people's money. You're just about through with that lesson. Use what you've learned so far. If you need financing, don't wait much longer.
it's time to get going on something you've been avoiding. Or you could
You've had it pretty easy lately,
you've been traveling, learning and improving yourself in all sorts of ways. Soon you'll be tested in your career. It could even happen today.
Your chances of advancement are good.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
back out of the deal. You won't, of course, but it's theoretically possible. Better to buckle down and do the job. That's your easiest option.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
There's still a lot to do, but that's OK. You can see the light at the end of the tunnel. You may even have a little time for something else. Lunch, for example. Call an old friend and set something up. Anticipate weird twists of fate this afternoon.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6
Grumpiness does not become you. A smile will get you the things you want and need today. Critical talk will only bring sadness on the ones around you. A living situation will rear its ugly head. Be wise, Travel to the Great Lakes to find your peace of mind, or just listen to soul music.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7.
There are ways to get what you want. Your supervisor is in a good mood. He or she may even be feeling generous. You might be able to sell information, too. A secret you've been hanging onto for quite some time should be just about ripe
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
by now.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7.
Aquarlus (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
Today is an 8.
For one day only, you'll have access to funding for home improvements, household furnishings or even a new house. How much money you can get depends on your credit rating. But strange things could happen. Go ahead and ask.
Plsces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6.
If you have a debt that's nearly paid off, make the effort to do so. Tonight, you could come up with another idea to complete something you've started. That's your theme for tonight and tomorrow.
You're about to go into a spending phase. It could be a phase in which you make more money, too. That would be best, because you'll only want items of the highest quality. This could turn out to be fun. Manage your resources carefully.
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
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For more information, call today! 842-0759/842-9293
How to get into Biology Graduate School at KU?
Join us March 19th,1997 at 6:30 pm in 2023 Haworth for more info
or call Jose Miranda @ 838-4529
Kansan Classified
图示
100s Announcements
男 女
105 Personale
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan
400s Real Estate
H
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Classified Policy
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 advert.
tise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
I
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
100s Announcements
105 Personals
KU QA OA offers *i*-divisional peer counseling to people who are lebian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unure. Please call KU 814-3564 or Headquarters at ku814-2364 for more information.
SWM age 40, a children's eyes & hair, country background, age 40, a women's lover. Desires female for dating. Would a foreign lady be interested? Please write P:O. Box 44215 Lawrence, KS 60544
120 Announcements
FAST FUNDAIRER - RAISE $200 IN DAYS
GREEKS, GROUPS, CLUBS, MOTIVATED
INDIVIDUALS, FAST, EASY - NO FINANCIAL
OBLIGATION (800) 1802-1862 EXT. 33
864-9500
110 Business Personals
NUDE RECREATION
NUDE RECREATION
North American Nudist Directory lists 100's of beachades, clubs, & resorts in your area and around the country. 24 hour information: 611-878-4778
NEED $$$$$$$$ ?
Stering Silver Jewelry For Guys & Gals.
Hoops, silver rings with carbons, toe rings
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc.袜. Shoe. 828 Mass.
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU SURVIVED
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
125 Travel
Gley,津lean, offers a transgender or unure?
KU Q&A & offers a confidential support group
Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. @Call KU Info at 863-356
or Headquarters at 413-243 for location.
120 Announcements
205 Help Wanted
A HOUSE IN BRECKENRIDGE AVAILABLE
and reservations needed. Call Steve at 331-0600
200s Employment
男 女
Babyssitter needed. Monday-Friday in Eudora.
Must have own transportation and provide
proper attire.
Now hire cooks, utilities hot and cold prep. No
hiring for cash only. Apply in person. In-
troduce Stockleave $159.0owa.
Carter's Children's Wear. Full_ Pt & pt sales associ-
tors. Come in. Iris Riverfront Plaza Suite 303. EOE
Iris Riverfront Plaza Suite 303. EOE
Spring Help for tree service. Start Spring Break
Work day until summer. Apply in person
845 Maple 7:18-8:00 m, or call 841-6841. EOE
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED .. 8 wk summer youth recreation program. Lake Quivira, KS? Questions: Call 288-4875
Desktop Publisher. Full-time days. Exp. in
the company, including resume of exp.
Copy Co. Copy 2 & Naimitha of copy 1.
205 Help Wanted
Local landscape company accepting applications from motivated individuals. Irrigation, lawn care, and general experience helpful, but not essential. Call 843-9494 from 8-5.
Now hire Finess Instructor, M.W.F m f o r preferred. See Becky, 4130 Clinton Ption EOK
ALVAMAR NAUTILUS
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in PocoMonz. of PA
Over 40 activities - Seeking general
and specialist counsellors
n1 928 736 552
n1 928 736 552
CAMP COUNSELORS
Part-time bookkeeper 20-25 hours/week. Prior experience or bookkeeping field of study preferred. Also need part-time service person jobss 820-746-2194. Jerry at NAPA Auto Parts 919 New Hampshire.
Work time help needed calling on behalf of SADP.
Work 15-20 hours a week. $6/hr plus commission,
schedule your own hours. Come join our Friends
group! Visit us at www.eoefund.org or 4pm-
10pm and fill out an application. EOE
and specialist counselor's
215-887-9700 or e-mail: pinetree@pond.com
*Now hiring, restaurant workers, all positions,支付. Sharing start at $8.50 and up, depending on experience and availability. Please apply in person or mail resume to pay between 3:00 p.M. to 3:00 p.M. or call 492-2330.
Working couple seeks dependable, reliable individual Mon-Thurs for approx 4-8 brs. Late afternoon to early evening. Qualified individuals must be withdrawn with infant care and preferred infancy CPR certification. References will be requested. Call Holly after 10:30 am 9:33:82-838
Babyssiter/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
own car, experience, and knowledge of child
development. Send letter, resume, schedule,
and reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Stauffer Flint.
Apartment Manager. Rapidly grow managing management team. Master's degree or join our management team. Experience preferred but will train right apply. Apply for firstman position in our office. Send resume to 10438 ports KS, 60044
STUDENT WORK- up to $125 'Nat I' CO. you immediate PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence and JOCO. Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. Co-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Con. Apply call our JOCO office at (913) 838-WORK (1am-5pm)
Rewarding, exciting summer for sophomore and older college students counselling in the Colorado Rockies. Backpacking, Western riding, water activities, natural science and many outdoor programs. Write: Sanborn Western Camps, P.O. Box 165, Floristan, CO 80816.
$$ SUMMER JOBS $$
DRIVERS, PACKERS, HELPERS Wanted.
Excellent to make good money in K.C. area.
Experience preferential for training. Will
serve Dairin Baldin (913) 415-0600 ext. 255.
Moving to Mt. Vernon, CA 91538.
205 Help Wanted
Sunrise Landscaping is now hiring site-
man for Sunrise Garden Center, 118th & New York
at Sunrise Garden Center, 118th & New York.
Brookcreek Learning Center is hiring part-time teacher assistants. M-F a 4am–noon (toddlers) and M–F 3-5p.m. (preschool). Opportunities include experience in an early intervention incubator. Complete application at 200 M.Hope Court. For more information call 685-0022. AA/EOE.
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education advisement in the University Placement Center. 20 wrs/hw, $7.00/hw., starting August 1997. Application deadline: December 30th. Complete job description at 110 Burge Union. See www.ukans.edu/~upc/jobs.html
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education advisement in the University Placement Center. 20 wrs/hs, $7.00/hr., starting August 1997. Application deadline: April 15th. Job description: Apply to Burge Job or see www.ukans.edu/~up/Jobs.html
LAKE SHAWNEE GOLF COURSE-Topeka Opportunity for an individual who enjoys working with food preparation and customer service. Lake Shawnee Golf Café has opportunities for the training and development of players. Apply at Lake Shawnee G.C., 4114 SE East Edge Rd., Topeka 267-2936.
Our busy not for profit health health agency is recruiting caregiver team oriented CAH/A/CHA's with Home Care Program, Evening hours available, have transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Douglas County Visiting Hospital, Duncanville, Lower Level or 814-4643 for PAT. EOE
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterkating, gymnastics, basketball, computer programs, camping, craft, drummands, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary: $45K/year (CWC 1760 Mable, IL, MD 10083 847-464-294)
Food Service Supervisors. 2 positions available @ The Mass Street Dell & Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. 15-30 hours per week. Must have 2 years experience in food service or superviving. $6.50-$7.00 per hour based on prior experience. Profit share bonus up to $1,500. Apply at Schumm Food Company business office @ Tjx
41.08
$$$$Earn Cash$$$
The Kansas and Burge Uniones
Catering Department
$6.00/hr.
M-F 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Come to the Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas
Union for training.
Work when it fits your schedule.
AA/EEO
205 Help Wanted
Summer Employment in Chicago. Childcare and light housekeeping for suburban Chicago families. Responsible, loving, non-smoker. Call Northfield Nannies (467) 503-354.
205 Help Wanted
205 Help Wanted
Summer work program, 1997, Competitive, ambitious undergrads being interviewed for summer job. Approx $5,800 + for summer. Call 1-800-967-8363. Southwestern program.
205 Help Wanted
Stay ahead of the Job Crowd!
Make sure you get that job nowl Register over we can keep you busy with clerical,
great summer the break and over the summer secretarial.
accounting or other office support jobs in the Kansas City metro area.
To schedule an appointment over break, call Shelley or Michelle at:
913-491-3491
Or contact us on the web at :
www.employbts.com
BTS BUSINESS TEMPORARY SERVICES
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
5B
205 Help Wanted
Wanted 87 students. Lose 8-100 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough. Doctor recommended. Guaranteed. $30 cost. Free gift. 1-800-435-7591.
Seeking students majoring in social/human service fields for hands-on experience & internship credit working with children who have multiple disabilities and significant behavior disorders. Intensive training in behavioral programming provided. Staff will assist in the implementation of new technologies for communication, self-help and functional living skills in a residential setting. Positions are live-in working five days on and off two days. Salary for 9 week program is $2,560 to $2,800 depending on assignment and work schedule. Prefer applicants with 60 credit hours in human service field or education. Send resume to: Human Resources, Heartspring, 2400 Jardin Dr., Wichita, KS 67219
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with possibility of renewal for next academic year. Interested students will have three years and will have no other job commitments. Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community experience, solid research skills, leadership and supervisory experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, in helping other. Must be Lawrence resident. Come by KU info. 420 538-3240. No phone calls or emails. come basis with final deadline for application. 5pm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
Budget Year Officer Salary: $40,000 (minimum)/fiscal year. Deadline: Applications accepted until position filled. Required qualifications: 1) Proven ability to successfully manage multiple responsibilities, bring them to successful conclusions, 2) Ability to communicate effectively with (3+ years) University of Kansas fund accounting and payroll systems, 3) Bachelor's degree in appropriate field of study, 5) Strong communication skills, 6) Ability to present both oral and written reports in a clear and concise manner. Contact Ann Engel at Networking and Telecommunications Services, University of Kansas, Ellsworth School of Law, Kansas State University, KS 60948, 864-9310 for a complete job description and application procedures. EO/AA.
for
SUMMER JOBS!
Key is hiring now for full-time
jobs that will start in the
summer. Many positions available
in Topeka for production, retail,
office and warehouse.
Apply today!
KEY Staffing
400 SW Croix, Topeka
267-9999
Earn cash on the spot
$20 Today new donors
Up to $40 this week
Donate your life saving plasma
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
Leading graphics software developer has immediate openings for Software Engineers
Inso Kansas City Corporation
Department 0305K
4901 Main Street, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64112
Fax: (816) 753-8387
E-mail: hr-kc@inso.com
If you have experience in either UNIX, OS/2, Windows, or Macintosh operating systems, and will be receiving a BA/S in Computer Engineering or Computer Science, have knowledge of C/C++ programming and would like to work for one of a handful of true high-technology firms in the Kansas City area, we have permanent and intern openings available. If you meet these qualifications, send your resume including education, math background, work history and salary requirements to:
An Equal Opportunity Employer Permanent residents and U.S. Citizens only, please
Inso CORPORATION www.inso.com
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
225 Professional Services
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800) 733-2404
FAIL ONCESS
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 Eaxt 13th
Sandy G. Koley
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
Fake ID$ & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
H.K.
235 Typing Services
Heathman & Kelly
DU/TRAFFIC/CRIMINAL/PERSONAL INJURY
Call For a Free Consultation
TRAFFIC DEFENSE
CENTER
OF
X
Call Jacki at 823-8444 for applications, term paper, books, dissertations, etc. E-mail: jacki@math.mit.edu
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/ laser printer will create top quality paper for you. Call us at (800) 255-9000.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
Eight tickets for southwest regional. Call after 4:00 pm for Brad Wood I: 2-051-351-6233.
Soft Top for Teepo Wrangler, Light Gray, $200
B.O. B. Call Tim @ 323-2743
Need Energy? Try our 100% natural product. It gives you a tremendous natural lift and mental alertness. No side effects. Great before study time. Independence HerbalBASE Distribute Call 813-394-6304
2 TICKETS TO SOUTH REGIONAL
POSITION FOR SALE CALL 1-005
James C. Heathman
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
340 Auto Sales
'90 Toyota Tercell, manual trans., runs well.
$2,000, obu 884 6749
or Melissa A. Kelly ATTORNEYS AT LAW
1990 FORD PROBE Excellent Condition: 5-
speed road, highways mile. Call 865-3800 until
ready.
varsuperioracura.com Pictures of pre-owned vehicles on www.superioracura.com. Various makes and models. 1-800-878-ACURA for more info. Ask for Kf. 1-800-878-ACURA for more info. Ask for Kf.
Varsuperioracura.com AWD 4 spd, black, a/br. Vgs, Grand Prix, Ford.
012. 267.0055 ..
Toll Free: 888-834-41 AW (529)
1984 Honda Accord LX. AC, cruise control, rusty but runs great. Extremely reliable. $1100 OBO. Call Jill at 841-4267.
360 Miscellaneous
VIRGINIA
THE CHAPMAN USED & CURIOUS GOODS
405 For Rent
731 New Hampshire 841-0550
BUY • SELL • TRADE
370 Want to Buy
Summer lease for 3 bdrm. apt. 1/2 bath. Available from May and August. Close to campus.
Sublease one bedroom apartment. Available
on 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th Floor.
Cable paid, $299/mo. /$600/mo. Avail. August
1st through September 30th.
STUDIO, CLOSE TO CAMPUS, ON BUS ROUTE.
Available for summer campuses $130/mo. + elec-
charge.
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Meadowbrook Apt. Fireplace, good view,
$400/month Call 864-3038 (DAY) Ask for Kerry
Studio 162 Bedrooms Available for summer & fall. Some locations close to campus, on bus route 38. Other locations are listed on the website.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
Tenn. a student housing alternative, Open
& diverse membership, non profit operation,
democratic control. $183-240 incl. wk dwellings, UW,
W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by
841-0484.
Mackenzie Place, 113 Kentucky. Now leasing for Aug. 1. Great Location! Luxury apartments, close to campus. A11 BR, Microwave, washer/dryer, all energy efficient. Well-insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-186.
CHEAP SUMMER SUBLEASE. $171/mo. + 1/7
utilities. Cool roommates. Avail. through July 31.
Hage house! 838-4867. Ask for Bret.
NOW LEASING
Birchwood Gardens Apt.
Condo for Sale 3 dkm. 2 bath, wash/dryer, on
land. 4096 sq ft. $189,500. FHA Loan, $79,000 OBO. Call to view 832-208-9600.
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG.1.
Price vary. Letter受理费, & deposit. Call (864) 718-5200 or (864) 718-5201.
WANTED:
Your used computer
(PC or Mac)
We are paying up to
$1,000 Reward
for your good used
computer.
South Pointe
PARK VILLA
Studio, 1-2 BR, also 5 BR house all near KU. Call 841-6254.
- Designer Interior
- 3 Bed, 2 Full Bath
- On Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- No Pets
GATEWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
2 BDRM, 2 bath College Hind condo. W/d,umption. water pd Aval Avail Rent $775) 313-894-2683
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
1 BDRM apartment available for summer subr
lease. Inexpensive furnished, close to Fraser
CALL841-8468.
Br Cawood Gardens Apt.
19th & Tenn. St.
A great place to live!
Comfortable two br units
Off street parking • Laundry rooms
Terrific location
Kl! • Shopping. • Schools
Rent starts at $385/mo.
No pets
Come see us,
you will be pleasantly surprised!
Off. 1815 Kentucky, Apt. 2. 843-0929
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- Built in '95
FURNISHED 3 BR AP-T, W/D/W/A/
BALCONY, ON BUS ROUTE, NEAR AIRC
PARKING
Available now 3-bedroom, 1-bath Washer/Dryer,
equipped kitchen. On KU bus route. Call MH-141
685-801-1911.
405 For Rent
- On Bus Route
- Pool & Volleyball Court
- Pets Welcome
- 1,2,3,4 Bedroom
- Hot Water & Trash Paid
400s Real Estate
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
405 For Rent
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
8 BR houses for rent.
UNI Computers 841-4611
Kansan Ads Work for YOU
Got a group? Available for fall. 9 bdrm or 6 bdmr home. Well maintained. Nice common areas, 'adry facilitys'. 841-STAR (7827).
SUMMER SULE-BASE-
Spacious 1 B.R. on bus route. Bus. A/C
and 2 B.R. on bus route.
Pinnacle Woods
Tuckaway
TRAILRIDGE
- 2,3,4 bedroom townhouses available
- Near shopping areas
AllNew - 865-5454
- Small pets welcome w/ deposit
1*2*3 br. luxury apt. homes
FIRST MONTH FREE
- Walking distance to New Life Fitness Center
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Live in Luxury.
VILLAGE
SQUARE
- 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
• Washer/Driver
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- Close to campus
CALL 843-7333 FOR MORE INFORMATION OR STOP BY 2500 W. 6TH ST.
- Laundry facility
- Swimming Pool
- Built-in TV
- Alarm System
PALM TREE
Holiday Apartments
9th & Avalon 842-3040
- Swimming pool
- On bus route
Leasing for Summer & Fall
*2 Bedroom $400-$445
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
- Alarm System
- 2 Pools & Hot tube
Call for Appointments
4:15-6pm Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
211 Mount Hope Court#1
For more Info, or Appt.
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
2BR 610.00
3BR 725.00
**for the summer and**
* 2 by 21m mats *
* 2 by 21m mats in each apt.
* Jacuzzi in each apt.
* Private basketball court/Palcos
* Pd cab TV/PVs
* Basketball court/Park
* the main arena
Ouadshi & LCL 841-815-81
- 1 BR 425.00
CALL 832-9918
HARPER SQUARE
Naismith Place
- Washer/Dryer
- New in 1996!!
- Alarm System
405 For Rent
A
Park25
Spacious Apartments and Townhouses for rent.
Washier/Dryer, Dishwasher Avail.
Central Air, Close to Campus
Studios 1,2,3, & 4 bedrooms
Call: LAI Apartments
331.29lp (757) am
8am-5pm
"Convenient affordable housing"
PLS
Low $350 per month for nice spacious quiet 2 BR apt. Appliances, C/A, bus route and bus路. Low utilities! No pets. y 1 yr leases beginning in May, June, July or Aug. Great Crest Apts. 841-6886
LCA
Apartments
Currently Leasing For Fall '97 10-Month Leases Available
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall'97
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms Reasonable Rates Great Location Near Campus (no pets, please)
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
- Voleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route
--oriented community
Studies 1,2,3,4 Bdrm Ants
West Hills APARTMENTS
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
2 Females to share 3 bedrooms luxurious home.
3 Female to share 1 bedroom.
In Campus, no map. W/D), C/Call 865-9423
Calls 865-9423 or 865-9423.
M-F10-6 SAT10-4 SUN12-4
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30-4:30
FRIENDSY, Sr.Gr (folds look see N/SFM Prev Antilow. Bright vaulted skylight dlpk. nr. campusa. Quiet clean away from traffic, on park (birds, flowers, trees). A/G W/D $13, 1/8! u/p Richard@841-2746.bam-1pm.
Pre-op transsexual lives in Lawrence area seeks another gay/gay friendly person to share a town house duplex with. Non-smoker, social drinker and non-homicide offender. If by two, please please call (913) 371-1286.
1 roommate must to sublease ASAP till August.
8 BR house, hardwood floor, 3 decks, 3 baths
Washer/Dryer. Pets OK. Very Clean.$200/mth
1/6 utilities.Call 841-7427.
No Appointment needed
ExerciseRoom
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
On KU Bus Route
Non-smoking female needed immediately to
campus campus campus campus campus
200 mg + 15 guillotes (581 301-6692)
Move In Now...
One Month Free Rent
On lease through July 31
3HotTubs
1&2Bedrooms
Female Sum. SubLEASE needed middle of May to complete the work on KU bus route. Close to campus. Call 832-8934.
Move In Now...
One Month Free Rent
On lease through July 31
1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment
Call or stop by today
"Apartments Designed for Your Lifestyle"
Stadium View
843-2116
11th and Miss
Berkeley Flats (EHO)
Groad Apartment Bradford Square
Oread Apartments Bradford Square
Bradford Square
Carson Place
Summer roommate wanted for furnished, 4-bedroom apartment with MG, AC, washer/dryer pool,
bedrooms $268/month; bills $219/month.
1425 Kentucky
FLATS
Abbotts Center
Chamberlain Court
Hawthorn Place
Leasing for Sum/Fall 97
1,2,3 bdmr/2 bath
4 bdmr/3 bath
841-8468
Lorimar & Leannamar Townhomes
Hawthorn Place
Highpointe
Call for an appointment
Call 841-7849
No one lives above or below you"
Private Court
331-2332
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly, service-
Linos, 1 & 2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts
2 & 3 Bdrm. Townhouses
Our townhomes are 2 levels
430 Roommate Wanted
Heritage Place
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER or FALL.
- Townhomes and Residential Homes
Fireplace, one-car garage
Fireplace, one-car
Office hrs 9am-5pm M-F
meadowbrook FALL '97
Private Courtyard
- 2 Pools
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to come see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like stmenhore
- 2 Pools
- 2 Volleyball Areas
- 3 Bus Stops
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
Now to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
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165 personal
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225 twins services
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
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The University Daly Kansan, 11 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68445
6B
Wednesday, March 19, 1997
STUDIO CIRCLE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
• NATURAL BODY CARE
• 820-822 MASS • 841-0100 •
www.jnetworks.com \ natural way\
NATURALWAY
O
LAWRENCE
Sportcenter
KANSAS
840 Massachusetts
842-NIKE (6453)
Massachusetts
1026 Massachusetts
913-838-9494
The Kansas City Royals right-hander pitched for the first time Monday since undergoing a season-ending shoulder surgery in September. The Yankees beat the Royals 8-2 in the split-squad game.
BAGEL & BAGEL
*Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban © Killer Loop™ Diamondhead ORBS® Sportswear ACTIV™ Predator™ Classic Metals™
23rd & Kasold
3914 Clinton Parkway
913-838-3600
- Serengeti Driver's
•SUNCLOUD
•Revō
Montgomery back on mound
The Bagel, Coffee & People Place
HAINES CITY, Fla. — Jeff Montgomery knows that his long haul might not be finished.
The Etc. Shop TM
Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB the world's finest sunglasses
i's
sunglasses
by BAUSCH & LOMB
928 Massachusetts • Lawrence • 843-0611
"Let's face it," said Montgomery, who has played nine seasons with the Royals. "I'm still not 100 percent convinced I'll pitch in the big leagues again. Even after pitching an imning
$15.95 per person on weekdays*
Club Presents
$17.80 per person on weekends*
Play 18 holes with a riding cart for
NGSPECIAL
*plus tax
Oak Gamsry
0 Scott Dr.
, KS 66018
583-3503
CLUB HOUSE
KILL CREEK NO.
L-180719 EC.1
The Associated Press
JOHNSON
In the last two years, he unconsciously allowed his arm to drop, avoiding pain from a bone spur and other abnormalities in his rotator-cuff area. The dropped arm caused his pitches to flatten out and become easier to hit. He blew seven of his last 15 save opportunities last season.
BLEACHERS SPORTS BAR
TONIGHT GRAND OPENING 25C DRAWS!!!
Montgomery only has two weeks of training camp to revive his game. He said he did not want to be on the club on a pass.
Last season contained many of the lowlights of Montgomery's career: a 2.03 ERA through May jumped to a 6.40 ERA during the rest of the season. He gave up a career-high 14 homers, including five to the first batter he faced in relief.
"I felt juiced up like it was a real ballgame today." Montgomery said.
KU VS ARIZONA ON THE BIG SCREENS $100 CASH PRIZE FOR THE MOST OUTRAGEOUS KU FAN APPAREL
GO HAWKS GO HAWKS GO HAWKS GO HAWKS
He got Ricky Ledee to rap into a double play while a run scored, and then struck out Shane Spencer.
18 ENTER 21 DRINK 749-HAWK FOR MORE INFO CALL: 804 W 24TH - BEHIND McDONALDS
He was the American League's top reliever in 1993 with 45 saves. He broke Dan Quisenberry's club record of 238 saves. His total is 242.
Montgomery gave up a first-pitch single to Mariano Duncan and another single to Paul O'Neill.
KC R Royals
MISS. STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS
Montgomery was to go either one inning or 25 pitches. He finished the sixth inning in 10 pitches thrown at full throttle.
HOMEMADE
cherry-blueberry-chocolate
CHEESECAKE
99¢
regular
price $2.25
LIMIT - FOUR PIECES PER PERSON $ ^{ \mathrm { N } } $
today after rehab."
"I've promised myself and everyone I've talked to," he said, "I will not pitch again in the major leagues until I feel like I'm capable."
Cardinals shortstop is training in peace
The Associated Press
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Royce Clayton is talking about conditioning this spring instead of controversy.
Now that Ozzie Smith has retired, everything has changed for the St. Louis Cardinals shortstop.
"It's calmer because I don't have to answer the same redundant questions," Clayton said. "It makes my job easier."
Since 1983, Smith had been a fixture in training camp. In five years, he'll likely be a first-ballot Hall of
Famer.
But last
s p r i n g
Smith made
t h i n g s
extremely
uneasy for
first-year
manager
ST LOUIS
CARDINALS
Tony La Russia, with whom he clashed several times about playing time, and Clayton, who never had to share the position before and suffered from the fallout.
This spring Smith hasn't been to Al Lang Stadium, although he had dinner with Brian Jordan and Willie McGee a few days ago.
Bad for baseball, perhaps, but good for Clayton. La Russa is counting on iron man work from Clayton as the Cardinals attempt to repeat in the NL Central.
"I'm not sure he's relaxed, because I think he's real motivated to make his mark," La Russa said. "He knows he's the shortstop but he's not taking it for granted, he's trying to make a mark."
If it happens, Clayton said some of the credit would be due Smith, whom he had idolized as a kid.
"I just learned how he went about his job and how he stuck around the game as long as he did," Clayton said. "He was an absolute professional as far as preparing himself.
"I want to stay here and play short-stop as long as I can," he said.
Cayton said he was ready for the physical grind after an offseason regimen with Mac Newton, a personal trainer who has been associated with La Russa for years. He worked out two hours a day, six days a week, not with weights but instead concentrating on various conditioning exercises.
PINK SALMON
LIBBY PINK SALMON TRADITIONAL 14.75 OZ.
10
ALL GRADE
"AA" EGGS
DOZEN PACK
Over Invoice Cost
DIAPERS
HUGGIES
JIMS
10:30 AM
NO. 26
STORE
50% OFF
Over Invoice
Cost
1¢ PER DIAPER
DAILY SPECIAL.
Bunga Tum, Mar. 20, 19:45 a.m. & BANANAS Fri., Feb. 21, 19:45
BANANAS 19¥
SQUIRT, DIET RITE,
A&W, DR. WELLS,
SUNKIST, WELCH'S,
RC or 7UP
12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS
262
EA.
FA.
RC JP
FISHIES
NATIONAL
GAMES
FISHIES
TAYSTEE
WHEAT BREAD
16 OZ. LOAF
98¢
DOG
FOOD
18 LB & LARGER
98¢
OLD HOME 139
DANISH ROLLS
KEEBLER
E.L. FUDGE
COOKIES
15 OZ
178
1c PER POUND
Over Invoice
Cost
1c PER POUND
LB.
KEEBLER
VANILLA WAFTERS
11 TO 19
12 OZ
FRA
PREMIUM
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
BUDWEISER BEER
24 PK 120Z CANS
ALL 12QT. TUB ICE CREAM
$825
MILWAUKEES
BEST LIGHT OR
BEST BEER
775
24 PACK
120Z. CANS
LIMIT 1
FLORIDA
RUBY RED
GRAPEFRUIT
GARAGE
Harbor
MUSIC
LIVE IN MIDTOWN
WEST
RIDGE
10AM - 7PM
NABISCO
PREMIUM
SALTINES
1 LB. BOX
149
EA
PREMIUM
1 C
PER QT
Over Invoice
COST
Sprite
48 CT. SIZE
1¢ PER QT
---
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Spain
Over Invoice Cost
NATIONAL BRAND POP
12 & 24 PACK
12 OZ. CANS
1 C
PER CAN
NATIONAL BRAND BEER
14 PACK 12 OZ. CANS
299
OR STEAK
BONELESS BEEF TOP SIRLOIN ROAST
100%
FRYER BREASTS
CITRUS PUNCH
TAMPICO
1 GAL.
128
$
WITH RIB BONE ECONOMY PAK
188
19¢
FRESH LEAN
PORK
STEAK
ECONOMY PAK
108
LB
MISSION
U.S. NO.1
COLORADO
RUSSET
POTATOES
10 LB. BAG
68¢
ORUDIS KT
18
ORUDIS KT
54 CT. TABS ON GARBET
299
10 LB. BAG
68¢
118 LB.
50c Over Invoice Cost
U.S. NO.1
COLORADO
RUSSET
POTATOES
FRESH CRISP ICEBURG HEAD LETTUCE
SUNKIST JUMBO
NAVEL
ORANGES
ORUDIS
K1
ECONOMY PAK
108
LB
LARGE 24 CT. SIZE
48¢
EA.
WE ACCLIM
FOOD STAMPS
WICU CHEFS
VISION CARD &
MANU ACTUERS
COUPONS
FRESH LEAN PORK STEAK
S
ECONOMY PAK
98¢
1B
24¢ EA.
98¢
MICHIGAN
JONATHAN
APPLES
BONELESS BEEF
K.C. SIRLOIN
STEAK
BONELESS BEEF
RUMP ROAST
ECONOMY PAK
Turtle Shell
BONELESS BEEF
K.C. SIRLOIN
STEAK
ECONOMY PAN
238
LB
119
LB.
MILD MEDIUM YELLOW ONIONS
Olives
THE MARRIAGE
FRYER
LEG
QUARTERS
10 LB. BAG
39¢
LB.
FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED
SUGAR FREE
PIES
8" 25 OZ.
FOR
2 FOR
14¢ LB.
OPEN
24
HOURS
EVERY DAY
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ECKRICH SMOKED SAUSAGE
C
FAIRMONT ROBERTS
COTTAGE
CHEESE
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148
FROM THE DELL SUGGED OR SHAVED 95% FAT FREE HAM 198 LB. MEDIUM RACK RAW CATFISH $1.69 MUGCETS
Pacific Reflects
MOOSE BROTHERS
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LARGE 12X
450
BREYER'S
ICE CREAM
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MOOSE BROTHERS
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EA.
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MARCH '97
SUN SUN TUE THU FRI SAT
20 20 19 20 21 22
23 24 25
Track: The team will begin its outdoor season at Emporia State today. Page 8
Hazing: Pi Kappa Alpha suspends KU chapter's international charter. Page 3
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
***********3-DIGIT 666
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 3
PD BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
ADVERTISING 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 20.1997
SECTION A VOL.103, NO.122
Quick LOOK
KU student charged with assault, battery
A KU student was released Tuesday afternoon from the Douglas County Jail after being arrested on charges of aggravated assault, battery and criminal threat.
Kevin M. Spiess, Bonner Springs freshman, was arrested on Saturday after a 19-year-old woman called Lawrence police and reported that she had been hit and threatened.
Police said that during an argument Spiess had hit the woman in her chest several times and had held a knife to her throat. After Spiess assaulted the victim, police said, she escaped and called the police.
(USPS 650-640)
A witness to the incident corroborated the story.
—Kansan staff report
Senate debates Mexico's role in fight against drugs
WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats threatened yesterday to block a resolution blasting Mexico's antidrug effort until Republicans agree to take up a 4-year-old treaty banning chemical weapons.
Wrangling about foreign policy issues approached a showdown as Congress moved toward a two-week recess facing dual deadlines: Congress has until March 30 to act on Clinton's blessing of Mexico as fully cooperative in the anti-drug effort, and the Senate has until April 29 to ratify the chemical treaty.
A bipartisan group of senators led by Sens. Paul Coverdell, R-Ga., and Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., want to send a strong message about Mexico, but both acknowledge that outright overthrow of the president's certification would not pass.
Supreme Court debates restricting online access
Nonetheless, their bill to overturn Clinton's favorable rating of Mexico's role in fighting drug trafficking is scheduled for debate and vote today.
WASHINGTON — Debating the future of the Internet, Supreme Court justices questioned yesterday whether the government can restrict online access to sexually explicit material to keep it from children.
But the attorney for those who chalenged the law said that it also would keep indecent material away from adults who have a right to see it.
The Clinton administration mounted a spirited defense of the 1996 Communications Decency Act, which makes it a crime to put indecent words or pictures online where children can find them.
A three-judge federal court in Philadelphia blocked the law from taking effect last year, saying it would unlawfully chill adults' free-speech rights.
Sexually oriented material is protected by the Constitution's First Amendment if it is deemed indecent but not obscene.
The Supreme Court is expected to rule by July in its first case involving the global computer network.
—The Associated Press
INDEX
TODAY
Television ...2
Opinion ...4
Horoscopes ...7
Classifieds ...9
Sports ...10
MOSTLY SUNNY
High 74°
Low 44°
Weather: Page 2A
Student gives up right to trial in rape case
Crime was at a summer party
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
A KU student pleaded no contest yesterday to attempted aggravated sexual battery in Douglas County District Court.
Sasaua Jafari-Rouhani, Lawrence sophomore, was accused of having unconsenting sexual intercourse with a KU
freshman on July 1, 1996.
At yesterday's hearing, Jafari-Rouhani signed a plea advisory from Judge Jack Murphy which informed the defendant of the maximum penalty Jafari-Rouhani could receive at sentencing.
By signing the plea advisory, Jafari-Rouhani gave up his right to a trial. At a trial, the state would have had to present evidence in an attempt to prove guilt.
Murphy said that Jafari-Rouhani could receive up to 23 months in jail.
Rouhani's guilt would be assumed, and he would give up his right to an appeal, Murphy told the defendant, Harry Warren, Jafari-Rouhani's attorney, agreed with the prosecution that the state's evidence would show that he had committed aggravated sexual battery.
After finding the defendant guilty, Murphy said that a pre-sentencing investigation would be held to determine Jafari-Rouhani's penalty.
Assistant District Attorney Marlon Williams said that the defendant and the victim had met at a July 1 party in a Lawrence house. He said that the 20-year-old defendant had had sex with the 19-year-old victim after the party while she was unconscious.
By pleading no contest, Jafari-
Williams said that Jafari-Rouhani probably would not have to go to jail because he did not have a criminal history. He said that to receive jail time for sexual battery, a defendant would have had to have committed at least two other crimes.
Sentencing for Jafari-Rouhani was set for 3.p.m. April 21.
Eric B. Howell / KANSAN
Here's pie in your face
THROW A PET GUN
WATER GUN 50¥
Senate
Awareness
Will
Wear With
---
Alicia Vause, Student Senate executive secretary , awaits the aim of Jordan McKee, holdover senator. The Throw-A-Pie booth yesterday in front of Wescoe Hall was part of Student Senate Awareness Week.
Groups split on evaluation issue
Data release not big issue for both
Scott Sullivan, presidential candidate for the Unite coalition, said that giving students access to the evalu-
By Mark McMaster
Kansan staff writer
In the last year, Student Senate has pushed for the release of faculty evaluations. Now, with Senate elections approaching, the issue is at the top of some campaigners'
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
tions was one of the main issues in Unite's campaign.
"We need to release faculty evaluation data to the student body," he said. "That is essential information for students to effectively choose their courses."
priority.
The opposing coalition, Delta Force, is not making the issue a
"I think faculty evaluations are a good thing, but it's not one of the issues we're running on," said Matt Caldwell, Delta Force vice presidential candidate.
The Unite coalition's goal to convince the administration to release the evaluations may be a difficult task. A proposal presented by student body president Grey Montgomery that would give students access to data compiled from standardized faculty review questionnaires was passed by Student Senate but denied approval by the University Council last month. Earlier in February, Senate gave its support to a petition calling for the release of current faculty evaluations, but the administration has not given any indication that it will release such information.
Jason Fizell
Sullivan said he thought that Senate could convince the administration to act if it concentrated on the issue and rallied student support.
If the administration did not respond, he said he would consider taking legal action.
PETER BROWN
Scott Sullivan
"I think the University is starting to get the idea that if this comes down to a legal issue, they're going to lose, and lose big," Sullivan said of the possibility of a lawsuit.
Senate could bring suit against the University on the grounds that its refusal to release evaluations is a violation of the Kansas Open Records Act. Sullivan discussed bringing suit against the University on his own last year and consulted a lawyer, but did not file suit.
Delta Force is opposed to any legal action on the issue.
The coalition's presidential candidate, Jason Fizell said that while he would support efforts to release information on faculty perform
formation on faculty performance, he thought past proposals did not give students appropriate access to meaningful information.
"Overall, we think there are a lot of more important issues on campus." Fitzel said
Michael Yaghmou
Matt Bachand, a Delta Force candidate for a liberal arts and sciences seat, said he thought the Senate needed to cooperate more with faculty when discussing evaluations.
Independent presidential candidate Michael Yaghmour said the issue was not a priority on his agenda.
"Faculty input is just as important as student input," he said. "It's a two-way street."
Yaghmour said he would not pursue the issue if elected, although he would support proposals to increase student access to evaluations.
Where to locate
financial holds
APPLICATION FOR
HOLD
YOUR ENROLMENT
OFFICE(5) LISTED IN
PARKING HOLD
GO TO PARKING
ENROLLMENT: FALL 1997 DEPT
Center could open by spring enrollment
Payment locations for holds may merge
By Dave Morantz
Kansan staff writer
Rather than running all across campus to pay enrollment holds, this semester students may be able to pay holds at a centralized location in Strong Hall, said Lindy Eakin, associate provost.
But Jamie Johnson, student body vice president, said that despite Eakin's claim that a hold center may be functionable for spring enrollment, the administration probably would not institute a center until fall.
Johnson presented the idea for a centralized location to pay enrollment holds to Eakin and the administration last semester. But after numerous phone calls to Eakin were not returned, and a promised meeting with Eakin and other administrators fell through, Johnson said chances were slim that a centralized location would be operating by the time enrollment started April 4.
"It's taken him five months to set up a meeting so I really doubt anything will get done for this enrollment period," Johnson said. "It's just beast a slug fest now."
On Feb. 12, Student Senate approved a petition to the administration requesting cooperation in creating an enrollment-hold center. And as a response to Eakin's repeated failures to return phone calls, the petition also requested that the lines of communication between the administration and Senate always remain open.
Eakin then promised Johnson a meeting to discuss the issue, but the two have vet to meet.
Eakin said that many of the details and data of the plan were still being analyzed by the registrar's office and that he would probably contact Johnson this week.
Students are alerted of enrollment holds when they receive permits to enroll. Although students have several weeks to take care of the holds, Johnson said many neglected to do so and were turned away at the enrollment line, forcing them to enroll at a later date.
A problem hindering the creation of the center, Eakin said, was whether the parking department could afford to send a staff member to Strong Hall to process fee payments.
Parking department assistant director Donna Hultine said, "It wouldn't matter to me if we did it up here or down there. I can't imagine in the spring that we couldn't care of the holds."
Hultine said that neither she nor Don Kearns, parking department director, had been contacted by anyone in the administration about the proposal.
I II III
2
Thursday, March 20,1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
WEATHER
QuickINFO
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
74
القصر المغني يريدون فألما أقسطوا
في القصر المغني يريدون فألما أقسطوا
CAMPUS EVENTS
Much warmer with mostly sunny skies.
FRIDAY
76
53
图示
Continued unseasonably warm temperatures and sunny skies.
SATURDAY
39
55 39
Much cooler than the last couple of days, but sunny and comfortable.
Assemblages, featuring artwork by Karen Jacks and Ardis Rambert, will be at the Phoenix Gallery, 918 Massachusetts Street, March 1 to April 15. Contact: B43-0090.
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Australia and New Zealand study abroad at 11 a.m. today at 105A Lioncap丘厅, Contact: 864-3742
KU Environers will sponsor a veggie lunch from noon to 1 p.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building at 1204 Oread Ave.
ON CAMPUS
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Great Britain and Ireland.
Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Western Civilization study abroad at 12:30 a.m. today at 105A Lippoin Hall, Contact: 884-7442.
105A.Lippincott Hall. Contact: 864-3742.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. at the st. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road.
Contact 843-7037
KU Fanding Club will meet from 5 to 7 p.m. at 212 Robinson Center, Contact
KU Champions Club will meet from 6:30 to
10:45 p.m. tonight at the Kansas Union.
Baptist Student Union will have Bible study at 8:30 p.m. today at the Baptist Center at 1240 S. Broadway.
**Christian Solecence Organization** will meet at 7 ononday at Alove B in the Kansas Union.
International Student Service will have a practical training information session at 7
Union, Contact: Lynne Vanhill, 843-3617,
U11, Kiger Chamber will have 8:47 at night.
A KU student's cellular phone and mountain bike were stolen between 7:30 and 10:30 p.m. Friday from the 1100 block of Louisiana Street. Lawrence警面警法 said.
tonight at 209 Wescoe Hall, Contact: Lindsey Schutz, 864-1339.
A KU faculty member's money was stolen between 3 and 6:30 p.m. March 11 from the 1600 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $358.
*PAL* will have a veggie dinner in celebration of the American meatout at 7 tonight at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building at 924 Third Avenue. Contact: Shannon Martin, 864-1313
A KU student's rear window was stolen between noon and 7:30 p.m. March 10 from a car in the 1100 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police said. It was valued at $382.
ON THE RECORD
*Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will present "In Her Honor" in celebration of Women's History Month at 8 onight at 200 Smith Hall. Contact: 843-3552.
kltus will sponsor 'What's a Christian' at 7:30 tonight on the Burge Union Contact.
A KU student's CDs and CD case were stolen between midnight and 2 a.m. March 8 in the 1900 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrenceville said. Items were valued at $5.4M.
A KU student's passenger window was damaged, and a car stereo and radar detector were stolen between 11:30 p.m. on March 9 and 7 p.m. March 10 from a car in the 1800 block of Naishtim Drive, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $420.
A KU student's car window was broken and car stereo and CDs were stolen between 4 p.m. March 8 at 8:15 a.m. March 10 at 8:15 a.m. The police also said. Items were valued at $1000.
KU Juggling Club will meet at 9:30 tonight at 207 Robinson Center. Contact: Scott Malone, 749-7540.
A KU student's car window was broken and speaker was stolen between noon March 9 and 10:30 a.m. March 14 in a car from the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence
A KU student's car was damaged and miscellaneous items were stolen between 9 p.m. March 12 and 1 p.m. Thursday from a car in the 7000 block of West 19th Street, Lawrence police said. Items were valued at $1175.
A KU student's mountain bike was stolen between 8.am, Sept. 1 and 11:30 a.m. Monday from 1501 Sigma Nu Place, Lawrence said news were valued at $750.
A KU student's stareo, CDs and miscellaneous items were stored between 2:30 and 9 a.m. Thursday from a car in the 1200 block of West Campus Road, Lawrence
A KU student's car window was damaged and a stereo and a bottle of wine were stolen between 1 and 9 a.m. Thursday from a car in the 1400 block of Apple Lane, Lawrence
A KU student's car window was broken between 7:20 p.m. March 9 and 10 a.m. March 10 in the 200 block of Bristol Terrace, Lawrence police said. Damage was
estimated at $100.
A KU student's wallet, money and miscellaneous items were stolen at 10 p.m. Saturday in the 3500 block of Clinton Parkway, insurance police said. Items were valued at $60.
A KU student's window was damaged between noon March 9 and 11:15 am. Sunday in the 900 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence notice said. Damage was estimated at $100.
A KU student's parking permit was stolen between 5 p.m. Monday and 4 p.m. Tuesday from a car in the 1000 block of Wellington police office, items were valued at $3.
A KU student's wallet and miscellaneous IDs were stolen between 9 and 10 p.m. Sunday in the 3300 block of West 15th Avenue, police said. Items were valued at $10.
A KU student's garage door and car was damaged between 9:30 and 9:35 p.m. Monday in the 1300 block of Kasold Drive, Lawrence said damage. The police was esti-
A KU staff member's parking permit was stolen between 8 a.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. Friday from a car in Lut 72, east of the Burge Union. KU polls said, it was valued at $63.
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| CNBC | 31 | Equal Time | Hardball | Rivera Live | Late Night (in Stereo) Ⓢ | Charles Grodin | Rivera Live (R) |
| CNN | 31 | Prime News | Burden-Proof | Larry King Live (R) Ⓢ | World Today Ⓢ | Sports Illus. | Moneyline (R) | NewNews | Showbiz |
| COM | 32 | "Back to School" **%**1/8 (1968, Comedy) Rodney Dangerfield. | Comic Relief | Dream On | Daily Show | Comic Relief | Tick Ⓢ | Sat, Night |
| COURT | 31 | Prime Time Justice | Trial Story: Broken Hearts | Cochran & Grace | Prime Time Justice (R) | Trial Story (R) |
| CSPAN | 31 | Prime Time Public Affairs | | | Prime Time Public Affairs (R) | |
| DISC | 32 | Wild Discovery: Animal Cann. | Choppers on Patrol (R) | | Wild Discovery: Animal Cann. | Choppers on Patrol (R) |
| ESPN | 31 | Billiards | Billiards out (R) | Boxing: Junior Lightweight Lightning. | Sportscenter (R) | Bloopers | Sportscenter |
| HIST | 33 | Crusades (R) (Part of 4) | Civil War Journal | Automobiles "Volvo" (R) | Year by Year "1945" (R) | Crusades (R) (Part of 4) |
| LIFE | 33 | Unsolved Mysteries | "Prison of Secrets" (1997, Drama) Stephanie Zimbalist. | Living | Mysteries | Unsolved Mysteries |
| MTV | 33 | Prime Time (In Stereo) | Yol (In Stereo) | Singled Out | Loveline (In Stereo) | Altern. Nation |
| SCIFI | 32 | Tekwar (In Stereo) | Forever Knight (In Stereo) | Sci-FI Buzz | Inside Space | Time Trax (In Stereo) | Tekwar (In Stereo) |
| TLC | 32 | Real America: 48 Hours | History of Legends | Survival in the Sky | Real America: 48 Hours | Legends of History (R) |
| INT | 32 | "Gettysburg" ***1993, Drama) The Civil Wars biggest battle as seen from both sides. | The Civil Wars biggest battle as seen from both sides. | "Gettysburg" ***1993, Drama) Tom Beenger. | | |
USA | 32 | Murder, She Wrote | "Beverly Hills Cop III" **%**1/8 (1987, Comedy) Edible Murphy. | Wings (R) | Silk Stalkings (R) | Silk Stalkings (R) |
WH | 32 | Donny | Barry Manilow-78 | Blockboard Entertainment Awards (R) | Private Parts (R) | |
WGN | 20 | 7th Heaven (R) (In Stereo) | Buffy the Vampire Stayer | News (In Stereo) | Wiseguy "Sins of the Father" | In the Heat of the Night (R) |
WTBS | 32 | "Rocky III" ***1982, Drama) Skyliner Stallone. | Smokey and the Bandit" **%**1/7 (Burt Reynolds.) | Deliverance" ***1/17 (1972) |
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO | 40 | "Fair Game" * (1996) Cindy Crawford. R | Sports on the Silver Screen (R) | High on Crack Street: Lowell | Comedy Hour: R. Dangfeldt |
MAX | 32 | "Sabrina" ***1/19 (1995, Comedy) Harrison Ford. PG* | "Fatal Battle" ***1996, Adventure | Jeffincott (R) | Screamers***1/195 (R)* |
SHOW | 32 | Jurassic Drama***1/195 (In Stereo) | "Coyote Brown II" ***1994, Science Fiction) David Bradley.* | "Dead Men's Gun" (1997) Frank Whale. |
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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.
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928 Mass. Downtown 843-0611
orbs
N
N HEIR ONOR
HEIR
ONOR
A Dramatic Collage of Women's Voices
In Celebration of
women's
10478
laboratories
omen's history month
history month
onth
Don't miss this evening of readers theatre celebrating the voices of women past and present. This collection of literature, poetry, and monologues serve as a reminder of the rich diversity that makes the voices of women unique. Share in the struggles and triumphs of these women and the contributions that they made to their communities.
8:00 p.m.
Thursday, March 20, 1997
200 Smith Hall
(Across from the Kansas Union)
8:00 p.m.
Directed by: Suzanne Grachek
Performed by: Betsy Atkinson and Louise Flory
Co-sponsored by The Commission on the Status of Women,The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center,and Student Senate.
Watch the Jayhawks here!
You could win a trip to the Finals!
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Can't
dribble with his left hand, hit a freethrow or touch the net.
Can
eat pizza, drink beer and go to the College Basketball Finals.
If he can do it, so can you. Just come to Old Chicago. Enter to win a trip for two to the Finals in Indianapolis. It's not about skill, it's all about luck. And everybody's got the talent for that.
MO BREW
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1934 & 1978
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 20, 1997
3
Fraternity suspends charter
By Ann Marchand Kansan staff writer
The Pi Kappa Alpha chapter at the University of Kansas had its international charter suspended following a hazing incident on Feb. 26. University officials said Tuesday.
The Beta Gamma chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha, 2000 Stewart Ave., waived its right to a formal hearing and agreed to accept responsibility for allegations in a complaint against it filed with the University, according to a University Relations statement.
The University has placed the chapter on interim suspension, pending the outcome of disciplinary proceedings that are set to conclude within two weeks.
hazing.
Until a formal punishment is set, the Pi Kappa Alpha members are prohibited from participating in University activities because they violated the Code of Student Rights and Responsibilities, which defines
The board of directors of Pi Kappa Alpha International fraternity, headquartered in Memphis, Tennessee, has suspended the chapter.
Kevin Virta, executive director of Pi Kappa Alpha, said that the national fraternity was among the first to ban hazing. In 1874, the fraternity amended its constitution to ban side degrees, which were the precursor to modern hazing. Virta said.
Virta also said that the fraternity had extensive programming designed to eliminate hazing in its 204 chapters in the United States and Canada. Yet he estimated that in the past 10 years, about 35 chapter charters had been suspended, with about 20 percent of those suspensions related to hazing.
For Pi Kappa Alpha to regain its charter at the University, it must undergo a reorganization of the Beta Gamma chapter, which was established in 1914.
Fraternity president Todd Guerriert, Lake
Forest, Ill., senior, said that reorganization measures would include securing the chapter's debts, financially preparing for an anticipated loss of membership, establishing an alumni board to run the house during the suspension period, finding a housemother or other supervisory individual and complying with University and fraternity suspension measures.
But Guerrieri said that the chapter was willing to change and work through the situation.
But Pi Kappa Alpha also is financially troubled. The fraternity has two outstanding mortgages, which Guiererl estimated could be paid in full within a decade. The chapter is more than two years delinquent on its payments to the international fraternity — the amount owed is among the largest of any Pi Kappa Alpha chapters, Virta said.
"The idea here is to get this house whipped into shape," he said.
Defining Hazing
"Hazing' includes, but is not limited to, any action, activity or situation which recklessly, negligently or intentionally endangers the mental or physical health, welfare or safety of a person, creates excessive fatigue, mental or physical discomfort, exposes a person to extreme embarrassment or ridicule, involves personal servitude, or substantially interferes with the academic requirements or responsibilities of a student. It is presumed that hazing is a forced activity regardless of the apparent willingness of an individual to participate in the activity."
source: Article 22, Code of Student Rights and Responsibilities (Lawrence campus)
Scientists lead research in Brain Awareness Week
Med Center investigates Down's Syndrome, AIDS
By Emily Vrabac Kansan staff writer
Brains can be the source of infinite information, yet they can also be the source of disease.
This week is the second annual National Brain Awareness Week, and researchers at the University of Kansas Medical Center are sharing knowledge gained through research.
Neuroscientists at the Med Center perform preliminary research to understand the brain's many mechanisms. The researchers are studying topics such as AIDS, brain damage recovery, infant brain development and Down's Syndrome.
"Research is wonderful in that it doesn't provide answers so much as it provides more questions," said Peter Smith, neuroscientist at the Med Center.
Paul Cheney, director of the Smith Mental Retardation and Human Development and Research Center at the Med Center, said the research was funded by the National Institutes of Health.
"We have nine neuroscientists involved in a large basic science research effort concerned with the development of the brain and its ability to reorganize following an injury." Cheney said.
Smith is researching plasticity, or how the central nervous system responds to damage or accident in people of different ages.
"Young people with brain damage can reorganize and compensate for things that older people can't," Smith said.
Smith's research has found that children's nerves can create new pathways that enable the children to regain abilities that were temporarily lost following the injury. Adults are unable to make new nerve pathways, Smith said.
He also has found that some nerves left stranded by the damage actually took on different functions in order to compensate for the injury. He said this showed the body's ability to change even after patterns had already been established.
"We're not hard-wired," Smith said. "We can cause wires to go different places and cause them to change a bit."
Cheney said other research being conducted at the Med Center involved the effects of AIDS on the brain.
"IHV can replicate in the brain and, through mechanisms not understood very well, does damage," Cheney said.
Cheney said that in addition to the AIDS and brain damage research, the neuroscientists were studying the factors that contribute to brain development in babies and what causes individuals with Down's Syndrome to have motor impairments.
The researchers observed Brain Awareness Week by traveling to Kansas City, Kan., elementary and junior high school classrooms and discussing the brain's diseases, functions and how to protect it.
"Our goal is to try to get the message out to the community about the importance of brain research," Cheney said.
Speaker stresses relaxation methods
By Paul Eakins Kansan staff writer
Whether working at a stressful job, doing stressful school work or just having a stressful life, most people enjoy a little relaxation now and then.
However, most people do not relax enough, which can lead to high stress and poor health, Ken Joseph said yesterday during an organizational behavior class.
Joseph, formerly head of the department of management studies at Madras University in Madras, India, said that students needed to take more time to relax and needed to worry less about falling.
To prove this point, Joseph gave statistics about stress-related injuries and death. For example, he said that about 80 percent of industrial accidents were attributable to stress and that every 33 seconds someone died because of heart and blood-vessel diseases that might have been averted by early stress management.
"There is nobody who has not failed. Failure is human. It is part of life's growth," Joseph said during his lecture. "Guilt about yesterday and worry about tomorrow kills us."
Joseph demonstrated ways that people display stress and loosened up the class with exercises, singing and dancing.
P. R. SUNYAN
Using a combination of relaxation rhythm, Indian transcendental meditation and Eastern philosophies such as Tai Chi and Zen, Joseph showed
the class techniques to relieve stress, such as regulated and alternating breathing.
"In 20 minutes of relaxation, you can accomplish what you do in eight hours of sleep," he said.
Joseph has taught seminars on stress management and relaxation internationally for companies such as British Airways and General Electric, and he was in charge of management development and training at Indian Airlines. Although Joseph usually is paid for his services, he said he had volunteered his time yesterday for educational purposes.
Ken Joseph
Joseph said now was the time for students to develop relaxation skills.
"You've got to be kind to yourself at this age," he said.
Elaine Hollensbe, Gladstone, Mo., graduate student, who teaches the class, said that the need for relaxation could be overlooked.
"We don't stop and think about needing relaxation," Holmlensbe said after the exercises. "I'm very relaxed now, and when I came in, I wasn't."
Jim Kolich, Overland Park, senior said that what he had learned from Joseph could help him.
"It itse like I'm always wigged out," Kolich said. "I could work stress management into my routine."
Volunteer note takers ingredient for success
By Emily Vrabac
Kansan staff writer
Taking notes, listening to lectures and typing papers are things that most KU students take for granted.
But students with disabilities must rely on peer volunteers to perform these tasks for them, and the services are not always up to par, according to several students.
"It's put me in some awkward positions trying to complete classes," said Brenda Vanhyning, Lenexajunior who filed a lawsuit recently against the University. Vanhyning has disabilities in both hands that prevent her from taking notes in class, so she must rely on student note takers.
"I've had to drop some classes," said Erik Peltzman, San Francisco junior who has dyslexia. "I've had to basically just wait on graduating. That doesn't reflect my knowledge. That just reflects that I didn't get a note taker."
Vanhyning and Peltzman have had problems in classes in which no one has volunteered to be a note taker or the note takers have not even attended class. They say something is wrong with the system.
"I feel like the school itself could provide so much for me educationally," Peltzman said. "They are supposed to try to provide an equal playing field for me."
The Student Assistance Center coordinates the volunteer recruitment, and the center assists about 170 students a semester, said Michael Shuttc, the center's assistant director.
Shuttic said he was not usually made aware of problems that students were having during the semester.
"A lot of times for me, the feedback is after the fact, so there's not a lot I can do," he said. "After the class, the student tells me they never had a note taker."
In the current system, instructors receive a letter from the Student Assistance Center requesting that they recruit a note taker for a particular class. Instructors have the burden of actually selecting the note taker by the first day of class.
"I usually get the letter early enough, and I often know people from previous classes that I've taught, so I can get students who are good at it," said Donna Luckey, associate professor of architecture and urban design. "I think the faculty are generally concerned about these kinds of situations."
Ashley Masoni, Emporia sophomore, is a note taker this semester in a history class for Peltzman.
"I did it because he (the student) deserves every opportunity as everyone else," she said. "He shouldn't be at a disadvantage when we're all doing the same work. All I have to do is everything I would do in a regular class."
"I think they should provide a list of professors who work well with students with disabilities," he said.
Shuttic said the Student Assistance Center had contemplated other methods of recruiting note takers.
"There's always discussion about how to do it better," he said. "The incentive is for them to be in class to do well for themselves."
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1307 MASSACHUSETTS
★BY RESERVATION ONLY★
(913) 843-1151
what film?
Le big mac!
what do
they call a
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find out at council
london $414
tokyo $654
amsterdam $575
Student fares may require an international package unless Taxes are not included and may range from $6-333. Fares are subject to change
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travel:
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THE MUSEUM OF THE WEST
MAKE YOUR
GRADUATION
RESERVATIONS NOW
RELISH IN DINING
ECSTASY AT
The Castle Tea Room
1307 MASSACHUSETTS
★BY RESERVATION ONLY★
(913) 843-1151
what film?
Le big mac!
what do
they call a
whopper?
find out at council
london $414
tokyo $654
amsterdam $575
Student fares, may require an
Internet Card. Student fees, Taxes
are not included and may range from
$6-333. Fares are subject to change
Conneill Travel
622 West 12th Street,
Lawrence, KS
Tel : 913-749-3900
travel:
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
CRAIG LANG, Editor MARK COPER, Business manager SUSANA LOOP, Managing editor DENNIE HAUPT, Retail sales manager KIMBERTY CRABTREE, Editorial editor JUSTIN KNUPP, Technology coordinator TOM EBLEN, General manager, news advisor JAY STEINNER, Sales and marketing adviser
Thursday, March 20, 1997
DON'T BLAME US,
IT'S THESE DARN
COOKIES.
Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Editorials
Students with disabilities need aid from University community
If the University of Kansas intends to educate all its students, it must take measures to ensure equal opportunities for students with disabilities. The recent lawsuit filed by a KU student against the University, alleging that it has violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, should cause all members of the KU community to be more proactive in accommodating students with disabilities.
The Americans with Disabilities Act is a 1990 civil rights law that prohibits discrimination against individuals on the basis of physical or mental handicaps. It is designed to eliminate barriers to people with disabilities.
According to the undergraduate catalog, the University has a policy of nondiscrimination and makes appropriate classroom accommodations for students who have special needs. It's time the University started living up to those ideals.
While completing a college education is challenging for any student, students with disabilities face additional challenges and should not be hampered by hurdles the school puts before them by not providing needed assistance. The University attempts to meet students' needs through the Student Assistance Center, but many of the services provided are on a volunteer basis, and volunteers aren't always available.
If necessary, the University should pay students to provide special services.
While it is commendable that the University is able to run a program to serve students' needs through volunteers, the measures should not stop there. If necessary, paid positions should be established when volunteers aren't available.
record reading assignments. Letting students know they have classmates who would benefit from volunteer services may prompt them to take action.
Lack of awareness is another problem. Many students do not know that the Student Assistance Center needs volunteers. Professors could help by asking for volunteers to take notes or
Students also should realize that the University is not the only one at fault. The University has sought to provide for students' needs through the Student Assistance Center and volunteers. If students are not stepping up to volunteer for some of these responsibilities, then they, too, are at fault.
Everyone at the University of Kansas needs to recognize that providing equal opportunities for all students is everyone's responsibility—administration, professors and students alike.
It is imperative that administrators find ways to run effective programs, even if it means paying people to assist in this task. However, students and professors are not absolved of responsibility. They also must realize their duty to help protect the rights of others within their community.
KAREN CHANDLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Interviews should ask for opinions
Last week the University invited 115 seniors to participate in interviews designed to assess what they had learned during their undergraduate careers.
Rather than asking students their opinions of the quality of their KU education, the interviews were based on a quantitative measurement of students' knowledge. Although quantitative measurement is worthwhile, the University should put the same effort toward asking for—and listening to—students' evaluations of their education. That would place equal value on student opinion and student performance. As consumers, students' opinions should be as valued as their test results.
The interview questions were based on Eleven Goals of General Education established by the University Assessment Committee in 1889. These goals include increasing KU students' communication skills, understanding of history, appreciation of human diversity and critical thinking skills, among others.
Students' views on their education should be as valued as their test results.
Associate Provest Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett said students were asked questions like, "What are the main points of American history?"
Ackerman said she was surprised the interviewers did not ask her opinion of her education, but rather focused on what she has learned. "I thought they'd ask me what my favorite classes and professors were and why."
Other questions asked students to make ethical arguments, such as arguing for or against the cloning of humans.
"Our goals were to assess students' knowledge of ethics and cultural mores," McCluskey-Fawcett said. "The interviews are for us to assess how much we've taught. What we wanted to find out was what they learned, not how they feel about what they learned."
The University does offer graduating seniors the option to offer their opinions through a senior survey, but the survey is offered only every four years. And it does not offer the same forum that a personal interview between a student and three professors does. Nor does it offer the $25 paycheck that participants received.
Most of the students who participated seemed to enjoy the interviews. However, some question the interviews' validity in assessing what they've learned at the University.
"A lot of the things I talked about I didn't learn at the University. I learned them growing up, or through cultural experiences," said Beth Ackerman, Dallassen senior.
The willingness of KU administrators to spend money assessing the University's quality of education is admirable. But they should show the same willingness to hear students' opinions of that same education.
KANSAN STAFF
NEWS EDITORS
LAURA WEXLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
LATINA SULLIVAN . . . Associate Editorial
KRISTIE BLASI . . . News
NOVELDA SOMMERS . . . News
LESIE TAYLOR . . . News
AMANDA TRAUGHBER . . News
TARA TRENARY . . . News
DAVID TESKA . . . Online
SPENCER DUNCAN . . Sports
GINA THORNBURG . . Associate Sports
BRADLEY BROOKS . . Campus
LINDSHEY HENRY . . Campus
DAVE BRETTENSTEIN . Features
PAM DISIMAN . . Photo
TYLER WRICKEN . Photo
BRYAN VOLK. . Design
ANDY ROHBACK . . Graphics
ANDREA ALBRIGHT. . Wire
LZ MUSSER . Special sections
AERICA VEAZEY . Neework
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
A
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kimberly Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (isulfian@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Column
Confederate flag not a symbol of peace
When Allied troops stormed Berlin in 1945, the first order of business was to remove, destroy or steal swastikas wherever they could be found. Swastikas on the tops of buildings were detonated. The more lightweight flags and paraphernalia either were burned, shredded or stolen by
souvenir hunters who have since sold their wares to creepy antique shops in Montana. The swastika was such a strong symbol of race hate and war that it was the first thing to go.
Apparently, the Union troops in 1865 had too much respect for their Southern brothers to destroy the symbol of their cause, the Confederate flag. Perhaps they should have. In Columbia
CARSON
ELROD
1.
S. C., the U.S. capital of Southern pride run amok, the debate rages about whether to keep the Confederate flag flying over the state capitol building.
Governor David Beasley, a born-again Baptist, once a staunch supporter of the banner, now opposes it. A recent U.S. News and World Report says that he changed his mind because he now believes that "the once peaceful emblem" had become a symbol of strife. "The plowshare has been turned into a sword," he said. So now that Governor Beasley has waken up to smell the wretched coffee that is the Confederate flag, he has proposed to relocate it from the capitol building to a Confederate monument. The House of Representatives, however, is skirting the issue by trying to hold a state referendum on the issue.
Defenders of the Confederate flag have written scores of material justifying the retention of the banner as a peaceful symbol. U.S. News reports that some defenders argue the flag itself is a Christian symbol based on the cross of St. Andrew. They also assert that the X shape in the flag is the Greek letter "chi", which is a Christian abbreviation for Christ.
Is the word "stretch" blazing like a neon sign in your head? Yeah, mine too. These justifications are ludicrous, to say the least. I am Presbyterian, and I can tell you that I have never been to a service where my pastor delivered communion wine with stars-and-bars napkins. In discussing this issue with other Christians, both Northern and Southern, not one of them goes to a church where the "Christian" symbol of the Confederate flag is used. Gee, I wonder why not?
Another argument from the bad-flag defense team is that the flag is nothing more than a peaceful symbol of sectional pride. Let's examine that statement. The flag was created to represent the
Confederacy of States that seceded from the Union in 1861. The states' secession was based primarily on the desire to maintain their socioeconomic structure, which happened to rely on enslaving Black people to make money. So much did the Confederacy want to protect this way of life that it provoked the bloodiest war ever fought on American soil. Given that the flag then represented the institution of slavery and white supremacy, it is pretty hard to argue that it has evolved into a peaceful symbol of anything. It was a flag of war. It never was peaceful. It never will be. It belongs in a museum.
Like it or not, the people of South Carolina and the South are going to have to deal with the very real fact that the Confederate flag has become an international symbol of race hate, belligerent sectionalism and the Dukes of Hazzard. In this country, the flag is the recognized symbol of the Ku Klux Klan. U.S. News reports that it is used internationally in South Africa to protest the government of Mandela and that in Germany, neo-Nazi groups paste it on everything to represent their ideology—the German government has outlawed the public use of the swastika.
These groups have not adopted the flag because they are big fans of the peaceful South. They adopted it because from its inception, the flag represented concepts of racial discrimination and white supremacy. The German government recognizes the pain that the swastika represents to those who suffered in the 1930s. South Carolina should have the presence of mind to recognize the mistakes of the South before 1865 and remove the flag from the seat of state government.
Unless South Carolina is prepared to publicly admit to racist tendencies and a dangerous nostalgia for a disgusting past, it needs to remove the symbol. There is a time when the past needs to become the past. It no longer is healthy or beneficial to fly the Confederate flag anywhere. It is up to the governing structure in South Carolina to recognize the mistakes of the past to enable it to move into a more hopeful future.
The reason that the South Carolina House of Representatives does not want to deal with this issue is clear. The Confederate flag means a lot of things to a lot of people. Regardless of their decision, there would be a lot of backlash. However, it is morally corrupt for the state government not to take a stand in removing the flag from the capitol. To fly a flag on a state capitol suggests that the government inside adheres to the principles of the flag waving over its dome.
Carson Elrod is a Topeka senior in history and theater.
2
David Schell / KANSAN
Letters
Insurance proposal isn't fair to older people
When I saw the headline in the March 10 University Daily Kansan, "Student health insurance plan slashes rates," and the deck that read "Premiums drop by 41 percent," I thought great, that will really help. But upon reading the article, I learned that rates will drop for students under 25 only. Those of us older are out of luck. Our rates are proposed to increase 5 percent next year, as they have increased in past years.
I was surprised that in fashioning the headline your staff would be oblivious to the fact that many students are 25 and older. More importantly, the staff missed the real story here. A huge proposed cut as a marketing ploy to attract younger students is in part being financed by a rate hike for older students. Sounds like blatant age discrimination to me.
At the least, this kind of two-tiered system within a group insurance plan is highly undemocratic. In fact, it may well be illegal. I've never heard of an
Even if differential rates are allowable for group health insurance, shouldn't lifestyle factors come into play? Diet, amount of exercise, drug and alcohol use and cholesterol level all play a part in overall health For example, why should a 25-year-old, nonsmoking jogger with a well-balanced diet and low cholesterol pay nearly twice as much for health insurance as a 24-year-old, junk-food munching, chain smoker?
Even life insurance rates, which are based on actuarial tables, take a sliding scale approach that gradually increases with age. G-M Underwriters whole-scale rate jump at age 25 is clearly out of line unless they can show an equal and across-the-board jump in the number of insurance claims submitted by people 25 and older.
I encourage the Kansan to challenge G-M Underwriters to
employer, for example, being able to charge such widely differing rates for medical insurance based purely on an arbitrary age cutoff.
justify this new policy, and to also ask members of the Watkins Memorial Health Center staff why they would allow such a discriminatory and agebased plan to be foisted on their clientele.
Perhaps the ultimate irony is that many students under 25 still have the option to be claimed on their parents' insurance. Sounds like G-M Underwriters is trying to lure them on board while carrying on business as usual with the many students 25 and older who have no other option for health insurance. Many of them, by the way, are graduate teaching assistants who work hard for the University yet get no University assistance with health insurance.
Instead of arbitrarily giving some customers a 41 percent discount, while imposing a 5 percent increase on the rest, G-M Underwriters should split the difference and roll back premiums 23 percent for every student. That will surely stimulate enrollment and have the added benefit of being a just policy.
Dan Grippo
Lenexa graduate student
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 20, 1997
5
Next five years day at the Beach
Disability program awarded $150,000
By Ann Marchand Kansan staff writer
For the next five years, the Beach Center's Family Studies and Disability program in the department of special education will be $150,000 richer.
The program was recently named one of five recipients of funding from the Department of Education's Research Training Grants program. Fourteen applicants competed for the funding.
Ann Turnbull, co-director of the Beach Center, said that the program's receipt of the grant demonstrated its excellence at the national level.
The other recipients were the University of Pittsburgh, Virginia Commonwealth University, Boston University, and the New Jersey University of Medicine and Dentistry, said Richard Melia, associate director of the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research within the Department of Education
"The program really is known nationally as one which is among
the best of its kind." she said.
Turnbull founded the program in 1988 with her husband, Rud. Together they co-direct the center. Their son, J.T., 29, has mental retardation and autism, and he works at the center as a clerical aide, she said.
J. T. Turnbull is an inspiration for others who work and study at the center.
The Department of Education grant will finance the research of one postdoctoral fellow and will provide stipends for three doctoral candidates to study at the center. The program's goal is to attract diverse applicants.
"He serves as kind of an example of the possibilities," said Denise Poston, Santa Clara, Calif., doctoral student. "He is a wonderful example of what is possible when you have the support of friends and a supportive community."
Poston's son A.J., 9, also is autistic. She came to the center to learn more about relating to her son and improving his life through new research developments.
The program now has nine doctoral students and no postdoctoral fellows. The operating budget is about $100,000 a year, which the grant will supplement.
The department of special education was ranked first in the nation by U.S. News and World Report magazine. The family studies and disability program is the only one of its kind in the nation.
Fric B. Howell/KANSAN
Upon hearing of the grant, Sen Pat Roberts said that the award reflected the quality of work conducted at the center.
Rud Turnbull is co-director of the Beach Center, a division of the department of special education, which recently received a $150,000 grant.
"KU was one of only five institutes selected for this grant," Roberts said. "In our tight budget times, this grant is special recognition of the important work KU is doing in the field of disability research."
KU professor to study ancient Aleuts' culture
By Sean Demory Kansan staff reporter
A University of Kansas archaeologist has received a grant to research one of the least studied parts of the New World.
Dixie West, adjunct assistant archaeology professor, will leave in April to study the Western Aleutian Islands, off the coast of Alaska. She is part of an international expedition of scientists trying to determine living habits of ancient Aleuts, the hunter-gatherer culture which lived on the islands in historic and prehistoric times.
The team, consisting of paleobiologists and archaeologists from the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, will excavate on two islands to learn about the people and their environment. West hopes to find evidence of the Aleuts' hunting and housing practices, as well as their sociopolitical practices.
West, whose specialty is arctic and subarctic adaptation of hunter-gatherers, has worked in
Bering Sea
ALASKA
Aleutian Islands
Central Europe studying Ice Age cultures. She said that the Western Aleutians were particularly daunting to researchers.
"The key problem with working in the Western Aleutians is the expense and danger in getting there." West said.
West received $220,000 from the National Science Foundation for the expedition.
"Competition for the grants is very fierce," said David Nevin, a grant officer at the University Research Support and Grants Administration.
Nevin said that the University received 58 NSF grants last year, amounting to about $6.7 million.
Internet chain letters draw police probe
KU police questioned a student yesterday about committing fraud while using the University e-mail system at the computer center.
Sgt. Chris Keary said that the police had contacted the student after learning that he had been using e-mail to participate in a pyramid scheme, which is a chain letter devised to make money for those receiving it.
"A lot of people don't understand that this is illegal." Keary said.
In a pyramid scheme, the message receiver is told to send $1 to each person on the list, remove the top name and add his or her own name to the bottom of the list, Keary said. The list is then sent to other people.
"It's a new technological twist on an old game," Keary said. "The best thing to do is just ignore it."
Other users at the computer center told the administration that the student was sending the e-mail.
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Richard Kershenbaum, manager of technical services at Computing Services, said that this was not the first time he had heard complaints, but he added that it was hard to prevent this kind of activity.
"It does happen on the Internet with some regularity," Kershenbaum said. "But we don't regulate or screen anything."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
--for the both the Summer and Fall 1997 semesters.
OUTHOUSE
WELCOME
Welcome to their world
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You are here.
Your future is here.
WATSON LIBRARY STAUFFER PLINT HALL WARD PINCOTT BARRY
Are you ready for the journey?
The road to the "real-world" is difficult, but The University Daily Kansan can make it easier. We're looking for enthusiastic individuals to fill the Summer and Fall advertising staff. As a member of our team, you'll get "real-world" job experience, the tools for success and an incredible semester. Stop by 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall to pick up an application. All applications are due Tuesday, April 8, 1997. Come along for the ride with the #1 college newspaper.
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National recognition doesn't come to those who wait around.
We're firm believers in doing the job right the first time. That's why we take challenges and turn them into opportunities. It's your turn.
The University Daily Kansan is accepting applications for the positions of
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Applications may be picked up at The Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Deadline for Business Manager and Editor application
Friday, April 4, at 12:00 p.m.
*The Business Manager is responsible for the entire operation of The Kansan advertising department.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
6
Thursday, March 20. 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
City manager organizes Lawrence
By Paul Eakins
Kansan staff writer
When Mike Wildgen graduated from the University of Kansas in 1969, he never thought he would end up running Lawrence.
Gale Garber / KAMSAN
Mike Wildgen, Lawrence city manager and KU graduate, faces city problems in his fourth floor office in City Hall. Wildgen was promoted to city manager in 1990.
Now, as city manager, Wilden goes each day to his fourth-floor office at City Hall to face the problems that may surface in a city with more than 600 employees and 65,000 people.
COLUMBIA
Wildgen said he felt privileged to work for Lawrence and that he was the envy of many city managers.
"Lawrence is quite a city to be a part of," he said.
As city manager, Wilden deals with general management issues, like designating tasks to his staff. His main focus, though, is the City Commission.
The commission hires the city manager and depends on him to help make informed decisions. Wildgen said he had to know, or have on hand, all pertinent information about every issue the commission might address at each meeting. From zoning to budgeting, liquor licensing to construction, Wildgen has to know what is going on in Lawrence.
Often, the issues facing the commission can be controversial. Wildgen said he had to strive to remain neutral.
"That's the key," he said. "I've got personal opinions on things. But my goal is to give the best information I can to the
commissioners and let them decide. I've got to be careful about the perception I give to the public."
Wildgen is also in charge of helping the commissioners organize and implement the city budget of nearly $70 million.
"It's a very serious, large responsibility to take care of that kind of spending," he said.
Despite numerous responsibilities, Wildgen said there was one thing more important to him than his job - his family.
He has a wife, Linda, and two children,
Chris. 6, and Anne. 2.
"At this age, those two kids are the most important thing I've got going," Wildgen, 49, said.
Wilden's father was also a city manager, in Hoisington. This influenced Wilden to return to the University in 1972, where he had received his bachelor's degree in anthropology and geography, to earn a master's degree in public administration.
He then worked for the cities of Olathe and Kansas City, Mo., until he became the assistant city manager of Lawrence in 1974. He was promoted to city manager in 1990.
By fulfilling his duties, Wildgen has become valuable to the commission, said John Nalbandian, mayor.
As a professor of public administration and government, Nalbandian knows the operations of a city manager. He said that Wilden fits the bill.
"He does a very good job," Nalbandian said. "He's very valuable to the commission and to the city. He's very trustworthy. City Commission relies on him very heavily."
Wilden said he enjoyed helping the commission, and that the most rewarding part of his job was completing a project.
Paleontologist's trip could ruffle feathers
By Mark McMaster Kansan staff writer
Larry Dean Martin, professor of paleontology, is one of several American scientists who left for China Monday on an 18-day trip to study the latest breakthrough in a debate about the evolutionary history of birds.
The breakthrough was the discovery of three small dinosaur skeletons, which attracted worldwide attention last fall when paleontologist Phil Currie told scientific magazines he has evidence of feathers in the specimens.
"If they are feathers, that would be very good evidence that birds evolved from dinosaurs," Martin said, although he is skeptical of Currie's original claim that a black film around the specimens' skeleton is proof of the dinosaurs had feathers. Since his first statements, Currie has downplayed the importance of this evidence.
The theory that birds have dinosaur ancestors is held by many scientists, including John Ostrom, a Yale paleontologist who will join Martin in China. Peter Welnhofer, German paleontologist and a supporter of Oström, also will be there, as well as Allen Brush, an expert on the origin and evolution of feathers from the University of Connecticut. The group's travel expenses were financed by the Philadelphia Academy of Sciences and The Dinosaur Society.
One scientist said that Martin's input would add credibility to the findings.
"Martin is one of the finest paleontologists in the country," said Allen Peducia, chairman of
Do dinosaurs have feathers?
Some scientists who have examined specimens recently found in China say dinosaurs did have feathers.
If their claims are true, it would offer substantial evidence for the theory that birds evolved from dinosaurs.
Professor of biological sciences Larry Dean Martin, who does not support the theory, will be traveling to China to examine the specimens and determine whether there is adequate proof that the dinosaurs had feathers.
biology at the University of North Carolina. "He is the world's expert on this area. He's very respected both here and in Europe, and I think that is why he was chosen to go to China."
Martin, who believes that birds evolved separately from dinosaurs, is doubtful that the specimens had feathers.
"I don't know of any evidence that would make me think that they are feathers," he said.
Instead, he said that the reported feathers resembled the pattern of frills on marine iguanas.
Martin said he hoped the gathering would resolve the issue, which has been widely discussed in scientific publications, including this month's Audobon magazine, which features the specimens on its cover.
"Hopfully, with all the evidence in front of us, we'll agree on what we see," Martin said. "It's the simple thing to do rather than argue ad nauseam in the newspapers and magazines."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 20.1997
7
Bells toll for return of swallows
The Associated Press
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Calif.
— The clang of old mission bells yesterday welcomed the swallows—and the tourists — back to their aging, warm-weather retreat.
The birds need to help their human landlords finance repairs of their 200-year-old nest, the mission that gave its name to a town, an Indian people and the romantic song When the Swallows Come Back to Capistrano.
Earthquakes and erosion have made the Great Stone Church, one of California's oldest buildings, a shaky ruin. Administrators are counting on the tourists' dollars that accompany the swallows to
help pay the estimated $5 million restoration bill.
"We're paying as we go, and it's a question of getting enough funds together to finish it off," said administrator Jerry Miller.
So far, about $1 million has been raised and so sent.
It takes the swallows about a month to fly in from their winter nests at Goya, Argentina. Biologists say that the swallows really do arrive about this time each year, though weather and food fluctuations mean they don't show up exactly on March 19, St. Joseph's Day.
After the Spanish and the native people built the mission in the late
1700s, the birds started putting their mud nests under the eaves of the buildings.
Last year, in a move to drum up business, local leaders decided to offer swallow celebrations on both March 19 and on the previous weekend.
Yesterday's ringing of the bells was the second this year for the swallows, who were already there. And so were the tourists.
"I never thought I cared a thing for California, and now I'm going to be homesick for it," said Dartha Bull of White Bluff, Tenn., who kept a promise to bring her daughter Karmen for her 16th birthday.
"We'd love to come back," she said.
Aries (March 21-April 19) - Today is a 6.
The sun is going into your sign today, and all is well with the world. This momentous occasion also is known as the vernal equinox. Do not be surprised if you find it impossible to inhibit yourself. You may burst out laughing for no reason.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) - Today is a 5.
Today begins your annual completion phase.
You have four weeks to finish everything you
started last year. Some of these are projects
you have been avoiding so this is not going to
be easy. You are tough. You will survive.
HOROSCOPES
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is 6.7.
You are charming, vivacious and popular.
How about organizing a softball league?
Now is the perfect time. You could get teams from each civic group in your city. People want to play, and it is up to you to make sure they do. If not softball, something else.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is a 5.
The emphasis for the next few weeks is on your career. You may have to work harder, but you may have more money soon. Do not look at it as scary but as a game. Do what your boss expects – do it well – and you will get the prize.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 7.
During the coming 30 days, you should take a trip, sign up for a class or get your manuscripts published. Two out of three would not be bad, so make a list. What would you like to accomplish? The possibilities are endless.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is a 5.
Focus for the next 12 weeks is jointly
holded finances. That includes your household
checking account, savings account,
investments and taxes. Do not take out a loan
today. Walt until tomorrow to do that.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 7
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 7.
Opposites attract, but they also repel.
For example, Libra and Aries often form love/hate relationships. Libra is the pacifist, of course. Aries is the warrior. You must admit, you never run out of things to talk about. Another one of those confrontations is coming.
Scopli (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is a 6.
For the next few weeks, you will be spurned to do more things for more people. You might even feel unappreciated. The main problem is a pusty co-worker, who could get really annoying. If you are working toward a common goal, you will get along much better.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7 hour there an amusement park within the city.
two of your home? You should go there tonight. You have something to celebrate. This is, after all, the vernal equinox. Do something outrageous for tomorrow night.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7.
Today begins your best time of the year for
household projects, or if all of that is hop-
loss, move on to something better. You will
be in the mood to take action. Do not do it
today, though. Think about it for another day.
Aquatina (Jan 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 7.
You will have a good time for the next few weeks. You will be inspired to get together with your brothers and sisters, or at least to call them. If you do not have any siblings, make sure you connect with a friend you have know for more than 10 years.
Picces (Feb. 19-March 20) - Today is a 6.
The sun has been in your sign for about
30 days, much to your delight. Now it is going
into Anes. For the next 30 days, you will be
more involved with money. Spend, save,
count and sort. Go along with a suggestion
your sweetheart makes in private.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
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Your NCAA Tournament Information Guru. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Your NCAA Tournament Information Guru. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Find out about all the action in the Sports Section. KANSAN
+
Thursdav. March 20.1997
---
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Track season begins
Team prepares for competition at Emporia State
By Matt Woodruff
Karman sportswriter
The Kansas track and field team will hear the first gunshots of the outdoor season today as they compete at the Emporia State University Spring Twilight in Emporia.
Kansan sportswriter
KANSAS TRACK
Kansas sent six athletes to compete in the Texas A&M Heptahpl/Decathlon in College Station, Texas, last weekend, but this will mark the first meet in which the entire team will compete.
Kansas ended the indoor season with a disappointing finish at the Big 12 Championships in Lincoln,Neb., with the men placing eighth and the women placing 12th.
"We're looking forward to getting started again, especially in events like the long throws, the discus and the javelin," said Kansas coach Gary Schwartz. "Some people will get their first chance to compete in those events, and they've been practicing all year."
be a good way to get back into the swing of things.
Schwartz said that this meet would
“It’s kind of a low-key thing, and you can treat this meet any way you want to,” he said. “You can go out and run it like it's a race, or you can treat it as a quality workout.”
Dave Harris, coach at Emporia State, said that in this type of meet, anything could happen.
"This is our home opener and a huge meet with 18 schools coming in," Harris said. "It should be a great day weather-wise, and when you catch a good day, I think it will surprise people what can happen."
Kansas failed to have an Indoor All-American for the first time since 1972, and if no one achieves the goal in the outdoor season, it would be the first time the team has been shut out of both seasons.
Kansas is looking for someone to step-up to All-America status this season.
Mike Evers, who reached All-America status by finishing sixth in the decathlon in the 1996 outdoor season, was redshirted in the indoor season and may be the team's best bet to
a race, or you can
quality workout."
treat it as a
Gary Schwartz Kansas track coach
achieve that goal this outdoor season.
Senior Latanya Holloway will try to repeat as an All-American for the women's team. Holloway is the school record holder in the 800-meter relay and the distance medley relay.
"Mike is another year stronger and another year smarter," Schwartz said. "It will be good to have him back."
Big 12 teams deserve respect
Field events will begin at Fran Welch Stadium at 2 p.m. and the running events will begin at the Zola Witten Track at 4 p.m.
Expectations were high when the Southwest Conference and Big
Over-rated! ... Over-rated!
The ACC started the tournament with five teams. It has just two teams remaining in the Sweet 16.
It has been said all season that the Big 12 is Kansas and the rest.
It had one, two, three, four, five and nine seeds when the tournament began. Only the one and four remain.
Of the teams that have lost, only Virginia lost to a higher-seeded team — Iowa was an eight seed. But somehow, Iowa was ranked 12 spots below Virginia in the RPI rankings. And College of Charleston, the team that beat fifth-seeded Maryland, was a 12 seed and ranked 32 spots below the ACC in the RPI rankings.
Analysts and rankings have been saying how great the ACC was the entire year. Four teams from the conference (North Carolina, Duke, Wake Forest and Clemson) have been ranked in the top five. Now, only two remain among the top 16 in the tournament.
JOHN
ERCK
While the ACC was receiving praise; the Big 12 Conference was getting no respect.
Eight allied,
but all season
there has been
talk about how
the conference
has been a dis-
appointment.
Only one team
other than
Kansas - Iowa
State - cracked
the top five this
season. Three
of the five
teams that
made the tourn-
ament from
the Big 12 remai-
SPORTS COLUMNIST
The only Big 12 team to lose in the first round was Oklahoma. Oklahoma only made the tournament because Texas Tech withdrew from consideration.
The Pacific 10 Conference also is underrated. All season, everybody had been saying that the conference was weak, that UCLA and Arizona had struggled, and that the conference never did well in the tournament.
The Pac-10 is the only conference with four teams in the Sweet 16.
As for some of the perennial power conferences, one team remains from each of the Big 10, Big East, Southeast Conference and Conference USA.
So, according to the Sweet 16, the best two conferences are the Pac-
10 and the Big 12.
That makes UCLA and Kansas the best two teams in the country. Only time and the tournament will tell. Don't ever count Kentucky out.
UCLA and Minnesota are playing the best basketball in the tournament right now. Luckily for Kansas, they also have the toughest routes to the final game including a possible meeting against each other this Saturday in San Antonio.
Will Utah's luck ever run out? It took buzer-beaters by Keith Van Horn in two games of the Western Athletic Conference Tournament for the Utes to win it. Now Stanford has eliminated Wake Forest from Utah's path.
Everyone is talking about how poorly Kansas is playing. The Jayhawks beat Jackson State and Purdue, both of whom were playing their championship games, by 14 points each. I'd rather see the Jayhawks continue to get by and peak in the championship game than win by 40 in the first round. They'll be okay.
Keith Van Horn will be a better pro than Tim Duncan. Duncan may record point and rebound totals in the 20s in college, but Van Horn can play small forward in the NBA. He's a more well-rounded player and he has range. In addition to that, Van Horn has that luck on his side.
T
100s Announcements
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200s Employment
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tire 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
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Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
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KU QA offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or orphan. Please call KU info at 604-3068 or Headquarters at 841-2435 for more information.
105 Personals
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Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. call KU Ini@844-3066
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205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
Desktop Publisher, Full-time days. Exp. in
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Carter's "Children's Wear." Full & pt sales associates. Comes to 1 Riverfront Plaza 303E. EOE
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. 6 wk sum.
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Now hire cooks, utilities hot and cold prep. No
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Surrize Landscaping Service is now hiring seasonally based employees at our location, Center, 115 & New York City.
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Local landscape company accepting applications from motivated individuals. Irrigation, lawn care, and general experience helpful, but not essential. Call 843-9434 from 8-5.
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
205 Help Wanted
Student hourly secretary. $5/hr. 15 hrs/wk. Must have good computer skills. Applications can be picked up at 1149 Haworth. Contact Gretchen at 804-0720.
Summer work program, 1997. Competitive, ambitious undergrads being interview for summer job. Approx. $5,800+ for summer. Call 1-800-967-8383. Southwestern program.
Wanted 87 students. Lose 1-80 pounds. New metabolism breakthrough.Doctor recommended. Guaranteed. $30 cost. Free gift. 1-800-435-7591.
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STUDENT WORK-UP to $12.50 *Nat* I CO. has immediate employment or Flexible Work-UP to $6.00 *JOB*. Flexible day, evening, weekend schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP and university Opponent Resumes. CO-OP WORK - 6am-5pm.
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205 Help Wanted
Brookcreek Learning Center is hiring part-time teacher assistants. M-F 8 a.m.-5 p.m. (odders) and M-F 5-9 p.m. (preschool). Opportunities include experience in an early intervention inclusive classroom program. Complete applications 850-0223. For more information call 850-0223. AA/EOE.
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education admission in the University Placement Center. 20 hr/wk, $7.00/hr, starting August 1997. Application deadline October 31, 2015. Please contact description at 110 Burge Union or see www.ukans.edu/~up/codes.html
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education adm inment in the University Placement Center. 20 hrs/wk, $7.00/hr, starting August 1997. Application deadline: October 31st. Job description anil 110 Burge Union job or see www.ukans.edu/~uc/p jobs.html
Our bus not for profit health agency is recruiting care team oriented CNA/CIA/HA to work in or Private Home Care teams who have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Douglass County Visiting Hospital 81-4653 or Lower Level 81-4653 for ETEO.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys/b girls summer camps. Teach: swim, basketball, archery, tennis, golf, sports, rifley, archery, tennis, OR riding, computers, camping, drama, crafts, OR riding. Also kitchen, on maintenance. Salary $325,000 per year. CAC/WC1 795 Maple, IL. NDU08 847-464-2444
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 20, 1997
9
205 Help Wanted
Food Service Supervisors. $2 positions available @ The Mass Street Deli & Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. $10,000 per year experience in food service $ 4 year experience in supervising. $6,50-$10,00 per hour based on prior certification up to $1,500. Apply at Schumann Food Company bus service @ 791-Mass. (upstairs abovethe smokehouse).
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SYSTEM TESTING INTERN. Deadline: 4/4/97.
Salary $6.50-7.5/周, 20hrs per week. Duties include install, configure, & customize software products. Participate in system testing & applications maintenance. Required qualification. Write programming exercises, 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, submit a cover letter and current resume to Computer Center, University of Akron, EO/AA PUBLYER Center, University of Akron.
Seeking students majoring in social/human service fields for hands on experience & internship working with children who are multiple disabilities and/or have difficulty with communication. Intensive training in behavioral programming provided. Staff will assist in the implementation of highly structured program to develop students' skills in a residential setting. Positions are live-in working five days on and off two days. Salary for position varies by assignment and work schedule. Prefer applicants with 60 credit hours in human service field or related exp. Call 282-8271 or 1-800-853-104, ext. 231, Jardin Carl W., Dr. Witcha, KS 67219, spring 2400 Garden D, Wichita, KS 67219
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with possibility of renewal for next academic year. Interested students will work in the years and will have no other job commitments. Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community experience, solid research skills, leadership and supervisory experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, interest in helping other. Must be Lawrence resident. Come by KU info, 420 768-5232 or consider on first come basis with final deadline for applications, 5pm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
for
SUMMER JOBS!
Key is hiring now for full-time
jobs that will start in the
summer. Many postitions available
in Topeka for production, retail,
office and warehouse.
Apply today!
KEY Staffing
400 SW Croix, Topeka
267-9999
$
Walk-ins welcome!
YMCA SUMMER DAY CAMP COUNSELOR POSITIONS
Looking for mature, dependable committed people to implement quality YMCA Summer Day Camps in Topeka locations. Must be able to work with children in a variety of settings. Aid, CPR, and CDL certifications a plus.
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W.24th 749-5750
Minimum Requirements: Must be 18 high school diploma, relevant college student, experience in job offered.
Elementary school teachers and college students majoring in Elementary Education, Child Development, Physical Education, or Recreation are encouraged to apply.
Pay Rate: $55 per day.
YA WANCARE; M
Vance Brancahue 1898 N Tylier, Topeka, KS 66008
or Downs Place 1891 A4 Van Buren, Topeka,
K66003. More info call Patty Gatzemeyer at
912-333-8915.
205 Help Wanted
205 Help Wanted
Budget Officer Salary: $40,000 (minimum)/fiscal year. Deadline: Education accepted until position filled. Required qualifications: 1) Proven ability to successfully manage multiple responsibilities, bring them to successful conclusions, 2) Ability to work in a team with experience with (3+ years) University of Kansas fund accounting and payroll systems, 3) Bachelor's degree in appropriate field of study, 4) Strong communication skills, 5) Ability to present both oral and written reports in a clear and concise manner. Contact Ann Engel at Networking and Telecommunications Services, University of Kansas, Ellsworth Hall, KS 68945, or email us: 864-8310 for a complete job description and application procedures. EO/AA
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Thesis &
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800) - 733-2404
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
Dissertations Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3 Day turnaround
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
OFFICE OFFICERS
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
K K
AFFIC DEFEN CENTER OF
Heathman & Kelly
DU/TRAFFIC/CRIMINAL/PERSONAL INJURY
Call For a Free Consultation
James C. Heathman
or
Melissa A. Kelly
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
913-267-0055 or
Toll Free: 888-834-4LAW (529)
235 Typing Services
Call Jack at 823-8484 for applications, term
calles, those documents, transcriptions, etc.
for the use of your organization.
Quality Typing form newletter editor w/ laser
print. Create a top quality paper for you. Call
us at 843-276-5150 or 843-276-5152.
300s Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
Soft Top for Jeep Wrangler. Light Gray. $200
O.B.O. Call Tim @ 832-7243
1990 FORD PROBE Excellent Condition: 5-
hour mileage. Miles call: 876-390-1300
6 ppm and 331-250 after 6 ppm.
Need Energy? Try our 100% natural product. It gives you a tremendous natural lift and mental alertness. No side effects. Great before study- day! Explore Independent Herbale Distributor 913-399-2049.
'90 Toyota Terrell, manual trans., runs well
$2,000. b64 8674-694
**superiororacula** - Pictures of pre-owned vehicles on the web. Various makes and models available.
205 Help Wanted
Stay ahead of the Job Crowd!
I
Make sure you get that job now! Register over we can keep you busy with clerical,
great summer the break and over the summer secretarial.
accounting or other office support jobs in the Kansas City metro area.
To schedule an appointment over break, call Shelley or Michelle at:
913-491-3491
Or contact us on the web at :
www.employbts.com
BTS BUSINESS TEMPORARY SERVICES
HOTEL
405 For Rent
4 Bd Rm. House sublease in May. Mant rent free.
Great location, 14th and Tenn. Call 841-7979
400s Real Estate
Available now, spacious one bedroom apartment,
10th and TN, $345/month. Call 838-364 to see.
Studio, 1.3-BR, also 5 BR house near KU, Call
841-6854
Available now-3 bedroom, 1 bath, Wash/Dryer,
Pitty equipped. On KU bus route. Call Mi-
tel: 627-805-3801.
Summer sublease. 2 blocks from campus. Nice
house, 107th St. 84th Flr., 512-739-3654.
Poseidon, 1944 Ashland, Call 815-1979 after 815-1
0725.
2 BDRM, 2 bath College Hill condo. W/d,
microwave, water pd. Avail Aug. Rent $775. Call
(913) 582-4385.
1 BDMR apartment available for summer sub-
subroom furnished, furnished close to Fraser
Call; 850.8974.74
Avail Aug 1.
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1601
8 BR houses for rent. Avail Aug 1.
Available June 1. One Bd. Apt. between campus and downtown, 403-879-2960 or Corbin. No pets.
MAJOR ID: 3197-1307.
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG. 1
Price (incl. deposit & lease)
Jim Edwards at (816) 693-5400
CHEAP SUMMER SUBLEASE. $171/mo. + 1/7
utilities. Cool roomers. Avail. through July 31.
Huge house! 834-887. Ask for Bret.
Condo for Sale 3 bdmr, 2 bath, washer/dryer, on
5 bedrooms. FHA 10, 78900. OBO see v38-2023
FHA 10, 78900. OBO see v38-2023
STUDIO, CLOSE TO CAMPUS, ON BUS ROUTE.
Available for summer absence, no. + elec-
rence required.
Email: info@northwestcampus.edu
FURNISHED 3 BR APT, 2 BATH, W/D/A/C,
BALANCED
50/100/mo. Call evening: (704)163-1800
Studio & B2 Bedroom. Available for summer & fall; Sonoma chic classroom on bus rentals; Pasadena chefs' kitchen at 841-115-8355.
Sublease one bedroom apartment. Available
now. Address 5641 Broadway, N.W., Washington,
midtown, zip 20002. $900 per month. No Avail.
email. Call (312) 555-2897.
Sublease 2-bdm apt. available now through July 31, close to campus, easily maintained
Summer lease for a 3 berm, apt. 1.1/2 bath. Available from Mira for less than or equal to campus fees. Low rent. Low rent.
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Meadowbrook Apt. Fireplace, good view.
$400/month Call 864-3038 (DAY) Ask for Kerry.
NOW LEASING
GATEWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 841-8468.
Pinnacle Woods
1223 br. luxury apt. homes
FIRST MONTH FREE
All New - 865-5454
Birchwood Gardens Apt.
19th & Tenn. St.
A live great! to a live!
Comfortable two br. units
Off street parking • Laundry rooms
Terrific location
KU • Shopping • Schools
Rent starts at $385/mo.
No pets
You see us,
you will be pleasantly surprised!
Off. 1815 Kentucky, Apt. 2, 843-0929
Tuckaway
HARPER SQUARE
Live in Luxury.
- 1,2, & 3 Bedroom
- Washer/Drver
- 2600 W. 6th 838-3377
- Washer/Dryer
- Built-in TV
- Washer/Dryer
- Alarm System
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
CALL 832-9918
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
1&2Bedrooms
- 3BR 725.00
2BR 610.00
On KUBus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
405 For Rent
1w.24th&Naismith
842-5111
- New in 1996!!
- APARTMENT
- Alarm System
3 Hot Tubs
- Fireplace
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1408
Tenn. a student housing alternative, Open &
diverse membership, non profit operation, demand
control. $180-240 incl. wk dy dorms, Ull,
W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 814-0484.
SUMMER SUBLEASE
Spaciosa IBR on KU bus route. Route A/C
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
SUMMER SUBLEASE
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- Laundry facility
- On bus route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
HIGH POINTE
1.2 & 3 Bedrooms
Washer/Dryer Alarm System
Clubhouse & Swimming Pool Workout Facility Basketball Court
Call First Management 841-8468
NOW LEASING
Holiday Apartments
Tropical Island
Leasing for Summer & Fall
*2 Bedroom $400-$445
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
211 Mount Hope Court #1
For more info, or Appt.
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Move In Now...
One Month Free Rent On lease through July 31 1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment Call or stop by today
843-2116
11th and Miss
erkley Flats $ ^{o} $
Berkeley Flats (EHO)
FLATS
Lorimar and Leannamar Townhomes
one lives above or below you"
"No one lives above
(our townhouses are two levels)
Leasing for Summer/Fall '97
1, 2, 3 bdm/r2 bath, 4 bdm/r3 bath
*Washer/Dryer
*Dishwasher
*Microwave
*Propiae
*Celling Fans in every room
*Cable in every room
*Walk-in closets
*Cplain paid
Lorrainem 4501 Clean Phone
Leannamern-4501 Wimbedrin Dr.
Call 814-7892 Office hr. 9-5-M-F
Sunset over the lake.
Sunrise Apartments Signing now for fall
- Garages (village)
- Tennis Courts, Pools
- Free Cable TV (Place)
• Luxurious Trun Homes
- Free Cable TV (Place)
• Luxurious Town Homes
- Luxurious Town Homes
* On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon.- Fri. 1-5
405 For Rent
Low $350 per month for nice spacious quiet 2 BR apt. Appliances, C/A, bus route and pool. Low utilities! No pets. 1 yr leases beginning in May, June, July or August. Spain Coast Crest. 811-688-6888
Naismith Place
Naismith Place
89% from B440
* Jacuzzi in each sept.
* to, if KU bus route
* to, if GU bus route
* Pd cabble TV/TVPs
* Basketball area/park
* Pd basketball area/park
Ousdahl 82/ TVPs 81. 641-1815
Park25
Apartments
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
10-Month Lease Available
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
- 10-Month Leases Available!
- On KU Bus Route
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhouses.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
--oriented community.
Studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts.
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall'97
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
(no pets, please)
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30 4:30
No Appointment needed
405 For Rent
LCA
PLS
Spacious Apartments and Townhouses for rent.
Washler/Dryer, Disheswater Avail.
Central Air - Closer to Campus
Studios 1,2,3, & 4 bedrooms
Closet/Apartment
Kitchen 2
749-3794 after 4pm
"Convenient affordable housing"
---
meadowbrook FALL'97
- 2 Pools
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to come see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like stmnhare
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly service-
- 2 Volleyball Areas
- 3 Bus Stops
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat. 1-4 Sun
430 Roommate Wanted
Summer room apartment w/ wanted for furnished. 4-bedroom apartment w/ left. AC, washer/dryer, pool. Furniture included: desk, chair, lamp.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
Non-smoking female needed immediately to campup $200/mo + 7/utilities ($60), Call 331-1354.
Female Sum. Sublease needed middle of May to end of July. May paid - $230/mo plus 1/3 u/d. On kU bus route. Close to campus. Call H3-8284
2 Females to share 3 bedroom luxurious home,
2 females to share 1 room, male from Campus, no pets, W/D, W/P. A/C Call 865-207-6949
How to schedule an ad:
Pre-pre txn sexuales in Lawrence area seeks another gay/gay friendly person to share a townhouse. Non-smoker, social drinker preferred. Bills will be requested by two. If interested please call (913) 731-1268
FRIENDLY Sr/Grad folks seek N/SFem.Pref.
Avail.now. Bright wavited skilt dyll nr. campus.
Quit clean air away from traffic, on park
parking lot. $18.34 / 1uf. Richard@841-2742.bat tpm :amn
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
1 trommate needed to sublease ASAP till August:
6 BR house, hardwood floor, 3 decks, 3 baths;
Washer/Dryer. Pets OK. Very Clean.$200/mth +/
1/utilities. Call 841-7472.
- ByMail: 119 Staffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68045
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is ist
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Stop by the Kansan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ade may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
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Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$18.00 (4 lines X 80 per line X 5 days).
105 personal
110 business persons
120 noncommerce
130 entertainment
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285 lt uuoted
295 professional services
295 ltye services
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAM POLICY
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The University Daily Kencan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
AVILA'S RANK CLIMBS
Kansas men's tennis player XAVIER AVILA jumped to No. 36 nationally in the singles rankings. Avila was formerly ranked No. 52. It is the highest ranking the junior from Barcelona, Spain, has ever attained. Avila has a record of 17-10 on the season. Junior Enrique Abaroa dropped in the rankings from No. 15 to No. 25. Together Avila and Abaroa
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
Together Avila and Abaroa are ranked No.
KANSAS TENNIS
16 in doubles, a drop from their former No. 11 ranking.
As a team, however,
the Jayhawks' ranking dropped to No. 21 after previously being ranked No. 17.
FORMER NFL QUARTERBACK ARRESTED
Former Colts quarterback ART SCHLICHTER was arrested for violating conditions of his probation, federal officials said. Schlichter, 36, violated probation conditions stemming from a bank fraud charge
in Indiana, U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force officials said. In January, the former Ohio State star pleaded guilty in Indianapolis to two counts of forgery and one count of theft.
LSU LOOSES OUT
THURSDAY, MARCH 20,1997
ROB EVANS will remain the University of Mississippi's basketball coach, bypassing an offer to become Louisiana State's new coach. Louisiana State's athletics director Joe Dean said in a statement late yesterday afternoon that Evans had informed him that he would remain in Oxford.
Evans just completed his fifth and most successful season at Ole Miss. Without any seniors, the Rebels went 20-9, won the Southeastern Conference Western Division title and advanced to the NCAA tournament for only the second time in school history. Dean had offered the job to Evans, 50, on Tuesday.
PAGE 10
Evans spent about nine hours Tuesday in Baton Rouge, La., meeting with Louisiana State officials.
KANS
3
100
Fast BREAKS
Victory against Arkansas ends Kansas' losing streak
The Kansas baseball team stopped a four-game losing streak yesterday by defeating Arkansas 8-2 in Fayetteville, Ark.
Kansas (15-9) took an early lead against Arkansas (13-8). The Jayhawks led the first inning with three runs on five hits.
Kansas pitcher Chris Williams picked up the win, allowing just three hits and one run in 6 1/2 innings of work. The Kansas pitching staff allowed Arkansas to get only six hits.
Arkansas pitcher Mike Moriarity picked up the loss. In two innings, he gave up four runs and eight hits. The Jayhawks lit up the Razorback pitching staff for 15 hits.
Second baseman Joe DeMarco led the Jayhawks. He had four hits on five at bats and one RBI. First baseman Aaron Wilmes had three hits on five at bats and one RBI.
Kansas recorded two errors.
Kansas' Paul Pierce and Scot Pollard battle for a rebound during the Jayhawks' first round game against Jackson State. The Jayhawks will take on Arizona Friday in hopes of advancing to the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament.
The three game series is now tied at 1-1. On Tuesday, Kansas lost to Arkansas 8-5.
The series resumes today.
Swim team sends women to NCAA championships
The Kansas women's swimming and diving team will send two representatives to the 1997 NCAA Women's Swimming and Diving Championships which will be held today through Sunday.
Senior Rebecca Andrew will compete in her fourth NCAA Championship in four years and junior Kristin Nilsen will be making her third appearance.
Andrew will compete in the 50 freestyle today, the 100 butterfly tomorrow and the 100 freestyle on Saturday. Nilsen will compete in the 200 individual medley today, the 400 individual tomorrow and the 200 breaststroke on Saturday.
Both Nilsen and Andrew are All-Americans. Andrew has collected eight All-America awards in her four years and Nilsen has three All-America awards. To receive All-America status an athlete must finish in the top 16 of an event at the NCAA Championships.
Andrew will try to become the fifth Jayhawk woman swimmer to earn All-America honors in each of her four years.
Men's tennis beats Florida, but loses to Mississippi
The No. 21 Kansas men's tennis team defeated No. 24 Florida State on Monday. The Jayhawks then beat No. 11 Middle Tennessee State 4-0 on Tuesday at the Blue-Gray Tennis Classic in Montgomery, Ala.
Kansas beat Florida State 4-2, in a match that saw Trent Tucker win his sixth consecutive tennis game. Tucker improved his record to a team best 20-8.
Overall, Kansas went 2-1 at the tournament.
After defeating the Seminoles, the Jayhawks faced No. 3 Mississippi. The match was tied at 3-3 going into the doubles matches, and each team needed to win two of the three doubles matches to win.
Ole Miss and Kansas split their first two matches, and the game came down to the last doubles game of the day. Kansas' Enrique Abaroa and Xavier Avila lost to the Rebels 8-6 and Ole Miss captured the victory.
A boost from bench
Kansas bounced back in its final match.
The Jayhawks roiled to a 4-0 victory against Middle Tennessee State. Kansas' Fernando Sierra and Luis Uribe defeated Tennessee State's sixth ranked doubled team of Anthony DeLuise and Fred Niemayer, 8-5.
—Kansan staff reports
B.J. Williams' play was key in 1996 win against 'Cats
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
Although the Kansas men's basketball team returns all five starters from last season's 83-80 victory against Arizona, the most influential force in that game will be coming off the bench in tomorrow's game.
Center B.J. Williams scored 18 points in the Sweet 16 matchup against the Wildcats, second only to forward Paul Pierce's 20 points.
Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams remembered how critical B.J. Williams' performance was for the Jayhawks.
"Raef (LaFrentz) really struggled, and B.J. stepped up and played more minutes than Scot (Pollard) or Raef that game." Roy Williams said.
The first team All-American LaFrentz scored only one point in 23 minutes of play.
Roy Williams partially blames himself for LaFrentz's poor outing.
"The coach gave him a bad matchup," Roy Williams said. "Everybody talks about how he only had one point, but defensively, other than the first two possessions, he did a really good iob."
B. J. Williams said filling LaFrentz's void had been a huge mental boost.
Roy Williams said that what he remembered most about B.J. Williams performance against Arizona was that one of the center's cousins stood up after he scored a basket and yelled, "Somebody better guard B.J."
"It was special that I contributed to a win," B.J. Williams said. "After that, I'd had more confidence than I'd ever had before."
"He's wild out there leading the crowd in cheering." B.J. Williams said of his cousin, Kevin Hopkins.
*The Lawrence Journal-World reported that Bernard Smith visited Kansas last weekend. Smith is a 6-foot-3 point guard from Conroe (Texas) High School in suburban Houston.
He averaged 20.8 points,10
and 4.4 assist last season.
Smith also is considering Indiana,
Purdue, Arkansas, Penn State and the University of Houston.
"He loved it," Smith's high school coach Tommy Johnson told the Journal-World. "He was impressed with all the players. That was what
he talked about the most."
The Kansas-Arizona game tomorrow is sold out. A Kansas ticket representative said that the best way to find tickets would be to check the classified sections in local newspapers.
$175 for upper-level to $350 for lower-level seats, according to Preferred Tickets, based out of Indianapolis.
According to Ports Unlimited Travel and Services, 601 Kasold Drive, the cheapest round-trip airfare from Kansas City to Birmingham is $561 on Northwest Airlines.
Ticket prices for all three games in Birmingham, Ala., range from
Traveling time high for'Hawks
Softball team on the road until April 2
The Kansas softball team will play in a tournament with a name almost as long as the team's on-the-road streak of 19 games: The Sacramento State AT&T Wireless Services Capital Classic Tournament.
By Matt Woodruff Kansan sports writer
The team will be in Sacramento, Calif., to compete in the four-day tournament, which begins today and features 12 teams.
"We'll be playing a nice variety of teams from all over the country," Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said. "I think this is a tournament that we should do well in and one that we can win if we play well. But we have to be more consistent."
Bunge said she was pleased with the team's batting but that several mental mistakes had cost the team wins.
Sophomore Sarah Workman has pitched in 14 of the team's 19 games, with a 7-7 record. Freshman Christy McPhail, who was recruited as an infielder, has pitched her way to a 3-1 record. Bunge said McPhail sometimes struggled with control, and the defense had struggled behind her.
"We just haven't taken advantage of some opportunities." Bunge said. "We're finding ways to give away ball games."
"When you have a freshman pitcher, you have to step up defensively, and we haven't been doing that." Bunge said.
The team also has struggled at times in the pitching department.
| NAME | POSITION | AVG | HR | RBI | SB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Sara Holland ...lf | .475 | 6 | 13 | 5 | 3 |
| Heather Richins ...2b | .277 | 2 | 10 | 3 | 3 |
| Kristina Johnson ...c | .305 | 3 | 13 | 3 | 6 |
| Michelle Huber ...ss | .233 | 0 | 5 | 6 | 3 |
| Sarah McCann ...3b | .291 | 0 | 6 | 3 | 3 |
| Shannon Stanwix ...1b | .315 | 4 | 14 | 0 | 0 |
| Jennifer Funkhouser ...rf | .286 | 0 | 8 | 2 | 2 |
| Julie True ...cf | .265 | 0 | 5 | 5 | 0 |
| Katie Malone ...dp | .149 | 1 | 7 | 0 | 0 |
Bunge said that the offense had impressed her this season.
Kansas has scored 90 runs in its 19 games, a 4.74 average. The team has a .293 batting average, and it has produced 16 home runs and has stolen 28 bases.
Softball probable starters
The team will try to pull together its pitching, defense and offense in the A&T Tournament, where it will compete against Sacramento State, Wisconsin, Arkansas, San Jose State, Nebraska, California, Michigan State, Pacific, Iowa, Harvard and Toledo.
Pitcher: Sarah Workman (7-7) 2.79 ERA 81 SO, 28 BB
1
The players will travel during spring break when they play Iowa on Tuesday in Sacramento, and they will begin Big 12 Conference play on March 28 against Baylor in Waco, Texas. Then the team will play Texas Tech in Lubbock, Texas, the following day.
But the game that Kansas coaches and players are looking forward to is on April 2, when they will play their first home game of the season.
"I can't tell you how much we're
The players are looking forward to playing in front of a home crowd.
looking forward to that," Bunge said. "People keep asking me, 'When do you play at home?' and I keep telling them I didn't make the schedule."
But first things first. Bunge said.
"It will be really great to get back home and see some familiar faces in the stands," said Shannon Stanwix, who plays first base.
the things first, Bunge said.
"The kids are excited about getting home after the long, winding road we've been on," she said.
"But it should be an interesting couple of weeks before we get back home."
Big 12 strives to become dominant
By Tommy Gallagher Kansan sportswriter
While the Big 12 Conference boasted a second-best six teams in the women's NCAA tournament, only Colorado survived the first weekend of play.
Kansas and Texas were the only schools to play host to first- and second-round games and not make the Sweet 16. Texas Tech, Iowa State and Kansas State all lost on the road.
By comparison, six of seven teams from the Southeastern Conference have advanced to the Sweet 16. Its lone loss came from No. 7-seeded Auburn's defeat by No. 2-seeded Louisiana Tech in the second round.
Iowa State women's basketball coach Bill Fennelly said that the Big 12 had room for improvement when compared to the SEC.
The only conferences with more than one team in the Sweet 16 are the SEC (six), the ACC (two) and the Big East (two).
"When compared to other conferences across the country, the Big 12 did fairly well," Fennelly said. "But there's a lot of work to do to catch up with the SEC. This year the SEC has shown itself to be a great league, and, to no one's surprise, they have been dominant in the tournament."
SEC teams that are still in the tournament are Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Florida, Louisiana State and Vanderbilt. Only Vanderbilt and Auburn had to play first- and second-round games on the road.
No. 3-seeded Kansas lost in the second round of the NCAA tournament to Vanderbilt, which advanced to the Sweet 16 for the seventh consecutive year. Commodore fans chanted, "SEC! SEC!" during the final seconds of Kansas' first home loss of the season.
Vanderbilt women's basketball coach Jim Foster said that the SEC schedule had prepared his team to play in almost any environment.
"We weren't intimidated by this crowd since we play some of the toughest road games in the country," Foster said. "We've played at Tennessee, at Alabama, at Georgia. When you play in those places, you develop a mental toughness that prepares you for games like this."
Kansas State women's basketball coach Deb Patterson agreed. She had been a four-year assistant coach at Vanderbilt under Foster and just led K-State to the NCAA tournament in her first year at Manhattan.
Patterson said that the Big 12 had the resources to catch up with the SEC but that it would take time.
"The Big 12 needs to build more depth and get more experience in big tournament games to catch the SEC," Patterson said. "If we can get five or six teams in the tournament each year, that will give the conference more credibility, which attracts better recruits and brings more success for each team.
"There's no substitute for experience," she said. "I think the SEC is the league that every conference tries to model themselves after. That's a tribute to the strength of the SEC, and it's something for us to aspire to become."
*******************3-DIGIT 666
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PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 6601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1997
SECTION A VOL. 103, NO. 123
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Quick LOOK
Gore, Chinese will talk about campaign gifts
WASHINGTON — While visiting with Chinese officials next week, Al Gore will diplomatically raise the subject of whether they tried to funnel money into U.S. elections last year, the vice president told advisers.
Gore leaves for Asia tomorrow. He will meet with Jiang Ziem, state
president and
Communist
Party leader,
and Premier LI
Peng.
Party leader, and Premier Li Peng. Gore was briefed by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright on her recent visit to Beijing, when China lead.
[Image of a man in a suit and tie].
AI Gore
ers denied allegations that the country had tried to influence U.S. politics
The official news agency has attributed the allegations to anti-China forces in the United States and Taiwan.
Palestinians, soldiers clash about construction
BETHLEMEM, West Bank — Tear gas filled Bethlehem's streets yesterday after Palestinians clashed with Israel soldiers about Israel's decision to build in east Jerusalem.
Hundreds of protesters threw stones at the soldiers, who fired back tear gas, rubber bullets and a barrage of water cannon spray.
Palestinian officials responded warily to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's proposal to skip the interim phase of Israeli withdrawals from the West Bank and to move directly to talks about the big issues — Jerusalem and Palestinian demands for statehood.
Yasser Arafat accused the Israeli government of trickery and conspiracy for building the Jewish neighborhood in east Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 Six-Day War and where the Palestinians want to build their future capital.
Cigarette maker admits smoking is addictive
WASHINGTON — The maker of Chesterfield cigarettes is ready to settle 22 state lawsuits by agreeing to put warning labels on every pack saying smoking is addictive.
The settlement by the Liggett Group would divide $25 million among the states — plus the potential of millions more from company profits in the next 25 years. Also, it could provide prosecutors with thousands of documents that detail industry-wide discussions of cigarette marketing and the dangers of smoking.
Tobacco giant Philip Morris and three other competitors won a temporary restraining order yesterday to keep those documents secret for at least 10 more days.
Liggert's move puts more pressure on its competitors because no tobacco company has ever admitted smoking is addictive.
The Associated Press
TODAY
INDEX
Television ... 2A
Opinion ... 4A
Features ... 6A
Scores and More ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 4B
Classifieds ... 5B
PARTLY SUNNY
High 73° Low 35° Weather: Page 2A
Victory or Voodoo?
(1)
Sport psychologists debate the merits of visualization by athletes desperate to find a way to win
Story by Cameron Heeg Illustrations by David Schell
These are the messages sport psychologists at the University of Kansas and everywhere else have sold to teams and athletes as part of mental training. It's a technique called visualization.
you may have read that visualization is the sport psychology practice of "being the ball" or sitting in a dark room chanting for victory.
College, Olympic and professional athletes depend on visualization to give them a competitive edge — an edge beyond physical ability and talent.
But psychologists outside of the gymnasium say visualization is all smoke and mirrors and has never been scientifically proven, and they question its use.
"They have done so many studies that go back 20 years to prove that some high school or college coach got his team to win a national championship because they all visualized it," said David Holmes, KU psychology professor. "Well, guess what? The losers did the same thing."
But visualization has come a long way, said Dave Templin, director of applied sport psychology at KU.
Envision the mental edge — it is always within reach. Picture the shot going in — it always does. Imagine success — it always comes.
For years sport psychologists have been con-
See VICTORY, Page 5A
Candidates tackle daycare
"The key thing we try to teach athletes about visualization is that it is not just a visual image in the mind," he said.
By Sean Demory Kansan staff reporter
On-campus child-care promises to be an issue of prime importance in this year's Student Senate campaign, and both coalitions and the independent presidential candidate have placed child-care highly within their campaign platforms.
Pat Pisani, program director of Hilltop Child Development Center, said an architectural program plan had been
"Student governance passed a resolution asking for the construction of a new facility."
DANIEL ROGERS
Jason Flzell
drawn up based on recommendations of a Senate task force. Hilltop was notified in February that a new facility wouldn't be worked on.
Provost David Shulenbur salad. "What we did with the report was to evaluate it and decide how funds could be raised to build the facility."
Funding for a new child-care center, Shulenburger said, would have to come from student funds or from patrons of the center, but the University of Kansas would be willing to pay for utilities in a new facility and provide some staff support.
Jason Fizell, Olathe senior and presidential candidate for the Delta Force coalition. disagrees.
"It'd be easy for students to fund a
new child-care center, but that's exactly what we don't want to do." Fizell said. "We think that the University should come up with at least part of the funding."
Delta Force supports a student fee of $4, and the University should foot the remainder of the bill, a proposal that Shulenburger said was not possible.
Independent presidential candidate Michael Yaghmour said he supported improvements for child care at the University and that he wanted the
"We have a $2 fee for the next two years that will go into the investigation of Hilltop," he said, "and we want to speed up that investigation. We would support anything that those people
whole process to speed up.
1234567890
Yaghmour also said he wanted more administration support on the issue.
investigating the situation find."
"I think they should definitely support Hilltop, or a new facility," he said.
"The staff and the students need the daycare that Hilltop or any other facility will provide."
Scott Sullivan, Leawood junior and Unite presidential candidate, led the subcommittee that proposed funds for a new child-care center. He said that more public pressure should be exerted on the University to make financing a higher priority.
Unite's proposal, a matching-fund process between student and University fees, would allow students, staff and faculty to bear an equal share of the burden. Sullivan said.
The value of a new child-care facility has been acknowledged by all sides. Pisani said the Hiltop building was having major problems that made it
"Child care is something that I've worked hard for in the past, and it's something that I'll continue to work hard for in the future," Sullivan said.
less than adequate.
P. BURROWS
"The building won't hold up for 25 years," Pisani said.
The number of children accepted into Hilltop also has been a continuing problem. Some children have been on a waiting list for
entry for more than four years without being admitted. Pisani said.
Pisani said children of KU students made up about 50 percent of the total Hilltop enrollment. The children of faculty and staff make up 30 to 35 percent, and the other 15 to 20 percent are children of former students, faculty and staff.
The cost of sending a child to Hilltop is determined on a sliding scale based on a parent's financial status, not whether the parent is a student or staff member, Pisani said.
"Students need to be on their guard, especially when alcohol is involved," Keary said. "If you drop your defenses even a little bit, you could end up somewhere you don't want to be."
Ward also said that female vacationers should be especially careful at bars. A drug called Robohynol, or "rooftops," has been used in several rapes in Florida and is prevalent in the state, according to the Miami Herald.
Tipsy travelers attract troubles
KU Police Sgt. Chris Keary said a lot of situations could cause problems for students on spring break.
Fort Lauderdale Police Detective Clinton Ward said students in a new environment and around new people should stay aware of safety at all times.
"People usually aren't cautious about their property," Ward said. "A lot of thefts happen when people go out and don't bother to lock their hotel door."
"When people go out, people need to pay attention to their drinks to make sure no one slips anything into them." Ward said.
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
A mass exodus of students will leave the University of Kansas this weekend, headed for sun-drenched beaches and all-night parties. But vacations could turn ugly for students who aren't careful.
Ward didn't know how often the drug was used to coerce women into sex, he said, because rape often is not reported. But he did say the drug made people feel drunk, enhanced the effects of alcohol and caused memory loss.
Wendy Lassey, Wichita sophomore, said she and friends were flying to Newport Beach, Calif., for break, but she already had thought about protecting herself while on vacation.
"We're all carrying travelers checks and ATM cards," Lassey said. "We're not going to be carrying a lot of cash." Lassey also said her personal safety was in the front of her mind.
"My aunt who lives out in California told me to be careful," she said. "She said to make sure that when we go somewhere to make sure there were a lot of people around."
1
2A
Friklay, March 21, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
QuickINFO
WEATHER
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
73
35
Partly sunny with wind increasing to 20-30 mph.
SATURDAY
64
39
Mostly sunny and a bit cooler.
CAMPUS EVENTS
SUNDAY
70
44
Warmer and still mostly sunny.
Assemblages, featuring artwork by Karen Jacks and Ardys Ramberg, will be at the Phoenix Gallery, 919 Massachusetts St., until April 15. Call 843-0080.
Office of Study Abroad will have a meeting about French-language study abroad at 10:30 a.m. today at 4021 Wescoe Hall. Call 864-3742.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel. Contact: the Rev. Raymond May, 843-0357.
ON CAMPUS
Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center will sponsor Pulling the Teeth of the Tropics: Environment, Disease, Race and the U.S. Sanitary Program in Panama, 1904-1914, from 4 to 6 p.m. today at the Hall Center Conference Room. Call 864-4798.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact: the Rev. Raymond May, 843-0357.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. Contact: Adam Capron, 842-9112.
KU Amnesty International will sponsor a write-a-thon and candlelight vigil from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact: Andrew Humphrey, 864-473.
KU Ballroom Dance Club will have lessons at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union. Contact: Shane Haas, 864-6597.
False report on Israel explodes across news station air waves
MSNBC retracts information after discovering impostor's hoax
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The cable news channel MSNBC was the victim of an embarrassing hoax when it broadcast a false report of an explosion in Israel and had to quickly retract it.
The false report came about 2 p.m. Tuesday. The report aired a few minutes after NBC Tel Aviv producer Shelly Howard had filed a live report on MSNBC about growing tensions between Jews and Palestinians in Israel.
A few minutes later, a man called MSNBC's news desk and identified himself as Howard, saying there had been an explosion with injuries in Israel, MSNBC representative Cameron Blanchard said.
The cable channel's news reader, Gulstan Dart, reported on the air that there had been an explosion and promised more details.
MSNBC was about to put the caller on air to discuss the report with Dart when it became clear that it was not Howard on the telephone, Blanchard said.
Dart immediately said on the air that the report was untrue.
"Clearly, this was mischief at work," Blanchard
said. "We immediately corrected the erroneous information. The caller did not get on the air, and we don't want to encourage this behavior further
with additional comment."
She would not comment on whether MSNBC was able to trace the hoax call or if it was evaluating procedures to make sure erroneous
"Clearly, this was mischief at work."
Cameron Blanchard MSNBC representative
information doesn't air again.
lensons have been high in Israel because of a decision by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to go ahead with construction of a Jewish house project in disputed east Jerusalem.
MSNBC Cable, a news-and-information joint venture of NBC and Microsoft Corp., has been on the air since last July. It joined a competitive industry that features two other all-news stations, CNN and Fox News Channel.
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KANSAN
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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.
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 $80. 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.
CORRECTIONS
a. m. March 28.
A Kansan staff report printed in Wednesday's paper erroneously reported that the court date for the South Lawrence Trafficway case in the U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Kan., was scheduled for March 31. The court date is 9
a.m. March 28
A story on page 1A of Wednesday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Tanning beds are not available at Total Fitness Athletic Center, 2108 W. 27th St.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 1, 1997
3A
Kansas sewage bills may rise
State fighting new regulations
By Paul Eakins and Ann Marchand Kansan staff writers
Environmental Protection Agency regulations may increase sewer bills throughout Kansas, unless Kansas legislators set their way.
Legislators are attempting to pass a bill that would keep Kansas towns from having to follow new EPA regulations for the next two years. The regulations would make water in the state cleaner but could increase costs by as much as 25 percent.
The EPA policy, which began in 1994, decreases the amount of ammonia in water put back in rivers from wastewater plants, as well as the amount of strazine from agricultural runoff, said Dave Wagner, wastewater treatment superintendent for the Lawrence plant.
Some legislators have shrugged off the suggested standards for wastewater treatment and have said they are ineffective.
"I think that there are enough questions about what standards we're using that we really need to take a good hard look at the standards," said REN, Troy Findley, D-Lawrence.
Rep. Tom Sloan, R-Lawrence,
wrote the bill, Substitute House Bill
2368. The original bill was written by
Rep. Andrew Howell, R-Fort Scott,
and proposed suspending all water
quality standards in Kansas indefinitely.
The bill substitute passed the House Tuesday and will be considered by Senate committees next week.
Sloan's bill also established a commission to review the EPA and Kansas Department of Health and Environment standards and to assess the advantages and disadvantages of changing them. The commission would submit its final report to the Legislature by June 30, 1998. The commission's recommended standards must then be implemented by June 30, 1999.
To implement the EPA standards now, Kansas towns would have to build new facilities that would cost millions of dollars for many towns, Sloan said. The cost for Lawrence would be $10 million, so the bill should be passed and more research should be done, Wagner said.
"We hate to build a $10 million facility, and then the scientists come back and say, 'You know what, we really didn't need to do that.' Wagner said.
Mike Wilden, Lawrence city manager, said the standards would be expensive for citizens, with sewer bills increasing 10 percent to 25 percent to pay for the new facilities.
Small towns would be hurt the most because they don't have the money to pay for new plants, Wildgensaid.
The EPA regulations could hurt the University of Kansas and the student population as well.
bills were to increase, and the University could not get additional money from the state, the money would have to be taken from other University expenditures.
For 1997, the University budgeted $197,040 for sewage bills for campus facilities, sald Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations. If the
A 10 percent rise would make the charges increase to $216,744, and a 25 percent increase to $246,300.
Rent also could be higher for students living in residence halls, said Kenneth Stoner, director of student housing.
"If we get increases in utilities, the only place we can get that is from students' room and board." he said.
Stoner said it would be difficult to estimate how housing costs might change, but if no other factors made up for the increases, students would pay the difference.
Based on figures for October 1996, Stoner estimated that the housing department paid $91,049 for sewage treatment at the residence halls over a nine-month period.
If the costs increased 10 percent, the costs of treatment in the residence halls would increase to $100,154. A 25 percent increase would raise the costs to $13,812.
Despite the costs, the EFA believes the state should follow the guidelines and has threatened to sue if the bill is signed by the governor, according to a news release from the office of U.S. Pat. Roberts, R-Kansas.
Rowena Michaels, director of the office of external programming for the Region VII EPA office, declined to comment on the threat but said EPA officials had been asked to testify before the Senate committee on energy and natural resources.
EPA wastewater regulations could increase sewer costs by 10 to 25 percent.
Cost of regulations
$197,04C
1996 cost plus 25%
1996 cost plus 10%
1996 cost
KU sewer bill
$99,448
Residence halts
sewer bill
Sloan,however,said the EPA
would not have a solid case against the state because the Kansas Department of Health and Environment tightened its wastewater standards in 1994, but the EPA has not yet approved them.
"There's a legal and ethical problem for the EPA: How do you criticize a state for not implementing what you didn't approve in three years?" Sloan said.
Rep. Laura McClure, D-Osborne,
said that regardless of the EPA or the
Legislature, Kansans had a right to
expect clean water. She said that
improving wastewater treatment
plants would save money in the long
run, but short-term costs would rise.
“It’s far less expensive to keep something out of the water than to take it out later,” McClure said. “Without water, there’s no life.”
Foreign students striving for unity
By Umut Bayramoglu
Konsep staff写
Kansan staff writer
More than 1,500 international students are on campus, but lack of unity between their individual groups results in lack of representation in the Student Senate and on campus in general.
Irvin Jerez, Tegucigalpa, Honduras, senior and vice president of the International Student Association, said it was crucial to have unity between different groups on campus.
"There is close to 2,000 international students on campus, and we need to get more involved," Jerez said.
Jerez said they had been holding meetings for the leaders of international groups and had reached 15 international groups so far.
"There are numerous organizations," he said. "The decision to come together and form a unity depends on all the leaders of these groups."
Jerez said one of the main goals of the meetings was to get a representative for international students in the Student Senate.
Beatrice Selomulyo, Jakarta, Indonesia, junior and president of the Indonesian Student Association, said international students needed a representative for their opinions to be heard.
"All we have is a student seat right now, but we need someone to represent us," he said.
"It's sad, you know. International students are a part of KU, too," she said. "Even one representative would be good."
"If we communicate more, we can get involved with different organizations' activities," he said.
Another benefit of forming unity among international groups, Jerez said, would be getting more support for programs.
Jue Wang, president of Chinese Students and Scholars Friendship Association, said that working together would be to the advantage of international student organizations.
"If we can get together,we can exchange ideas for programs and activities," he said.
Jerez said ISA also was working on putting together an International Awareness Week in April.
Wang, Kaifeng, China, graduate student, said that an awareness week would let American students know about the contributions of international students.
"We as international students contribute to the University financially and academically," he said. "Some Americans realize that, but some don't."
Selomulyo said she thought the meetings among the international student leaders already had helped their group.
"We are planning on playing basketball with the Taiwanese Student Association," she said. "If we did not have those meetings, we wouldn't have that."
Dead fish compilation keeps researchers busy sorting
Collection is among largest in the nation
By Mike Perryman Special to the Kansan
Kate Shaw fumbles a four-inch, brown-gray fish in her hands as she tries to wrap a paper label around its slippery body. She dips it in a series of alcohol solutions and places it in a jar on a shelf in the University of Kansas' Natural History Museum.
The fish, a Midwestern darter, is only one of 400,000 fish specimens dating back to the 1880s that are preserved in the Ichthyology Department collection on the second floor of Dyche Hall.
The University, hopelessly landlocked in Kansas, has to find creative ways to acquire marine specimens. Often, it means swapping fishy samples.
the university is important for other universities that are conducting research.
The collection is one of the largest among U.S. universities and ranks between 16th and 25th in the nation. Although it is known nationwide among ichthyologists, the collection is like a well-hidden secret at the University, Shaw said.
The large and diverse fish collection at
Not all universities have extensive "dead" fish collections, and they often have to refer to KU's collection to borrow or exchange specimens for research.
In return, KU's museum receives marine fish from the Atlantic coast from Harvard.
Shaw, who received her Ph.D. from the University, is in charge of acquiring, sorting, labeling and maintaining the specimens.
The biology department benefits greatly from the ichthyology program, Shaw said.
Tenthology's tradition or systematics and collection at KU attracts some excellent graduate students from around the nation." she said.
Systematics is essentially the gathering, organizing, arranging and documenting of information involving the collections.
"They go through our program and eventually become part of the field of excellent researchers. That looks good for KU." Shaw said.
Mike Ghedotti has been in the ichthyology graduate program for four and a half years.
Researchers, like Shaw and Ghedotti, organize specimens by determining the characteristics that are similar among them. By comparing the similarities, the researchers can trace genetic relatives and ancestors of certain specimens, and then better understand the path of evolution.
Shaw and Ghedotti said that taking care of the collection was time-consuming. The collection is always changing, and it requires a lot of maintenance.
The department is constantly exchanging specimens with other universities for research, and ichthyology curators E.O. Wiley and Walter Dimmick, both fish researchers at KU, gather specimens worldwide.
Wiley is teaching a course in systematics and phylogenetics this semester.
Dimmick is an expert in DNA sequence and analysis and taught evolution for three years at KU. Because he is in Africa on a research expedition, Dimmick is not teaching this semester.
Dimmick, who is beginning his fourth year as co-curator and head of DNA research in ichthyology at the museum, recently received a $275,000 grant from
the national Science Foundation for his Ethiopian studies. From January until March, he will be working with a Russian colleague at the Genale River drainage in Ethiopia.
Many of the fish in the collection are gathered locally. On Fridays, after Shaw and graduate students such as Ghedotti return from collecting fish specimens from the Mill Creek drainage in Kansas, the ichthyology program engages in "fish sort."
Fish sort is an opportunity for undergraduates planning to enter the field of ichthyology to use the museum.
Undergraduates involved in ichthyology and students just interested in fish go to the museum on Friday to help sort and label the newly acquired specimens.
While sitting at tables breathing in the distinct odors of dead fish and formaldehyde, students study and sort through hundreds of brown, gray, yellow and orange fish specimens.
The fish sort is just one example of how the collection has served education at the University, Shaw said. The collection is useful for the University, but it serves a larger purpose, she said.
"They serve as a repository for that information," she said. "They are essentially safeguarding the heritage."
H. K. S.
Andrei Urasov / KANBAM
Two people in the ichthyology department sort and label dead fish for the University's collection. KU has one of the largest fish collections among universities, ranking between 16 and 25th in the nation.
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
4A
CRAIG LANG, Editor
SUSANNA LOOP, Managing editor
KIMBELY CRAPIEFF, Editorial editor
TOM EBILEN, General manager, news adviser
MARK OZAK, Business manager
DENNIS OHAUP, Retail sales manager
JUSTIN KNUPE, Technology coordinator
JA YSTEENER, Sales and marketing adviser
Friday,March 21,1997
HAVE A SUNNY, FUNNY, SAFE
SPRING BREAK
Editorials
SafeBreak program provides protection, informs students
Watkins Memorial Health Center is offering a program to help students have a safe and enjoyable break. This effort is laudable, and the recommendations and information given to students through the program should be utilized to make this year's spring break as safe as possible.
The program, called SafeBreak, provides informational packets to inform and protect students. The packets, which are given away in Watkins, include condoms and sun block. The packets also include the following spring break safety tips:
A 12-ounce beer, a glass of wine and a shot of liquor all contain an equal amount of alcohol. Driving skills can be affected by one to two such drinks per hour.
Abstaining from sex is the best protection against sexually transmitted diseases and HIV. If used properly, latex condoms lubricated with nonoxynol-9 are adequate for people who are sexually active.
To have a worry-free spring break, students should follow safety tips.
Use a broad-spectrum, water-resistant sunscreen with an SPF of 15 or higher. Apply it at least 15 to 30 minutes before going into the sun. Be careful especially between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m when the sun is most intense.
Use the BACCHUS maneuver to help intoxicated people who are passed out. Make sure that people are lying on their side to keep them from choking to death if they vomit.
Avoid taking drinks from strangers and do not leave beverages unattended. In areas such as Florida, Texas and California, the drug Robynpol, or "roofties", is prevalent and can be slipped to an unsuspecting drinker. The drug is colorless, tasteless, odorless and creates a drunken-like effect that lasts from eight to 10 hours, often causing amnesia.
The packet also gives information about how many drinks it takes for a person of a certain weight to become intoxicated. It also gives legal information on underage drinking.
To have a safe spring break, some precautions and common-sense guidelines need to be followed. The SafeBreak program at Watkins helps provide necessary information that can make spring break safer and less stressful.
GERRY DOYLE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Campus needs recycling center
A campus-wide recycling program is an issue that concerns many students. However, the University has never had a comprehensive recycling program. This could change if a recent Student Senate proposal for a recycling center on West Campus is passed. This center would be a good start to a much-needed recycling program.
The proposal calls for a recycling center that is 4,000 square feet and would cost about $137,000. Part of this money would be raised through a $1 student recycling fee and the rest would come from University allocations.
Students have voiced support for a campus-wide recycling program, and the University should shoulder some of the financial burden.
In fact, the center would ultimately pay for itself. It would save the University thousands of dollars by circumventing costs of transporting large amounts of recyclable materials, like paper and cardboard, to dump sites. In addition, a profit could be generated through the sale of recyclable materials to companies that handle them.
Students and University administrators can work together.make a difference.
Some students argue that transportation of recyclable materials to the West Campus center would be difficult. However, Grey Montgomery, student body president, said that environmental health and safety workers would be responsible for picking up recyclable materials from University buildings.
versity would handle the general maintenance and upkeep. This would be more efficient than a student-run center, which would depend upon volunteerism and could become overburdened if not enough students participated. University employees would manage the recycling center and it would thus get adequate attention.
Waste management can be improved by the use of recycling, and the University can do its part by recycling some of its waste products. Despite objections by some, students and University administrators can work together to make a difference. The proposed student recycling center is one way this can be achieved.
Many students agree that recycling is an important check to curb the tremendous amount of waste generated by mass human consumption.
Once the center is running, the Uni-
NICK ZALLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Hey, pay phone user, it's an extra dime
Column
"The call you have made requires an initial deposit. Please hang up momentarily, listen for the dial tone, deposit the amount specified on the instruction card and dial your call again."
Looking down at the pay telephone I was using outside the West Glen Theatre in Lenexa last weekend, I was shocked to find that the required deposit was no longer the time-honored quarter but rather 35 cents.
MARY CORCORAN
phone call? A phone call has cost a quarter for as long as I can remember. My parents might remember when a call only cost a dime, but that was before my time. In my life, a quarter was what it took to reach out and touch someone.
Southwestern Bell announced the pay phone rates March 1. I must have been a little behind the times not to notice until two weeks later, but I don't make many calls from pay phones.
As I scrounged for a dime, I began to feel a little betrayed by the phone company. How could it raise the price of a
To find out why the rates went up, I dialed 0, which is still a free call, to talk to an operator. She transferred me to a sales associate who told me Southwestern Bell raised its rates because it was not making enough money "to continue calls." She then tried to transfer me to the publicity department, but the transfer was interrupted, and all I got was a busy signal.
I guess that's what the sales associate meant when she said they weren't making enough money to continue calls.
I have a feeling that changing the pay phone rate
Southwestern Bell also has helped destroy a number of country music songs. Although I'm not a country fan myself, growing up in the Midwest has exposed me to my share of country music. I know we're all familiar with the song line: "Here's a quarter, call someone who cares."
Country artists vying for our market will have to change their lyrics to compensate for the rising telephone prices.
Actually, I'm not that upset about the new rate. Last weekend was the first time in about six months that I had to put coins into a pay phone. I've been using prepaid calling cards instead, as has almost everyone else I know.
will upset, or at least affect, a much larger group of people than Southwestern Bell ever considered.
I rans and graduation are approaching for high schools and colleges throughout the state. How many of these schools have given away key chains that hold a quarter as part of a promotion to combat drunk driving after the celebrations? I know that SADD and MADD have made thousands of these now-obsolete novelties. How is a person, drunk from an after-graduation party, supposed to call a cab, when the phone requires 35 cents, and their key chain only holds a quarter?
A 10-cent increase was probably required to maintain a constant level of service. But just in case, I should probably call Southwestern Bell again and find out what's really going on.
"The call you have made requires an initial deposit..."
With the advent of calling cards, I think the coin-operated phone is on its way out.
Mary Corcoran is an Overland Park sophomore in Journalism.
Letters
Tamecka Dixon is a woman, a great player
The article about Tamecka Dixon that appeared in the March 10 issue of The University Daily Kansan reminded us of how far women still have come in athletics.
Although Dixon is the Big 12 player of the year, the article seemed to focus on her lack of a Y chromosome.
Dixon talked about not having any women role models to look up to in basketball, but now that she is a role model herself she has not been given much respect by the Kansan.
If she can be compared to Michael Jordan, as she is in the article, then she is a great player—period.
In the past, women have not had many opportunities in basketball, but now that times are changing it is time to change our attitudes.
Women now have role models like Tamecka Dixon, and there is no need to wish that women played more like men.
If Dixon and so many other basketball players are doing so well, then they do play like women, and they have proven that women play great.
Regan Cowan
Regan Cowan
Scottsdale, Ariz. senior
Janet Cull
Kansas City, Mo. senior
Catharine Gray
Wichita senior
Lori Hoober
Olathe junior
Jennifer Keltner
Wichita senior
Charlene Muehlenhard
associate professor
of psychology
and women's studies
Society forces many to hide their sexuality
It amazes me when someone says that he or she has nothing against homosexuals, just as long as they don't force their sexuality on him or her.
The irony in this statement is that we as a society force heterosexuality on all individuals everyday. This ranges from the extreme firing of people based on their same sex orientation to the subtle underlying assumptions in asking a man if he has a girlfriend, to the horror of taking someone's life because she is a lesbian, to the injustice of government refusal and to legally recognize same sex marriages.
While differing in degrees, these all imply the same basic unspoken rule—heterosexual
ity is the norm, the standard that we must all adhere to in order to safely and acceptably make our way through society.
In reality, people have little to fear of the homosexual population forcing anything on anyone.
The homosexual part of them is forced to hide in secrecy and shame while a mask of heterosexual appears for society to accept.
When I read an article in The University Daily Kansan about coming out in the workplace, these are the thoughts that came to my mind. I felt a horrible, sick twisting in my stomach as I realized that I live in a society in which people's identities are cut apart and mutilated.
For fear of abandonment and harm both physical and emotional, they can't take off their masks to anyone—not their coworkers, their classmates, their friends nor their families. When they do so, they often pay a price higher than they could ever imagine; they endure pain and loss simply for being real, for exemplifying truth.
How can they when they are just trying to maintain their own personal security in a world that tells them that a key part of them is wrong? It is they who are being forced to take on an identity that is not really theirs.
The words of a friends kept running through my head. He once said to me that I would never understand what is to be discriminated based on my sexuality. "If you fell in love with someone, you could bring them home to meet your parents," he said. "You could share that wonderful experience with your family. I can't Philius F. Martin
Larned, Kan., junior
Former BSU vice president could have other motives
I am surprised and appalled that Student Senate would take the word of one student to cut the Black Student Union budget by $5,000 without knowing this member's real motivations.
I believe that Dion Jones has a personal vendetta against the leadership and membership of BSU. Last year, Jones ran for BSU president and lost.
This is important because traditionally BSU's vice president succeeds the out-going president. Jones' situation differs in that the membership didn't have the confidence in his ability to lead them; therefore, he was not elected.
He has tried all types of tactics to hurt those in leadership and BSU.
Jones is using Student Senate as a forum to be get back at those who did not elect him.
It seems to m that his reason for saying that other organizations could use the money is a ploy to undermine all the work of those in leadership, and to detract from the fact that BSU in the past did use its allocation to put on programs for the entire campus.
I believe that Jones also is using this as an opportunity to show all those members who did not vote for him that this would not have happened if they had elected him.
As former president of BSU in which Jones served as my vicepresident, I have seen Jones' risk hurting the entire organization when he does not get his way.
The second point that I would like to address is Jones' objection to BSU presentation of Def Comedy Jam. Who is he to judge if BSU should have a specific program? He is only one of many. BSU is a democracy that carries out the will of the majority while protecting he rights of the minority.
If he now objects to Def Comedy Jam, where was his objection when he was vice president or at the general assembly meeting when it was voted upon?
I do hope that this new information about Jones and his proposals will not allow one person's vengeful motivations to stump the growth of an important organization.
It would be a travesty and an undemocratic move by Student Senate and the Finance committee if Jones' words were allowed to discount the will of many.
Jessica Keith
Kansas City, Kan., senior KU is an institution of learning, not fashion
This is a letter about the story KU style case for fashion police.
First of all, let me start out by apologizing to those international students that find us without fashion, on behalf of myself and every other fashion missits walking around campus, sorry.
What's wrong with jeans? Not everyone wears jeans, also. I see Dockers, slacks and other dress pants when I look around. Jeans do not define a person's individuality. Not all faces are the same.
I'm sorry if we don't update our wardrobes to be in fashida.
Most students have more important concerns. Last time I checked, students had to pay tuition and other bills.
If deciding on what to wear out clubbing is more stressful than class work, then there's something wrong with your priorities.
Ryan Falkenreuth
Olathe junior
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 21,1997
5A
Victory or Voodoo?
Theories suggest that athletes can condition their minds and bodies without physical practice
G G
LOSE FAIL
FAIL MISTAKE
FALL FAIL
MISHAP
WIN! PREVAIL
WIN
DEFEAT WIN!
OVERCOME
fracting studies in an effort to connect visualization with brain-to-motor stimulation.
Continued from Page 1A
Theories suggest that the same impulses the brain sends to the muscles during actual play can be recreated by picturing the event in your mind.
Consequently, visualization should allow athletes to condition their minds and bodies for competition without biological waste.
their minds and bodies for compe
tition without physical practice.
Sport psychology studies seem to show that visualization does reinforce and condition muscular an
49 force and condition muscular and neural connections.
Competitive edge or smoke and mirrors?
In his doctoral dissertation, Scott Ward, KU graduate in sport psychology, said the use of imagery in sports was an effective addition to an athlete's training program. But
the exact function imagery plays in
biotics remains unclear.
"There are some studies that tend to point to the idea that visualization works," Templin said. "The difficulty is that there is no real proof. There are a lot of things in this world that work, but they can't be scientifically proven. And since 90 percent of the Olympic athletes
at Atlanta used visualization in "their training program, that should be some grounds that it works."
Betsy Klein, a psychologist who has worked with professional football players from the Kansas City Chiefs, has been told by a number of athletes that visualization
"A big problem arises when psychologists try to determine if visualization alone is responsible."
Klein said. "There could be many factors affecting the way an athlete performs."
increases their performance, but she questions whether it is the real performance enhancer.
"There is no adequately controlled, consistent evidence that visualization works," Holmes said. "I think my colleagues in psychology, especially sport psychology, aren't happy when I point these things out, but this visualization is all Mickey Mouse."
Balance of sport psychology on visualization, as well as the lack of scientific proof, have other psychology professionals asking whether visualization should be taught without proof of its effectiveness.
Dave Cook, former director of applied sport psychology at KU, strongly disagrees with Holmes.
Big-time clients
Cook resigned last year from the University to pursue big-time sports clients that were in search of mental training.
He now runs the Dallas-based sport psychology company Mental Advantage. His client list includes members of the National Basketball Association, National Football
"...this
"...this visualization is all Mickey Mouse."
David Holmes professor of psychology
League, Major League Baseball,
Professional Golfers Association
and world-champion track and
power-lifting teams.
"Visualization is one of the critical things that sport psychologists can teach athletes," Cook said. "It gives the athletes a mental and physical balance in competition. This sets up the athletes so they can form an
optimistic picture of the outcome of competition."
The San Antonio Spurs were looking for that optimistic approach when they hired Cook, said Greg Popovich, vice president of basketball operations for the team.
"The type of mental skills Cook teaches is being used by almost all professional teams," Popovich said. "We will use those skills to get our players to a higher level of play. Get out on the court and just practicing isn't enough."
Douglas Demney, director of KU psychology undergraduate studies, said that he was uncomfortable with using unproven psychological techniques and that sports psychology should pursue more rigorous testing of visualization.
He said visualization could be viewed as more of an art form than an exact science.
"Speculation and theory are helpful, but proof is what psychologists should work for," he said.
KU doctoral students who work
with KU coaches, athletes and outside clients in the sport psychology program say they stand behind the effectiveness of visualization.
They work with athletes as a team or on a one-to-one basis at the Peak Performance Clinic. At the clinic, started by Cook in 1990, athletes are taught visualization techniques and ways to incorporate them into all aspects of their sports.
Some widely used techniques include relaxing and imagining what it takes to be successful, the use of a key word to trigger positive visualization and self-recorded reinforcement audio tapes.
Relax and see the strike zone
"Visualization can be seen as the freeway between the mind and body," said Mike Norwood, sport psychology doctoral student. "It builds a muscle-memory reflex so that athletes can turn their visualization quickly and easily into actual performance."
"Visualization can be seen as the freeway between the mind and body."
Mike Norwood doctoral student
Josh Wingerd, a pitcher for the Kansas baseball team, had surgery
Norwood said mental reflex through visualization was a matter of survival at Division I colleges, where winning often comes down to a tenth of a second or the last foul shot.
to remove bone spurs from his throwing shoulder before coming to Kansas last year.
It only took a couple of bad games to shake his confidence to the point at which throwing strikes was one of the toughest things for him to do.
"There was no way I could throw a strike because in my mind, if I threw anything over the plate, they were going to hit it five miles," he said. "My confidence was shot."
Wingerd had never used visualization before going to the Peak Performance Clinic for assistance.
He worked with KU doctoral graduate Jeff Kress on using key words to trigger positive visualization during cames.
When Winged would begin to struggle in a game, he would remind himself of the key words "balance," "strike zone" and "speed."
Key words are supposed to put an athlete in a positive state of mind and increase focus on the task at hand.
But Wingerd uses visualization in a way not taught by sport psychologists. Instead of positive visualization, he imagines giving up home runs and base hits.
"I will visualize myself not doing so good with my pitchers to find out how that makes me feel. If you focus on success all the time, then you won't know how to move on after failure," he said. "When I started to visualize hits and homers, things really started clicking for me and getting better."
Beth Kane, assistant golf coach and Peak Performance Clinic facilitator, encourages the athletes with whom she works to use positive visualization.
"I want people to visualize what they are like when they are performing at an awesome level," she said. "They need to be thinking what would they want to be like on the most important shot or game of their life."
That shot came Oct. 7 in the form of a hole in one for Anne Clark, Salem, Ill. senior KU golfer.
"Preshot visualization might have helped me get off such a good shot, but when I found out that it was a hole in one, it actually shook my confidence," she said. "After that hole, I had to visualize myself doing good on the remaining holes to try and focus."
Sport psychologists are confident that advances in brain-monitoring science will help prove that visualization has an identifiable impact on athletic performance.
But until that scientific proof comes to light, sport psychologists will have to endure criticism from their peers.
"I will welcome visualization with open arms," said Holmes, the KU psychology professor. "But the only thing that will pry my arms open is proof that it works. Proof that all psychologists in the field of psychology should demand before it is put to use."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
19 12
Scott Dold gazes in front of a stained glass window of the 1912 version of the Kansas Jayhawk, which is in his home's "Jayhawk Room." He is a diehard fan, and his roots remain tied to the plains of Kansas for his lifetime
Mad about the Jayhawks
With Kansas hoping to make a run to the Final Four, one fan believes that there's no place like Lawrence
Story by Nick Charalambous
Scott Dold lives, breathes and bleeds crimson and blue, and he's madder about KU than a March hare.
OK, so you might not think that's too strange, given the fact that the Jayhawks are gearing up for their fifth national basketball championship and that Dold is an assistant director of admissions and a KU alumnus.
But think again.
"He would love that to happen," said Jean, his wife of six years. "But it's never going to happen."
When he married his wife, a Wichita State and KU law graduate, in 1990, he insisted that the KU alma mater be played after the exchange of vows. But his wife wasn't too crazy about that.
Do think again. He's serious about naming his first child "Kansas." His wife says the names Raef or Pierce also are high on the list. He has even joked about the baby, which is due May 10, being born on centercourt at Allen Field House.
In the Dold's kitchen, there are pictures of the Campanile and Fraser Hall hand-etched into the wall tiles. And in the living room, there is a hand-made 18-inch stained glass window of a 1912 Jayhawk.
"Initially, I said, 'Oh my God,' but it was played on a harp, so it was really rather nice," she said.
Once he and Jean have renovated their old
townhouse on Tennessee Street and unpacked the cartons full of KU memorabilia, he is planning to convert the back room into a Jayhawk room, a shrine devoted to all things KU.
For Dold, the University of Kansas was love at first sight. He knew it the very first time he
that his parents on campus as a National Merit scholar.
"I stepped out of the car and looked at my mom and said, "This is where I'm going to school and where I'm going to live," Dold said. "My gut feeling told me this was it. This was my place."
After graduating from the University, Dold served six years in the Marine Corps from 1982 to 1988 in Korea, Hawaii
as an assistant director of admissions.
"I absolutely loved my legal practice," he said. "It was the pull of KU; the chance to be around this; the chance to give something back to KU; the chance to be in Lawrence."
Dawn Kovats, coordinator of transfer student recruitment, was on the search com
and the Philippines, attaining the rank of captain. Dold was born into a military family, so he had moved many times as a child, but of all the places he had lived, Kansas was always home, he said.
"My gut feeling told me this was it. This was my place."
In 1988, Dold returned to the University to study law and then practiced for five years as a prosecutor and defense attorney. But he gave it all up in 1995 to earn much less money
Scott Dold Assistant director of admissions
mittee that hired Dold and vividly remembers his interview. Instead of giving a five-minute presentation, he hauled out a trunk from beneath his legs, began unpacking all sorts of memorabilia and talked for about an hour about KU.
his insanity about KU."
"We were just sitting there with our mouths open thinking this guy was nuts, "Kovats said. "Evidently, we'd only scratched the surface of
Dold remembers a World War I recruiting poster that hung above his bed as a child. An old-fashioned sailor in a crackerjack uniform was leaning over a man sitting in an armchair with a book. The poster said: "Don't read history, be a part of it."
Dold says he's done both. He reads history books and journals for two hours every night.
rus mother, an antique dealer, helps him find artifacts from KU history.
'She found a 1912 commencement program and stuck that in an envelope and sent it up to me for my birthday. She found a little glass bottle with a Jayhawk on it that said 'Lawrence Creamery.' And that's just the kind of thing she knows that I'll stick in a box and someday put up on the shelf.
"I was here. I was a little teeny part of this history and so I want to know about things I was a part of," Dold said. "I like to know about this place because it is a part of me."
Dold will leave the office of admissions April 4 to look after his baby. He says it's one more role in his life that he will relish, until it is time to do something else — like working at Disneyland for a summer after he retires.
His friend John Hampton, an athletic trainer with the 1988 national championship basketball squad, said that while he and Dold studied together in the late 1980s, their goal in college was to graduate, let their wives earn money as attorneys and buy a sports bar.
"We would buy Dos Hombres, put stadium chairs in the balcony on the upper deck, put in a big screen TV to make it seem like you were in Allen Field House, get a direct feed from the clock so people would know exactly how much time was left and pipe in Max and Bob," he said. "Instead of waitresses, we'd have a beer guy, like at a baseball game."
BUTTERY CHUNKS MUSIC REVIEW
Bon Folds Five: Whatever and Ever Amen (Caroline Records)
Can a rock band that has no guitar still
Can a rock band the
threesh2 Well, the trio
biasin Wei, the duo from Chapel Hill known as Ben Folds Five have answered that question with a resounding yes. The new album, Whatever and Ever Amen, is more mature and melow than the band's first album, the self-titled Ben Folds Five. Songs like One Angry
Dwarf and 200 Solemn Faces and Kate are typical of the group's piano-thrash-funk-punk, while songs like Smoke and Brick show the thoughtful and introspective side of the band. Fortunately, the band has come together and tightened its musical style while leaving its quirky lyrics intact. The track Songs for the Dumped is a perfect example of the sarcastic, funny lyrics that we have come to expect from the band.
DARK FROGS TWO
A NOIRS GLOBAL TWIN
NICK LAVE & THE GARTH PLEYX
So you wanted to take
a break/Slow it down some and
have some space. Well @#*% you,
too/Give me my money
hack/You b--h.
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds:
The Boatman's Call (Reprise
Records)
I couldn't have said it better myself.
Nick Cave has released an expressive new album that is in total contrast with his previous
Murder Ballads. The Boatman's Call is 12 slow songs that show off Cave's mellow stylings. The songs that appear on Boatman are intensely private and melancholy, making listeners feel as if they had taken a brief glimpse into the world of a tortured lover. Songs
(Are You) The One I've Been Waiting For? And Far From Me are definitely romantic, in a dark mysterious way, and the words draw you in to tell their story.
For you dear I was bom/For you I was raised up/For you I've lived and for you I will die/For you I am dying now.
Matthew Sweet: Blue Sky On Mars (Volkman Records)
If you are afraid that pop music is dying out, fear no more. With Blue Sky On Mars, Matthew Sweet, the prince of
college pop, serves up a moist, fluffy album with a light, creamy filling. Sweet admits his pop roots, and that's what makes the album work. There is no pretension, just straight-ahead pop, with the occasional grungy-sounding guitar riff thrown in for good measure. But the bottom line is that for all the feel-good lyrics and uptime rhythms, it's still pretty good. And either Come to California or Where You Get Love is sure to be the obligatory hit from the new album. Blue Sky is sort of like a Pauly Shore movie: As long as you know it's going to be stupid and you don't expect too much, you'll like it.
Olive Oil
Mustard
Sauce
Shiner: Lula Divina (Hititt Records)
This Kansas City band needs to figure out what kind of sound it is going for. Is it alternative? Is it cheese rock? Or is it just plain bad? It is usually nice to see some sort of construction within a song, and on Lula Diva, it was hard to spot it. The mediocre singing is backed by muffled, mediocre music. Shiner needs about two more years of playing together before trying to attempt another pseudo-major label release. Shiner will be performing Saturday at the Bottleneck. Maybe they sound better live.
SHINER
julia divina
—Ashlee Roll
MAGIC JOHNSON
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MAGIC JOHNSON will have to wait until 2002 to be considered for the Basketball Hall of Fame. Hall of Fame trustees considered waiving the five-year waiting period for players earlier this year after getting a request from Johnson's agent, Hall spokesman Robin Deutsch said.
SPORTS
However, he said, the trustees 14-member executive committee had decided against allowing exemptions before getting into the specifics of Johnson's case.
Even though Johnson said he wanted the waiver so he could be enshrined in the same year as Larry Bird, who becomes eligible in 1998, Deutsch said one issue the trustees considered was whether a waiver could be considered because of a player's health. Johnson suffers from HIV and would like that to be considered.
TOMMY MORRISON IN TROUBLE WITH LAW
Boxer TOMMY MORRISON was arrested yesterday on a charge of driving under the influence of alcohol and violating the terms of a suspended sentence for carrying a
loaded handgun. Morrison, of Jay, Okla., was pulled over about 3 a.m. for driving 52 mph in a 30 mph zone near Fort Scott, Police Chief Larry Dixon said.
KINGS COACH FIRED
The Sacramento Kings, mired in a sevengame losing streak and on the brink of fading from the NBA playoff picture, fired fifth-season coach GARRY ST. JEAN yesterday.
The Kings picked assistant coach Eddie Jordan to replace St. Jean.
The Kings' seven-game losing streak is their longest since an 11-game slide in February of last season.
St. Jean's career record with the Kings was 160-239.
KINGS
FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1997
He took the Kings to the playoffs last year for the first time in a decade but lost to Seattle in the first round.
10
Fast BREAKS
Women's rowers travel to Tulsa for dual regatta
The Kansas women's rowing team will compete in a dual regatta against Tulsa tomorrow.
The dual will be held on Zink Lake on the Arkansas River in Tulsa, Okla. The competition begins at 10 a.m. with the varsity four. The lightweight four races are at 10:20 a.m., the freshman eight begins at 10:40 a.m. and the varsity eight race starts at 11:20 a.m.
SECTION B
After the regatta the team will travel to Natchitoches, La., for a week of spring training.
The team will train March 23-29. While in the Pelican State, the Jayhawks will practice two or three times a day on the Cane River Lake, rowing distances of 20 to 30 miles a day.
Assistant rowing coach Tami Odell said the trip would get the team ready for the spring season.
"The trip is excellent in terms of team bonding," Odell said. "It brings the freshman and varsity squads together. They spend a lot of hours on the water with the same people in the same place and are totally focused on rowing. They improve by leaps and bounds their rowing technique and movements in the boat."
NCAA tournament action heats ud as four advance
Now this is getting fun.
Sweet 16 games got under way last night in the NCAA tournament. If the first two games, which both went into overtime, are any indication of things to come, hold on to your seat.
In the Midwest Regional, it took top-seeded Minnesota two overtimes to defeat the No. 4 seed Clemson, 90-84. Golden Gopher guard Bobby Jackson scored a career-high 36 points.
—Kansan staff report
In the West Regional, second-seeded Utah and sixth-seeded Stanford traded baskets in overtime before Utah prevailed, 82-77.
For complete results from las night's games, see page 2B.
Swimsuit issue now optional for magazine's subscribers
NEW YORK — Sports illustrated has
gone swimsuit optional.
For the first time, Sports Illustrated published a notice offering subscribers the option of not receiving the annual swimsuit issue.
The notice appeared on the magazine's March 24 letters-to-the-editor page. Most of the letters concerned the swimsuit issue, including one that denounced it as "pormography."
Sports Illustrated representative Dave Mingey said that it was the first year the magazine had published such a notice to readers but that the magazine had offered the option for a few years.
Mingey said the magazine received about 79 letters this year critical of the swimsuit issue, but the number has been declining since 1975, when the magazine began keeping track.
Olympic gold medalist to make debut in the ring
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
Reid will make his professional debut tomorrow night, six months after winning an Olympic gold medal on a one-punch knockout of Cuba's Alfredo Duvergel in Atlanta.
Jones, the man many call the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, is a heavy favorite to retain the WBC light heavyweight title, but challenger Montell Griffin is unbeaten.
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — The day is at hand for David Reid and maybe for Roy Jones Jr.
The 12-round Jones-Griffin match at the Trump Taj Mahal will be televised at 8:30 p.m. on HBO, as will Reid's four-round middleweight bout against Sam Calderon.
The Associated Press
KANSAS 45
ACKSO
4
Forward Raef LaFrentz collides with two Jackson State players while fighting for a rebound at The Pyramid in Memphis, Tenn.
Fancy meeting you again
Revenge, Haase's wrist may be factors in game
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
In the post-game press conference following Arizona's 73-69 victory against the College of Charleston, a reporter asked Wildcat guard Mike Bibby what it would be like to play the No.1 team in America, Kansas.
Another concern for the Jayhawks is Jerod Haase's wrist. He went through only
"Arizona is the fastest, quickest team we coached against in our nine years," Williams said. "They really cover a lot of ground. Their athleticism, their quickness and their speed concern us."
But before Bibby could answer, Arizona coach Lute Olson covered the freshman's microphone and cautiously proclaimed, "You're terrified."
Despite having eight more losses than Kansas, Jayhawk coach Roy Williams said Kansas wouldn't take the Wildcats lightly when the teams play at 6:55 p.m. tonight in Birmingham, Ala.
a limited practice yesterday because of soreness. But trainer Mair Cairns said it was not unusual for Haase to be held from practice; it had been done at least three times this year.
Revenge also may be a factor. The Jayhawks defeated Arizona 83-80 last season in the third round of the NCAA Tournament.
"They're happy they got us because we beat them last year and they want to prove they're as good as us," Williams said. "Perhaps it gives them a little more incentive."
Michael Dickerson leads the Wildcats in scoring, averaging 20.1 points per game. The court leader for Arizona, however, is Bibby.
He sank two clutch free throws in the waning moments of Saturday's victory against Charleston.
"He is a complete player that has a great deal of savvy and a great deal of confidence," he said.
"Mike Bibby doesn't play like a freshman," Olson said. "He hasn't played like a freshman the whole year long."
Williams is equally impressed.
Bibby's progression, however, will be put
to the test tonight. He has the assignment of guarding Jacque Vaughn. Vaughn said he was recovering from bronchitis that had weakened him in the Purdue game. He still made 12 points and nine assists in the Jayhawks' 75-61 victory last Saturday.
Williams said, "It's going to be a heck of a matchup. It will be a challenge for both of them."
"I feel the best I've felt in seven days," Vaughn said, "so that's a good sign."
Despite being the third consecutive Kansas opponent favored to lose by double figures (10.5 points), Olson said the Wildcats wouldn't back down.
"This is a competitive group of guys," Olson said. "They're not going to quit. Every game we've lost, we're been in."
Williams said he understood that his team was expected to make it to the Final Four, but his main concern was to satisfy his team.
"The expectations around here are pretty awesome," he said. "As long as I please 14 people, that's all that makes the difference to me."
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
Chancellor teaches pupils hypocrisy, not English
Chancellor Robert Hemenway is a hypocrite.
The man in charge recently announced that if the Kansas men's basketball team wins the national championship, classes at the University will not be canceled.
Thanks for trying, Bob, but you are out of line.
For those who do not know, Hemenway teaches a 7:30 a.m. English class Mondays, Wednesdavs and Fridavs.
A Kansan reporter, who shall remain nameless because he is in his man Bob's class, pointed out to me that our leader was not in class last Friday.
A call to Hemenway's assistant explained why.
It seems Bob was in Memphis, Tenn., watching, cheering, cavorting and skipping school with the rest of the basketball team.
And today the Chancellor again could not
Welcome to the hypocrisy.
And today the basketball teach. He is in Birmingham, Ala., celebrating and schmoozing and supporting the basketball team as it plays in the Sweet 16.
Welcome to the noprocrys.
Our chancellor sees nothing wrong with missing his class so that he can travel to a basketball game, but he has the audacity to tell students that they cannot miss a day of class if the men's team wins the title.
This is the same man who in Wednesday's University Daily Kansan said that
SPORTS EDITOR
SPENCER DUNCAN
nothing should interfere with academics at the University, including a national basketball title.
Obviously, the Chancellor did not believe what he said.
Hemenway's assistant explained to me that the chancellor is a busy man and that he has an assistant to teach his class in his absence. But for some reason, that isn't satisfying.
If the main man of the University can skip out of teaching his class for basketball, then he shouldn't pretend that canceling classes is an absurd idea. If Kansas wins the title, he needs to cancel classes. He has set the precedent.
Of course, canceling an entire day of school to cheer home the basketball team is ridiculous. But to not cancel classes would be just as absurd.
If Kansas wins the title, no one is going to class. Students, thinking that they deserve a break because they played so hard to help win the championship, will feel obligated to stay home and rest. Some teachers already have said they would not hold class.
If classes are not officially canceled, then students will unofficially make sure nothing gets done.
Come on, Bob, do the right thing and show that you were just kidding about not canceling classes. Or at least stay in Lawrence to teach, and show us that you mean what you say.
Besides, I have a paper due the Tuesday after Monday's championship game, and I could use an extra day.
Comments? E-mail Spencer at sports@kansan.com
Women's season lays strong foundation
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
For the Kansas women's basketball team, this season was a strong foundation for the future.
Kansas was 25-6 overall and 14-2 in the Big 12 this season. It was the Jayhawks' best record since the 1991-92 season, when they had an identical overall record and had a Big Eight-best record of 12-2.
The Jayhawks captured the regular season conference title for the second consecutive year.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said, "Everyone that's been through my program has helped to build this program. These seniors came in as a freshman class extremely competitive and wanted to make a difference in the program."
Early this season, Kansas lost to two of the nation's perennial powerhouses on the
road: Tennessee and still-undefeated and top-ranked Connecticut. The Jayhawks played without injured starting forward Lynn Pride.
Kansas guard Angie Halbleib, who had struggled with her shot during the middle of the season, said the loss made the team rethink how it prepared for opponents the rest of season.
"I wasn't upset about (my shooting) until the Missouri game, where I shot terrible and we lost," Halbleib said. "That Missouri game was a wake-up call for a lot of us. I don't like to say that a loss was needed, but I think that one was. It made us rethink everything we did."
The Jayhawks won their last seven regular season games and entered the Top 10 for the first time in more than three years.
The loss ended Kansas' 21-game home court winning streak, a school record.
Washington said people should recognize what her seniors — Halbleib, Tamecke Dixon, Jennifer Trapp, Shelly Canada and Patience Grayer — were able to accomplish during their careers at Kansas.
Kansas defeated No. 14-seeded Detroit Mercy 81-67 in its first-round game. In the second round, No. 6-seeded Vanderbilt handed the Jayhawks their first home loss of the season. 51-44.
Kansas lost in the Big 12 Tournament semfinals but still merited a No. 3 seed in the West Region of the NCAA Tournament.
"They came here to help us achieve more than what we had at that point in our development, and I think they've done exactly that," Washington said. "I love them to death. I just hope that you'll appreciate what they have given us over the past four years."
6
4
Chris Hamilton / KANSAN
Lynn Pride and Kansas State's Brit Jacobsen hustle for a ball earlier this season. Kansas finished 25-6 this year.
28
Fridav.March 21.1997
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASIC
NCAA Basketball Tournament
By The Associated Press All Times EST
North Carolina 73, Colorado 58
California 75, Villanova 68
At Pitkin College Civic Arena
Mass 62, Coppin State 81
Regional SmallHouses
At The Cy Jr. Deer Field
Flightman, March 21
Texas (18-11) vs. Leo- lille (25-6), 6:39 p.m.
North Carolina (18-10) vs. California (23-3), 30
p.m.
North Carolina-California winner vs. Texas-
californian winner 140 cm
SOUTHEAST REGIONAL
Second Round At The Pyramid
Mumphin, Term.
Arizona 73, College of Charleston 69
Charlotte, N.C.
Sunday, March 16
Tennessee-Chattanooga 75, Illinois 63
Regional Semifinals
At Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center
Birmingham, AL
Friday, March 21
Providence (23-11) vs. Tennessee-Chattanooga (49-10). Inference袋
Kansas (34-1) vs. Arizona (21-9), 6:55 p.m.
Regina Championship
A&B Illumina, Indiana Citic Center
Al Birmingham, Anderson Ct.
Birmingham, Ala.
Birmingham, Ala.
Sunday, March 23
Kansas-Arizona winner vs. Providence-Ten-
Second Round
At the Palace of Auburn Hills
Auburn Hills, Mich.
MIDWEST REGIONAL
Kansas City, Mo.
Iowa State 67, Cincinnati 66
UFL A66 Yankee Ohio 62
Minnesota 76, Temple 57
Regional Semifinals
At The Alamocoona
San Antonio
Thursday, March 29
UCLA (23-7) vs. Iowa State (22-8), 30 minutes
minnesota 90, Clermson 84, 2OT
Regional Championship
At The Alamedae
San Antonio
UCLA-laws State winner vs. Minnesota (30-
38, 210 p.m.)
WESTREGIONAL
WEST RESIDUAL
Second Round
At The Huntersmen Center
Soft Lakes City
St. Joseph's 81, Boston College 77, OT
At The McKale Center
Tuson, Arz.
Sunday, March 16
Utah 77, North Carolina Charlotte 50
Regional Semifinals
At Sen Joe's Arena
Sen-Joe, Calif.
Thursday, March 20
Utah 82, Stanford 72, QT
Kentucky (32-4) vs. St. Joseph's (26-6), 30
Regional Championship
San Jose, Calif.
Kentucky-St. Joseph's winner vs. Utah (29-3).
THE FINAL FOUR
At The RCA Dome
Indianapolis
National Smallliness
Saturday, March 12
First game starts at 8:40 p.m.
East champion vs. Southeast champion
Midwest champion vs. West champion
National Championships
Monday, March 31
National Invitation Tour
---
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times EST
Second Round
Monday, March 17
North Carolina State 76
West Virginia 71, North Carolina State 73
Michigan 75, Oklahoma State 65
Nebraska 79, Nevada 68
Florida State 76, West Virginia 71
Third Round
Highlights of life, pane-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for this weekend (schedule subject to change and or black-out)
SPORTS WATCH
(All those Central)
FRIDAY, MARCH 21
ESPN2 --- Pro basketball, Detroit
6:20 a.m.
WGN Pro basketball
Chicago vs. Indiana
CBS — College basketball
FOXSPORTS — Pro hockey.
Arkansas 86, UNLV 73
SATURDAY, MARCH 22
CBS — College basketball
North Carolina, college
GCC5.1.10.
CBS --- College basketball
CRS — College basketball, Mini-
west RegionI Final
CRS — College basketball.
west region final
West Region Final
ESPN2 — Women's college
WGN: Pro basketball, Detroit
0x25 0x00
Basketball, Tennessee vs. Colo-
basketball Tennessee vs. Colo-
SUNDAY, MARCH 23
NBC Pro Basketball LA.
12:30 p.m.
CRS — College basketball
11:30 a.m.
Nebraska (18-14), at Connecticut (16-14).
bleheader, East Region Final and
ESPN Pro hockey, Colorado
7pm
At Madison Square Garden
New York
Tuesday, March 25
Times TBA
Friday, March 21
Semifinals
at Philadelphia
CBS — College basketball doub
1:30 a.m.
Michigan (21-11) vs. Arkansas (18-12)
Thursday, March 20
Connecticut-Nebraska winner va. Florida St.
Louisville
Michigan 67, Notre Dame 68
Third Place
At Medford Square Garden
New York
Thursday, March 27
Championship
At Median Square Garden
New York
comminel users, 4 p.m.
PRO HOCKEY
Worcester, march 27
Semifinal wins, 630 d.m.
NML Glance
By The Associated Press
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L T Pts GF GA
x-Philadelphia 40 21 10 624 187
x-New Jersey 38 20 13 890 163
Florida 32 24 17 890 177
N.Y. Rangers 33 30 9 753 235
Washington 28 35 8 641 198
Tampa Bay 27 36 7 618 128
Y.I. Islands 25 36 10 698 121
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Control Disclaimer
W L T Pte GF GA
Buffalo 37 22 11 85 210 178
Pittsburgh 34 30 7 75 249 239
Missouri 26 32 14 75 220 249
Ottawa 23 33 15 61 195 200
Boston 23 33 15 61 195 200
W L T Pto GF GA
x-Dallas 42 23 60 92 22 173
Detroit 34 21 15 83 25 166
Phoenix 34 34 5 73 210 226
St. Louis 31 12 97 71 213 219
Chicago 28 32 12 68 188 184
Toronto 26 40 6 58 120 250
Tampa Bay at Calgary, 8:30 p.m.
| | W L | T Pts | GF GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| x-Colorado | 44 18 | 9 97 | 244 173 |
| Edmonton | 33 32 | 7 73 | 224 216 |
| Anaheim | 30 30 11 | 71 209 203 |
| Calgary | 31 34 8 | 8 70 195 204 |
| Vancouver | 29 38 | 4 62 200 244 |
| Los Angeles | 25 38 9 | 9 59 190 239 |
| San Jose | 23 40 7 | 5 73 179 235 |
Dellair at W. Yale - 6:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Washington, 6:30 p.m.
Hartford at Daffee, 7:30 p.m.
Anahalee at Colorado, 8 p.m.
Philadelphia at n. r. 1, monroe, 6 p.m.
Washington at Montreal, 6:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Florida, 8:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Florida, 9:30 p.m.
Phoenix at Toronto, 9:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m.
San Jose at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Anaheim at Edmonton, 2 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago, 2 p.m.
Dallas at St. Louis, 6 p.m.
Colorado at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
NBA Glaze By The Associated Press
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dialysis
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| x-Miami | 49 | 17 | .742 | — |
| x-New York | 49 | 18 | .731 | ½ |
| Orlando | 37 | 29 | .561 | 1/2 |
| Washington | 32 | 35 | .478 | 17/18 |
| New Jersey | 20 | 45 | .308 | 28/31 |
| Philadelphia | 17 | 49 | .259 | 32 |
| Boston | 13 | 55 | .151 | 37 |
x-Chicago 57 9 864 --
Detroit 47 19 712 10
Atlanta 45 22 672 12½
Charlotte 42 24 942 14½
Cleveland 35 31 530 22
Indiana 31 35 470 26
Milwaukee 27 39 409 30
Toronto 25 42 373 32½
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| x-Utah | 50 | 17 | .746 | — |
| x-Houston | 45 | 22 | .672 | 1 |
| Minnesota | 33 | 33 | .500 | 16† |
| Dallas | 22 | 43 | .338 | 27 |
| Denver | 19 | 46 | .292 | 30 |
| San Antonio | 16 | 50 | .242 | 33† |
| Vancouver | 11 | 58 | .159 | 40 |
x-Scantle 45 20 .692
x-L.A. Lakers 45 21 .682 %
Portland 40 28 .588 6½
LA-Lakers 40 28 .588
Phoenix 39 28 .418 18
Sacramento 28 39 .418 18
Golden State 25 42 .373 18
x-clinched playoff spot
Friday's Games
Charlotte to Toronto, 6 p.m.
Charlotte at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakes, 6:30 p.m.
Dallas at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.
Chicago at Indiana, 6:30 p.m.
Denver at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Sacramento, 9:30 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Phoenix at Houston, 7:30 p.m.
New York at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
Golden State at Charlotte, 8:30 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago, 7:26 p.m.
Portland at Washington, 8:30 p.m.
Golden State at Charlotte, 6:30 p.m.
SPORTS BRIEFs
Kansan staff report
Kansas swimmers Rebecca Andrew and Kirsten Nixon failed to quality for the finals in their events at the NCAA Women's Swimming and Diving Championships held this weekend in Indywolls, Ind.
Competing in the preliminary heat of the 50 freesleep, Andrew swam a time of 23.54, which was the 44th fastest time of the morning. To qualify for the finals, a swimmer must have one of the top-16 preliminary times for an event. Nilken swim in the preliminary heat of the 200 individual medley and had a time of 203.50 for 32th place.
Both swimmers will return to the pool tomorrow as Andrew will compete in the 100 butterfly while Nilson will swim the 400 individual medley. Entering the championships, Andrew had the 7th best 100 butterfly in the country and has a serious shot of making the top-16 and earning her ninth All-American honors.
Kansan Staff Report
The Kansas State team has last night to Sacramento State 1-0 in eight innings in the Sacramento AT&T Wireless Services Capital Classic in Sacramento, Calif.
Kansas pitcher Sarah Workman took the loss after pitching eight innings and giving up no earned runs.
The Jayhawks are scheduled to continue play at 1 p.m. today against Wisconsin and at 3 p.m. versus Arkansas.
Sacramento scored the only run in the eighth inning of the game when Sarah Holland, Kansas out-
L.A. Clippers at Utah, 5 p.m.
Sunchey's Games
Locations on Saturday 4-6-2022
Atlanta at Toronto,2 p.m.
Miami at Minnesota, 2:30 p.m.
Miami at Minnesota, 2:30 p.m.
Portland at New York, 7 p.m.
Seattle at Vancouver, 8 p.m.
San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, 8 p.m.
NATURALWAY
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 21, 1997
3B
Jayhawks look strong matched against Arizona
B.J. Williams could prove secret weapon for 'Hawks
B. J. Williams was not just in the "zone" during last year's Sweet 16 game. He was in the "Arizona."
B. J. played more like a combination of L.J., K.J., and M.J. last year against Arizona in the NCAA Tournament.
The 6-foot-8, 206-pound senior came off the bench to help spark the Kansas Jayhawks to victory, 83-80. Williams grabbed nine rebounds and scored a career-high 18 points in 27 minutes.
He even outscored and outbred Baef LaFrentz and
Baef LaFrentz
SPORTS COLUMNIST
ADAM HERSHMAN
Scot Pollard, who combined scored eight points and snatched eight rebounds in 48 minutes against the Wildcats.
So the question leading up to the Kansas (34-1)- Arizona (21-9) game tonight is: Have the Wildcats found a defense to stop B.J. Williams this time?
fmmm ... I'm pondering ... Hmmm.
The next question is: Will Williams play as big a role as he did last year?
Now, I'm not a member of the Psychic Friends Network, but I doubt it.
I think Kansas' starting frontcourt of LaFrentz and Pollard will be big factors against Arizona, even though the Jayhawks didn't play well against the Wildcats last year.
Like ESPN Sportscenter, here's my own "Breakdown" section.
On paper, the starting backcourt matchup between Kansas and Arizona is pretty even.
Jacque Vaughn and Jerod Haase, combined,
have averaged 22.5 points, 6.1 rebounds and 9.3
assists a contest.
Arizona's starting backcourt of Mike Bibby and
Miles Simon, combined, have averaged 29.7 points, 7 rebounds and 9.8 assists a game. Simon missed 11 of the Wildcats' 30 games.
The statistics of both starting small forwards also is consistent.
Paul Pierce has averaged 16 points, 6.6 rebounds and 2.1 assists for the Jayhawks this season.
The Wildcats' Michael Dickerson is the team's leading scorer. He has averaged 20.1 points, 4.7 rebounds and 1.6 assists a contest.
Although the perimeter players on both teams match up, the frontcourt comparison is a mismatch.
Kansas' frontcourt of LaFrentz and Pollard, combined, have averaged 29.3 points, 17.7 rebounds and 3.2 blocks a game. It also has a size advantage and has outscored Arizona's front-court by 11 points and outrebounded it by 4.6 boards a game.
Arizona frontcourt players Bennet Davison and A.J. Bramlett, combined, have averaged 18.3 points, 13.1 rebounds and 1.4 blocks.
Some may think previous statistics don't count for much in a game of this importance, but NCAA Tournament experience does.
Among Arizona's expected starters tonight, Simon is the only one who started in last year's Sweet 16 game.
The Jayhawks did not lose a starter from last year and have more NCAA Tournament experience. Arizona lost four starters — former Kansas forward Ben Davis, Corey Williams, Jim McLean and NBA rookie Reggie Geary — from last year's team.
Kansas also has a deeper bench than Arizona and a secret weapon in B.J. Williams.
Although Williams' scoring average is just 2.8 points a game, I think he still will be a factor (especially on the boards and the defensive end).
If Arizona pays too much attention to LaFrentz and Pollard, Williams will be there to pick up the slack. Just like he did last year.
And if Williams leads the Jayhawks to victory by outscoring and outrebounding both Pollard and LaFrentz again, then I'll think about giving Dionne Warwick a call.
one with comments or suggestions can send them to sports@kansan.com and selected messages will be printed.
TALKING BACK
Thanks a lot for your continued good work. The coverage on basketball has been excellent. Keep up the good work all the way to the title.
During the past year, I supported the KU women's basketball team. From a distance, I got to know the players and the coaches. Through them, I experienced the highs and lows of the season.
In the team's loss against Vanderbilt on Monday night, I wanted to reach out to each of the players and coaches and
say, "Thanks."
Thanks for making me proud to be a supporter of women's athletics. Thanks
for consistently representing the University with such class. Thanks for continuing to practice and play while knowing that you will never have the same fan base as your male counterparts.
My particular thanks to the senior class: Patience, Jennifer, Shelly, Angie and Tamecka. You gave your fans many thrilling moments as you played with heart and determination. I wish each of you the best in your future. I hope to be fortunate enough to see some of you continue to play in the American Basketball League or the Women's National Basketball Association.
Again, thanks for the memories. I'm already looking forward to next season.
One Royal moves up as another moves out
The Associated Press
HAINES CITY, Fla. — One former All-Star relief pitcher trying to make a comeback with Kansas City was all smiles yesterday while another was sent fuming to the minors.
Mitch Williams, who set single-season save records with two National League teams, was asked to go to Triple-A Omaha after pitching one hitless inning and getting the victory in a 5-4 win against Pittsburgh.
Also pitching one inning of scoreless relief yesterday was right-hander Jeff
Montgomery, who continued to show steady progress after coming back from shoulder surgery. It was the second spring appearance for Montgomery, who was Kansas City's alltime save leader last year but underwent surgery in September after blowing 10 save opportunities and seeing his ERA balloon to 4.26.
"It looks and feels normal," said Montgomery about his shoulder. "My velocity is in my normal working range."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Hawks and Chiefs can win if they'll just take this advice
The underdors really know how to screw up a guy's bracket. But all of the No. 1 seeds are still around. If they all make it to the Final Four, it will be the first time in history it has happened.
- Kansas is a lock to win the national championship if:
1. Paul Pierce doesn't get into foul trouble.
2. Billy Thomas keeps the hot hand he had in the team's win against Purdue.
3. Scot Pollard doesn't injure his hand in some kind of horrible fingernail-polishing accident.
Let the onslaught of Elvis jokes begin.
4. Syracuse doesn't sneak into the tournament disguised as Providence or Chattanooga.
i wonder how people would be responding to the Chiefs' acquisition of quarterback Elvis Grbac if the Steve Bono experiment had not gone up in a ball of flame. Granted, Grbac would not have been my first choice, but he has size and can throw deep, two things Sonny, er, Steve seemed to be lacking. But I'm not sure poor quarterbacking has been the
SPORTS REPORTER
MATT
WOODRUFF
Grbac will be the third ex-49er quarterback the Chiefs have signed. The first two were Joe Montana and Steve Bono, who had solid careers in San Francisco before coming to Kansas City and suffering a significant drop-off in their level of play.
Chiefs' problem.
Some have said the reason for that is the absence of Jerry Rice, but that is oversimplifying things. The 48ers haven't had a running game as strong as Kansas City's, so that alone should balance out the Rice factor.
It all comes down to play-calling. In that area the Chiefs have been as predictable as the steam whistle; run, swing pass, run, run. In the one game of the year they were creative with their run-pass mix, they handily defeated the Super Bowl Champion Green Bay Packers. In that game, the Chiefs lined up Hill (the fastest guy on the team) in the slot and stretched the field. And it worked. So they didn't do it anymore.
Mike Shannahan and Mike Holmgren are masters at calling plays, and their records show it. Shannahan called the shots for the best offensive team ever, the 1995 Niners, and has built a powerful offense as the head coach in Denver. Holmgren watched Brett Favre slowly mature, learn the complex plays and take the team to a Super Bowl.
Instead of placing all the blame for last season
on Bono, some of it should be given to offensive coordinator Paul Hackett. Maybe that's where the Chiefs should be looking for a replacement. But, unlike their play-calling, that would make sense.
Speaking of play-calling, I'm looking forward to watching Kansas football after reading Adam Herchman's interview with new coach Terry Allen last week in the Kansan. Allen said he intended to have a wide-open offense that should be fun to watch. It will be a far cry from last season's "guess which way Henley will run" offense.
A bitter Missouri basketball fan, who is used to having nothing to do at this time of year, wrote to The Kansas City Star last week claiming that if California fell off of the map, Kansas wouldn't have a basketball team. While Tiger fans are making speculations that have no basis in reality, I have a few questions about their team:
1. Is there a law that all the really talented players from Missouri (i.e. Ryan Robertson) must go to other schools, or does it just work out that wav?
2. If a shark stops swimming, it can't breathe and will die. If Jason Sutherland stopped fouling, could he breathe or would he die?
3. Is it true that Norm Stewart was one of the people booing Sutherland during the Big 12 Tournament?
4. If Missouri hadn't scraped out a lucky overtime win over Kansas, would anyone have noticed that they had a basketball team this season?
Knight accused of abusing players
Guard says coach forced him to leave
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Neil Reed is accusing Indiana coach Bob Knight of verbally and physically abusing him and pressuring him to leave the basketball program.
"If the choice were mine, I would have returned to Indiana University," the junior guard said in a statement Tuesday. "But the choice was not mine. Coach Knight has made it clear that in making those decisions about my future, he is accountable to no one."
Reed's statement also included vague references to Knight verbally and physically abusing coaches and players, although he
did not elaborate. Reed said he was made the focal point of the coach's abuse.
"Coach Knight has continued his longstanding tradition of verbal attacks and physical assaults on his players and his coaches," Reed said. "I have personally been at the forefront of those focused attacks during my time at IU."
Reed's comments were part of a statement announcing that he would leave the basketball program at Knight's request.
Knight released a statement through the university Tuesday night, denying Reed's allegations that he had abused players and coaches.
Reed would not elaborate on how he was abused, but he said university officials were aware of what he alleged had happened.
"I only have the truth as my defense," Reed told WTHR-TV in reference to the allegations.
Earlier, Knight told Indianapolis television stations that he met with juniors Reed, Andre Patterson, Richard Mandeville and Robbie Eggers to discuss their futures. He said all four players were told what was expected of them next season, and each was given the option to play elsewhere.
Knight said Eggers, Mandeville and Patterson indicated they wanted to complete their careers at Indiana, which lost to Colorado 80-62 last week in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
"What I want is for this to work out for these kids the best way possible," Knight said. "I've told them in each case what I think, and they've thought it over and have told us what they would like to do,
and we'll just take that and go from there."
Knight criticized Reed, Patterson, Eggers, Mandeville and Charlie Miller for inconsistent play this season and questioned their dedication to the program.
After Indiana's loss to Colorado, which ended a disappointing 22-11 season for the Hoosiers, Reed said Knight met with him and two other juniors.
"Coach Knight told us, 'I think you guys should transfer because you are not going to play here next year.'" Reed said.
Reed's departure follows a rocky season for Indiana, which went 9-9.
During the regular season, Reed had career high averages in points (12.9) and rebounds (3.0). He also led the Big Ten in free-throw percentage this season, shooting 85.2 percent.
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday (March 21) Learn to serve others this year without getting walked on, and you win. Past obligations cause pressure in April. Are you on the right path? If not, change it by May. Get in shape this summer because September will be intense. Submit your resume for the job you really want. A surprise from far away boosts your self-esteem in December. Get good news on the job in January. Celebrate in a crazy way with friends in February.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7.
Your assignment for today is to get organized. You realize it's theoretically possible, but you may not know how to do it. If you need help, consult a Virgo. Or hire one.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6.
Look at the coming phase as an opportunity. It's your chance to finish up all the stuff you've been meaning to do. You'll be ready to launch all sorts of new enterprises soon. Love will find a way.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is an 8.
Be prepared to move quickly if conditions change. You're great at that because you're adaptable. Remember to keep your standards high. If you want to learn about truth, ask an Aries.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)Today is a 7.
Your brain is like a vacuum cleaner today. Information is sucked in and stays there. Don't waste this opportunity. Learn something that will help you on the job. This is a fine evening to try a complicated recipe.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 7.
There's money coming into your account today This could be pleasant, but you'll have to keep track of the details. If you could get back all the time you've wasted, you'd have enough to do what you want.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 7.
If you want other people's money,
ask. They'll be glad to give it to you, if you help them figure out how much they have. Be careful at home this evening. There's a better-than-average chance that something will break. Don't let the children do the dishes.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is a 6.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) —
Togav is a 5,
A friend can provide valuable information today. You might get him or her to run a few of your errands, too. You can be the one who figures out what needs to be done. Or you could delegate that, too.
You've got something of a dilemma. You want to play, but you have to work. You should be used to this by now. If you take off even five minutes early, it will be noticed.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan.19) — Today is a 6.
Delegate the chores to someone else so you can travel. You think your friends or roommates can't do as good a job as you can, but that may not be true. Hire a professional to handle it. Stop worrying.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5.
Balance your checkbook and pay your bills. If you keep putting money into investments, they eventually can provide a nice income. All you have to do is stash something away regularly.
Someone is watching your every move. He or she is offering constructive criticism. Let a Virgo organize your life, and let an Aries make your decisions. You can just sit there and look pretty.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 6.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) -
Todav is a 7.
You know how depressed you get this time of year. That's because your talent doesn't lie with putting numbers into rows. You're better at taking photographs of cypress trees in the sunset.
1
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
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205 Help Wanted
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. 6 wk acum.
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customer hourly secretary. $5./hr. 15 hr./wk. Wkst have good computer skills. Applications can be picked up at 1149 Haworth. Contact Gretchen at 640-0720.
Nanny wants: weekdays, after school care, for
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Local landscape company accepting applications from motivated individuals. irrigation, lawn care, and general experience helpful, but not essential. Call 403-8944 from 8-5.
Surrey Landscaping Service is now hiring sea-
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Busy Property Management Company seeking part-time office work. Duties include general office procedures as well as leaving responsibility for client needs at $83 per hour; L-1 between 1-5 M-F. 749 1288
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CAMP COUNSELORS Overnight camps in Pocos Nm. of PA Over 40 activities - Seeking general and specialist counselors
Part-time bookkeeper 20-25 hours/week. Prior experience or bookkeeping field of study preferred. Also need past delivery parcel number 825. Must be a New Yorker. Jerry at NAPA Auto Parts 819 New Hampshire.
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Working couple seeks dependable, reliable individual Mon-Thurs for approx 4-8 hours. Late afternoon to early evening. Qualified individuals must be experienced with infant care and preferred infancy CPR certified. References will be requested. Call Holly after 10:30 am 931-823-8818.
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Apartment Manager. Rapidly growing management team. Must be able to join our management team. Experience preferred but will train right person. Apply at first position. Pos. Ben 108 North KS. 60944
STUDENT WORK- up to $10.25 ! Nat' I CO. has immediate PT/FT entry level openings in Lawrence & JCOO. Flexible day, evening, week-end schedules. All majors accepted. CO-OP & scholarship Opportunities. Cond. Apply call our JCOO office at (931) 831-7808 (1am - 5pm)
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BabySister/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings,
weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime.
Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have
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development. Send letter, resume, schedule,
and reference to Blind Bort 10, 119 Staffer Flint.
Brookcreek Learning Center is hiring part-time teaching assistants. M-F 5a.m.-m-noon (toddlers) and M-F 3-5p.m. (preschool). Opportunities include experience in an early intervention inclusive classroom program. Complete applications 850-0222. For more information call 850-0222. A/E/OO
DRIVERS, PACKERS, HELPERS Wanted.
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Experience preferred but not necessary. Will
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Darwin Dairie (914) 602-4957 ext. 255.
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education advisement in the University Placement Center 2012 hr/jwk, $7.00/hr., starting August 1997. Application deadline April April 1997. Complete job report for 110 Burge Union, or see www.ukans.edu/~upjobs.html
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education advisement in the University Placement Center. 20 hrs/wk, $7.00/hr., starting August 1997. Application deadline: October 31, 2004. Job description at 11 Burge Union, or see www.ukans.edu/~upc.jobs.html
205 Help Wanted
Our busy not for profit home health agency is recruiting care team oriented CNA/chIA's Hauling. Evening hours available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. We apply at Douglas County Visiting Clinic, Lower Level or call 814-4633 for Pat. EOEO
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, music, dance, sports, computers, campings, crafts, dramatics, or Riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary is based on LWC/GWC 1765 Mason. L 00903, 847-244-7650
Food Service Supervisors: 2 positions available @ The Mass Street Deli & Buffalo Bufalo's Smokehouse experience in food service + 1 year experience in supervising. $6.50 per day on hour based on prior experience. Profit share bonus up to $1,000. Apply by September 30th at http://www.massstreetdeli.com/by79. Upstairs (above smokehouse).
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Salary $6.30-8.5/hour, 20 hr per week. Duties include install, configure, & customize software products. Participate in system testing & applications library maintenance. Required qualifications partial listing: experience of 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 by submitting example to Kansas Porter Center, University of Kansas, EO/AA EMPLOYEE
Reading water meters & accurate recording of amounts of water consumed. HS Grad/GED.
Valid driver license. Must provide own vehicle.
License plate identification. Available for plate application by 3/28/97 in Admin Sys, 2nd Floor, Hotel, 6 E, 8th St., Lawrence, KS 60044 EOE M/F/D
PART TIME METER READER CITY OF LAWRENCE
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Seeking students majoring in social/ human services fields for hands-on experience & internship credit working with children who have multiple disabilities and significant behavior disorders. Intensive training in behavioral programming provided. Staff will assist in the implementation of a curriculum designed to promote communication, self-help and functional living skills in a residential setting. Positions are live in working five days on and off two days. Salary for 9 week program is $25.00 or $2,500 depending on assignment and work schedule. Prefer applicants with a bachelor's degree and related exp. Call 893-8271 or 4271, ext. 232 or submit resume to: Human Resources, Heart-spring, 2400 Jardin Dr, Wichita, KS 67219
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student for Spring and Summer 1997 with possibility of renewal for next academic year. Interested candidates will have no other job commitments. Student hourly position will start immediately at $7.00 per hour. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community experience, ability to build solid research skills, leadership and supervisory experience, organizational skills, great sense of humor, empathy, interest in helping others. Must be Lawrence resident. Comes by KU info, KU 480, 230-6530, or email combs base with final deadline for applications, Spm, Friday, March 21, 1997.
Arabic Language Instructor. Half-time, one year appointment at $30k, with possible renewal up to a total of three years. Instruction of two Arabic language courses; two first-year classes; involve two first-year classes; in subsequent years responsibility will be for one first-year and one second-year class per semester; in coordinated qualifications include native or native-natural proficiency in Arabic and demonstrated ability to teach owl and written language skills. Graduate degree in Arabic language offered by Saharan, Maghreb, or North African Muslim cultures. Initial review of applications will begin on recommendation, and relevant instruction will be provided. American Sikh universities: 104 Liplincott, University of Kansas, Lawn, lwc. Ks. 10635. ECAA/OA employee.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 21, 1997
50
2/5 Help Wanted
Seasonal part time position to schedule umpires for adult selfball linemes and assist in supervision of legumes. 30-60hr/week starting in April. MS 68/72. Coordinator, Attendance. Apply by calling W/M/D Admin sw1. Floor, City Halk, 6 E. 8th St., Lawrence, KS 60044. EOE M/F/D
ADULT SPORTBALL UMPIRE SCHEDULEDOR
LEAGUE SUPERVIEWOR
HIRING NOW
for
SUMMER JOBS
Key is hiring now for full-time jobs that will start in the
summer: Many positions available in Topper for production, retail
Earn cash on the spot
Earn cash on the spot
$20 Today new donors
Up to $40 this week
Donate your life saving plasma
Walk-ins welcome!
NADI Biomedical Center
816 W. 24th 749-5750
COUNSELER POSITIONS
Looking for experienced people to implement quality YMCA Summer Day Campincs & Topkina locations. Must be able to work in a team environment and CBL certifications a plus.
ACP, Career, and CBL certifications a plus.
Elementary school teachers and college students majoring in Elementary Education, Child Development, Physical Education, or Recreation are encouraged to apply.
Minimum Requirements: Must be 18, high school
experience in child care or observation hours.
Fick up applications at the following Topeka YMCA branches:
Knuth Branch at 41389 N Tyer, Topica, KS 65009
or Downtown Branch at 421 Van Buren, Topica
65009. For more info call Patty Gatzemeyer at
912-273-6815.
225 Professional Service
PROMPT ABORTION and
CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-6716
Metro KC Office (800) 733-2404
TRAFFIC DUPS
HISPONAL IN JURY
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
DONALD G. STROHE
Donald G. Strohe
16 East 13th
842-5116
Education Center
16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation
STATUT DE LA REPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE
CENTER
TRAFFIC DEFENSE
Heathman & Kelly
DU/TRAFFIC/CRIMAL/PERSONAL INJURY
Call For a Free Consultation
James C. Heathman
or
Melissa A. Kelly
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
913-267-0055 or
Toll Free: 888-834-4LAW (529)
205 Help Wanted
275 Typing Services
simply, Fitting for more movemover edifice or home
sanitary, Fitting for the quality top quality furniture. Call
0908-274-8656 or 0908-274-8656.
Call Jackl at 623-8564 for applications, terms
and conditions. Please refer to the **Office of the
Director** given below. **The Office of the
Director:**
X
300s Merchandise
For Sale: AUTS 16 inch wheels 6 spats with
Pivellé P1002 1982-1983 Clive Clyne 4252 G-R. G.
Clyne
One pair of Final Four tickets,
upper level, distant view. Best offer.
Large message with offer. (723) 851-6523
Neural Energy? Tee our 100% natural product, it gives you a tremendous natural life and gives alarmness. No side effects. Great before study-ing. Independent Herbicide Distribute CALL 833-295-8567
340 Auto Sales
www.supermarchera.com. Pictures of pre-owned
books by authors listed on this website.
Call 1-800-435-2698 for more info. Ask for Paula
070 Want to Buy
UNI Computers 841-4611
FARM
WANTED:
Your used computer
(PC or Mac)
We are paying up to $1,000 Reward for your good used computer.
4 Bd Bld. House sublease in New York may rent free.
Great location, 14th and Tenn. Call 891-3797
Available now, spacious one bedroom apartment,
10th and TN, $345/m. Call 818-3044 to see.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
2 BDRM, 2 bath College HILD coupon. W/d,
macerate, water pk. Avail Aug. Rent $75/h.
BDRM, 2 bath College HILD coupon. W/d,
macerate, water pk. Avail Aug. Rent $75/h.
Available now-3 bedrooms. 1 bath, Washer/Dryer,
equipped kitchen. On KU rent. Call 855-200-6072.
Call 855-200-6072. Call 855-200-6072. Call 855-200-6072.
Summer sublasse, 2 blocks from campus. Nice
dining room. Phone: 342-691-5000; fax: 342-
691-5075; iPhone: 128484. Call 858-9679 after 8:31 a.m.
/afternoon.
1 BDRM apartment available for summer sub-
lease. Furnished, closed to Frazer Ha-
la, Call 804-9724
1/2 block from KB1. 1 bedroom and studio apartments,
for Auxiliary heating and laundry.
CALL 800-725-3644
8 BR houses for rent.
No pets, Deposit, Close to KU. 843-1691
Available Amos I. One Bnd. Agt. between campus
and campus Cincinnati. No. pet Np.
+ electric. Call 841-3287.
Stay ahead of the Job Crowd!
CAMPUS LOCATION HOMES AUKE. 1
Bishop's Chapel, & basement. Call
Jim Erwin @ (833) 669-3150.
Email: jim.erwin@campus.edu
To schedule an appointment over break, call Shelley or Michelle at:
Kansan
205 Help Wanted
913-491-3491
Make sure you get that job nowl Register over we can keep you busy with clerical,
accounting or other office support jobs in the Kansas City metro area.
Or contact us on the web at :
www.employbts.com
great summer the break and over the summer secretarial,
BTS BUSINESS TEMPORARY SERVICES
407 For Rent
CHEAP SUNSHINE / RELEASE $72/mo + 1/4
toll费. Cool rains! Sunny days!
Cost range: $15-$30/mo. Aud. Bag fee.
Email: info@sunshine.com
Condé fur Sale Dhadran, Zhaith, washer/dryer, on bus. route. Best view in Lawrence. Assamblee FIA Launch, 850,000 GROC. Call to view 823-5081.
FUNNISHED 3 BAR APP. 2 BAYE WIDE, WJD, A/C
BALKENY, ON BUS SHELL, NICE CABIN, KNAPS
CABIN
STUDIO CLOSE TO CAMPUS, ON ION BAY ROAD.
Available for summer payments $216.00 + incl.
Similar. 120kWh households available for summer and fall. Since intensive clash on charges on our route, we are offering a special package of two years of electricity.
Sublease one bedroom apartment. Available immediately. A/C; walk-in closet, dishwasher, cable paid, $411-688, $229/mo. Avail, August.
Sublease 2-bdrm apt. available now through July
31, close to campus, nicely maintained,
$457/month + utilities, calls 303-8944 for more info
Available April 20th, 1 bedroom, one year lease,
Top floor Mainsbroom Apt. Fireplace, good view.
$449/month Call 854-3038 (DAY) Ask for Kerry.
A great place to live! comfortable two by unit
Birchwood Gardens Apt.
19th & Teen. St.
A great place to live!
Comfortable two br. units Off street parking - Laundry rooms
Off street parking - Laundry rooms
Terrific location
KU • Shopping. • Schools
Rent starts at $385/mo.
No pets
South Porte
PARK VILLAGE
you will be presently sign up for:
Off. 1515 Kentucky, Apt. 2, 843-6929
- Built in'95
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
- Built in '95
* Designer Interior
* 3 Bed. 2 Full Bath
* On Bus Route
* Swimming Pool
* No Pets
South Point
APARTMENTS
1,2,3,4Bedroom
- Pool & Volleyball Court
- Hot Water & Trash Paid
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury.
Live in Luxury.
* 1,2, & 3 Bedrooms
- Washer/Dryer
- Built-in TV
- Alarm System
- Built-in TV
- Alarm System
* Park & Httub
- 2 Pool & Hot tubs
- Fitness Center
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
HARPER SQUARE
3BR 725.00
APARTMENTS
CALL 832-9918
Washer/Dryer Alarm timers
3BR 725.00 Workhorse
- New in 1996!!
Alarm System New in 1996!
Call for Appointments
4-6pm Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
looking for summer at
3 - 25hr from B440
1 - 24hr from B440
2 - Tbl to KU glue mats
3 - KU glue mats
4 - PcTable TAPPs
5 - PcTable TAPPs
6 - Onsite maintenance
Chandhari & 25th Cl. B41-181-1
LCA
Naismith Place
Studio, 1-3 BUR, also 5 BUR house all owner KU. Call
804-6254
townhouses for rent.
Walter/Beer, Dishbone Avail.
Walter/Beer, Dishbone Avail.
Studios L. 3, & 4 of bedroom
Calle LCA Apartments
405 For Ren
PLS
OnKU Bus Route
Miniature Place, 1232 Kirksey, New listing for Ang. 1, Great Location Kamny apartment, close to condo, All 8 Beds, Microwave, window/door, all windows, energy efficient, Cell Phone 780-1196.
COLONY WOODS
1301W.24TH&Nairnth
"Convenient affordable housing"
331-2plx(757)am
Fireplace, one-car
Townhomes and
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
331-2332
Private Courtyard
M-F 10-6
SAT10-4 SUN12-4
ExerciseRoom
Residential Homes
- 2,3,4 bedroom townhouses available
TRAILRIDGE
- Near shopping areas
- Small pets welcome w/ deposit
- Walking distance to New Life Fitness Center
a Ruc Stop
CALL 843-7333 FOR MORE INFORMATION OR STOP BY 2500 W. 6TH ST.
- Swimming Pool
1,2 & 3 Bedrooms
HIGHPOINTE
Washer/Dryer Alarm System
Clubhouse & Swimming Pool
Workout Facility
workout Facility
Basketball Court
NOWLEASING
Call First Management 841-8468
405 For Rent
GATWAY AND REGENCY PLACE
CLOSE TO K.U. ON K.U. BUS ROUTE
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 841-8468.
NOW LEASING
Low $295 per month for nine apartments quiet 2 BRML units. Accommodations, C/A, tunnel route and pool. Low utilitarian? No pets. 1 yr amenities beginning in May, June, July or Spanish Grant Credit. A$81 - $680.
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
Current Leasing For Fall '97
Park 85
Apartments
10-Mouth Leases Available!
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
bedroom apartments, as well as
On KU Bus Route
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
Enjoy living in the apartment
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
Holiday Apartments
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
meadowbrook FALL'97
Our convenient office hours
One Month Free Rent
On lease through July 31
Tropical island with palm trees and a volcano.
come see how much you would love living in our
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
would love living in our beautiful park like atmosphere
oriented community
1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment Call or stop by today
Leasing for Summer & Fall
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly service
1 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer
Oriented Commuting
Studios.1, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
MOVE IN NOW.
*2 Bedroom $400-$445
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
2 & 3 Bdrm. Townhouses
-Laundry facility Nice quiet setting
One Month Free Rent
FLATS
-On bus route
call or stop by today
-Nice quiet setting On site management
843-2116 11th and Miss
- 2 Pools
- 3 Bus Stops
Apartments
841-7726
-Behind the Holidorne
- 2 Volleyball Areas
Shannon Plaza
211 Mount Hope Court#1
Move In Now..
Meadowbrook
211 Mount Hope Court #1
For more info, or Appt.
843-9011 or 843-3841
2100 Heatherwood A2 (EHO)
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
10th & Cleistine
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat. 1-4 Sun
Pinnacle Woods
1*2*3br. luxury apt. homes
FIRST MONTH FREE
AllNew - 865-5454
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
we provide good old-fashioned personalized service."
Managed & maintained by Professionals
439 Roommate Wanted
Summer roommate wanted for furnished, 4-bed,
2-bath, 3-car garage. Floor plan on bus route 89, 106-ton/+ mowers, Cable 323-28-5440
Fernale Sum. Sublease needed middle of May to end of July. May paid-$25/mo/vehil/StK/W. on KU bus route. Close to campus. Call 832-829-0100
Non-smoking female females immediately to
catch up on medication. Call $495/月/
L/270ml (800), Call 321-267-2222.
2 Females to share 3 bedrooms humorous house,
$500/mm + L/Survival
6 Bachelors to share 1 bedroom humorous house,
$800/mm + A/C, Calc 640-6495
FRIENDLY Sr/Grad folks seek N/SPF.Penf Avail now. Bright skived vialk ydbr. mr. campus. Quit clean air窿 and A/C/W $328, $154, u.util. Richarddp $240-248.bat. 6am-1pm.
I roommate needed to sublease ASAP t/a August.
6 18家, hardwood floor, 3 ducks, 3 baths.
Wather/Dryer. Petks.OK. Very Clean. $200/mth +/
1/6 utilities. Call 841-7422.
How to schedule an act
Pre-op transitional衣 in Laurence area another gay/girl friendly person to share a two-house/ duplex wif. "...mother, sexual drubber..." (332) 721-2288 If you indeed call (633) 721-2288
- In persons: 119 Stuffer FIllet
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Friday, March 21, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tennis team to face New Mexico
Jayhawks settle in, show improvement
KU
Freshman Ryan Baxter returns a volley earlier this season at Alvamar Tennis Club. Baxter and the rest of the Kansas men's tennis team enter the height of the season this weekend, finishing nonconference play against New Mexico and Fresno State.
Staff Photographer / KANSAN
By Andy Rohrback Kansan sportswriter
Just in time for the most decisive part of the season, the Kansas men's tennis team is hitting its stride.
"We're a lot better team than we were even a week ago," head coach Mark Riley said. "All you want to do is improve, and we've been improving."
we've been off a 2-1 record at the Blue-Gray Tennis Classic last week in Montgomery, Ala., the Jayhawks face two more nonconference teams this weekend, just before the Big 12 Conference schedule begins. Kansas faces conference rival Texas A&M March 29 and will follow that match with five more Big 12 matches, two at home, before the conference tournament on April 24.
The nonconference meets this weekend feature teams the Jayhawks have met and defeated before. Tomorrow, the team travels to Albuquerque to take on New Mexico. The Lobos visited Lawrence Jan. 31 and kept the meet close by winning three singles matches. Kansas picked up the doubles point in that match at Alvamar Tennis Club and won 4-3.
This meet will be different. The Lobos will have home-court advantage, which places added pressure on Riley's team. But the Jayhawks will have an edge with the return of Fernando Sierra, who sat out the previous meeting with an injured shoulder. Sierra is 13-8 in singles play and has a 15-9 doubles record with partner Luis Uribe.
Sierra said his biggest concern was the change in environment. "If it's really hot here, then they're going to be used to it and we're not," he said.
Riley said having a healthy team and a cohesive squad would be a plus.
"We're pretty healthy right now," he said. "People are starting to get used to my style and what I expect. What we have to do and now is win matches."
The weather in Lawrence in recent days may work to the Jayhawks' advantage. Riley said.
"We have to be prepared for each match," he said. "We've had great weather this year."
Another benefit for Kansas is Trent Tucker, who has not lost a singles match all season. Tucker is on an eight-game winning streak, which he said was an effective confidence booster. But now doubles play is paramount.
"I'll definitely focus on doubles and hope that singles keeps rolling," Tucker said. "The confidence is there right now."
After the New Mexico meet, the Jayhawks travel to Fresno, Calif., to take on
the No.22 Fresno State Bulldogs. Fresno State is on the 33-game home winning streak, but the team is 1-7 against Top 25 teams. The Jayhawks are ranked No.17 and beat Fresno 4-3 at the National Indoor Tournament.
"They have good tradition," Riley said. "They've been pretty strong in the past. We certainly felt that we were fortunate to beat them the first time."
The Jayhawks will return home March 29 to play Texas A&M at the Robinson Center courts.
The Big 12 became more competitive after the Texas Longhorns slipped past Kansas March 11. Texas and Kansas are in contention for the conference lead, and the victory gave Texas the advantage.
"We'll have another opportunity at the (Big 12) tournament," Riley said.
"People are starting to get used to my style and what I expect.What we have to do now is win matches."
Mark Riley
Kansas men's tennis coach
KU golfers finish in middle of pack at New Mexico
Kansan staff report
The Kansas women's golf team finished in ninth place Wednesday at the University of New Mexico Spring Intercollegiate Golf Tournament.
The team moved into ninth place after shooting a team score of 315 in the third round of play. The score was the team's second-best single-round score of the season.
The Jayhawks shot 326 and 330 in the first two rounds and finished with a three-round team score of 971.
Fifteen teams participated. Kansas finished 87 strokes behind tournament champion New Mexico.
The tournament was held at the University of New Mexico Championship Golf Course, a par-73, 54-hole course in Albuquerque, N.M.
Kansas' Susan Tressary dropped 10 spots from the second round to the third after shooting an 83 in the third round. She finished with a three-round total of 283 and ended in 20th place. It was the third time in her career that Tressary, a freshman, finished in the Top 25. Missy Russell fired a 75 in the third round, lifting her into a tie for 28th place.
Golf results
Kansas finished ahead of Big 12 Conference rival Kansas State, which shot a 977.
Top five team finishers at the UNM Golf Tournament (three-round total)
1 University of New Mexico 883
2 Northern Arizona 942
3 Iowa State 944
4 Pepperdine 950
5 Colorado 955
Where Kansas golfers placed
20 Susan Tressary 239
28 Missy Russell 241
34 Mandy Munsch 243
44 Anne Clark 248
60 Lori Lauritsen 257
'Hawks Vaughn, Haase join Halbleib on GTE Academic All-America team
Kansan staff report
Kansas men's basketball guards Jacque Vaughn and Jerod Haase have proved they don't spend all their time playing basketball. They take time out to study, too.
The two seniors have been named first-team GTE Academic All-Americans. It is the second year in a row that Vaughn has been named to the first team. Haase was a second-team selection last year.
Vaughn, who has a 3.72 grade point average in business administration, was also named the Academic All-American team member of the year. The honor is much like being named most valuable player.
Haase has a 3.70 grade point average, also in business administration.
Also representing the Big 12 Conference on the first team was Baylor senior Doug Brandt.
Kansas now has three GTE Academic All-American basketball players. On Monday, senior guard Angie Halbleib was named a third-team Academic All-American. Halbleib has a 3.82 grade point average in math education.
GTE Academic All-America teams
First Team
First Team
Jacque Vaughn Kansas
Sr. 3.72 Business Administration
Jerod Haase Kansas
Sr. 3.70 Business Administration
Doug Brandt Baylor
Sr. 3.98 Aviation Science
Adonal Foyle Colgate
Jr. 3.47 History
Pat Garrity Notre Dame
Jr. 3.67 Biochemistry
Second Team
Second Team
Matt Harping Georgia Tech
Jr. 3.30 Management
Pete Lislicky Penn St.
Jr. 3.32 Finance
Seamus Lonergan Dartmouth
Sr. 3.85 Chemistry
T.J. Lux Northern Illinois
So. 3.76 Math Education
Dan Muller Illinois St.
Jr. 3.84 Business Administration
Third Team
Scott Cross Texas-Arlington
Jr. 4.00 Business/Marketing
Carlos Daniel Washington St.
Jr. 3.52 History
Alexander Koul George Washington
Jr. 3.33 Exercise Science
Corey Reed Radford
Jr. 3.97 Chemistry
Skipp Schaefbauer Illinois St.
Jr. 3.84 Business Administration
Baseball team to spend break traveling through the Midwest
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
While students are basking on the beaches of Cancun or hitting the ski slopes in Colorado next week, the Kansas baseball team will be spending spring break in exotic locales such as Ames, Iowa; Tulsa, Oklahoma; and Omaha, Neb.
- Maybe next year Kansas should schedule a few more of those road games in South Florida
"We're not going to the beach," head coach Bobby Randall said. "But all we have to concentrate on is playing baseball and getting rested."
The Jayhawks (15-9, 4-5), who ended their four-game slide with Wednesday's 8-2 victory against Arkansas, will be back on the road this weekend. Kansas, making the first of three spring break road trips, plays Iowa State tomorrow at noon in Ames.
The visit to Ames will mark a sort of homecoming for Randall. Randall, who made his college coaching debut as the Cyclones' head coach in 1985. Randall spent 10 years in Ames. He helped turn Iowa State into a formidable baseball program.
Before Randall's arrival the Cyclones hadn't posted a
winning record in seven years.
"It's funny because I still have some friends in Ames," Randall said. "But they're all Cyclone fans."
Although Randall still has ties to the Iowa State program, he said his main concern was with the Jayhawks.
"We had some good years up there, but this is my home now," Randall said. "I'm not part of that program anymore, I'm thinking more about today and tomorrow than I am about the past. Kansas is where my enthusiasm is."
Randall said the most important part of going to Ames was getting key conference wins.
"if there is any nervousness about Iowa State, it's that we need to win some games."
After Iowa State, the Jayhawks will play Rockhurst College and Howard University at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium and Oral Roberts and Creighton on the road. In all, Kansas will play eight games during the break.
After the nonconference series, the Jayhawks will be gearing up for a rugged conference schedule.
"We have a tough schedule ahead of us, Oral Roberts and Iowa State are quality teams," Randall said. "But our most difficult stretch starts real soon. Once we hit April, it's nothing but Big 12 Conference games."
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The University Daily Kansan is accepting applications for the positions of
Business Manager* and Editor
for the both the Summer and Fall 1997 semesters.
Applications may be picked up at The Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Deadline for Business Manager and Editor application
Friday, April 4, at 12:00 p.m.
*The Business Manager is responsible for the entire operation of The Kansan advertising department. Kansan experience is preferred.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(1)
Basketball: LaFrentz, Pierce consider entering the NBA draft. Page 1B
Intent to return: Templin Hall attracts returning on-campus residents. Page 3A
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
MONDAY, MARCH 31. 1997
SECTION A VOL.103.NO.124
ADVERTISING 864-4358
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Quick LOOK
Attack targets Cambodia's opposition leader, kills 11
PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA — Attackers hurled a grenade into a political protest yesterday in an apparent assassination attempt on Cambodia's main opposition leader.
Eleven people died, and 112 were wounded—including one American—in the attack that followed predictions of worsening political violence before legislative elections planned for November 1998.
San Rainsy, head of the Khmer National Party, was slightly injured by shrapnel in his leg. He said he owed his life to a bodyguard who died when he threw himself on the political leader to shield him.
Blood stained the grass and street after the attack on 200 protesters outside the National Assembly, where Rainsy had been leading a rally against alleged interference in the judicial system by Hun Sen's Cambodian People's Party.
SAN'A, Yemen — A father opened fire at two high schools in the Yemenite capital yesterday, killing seven people, including three children, and wounding others. security officials said.
Man's shooting rampage leaves 7 dead in Yemen
The gunman, identified as Hassan Ali al-Baadani, waited outside the gates of Al-Tallah private high school, which his two daughters attend, said the officials, speaking on customary condition of anonymity.
When the headmistress, Asma al-Nomaan, arrived, he fatally shot her in the head, witnesses said. He then killed a cafeteria employee who rushed to cover her body and wounded a bus driver who tried to block him from entering the school.
Saudi bombing suspect may be sent back home
Once inside, he went from classroom to classroom, killing three children and one teacher before walking 500 yards to the nearby Moussa bin Nussail High School, where he killed another teacher.
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — The Saudi suspect held in Canada for last June's bombing that killed 19 American servicemen should be extradited to Saudi Arabia, not to the United States, an Interior Ministry official said yesterday.
Hani al-Sayeg was arrested in Ottawa on March 18 for possible involvement in the deadly truck bombing at Dhahra in eastern Saudi Arabia.
Canadian officials claimed that al-Sayyeh was a threat to Canadian security and wanted to deport him. U.S. officials have said that because he entered Canada from the United States, al-Sayyeh could be deported to U.S. territory rather than Saudi Arabia.
But the Interior Ministry official, speaking on customary condition of anonymity, said that al-Sayeh should be sent to Saudi Arabia because he is a Saudi and the bombing happened in Saudi territory.
The Associated Press
TODAY
INDEX
Opinion...4A
National News...6A
Features...8A
Horoscopes...6B
Classifieds...6B
SUNNY
High 68° Low 42°
Weather: Page 2A
Duck
Teacher takes fatal fall
John T. Lee dies at 51
By Kevin Bates Kansan staff writer
KU instructor John T. Lee died Thursday morning after falling from the Clinton Lake spillway control tower to a concrete deck 49 feet
below. He was 51.
Sgt. Blake McCall said that the Douglas County Sheriff's Department was still investigating whether the death was accidental or a suicide. Foul play has been ruled out.
Lee, instructor in architecture and urban design, was found shortly before 9:45 a.m. by a group of sighteers.
Lee had lived in Lawrence since 1970 and had been an instructor at the University since 1980. He also
had worked in private practice in Lawrence as the founder of the architectural firm John Lee & Associates. 833/1/2 Musicsts St.
Doug Loveland, Lawrence senior, said that he had found out Friday night about Lee's death. Loveland, who was in Lee's studio class two semesters in a row, said that his teacher had fostered close-knit classes.
room," Loveland said. "We usually had 5 p.m. deadlines, so sometimes his version of a deadline was to gather at Free State. If you showed up, he assumed you met the deadline and handed in your project."
Loveland said that Lee had been helpful, but that he would not push students in a particular direction.
"I think everyone in the class got to know him better than they would have if we were just stuck in a class-
"He was very willing to help students work on their goals, but he wasn't inclined to lead a student," Loveland said. "I think he was more comfortable letting students find
"He really provoked creativity in the studio," Nenonen said. "He posed questions and really made us think."
Dan Nenonen, Sycamore, Ill., senior, said that Lee had forced students to think in class.
12
John Gaunt, dean of architecture and urban design, said that the School of Architecture and Urban Design would inform students
their own course."
See FALL. Page 2A
Doggone it!
Kansas men cope after heartbreaking loss, missed chances
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams sits alone and disappointed in the locker room with the box score from Friday's game. The Arizona Wildcats beat the Jahwaves 85-82 in the third round of the NCAA Tournament at Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center in Birmingham, Ala.
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Tears, blank stares,
stunned faces ... it was as if a close friend
had died.
The mood in the Kansas men's basketball locker room had all the look and feel of a funeral home following the team's 85-82 loss to Arizona in the third round of the NCAA Tournament in Birmingham, Ala.
The grief was not for a person; rather, shattered hopes and dreams were being mourned on this evening.
Kansas guard Ryan Robertson went so far as to question whether he would be able face his family and friends in Kansas and Missouri
Steve Punke / KANSAN
In the postgame press conference, a downhearted Kansas coach Roy Williams fought tears when talking about his disappointment.
"It's going to be extremely hard to go back to Lawrence and St. Charles and look people in the eye," Robertson said. "This is a hard one to swallow."
"Sometimes life isn't fair," a teary eyed Williams said. "I'm going to keep knocking on the door, and one of these days we'll kick it down."
Williams, who hasn't taken a team to the Final Four since 1993, said he would conduct an internal inquiry of his coaching.
"As a coach I'm going to do a lot of soul searching and see if there is anything missing from Roy Williams," Williams said.
On March 26. Williams was voted college
basketball coach of the year by The Sportina News magazine.
Despite the loss, Williams said he was proud of the Jayhawks, who posted a 34-2 record.
"Im the luckiest coach in America, and I can say that right now," Williams said. "There will be a coach cutting down the nets, and he won't be as lucky as Roy Williams."
Trafficway debate has its day in court
By Paul Eakins Kansan staff writer
The first court battle concerning the South Lawrence Trafficway ended on Friday, and the plaintiffs won many of the concessions they wanted.
At the end of the hearing, U.S. District Court Judge Tom Van Bebber issued a preliminary injunction, limiting county and state work on the project until the trial on May 2 is concluded.
The injunction limits the county to basic planning of the eastern leg of the trafficway, but prohibits them from buying rights of way or beginning construction.
Plaintiff Jason Daniels, Colby sophomore, said the decision was a victory for trafficway opponents.
"We would have loved for the whole thing to be decided on Friday," Daniels said. "But anytime you stop the machine of development for a couple months, it's a win."
Bruce Plenk, attorney for the trafficway opponents, said that the judge would hear the case again on May 2, after revised documents from both parties had been submitted to him.
Van Bebber will decide then if construction can commence or if a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement is necessary.
"We wanted him to stop any fur
County officials said they did not need to prepare the statement because they did not intend to spend federal money for the remaining leg of the trafficway.
The impact statement would examine the trafficway's environmental effect on the Haskell Indian Nations University and Baker Wetlands and its spiritual and educational impact on Haskell students and faculty.
tner progress until he could decide if an SEIS was needed," Plenk said, "and that's what he decided."
The Federal Highway Administration, which had overseen the trafficway project, pulled out of the remaining operation.
If an impact statement found that the trafficway could not be built on its current proposed route along 31st Street, the plaintiffs would want the money to be spent on a route south of the Wakarusa River away from both the Wetlands and the Haskell campus.
However, the project was begun as a federally funded project, and $11.6 million of those funds have not yet been used.
Daniels said he was optimistic about what Van Bebber's decision would be.
"He told us that we had a really good case right at the beginning," Daniels said.
Bus options discussed
Senate candidates agree KU and city should cooperate
By Paul Eakins Kansan staff writer
Cooperation between the University of Kansas and the City of Lawrence is necessary to handle public transportation, the three presidential candidates for
Student Senate agreed
"Basically we want someone on Student Senate to hook up with City Commission to work as a liaison," said Michael Yaghmour, Pittsburgh
P
Michael Yaghmore
junior and independent presidential candidate.
Scott Sullivan, Unite presidential candidate and Leawood junior, said he supported a coordinated bus system between the University and the city because that would be the most effective and productive system.
"We can put together a service that serves the students and the citizens and costs the least for both parties." Sullivan said.
Jason Fizell, Olathe senior and Delta Force presidential candidate, agreed that the University and the city needed each other in establishing a city wide bus system.
"I definitely think it would be stupid for the city to work without the University and stupid for the University to work without the city." Fizell said.
agement Advisors, Inc., a Philadelphia-based company presented several public transportation options to the commission. One
Earlier this year. Chance Man-
Scott Sullivan
P. R. M. BAGHAIN
Yaghmour said he supported the second option, not only so that KU students can benefit
Another option was to combine the KU bus system and a city system, creating a 12-route system.
option was to have two separate bus systems, one run by the University and the other, a five-route system, run by the city.
Sullivan said that he also supported the second option but that it would take a while to integrate the two systems. He said the city could slowly take control of the KU on Wheels system after it had established its own system.
from being able to travel to more places around Lawrence but also because a larger system would benefit Haskell students and Lawrence residents as well.
Fizel said that he would support the eventual integration of the two
systems, as suggested in the second option, and that this might be a good opportunity for students to get out of the day-to-day running of the bus system.
"I question
Jason Fitzell
whether or not it should be in students' hands." Fizzel said.
However, regardless of whether the bus system was turned over to the city or to the University, Fizell said student representation must be maintained.
Last year, Senate had to give KU
See BUS SYSTEM,Page 2A
2A
Monday, March 31, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
C
WEATHER
QuickINFO
CAMPUS EVENTS TELEVISION LISTINGS WEATHER ET CETERA
TODAY
68
42
Mostly sunny with a chance for winds.
TUESDAY
67
47
C
A chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon.
WEDNESDAY
56
42
CAMPUS EVENTS
A chance for rain and a drop in temperatures.
ON CAMPUS
Assemblages featuring artwork by Karen Jacks and Ardys Ramberg will be at the Phoenix Gallery, 919 Mass. St., March 1 to April 15. Contact: 843-0080.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at the Danfort Chapel. Contact the Rev. Raymond May at 843-0357.
from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson. Contact: Adam Capron at 842-9112.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have Mass at 4:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Chapel, 1631 Crescent Rd. Contact: the Rev. Raymond May at 843-0357.
International Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kauai Union.
Contact: Dedu Cohaut at B41-1010
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet
KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. Contact: Pannir at 844.7736
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have the Fundamentals of Catholicism at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. Contact: 843-0357.
BUS SYSTEM
Continued from Page 1A
on Wheels $140,000 to keep the buses running.
Fitzell said that last year's bailout was unfortunate and that it will probably happen again unless something is changed.
He said that Senate should try to find federal money to help pay for it because public transportation is not self-supporting.
Sullivan also said that the ballout was unfortunate but that it was necessary, as many students rely on the buses.
"People want to get from point A to point B," Sullivan said. "You can't stop the buses. They have to run every day."
Yaghmour agreed that the University needed the bus bailout.
"As long as the students are running the system, I think that Senate should bail them out," he said. "I definitely think it's Student Senate's responsibility."
Sullivan said that he thought that Senate could help to get a city and KU bus system running but that if this didn't happen, the Senate would need to have a forum considering other options to improve the system.
Sullivan said that a coordinated bus system was among Unite's top transportation priorities but that he also wanted to ensure that services such as Safe Ride remain available and free.
Fizell said that other transportation issues of importance to Delta Force were modernizing the buses by making them more environmentally friendly and creating bike lanes on Jayhawk Boulevard.
FALL
Continued from Page 1A
today about who would take over Lee's classes.
"I've only known him for about two and a half years, but I really enjoyed him," Gaunt said. "I think everyone did. He was an articulate, intelligent, witty guy. I considered him a valuable part of the faculty."
Lee had been involved in the design of several projects in Lawrence, said Bob Moody, Lawrence city commissioner. One of Lee's more recent projects was the renovation of the Union Pacific Depot in North Lawrence, which should be completed this spring, he said.
"He researched and found the depot's original drawings in University Archives," Moody said. "It's an unfortunate thing that he couldn't have seen it finished. The gardens were to have been his signature on the project. It was his dream to see it completed."
Lee was born May 12, 1945 in St. Louis and married Janet Majure in 1984. Lee is survived by his wife, daughter Susan Lee and his mother.
A visitation was held for friends and family from 5 to 6 p.m. yesterday at the Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. There will be a memorial service at 2 p.m. today at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
MONDAY PRIMETIME
TV TONIGHT
MONDAY: PRIMETIME MARCH 31, 1997
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO In the House Malcolm Spark (R) ★★★ Homebys Xenx Warrior Princess (R) ★★ Mad Abo, You Bzzz Cops ★★ LAPD WDAF Melrose Place (in Stereo) Married.. Pauly ★★★ News ★★ H. Patrol Cheers ★ Extra KCTV Kansas Basketball College Basketball: NCAA Tournament Championship -- Teams TBA News ★★ Late Show (In Stereo) KS06 News Plus
KCPT National Geographic American Experience Survival (R) ★★ Business Pkt MotorWeek Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
KSNT Mad Abo, You "The Plano" ★★★ (1993, Drama Holly Hunter, Harvey Kollart, in Stereo) News Tonight Show (In Stereo) Late Night KMBC "The Ten Commandments" ★★★(1994) Charlton Heston. News Roseanne M"A'SH" KTWU National Geographic Where Have Children Gone? Spring Business Pkt Charlie Rose (In Stereo) WIBW Cooby (R) Raymond College Basketball: NCAA Tournament Championship -- Teams TBA News Late Show (In Stereo) KTKA Relativity (in Stereo) "The Ten Commandments" ★★★(1956) Charlton Heston. News Seinfeld ★Married... Nighttime
CABLE STATIONS
AAE Biography: Nancy Reagan Poirot "The Third-Floor Flat" Miss Marple (Part 3 of 3) Law & Order ★★ Biography: Nancy Reagan CNBC Equal Time Hardball Rivers Live Late Night (in Stereo) Charles Grodin Rivera Live (R)
CNN Prime News Burden-Proof Larry King Live World Today Sports Illue. Moneyline Newnight Showbiz COM "Raising Arizona" ★★★(1987) Comedy Nicolas Cage. On Delivery Dream On Daily Show Comic Relief Tick Sat. Night COURT Prime Time Justice: Okla. Trial Story: Shirley Cochran and Grace Prime Time Justice (R) Trial Story (R)
CSPN Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs ★★
DISC Wild Discovery: Salmon Life on Mars (R) CIA-Secret Warriors Wild Discovery: Salmon Life on Mars (R)
ESPN Sportcenter Figure Skating World Championships -- Finals Baseball Sportscenter Baseball
HIST Churchill and War Rooms Victory at Sea Battle Line Men in Crisis Perspectives Year by Year "1961" R churchill and war Rooms
LFE Unsolved Mysteries "In the Shadow of Evil" (1955, Suspense) Treat Williams Living Unsurvived Mysteries Sisters
MTV Induct Outing Sports Music Videos (in Stereo) Road Rules Daria Singled Out Loveline (in Stereo) Adult Videos
SCJF Sequestra DSV "To Be or Not to Be" (in Stereo) Masters New Edge (R) Quantum Leap Sequestra DSV (in Stereo)
TLC Extreme Machine-Depth Passion of the Saints (R) Immortal Extreme Machine-Depth Passion of the Saints (R)
TNT WCW Nitro (Live) Adventures of Robin Wood WCW Nitro (R)
USA (6.57) World Wrestling Federation Monday Night Raw La Femme Milka "Fiandre" Wings Wings Silk Stalkings "Ask the Dust"
VH1 Hard Rock Live (R) Fashion TV RuPaul (R) Dance Bandstand Sex Appeal Crossroads Soul of VH1
WGN 7th Heaven (R) Buffy the Vampire Slayer News (in Stereo) Wiseguy "The Reunion" In the Heat of the Night
WTBS "Narrow Margin" ★★★(1990, Suspense) Gene Hackman "Wheels of Terror" ★★★(1990, Suspense) Cassady Wild Life Adventures (R)
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 40 "The Bridges of Madison County" ★★★(1995) Clint Eastwood, PG-13 "Hostile Intentions" ★★★(1995) Ta Carrere. "The Second Civil War"
MAX "It Takes Two" ★★★(1995, Comedy Kristine Alley, PG) Heat ★★★(1995) Al Pacino. A harmed detective matches wits with a running adversary. R
SHOW B-Dome "Bear Dogs" Sharp Show (R) Daffnake Hammack
ETCETERA
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Congratulations from KU faculty, staff and students on a wonderful season.
KANSAS
25
You are the best Jayhawks!
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 31, 1997
3A
Templin Hall attractive to returning residents
By Harumi Kogarimal
Kansan staff writer
A survey by the Department of Student Housing showed that many students who live on campus want to live in Templin Hall next year.
The department sent intent to return cards to current residents at the beginning of the spring semester. The residents filled out their intent to remain or to leave on-campus housing and their hall or room preferences.
The housing department has compiled the results and mailed contracts to the residents who wish to live on campus next year.
Kami Thomas, assistant director of the Department of Student Housing, said that 175 current residents wanted to live in Templin next year. The number was the highest among all residence halls, although Templin's maximum occupancy is the lowest at 290.
"Since it's new and renovated, students are interested in Templin." Thomas said. "The suite is also attractive to them."
Thomas said that 1,400 students will come back to on-campus housing next year, according to the occupancy report compiled on March 21.
Six hundred students in residence halls, 320 students in scholarship halls and 480 students in Jayhawker Towers plan to stay on campus next year.
These students were 21 percent of the current residents, Thomas said.
Intent to Return
Results of intent to return cards as of March 21:
600 students for residence halls
320 for scholarship halls
480 for Jayhawker Towers
■ Corbin Hall—5 (320)
■ GSP Hall—16 (430)
■ Ellsworth Hall—129 (650)
■ Hashinger Hall—61 (320)
■ Lewis Hall—56 (420)
■ McCollum Hall—101(950)
■ Oliver Hall—56 (650)
■ Templin Hall—175 (290)
*Numbers in parenthesis are the maximum occupancy.
The percentage was slightly lower than last year, but some students haven't returned the cards yet.
The housing department gives hall or room preferences to students who returned the cards by February 21. Upon receiving the cards, the housing department sent a contract to the students. If they sign the contract and make a payment by April 1, they will get priority status.
But even if students returned the cards before the deadline, it does not necessarily mean that they will be able to live in Templin.
The housing department has a separate selection process for Templin residents due to the hall's academic focus. University scholars will have the first priority, followed by new Honors Floor and KU Experience program students. Returning residents and new KU students will have the last chances to get a room in the residence hall.
"Since it's new and renovated, students are interested in Templin. The suite is also attractive to them."
Kami Thomas assistant director department of student housing
The cost for a Templin room varies from $4,700 to $4,860 while the cost for other residence halls is from $3,736 to $4,644.
John Yoo, Independence, Mo., junior, indicated that he wanted to live in Templin on his intent to return form.
"I have been here for three years, and I wanted to try something different," he said.
Technology funding debated
Regents seek money for modern equipment
By Ann Marchand
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Funding for technology improvements at Board of Regents institutions yo-yoed this week as the House and Senate debated parts of the budget bill.
Gov. Bill Graves, in his State of the State address in January, said that he would support a one-time $7.5 million technology expenditure.
Maintaining high-caliber technological equipment is a priority for the Regents this year, executive director Steve Jordan said earlier this month. The Regents requested a one-time $12 million allocation to upgrade technology at the six Regents institutions.
But the House did not endorse the Governor's recommendation. The appropriations committee proposed a one-time allocation of $4 million.
When the budget bill reached the House floor for consideration, conservative members attempted to delete the technology funding from the legislation. The amendment passed. But after later reconsideration, the $4 million was restored.
Rep. Troy Findley, D-Lawrence, said that providing students with cutting-edge technology would be a continuous expense for the state and should not be a one-time program.
"Technology improvements are definitely going to be an ongoing expenditure," he said. "We need to address short-term needs as well as long-term needs."
Members of the Senate Ways and Means Committee agreed with Findley. The committee recommended that $4 million be built into the base funding level for higher education so that the Regents could count on the money each year.
Ways and Means chairman Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, said that the rapid rate of technological advancement meant universities would need to upgrade equipment every year.
"It was our belief that the Regents would be better off with a smaller amount of money that they could count on every year," he said. "If we buy $7.5 million worth of equipment now, three years down the road we're faced with obsolescence, and we have to do it again."
But Kerr said that the ongoing funding could be abolished this week as the House and Senate tried
The proposed amount of money The Board of Regents will spend on technology next year has changed many times since January.
Technology Funding
$12 million
$7.5 million
$4 million $4 million
$4 million
(annually)
$0
Amounts indicate a one-time allocation unless otherwise noted.
Noah Musser/KANSAN
Graves will support whatever funding level the legislature hands him. His press secretary, Mike Matson, said that the governor trusted the decisions made by the House and the Senate, but that he would like to see some money for technology included in the final package.
to hash out their differences over the technology funding.
"He is obviously pleased that there is still money there," Matson said. "Ultimately, he will support whatever the legislature comes up with."
Classified Senate member in hot water
By Sean Demory
Kansan staff writer
Policy shifts and re-evaluation marked a special procedural meeting of the Classified Senate Wednesday.
The meeting was called to discuss the actions of a member who had been reprimanded for leaking information to the Graduate Teaching Assistants Coalition.
According to a letter sent by Richard Kershenbaum, Classified Senate member and manager of Technical Services at the Computer Center, statements were made by Tom Hutton, director of University Relations, regarding the status of GTAs.
Thelma Simons, president of the Classified Senate, which represents classified employees of the University such as some secretaries and members of KU police, had been approached by GTAC to speak at a rally. She asked her fellow members of the public relations committee whether to attend and whether attendance would be in the best interests of Classified Senate.
According to Kershenbaum's letter, Hutton said that graduate teaching assistants have nothing in common with classified staff because they are not employees, but merely interns who are preparing for a privileged position in society.
Hutton was unavailable for comment about this statement.
Kershenbaum sent e-mail documenting this to Karen Hellekson, former president of GTAC, who passed the message on to the Kansas Association of Public Employees.
He also sent a copy of the e-mail message to Simons who, acting on a vote from the executive council of Classified Senate, wrote a letter to Kershenbaum reprimanding him for acting against the spirit of Classified Senate's code. Kershenbaum responded by tendering his resignation.
At the meeting, Simons said that the significance of Kershenbaum's actions were based in the potential damage done to Classified Senate. There was some disagreement about whether Kershenbaum's actions were actually harmful to Senate or merely not in its best interest.
Although there were irregularities in the procedure, the assembled senators agreed that Kershenbaum's actions were not in the best interest of Classified Senate. The senators voted to have a letter sent to Kershenbaum stating their willingness to have him serve out the remainder of his term.
Dave Young, a member of GTAC's steering committee and a graduate teaching assistant in Spanish, attended the meeting as a representative of GTAC. He said that he hoped that Kershenbaum's actions and the response to them wouldn't strain employee relations at KU.
"The most important thing is that we are all employees of KU," Young said. "Attacks are coming down at all levels on public employees. We have to work together."
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HILLEL presents:
The Israeli Film Series;
A Collection of Israeli Made Films
Now Showing
...
Now SHOWING
Beyond the Walls Monday, March 31, 1997, 7:00 pm 2092 Dole Hall Israel's nominee for Best Foreign Film of 1984 is set within the confines of an over-crowded Israel prison where hatreds and conflicting ideologies come into sharp focus. When a prison official kills a Jew and blames the Arabs, the stage is set.
My Michael Monday, April 14, 1997, 7:00 pm 308 Dyche Hall Two intelligent young adults find each other and marry in a divided Jerusalem of the late 1950's.
Wedding in Galilee Monday, April 28, 1997, 7:00 pm The mukhtar of a Palestinian village under Israeli occupation wants to hold a traditional wedding for his son, and invites the Israeli military governor as a guest of honor.
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OPINION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
4A
PUBLISHED DAILY SINCE 1912
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Monday, March 31, 1997
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Editorials
Proposed holds center fosters procrastination and laziness
One of the greatest lessons students should take with them from the University does not come from a book. It comes from being forced to make decisions regarding time, money and priorities, because decisions like these, only with more serious consequences, are going to have to be made outside of the University.
Unfortunately, some people in Student Senate don't feel that these lessons are valuable, and instead want to be coddled even further by the University. Headed by Jamie Johnson, student body vice president, some members of Student Senate are diligently working to create a special holds office in Strong Hall where students could pay bills that are putting holds on their enrollment forms.
The center would be next to the enrollment center in Strong Hall so students could conveniently pay fees and
A holds center would allow students to pay enrollment holds on in one place.
then enroll. For some students, one less trip to campus would be a blessing, and this seems to be the motivation behind the proposal.
But in actuality, a holds center would only foster laziness. When a student gets a parking ticket, it can be paid immediately, hence the pink, addressed envelope the ticket comes in. Bills for services at Watkins Memorial Health Center can be paid anytime, and there are no late fees. Reminders for both parking tickets and Watkins bills are also frequent. Although tickets or Watkins bills can be expensive, the policies for delinquencies are lenient.
In addition, a holds center is not necessary. Any holds on a student's enrollment show up on his or her Academic Record Tracking System form, which is mailed about three weeks before enrollment. This should be plenty of time to take care of holds before enrollment. The idea of a holds center encourages students not to pay bills on time because they know they can wait until the last minute.
An institution to prepare students for the real world should not encourage irresponsibility. What is a student going to do after graduation? Wait until the house or car is about to be repossessed before paying off credit-card bills or payments? A hold center is futile because it would require student money to staff and equip a center for bills that students should have paid in the first place.
CATHY PIERCE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Tournament win deserves day off
At what should be considered the mecca of college basketball, Chancellor Robert Hemenway's March 10 announcement that classes would not be canceled if Kansas had won the NCAA basketball tournament caused sparks to fly among many fans, and with good reason. If classes were canceled in 1988 to celebrate the win, and a half-day was given off to celebrate making the Final Four in 1991, why shouldn't tradition and precedent be followed had this year's team had the same success?
Some people have cited a difference between the 1988 championship and the once-possible 1997 championship because of different expectations going into the tournament. The 1988 team was not really expected to win the tournament, they say, whereas this year's team had high expectations and hopes to win it all.
This year's team was favored to win. If it would have gone all the way, would
Celebrating a tournament title would not demean the academic caliber of KU.
that make victory any less sweet? A magnificent feat is just that, and the fact that fans had higher hopes this year should not have diminished this year's accomplishments.
For the past wins, days off were a way to honor the team and give students a chance to celebrate with a welcome-home rally. If a team with higher expectations wins the championship, is it not entitled to the same commemoration of the achievement?
Another reason the chancellor gave for his decision was that few tournament-winning universities had canceled classes in celebration of the national title.
sity merely be a reflection of other universities' policies? Few other schools may cancel classes following the winning of the national title, but few other schools have the fans and tradition in basketball that the University has. There are times when following tradition of our own is more appropriate than following the examples of other schools.
Yes, this is an academic institution,
not a fan club. But even among students of the highest caliber, basketball mania will forever exist as long as students can look down the Hill and see Phog's field house. Taking time to celebrate a tradition does not demean the academic caliber of our institution. Rather, it commemorates a feat that hasn't been accomplished by the Jayhawks since 1988.
Since when must policy at the Univer-
It's tragic that at a school where basketball is such a tradition, a tradition that celebrates its success isn't policy.
KANSAN STAFF
KAREN CHANDLER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Kimberly Crabtree (opinion@kansan.com) or LaTina Sullivan (sullivan@kansan.com) at 864-4810.
Columns
'Magic fingers' gives new meaning to life
I discovered the supreme secret of life during spring break.
My good friend Frick and I drove from sunny Floyds Knobs, Ind., to Lexington, Ky. He was going to visit some old friends and decided to tag along. At the end of the two-hour drive, we arrived
ERIC WESLANDER
in a charming neighborhood that reminded me of downtown Lawrence. It was full of old houses with porches that were perfect for sitting and watching the sunset.
We knocked on the door, and the two people who emerged have changed my life. They were a couple who must have been in their late thirties. She was very friendly and very attractive. He, on the other hand, bore a
strange resemblance to Tatu from Fantasy Island. Of course, being a completely shallow person at times, my first reaction was to wonder what circumstances brought these two together. As we all know, the whole "beauty is skin deep" thing is nice to say but is rarely applied in the search for a mate.
As I reveled in my idealistic fantasy, I began to
This, however, was an exception. As I looked around at the decorations on the walls—wedding pictures, tapestries, paintings—I saw that this couple had settled into a comfortable existence in a great neighborhood. It was the kind of lifestyle I had always envisioned for myself. They seemed very happy together as we sat around and talked. The best part was that she had ignored the strong guidelines of physical attractiveness and had apparently married someone solely for his personality. How nice, I thought.
wonder what these two did for a living. Then the guy mentioned something about one of his "biggest clients." Were they drug dealers? Art dealers? Internet consultants? Frick told me after we left that he wasn't sure what she did, but that he was a professional masseuse.
Suddenly, everything was clear. He seemed like a nice guy, and I'm sure his magic fingers weren't the only reason they were a happily married couple, but I bet it didn't hurt. I bet it didn't hurt that he could knead the muscles in her back like a baker kneads bread. I bet it didn't hurt that he knew how to tweak, twist and prod every muscle in her body until she became like putty beneath his hands.
Yep, that's the supreme secret. Massage school. It doesn't matter if you look like a troll or have the personality of a walnut. If you know how to give a killer back rub, you will have your pick of any man or woman on the planet. Is that sick? Maybe. But is it true? Maybe. Put yourself in this situation: You are at a bar and you meet a member of the opposite sex. After a few minutes of conversation, it comes out that he or she dropped out of the University two years ago to study massage in Sweden and that he or she has just come back to the country to set up a massage parlor. What is the first thought that creeps into the back of your mind? Is it "Boy, I sure do hate Swedish massage," or is it "Back rub for ME!!"?
I am presently investigating ways to attain professional masseuse status while still completing my journalism degree in four years. I figure that, regardless of where I end up in life, it can't hurt to have a little massage know-how. Just like the jelly-of-the-month club, a knack for massage is the gift that keeps on giving.
Eric Westander is a Floyds Knobs, Ind., sophomore in Journalism.
Gangsta rap only reflects violent gang subculture
Like the death of rap star Tupac Shakur, the death of his rival rapper, The Notorious B.I.G. (alias Biggie Smalls aAlias Christopher Wallace), is an example of a culture's chickens coming home to roost.
I am talking about the culture known as gangsta rap. But I am not talking only about that.
The music known as gangsta rap is only an expression of a violent subculture known as gangsta, in the Ebonics of
Unlike C. Delores Tucker or former Education Secretary William Bennett or other famous critics of gangsta rap, I do not blame the music. My blame goes deeper than that.
CLARENCE PAGE
ghetto life. The Notorious B.I.G. went out in true gangsta style, gunned down in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles. So did Tupac Shakur, six months earlier in a drive-by in Las Vegas.
If anything, the deaths brought to national attention a continuing string of black-on-black violence that usually rates no more than a local headline, if that. In this world, as The Notorious B.I.G. put it, you're nobody until somebody kills you.
This edgy atmosphere of peril appeals to the risky sensibilities of impulsive youths. But they didn't invent it. Death long has been a dreary companion to youth music cultures. The rock culture of the 1960s is remembered, in part, for its famous overdoses, like Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison. Gangsta rap will be remembered for its famous drive-by shootings.
Those deaths signaled the end of the '60s. But gangsta rap appears to be going strong, helped, if anything, by these famous deaths. The Notorious B.I.G.'s latest album is expected to soar to the top of the sales charts the way Shakur's did after his death, where it stayed for weeks.
We need not turn to record or CD spinners to find
someone on whom to pin the blame for the downfall of our youths. Gangsta culture had many parents.
It grew out of an urban society that saw jobs pack up in the 1960s and later move to the suburbs or overseas or somewhere far from the people who formerly depended on them for employment
It grew out of statistics that show the numbers of black males in jail (683,000 in 1994, according to the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics) exceeding those of black males in college (549,000 that year, according to the United Negro College Fund.)
The number of African Americans who go to college has never been higher. That's the good news. The bad news is that the number of black men in prison has never been higher, either.
The results: a society in which at least 28 percent of the black males born today will go to prison sometime in their life, if current trends continue. That's according to figures released by the Bureau of Justice Statistics a few days before the Notorious B.I.G. died notoriously on the streets.
Gangsta rap was a natural byproduct of a segment of black America that was left behind.
Poor blacks created the blues and, out of that, rhythm and blues. Poor whites helped turn it into rock 'n' roll. Gangsta rap was created by the ghetto and consumed largely by suburbanites who made rappers rich and provided an incentive for the creation of more rappers.
I once heard a teen counselor say that if you want to prevent girls from getting pregnant, don't just give them a condom; give them a future.
I'd say the same for the violent gangsta youths. It is not enough for parents to denounce rap CDs and tapes and snatch them out of our children's hands. Forbidden fruit only becomes more tantalizing.
Rather, we have to give kids something to believe in. We have to show them they have a future, that they can be somebody without somebody killing them.
Clarence Page is a syndicated columnist.
Letters
Ebonics is a different form of communication
J. Ramon Ziadie's letter, published on March 11, concerning Ebonics reflects a number of misconceptions. There is no definition of what constitutes a language—for linguists the point at which a dialect or accent or slang becomes a language is fuzzy and indeterminable. Ebonics is a distinct style of communication. It is sufficiently different from standard English in that the two are not always mutually intelligible and speakers of one variety may often misinterpret the other.
Ziadie suggest that the only difference between Ebonics and standard English are minor phonetic differences. although the lecture that Ziadie refers to may have given phonetics as an example, Ebonics differs from standard English on all levels, including phonetic, syntactic and pragmatic.
Ziadie's letter promotes the notion that Ebonics contains errors. This is only true compared to standard English. it is no more valid than saying that Americans make errors, which they do if the English spoken in England is taken as correct. Ebonics is a different form of communication with different rules. Ebonics speakers follow those rules. Let's take the so-called incorrect verb conjugations used in Ebonics as an example. The incorrect use of the verb "to be" is commonly used as an example of Ebonics and of bad English. But Ebonics speakers are perfectly capable of conjugating the verb "to be" where appropriate. The unfamiliar use is a verb tense known as the habitual, which is common in West African languages but does not exist in standard English. "He be happy" is a an example. Ebonics speakers are capable of conjugating the phrase "He is happy," but this sentence would mean something different to them—it means he is happy right now. Ziadie may be happy writing Ebonics off as bad English, but perhaps we
should all be more aware that it contains sophisticated elements, some of which do not even exist in standard English. It is absurd to judge the correctness of one style of communication by the rules of a different style.
This does not mean schools should be teaching Ebonics: it is clearly a communication style that is going to inhibit someone's ability to get ahead in society. But we should refrain from ignorantly writing it off as bad English, and we should refrain from squabbling over whether it is a language. Instead, let's make sure that teachers in schools with large numbers of Ebonic speakers are able to understand their students; they are skilled in helping those students know when standard English is appropriate and do not further disadvantage an already disadvantaged group by telling them that the way they speak is wrong.
Jake Harwood
Jake Harwood assistant professor, communication studies
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 31, 1997
5A
Law, social work can be team
Program combines disciplines as means of helping the poor
By Sarah McWilliams Special to the Kansan
A few KU students are trying to demonstrate that combining the studies of law and social work, which might seem to be polar opposites, can produce a powerful means of helping the underprivileged.
There's not a well-heard voice for someone who doesn't have any money or who makes bad choices or is a third-generation welfare recipient," said Sharon Franco, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student. Franco said that she planned to become a licensed attorney and an advocate in the egislature.
Bethany Kay, Greensburg graduate student, said that lawyers and politicians often didn't have complete knowledge about social systems and that sometimes social workers lacked knowledge of the law.
Kay, who is finishing her second year in the School of Social Welfare,
said she might go into family law and deal with divorce and child custody mediation.
"I got through my first semester of law school and realized that while I liked law, I didn't like the adversarial nature of it," Kay said. "I liked being the peacemaker."
She said she felt getting a social work degree would help her fill that role, so she enrolled in the law and social work joint-degree program.
Deans in the School of Social Welfare and the School of Law started the program in 1989 to enhance law students' knowledge with a social work background and to enhance knowledge of law among students of social work.
The program is a set of degree requirements from each school combined into four years, shaving one year off the time it would take to earn each degree separately, said Margaret Severson, assistant professor of social welfare.
Students in the program take classes in either the social welfare
school or the law school for their entire first year and classes in the law school for their second year.
In their third year, they combine law classes with an average of 20 hours a week of social work in an agency. In their final year, students take all of their classes in the law school.
Phillip Palmer, Berkeley, Calif., graduate student, plans to become a licensed attorney after he graduates this spring. He is willing to work the extra hours for his degrees, he said, because he has a strong moral conviction that accused criminals deserve to have their civil rights protected and to have good lawyers defending them.
"I look at poor people who are not getting legal representation like O.J. Simpson." Palmer said.
Carol Porter, Emporia graduate student, said that her interest in social justice started when she managed a low-income housing project for the Department of Housing and Urban Development. She plans to work for underprivileged people in criminal defense.
John Rainwater, Oklahoma City, Okla, who will graduate this spring, said he planned to become a licensed attorney. He said he might
"I got through my first semester of law school and realized that while I liked law, I didn't like the adversarial nature of it."
Bethany Kay Greensburg graduate student
advocate for low-income housing in cities and fight against housing and employment discrimination. He said law had given him a foundation of skills to work for social justice, while social work had given him values.
"Social work will always guide my law career," Rainwater said.
Crimson tears
PAPA SALVATORE
Crimson Girls Rachel Schmidt and Angela Arnold console each other after Kansas' loss to Arizona on March 21.
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
KU law students prepare for court competition
By Ann Premer Special to the Kansan
A group of students of the University of Kansas School of Law are busily preparing for a mock-court competition fashioned after the United States Supreme Court.
On April 3, eight KU law school students, four teams of two students each, will compete against each other in moot court semifinals. Two of the teams will advance to the finals on April 10.
The team that wins the finals will represent the University in regional competition next fall in St. Louis.
"The competition itself is really nerve-racking because you know everyone there is really smart," said Matt Wiltanger, a third-year law student from Olathe who competed in last year's event. "You feel like you are going to throw up, but after you get your first question, you relax and then it's fun."
Stephen McAllister, professor of law and director of the competition, said it was an important experience for participants.
"We do it for practice and preparation for actually working in the real world," McAllister said.
U. S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas judged the final
round of last year's competition at the University.
"It was really intimidating arguing before him because he is a Supreme Court Justice," Wiltanger said. "You can never anticipate what a judge is going to ask. You can only prepare."
Kansas Attorney General Carla Stovall will serve as a judge for this year's competition.
McAllister said that KU teams had fared well at previous regional competitions. For the past two years, the University has advanced to the national level. He said that 28 teams advanced from regionals out of a field of 300.
Despite past success, McAllister said the teams were making improvements to their strategy.
"We are retooling our approach to briefs," McAllister said. "We've also done some refinements on oral arguments."
"We practice with all kinds of judges. We try to get a lot of perspectives so we develop something that has the widest appeal possible," McAllister said.
All teams in the competition work on the same case. Entrants submit a 50- to 60-page brief and
present an argument on behalf of either the respondent or the state to an appellate court.
Because so many cases are appealed, it is beneficial to know how to argue in front of an appellate court, Wiltanger said.
Brandease Caswell, a second-year law student from Montrose, Colo., said that the competition was a rare opportunity for law students to collaborate. In other situations, law students are not allowed to work with others because of an honor code, Caswell said.
The topic for the KU competition is Megan's Law, named for a girl who was murdered by a
repeat sex offender in New Jersey. The law states that when a sex offender is released from prison, notification must be given to law officials. They are then required to notify the community, McAllister said.
This law is under fire because some believe that it creates a situation called ex post facto, which punishes criminals for crimes committed before the law was passed, McAllister said. The problem facing the government is what happens to sex offenders who were convicted before Megan's Law was passed, he said.
Both KU competitions will be held in 201 Green Hall.
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NATION/WORLD
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American Indians continue dispute over Arizona land
Navajos may face relocation
The Associated Press
PHOENIX —The clock is ticking louder and louder for hundreds of Navaios living on Honi land.
Navajo families have until midnight to either sign leases acknowledging that the land in northern Arizona is Hopi or to put themselves in line for eviction.
"One person in the family wants to sign because they're scared, and another says they shouldn't. I don't trust the attorney. I don't trust the Hopi Council. I don't know what to believe at this point," said Lisa Tso, whose family lives on the Hopi reservation. "People are running around pretty sad, confused, stressed, fearful."
The leases, or so-called "accommodation agreements," were approved by Congress last fall as a solution to a decades-long land feud. The leases came about after the Navajos sued the federal government in the 1970s, saying their historical religious attachment to the land gave them the right to live there—despite the fact that courts had already ruled the area Hopi. A
federal appeals court in 1991 told the two sides to negotiate; the leases are the result of that.
Rumors abound about the lease agreement and whether the Hopi will limit the Navajos' agricultural or religious life. While the land was legally declared Hopi more than 20 years ago, the case has been tied up in the courts since then.
"People are being given all kinds of false hope," said Lee Phillips, a lawyer who represents Navajo families that want to sign leases with the Hopis. "They're being told it would be too much of a public embarrassment for there to be evictions of Native Americans on U.S. soil and that Congress will step in. They're being told the United Nations will step in or the World Court, none of which have any merit."
Religious freedom has been a sticking point. The Navajos claim that the Hopis are violating their rights by requiring permits for large ceremonies or for removing branches for spiritual services.
"These ordinances are designed for protection of our natural resources, not for restricting religion," said Kim Secakuku, a spokeswoman for the Hopi tribe. "Any community requires permits when people use public lands or roads."
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cent of the 112 Navajo "homesites" had signed leases. Several extended families can live at one homesite. Estimates of how many Navajos live there range from 300 to more than 1,000.
As of late Friday, more than 65 per-
Either way, evictions aren't imminent.
For families who don't sign, the federal government must give them 90 days to decide whether they want to be relocated at the government's expense. Then the government must build them a house, typically on the Navajo reservation. The process could take from six months to more than a year.
Families who do sign have three years to live under the Hopi leases before they lose their right to a relocation home elsewhere.
Cult suicide brings closure
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — The shock and grief most people feel when losing a loved one was missing for many relatives of the Heaven's Gate cult members who killed themself.
Most cult members abruptly left worldly matters, writing themselves out of their loved ones' lives long before they took their own.
"For me, he died 22 years ago," Mary Ann Craig said of her exhusband, John Craig, who left her and their six children for the cult in 1975. "When we found out
he was dead, there was a sense of closure more than anything for us."
Cult members estranged themselves from family and friends to pursue a monastic life in preparation for the UFO they believed would arrive to carry them to a higher plane of existence.
When they killed themselves in an attempt to rendezvous with a spaceship they thought was trailing the Hale-Bopp comet, it did not surprise many relatives.
"We're of mixed emotions," said Mark Applewhite, the son of Heaven's Gate leader Marshall Herff Applewhite. "My father is
dead—that's painful. It's sort of like we've been through a grieving process, and now we're seeking closure."
Applewhite said that he had not seen his father since he was 5 years old.
Actress Nichelle Nichols, who played Lt. Uhura on the original Star Trek television series, sad her brother cut off all communication with the family for 20 years after joining the cult but had called twice in the past few years.
"He made his choices, and we respect those choices," Nichols said Friday on CNN's Larry King Live.
Prescribed burning to clear forest
Debate about land clearing heats up
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Smokey Bear made a career of stomping out fires, so it may seem odd to think that the Forest Service would set trees ablaze.
stocked national forests of dead and dying timber.
Rep. Bob Smith, R-Oregon, chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, said the burning could cause hidden problems. He preferred salvage logging and worried that the fires would get out of hand.
Forest Service Chief Mike Dombeck agreed and told lawmakers fires must be treated with respect.
The Clinton administration plans to increase prescribed burning from 750,000 acres in 1997 to 1.3 million acres next year to clear over-
result, they upset the natural cycle of fire that for 10,000 years made way for more mature trees.
"The price that we have paid for 60, 80 or 100 years of very effective fire suppression is that we have changed the succession of ecosystems," Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt said.
In defense of prescriptive burns, Babbitt used an analogy of a person with a long history of poor eating habits.
Federal firefighters saw 6 million acres burn naturally last year and tried to douse every blaze. As a
"We need to burn off the unhealthy fat, not practice forest liposuction," Babbitt said.
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Business Manager* and Editor
The University Daily Kansan is accepting applications for the positions of
for the both the Summer and Fall 1997 semesters.
Applications may be picked up at The Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Deadline for Business Manager and Editor application submission is Friday. April 4. at 13:00 p.m.
Friday, April 4, at 12:00 p.m.
*The Business Manager is responsible for the entire operation of The Kansan advertising department. Kansan experience is preferred. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 31, 1997
7A
Pope sends message of hope
The Associated Press
VATICAN CITY — Decrying the forces of evil, Pope John Paul II sent a message of hope for the victims of violence in Albania and Africa in his Easter Sunday message.
As has become his custom, the 76-year-old pontiff used the Urbi et Orbi ("To the City and to the World") blessing to appeal for peace in world trouble spots.
"Christ is the hope ... of those who see life and the future threatened by war and hatred, especially in the heart of Africa," said the pope.
"May the power of the Risen Christ sustain those who work to strengthen peace and democracy,
Pope St. John Paul II
Pope John Paul II
often obtained at the cost of great sacrifice, as in the Balkans, and especially in beloved Albania," said the pope, who plans a visit to the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, in two weeks.
He also called for harmonious living in the Holy Land and said that his thoughts went out in a special way to the hostages held by rebels since December at the Japanese Embassy in Lima, Peru.
For Christians, Easter is a celebration of Jesus' resurrection after death by crucifixion.
"Christ is truly risen! In him, today, we can overcome the forces of evil," said John Paul, who delivered Easter greetings in 57 languages.
In a departure from tradition, the pope spoke seated in a chair near the outdoor altar rather than from the basilica balcony, which had a banner and curtain set up in preparation for his presence.
The Vatican blamed the change on the late start of the pope's outdoor Easter Mass before the message. He risked missing the satellite feed for the message's worldwide broadcast if he had gone up to the balcony, officials said.
Some 100,000 people filled St. Peter's Square, marked by splashes of yellow, pink and white from flowers donated by Dutch cultivators.
John Paul appeared in relatively good form, if a bit tired, after a long week of celebrations, which culminated in vestedday's rites.
Albania, torn by chaos and violence for weeks, and Zaire, scene of a long-running civil war, have been foremost in the pope's mind during the Holy Week celebrations.
He has referred to the countries several times in public remarks, and Albanians and Zalrians were selected for Saturday's traditional baptisms by the pope and for the Good Friday procession at the Colosseum.
Women's garb veiled by controversy
Islam dictates modest attire in Persian Gulf
The Associated Press
SHARJAH, United Arab Emirates — Samira Ismaili can see the world around her through a thin slit in her veil. The world sees little more of Ismaili than her eyes. The rest of her remains concealed by folds of black cloth.
Still, among the conservative Muslims of the Persian Gulf, showing even a woman's eyes is too much. Hard-line Islamic clerics argue that the "niqab —the eye-revealing veil that Gulf women are taking to—can encourage promiscuity.
Women's eyes are too alluring, the clerics argue. And worse yet, the hard-liners say, some women are wearing kohl—an age-old Arab version of eyeliner—doubling the temptation for men to stare and women to stare back.
In mosques, religious edicts, or fatwas, are handed out urging a return to the traditional veil that covers the entire face. In one fatwa, a Saudi cleric says that "the gates of evil shall open and will be difficult to shut again" if any man can look into a woman's eyes.
Ismaila's almond-shaped, brown eyes register hurt when this is discussed, for she believes the niqab is her way to be closer to Allah.
"I'm at peace because I feel I will not incur God's wrath," says
Ismaili.34.
The idea of the veil comes from the Koran, Islam's holy book, which says women must hide their "adornments" from all but their husbands. This has led to the tradition of Muslim women wearing a whole range of scarves, veils and even masks when outside their homes.
Many Muslim women wear the "hijab," which covers the hair—or most of it—but shows the face. Veils that reveal just the eyes have long been used in some places. But in the Gulf, tradition dictated a gauzy black cloth that hides the woman's face entirely and allows her to see the world only dimly.
The wearing of the veil seems to cause as much fuss as any aspect of Islam, both in the Muslim world and outside. Westerners—and some Muslims—argue it is a way to subjugate women. But other Muslim women say it gives them a comfortable anonymity.
Many Muslim women gave up the veil earlier in the century, wearing Western styles instead to be modern. But with Islam gaining a stronger influence in the last 20 years, so have the veil and scarf.
In Sharjah, Ismaili sat cross-legged on the carpeted floor of her home and explained that her life had been a series of veils.
First, she covered her entire face, as her mother had. But after she had an embarrassing stumble, her husband suggested she cover her hair with an "abaya," a black cloak, but leave her face showing so she could see where she was going. Now, with many Arab women returning to tradition, she has taken to the niqab.
Along with piety, reasons given for donning the garment include pressure from family and friends and its stvlishness in the Gulf these days.
Women in niqab do not socialize with strange men, but it hasn't stopped them from taking on careers. It is not unusual to see Gulf women wearing niqabs while driving cars or talking on cell phones.
Fatima, 43, claims she was one of the first women in Sharjah to don the niqab seven years ago. She gave up her scarf for the more conservative niqab not from religious conviction but because her husband pushed her to do so.
"Soon afterward, I welcomed it because my husband stopped nagging that I wore too much makeup or opened my mouth too wide when I laughed," said Fatima, who asked that her last name not be used.
"Now I can laugh as loud as I want and open my mouth as wide as I like. Nobody is going to know who I am," she said with a giggle.
Fatima has heard the criticisms of the niqab's focus on the allure of women's eyes, and she has stopped using black-powdered kohl around her eyes.
She did so at the urging of her daughter, a 22-year-old medical student who wears the niqab and considers kohl too enticing.
Most of the anti-niqab clerics are from Saudi Arabia, which sees itself as the guardian of Islamic orthodoxy. They argue that the anonymity of the niqab can foster immorality, and one fatwa relates a married Saudi woman's confession of her temptation after donning the niqab.
"I began looking at men very openly and would see their eyes
Samira ismalli Muslim woman
"I feel I have earned my respect. Being anonymous gives me freedom."
and feel their astonishment," the woman's account said.
"I began to hear compliments. Flattering remarks were music to my ears. One thing led to another, and the fear subsided and finally disappeared. ... When a man noticed my excitement and approval, he gave me his phone number."
Despite complaints against the niqab, Ismaili sees it as God's will and said it liberated her.
"I feel I have earned my respect. Being anonymous gives me freedom," she said.
She also has given up wearing kohl and now sits with male relatives or friends only in the presence of her husband.
"Islam says that temptation results from mingling between men and women and that that women are often subjected to insults," Ismaila said. "I prefer that God is happy with me, not that men are. I feel God is satisfied with me—and would take me to Heaven."
Peru's hostage crisis lingers on
Easter brings hope, no end
The Associated Press
LIMA, Peru — President Alberto Fujimori has again rejected a key demand from rebels holding 72 captives, dampening Easter weekend speculation that an end to Peru's hostage crisis was close.
"The framework in which we're working is the same, which is to say, not to release any of them," Fujimori told a television news program, Contrapunto, on Saturday. However, he said that talks had advanced.
Despite newspaper reports that the government and leftist guerrilla captors were considering a deal, Fujimori said in an interview broadcast yesterday that he had not budged from his refusal to release several hundred jailed rebels.
Tupac Amaru leader Nestor Cerpa said this weekend that the standoff at the Japanese ambassador's residence would continue as long as the government refused to free his comrades.
Cerpa, who led a team of commandos that seized the compound during a cocktail
party on Dec. 17, denied that a resolution to the hostage crisis was close.
Fujimori was more positive, saying that preliminary talks had practically finished and that the two sides had reached agreement on some issues.
He said that Cerpa and government negotiator Domingo Palermo still needed to hold some meetings.
"There was a lot of speculation this Easter Week that a peaceful way out would happen, but it wasn't in the final stage," he said.
Talks between the rebels and the government were expected to resume this week
Last week, Peruvian newspapers reported that mediators had crafted a plan in which the rebels would be offered a payoff and safe passage to Cuba, which has agreed to accept the rebels. The deal also would include the promise of early release for some, but not all, jailed Tupac Amaru rebel.
Fujimori said that the rebels had been flexible on the issue of a ransom payment.
"I understand that there's no insistence on that subject," he said.
"They're physically well. But from the psychological point of view, it could be causing deterioration in their health after more than 100 days of being confined."
Politics hostile in India
The Associated Press
liament reconvenes in three weeks.
NEW DELHI, India — The Congress Party, which has dominated Indian politics since leading the country to independence from Britain in 1947, suddenly withdrew its support from the governing coalition yesterday, meaning new elections may be necessary for the second time in a year.
Congress called on Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda to resign, blaming his government for what the party called a failure to curb Hindu nationalism and for a breakdown of law and order.
Gowda's 14-party United Front coalition responded defiantly, saying that it would battle to stay in office when par-
The timing of the move came as a surprise because India and Pakistan were engaged in their first formal dialogue for three years in an effort to ease tension between the hostile neighbors. The political upheaval was likely to overshadow the talks, which are due to end today.
A spokesman for the United Front coalition said that the prime minister would not resign.
Opposition leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee said the withdrawal of Congress' support would likely lead to an election and that he doubted that any party could command a majority in parliament.
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What I did on my
SPRING BREAK
OPTION No.1
A wet, wild, wonderful week in South Padre
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TEXAS
Story and photograph by Dave Breitenstein
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TEXAS
—Spring break. Just those two words conjure up images of packed beaches, alcohol and road trips.
Most college students yearn for the week in March when schoolwork and jobs take a backseat to partying.
But I never had a fun spring break—until last week when I left the book bag at home, loaded up the car and head to South Padre Island, Texas.
The 16-hour, 1,099-mile trip from Lawrence was a bit boring, and once I finally was there, I wanted to get crazy. But there were a few immediate problems—the spring break agency booked us in the wrong hotel, the pullout sofa bed had the bar from hell running through it, and the sun wasn't shining.
corporations, such as Coca-Cola and Nestea, sponsored huge beach bashes. Almost every student was drinking cheap beer and having a blast. My parents warned me about safety at Padre, but with so many security officers patrolling the area, I felt safer than I do in Lawrence.
Walking along Padre Blvd. was proof that college men still have no clue what sexual harassment is. "Shake it, baby" and "Take it all off" replaced the standard, cheesy pickup lines. Padre did prove to be a place where students showed off their bodies, and I think I've seen enough bilinis, chests and dance contests to last me for a while.
But when the clouds broke that afternoon, I was ready to experience a real spring break. Several large
The dance clubs were probably the most exciting part of spring break. Where else can you put thousands of drunk, sweaty, horny 20-somethings in a confined area and have no problems? I never saw a fight or argument. Wild disc jockeys threw free
T-shirts and hats to partyers on the dance floor. The clubs also brought in big-name musicians, such as Rob Base and Vanilla Ice, as well as up-and-coming local bands, such as Norman, Okla.-based Wakeland, whose hit song will appear on tonight's Melrose Place.
KIDDY
Thousands of college students pack the beaches in South Padre Island, Texas, each year during spring break. Corporate sponsors provided students with free T-shirts, CDs, beverages and on-stage entertainment.
A must for every spring breaker is a shopping trip in Mexico. Three dollars pays for a bus ride to and from the border to nearby Matamoros, Mexico. Taxi drivers did not care if they bumped into another car, hit a curb or even a person.
Shop owners would attempt to use minimal English to persuade you to purchase a knicknack. Bargaining with the owners was fun as neither side wanted to give in. But in the end customers usually walked away with something new. Little girls would follow you down the street tugging on your shirt, hoping you would buy gum or cigarettes from them.
Just laying on the beach provided entertainment. Small airplanes struggled to pull huge advertisements behind them, and it was fun to see a pilot give up and turn around because the wind was too strong. So
many beach junkies were burned or peeling, and it just made me want to slap them on the back and say, "I'm sorry. Did that hurt?" The water was freezing, so few people actually braved the waves to get wet. But parasailing, jet skiing and bungee jumping quenched many students' quest for excitement.
Looking back on my spring break, I wonder why I waited until my senior year to finally have fun.
I encourage all KU students to party at South Padre; Daytona Beach, Fla; or Cancun, Mexico sometime during college because once you're in the real world, people expect you to be sober most of the time.
OPTION No.2
Students spend week in cities helping others
While most students prefer spending their spring breaks on a beach, soaking up rays and sucking down frozen drinks, two groups of KU students chose to do something less glamorous.
Story by Amanda Arbuckle
These students spent their vacations learning that for many unfortunate Americans, life is not a beach.
Thirty-five philanthropists sponsored by the St. Lawrence Catholic Center traveled to Denver, Chicago, Dallas or Conception, Mo., and worked for nonprofit groups.
The students who went to Denver worked for the Neighborhood Housing Partners, an organization that remodels old
buildings into homes for those who cannot afford regular housing. The students spent their days in a poor Hispanic-American neighborhood, doing everything from demolition to painting.
Laura Gomez, Overland Park senior, chose this trip because she knew it would be a unique, rewarding experience. She also knew her fluency in Spanish would be an asset.
"I've already done the Padre thing." Gomez said. "I'd like to know that I've made a difference in someone else's life."
Paul Brune, Olathe junior, attended this year's Chicago trip and worked for the Apostolic Volunteers in North Lawndale, a
community where drugs and gang activity are major problems.
Brune and other vo unteers
Brune and o worked in an after-school youth center, taught literacy classes and helped women study for the G.E.D. exam. "It's an opportunity to live out the teachings of the church," he said. "I can im m er s e myself in an experience I could not do here in Lawrence."
dents more than just practical experience.
"These students have expressed
topics
Jennifer Bagby, outreach minister for the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, said these trips gave stu-
March 31,1997 Page 8A
Projects in the Community, is in its third year. Sixty-five students traveled to Philadelphia, New
An other group of KU students spent their breaks performing volunteer work and earning college credit. The HDFL 606 class. Special
York; Boston, Cincinnati, Detroit, San Antonio, New Orleans, El Paso, Texas, and Elgin, Ariz. to work with volunteer organizations.
Each group specialized in a specific service and had to research the organizations they would be working with and the issues they would be confronting.
Some groups dealt with poverty, education or gang prevention.
Upon returning, each group will give a presentation of what they experienced and learned.
The students also will discuss how this experience affected their own view of the world.
Last year, Abigail Hankin, Overland Park senior, volunteered in New York City.
"It was a huge culture shock," she said. "It's difficult to appreciate our own opportunities and how privileged we are as college students. It made me rearrange my priorities."
OPTION No.3
Story and photographs by Dave Morantz
Southwestern adventure leaves student exhausted
Far from the maddening crowd. In the mountains of New Mexico, even the sorrows of the NCAA tournament seem distant.
My friend and I took a road trip through Colorado and the Land of Enchantment to do some camping and hiking in the mountains. It was a welcome change of pace and atmosphere. But traveling 2,600 miles in six days left us exhausted by the end of the trip.
After driving to Denver and visiting friends, we headed south through the beautiful Sangre de Cristo mountains in southern Colorado. The snow-covered mountains gave us a sign of the cold that was to come.
The next morning we began to set up our propane stove and cook breakfast, but we realized that we forgot to bring a cooking pot. We drove back into Taos and ate a wonderful Mexican breakfast at a small diner.
We ate a decent dinner at a Mexican restaurant in Taos, N.M., and camped in Carson National Forest, which is south of Taos.
More than 10,000 years ago, Pueblo Indians built cliff dwellings and a village of mud and sand. Today, the ancient ruins rest less than 10 miles from Los Alamos, N.M., which is considered the birthplace of the Atomic Age.
After buying a cooking pot, we drove to Bandelier National Monument, north of Albuquerque, N.M.
As we continued south through the mountains and a small blizzard, we stopped at a bath house
Hungry, tired and cold, we drove into Lincoln National Forest to camp. After failing to start a campfire, we slept in the van and woke up every hour to gather more blankets for protection from the bone-chilling cold.
The warm sun of Mexico sounded appealing. We drove south to El Paso, Texas, parked the van and walked over the Rio Grande into Juarez, Mexico, – the armpit of North America.
The next day we journeyed to White Sands National Monument in southern New Mexico. Miles of wind-swept, stark-white sand dunes, coupled with cold winds, created an eerie, moon-like scene.
in Jemese Springs, N.M., where mineral water is collected from a natural spring and pumped into tubs made of mud and sand.
That night the temperature was predicted to dip into the 20s. Thankfully, friends in Albuquerque gave us a warm place to stay.
"What do you want?" one store owner asked. "All types of gifts," he said pointing to cheap T-shirts with Bart Simpson plastered on them.
We couldn't find any cheap souvenirs to buy as gifts.
We bought a cheap bottle of liquor and quickly came back to the United States.
After driving east through the Texas panhandle, we arrived at Guadalupe National Park, a patch of beautiful mountains in the desert of Texas.
We then visited Carlsbad National Park, a maze of amazing
caves in southern New Mexico.
But we realized that we only had $40 left and 1,500 miles to travel home. Poor, dirty and smelly, we headed back to Lawrence. A warm shower was more appealing than all the mountains and rivers in New Mexico.
ABOVE: Road trips are common for spring breakers. And many times automobiles become small hotel rooms for travelers.
RIGHT: The wilderness provides tranquility and an escape from the hustle of city life. National forests are not usually busy during early spring months and camping space is usually available.
---
BOGGS INJURY
New York Yankees third baseman Wade Boggs was struck above the left eye by a ball during batting practice prior to yesterday's exhibition game against the Atlanta Braves.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS
The wound took 47 stitches—30 inside the wound, 17 on the outside—to close, but Boggs said that he expected to play when tomorrow
night in Seattle.
Yankees
Stuart Hershon, the Yankees team physician, said the injury was a laceration that was similar to what boxers get above the eye.
The injury occurred with Boggs at third and Yankee coach Willie Randolph hitting fungos to the infelders during batting practice.
SPECTATOR STAND COLLAPSES IN NEW DELHI
A makeshift spectator stand at a volleyball match collapsed yesterday, and at least 150 fans were injured.
10 people were hospitalized in critical condition after the packed bamboo stand collapsed in the town of Vatakara, just outside of New Delhi, according to the Press Trust of India news agency.
SHAQ ATTACK
MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1997
Who needs basketball? Shaquille O'Neal said he wanted to be the ultimate businessman—rapper, actor and fashion promoter.
"I just want to maximize my potential as a person," O'Neal said during an appearance for his third recording. You Can't Stop the Reilan.
O'Neal, sidelined from the Los Angeles Lakers since February with a knee injury, plugged his acting, a new record company called Twism Records and a clothing line.
O'Neal appeared in the movies Blue Chips and
LOS ANGELES LAKERS
Kazaam, both of which performed poorly at the box office. His first two compact discs, Shaq Diesel and Shaq Fu: Da Return both sold more than 500,000 copies. He's due back on the court in April.
SECTION B
Fast BREAKS
Golfer to begin treatment for alcoholism after binge
NASHVILLE
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FLA. — John Daly, an admitted alcoholic, withdrew from the Players Championship the day after a drinking session in a bar.
And he said yesterday that he would immediately begin treatment for alcoholism.
Daly was seen in a night spot called Sloppy Joe's on Thursday and spent several hours drinking with members of the Jacksonville Jaguars football team. He also sang with the bar band and at one point took the microphone and drew loud applause when he praised the Jaguars.
Daly, the 30-year-old winner of the 1991 PGA Championship and the 1995 British Open, entered an alcohol rehabilitation program in 1993 but late last year admitted he again was drinking socially.
Daly has been suspended twice by the PGA Tour for erratic behavior.
The PGA Tour suspended Daly once for picking up his ball in a tournament. In September 1994, Daly announced that he would voluntarily sit out the rest of the year after he got into a shouting match and scuffed with a 62-year-old man.
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
Canadian wins fifth victory in Brazilian Grand Prix
SAO PAULO, BRAZIL — Jacques Villeneuve took the lead on the second lap and never relinquished it in winning the Brazilian Grand Prix yesterday.
The Canadian, driving a Williams-Renault race car, completed the 71 laps around the 2,687-mile Jose Carlos Pace track in 1 hour, 36 minutes and.069 seconds.
It was his fifth Formula One victory—one short of the number of wins by his father, the late Gilles Villeneuve—in 17 races.
The win made up for Villeneuve's first-lap spinout in the season-opening Australian Grand Prix two weeks ago.
Germany's Michael Schumacher—No. 2 on the grid—shot into the lead in a Ferrari, but Villeneuve overtook him in the straightaway at the start of the second lap.
Villeneuve demonstrated the superiority of his car by outdistancing runner-up Gerhard Berger of Austria by up to 17 seconds during several laps.
Chiefs' new quarterback tries to avoid Bono's errors
But Berger cut into that advantage, and by the end of the race, the margin was just a little more than four seconds.
Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz takes a fall during the Arizona game on March 21. LaFrentz faces the decision to enter the NBA draft or play for Kansas one more year. He must make his decision by May 18.
KANSAS CITY, MO. — The Kansas City Chiefs' new quarterback, Elvis Grbac, wants to set a good example for his new teammates as the Chiefs begin their off-season workout program this week.
Bono, who like Grbac had been a backup at San Francisco before joining the Chiefs, made only a sporadic appearance at off-season workouts last spring. This helped open a rift with his teammates that never really healed.
Grbac was signed recently to replace Steve Bono, who was benched late last season as the Chiefs failed to make the NFL playoffs for the first time in this decade.
Grbac, in contrast, said that he plans to be there every day, learning the new system and getting to know his coaches and teammates.
LaFrentz, Pierce considering NBA
The fact that Kansas City and San Francisco have similar passing systems should ease Grbac's transition to his new team. Still, there will be some long hours in study sessions with offensive coordinator Paul Hackett, quarterback coach Mike McCarthy and the other quarterbacks. Starting next week, the Chiefs will spend two days a week on the practice field.
—The Associated Press
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
For the second consecutive season the Kansas men's basketball team is in danger of losing its top talent to the NRA
Last season, guard Jacque Vaughn weighed his options before he decided to decline the NBA draft. This year, forwards Raef LaFrentz and Paul Pierce are considering forgoing college eligibility for the pros.
LaFrentz and Pierce said whatever their decisions are, they will be taxing ones.
"It will be unbelievable tough to leave a program like this one." LaFrentz said.
He added that his approach will mirror Vaughn's contemplation, which included talking to family and Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams.
Pierce echoed LaFrentz's feelings
"Coach and I will sit down and discuss this, and I'll look and see what's best for me." Pierce said.
If the decides to take his talents to the next level, Pierce, a sophomore, would be forgoing two years of college eligibility. LaFrentz would be forfeiting his senior season.
Pierce improved his stock in the NCAA Tournament, leading Kansas in scoring in each of its three games.
ESPN NBA draft analyst Don Leventhal said LaFrentz could go as early as fifth in the draft. Pierce, Leventhal predicted, also could be a lottery selection, one of the first 13 drafted.
The NBA draft already has been flooded with underclassmen.
Two high school players have entered the draft along with several college non-seniors.
Top high school players Tracy McGrady of Durham, N.C., and Lamar Odom of Redemption Christian High School announced they will be eligible for the NBA draft. Kentucky forward Ron Mercer, Colgate center Adonal Foyle, Georgetown guard Victor Page and Kansas State forward Mark Young also said they're eligible for the NBA draft.
LaFrentz and Pierce have been added
to the list of other talented underclassmen who have not yet decided.
Cincinnati forward Danny Fortson,
Villanova forward Tim Thomas and
Texas Tech center Tony Battie also may enter the NBA draft.
LaFrentz and Pierce combined to lead the Jayhawks in scoring in 31 of the team's 36 games this season, including 22 of its final 23 games.
The Kansas City Star contributed some information for this article.
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
Tameka Dixon goes up for a shot in the Nebraska game. Dixon has been named the Kodak All-American team. She is the third player in Kansas history to be named to the team.
Dixon named to the 1997 Kodak All-America team
17
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
Dixon is the third player in Kansas history to be named to the Kodak All-America team. Lynette Woodard was a four-time selection (1978-81) and Angela Aycock made the team in 1995.
While Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon waits for the opportunity to play professional basketball this summer, she was named to the 1997 Kodak All-America team last Thursday.
After learning she had made the Kodak team, Dixon said it was an honor to be mentioned in the same breath as Woodard and Avcock.
"I really can't put into words what this means to me," Dixon said in a press release last week. "Coach and I have talked about what being named to the Kodak team means, and it's nice to know that the hours of hard work have paid off."
Dixon is expected to be drafted during the Women's NBA rookie draft April 28.
Coach Marian Washington said she knew that Dixon possessed All-America talent
"I knew from her talent that she had the potential to become an All-American," Washington said. "At the beginning of last season, I tried to help her understand what she had to do to make this dream a reality. She was consistent this season and has impacted our program from day one."
This season Dixon led Kansas in scoring with 21 points per game. She also led the Jayhawks in assists, steals, field goals made and attempted, and free throws made and attempted.
Dixon was the 1997 Big 12 Conference Player of the Year and the 1966 Big Eight Conference Player of the Year. She was the second player in Kansas history to have more than 1,600 points and 300 assists in a career, the other is Woodard.
when she recruited her out of high school.
Ten players were selected to the Kodak All-America team by the Women's Basketball Coaches Association.
1
ALL-AMERICAN TEAM: For a list of the Kodak All-American team members see Page 28.
Y
Win escapes men Saturday in bitter battle against Arizona
Season ends in third round as Wildcats prevent inside shots, beat Jayhawks 85-82
By Bill Petulla
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz, a first team All-American, said he will use the next several weeks to evaluate whether or not he will declare himself eligible for the NBA draft.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — All eyes are on next season as the Kansas men's basketball season came to a roaring halt March 21 when Arizona defeated the Jayhawks 85-82 in the third round of the NCAA Tournament in Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center in Birmingham, Ala.
Arizona guard Miles Simon, who scored 17 points, including five points in the final six minutes of the game, said the Wildcats did not fear the ton-ranked Jayhawks.
The Wildcats curbed Kansas' inside attack, holding LaFrentz to 14 points—four below his season average—and center Scot Pollard to zero points.
"They played pretty aggressive," LaFrentz said. "They did a really good job down low. Some of the looks we've been getting all year weren't there."
"We weren't intimidated at all," he said. "We read the front page of the paper today, and it said Kansas against 'those other guys.' That was very disrespectful, and we felt we had something to prove."
Arizona's run at a national championship didn't stop with the Jayhawks. The Wildcats defeated Providence 96-92 in overtime to claim the Southeast regional title and beat North Carolina on Saturday, 66-58.
From the opening tip, the Kansas-Arizona game was a dogfight. Kansas guard Jorda Haas stole an errant pass by Arizonia guard Mike Bibby and drove the ball the length of the court for a 2-0 Kansas lead. However, the Wildcats stormed back and scored the next 10 points of the game.
The Jayhawks, behind forward Paul Pierce's 11 first half points, erased Arizona's lead and took a three-point lead. 25-22, at the eight minute mark.
Arizona guard Michael Dickerson, who led all scorers in the first half with 14 points, brought the Wildcats back to take a two-point lead into the half. 38-36.
With poise on their side, the Jayhawks mounted a comeback. Down by 13 points with three minutes and 18 seconds remaining, Pierce caused two Arizona turnovers. Guard Billy Thomas capitalized on Pierce's steals, scoring two three-pointers. Robertson sank a three-pointer with 21 seconds remaining, bringing the Jayhawks within one point. 83-82.
The shooters were hitting some pretty big shots down the stretch," LaFrentz said. "We never thought that we were out of the game."
The second half started out as a seesaw battle until the Wildcats began pulling away at the 15 minute mark. Bibby, a freshman who nailed two crucial three-pointers in the second half, gave Arizona a comfortable six-point cushion for a majority of the second half. With Haase sidelined because of a broken scapoid bone in his right hand, Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn received his fourth foul with 9 minutes and 25 seconds remaining.
"We jumped on them early," Arizona coach Lute Olson said. "Then they went on a run, and our kids battled back. There was a tremendous effort and intensity on both sides."
Despite the glum circumstances, Jayhawks guard Ryan Robertson said the team remained confident.
"We felt like we could pull it out because we've been able to do it all year," he said.
On the ensuing possession, the Jayhawks fouled Bibby with 18 seconds remaining. The freshman calmly sank both shots to extend the Wildcats' lead to three points.
Kansas drove the ball the length of the court but Thomas', Robertson's and LaFrentz's three-point attempts rimmed out.
"We made a great run at them, and they were tough enough to withstand and make the plays that they had to make down the stretch," said Kansas coach Roy Williams. "As we made a tremendous comeback, they were tough enough to step up and make the free throws."
The Jayhawks finished the season with a 34-2 record, which were the fewest number of losses since the 1945-46 season's 19-2 record. The '45-46 team lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
---
2B
Monday, March 31, 1997
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Saturday's Men's NCAA Final Four Boxes At Indianapolis
ARIZONA 68, NORTH CAROLINA 58
ARIZONA (24-9)
NORTH CAROLINA (28-7)
Davison 1-2-2-4, 4 Dickerson 1-10-2-3, 5 Bramlet
0-5-2-2-1, 5 Berry 7-18-1-0, 9 Simon 19-9-3
15-24, Edgerson 1-3-0-2, 2 Terry 1-6-0-3, Hara
2-6, Totals 22-6-11 16-66
Orlando 1-8 0-0 3, Williams 7-17 4-4 18,
Zwicker 4-12 0-0 8, Williams 1-13 0-0 3, Carter
8-15 4-52, Cota 9-15 0-1, Nidway 0-0 0-0,
McNairy 0-0 0-0, Totale 23-74 8-10 58.
Hallifield —Arizona 34, North Carolina 31.3
Point goals —Arizona 11-29 (Bibby 6-11,
Simon 3-8, Dickerson 1-4, Terry 1-6), North
Carolina 4-12 (Koulaijia 1-3, Cota 3, Carter
1-7, Williams 1-8). Fouled out—None.
Brewers —Arizona 48 (Bramlett 10), North
Carolina 52 (Jamison 11), Assists —Arizona 15
(Simon 5), North Carolina 14 (Cota 4). Total
fouls —Arizona 13, North Carolina 20. A—
47.028.
KENTUCKY 78, MINNESOTA 69
MINNESOTA (31-4)
James 2-3-4-6-8, Jacobson 4-12-2-3-10
J.Thomas 5-6-0-10, Jackson 8-15-6-23
Haris 2-0-0-5, Winter 2-3-0-4, C.Thomas 2-7-1-2, Lewis 1-9-2, Tarver 1-2-0-2, Archambault 0-0-0-0, Stauber 0-1-0-0.
Totals 27-64-12-19-69.
mercer 7-21 4-5 19, Padgett 3-0 8-09, Magliore
0-1 1-2 1, Turner 2-6 4-6 8, Epss 3-10 5-16 13,
Mills 3-4 4-10 4, Perrick 3-1 4 7, Mohmaden
2-3 1-5 5, Edwards 1-3 1-2 4, Anderson 0-0 2-2
Total 28 32 32 24 78
Halftime —Kentucky 38, Minnesota 31, 3-point goal—Minnesota 3-16 (Jackson 2-5, Harris 1-1, C.Thomas 0-1, Lewis 0-4, Jacobson 0-5),
Kentucky 9-23 (Padgett 3-6, Mills 2-5, Epsr 2-7, Edwards 1-3, Mercer 1-7) Fouled out—Jacobson, C.Thomas, Padgett. Rebounds—Minnesota 48 (Tarver 9), Kentucky 34 (Prickett 6) Assists—Minnesota 11 (Jackson 4), Kentucky 14 (Epss 7), Total fouls—Minnesota 28, Kentucky 19. Technicals—Minnesota coach Haskins. A—47,028
1987 Women's Kodak Alt-America Team
Player School
Talajma Abraham George Washington
Tamecka Dixon Kansas
Chamique Holdclaw Tennessee
Clarisse Machanguana Old Dominion
DelLaSh妈 Florida
Ticha Penicheiro Old Dominion
Tracy Reid North Carolina
Nykesha Sales Connecticut
Kate Starbird Stanford
Kara Wolters Connecticut
Women's NCAA Championship Game
TENNESSEE 68, OLD DOMINION 59
TENNESSEE (29-10)
Johnson 4-4 0-0-8, Holdswell 11-20 2-3 24,
Thompson 4-4 0-3-8, Elyz 1-3 1-0 12, Jolly 1-5
2-5, Butts 4-7 0-0-8, Milligan 0-0 0-0, Green D-
1 1-2 1, Laxton 0-0 0-0, Stephens 0-0 0-0,
Conklin 4-5 2-12, Totals 29-49 7-13 68.
Andrade 2-7-0-4, Machanguana 7-13-2-16
Roberts 6-8-1-2-13, Himes 1-0-1-0,
Penicheiro 4-13-2-10, Eiler 2-4-0-5, Eblin 1-12-1-11, 4-11-1, Small 0-1-0-0, Diaz 0-5-0-0,
Bradley 0-0-0-0, Toldrion 24-62-10-159.
Haltime—Tennessee 34, Old Dominion 22, 3-point goals—Tennessee 3-5, (Cohnlin 2-2, Jolly 1-3), Old Dominion 4-18, (Eblin 3-10, Eiler 1-2, Penicheiro 0-1, Diaz 0-2, Anade 0-3).
Fouled out—andrade, Machanguana.
Rebounds—Tennessee 29 (Holdclaw 7), Old Dominion 32 (Machanguana 10). Assists—Tennessee 18 (Jolly 11), Old Dominion 15 (Penicheiro 8). Total toulus—Tennessee 13, Old Dominion 16 A.—16,714.
OLD DOMINION (34-2)
COLLEGE GOLD
Womens' golf results
Place Team Results
1 Kansas 321 338 348 1005
2 Oral Roberts 331 340 338 1009
3 Kansas State 332 343 335 1010
4 SW Mo. State 335 337 340 1012
5 Simpson College 352 364 387 1014
Kansas Finishes
Place Name Results
5 Anne Clark 83/98 62 248
6 Beth Reuter 78/98 62 241
10 Mandy Munsch 83/98 62 254
12 Missy Russell 83/98 62 256
16 Susan Tressary 86/98 62 259
29 Jill Simpson 86/98 27 277
Men's golf results
Pacific Coast Intercollegiate
Place Name Results
2 Chris Thompson 72 70 71 213
9 Kit Grove 72 70 78 213
29 Jake isnick 75 74 72 213
43 Brad Davis 75 78 72 225
55 Brad Barnett 74 75 72 287
92 Ryan Vermeer 77 78 72 231
Border Olympics
Place Name Results
19 Chris Thompson 72 73 72 218
21 Ryan Vermeer 75 74 70 219
28 Kit Grove 73 73 75 221
29 Brad Barnett 75 72 75 222
36 Brad Davis 74 76 72 255
37 Jake Itnick 75 78 75 232
COLLEGE ROWING
Kansas Rowing Dual Regatta Results
Place Team Time
Varsity Four
1 Kansas 9:47
2 Tulsa 10:02
Lightweight Four
1 Tulsa 9:13
2 Kansas 9:26
3 Kansas 9:29
Freshman Eight
1 Kansas 8:52
2 Tulsa 9:03
3 Kansas 9:25
1 Kansas 8:24
2 Tutsa 8:36
3 Kansas 8:52
4 Tutsa 9:57
PRO HOCKEY
NHL Expanded Glance, Sub-Standing All Times EST
LAST EAST STANDING
Atlantic Division
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division
W L T Pts GF GA Home Away Div Div
x-Philadelphia A43 11 11 97 268 198 16
x-New Jersey 41 21 13 95 215 171 21-
x-Florida 33 25 18 84 204 183 19-12-
8 14-13-10 12-10-8
N. Y. Rangers 35 32 9 79 240 212 19-
Washington 30 38 8 68 194 216 17
16.4 13.24 13.12 13
N.Y. Islanders
28 36 11 67 219 222 18-16-4 10-20-
7 14 10 1
Tampa Bay 29 38 8 66 202 232 14-
18-7 15-20.1 12-12.3
W L T Pts GF GA Home Away Dv-
x-Buffalo 38 26 17 87 221 190 23-9
9
Montreal 28 34 14 70 234 263 16-16
12-18-8 7-12-7
Pittsburgh 35 33 7 77 260 254 21-11-
13 12-23 11-8-5
Montreal 28 34 14 70 234 263 16-16
Northeast Division
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and or blockout)
6:30 p.m.
FOX—Pro hockey, Florida vs. Pittsburgh
8 p.m.
CBS—College basketball, NCAA Men's Chaplinship game.
ESPN—Figure skating, World Championships replay
Midnight
ESPN—Skiing, U.S. Alpine Nationale
Tuesday, April 1
Noon
ESPN—Baseball, Chicago vs. Toronto
Hartford 29 36 10 68 201 232 21-14-
8 32-22 12-8-3
Ottawa 26 34 15 67 208 221 13-17-
8 13-17-7 9-11-4
Boston 24 43 9 57 217 280 12-19-
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Monday's Games
W L T Pts GF GA Home Away Div
x-Dallas 45 23 6 06 23 176 23-11
3 22-12 15-7-3
3 -Detroit 36 24 15 87 23 181 20-10
7 16-14 8-10-6
Phoenix 35 35 76 215 228 14-19
6 21-16 15-9-2
Chicago 31 33 12 74 204 196 15-20
4 16-13 8 10-12-4
St. Louis 32 34 9 73 218 27 15-19
3 17-15 6 8-12-4
Toronto 28 41 7 63 216 257 16-19
4 12-22 3 8-12-3
Pacific Division
W L T Pts GF GA Home Away Div
x-Colorado 46 21 9 101 259 187 25-8
5 21-13 18-6-4
Edmonton 35 34 7 77 236 226 20-14
2 15-20 12-15-3
Anahiel 33 33 11 77 226 219 21-12
5 12-21 6 11-12-5
Calgary 32 36 8 72 203 215 21-15
2 11-21 6 16-13-1
Vancouver 32 40 5 69 238 258 18-17
3 14-23 12-15-1
Los Angeles 26 41 10 62 198 253 17-15-6 9-26 10-15-4
San Jose 25 43 7 57 188 248 13-21-3
12-22 4 12-14-0
x-clinched playoff beth
Saturday's Games
N.Y. Islanders 8, Boston 2
Hartford 2,N.Y. Rangers 1
Pittsburgh 4, Los Angeles 1
Vancouver 5, Calgary 2
Ottawa 5, Montreal 2
Philadelphia 5, Washington 3
Tampa Bay 1, Florida 1, OT
Toronto 3, Colorado 2
Edmonton 3, Phoenix 1
Sunday's Games
Late Game Not Included
Late Jersey 5, Los Angeles 2
Anaheim 1, Detroit 0, OT
Chicago 3, Buffalo 2
Dallas 3, Vancouver 2
Philadelphia at St. Louis, (n)
Monday's Games
Florida at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.
Dallas at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m.
Tampa at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Washington, 7:30 p.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Buffalo at N.Y., Rangers, 8 p.m.
San Jose at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Chicote at Anheml, 10:30 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
Expanded Glance
All Times EST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct GR
W L Pct GB Awf Conf L10 Streak Home
x-Miami 53 18 .746 — 8-
Lost 1 25-9 18- 33-12
xNew York 51 21 .708 2½ 5-
Won 1 29-7 22-14 32-12
Orlando 40 31 .563 13 7-
Lost 2 24-11 16-24 20-
Washington 36 35 .507 17 8-
Won 4 21-16 15-19 20-24
New Jersey 23 48 .324 30 5-
Lost 1 14-21 9-27 13-32
Philadelphia 20 50 .286 32½ 4-
Gon 2 Won 11-25 9-23 12-30
Boston 13 59 181 40½ 1-
Gon 5 Won 10-25 3-34 6-39
Central Division
x-Chicago 62 9-873 — 9-
1 Won 7 35-1 27-8 37-6
x-Detroit 49 22 .690 13 4-
Gon 1 Won 28-8 13-14 31-14
x-Antla 50 22 .694 12½ 7-
Gon 37-8 19-29
Charlotte 45 26 .634 17 6-
Lost 2 25-10 20-16 25-18
Cleveland 37 34 .521 25 3-
Won 1 23-13 14-21 21-22
Indiana 35 36 .493 27 6-
Gon 4 Won 20-15 15-21 19-25
Milwaukee 28 42 .400 33½ 3-
Lost 3 16-20 12-22 18-29
Toronto 26 47 .356 37 3-
Won 1 17-21 9-26 12-33
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Walnut Pet GB
Midwest Division
W L Pct GB 10 Conf L10 Streak Home
x-Uah 54 17 .761 — 9-
1 Won 9 31-3 23-14 31-10
x-Houston 48 23 .676 6 7-
28-11 22-12 31-10
Minnesota 34 37 .479 20 3-
7 Lost 1 23-13 11-24 26-21
Dallas 22 49 .310 32 2-
7 Lost 7 13-22 9-27 14-28
Denver 19 51 .271 34 1/2 1-
9 Lost 6 11-24 8-27 12-29
San Antonio 18 53 .254 36 3-
7 Lost 1 12-24 8-27 10-32
Vancouver 12 62 .162 43 1/2 1-
9 Lost 4 8-30 4-32 7-38
Pacific Division
x-Seattle 50 21 .704 — 7-
3 Won 1 27-9 23-12 31-11
x-L.A. Lakers 48 23 .676 2 7
3 Won 3 26-9 22-14 29-12
x-Portland 43 30 .589 8 8-
2 Won 2 26-10 17-20 31-13
Phoenix 32 39 .451 18 8-
2 Won 5 23-14 9-25 19-22
L.A. Clippers 31 40 .437 19 5-
5 Lost 3 20-17 11-23 24-21
Sacramento 29 43 .403 21 1/2 1-
8 Won 18-16 11-27 18-24
Golden State 25 45 .357 34 1/2 2-
x-clinched playoff belt
Saturday's Games
Washington 94, Dallas 97
Atlanta 88, Sacramento 74
Chicago 114, New Jersey 101
Houston 120, Denver 105
Utah 115, San Antonio 102
Sunday's Games
Late Games Not Included
Late Games Not Included
New York 101, Orlando 86
Toronto 73, Chicago Clippers 96, OT
Tampa Bay 102, Miami 104,
Cleveland 94, Dallas 80
Philadelphia 96, Detroit 82
Minnesota at Golden State, (n)
Milwaukee at Denver, (n)
Seattle at Phoenix, (n)
Sunday's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Philadelphia at Orlando 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Miami 7:30 p.m.
New York at Cleveland 7:30 p.m.
Washington at Indiana 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Seattle 8:30 p.
Boston at Chicago 8:30 p.
Detroit at Dallas 8:30 p.
Houston at Denver 9 p.
Golden State at Portland 10 p.
Milwaukee at Vancouver 9 p.
PRO BASEBALL
Exhibition Baseball, Sub
At A Glance
All Times EST
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct.
New York 20 11 .645
Baltimore 18 12 .600
Toronto 17 14 .548
Oakland 16 15 .518
Seattle 16 16 .500
Texas 16 16 .500
Cleveland 15 18 .455
Kansas City 14 18 .438
Milwaukee 13 16 .449
Detroit 12 18 .400
Chicago 12 19 .387
Minnesota 12 19 .383
Boston 10 18 .357
Anaheim 9 21 .300
| Florida | W | L | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| St. Louis | 26 | 5 | .839 |
| San Diego | 21 | 11 | .656 |
| Philadelphia | 20 | 11 | .645 |
| San Francisco | 17 | 13 | .567 |
| Houston | 18 | 14 | .563 |
| Cincinnati | 16 | 13 | .552 |
| Los Angeles | 17 | 15 | .531 |
| Chicago | 16 | 13 | .519 |
| Colorado | 16 | 16 | .500 |
| New York | 15 | 17 | .469 |
| Pittsburgh | 10 | 13 | .435 |
| Montreal | 10 | 15 | .400 |
| Atlanta | 10 | 18 | .357 |
do not.)
(NOTE): Split-squid games count in the standings; games against non-major team teams
Saturday's Games
Cleveland 6, Chicago Cubs 3
Florida 4, Cincinnati 3, 5 innings, rain
Baltimore 4, Montreal 3
Atlanta 2, New York Yankees 0
Toronto 5, Philadelphia 4
Detroit 6, Chicago White Sox 4
San Diego 5, Boston 4
Kansas City 7, Colorado 5
St. Louis 4, Texas 3
San Francisco 3, Oakland 2
Houston 11, Milwaukee 1
Anaheim 5, Los Angeles 1
New York Mets 4, Seattle 0
Sunday's Games Late Game Not Included
Toronto 12, Philadelphia 4
Montreal 4, Ottawa 1
Minnesota 8, Chicago Cubs 7
Florida 2, Miami 1
Chicago White Sox 11, Hickory 6
New York Yankees 5, Atlanta 3
Cincinnati 3, Detroit 1
Colorado 12, Kansas City 3
St. Louis 11, Baltimore 4
San Diego 5, Oakland 2
Houston 8, Texas 4
Wilkesboro 9, Pittsburgh 6
Cleveland 6, San Francisco 4, 5½ innings, rai
Anheime 2, Los Angeles 0
Seattle 14. Lancaster 4.
Seattle vs. LI, Seattle
Boston vs. NY, New York Metals at Lae Vegas (n)
Monday's Gaming
Boston vs. New York Mets at Las Vegas, 3:05
minute
Cleveland at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Anaheim at Cal St.-Fulton, 6:30 p.m.
End Exhibition Session
TRANSACTIONS
Weekend Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
CLEVELAND INDIANS—Traded RHP Terry Harvey to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays for future considerations.
MINNESOTA TWINS—Placed OF Roberto Kelly on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to March 24.
BALTIMORE ORILOES—Sold C Cesar Devarez to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. Assigned C Kris Gresham to their minor-league camp.
TEXAS RANGERS—Optioned RHP Jose Alberno and OF Mike Simms to Oklahoma City of the American Association.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Placed LHP Paul Spotjaric on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to March 23.
ATLANTA BRAVES—Optioned NF Ed Ef Vanola and LHP Dean Hargraves to Richmond of the International League. Assigned OF Tommy Gregg, C Fausto Tejero, LHP Brad Woodall and LHP Kevin Rogers to their minor-league camp. SNT RHP Scott Brow outright to Richmond. Placed OF Danny Bautista on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to March 23; RHP Bryan Harvey on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to March 24; and LHP Pedro Borbon on the 60-day disabled list.
COLORADO ROCKIES—Walped RHP Mike Dyer. Purchased the contract of RHP Jeff McCurry from Colorado Sorris of the PCL.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Optioned RHP Antonio Osuna to Albuquerque of the PCL. Sent LHP Narisco Elvira outright to Albuquerque.
PHILADELPHA PHILIES—Placed OF, Lenny Dykstra on the 60-day dislisted list and RHP Mark Portugal, RHP Edgar Ramos, RHP Ken Ryan, RHP Mike Grace and RHP Tyler Green on the 15-day disabled list. Sent Green to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre of the International League and Ramos to Clearwater of the Florida State League for rehab assignments. Optioned C Chris Tremle Reading of the Eastern League. Purchased the contracts OF Ruben Amaro, OF Derrick May, RHP Reggie Harris, and LHP Erk Plantenberg from Scranton. Recalled RHP Ron Blazer from Scranton and optioned INF Kevin Jordan to Scranton.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Traded OF Trey Beamon and C Angelo Encarnac to the San Diego Padres for OF Mark Smith and RHP Hal Garrett.
SAN DIEGO PADRES—Optioned LHP Joey Long to Las Vegas of the PCL, Assigned LHP Terry Burrows, OF Doug Dascenzo, INF Rene Gonzales, FO Terry Terry Swumper, RHP Pete Smith and INF Jim Tatum to their minor-league camp. Purchased the contracts of C Carlos Hernandez, RHP Tim Scott and C Don Slaughter from Las Vegas
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Placed 3B Mark Lewis on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to March 28.
FOOTBALL National Football League
HOUSTON OILERS—Agreed to terms with GB Dave Krieg on a two-year contract.
National Hockey League
DALLAS STARS—Recalled G Roman Turek
from Michigan of the HUJ
NEW YORK ISLANDERS—Recalled LW
Dave Mclain from Cleveland of the IHL.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
WATSON LIBRARY STAUFFER FLINT HALL VARD PPINGCOTT BAILEY
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 31, 1997
3B
Tennessee wins it all
By Chuck Schoffner
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Tennessee arrived at the women's Final Four with more losses than any previous team. But the Vols also arrived with Chamique Holdsclaw, and that's what mattered most.
Holdscraw was brilliant yesterday night, leading Tennessee to a 68-59 victory over Old Dominion that gave the Vols their second straight
national
champion
onship and
fifth overall.
fifth overall.
She scored
14 of her 24
points in the
second half
and made
the key
plays down
the stretch
to help her
t e a m
re co ver
1977 ncda.
women's final four
after temporarily losing the lead. In the final 6:48, the All-American scored 10 points, assisted on two baskets and blocked a shot.
Shut down in the first half by Old Dominion's pressure and her own reluctance, Holdsclaw settled down and settled in when the Vols needed her most.
"I felt I let their pressure get to me early," Holdscraw said, who wore one of the nets around her neck. "My teammates and coaches stayed on me: 'Chamique, just take your time.' I can't hide on this team."
An aggressive, physical defense that took the free-spirited, emotional Old Dominion players out of their game also was key, as was the coaching acumen of Pat Summitt.
Summitt has guided the Vols (29-10) to all of their titles. UCLA's John Wooden is the only coach in major college basketball, men or women, with more titles than Summitt.
"Fifth in the SEC and No. 1 in the country," Summitt said. "Doesn't that just sum up what this team has just accomplished?"
With 9.3 seconds left and the title secure, Holdesclaw slapped hands and bumped bodies with jubilant teammates. Indicative of the way the game went, Old Dominion All-American guard Ticha Penicheiro threw the ball away on the Monarchs' last possession, then went to the bench in tears. It was her 1th turnover, a season high, and Old Dominion's 26th.
Those turnovers were the result of a Tennessee defense that was allowed to bump and knock people around without fouls being called
while the Vols were building a 16 point lead in the first half.
Penicheiro, Old Dominion's darting, slashing point guard from Portugal, bore the brunt of the Tennessee defense. She went scoreless in the first half and finished with 10 points on 4-of-13 shooting. But she did set a championship game record with eight steals.
"In the first half, we were a little intimidated by the kind of pressure Tennessee put on us," Penicheiro said. "We turned it over way too much. That had a lot to do with the result."
The title capped a long bumpy ride for Tennessee, which suffered through injuries and the nation's toughest schedule in the first half of the season. Tennessee stood 10-6 after losing at Old Dominion 83-72 on Jan. 7 and looked nothing like a team that could win the national championship.
But point guard Kellie Jolly returned from a knee injury after that game, and the Vols regrouped to become only the second team in 16 years of NCAA women's play to win consecutive titles. Southern Cal won in 1983 and 1984.
Tennessee's 10 losses are the most ever for a national champion. The most previously were six by Tennessee's 1987 title team.
NCAA championship game promises to be fast-paced
By Jim O'Connell The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Get the VCRs ready. The pace of the NCAA title game promises to be so fast you might need to watch it in slow motion to catch it all.
Kentucky and Arizona are quick. No, they're quicker than that.
"Our guys like fast-paced games," Arizona
"It's going to be like watching a tennis match, so people better do some neck exercises before they come in tomorrow night."
Both teams capitalized on their quickness to reach the title game. Kentucky is well known for the speed it uses in a variety of defenses, which forced 26 turnovers in Saturday's 78-69 victory over Minnesota in the semifinal.
Arizona (24-9), the only non-No. 1 seed in the Final Four, made its move in the NCAA tournament with wins over top-ranked Kansas, Providence and North Carolina.
1997 NCAA
final
four
INDIANAPOLIS
Kentucky coach Rick Pitino said of Arizona, "They've got incredible quickness and speed, and they didn't beat Kansas on a fluke game."
Kentucky (35-4) is one win away from becoming the first repeat champion since Duke in 1992. Pitino would be the seventh coach to win at least two straight titles.
His team bears little resemblance to the one that beat Syracuse for the title last season, except for Ron Mercer, who had 20 points in that championship game as a freshman.
Still Kentucky uses the pressure defense to get things going, even if the opposition has the
same strategy.
Kentucky Anthony Epps said, "When teams press us, we try to get layups off it. And with me and Wayne Turner both being point guards, we have two guards to beat the press, and we use all five guys to break it. We press each other every day in practice, so we know how to handle it."
Arizona point guard Mike Bibby also didn't sound all that concerned about facing pressure.
"They like to run. We like to run," he said.
"Teams that have tried to press us have only done it a couple of possessions because we have broken it every time. Their press is unbelievable, and they keep coming at you because they never seem to get tired."
Like Turner.
He played 39 minutes against Minnesota and was key in forcing all those Golden Gopher turn-overs.
"I hope that wasn't my best game, that there's a better one from me in my career," he said. "I think it will be a great challenge. Bibby and (Miles) Simon are great guards."
Simon and Bibby took turns supplying the offense for Arizona in Saturday's 66-58 win over North Carolina. Simon had 15 of his 24 points in the first half. Bibby had all but three of his 20 in the second half. They combined for nine three-pointers.
Pitino said, "If you have people that spot up from the three, then you can take that away. But as well as they put it on the floor you can't do that.
"They look to get the three or the easy shot in the lane. This is a team in transition that is as good as I've seen in quite some time."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The following are comments received by the Kansan sports desk via e-mail. Comments can be sent to sports@kansan.com
TALKING BACK
In response to Spencer Duncan's column saying that Chancellor Robert Hemenway was a hypocrite for skipping class to go to basketball games but not agreeing to cancel classes if Kansas won the national championship:
Just read your column. Great job! First it was the Christmas tree issue with the Chancellor; now it's this.
Great article. It is about time people at Kansas stand up for what they believe in. I agree with you. That "Chancellor" is a hypocrite. It is too bad he won't see this, being in Birmingham and all. Hemenway talks about tradition, but he is breaking the tradition of classes being canceled after a national championship. Keep up the good work.
I laughed when I read the first line of your sports article today. Yes, I can still recall vividly what the chancellor has said about not canceling classes on campus. If the information you obtained from the assistant is true, well, brave! I'll totally agree with you!
Apparently you do not understand the difference between Chancellor Hemenway and yourself. You are a student. He is Robert Hemenway. Your "rebel against authority" attitude only makes you look like a child, whining about what's fair and what's not. If you want to skip classes to watch the games, that's your business. (I would also say that Chancellor Hemenway has a little more obligation than you to attend the game, considering he's the Chancellor and all.)
Hemenway was considering many students, no wait, make that all the students here at the University who are paying for their own education one way or another. Canceling class for a basketball game would be an insult to those who are here for reasons other than worshiping the basketball team.
Now I am as big a fan as any, but even I know where to draw the line between my devotion to the team and devotion to my education. I know the Chancellor's appearance might not be necessary at the game, but if you consider yourself to have as much authoritative free will as he does when it comes to deciding whether or not classes are canceled, more power to you.
His decision was not an act of hypocrisy (a word which you use as if you are still suffering from high school teen angst). It was in the best interest of the University and its students.
Thank you for reading this far. And before I go, I want to ask you to find something you believe in to write about, instead of whining so much in your articles. You come across as snide and stuck up.
Spencer, excellent job on the chancellor editorial. This university has become such a corporate mess; just wait till we run out of money and the Chancellor decides to sell the basketball team to make money. We, the university, have become a corporate institution. Nothing is supposed to be fun anymore—it's all business.
tions. They just have to dash from their luxury cars to their office. And of course they can't see us outside trudging
And as with any business, the upper management gets all of the perks. They don't have to walk to classes when it's subacaric temperatures outside with blizzard condi-
through the snow because their windows are so fogged up.
We need to stand up against this sterilization of the school's humanity. If nothing is done soon, students will be losing their rights and voices becoming dehumanized.
*Spencer, haven't you heard that rank has its privileges? Or didn't your parents teach you "don't do as I do but as I say"?*
■ Your column on Chancellor Hemenway is right on target. I can't wait to hear how or if he responds. I applaud your courage in standing up to "the man." (And I wonder how hypocrisy might manifest itself in other parts of his job?)
I agree with the sentiments behind the column (saying that the Chancellor should be teaching his classes if he's going to hold that academics are more important than sports). I think the Chancellor should present himself as a model in terms of participation in the University. I'm glad that he at least had someone else teach his class for him, but I think it would be more responsible if he were to be there, showing his students the value he places on their education.
One other thing: isn't it convenient that the Chancellor defended the precedent of not suspending classes by referring to the University of Kentucky's year at the top? Wasn't he the Chancellor there, setting the precedent to which he himself refers as being established? Moreover, was he teaching that day?
I read Friday's article about Hemenway with a great deal of interest. I couldn't decide if what you were saying was completely ludicrous or remarkably profound. Allow me to elaborate a bit.
Right or wrong, there is no question that at times academics take a back seat to athletics (and more specifically, WINNING at athletics) at today's universities. If you want me to cite relevant examples of this, then you just aren't paying much attention to college sports these days.
Perhaps at no time is this fact more evident than during March Madness and the NCAA Tournament. In fact, I am guilty of this myself. I'll admit that there were times in my undergrad days at KU in which I found myself blowing off my three impending midterms just so I could find out who won that pressing first-round match-up between Maryland and Santa Clara.
Therefore, we must face a simple fact: The No. 1 man at the university with the No. 1 team in the nation would not be doing his job if he was not on location supporting his team.
At the same time, however, it was hypocritical of him to do this while not allowing students to revel in the success of their team as well. It is in this manner that your article transcended college athletics and cut to the very heart of the ethics (or lack thereof) commonly shown by the faculty, staff, administration, and, dare I say, even the Chancellor of our university.
Students at this university often are held to a double standard. Frequently students' needs are ignored by faculty and administration who seem to have forgotten who pays their salary. The time has come for professors, administrators, and even our own Chancellor to begin collectively practicing what they so often preach.
KU students to play for racquetball title Championships elect defending bank wil along U.S. national team
Kansan staff report
Two University of Kansas students will play racquetball in the E-Force 25th U.S. National Intercollegiate Championships at The Court House in Boise, Idaho, on Wednesday and Thursday.
Jason Pointelin, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, and Jeff Maloney, Lenexa freshman, will compete individually and in doubles play.
The men's and women's brackets each include six singles and three doubles divisions. The winners of the men's and women's No. 1 singles titles will automatically earn a one-year appointment to the U.S. National Racquetball Team.
Last year's overall team champion, Brigham Young University, will attempt to win its third straight title in the 34-team field. Led by No.1 singles players Steve Black and Cindy Richards, the Cougars will have to fend off top challengers Nichols College, Penn State and Memphis, Florida.
In the women's singles, Boise, Idaho native Tammy Brockbank, who is currently ranked in the top 25 on the women's tour as an amateur, is the top seed in women's singles. A two-time
defending national champion, Brockbank will lead the Boise State squad along with her brother Rick Brockbank. No woman has ever won three national intercollegiate racquetball crowns.
However, Brockbank's "3-Peat" will not be an easy feat. Junior Team USA member Sadie Gross of Memphis was a semifinalist last year. Others to watch are former U.S. Junior Team members Shannon Feaster from Howard University and Vanessa Tulao from North Carolina.
In the men's division, 1996 semifinalists Brian Simpson from Indiana and Shane Wood of Nichols College return to fight for the crown. Simpson is ranked 24th on the men's pro tour as an amateur, while Wood captured the men's No. 1 singles title in 1995.
Schools participating in the tournament are Air Force, Akron, Army, Baldwin-Wallace, Boise State, Brigham Young, California, Cal-Davis, Cal State-Sacramento, Case Western Reserve, Clovis Comm., Colorado, Florida, Howard, Idaho, Idaho-State, Indiana, Kansas, Lewis & Clark State, Memphis, Minnesota, Missouri, Nichols College, North Carolina, Penn State, Providence, Rensselaer Poly Tech. Rick's College, Shippensburg, Southern Colorado, Southwest Missouri State, Texas A&M, Utah State and Weber State.
The International Racquetball Association contributed to this story.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
KU should mark surprise loss
In 1988, KU's "Cinderella" men's basketball team surprised the country when it won the national championship. In celebration of the fantastic victory, classes were canceled the following day.
Two weeks ago, Chancellor Robert Hemenway issued an official statement saying that if the men's basketball team were to win the national championship this year, classes would NOT be canceled. The chancellor's reasoning was that the 1988 team was unexpected, whereas a victory by this year's team would be no real surprise.
Students who wish that other University sports teams and athletes earned as much recognition as the men's basketball team may have thought that the chancellor's decision was fair. Those who point out that there are many other University students with worthy accomplishments who seem to be underappreciated also may have thought that the chancellor's decision was just. I know several KU students and alumni who were and are overachievers but don't get as much attention as they should.
onship, whether it be the No. 1 team or the No. 64 team, that team always wins simply because it was better in the last three weeks of the season, the toughest three weeks of the season, than any other team in the country. And that kind of performance is always a reason to celebrate.
But on Friday, March 21, Kansas was knocked out of the running for the men's basketball championship by a fine Arizona team. Perhaps now the chancellor may begin to realize that no No. 1 team can ever be taken for granted to go all the way. No matter who wins the champi-
I thank both of KU's basketball teams for a fantastic year, full of excitement, pride and joy. I thank them for bringing home BOTH of the inaugural Big 12 Conference Championships and the men's Big 12 title.
But Kansas could NOT win the national championship, and by the chancellor's reasoning, that IS a surprise. So in protest of the chancellor's decision not to cancel classes in the event of Kansas winning the championship, a decision which seemed to lack the level of University pride expected from the institution's leader, I will not be in class on Tuesday, April 1. Instead, I will be in "mourning" of Kansas' inability to bring home the trophy this year. And I invite the rest of the student body, faculty, and staff to join me in mourning the "surprising" result for the men's basketball team.
Sara Pizarro Subtil Lawrence Senior
Softball team is on a roll, winning 10 away games
By Matt Woodruff
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team was on a roll during spring break, going 10-4 on the road, 4-0 in the Big 12 Conference and raising its overall record to 21-12.
Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said that the team was beginning to put everything together in time for the home opener, which will be at 2 p.m. on Wednesday against Wichita State.
"Looking back I know there are a few games that we should have won that we didn't, but it feels good to be 4-0 in the conference," Bunge said. "Our batting really came alive this weekend."
The team was in the Lone Star State to begin the official Big 12 season against Baylor on Friday and Texas Tech on Saturday.
The team passed its first conference test with flying colors, defeating Baylor 6-1 and 2-0. Sarah Workman, who according to Bunge is enjoying a strong season, was the winning pitcher in both of the contests.
"I can't say enough about how Sarah is pitching," Bunge said. "She pitched 45 of the innings in our eight games in Sacramento, if that tells you anything."
The team continued to play well the next day against Texas Tech, and Workman earned two more victories as Kansas defeated the Red Raiders 7-4 and 7-0.
The team split two games against the No. 6 Iowa Hawkeyes on March 25 in Sacramento, Calif.
Kansas won the first contest 4-2 behind Workman but was shut out in the second 8-0, with Christy McPhail taking the loss.
"I decided going into the games with Iowa that Workman was going to pitch one and McPhail would pitch the other," Bunge said. "Iowa is a very, very good team, and I think it was a good experience for (McPhail) in kind of a non-pressure situation. She pitched well but struggled with keeping the ball down, and when you get the ball up with Iowa, they are going to hit it hard."
March 20-23 the team advanced to the Sacramento State AT&T Wireless Services Capital Classic championship game but fell to the Hawkeyes 4-0.
Workman pitched in five of the eight games, going 3-2 and earning All-Tournament Team honors.
"This may be one of the best spring breaks I've ever had." Bunge said. "Our pitching has been coming around, and right now it's there. As the week went on we got better defensively, and the offense is getting into gear."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 31, 1997
5B
Rodman is out but Bulls rolling to strong finish
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Dennis Rodman is out, Toni Kukoc is back and the Chicago Bulls are rolling and in reach of a second straight 70-win season.
- Bulls coach Phil Jackson had initially planned to bring Kukoc back slowly after he missed 12 games with a strained arch in his right foot.
"we talked about it, and Phil said if I feel hurt or something to let him know," Kukoc said.
Kukoc was activated Thursday, two days after the Bulls learned that Rodman would miss the rest of the regular season with a sprained left knee.
Kukoc scored 17 points in 24 minutes Saturday night in only his second game back from the injured list, as the Bulls hit the New York Nets.
Bulls beat the New Jersey Nets 111-101 for their seventh straight win. In his return Thursday, Kukoc had eight points and six assists in 32 minutes.
CHICAGO BULLS
The foot is still stiff when he awakes in the morning, but Kukoc has been able to run the floor without pain. On Saturday night, he hit seven of 11 shots, including three pointers, and had a dunk.
"I feel good." Kukoc said. "I've surprised myself a couple of times. There's no fatigue, and that's a good sign."
Four more victories and the Bulls (62-9) will ensure themselves the homecourt advantage throughout the playoffs, just as they did last season in winning their fourth NBA title of the '90s.
And with 11 games remaining, the Bulls have a chance not only to win 70 games again but with a sweep and go 73-9. That would be a one-game improvement over last season's best-ever NBA record of 72-10.
Chicago has a tough stretch of four games in five nights, including road games at Orlando, Indiana and New York.
"Seventy is something we aren't concerned with," Jackson said. "We just want to win ... We have a little haul, but we know that four ... wins will put this thing to bed as far as homecourt advantage in the conference and in the league."
The Bulls have gotten a big offensive boost the past seven games from center Luc Longley. He is averaging 15 points over that span, including a season-high 17 Saturday.
Michael Jordan, meanwhile, appears tired, even if he insists he isn't. His shot is off, and he's hit only 23 of 58 field goals attempts over the past three games.
"Physically I'm great," Jordan said. "I love the concern from everybody, but I'm feeling fine. I don't need Geritol. Right now, I'm not in a good rhythm. I've hit a wall a little."
The Bulls' depth could be depleted because backup center Bill Wennington hurt his left foot in the fourth quarter Saturday and had to leave the game.
Women win golf tournament
Kansan staff report
During spring break, the Kansas women's golf team did something it hasn't done in three years: Scored a tournament victory.
The Jayhawks won their first team championship since 1994 at the eight-team Southwest Missouri State Women's Golf Invitational. Kansas shot a three-round team total of 1,005 and finished four strokes ahead of secondplace finisher Oracle Roberts University.
The tournament was held at the par-72
RESULTS: Complete scores for the Kansas women and men. Page 2B
Millwood Golf and Racquetball Club in Springfield, Mo.
The Jayhawks hadn't won a tournament title since winning the five-team Aztec Invitational in 1994.
Anne Clark finished in fifth place and led Kansas with a three-round total of 248. It was her third career top-10 finish.
Following Clark was KU Beth Reuter, who shot a three-round total of 251 and
finished in sixth place. It was her first career top-10 finish.
Mandy Munsch finished in 10th place. Susan Tressary shot a three-round total of 259 to finish 16th. It was her third top-20 finish in a row and the fourth of her career.
Jill Simpson, playing in her second tournament as a Jayhawk, earned a 29th-place finish.
The team will travel to St. George, Utah, on April 7 to compete in the Jones Sport/Utah Dixie Classic.
Golfers finish in top 10 twice
Kansan staff report
The Kansas men's golf team kept busy during spring break by competing in two tournaments.
Last Sunday the Jayhawks finished in a tie for eighth place with Baylor at the Border Olympics in Laredo, Texas. The team then grabbed a fifth place finish Thursday in Santa Barbara, Calif., at the Pacific Coast Intercollegiate.
The tournament, held at the par-72
Laredo Country Club, is considered
In Laredo, Kansas finished 24 strokes behind tournament champion and Big 12 Conference rival Texas A&M.
the second-oldest college golf tournament.
Chris Thompson paced the Kansas team. He shot a three-round total of 218 and earned a 19th-place finish. Brad Barnett, who was playing in just his fifth career tournament, shot rounds of 75, 72 and 75 for a total of 222, his career best.
On Thursday at the par-72 Sandpiper Golf Course in Santa Barbara, Kansas shot a three-round total of 881 to finish 12 strokes behind tournament champion Fresno State.
The 24-team field included seven nationally ranked teams. Kansas finished ahead of five of them.
Thompson again led Kansas with a three-round total of 213, a career best. His second-place finish was the highest of his career.
He edged the nation's top-ranked college golfer, Arton Oberholser of San Jose State University, who tied for fifth with 216. Justin Russo of San Jose earned the tournament title with 210.
Kansas Kit Grove fired a total of 218 and finished ninth. Ryan Vermeer struggled, shooting a career-worst 231.
The Jayhawks will compete on April 7 in the Western Intercollegiate in Santa Cruz, Calif.
Rowers' spring break is work on the lake
Kansan staff report
The Kansas women's rowing team spent spring break training in Natchitoches, La. But before the team left, it took care of business at home.
The Jayhawks won three of four races against Tulsa last Saturday on the Kansas River in Lawrence.
Kansas won the Varsity Four race, and Tulsa took second. The Jayhawks' boats were first and third in the Freshman Eight and the Varsity Eight. Tulsa won the Lightweight Four race.
Rowing coach Rob Catloth said he was happy with his team's performance.
"I feel confident in how they did and how they are improving," Caloth said. "We are working on raising our stroke rates as we go on in the season. Right now we are rowing really controlled."
After the regatta, Kansas hit the road for Natchitoches for a week of training. The team practiced three times a day on Cane River Lake, which offers rowing distances between 20 and 30 miles long.
On the trip, the team worked on conditioning and efficiency. It also should help bring the team together and should help lift morale. Catloth said.
During the week, Catloth used seat racing to determine which rowing groups worked best together. Seat racing is when two boats race, trade rowers between the boats and race again. This is repeated several times until it is determined which combinations of rowers work the best together.
"We saw what eight people made the boat go faster," Catloth said. "Hopefully, we have our best boats now."
Regatta Results
Varsity Four
Varsity Four
1. Kansas 9:47
2. Tulsa 10:02
Lightweight Four
Lightweight Four
1. Tulsa 9:13
2. Kansas 9:26
3. Kansas 9:29
Freshman Eight
Freshman Light
1. Kansas 8:52
2. Tulsa 9:03
3. Kansas 9:25
1. Kansas 8:24
2. Tulsa 8:36
3. Kansas 8:52
Varsity Eight
Swimmers perform well at NCAA Championship
Tyler Palinter and Erik Jorgensen once again showed that they were two of the nation's best distance swimmers at the NCAA Men's Swimming and Diving Championships in Minneapolis on Saturday.
Painter finished second in the 1650-ay freewire freeplay with a school record-breaking time of 15 minutes and 00.41 seconds. Painter's second-place finish was the best finish in the history of Kansas men's swimming at the NCAA Championships.
Jorgensen earned his third All-American award with a 16th-place finish in the 1650-vari freestyle in 15:17:24.
Rebecca Andrew and Kristin Nilsen also attempted to qualify at the NCAA Women's Swimming and Diving Championship preliminaries in Indianapolis, but each fell short. Nilsen swam the 200-yard breaststroke in 2:16.60, missing an All-American Award by three one-hundredths of a second.
In the team competition, the Kansas men finished 27th with 30 points. Aubum took the championship with 496.5 points.
Track and field teams finish high in Texas meet
The Kansas men's and women's track and field teams both earned top three finishes Saturday at the 21st annual Arlington Invitational in Arlington, Texas.
The women's team finished second behind Texas at Arlington, breaking its season-best marks in nine events. Sprinter Carleen Roberts won the 400-meter race with a time of 55.45 seconds. Candace Mason finished fourth in the javelin at 13-8 feet and second in the long jump with 19-1 1/2 meters. Team captain Kim Feldkamp finished second in the shot put with a throw of 44-9 feet. Marla Woodman had a four-place discus throw of 154-7 feet.
The men finished third behind Texas at Arlington and Oklahoma.
Gene Coleman earned fifth place in the 400-meter race with a time of 47.71 seconds. Three members of the men's team achieved second-place finishes: junior captain Nathan Prenger in the 1.10-meter hurdles (14.16), Marcus Scheil in the long jump (23-6), and Brent Scholz in the triple jump with a career-best 47-3 meters.
Most of the Jayhawks will travel to Austin, Texas, for the 70th annual Texas RELays April 3-5. Others will go to the Emporia State RELays on April 3.
—Kansan staff report
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LIMIT - FOUR PIECES PER PERSON
LAS VEGAS — Teddy Atlas was getting desperate even if Michael Moorer wasn't.
With Moorer fighting cautiously and badly against unheralded Vaughn Bean, Moorer's trainer Atlas tried every play he could Saturday night to get Moorer motivated enough to keep his International Boxing Federation heavyweight title.
Moorer fights cautiously, retains heavyweight title
By Tim Dahlberg The Associated Press
seem to work, but Moorer did just enough against Bean to keep his portion of the heavyweight title with a majority 12-round decision.
The tirades from his corner didn't
"I did what it took to win," Moorer said. "I was the aggressor in there."
Moorer escaped with his title even after Atlas lied to him after the 10th round and told him he was four points down and needed a knockout to win.
Moorer didn't pay any attention and continued to fight cautiously and defensively against an opponent who many thought shouldn't even have
It was one of the least entertaining heavyweight title fights of recent years and ended with boos from the crowd after 12 lethargic rounds at the Las Vegas Hilton.
been in the ring.
"It was the style. I knew I won. I was the aggressor, I used my job," Moorer said. "They say styles make fighters. did what had to win. I knew I won.
Bean, who had fought only four fighters with winning records in his first 27 fights, was clearly out-matched against Moorer, who had
beaten Evander Holyfield and was in his fifth heavyweight title fight. Bean's opponents had a total record of 126-402-5, while Moorer had lost only once in 39 fights.
In another fight, former champion Julio Cesar Chavez beat Tony Martin. Chavez looked more like an aging fighter than the legendary boxer who won titles in four weight divisions.
Chavez ended the 10-round fight with his hands raised in the air in triumph. But his left eye was nearly closed, and his face was marked
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday (March 31)
If you pass the test, you'll bet the promotion. You're bold and brassy in April. Make sure you're also producing the necessary results and you'll succeed. You'll get another opportunity to serve in September. A change in December turns out to be lucky. Learn from authority figures all year instead of resisting and you'll get the job of your dreams in January. Play hard in February.
Arles (March 21-April 19) · Today is
an A.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) - Today is a 5.
You tend to have Capricorn bosses. They're brusque and foul-tempered a lot of the time, and they'll let you know if you mess up. And that's fine with you. Once you've established mutual respect, you get along well.
You can be a big help today. Your friend is in a bit of ajam and can use a little comfort and advice on an intense domestic problem. Don't take sides. Unless there's something awful happening, the best route is reconciliation.
an 8.
Need money? This is a good day to go hunting for it. An older person with a rather gruff exterior is your most likely choice. Don't schmoze this person. This guy doesn't trust anything but the facts.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is
it looks like somebody needs you. He or she is in a pretty good mood first thing this morning, but then the problem starts. This person wants to go full speed ahead, and that's just not possible. You can be a calming, rational influence.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is a 7.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 7.
Get your notes in order first thing this morning or you won't understand them. Then cancel your business trip. Instead plan for Wednesday or Thursday instead. Wednesday is best if it's new business, and Thursday if you're completing an ongoing assignment.
doesn't mean it will fail. Your scheme may actually succeed tomorrow.
Don't be discouraged if you run into problems. Just keep solving them.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is a 4.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 6.
Did you overdo it yesterday? That's unlike you! Everything in moderation. You can't be chipper and perky all the time. Your mate may be in a foul mood as well. You'll be fine by tomorrow.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is a 7.
You're interested in how things work. That's because some of them aren't. There could be several massive breakdowns in the middle of the day. Remember where the owner's manual is and use it. Help a co-worker calm down and cope.
Somehow you don't have enough money to do what you want. Either you had it and lost it or you never had it. Not to worry. You always get by. Besides this is only a temporary setback. The check is in the mail. Go out for ice cream.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -
Today is on 8
The middle of the day could be tough. If you're building a house, the carpenters will go on strike, and the electricians will wire up the place backwards. Amazingly enough, everything will be OK by tomorrow. Be careful in the meantime!
Aquarium (Jan, 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 5.
Finalize paperwork or pay fees first thing this morning. Around the middle of the day, there will be a major shutdown. The congestion will clear by late afternoon. If you can't get the job done early, wait until tomorrow.
Pliscs (Feb. 19-March 20) - Today is a 4.
A friend needs money. If you can help out, do so. It should be a safe bet. If you're thinking about asking for a raise, wait until tomorrow. Don't worry about your job. Just be supportive. It looks like everything will be under control soon.
Kansan Classified
1015 Personals
1110 Business Personals
1210 Announcements
1215 Travel
1300 Entertainment
1400 Lost and Found
100s Announcements
NOTE: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
Capriform (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)-Today is a 3.
200s Employment
Male Female
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
Classified Policy
will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
1
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
100s Announcements
tise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertis
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
KU QA offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender or unaware. Please call KU info at 864-3068 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
Stering Silver Jewelry For Gays & Gals.
Hoops, naval rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
'Ete. Ttc. Shop. 928 Mass.
HEALTH
Watkins
Since 1906
Caring For KU
CONTROL
120 Announcements
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
FAST FUNDRAIRER - RAUSE $400 IN 5 DAYS,
GREEKS, GROUPS, CLUBS, MOTIVATED
INDIVIDUALS, FAST, EASY - NO FINANCIAL
OBLIGATION (800) 162-1982 EXT. 33
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or unure?
KU QA offers a confidential support group
Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. Call KU Inte at 845-3084
or Headquarters at 842-2464 for location.
STUDENT VIDEOS WANTED, exciting prizes for funniest video classes. Mail 3 min. VHS clips to CAMPUS VIDEO CONTEST. Event Theater, 148 Sb Avenue, 11th Floor, New York City. All students will become property of NET and may be used by NET in the future as it determines.
NUDE REHEAUTATION
North American Nudist Directory lists 100's of
nude beaches, clubs, & resorts in your area and
around the country. 24 hour info: 1-612-879-4788
NUDE RECREATION
120 Announcements
NEED $$$$$$$$$ 1
Men & Women needed in Lawrence area to participate in dozens of different kinds safe, fun research. Earn up to $1000 wk. 24 Hour Info(2.5 minutes): 1:412-879-4771.
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
24 hrs.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
Free
男 女
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
SAILING INSTRUCTOR NEEDED. 8 wk sum.
Dress shirt, snake skin. Lake Quavira,
KS. Question 1: Call 245-798-
836; Question 2: Call 245-798-
836.
Busy Property Management Company seeking part-time office assistants. Duties include general office procedures as well as leasing responsibilty of buildings at 530 Eldrion, Lt. between 1:5 M - 799, J428
Local landscape company accepting applications from motivated individuals, Irrigation, lawn care, and general experience helpful, but not essential. Call 843-4944 from 8-5.
"Now hiring, restaurant workers, all positions, shifts. Pay starting at $5.00 and, depending on availability. Please in person, Monday, Friday between 2:00 and 5:00 P.M. or call 492-3239."
Student hourly secretary. $0/hr 15 hrs/wk Must have good computer skills. Applications can be picked up at 1149 Haworth. Contact Gretchen at 864-0720.
DELIVERY DRIVERS FULL-TIME/PART-
TIME AUTO IN OVERLAND PARK (912) 653-301
Working couple sets dependable, reliable individual Mon-Thurs for approx 4-8 p.m. Late afternoon to early evening. Qualified individuals must be experienced with infant care and preferred infancy CPR certification. References will be requested Call Holly after 10:30 am n93-8132-6835
CAMP COUNSELORS
Overnight camps in Pocono Mtns. of PA
Over 40 activities - Seeking general
and specialist counselors
215-887-9700 or e-mail: pinree树@pond.com
205 Help Wanted
Summer work program, 1997. Competitive, ambitious undergrads being interviewed for summer job. Approx. $5,800+ for summer. Call 1-800-967-8363. Southwestern program.
Apartment Manager. Rapidly growing management firm is currently seeking out individual to join our management team. Experience preferred but will train right person. Apply at a firm management Inc. 1820 W. 6th or mail resume to P.O. Box 1823 north KS, 60444
Babyfisher/nanny wanted. Afternoons, evenings, weekends, also Tuesday & Thursday daytime. Starting now. Full time over summer. Must have own car, experience, and knowledge of child development. Send letter, resume, schedule, and reference to Blind Box 10, 119 Shauffer Flint.
Hiring Bison. School bus drivers needed for the transportation allowance paid upon completion of training. Must complete training by April 10th, to be eligible for hiring bison. Laidlaw transit 1548 E. 23rd St.
$$ SUMMER JOBS $$
Brookcreek Learning Center is hiring part-time teaching assistants. M-F 7 a.m.-10 a.m. (toddlers) and M-F 5:30 p.m. (preschool). Opportunities include experience in an early intervention inclusion classroom program. Complete applications 855-0222. For more information call 855-0222. AA/EOE
DRRIVERS, PACKERS, HELPERS Wanted.
Excellent to make good money in K.C. area.
Experience preferred but not necessary. Will
have a college diploma or 5 years of exp.
Darm Bawdin (913) 540-020 ext. 255.
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education advisement in the University Placement Center. 20 hrs/wk, $7.00/week, startring August 1997. Application deadline April 11th. Flunk up complete job requirements. Visit www.uks.edu, or see www.uks.edu/~ucpJobs/.
Our busy not for profit health agency is recruiting care team oriented CMA/ChIA's to work in a Private Home Care Aide Program. We also offer the opportunity to participate in transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Douglas County Visiting Library, 3260 N. Bayside Court, Lower Level or call 814-4653 for Pat. EATO
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, horseback riding, hiking, computers, camping, crafts, drama, or ranches. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1300 or more plus H& B. Camp LWC/WC 7/8C (10-12). Camp AWC/WC 6-8C (10-12).
Graduate Assistantship Position to work with elementary and secondary education advisement in the University Placement Center. 20 hrs/wk, $7.00/week, starting August 1997. Application deadline April 14th. Pick up complete job description online at www.mit.edu or see www.uku.edu / unee.shtml
FREE T-SHIRT
Credit Card handlers for fraternities, sororites,
Aegreum. Any errors can win奖金.
raise up $1900 by earring a wishing
$5.00/VISA application Call-1-800-9528 ext. 65.
Qualified callers receive
FREE WIFI
205 Help Wanted
Sunrise Landscaping is now hiring seasonal landscape laborers. Apply in person at Sunrise Landscaping.
$$$$Earn Cash$$$
The Kansas and Burge Unions
Department
$ 0.00/hr.
My name is:
Come to the Personnel Level, 5 Kansas
Union for details.
Work when fit your schedule.
A.K.E.
PART TIME METER READER CITY OF LAWRENCE
Reading water meters & accurate recording of amounts of water consumed. HS Grad/GED.
Valid driver licenses. Must provide own vehicle.
84.42.14. 60 hr. lx/wr, flexible schedule. Com-
pulsing. City Hall, 75 W. 3rd St. in Admin Yon. 60 Floor, City Hall, E. 6th St., Lawn, RS 6600 E/M/F D/M
MAINTENANCE WORKER/LANDSCAPE
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Seasonal worker to provide landscape maintenance for city's parks and public right of ways. $7.5/hr. Season is now through November. Valid until November 30th. Walk behind walkins. Submit application by 3-28-97 to Admin. Serv. 2nd floor, City Hall, 6. E. 6th. Lawrence, KS 66044.
ADULT SOFTBALL UMPIRE SCHEDULER
LEAGUE SUPERVISOR
Seasonal part time position to schedule umpires for adult softball leagues and assist in supervision of leagues. 30-48hr/wk starting in April. #65-87 hr. Must be able to become registered as a coach. Minnie is 2nd floor, City Hall, 6 E. 6th St., Lawrence, KS 60044. EOE M/F/D
STUDENT HOURLY POSITION: shipping assistant to start immediately; work 15-20 hrs/wk, M-f aftermores from 1-5 p.m. spring semester & 30 mfrs/wk M-F summer. Pack and ship books from University Press of UPS warehouse at 2425 W. 15th st. Wf UPS and U.S. mail; must be able to lift parceles to 60 lbs. & must be enrolled in 6 credit courses. Please visit www.ups.edu. Come by 2591 W. 15th st., (ph. 864-424), to complete application. Deadline for applications is 5 pm Wed. 4/2. An EOE/AA employer.
*STUDENT HOURLY POSITION: shipping assistant to start immediately; work 15 wk/hr. wk/m, hrs/wk, hrs/M-F summer. Pack and ship books from University of Kansas warehouse at 2425 W. 15th St., hrs/wk, M-F summer. Pack and ship books up to 80 lbs. & must enrolled in 6 credit parcels up to 80 lbs. & must enrolled in 6 credit parcels $4.75/hr. to start; to pay $2.35 in 3 months. Come by 2520 W. 15th St., (ph. 864-4154), to complain. Come by 2520 W. 15th St., (ph. 864-4154), to complain. Comes in 5 mw pads. Wed. 4/2. NO EA/OE employer.
205 Help Wanted
SYSTEM TESTING INTERN. Deadline: 4/4/97
Salary $6,500-7.5/hour. 20hrs per week. Weekends include installation, configure, & customize software products. Participate in systems testing & applications library maintenance. Required qualifications partial listing: experience in designing and developing databases, including gizmos, 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 programming example to Ann Riatt. Completion of University of Kansas: EO/AAM EMPLOYEE
Wanted: summer camp Counselor and Arts & Crafts Director to work at ACA accredited YMCA camp. Men & women 10 yrs or older certified in woodworking or related. Contact CAMP WOOD YMCA at (316) 278-891.
Arabic Language Instructor. Half-time, one year appointment at $20k, with a potential renewal up to a total of three years. Instruction of two Arabic courses is required, and students may involve two first-year classes; in subsequent years responsibility will be for one first-year and one second-year class per semester; in coordination with the instructor, qualifications include native or near-native proficiency in Arabic and demonstrated ability to teach oral and written language skills. Graduate degree and teaching, and familiarity with subroutine programming are required. Initial review of applications will begin on recommendation, and relevant instructional materials to Beverly Mack, African and African Studies, Northwestern University Kansas, Lawson, Kansas. Ks 6504. EO/AI employee.
Seeking students majoring in social/ human service fields for hands-on experience & internship credit working with children who have multiple disabilities. Provide intensive training in behavioral programming provided. Staff will assist in the implementation of highly structured program to develop students' skills in a residential setting. Positions are live in five days on and off two days. Salary for position is $19,000. Assignment and work requirements: Pre-applicable with 60 credit hours in human service field or related. Call 822-8271 or 1-800-355-143, ext. 127. Applicant must be a licensed professional
Hiring dining & laundry aides
Immediate openings.
Weekday or weekend hours.
No evenings.
Full or part time.
Will train.
Benefits available.
Cottonwood, Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full-time Residential Education, organization and daily management of a group home. Responsibilities also include the development and implementation of a person care program, supervision of the development of house management skills, and providing for, and transportation to, social and leisure time opportunities. Even hours of work are required. Years experience in a related field or College course work is required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS MUST BE. Excellent health, including regular physical activity, 7.33 per hour. Seven part time, evening and weekend positions are still available also with starting pay of $9.60 per hour. Please apply to Cottonwood, Inc., 2801 W. 31st, by April 11, E.O.E.
Apply at 1510 St. Andrews Drive
DRURY PLACE RETIREMENT CENTER
Looking for mature, dependable, committed people to implement quality YMCA Summer Days Camp in 6 Topica locations. Must be able to work with children and adults in CIP, AID, CPR, and CDL certifications a plus.
205 Help Wanted
Earn cash on the spot
$20 Today new donors
Up to $40 this week
Donate your life saving plasma
Walk-ins welcome!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W. 24th 749-5750
YMCA SUMMER DAY CAMP COUNSELOR POSITIONS
Pick up applications at the following Topeka YMCA branches:
Elementary school teachers and college students majoring in Elementary Education, Child Development, Physical Education, or Recreation are encouraged to apply.
Minimum Requirements: Must be 18, high school diploma, relevant college hours, experience in library operations.
Pay Rate: $55 per day.
Kuehne branch at 1893 N Tyler, Topeka, KS 66080 or Downtown建筑 at 421 N Van Buren, Topeka 6603. For more info call Patty Gatzenmeyer at 912-338-8151.
225 Professional Services
K
K
TRAFFIC DEFENSE
CENTER
OF
Heathman & Kelly
DU/TRAFFIC/CRIMINAL/PERSONAL INJURY
Call For a Free Consultation
James C. Heathman
or
Melissa A. Kelly
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
913-267-0055 or
Toll Free: 888-834-4LAW (529)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 31, 1997
7B
225 Professional Service
H. C. Hodes, M.D., FACOG
Lawrence Office 841-5716
Metro KC Office (800)-733-2404
PROMPT ABORTION and CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
TRAFFIC-DUPS
PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
Sally G. Kessey
16 East 138th
1616
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 823-8484 for applications, terminating transcripts, etc.
if infection guards are needed.
Quality Typing former newsletter editor w/laser printer will create top quality paper for you. Call Deanna @ 843-2864.
X
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
For Sale: AT5 16 inch wheels 6 spoke with
Pirelli F700Z 1685x415ft Hitch Cadmium 4475.0 B.C.
Smooth ride
205 Help Wanted
HOTEL
340 Auto Sales
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
4-Bd Rm. House sublease in May. MAY rent free.
Great location. 14th and Tenn. Call 841-5797
Available now, spacious one bedroom apartment,
10th and TN. 841-5795, call 841-3684 to age.
www.supertaura.com Pictures of pre-owned
Cameras from Caraunia, CA. Call 1-800-427-ACURA for info on肌友 Ankai For Kaf.
**Made in China**
1 BDRM, 2 bath College Hind condo. W/d/
water pd. Avail Aug Rental $775 (931) 858-4062
1/2 block from KU, 1 bedroom and studio apartments,
for August. Parking and laundry.
Summer sublease. 2 blocks from campus. Nice
super studio. 1/ May Pad, $330/mo. + deposit. No pets.
1244 Ohio. Call 841-6797 after 5 at 331-0725.
Available now-3 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer/Dryer.
Fully equipped kitchen. On KU bus route. Call 841-164-
297.
CAMPUS LOCATION HOUSES AUG. 1.
Prices vary. Reference, lease, & deposit. Call
Jim Edwards @ (913) 649-3198.
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
205 Help Wanted
Stay ahead of the Job Crowd!
Make sure you get that job now! Register over we can keep you busy with clerical, accounting or other o Kansas City metro.
accounting or other office support jobs in the Kansas City metro area.
great summer the break and over the summer secretarial.
913-491-3491
To schedule an appointment over break, call Shelley or Michelle at:
Or contact us on the web at :
www.employbts.com
BTS BUSINESS TEMPORARY SERVICES
NEW APPLICANT BONUS* Summer Employment Johnson County
$50
Light Industrial
Clerical Positions
405 For Rent
HEART SORTIONS
**Fileer**
**Typists**
**Word Processors**
**Data Entry**
**Receptionists**
**Bank Tellers (exp)**
Call Kris
(913) 786-1331
Olathe
Applications accepted Mon.-Fri. 9a.m. - 3p.m.
*ASK FOR DETAILS*
Call Joanne (913) 384-6161
6405 Metcalf
KELLY SERVICES AND SPRINTTELECENTERs INC.
BE A PART OF OUR WINNING TEAM!
Build your career with one of the fastest growing direct marketing companies in the nation. Full and
PERSONNEL SERVICE
Call Ann
(913) 491-0944
11015 Metcalf
A wide range of benefits include:
* 7/8 hr Base salary plus Bonuses
Industrial
Packers
Assembly
Warehouse
General Labor
Lawn Maintenance
Production
Bossler Hix
Requirements for these positions include excellent oral & telephone communication skills, basic computer experience, sales and/, or customer service skills.
Sprint
- Tuition Reimbursement Program
Condo for Sale 3 bdrm, 2 bath, washer/dryer, on bus route. Best view in Lawrence. Assume FHA Loan, $79,000 OBO. Call to view 832-2001.
-
- Vacation & Holiday Pay
Bank Deposit
KELLY Services
FURNISHED 3 BR APT., 2 BATH, W/D, A/C/
RALCONY, ONLY ONE Bath. NO AC.
PLEASE CONTACT US FOR INFO.
STUDIO, CLOSE TO CAMPUS, ON BUS ROUTE,
CALL 814-256-9000 for more information.
Call 814-256-9000 for more information.
- Professional Work Atmosphere
Tuckaway
Studio, 1-3-8 BR, also 5 BR house all near KU, Call 811-6254.
Studio I&2 Bedrooms. Available for summer & fall. Some locations close to campus, on bus route 1850.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Sublease one bedroom apartment. Available immediately, A/C, walk-in closet, dishwasher, laundry room, parking lot.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. THREE BEDROOM.
BATHS FURNISHED. CALL EVENINGS
IN THE DAY.
- 401K Stock Options
* Career Advancement
Sublease-2 bdmpt. available now through July 31, close to campus, nicely maintained, $475/month + utilities, calls + more info.
To join the team. call Kristin at 749-2782 for an interview
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
South Pointe APARTMENTS
18.1/2 bath, ca, w/d, d/w, fwened, jouth of
campus, $140/m, + utilities 4 Bd, bath,
female, CA, just south of campus, $800/m,
female, CA, $63-647. Pets considered. Available
1. 1997.
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
South Doyne PARK VILLAS
Live in Luxury.
* 1. 2. & 3 Bedrooms
- 1, 2, 3, 4 Bedroom
* On Bus Route
* Pool & Volleyball Court
* Pets Welcome
* Hot Water & Trash Paid
- Available June 1st. Summer Sublease 1 bedroom apartment in renovated older house 9th & Mississippi floor floor, ceiling fan, off-street parking, front porch, declustered neted cats welcome / pet rent and deposit. $299. Longer lease option available. 841-1074.
- Built in '95
* Designer Interior
* 3 Bed, 2 Full Bath
* On Bus Route
* Swimming Pool
* No Pets
Avail Aug. 2 bdr, apt, in renovated older house,
10 & Kentucky. Front porch, wood floors, den,
claw-foot tub, ceiling fan, window a/c., d/w, w/d
hookups, off-street parking, de-clawed and
neutered cats only w/pet rent and deposit. $880.
841-1074.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406
Tenn, a student housing alternative. Open and diverse membership, non profit operation, democratic control. 818-240 incl. wk dym dimers, Uil, W/D, cable. Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 811-484-048.
- Alarm System
- Parks & Hot tub
- Washer/Dryer
- Built-in TV
- 2 Pools & Hot tubs
·Fitness Center
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
HARPER SQUARE
APARTMENTS
CALL 832-9918
- Washer/Drver
- 2BR 610.00
3BR 725.00
- New in 1996!!
- Alarm System
- Fireplace
1&2Bedrooms
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
M-F10-6 SAT10-4SUN12-4
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
ExerciseRoom
3HotTubs
405 For Rent
On KU Bus Route
- 2,3,4 bedroom townhouses available
TRAILRIDGE
- Near shopping areas
TRAILRIDGE
- Small pets welcome w/ deposit
- Walking distance to New Life
Elegance Center
- Swimming Pool
Fitness Center
1 need person to sub-lease apartment from mid-May to end of July. Close to campus and downtown Lawrence. Rather cheap rent. If interested please contact Brandon at 843-2931.
Pinnacle Woods
CALL 843-7333 FOR MORE INFORMATION OR STOP BY 2500 W. 6TH ST.
2500 W. 6TH ST.
1*2*3 br. luxury apt. homes
FIRST MONTH FREE
All New - 865-5454
Tropical island
Holiday Apartments
Leasing for Summer & Fall
*2 Bedroom $400-$445
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
211 Mount Hope Court #1
For more Info, or Appt.
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Move It Now...
One Month Free Rent
On lease through July 31
1 or 2 Bedroom Apartment
Call or stop by today
Move In Now...
843-2116
11th and Miss
Berkeley Flats $ ^{\circ} \mathrm{E} $
FLATS
Lorimar & Leannamar Townhomes
Leasing for SumiFall 97
1, 2, 3 bdmr/2 bath
4 bdmr/3 bath
"No one lives above or below you"
Call 841-7849
M
Moore
Our townhomes are 2 levels
Office hrs 9am-5pm M-F
405 For Rent
Part25
Park25
Apartments
1012 Emery Road 841-3800
Currently Leasing For Fall '97
10-Month Leases Available!
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
We are now accepting deposits for the fall semester on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, as well as spacious 3 bedroom townhomes.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence!
- 2 Pools/2 Laundry Rooms
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
- On KU Bus Route
- --closets in a friendly, service oriented community.
- 2 Pools 2 Laundry Rooms
- Volleyball Court
Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms
Reasonable Rates
Great Location
Near Campus
(no pets, please)
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Wed-Fri
12:30-4:30
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall '97
No Appointment needed
West Hills APARTMENTS
meadowbrook FALL'97
You should prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER OR FALL.
Mackenzie Place, 1139 Kentucky. Now leasing for Aug. 1. Great Location! Luxury apts., close to campus. All B&R. Microwave, wireless/driver. Energy efficient. Wet well-insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-116.
Our convenient office hours make it easy for you to come see how much you would love living in our beautiful park like
LARGE apartments with Big closets in a friendly service.
2&3 Bdrm. Townhouses
oriented community. Studios,1.2 & 3 Bdrm. Apts.
- 2 Pools
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon-Fri
10-4 Sat 1-4 Sun
- 2 Volleyball Areas
- 3 Bus Stops
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
"In a busy, impersonal world,
QUIKQUAK
we provide good old-fashioned personalized service"
service."
Managed & maintained by Professionals
405 For Rent
Live your summer fantasy in a charming older house, sit on the porch and watch the world go by. Walk to KU or downlown 1,2, & 3 bedroom apartments in required location. Longer lease options also available, decaled neutered cats welcome w/ pet rents and deposit starting at $299.81-1074.76
Call for Appointments
4-6pm Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
ABERDEEN APTS
& TOWNHOMES
1, 2 & 3 bedroom
$495-$780
BRAND NEW!
EAGLE APARTMENTS
1-bedroom $345
2-bedroom $420
NEWER!
OVERLAND TOWNHOMES
3 & 4 bedroom
$720-$840
NEWER!
Swan Management
Naismith Place
Now leasing for summer and fall
* 2 BR from $440
* Jacuzzi to each apt.
* 1 bath. to 8 bus bus route
* Paddle board area
* Pd cable TV/TVPs
* Basketball court Park
* Baseball park
Ousdahl & 25th Ct. 841-1815
SUMMERTREE WEST
TOWNHOMES
2-bedroom/2-level
$525-$550
NEWER!
OPEN HOUSE
M-F 1-5
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
530 Elderidge, L-1
3 blocks west of Kasold
on 6th Street
749-1288
How to schedule an ad:
430 Roommate Wanted
- By phone: 864-4358
Female Sub. Suspension needed middle of May to meet bus route. Close to campus. Call 823-9044 on KU
- In person; 119 Stauffer Flint
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
FRIENLY Sr/Grad folks seek N/S Fem. Prenail avon, Bright wavled skylift skd. nr. campus. trees, flowers. A/C / BDR, 8138, i/148, Richard@814-2746 bade. 8am-1pm.
2 Females to share 5 bedroom luxurious rooms $250/mo. + 1/5 unit. + all amenities 1/2 mile from Campus, no pets, W/D, A/C, Call 865-5425
- By Mail: 119 Staffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60445
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The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Half, Lawrence, KS. 68045
1234567890
8B
Monday, March 31, 1997
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Boys of summer enjoy spring break
Kansas baseball wins six of seven during vacation
By Harley V. Ratliff Kansan sportswriter
Even though they didn't spend the week gallivanting across sandy beaches or partying all night at dance clubs, the Kansas baseball players' spring break was anything but disappointing.
The Jayhawks (21-10, 7-5), behind solid pitching and hitting, were victorious in six of seven games during the break.
Kansas started the week with a good showing in Ames, Iowa. The Jayhawks, coming off three tough losses at Oklahoma, rebounded by sweeping Big-12 rival Iowa State. Kansas won both games of Saturday's doubleheader 3-2 and 9-7 and completed the sweep by bending on for an 8-6 victory on Sunday. The three wins pushed the Jayhawks' Big-12 record over .500.
After Kansas opened up a 7-2 lead on Sunday, the Cyclones rallied for four runs in the bottom of the eighth inning and reduced the Kansas lead to one. However, Kansas tacked on an insurance run in the ninth, and Iowa State never threatened again.
Kansas' next game, which was supposed to be against Rockhurst, was canceled because of rain. The Jayhawks followed the cancellation by taking their only loss of the break against Creighton.
After the loss, Kansas closed out spring break by reeling off three consecutive wins.
The Jayhawks began with a 10-inning, 4-2 victory in Tulsa, Olda., against Olal Roberts University and then returned home and clubbed Howard University 26-4 and 15-6.
Kansas, which allowed Roberts to tie the score in the bottom of the ninth, put the
game out of reach with a three-run 10th inning. The Jayhawks started the scoring when second baseman Joe Demarco doubled and drove in shortstop Paul Levins. After catcher Mike Dean was put out on a fly ball to right field, centerfielder Justin Headley singled and drove in Demarco. Designated hitter Josh Dimmick followed Heady's hit by singing and driving in Headley for the Jayhawks final score of the inning.
Oral Roberts managed a run during its half of the 10th inning but wasn't able to overtake the Jayhawks. Freshman pitcher Jake Good closed out the game against the Golden Eagles for his third win of the season.
Kansas finished the week with two impressive offensive showings against Howard.
The Jayhawks opened the series by devastating Howard's pitchers with a Kansas record-tying, six home-run performance. The game marked the fourth time Kansas has accomplished the feat and the first time since 1993's game against Northwest Missouri State. First baseman Chad King smacked his first two home runs of the season. Thirteen batters got hits and crossed the plate in the Jayhawks' 26-4 victory.
Kansas continued to dominate the next day.
The Jayhawks used an early 5-1 lead to propel them to a 15-6 victory. Kansas was led by three of its senior stars. Headley connected on his team-leading ninth run. Demarco went three for five, extending his hitting streak to 15 games. And Casey Barrett, making his first appearance of the season since his shoulder injury, got his first win of the season.
Kansas will try to stay on the winning track today when the Jayhawks host Oral Roberts at 3 p.m. at Hogland-Maupin Stadium.
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Bari Bighittan ♡ สัมพันธ์ที่ต้องการ
Kansas right fielder Les Walrond slides into third base as Howard University's Johan Hernandez attempts to tag him out on Saturday after noon. Kansas beat Howard 26-4. Overall, the baseball team is 21-10 for the season.
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Kansas men's tennis player Xavier Avila returns a serve as doubles partner Enrique Abaroa waits at the net Saturday afternoon at the Robinson Center courts. The Kansas No. 1 doubles team beat Texas A&M, helping to secure a 4-3 victory for the Jawhaws.
Tennis men shine in spring break victories at home
Women struggle with tournament losses at UNLV
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
During spring break, the No. 21-ranked Kansas men's tennis team was successful in match play while the No. 32-ranked women's team struggled in tournament competition.
The men began spring break with a dominating 6-1 victory at home against No. 37-ranked New Mexico.
The men's team is 11-6 this season. The women's record dropped to 5-10.
The day was highlighted by a match that featured Kansas Enrique Abaroa against Javier Gutierrez at No. 1 singles.
Gutierrez helped give the Lobos their only victory of the day in a 9-7 defeat of Kansas' No.1 doubles team of Abaroa and Xavier Avila.
Abaro won the closest match of the day, 6-7 (7-3), 7-6 (7-1), 7-6 (8-6).
The Jayhawks then headed to California, where they were defeated 5-2 by No. 22-ranked Fresno State.
The Bulldogs extended their home-court winning streak to 34 matches.
1.
Avila defeated No. 75-ranked Robert Lindstedt.
Kansas' Trent Tucker won in straight sets for the other victory.
The Jayhawks rebounded at home this weekend with a 4-3 victory against No. 54-ranked Texas A&M. They improved to 3-1 in the Big 12 Conference with the victory.
Kansas took a 1-0 lead into singles play by winning two of three matches against Texas A&M in doubles competition.
Tucker won, 6-4, 6-2, at the No. 3 singles slot, and Avila won, 7-5, 6-4, in No. 2 singles. Abaroa, who is nationally ranked No. 25 in singles, won the decisive match in three sets, 6-4, 6-7, 6-4.
The Aggies then grabbed victories at the No. 4, No. 5 and No. 6 singles slots and had a 3-1 lead.
The Jayhawks' premier players then stepped to the forefront and prevented a team loss.
The women's tennis team lost 7-2 to No.10-ranked Georgia this past weekend.
The match was part of the Lady Rebel Challenge at UNLV.
Brooke Chiller won at the No.
3 singles slot, while Christie
Sim and Kris Sell won at the No.
2 doubles slot.
The women's team will play host to Nebraska on Wednesday, while the men's team will play Missouri tomorrow in Kansas City, Mo.
Went down swinging
NCAA SOUTHEAS
SOUTHEASTERN
23
TOP: During Kansas' 85-82 loss to Arizona, Jacque Vaughn passes into the lane around Michael Dickerson.
ABOVE: Billy Thomas shields the ball from Arizona's Michael Dickerson. The junior guard scored 13 points and was one of four lawvahs in double figures.
RIGHT: Scot Pollard and Paul Pierce reach for a rebound in front of center AJ. Bramlett, who had a game high 1.2 rebounds.
Steve Puppe / AACAAR
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