CM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56
1 CENTIMETER = 0.3937 INCHES - 1 WETER = 39.37 INCHES - FEET OR 1.094 VOS - 1 INCH = 2.54 CENTIMETERS - 1 DECIMETER = 3.937 IN OR 0.328 FOOT 1 FOOT = 3.048 DECIMETERS - 1 YARD = 0.9144 METER
3 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 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
4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Tomorrow's weather
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
COLD
Kansan
Cold again with periods of clouds and sunshine.
HIGH 32
Online today
Monday
January 12, 1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 • No. 77
HIGH LOW 32 26
The new version of The Love Connection premieres next week. Be the first to catch this online marvel at its new address.
MANSAY
Sports today
http://www.jhawkbbball.com
---
Wilt Chamberlain will return to Lawrence this weekend to retire his jersey.
WWW.KANSAN.COM
SEE PAGE 6B
Contact the Kansan
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
News: (785) 864-4810
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Opinion e-mail: opinions@kansan.com
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Advertising e-mail: onlineads@kansan.com
Drowning sorrows in 3.2 beer
Bullwinkle's Bar and Jayhawk Cafe reduce hours, alcohol content after bust
BULLWINKLES
1924
"We're not trying to close bars down. We're hoping that the patrons could be more considerate of non-patrons." Linda Hixon Oread neighborhood resident
(USPS 650-640)
THE HAWK
Top: Bullwinkle's, 1344 Tennessee St.
Above: The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St.
Pending permission from the city department of health, the bars will open tonight for business. Photos by Roger Nomer/KANSAN
By Tamara Miller
Kansan staff writer
Students searching for a late-night mixed drink from Bullwinkle's Bar or the Jayhawk Cafe will have to search elsewhere. The two bars, commonly known as "The Bull" and "The Hawk," now will sell only 3.2 beer and will close at midnight.
Bullwinkle's, 1344 Tennessee St., and Jayhawk Cafe, 1340-1342 Ohio St., have been granted cereal malt beverage licenses by the city of Lawrence and are scheduled to open tonight pending city health department approval.
Tom Devlin, co-owner of the bars, said that pressure from neighbors convinced him and co-owner John Davis to consider applying for the licenses. They applied for the licenses during the University of Kansas' winter break.
The licenses will allow the bars' owners to sell beer containing only 3.2 percent alcohol. The establishments also must close at midnight.
Ervin Hodges, city commissioner, said both bars had misbehaving patrons. Neighbors had complained of noise, public urination and the mishandling of trash by employees.
Because a cereal malt beverage license is granted by the city, there is more local control of the bars. Hodges said. The city can revoke the licenses at any time if the bars operate illegally.
In the Jan. 6 city commission meeting, Bullwinkle's and Jayhawk Cafe were granted cereal malt beverage licenses. As part of the agreement, both bars' licenses will be reviewed in six months.
Residents who live near the bars attended the city commission meeting to voice their opinions on the issue.
Linda Hixon, who lives near Jayhawk Cafe, said she thought the midnight closing time would alleviate some of the problems.
Hodges said the city was aware that both bars had problems with underage drinking and by granting the owners a license, the city would have more control of the problem
"We're not trying to close bars down," she said. "We're hoping that the patrons could be more considerate of non-patrons."
However, some said underage drinking would persist at the bars.
Brian Mall, Lenexa sophomore, said the two bars were known as places where those younger than 21 could be served alcohol.
"No matter what they try to do, if they're trying to prevent underage drinking, they'll have no success," he said.
Devlin said he thought underage drinking was a problem for most college bars.
"Like most bars, we do the best we can," he said.
Devlin said that the new regulations would hurt business, but he was glad that the neighbors were appeased.
Shortly before winter break, both bars were ticketed by the state Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control for selling alcohol to minors. Alcoholic Beverage Control is responsible for granting liquor licenses in the state.
Devlin and Davis currently are negotiating a settlement with the division.
When a bar receives a ticket for serving minors, its liquor license is suspended for two or three days, during which the bar must close.
Because the December incident occurred shortly before winter break, and both bars close during the break anyway. Devlin said that he and Davis decided simply to close earlier than planned.
The owners' lawyers currently are negotiating a settlement that will state whether the licenses were voluntarily or involuntarily suspended.
If the licenses were voluntarily suspended, they can be reinstated automatically. If the licenses were involuntarily suspended, the owners will have to apply for new ones.
Devlin said that the bars' state liquor licenses had not been revoked, but probably would be suspended.
Kentucky St.
Bullwinkle's Bar
Tennessee St.
Jayhawk Cafe
Ohio St.
Kristi Elliott / KANSAN
Robinson fire sparks action from employees
Swift response limits damages to $1,000
By Laura Roddy
Kansan staff writer
Bob Lockwood, Robinson facility director, Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, and Mike Sinclair, general maintenance technician, helped extinguish the flames before the fire department arrived.
Thanks to the quick thinking of several University employees, damage caused by a fire in Robinson Center Friday afternoon was minimal.
"We're pretty lucky," Lockwood said. "No one was hurt."
Lockwood said the fire began in the roof above the west pool where maintenance crews had been installing a new ventilation system and that the damage was contained to a 12-by-12 foot area in the roof.
Fire officials told the Lawrence Journal-World that the fire caused no more than $1,000 damage. University officials said that equipment used in the repairs may have caused the fire.
By that time, the workers had left the building and Lockwood called 911. Sinclair said. Security then evacuated the building.
Porter was walking near Summerfield Hall when he heard the fire report on his communications radio. When he entered Robinson's west doors, maintenance workers were stretching out a garden hose. Porter sprayed water at the fire from the ground until the fire department arrived.
Lockwood discovered the fire shortly after 4 p.m. when he noticed flames through a construction hole above the
pool. He first thought that crews were still working on the hot tar roof, so he ran to check with Sinclair.
Meanwhile, Sinclair went onto the roof with a fire extinguisher and began putting out the fire.
Sinclair said the fire department cut back part of the roof to make sure the fire was extinguished completely.
Lockwood said the firefighters were finished by 5:30 p.m. and Robinson employees were able to reopen it within minutes. However, the pool was not reopened until Saturday morning.
Porter said he thought the fire department arrived within five minutes.
Lockwood also said crews were almost finished installing the new ventilation system but that the fire should cause a minimal setback.
"The flames were gone, but it was still smoldering." he said.
AIDS expert, cocktail creator to visit campus
Kansan staff writer
David Ho, world-renowned HIV/AIDS physician and researcher and *Time* magazine's former Man of the Year, will speak 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Lied Center.
Ho's landmark discovery, the AIDS Cocktail, is a combination of drugs that works together to slow the progress of HIV.
Donna Sweet,
Wichita physician
and director of the
Kansas AIDS Education
Center, will introduce Ho at Tuesday
night's lecture.
余建章
Ho: HIV/AIDS
expert to speak at
Lied center Tuesday
"We used to say
once a person was given the AIDS diagnosis, they had approximately 30 months to live." Sweet said. "With the addition of the new cocktail therapies, that time span has been extended to approximately five years."
the immune system's invisible fight against the disease.
Researchers once thought that HIV remained dormant in the body until AIDS developed. But this resulted from
He proved that as the HIV multiplied, the immune system fought even harder to keep it down, and in doing so, was wearing itself out.
The AIDS Cocktail is a combination of three drugs: AZT, protease inhibitors, and 3TC. These drugs work together to keep the HIV from progressing into AIDS.
At this time it is unsure if the patients will have to take the cocktail for the rest of their lives. Ho suspects, however, that the combination therapy should remove the HIV from the body in two to three years.
Ho is scientific director and chief executive of the Aaron Diamond Research Center, a position he has held since the center's founding in 1990. He also is a professor at Rockefeller University.
The lecture is free. Vouchers are available at the SUA Box Office today with KUID and tomorrow for non-students.
The lecture is sponsored by Student Union Activities, the Kansas AIDS Education and Training Center, the Kansas City AIDS Research Consortium, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company and Agouron Pharmaceuticals.
Graves to ask for $3 million to help build Dole Institute
Kansas Governor Bill Graves will ask the state legislature for $3 million to help build the Robert J. Dole Institute for Public Service and Public Policy at the University of Kansas.
By Brandon Copple Kansan staff writer
Mike Matson, Graves' press secretary, said the Governor settled on $2 million after discussions with Dole, the Board of Regents, Chancellor
Introducing the former senator to a luncheon crowd Thursday in Overland Park, Graves said the appropriation would be included in the proposed budget that he would submit to the legislature today.
Robert Hemenway and Marlin Rein, University director for governmental affairs.
Legislative approval of the governor's recommendation would mean the institute would have locked in more than half of its cost, now estimated at $8 million. The institute will be erected on the University's west campus just west of the Lied C.
Graves: Asking state legislature to pitch in for the Dole Institute.
west of the Lied Center.
The Kansas University Endowment Association has already raised more than $2 million from private sources.
"We heard the money was coming, but talk is cheap," Loomis said. "A $3 million commitment means we can move the planning forward a lot more quickly."
No building plans have been prepared, although archivist Bryan Culp already is sorting through Dole's collected papers in the basement of Spencer Research Library.
Burdett Loomis, interim director of the Dole Institute and professor of political science, said he was pleased with the governor's commitment.
PETER J. MURRAY
Once completed, the institute will house documents from Dole's 27 years in Congress, host forums for national,
state and local policy discussions and hold programs aimed at educating elected officials and the public. Loomis said that Dole wanted the Institute to help reduce cynicism toward government.
Dole: Donated documents from his 27 years in Congress.
"Senator Dole is a man who dedicated his life to public service," Loomis said. "He wants to help people believe in public service again."
The governor's proposal would take the $3 million from a one-time $67 million tax payment paid to the state by Western Resources, a Kansas power company.
Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, said it was preferable to use the one-time payment for one-time expenditures such as building projects, which do not require an ongoing source of funds. Praeger also said the legislature should approve the governor's proposal.
"I'd like to see it supported for reasons beyond politics," she said. "I hope we'll support the institute because of what Bob Dole has meant to Kansas, and for what it can do for state and local government in Kansas."
Loomis, an expert on the legislative process, said he thought Dole's popularity in Kansas would carry the proposal to passage.
"I think the legislature would go for just about anything with Bob Dole's name on jc," he said. "If we can frame it as a way to thank Senator Dole for his years of service, there shouldn't be any problem getting it passed."
Section A · Page 2
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 12, 1998
LeaderShape teaches life principles
Retreat widens student views
By Emily C. Forsyth Kansas staff writer
LS THE LS
LEADERSHAPE
INSTITUTE
Chancellor Robert Hemenway addresses the LeaderShape student retreat at Tall Oaks Conference Center in Linwood, on Friday. Hemenway's speech was part of the closing festivities. Sixty-three student leaders participated in the retreat, which was sponsored by the Department of Student Housing. Photo by Augustus Anthony Pizza/KANSAN
While some students loured about, savoring their last moments of peace before a grueling semester of work, 63 student leaders at the University of Kansas launched the spring semester a week early.
The students and five graduate teaching assistants participated in a retreat called the LeaderShape Institute from Jan. 4 to Jan. 9 at Tall Oaks Conference Center in Linwood.
The program, sponsored by the Department of Student Housing, was designed to equip students with leadership skills, emphasizing teamwork, integrity, ethics and achieving results.
"So much of the week focused on building relationships and bridging the gap between different organizations," Bradford said.
Katie Bradford, Marysville junior, said the retreat helped students from different campus organizations build a foundation for future cooperation.
During one evening of the program, four community leaders discussed ethics and integrity in leadership. The panelists were Ann Evans, director of Lawrence Arts Center; Rod Bremby, Lawrence assistant city manager; Marilyn Layman, superintendent for DeSoto public school district; and Roger Morningstar, of Sport 2
Sport. 5200 Clinton Parkwav.
Bradford said it was beneficial to hear from leaders who were active in Lawrence.
"They're people we can look up to because they are doing great things in our community." she said.
LeaderShape participants were encouraged to develop a plan for improving organizations in which they were involved for a nine- to 12-month period. Bradford, a member of the KU Panhellenic Association, said she wanted to focus on improving relations between sororities.
Bradford said she hoped to develop a program where sororities could build a house for Habitat for Humanity or make a contribution in some other form of community service.
"So many of the projects focused on building relationships with other organizations. It was really a recurring theme," Bradford said. "Within any organization, the same things need to be addressed."
Anthony Nicholson, Overland Park junior and president of Battenfeld Scholarship Hall, developed a similar plan for improving understanding between campus living groups. Nicholson said interacting with other students helped him to change his ideas about people.
"I changed my view on how I perceived people based on whether they live in a scholarship hall or greek hall or residence hall." Nicholson said.
Nicholson said he hoped to incorporate an exchange program where members of different living organizations would live in another person's room for a day or two to gain a better understanding of fellow students and to eliminate stereotypes.
"All you know is what people tell you and the negative stereotypes," Nicholson said. "I think
the best thing I got out of the week was meeting people such as the president of a fraternity or sorority and learning that they are great people."
ing speech left students like Bradford with a new enthusiasm and eagerness to apply what they had learned.
Chancellor Robert Memenway addressed the group both on the opening day of the program and at the ending session. His clos-
"The chancellor said, 'You've done so much with just 65 people, imagine what 24,000 can accomplish,'" Bradford said.
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Student Financial Aid is awarding federal work-study funds for the spring semester. To apply, access an online application at http://www.ukans.edu/~osfa using Netscape or Internet Explorer. Call 864-4700 or inquire at 51 Stroig Hall for more information.
The University Forum commences for the spring semester from noon to 1 p.m. Wednesday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. This week's free lecture is about the architecture of Columbus, Ind. All of the town's public buildings are designed by renowned architects thanks to a philanthropic donation. The forum meets Wednesdays. An optional lunch begins at 11:30 a.m. All students, staff and faculty are welcome.
The KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday Call 864-7325 for meeting location and more information.
The Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at the Multicultural Resource Center. Call Lori Huxwell at 841-5852 or Regina Grass at 832-2569 for more information.
The International Student Association will meet at 6 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Call Scott Grigsby at 864-4848 for more information.
The University Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Sunflower Room in the Burge Union. Call Rick Clock at 841-3148 for more information.
Registration for a human sexuality class sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries will be accepted from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. this week. Beginning this week the class will meet from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Thursdays.
■ The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor a "How?@KU" informal meeting at 4 p.m. today and tomorrow and at 9 a.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday in 109 Lippincott Hall. Call Doug Schenkelberg at 864-7812 for more information.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor a Great Britain Direct Exchange informational meeting at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. Contact Doug Schenkelberg at 864-7812 for more information.
The KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesdays at the Daisy Hill Room in the Kansas Union.
The St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center's Vespers Concert Series will continue at 7:35 p.m. Friday at the center, 1631 Crescent Road. The Loras College Concert Choir will sing a Concert of Sacred Music after the 7 p.m. Vespers service.
University Daily Kansan's On Campus Policy
The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
ON THE RECORD
A contractor's parking permit was stolen from a van in Lot 10 Dec. 14, KU police said. The permit was valued at $138.
Kansas official license tags, mounting screws and n'ts were stolen from the University Motor Pool between 8 a.m. Dec. 17 and 10 a.m. Jan. 8, KU police said. The items were valued at $21.
■ A KU student's residence hall parking permit was stolen from lot 104 between 11:30 p.m. Dec. 3 and 9:30 a.m. Dec. 4, KU police said. The permit was valued at $75.
The front door and carpet of a Lawrence man's apartment in the 1100 block of Indiana were set on fire at approximately 3:30 a.m. Friday, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $100.
Shows go on despite repairs to leaky roof
Rain damage alerts crews to structural disintegration
By Chris Horton
Kansan staff writer
University Theatre assistant director Kathy Pryor said an inspection of Murphy's roof after the rains revealed a potentially dangerous situation.
Last semester's rain-induced damage to two theaters and a practice room in Murphy Hall may have been a nuisance, but it alerted the University to a greater problem.
"The steel and concrete that make up the structure of the roof had disintegrated significantly," she said. "The concrete would literally crumble in your hands."
That discovery forced the University to replace the entire roof, a procedure slowed by snow and asbestos removal. Despite the delays, Mark Reiske, production manager at Design and Construction Management, said the task is near completion.
Reiske said repairs to Crafton-Preyer Theatre and the practice room beneath it as well as the William Inge Memorial Theater had been completed, with only a small area of roof beneath a cooling tower still needing to be replaced.
Design and Construction Management created the plans and specifications for the project, which was contracted to Huttinger Construction Co. of Kansas City, Mo.
Bob Huttinger, president of Huttinger Construction, said although a small amount of work remained, completion of the reroofing would not occur until the roof was sufficiently dry, which requires at least one full day of warm, dry weather.
"There's a week to a week and a half of work left, but since it's a weather-permitting job, it could go on for months," he said.
As for the asbestos, Huttinger said its removal was not much of an obstacle for the contractor.
Even though theaters are safe, University Theatre is still feeling the repercussions, Pryor said.
The children's production "Little Monster" was displaced by the repairs and had to be converted into a touring production. Two on-campus performances are also scheduled for 100 Smith Hall on Jan. 31 and Feb. 1, she said.
The first performance for the repaired theaters takes place early next month with "Die Fledermaus", which will take run at Crafton-Preyer Theater and will run Feb. 5-8.
ET CETERA
The University Daily Kansan is the student news-
paper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid
through the student activity fee. Additional copies of the
Kansan are 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
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 $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity.
more than 400 people through the student diversity tee.
**Postmaster:** Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan.
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The On Campus section is now located in the University Daily Kansas's news section.
On campus forms also can be filled out on line at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive.
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STUDENT
Monday, January 12, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Senate midyear evaluations
Scale of 1 to 5 Excellent = 5 Numbers in columns show how many senators gave the indicated rankings.
| | How accessible has this person been so far? | How accessible has this person been so far? | How accessible has this person been so far? | How accessible has this person been so far? | How accessible has this person been so far? | How accessible has this person performed their job responsibilities? | How accessible has this person performed their job responsibilities? | How accessible has this person performed their job responsibilities? |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Scott Sullivan Student Body President | 0 0 | 7 7 7 | 2 2 | 4 7 7 | 2 1 | 3 7 3 | 0 3 | 4 6 8 |
| Mike Walden Student Body Vice President | 1 1 | 2 7 10 | 2 2 | 3 4 10 | 1 2 | 2 6 9 | 1 2 | 3 7 9 |
| Kelly Huffman Student Exec. Committee Chair | 0 0 | 0 7 14 | 0 0 | 0 6 15 0 | 0 0 | 0 5 16 0 | 0 0 | 0 5 16 |
| Tom Prehelm Student Body Treasurer | 0 1 | 2 8 10 | 2 1 | 4 6 8 | 1 0 | 4 3 13 0 | 1 4 4 12 |
| Dave Reynoldson Student Body Assistant Treasurer | 1 0 | 5 2 8 | 0 0 | 4 2 9 | 0 0 | 3 1 11 0 | 0 4 4 9 |
| Kristen Hall Executive Secretary | 0 0 | 0 6 15 | 0 1 | 0 5 15 0 | 0 0 | 0 5 16 0 | 0 0 | 0 5 16 |
| Emily Heath Center for Community Outreach | 0 1 | 3 4 11 | 1 0 | 3 0 15 1 | 0 2 2 14 1 | 0 3 1 15 |
| Jamie Najim Center for Community Outreach | 1 0 | 1 7 10 | 1 0 | 2 8 8 0 | 1 0 | 8 10 0 | 0 2 6 10 |
| Samantha Bowman Legislative Director | 0 0 | 2 5 14 | 1 0 | 3 4 12 0 | 0 0 | 0 5 15 0 | 0 3 6 14 |
| Scott Kaler Transportation Coordinator | 0 1 | 4 5 9 | 2 0 | 6 3 9 | 0 3 4 4 9 | 0 2 6 5 9 | |
Senate evaluations, effective or not praise StudEx chair but pan president
By Melissa Ngo
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate released its midyear evaluations for the first time in the past several years amid speculation that the evaluations were ineffective.
The evaluations were handed out by Kelly Huffman, student executive committee chairman, at the beginning of the Dec. 3 Senate meeting. Senators were asked to evaluate the Senate executive staff during the meeting and to turn them in at the end.
Scott Sullivan, student body president, estimated that 40 to 50 of the 70 senators attended that meeting. Twenty-one senators turned in evaluations.
Senate executive staff includes the student body president, vicepresident, student executive committee chair, treasurer, assistant treasurer, executive secretary, Center for Community Outreach co-directors, legislative director, and transportation coordinator.
Sullivan said that one reason so few senators turned in evaluations might have been because some people were uncomfortable turning in bad evaluations.
Sullivan said that he was proud the executive staff had good overall evaluations because it proved Senate had a good staff.
There has been debate about how effective the evaluations were, especially because less than one-third of senators turned them in.
Matt Bachand, liberal arts and sciences senator, said that the responses were not representative of all Senators.
"I think the way that it turned out was that the people who were
happy with Senate filled them out. Others who didn't were disillusioned with the idea and felt that it didn't matter." he said.
Bachand said he didn't think the questions were helpful in planning new action for the spring.
The evaluations asked questions such as how effective the officers were overall and how active the officers had been in pursuing senator ideas and involvement.
"I want questions like 'How do you think the different things we did this semester were handled?' and 'What do you want us to work on?" Bachad said.
Bachand also said senators should not be the ones filling out the evaluations, because the point wasn't whether Senate was happy with itself.
"Why not give it to the student body to see how they feel?" he said.
Huffman had the best evaluations, with no one rating him less than 4 out of 5 possible points. Positive comments about Huffman said that he was "incredibly helpful" and had "fair and objective listening skills."
Huffman said that the evaluations were a good tool for feedback, but he also had concerns about them.
"My biggest concern with the evaluations was that they were done at a heated meeting on a controversial issue. People's views on that issue might have biased how they felt during the evaluations," he said.
Because Senate is asking professors to be open with their evaluations, Sullivan said it would be hypocritical for Senate not to release its own evaluations.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
What's Happening in The KU Libraries?
Library Orientation Tours
Art and Architecture Library Level 1, Spencer Museum of Art Tuesday, January 14 4:00 p.m.
Staff tour guides will introduce information resources and services available through the University of Kansas Libraries. Scheduled tours are approximately 45-60 minutes long.
Thursday, January 16 1:00 p.m.
Thomas Gorton Music Library 448 Murphy Hall
Friday, January 17 2:00 p.m.
Watson Library
Friday, January 10 10:00 a.m.
Friday, January 17 10:00 a.m.
Tuesday, January 21
Workshops
The library workshop series continues this semester.Call 864-8998 or email The Libraries at workshop@ukans.edu to register.
Searching Library Databases I: Improving Search Skills
Wednesday, January 21 1:30-3:00 Clark Lab
Tuesday, January 27 1:30-3:00 Clark Lab
Statistics on the Internet Friday, January 30 10:00-12:00 Clark Lab
Exhibits
*Kansas Collection: Championing Archives: The Legacy of Donald R. McCoy; and 129 Years of Serving God and Community: $ _{1^{st}} $ Regular Baptist Church, Lawrence, Kansas, 1868-1997
*Special Collections: Britannia in Kansas
*University Archives: Naismith to Williams
Watson Library: The Idea of the West
*Located on the $ 2^{nd} $ , $ 3^{rd} $ ,and $ 4^{th} $ floors of Kenneth Spencer Research Library
The University of Kansas Libraries - Publications Office - 350 Watson Library - 864-3378
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Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Kansan
Published daily since 1912
4A
Lindsey Henry, kaur
Dave Morantz, Managing editor
Kristie Blasi, Managing editor
Tom Ebien, General manager, news adiser
Marc Harreel, Business manager
Colleen Eager, Retail sales manager
Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser
Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
Monday, Jan.12, 1998
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Break might alleviate stress now, but it would add more stress later
Editorials
Breaks are good things. Few people would disagree with that students need to take time off to focus, study, party, or simply vegetate. The creation of a fall break is being considered by the University Calendar Committee, but this is one break we do not need.
Under the current proposal, the break would fall sometime in midto late-October, after most midterms. It would supposedly give students more time for studies and rest than they have now. The break would be two or three school days long in addition to a weekend.
However, this idea has many problems and would not be beneficial to students.
The University has a limited number of days with which it can work. So if we had a fall break, we likely would sacrifice other break days.
Fall break is a bad idea given the limited days available in the schedule.
A three-day break might come at the cost of Stop Day — the traditional break before finals. Supporters argue that by ending classes on a Friday, a weekend would suffice for rest and study break before finals. Many of the people who favor the fall break also favor shortening finals to make up required school days. This also seems poorly conceived. If the proposition is that a fall break will give us more rest, then why would we want to give ourselves more stress during finals?
An argument in favor of fall break is that the University is one of the
few schools that still does not have one. That may be, but Thanksgiving has been the traditional break at the University. Different institutions have different academic calendars and budgeting priorities. Also, supporters apparently have not considered how a fall break would affect midterms. There is no midterm schedule — the test dates set by individual instructors. Furthermore, it's hard to say whether students at the University are less rested than their peers at other institutions.
Most students seem to be able to deal with the current, "breakless" fall schedule.
As Kelly Huffman, chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee, noted, "Everyone likes a break, but the problem is do you lose more than you gain?"
Tom Moore for the editorial board
Dissenting opinion: give us a break
Drop a day or two from Hawk Week and begin classes earlier.
The University of Kansas needs a break: a fall break. Jason Fizell, calendar committee member, is proposing solutions to the problems that could arise if the University adopts a fall break. These changes could be made to assure students some time off:
- Drop Stop Day in the fall and instead have a weekend precede finals.
Shorten the finals period to one week.
Hawk Week has traditionally been a time of adjustment for freshmen. This time could be condensed into a few
Labor Day to Thanksgiving is too long to go without a break to study or just relax
days instead of drawn into a full week of student activities. Ask students which they want: a week for freshmen adjustment or a couple of days to catch their breath.
The change in finals week also could be a welcome one. Condensing finals to a Monday-through-Friday schedule is a more efficient schedule for students and faculty. It saves housing costs for students and operational costs for the University.
Cutting Stop Day could provide a full weekend before finals instead of one day of frantic studying.
But the biggest reason is the most obvious: We get tired in mid-October. Midterms wear students down. A fall break could revive students and therefore improve output and grades.
This proposal isn't for an entire week of vacation; it's for an extended weekend of breathing room. A one-to-two day break in the University's schedule will do less damage than the brain frying that starts during that time of year.
Cara Skodack of the editorial board
Kansan staff
Paul Eakins ... Editorial
Andy Obermueller ... Editorial
Andrea Albright ... News
Jodie Chester ... News
Julie King ... News
Charity Jeffries ... Online
Eric Weslander ... Sports
Harley Rattiff ... Associate sports
Ryan Koerner ... Campus
Mike Perryman ... Campus
Bryan Volk ... Features
Tim Harrington ... Associate features
Steve Puppe ... Photo
Angie Kuhn ... Design, graphics
Mitch Lucas ... Illustrations
Corrie Moore ... Wire
Gwen Oison ... Special sections
Lcachelle Rhoades ... News clerk
News editors
Advertising managers
Kristie Bisel . Assistant retail, PR
Leigh Bottiger . Campus
Brett Clifton . Regional
Nicole Lauderdale . National
Matt Fisher . Marketing
Chris Haghirian . Internet
Brian Allers . Production
Ashley Bonner . Production
Andee Tomlin . Promotions
Dan Kim . Creative
Rachel O'Neill . Classified
Tyler Cook . Zone
Steve Grant . Zone
Jamie Holman . Zone
Brian LeFevre . Zone
Matt York . Zone
Broaden your mind: Today's quote
"You really don't want a president who is a football fan. Football combines the worst features of American life. It is violence punctuated by committee meetings." —George F.Will, Men at Work
meetings." — George F. Will, Men at Work
**Letters:** Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify 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 letters 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 Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermueller (andyoe@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Perspective
Kansan editor promises coverage of all students
Another difference for this semester's Kansan can be found on the feature page. The main difference is that we actually will have a feature page at least twice each week, offering alternative and longer pieces for your reading pleasure. If you have suggestions for the feature page, look no further than feature page editor Bryan Volk and his trusty sidekick, Tim Harrington.
W welcome to the new, improved and responsible University Daily Kansan. It slices, it dices, it can cut through anything. Well, not really. What it will do is give
For more details on how to contribute to the Kansan, how to place an ad, how to meet with the editors or how to do just about anything related to the paper, we will publish a Kansan User's Guide within the next two weeks. This handy document is for you to clip and save — it will list everything you'd need to know about how to use and improve your University Daily Kansan.
10
a voice to more than the usual handfull of student leaders and offer insightful reporting and writing.
Lindsey Henry
lhenry@kansan.com
So in the meantime, put that $1.68 of your student media fee to good use, and read your Kansan.
Speaking of editors, this semester's opinion page will offer a lesson in diversity. But the diversity on the editorial page stretches beyond the topics presented — the conflicting political affiliations of co-editors Paul Eakins and Andy Obermueller should entertain and enlighten everyone involved.
The new semester brings new editors, new reporters and a new philosophy to running a campus newspaper. In a change from last semester, we at the Kansan hope to keep our own names out of the news. The job of a newspaper is to report the news, not to make it with firings, car accidents and other miscellany.
The goal for this Kansan
staff is to be more open with and to the campus. Seventeen campus reporters will dedicate the next 16 weeks to covering the happenings and personalities that make the University unique. It is the responsibility of the reporters and the editor to make sure all students are represented in the pages of the paper, not just members of the Student Senate. There are only about 70 senators on a campus of about 26,000 students, yet to read past issues of the Kansan, you would think the senators are the only students with an opinion quotable for a story.
faces into our little world at 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall will make the news process more understandable to those who don't spend every waking moment in the newsroom. Bringing different voices and opinions into the newsroom on a weekly basis will improve the Kansan's coverage and depth with new slants on editorials and issues that matter to real students with real lives.
In order to make the newspaper more accessible, I am starting an Editor for a Day program offering a day for the leaders of any student group, or for that matter, any student with a desire to delve into the ways and means of the Kansan, to spend a day shadowing editors, attending news meetings and writing guest columns or editorials. I hope bringing new
Henry is an Overland Park junior in journalism and political science.
All perspectives welcome despite editors' ideologies
liked my old photo more than I like this one.
In fact, I didn't want anyone to take my picture while I was in this thing. but because
picture when I was in
this is a page about perspective and its goal is to make readers reconsider their ideas, it wouldn't be honest for me to omit what has most affected my perspective and my ideas.
It's called a halo brace and it immobilizes my upper body so that my broken neck can heal. The bars attach to a vest, and the metal halo is bolted into my skull in four places.
PETER M. BELKINS
Andy Obermueler
andvo@kansan.com
To those of you who
The brace doesn't hurt but it isn't comfortable, sort of like meeting your girlfriend's parents for the first time. The hardest part is not being able move my head to nod or to clamp my chin down when folding a towel. I used to dream about getting a BMW for graduation, now I dream about being able to take a real shower. As I said, it's a matter of perspective.
always suspected that I had screw loose, let me assure you that they are very tight.
So with that in mind, I'd like to welcome you to the Spring 1998 Editorial page. Paul Eakins, the Summer 1997 Editorial Editor, has returned, and he and I hope to put together an interesting and engaging page.
We plan to try new things this semester, in fact, we're going to do everything short of turning me into a bleeding-heart liberal to keep you interested. Here's the official user's guide to the page:
■ We will still feature daily columns, cartoons and editorials written by KU students. We've asked several columnists to return this semester and also sought new voices. We've solicited guest columns from a schmere of campus organizations, faculty and administrators to bring you other campus viewpoints as well.
On Wednesday, we will bring you information about the bills before Student Senate, including who is sponsoring the legislation, the purpose of the bill and how much it will cost. Our hope is that seeing the names, ideas and dollars behind the scenes will pique your
interest in student government. Who knows, you may wind up caring enough to actually vote this year.
The Editorial page will be monitoring several e-mail listservs around campus and will be bringing you some of the best banter betwixt the movers and shakers on campus. "Overheard" will provide an insight into the discussion that changes campus.
On Fridays, we will be running a lighter bill of fare consisting of your feedback and a feature called "Buzz from the Boulevard." Buzz will bring the editorial page to you to discover how students think about issues. Your feedback, via e-mail, written letter or direct interaction, will be seriously considered by Paul and me and also shared with the editorial staff and Kansan management.
Things happen in our lives—some big things, like this strange brace on my head, and some little things, like the opinion page—that make us reconsider our perspective. We may not be able to make you change your mind in the end, but that's OK with us.
*Point-Counterpoint will pit two viewpoints against each other in an extended column to bring you both sides of a pressing campus issue, like the proposed pollting site on Daisy Hill.
Paul and I will try our best to make this a forum for your ideas, not just ours. Some readers might not know, but I tend to be a little on the conservative side. But fear not, because Paul, the big-hearted, tree hugger that he is, has vowed to keep me in check. There are some bets being made here at the Kansan that I will become a Democrat and Paul will turn into a Republican, so if you'd like in on the action, stop by the newsroom.
You can reach Andy Obermueler, a Liberal, Kam,
senior in journalism, at 864-4810.
And finally, in an attempt to transcend the barrier between readers and the press, the opinion page will be sponsoring editorial coffees. (I thought about calling this the Editorial Grind but then thought better of it.). Readers and writers thus will be able to interact — in a non-Geraldo Show way, of course — so that neither side loses track of the other. We will publicize these events well in advance on the opinion page.
We just want to make you think.
Political correctness not point of news
KU students and staff need to quit monopolizing valuable class time and costly newshole with the debate over politically correct terminology.
Feedback
If we read a story about the low percentage of minority professors at KU, shouldn't the main focus be upon the reasons why and its future ramifications rather than whether the reporter used the word "Black" or "Afro-American?"
The best way to change a society is through education
of its youth. It is a slow process, but isn't our generation supposed to be the first one that is educated enough to achieve unforced equality? In most cases, I think we have created at least equal opportunity for all.
I am tired of seeing so much wasted effort going into the debates over what reporter has offended what special interest group. Granted, a journalist has the responsibility to remain neutral and seek out the terminology that will not offend a reader, but the reader also has a responsibility, and that is to look at the
big picture and not just focus on a small part of the story.
Every story does have a variety of viewpoints and that political correctness should be just one of them and not an all-encompassing umbrella that becomes a token agenda for every politically active special interest group.
Words don't kill people, people kill people. If we can't lighten up a bit and look at what journalists are really saying, our generation may just prove about 20 years too early.
Cal Butcher
Cal Butcher Lawrence graduate student in journalism
Monday, January 12, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
.
Section A · Page 5
Parking spaces will reopen today behind Kansas Union
By Marc Sheforgen
Kansan staff writer
Early planning by the city has allowed valuable parking spaces behind the Kansas Union to open by the start of the semester.
The parking spaces, located on Mississippi Street, were closed off while Lawrence Utility Department workers replaced a section of a deteriorating water line.
Although the city officials don't know when the the project will be finished, the street will be temporarily available for parking until warmer weather permits workers to put down a final layer of asphalt.
The west side of the street contains a strip of spaces that require yellow parking passes. These spaces are valuable because of their proximity to the Union. The city and the University of Kansas' parking department kept this in mind when planning the project, said Donna Hultine, assistant
director of the parking department.
director of the parking department. By starting in early December, workers were able to complete the majority of construction during winter break, minimizing the effect of lost parking, Hultine said.
"Hopefully, most of the parking on Mississippi Street will be available Monday," she said.
Debbie Van Saun, assistant director of utilities for Lawrence, said that the project was part of a water line rehabilitation program that aimed to replace Lawrence's decaying water pipes with new pipes made of stronger plastic or iron.
The city also is adding more fire hydrants to the area because of a larger water main in the new line.
The pipe, which runs from Mississippi Street to 11th Street, has been replaced, but Kevin Carr, Lawrence Utility Department worker, said the street would not be completely finished until asphalt was laid.
The city contracted Wildcat Concrete Services in Topeka to lay a concrete cap over the street, allowing people to park their cars in the unfinished spaces. A layer of asphalt still needs to be laid over the concrete cap, but right now it is too cold to make the asphalt, Carr said.
Spencer Museum of Art
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"When the weather warms up, we'll put the asphalt down," he said.
More Merit Scholars attend KU
By Gerry Doyle gdoyle@kansan.com Kansan staff writer
A new record has been set. It's not for dunks, touchdowns, assists, goals or home runs. It isn't for attendance, crowd noise or games won.
It's for scholarship.
The University of Kansas has 90 National Merit Scholars attending this year, 50 percent more than last year. The University ranks 18th out of the 396 public and private colleges and universities with National Merit Scholars enrolled. It is the first time in the school's history that it has been ranked in the top 20. Kansas is ninth among public institutions.
"I think it's an indication of the force that KU has," said Chancellor Robert Hemenay. "It shows our willingness to provide opportunities for excellent scholars."
National Merit Scholars are chosen by the National Merit Scholarship Corporation because of their academic achievement and PSAT test scores. Being selected as a National Merit Scholar places a student in the top 1 percent of all students in the United States.
The University ranks fifth in the Big 12 Conference, behind the University of Texas, the University of Oklahoma, Texas A&M University and Iowa State University. Those four Big 12 schools use money from their state legislatures to fund scholarships. The University only uses money from the KU Endowment Association.
"Most of the 90 (National Merit Scholars at KU) are in-state," said Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate provost. "If the state pays for them, that's several hundred thousand more dollars the Endowment Association would have for scholarships."
As part of Chancellor Hemenway's
MERIT SCHOLARS
1. University of Texas, Austin 251
2. University of California, Berkeley 167
Merit Scholars at Public Colleges and Universities National Ranking
3. University of Oklahoma 153
4. Texas A&M University 149
5. University of Florida 146
6. Iowa State University 110
7. Ohio State University 103
8. Georgia Tech 91
9. University of Kansas 90
10. University of Alabama 71
effort to attract more National Merit Scholars, scholarships for incoming National Merit Finalists have been raised to more than $5,000 in the last three years.
"My scholarship made it possible for me to attend KU," said Matt Merkelhess, Iowa City freshman.
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Section A·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 12, 1998
Calendar committee considers break for students, professors to fall back on
By Gerry Doyle
gdoyle @kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Future students may be given a chance to fall away from the stress and tedium of nearly 75 unbroken days of class.
The University Senate and the University calendar committee are considering a plan that would insert a break into the fall semester, probably in October.
The break would be less than a week — probably three days. The change would not be implemented until 1999.
"In casual discussion, it came up that the fall was more stressful than the spring," said Carol Holstead, associate professor of journalism and chairwoman of the calendar committee. "The break would be to help students and professors be more productive."
The added days of the break must fit in with the University of Kansas' calendar, however. The Kansas Board of Regents requires there be 160 instructional days per school year. Seventy-five of the University's instructional days are in the
fall semester.
To make the break fit, the school year would start earlier or end later, a prospect that could be unappealing to students and violate some teaching contracts that have specific starting dates, Holstead said.
Not all students see the need for a break.
"You have Thanksgiving break," said Dave Cook, Ames, Iowa doctor student. "You have the summer to recover from spring semester, so you're not as worn out. I don't see any real need for it."
Another option is shortening finals week by one day and using a two-day weekend to replace stop day. That option would produce the needed days, but could face some resistance from students because of exams being packed into a tighter time period.
nis Quinn, professor of English.
So far, the idea has received a positive response from both faculty and students. The stress and work of an entire semester with only Labor Day and Thanksgiving offering breathers can be trying and hurt teaching's effectiveness, said Den-
"On first sight, the idea appeals to me," Quinn said. "It's a long time from August to Thanksgiving. A break would give some relief from the tension of teaching."
The issue will be addressed in a calendar committee meeting in a few weeks, Holstead said. While there is support for a fall break, the meeting probably won't be more than a discussion, she said.
"Because of what it entails, there will be opposition to it," she said. "There will be a huge domino effect that is hard to anticipate."
Even if a concrete decision is made by the calendar committee, implementation of the plan isn't guaranteed to come soon — or at all.
The committee must write a proposal, which would be sent to the University Senate. If the senate and the students approve the proposal, Chancellor Robert Hemenway would have to endorse it and Provost David Shulenburger would implement it.
Additionally, the University calendar is created in three-year
FALL BREAK CONCEPT
WHEN: Possibly late October
WHY: To give students a chance to rest after midterms
HOW: The break would be accomplished by either changing the start or end times of of the school year or by shortening finals week and eliminating Stop Day
OTHER SCHOOLS! No Regents schools have a fall break, but Wichita State University is consider-ing one
cycles, and although no rule prohibits change during a cycle, an alteration couldn't take place until 1999.
"We're all for it, but it all depends on whether it's possible with the calendar or not," said Laurence Draper, president of the University Senate and professor of microbiology. "That's where it stands now."
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Monday, January 12, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 7
Robbery hits research area
Winter break crime overrun with theft
By Laura Roddy
Kansan staff writer
Damages and losses valued at $10,475 to the University of Kansas' Nelson Environmental Research Area marked the largest campus theft during the winter break, KU police reported.
Galen Pittman, the area's field facility manager, discovered the theft of hand tools and computers from a shop building at 8 a.m. on Jan.5.
Pittman said the Nelson Area was used by faculty and graduate students for research and also by undergraduate classes in systematics and ecology and environmental studies.
"Even though no one's actual experiment was damaged, indirectly it definitely affects research," he said. "It is a pretty big hit."
John O'Brien, director of the experimental and applied ecology program, said the building contained maintenance equipment for the approximately 1,500 acres of land that made up the Kansas Ecological Reserves.
"It will have a devastating effect." O'Brien said.
Sgt. Chris Keary of the KU police department said entry was made through one of the building's doors.
"They got in there some way without causing too much damage. We're still investigating how they may have gotten in there," Keary said.
A window also was broken in a laboratory building, although nothing appeared to be missing from that building.
The 500-acre Nelson Area is located northeast of Lawrence and is part of the Kansas Ecological Reserves.
The KU police reported several other campus thefts during the break:
$100 in green Christmas garland was taken from the second floor of Strong Hall between 5 p.m.
Jan. 2 and 9 a.m. Jan. 5.
A laptop computer valued at $1,220 was taken from Room 203 of Green Hall between 1 a.m. Dec. 29 and 8:30 a.m. Jan. 5.
$64 was taken from a purse between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. Jan. 3 at the men's basketball game at Allen Field House.
$200 in damage was caused to a Coca-Cola machine in the parking garage between 5 p.m. Dec. 18 and 11:20 a.m. Jan. 3.
A portable CD player valued at $150 was taken from a Haworth Hall office between 5 p.m. Dec. 19 and 10 a.m. Dec. 21.
A KU staff member's wrapped Christmas gifts and a candy jar, together valued at $28, were taken from Room 4210 of Murphy Hall between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. Dec. 18.
$50 in spray-painted graffiti damage was caused to Oldfather Studios between 5 p.m. Dec. 15 and 3:05 p.m. Dec. 23.
Former American history professor dies in Lawrence
Clifford S. Griffin will be remembered for his enthusiasm
By Emily C. Forsyth Kansan staff writer
Clifford S. Griffin, 68, former University of Kansas professor, died on Dec. 27 at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Griffin taught American history at the University from 1959 to 1996. He is remembered by many as an extraordinary lecturer, teacher and scholar, said Ned Kehde, one of Mr. Griffin's former students.
Kehde recalled the professor's enthusiasm for history and teaching.
"His insightful and enthralling discourses about Ralph Waldo Emerson, Thomas Jefferson,
Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln engendered applause — even an occasional standing salvo from us. "Kehde said.
Lloyd Sponholtz, associate professor of history, regarded Mr. Griffin as one of the best minds in the University's history department, with a tremendous gift for communicating with his students.
"He had the ability to take complex information and make it pleasantly understandable for his students." Sponholtz said.
In addition to his legacy as an excellent professor, Mr. Griffin leaves the contribution of his book, "The University of Kansas: A History," published in 1974, which is considered an honest portrait of the University's first century.
"Professor Griffin's wisdom is irreplaceable," Kende said. "Without him, KU is a poor place."
Family members did not wish to comment.
Missing music gear mutes returning student disc jockey
Kansan staff report
The Tau Kappa Epsilon house, 1911 Stewart Ave., was broken into during winter break. One student lost a good deal of his livelihood.
"The unidentified suspect pushed in the southeast window of the room and entered through that," said Sgt. Susan Hadl of the Lawrence police.
Jeremy Dixon, Overland Park senior, returned to his room Jan. 8, only to find his music and electronic equipment valued at $700 missing.
Dixon, who works as a disc jockey, lost microphones, turntables, amplifiers, a bass guitar, a computer printer and a VCR.
Police have no suspects in the case, Hadl said.
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A Lavalane Tradition Sinai
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NEW
hilltopics
daily kansan
monday
1.12.98
eight.a
It may look new, but it still is yours
Revamped features page will present topics that you find interesting
By Bryan Volk
bvolk@kansan.com
Features editor
HARVEY FOUNDERS
On behalf of the Kansan staff, I want to welcome you to the new and improved HillTopics. Oh, I know what you are saying: "Why new? Why improved? Who are you to welcome me?" If scientists succeed with plans to develop a colony on the moon, would there be enough room for cows to graze?" While I cannot answer all your questions, I will do my best to clue you in about this page.
More than anything, it is important for you to understand that this page is your page. I thought about calling it, "Your name here," but was talked out of it. The sentiment is there, however. It wouldn't make any sense to have topics that you didn't care one iota about. Therefore, I want to know what you want to know about. That's why I've included the handy "Clip-n-return" coupons toward the bottom of the page. Each one is simple to use (hint: they both are the same) and the rewards you will reap will far outweigh the time it will take to fill one out — like that time spent doing your Spanish workbook instead will help much anyway.
Almost 100 percent new
The page is "new" for many reasons. You may have noticed that it has been redesigned. That's new. Instead of having a monopoly of the page like features editors in the past have, power now is shared with an associate features editor. That's new.
The attitude of the page also is new. Hopefully revolutionary. The motto for the page this semester is, "Topics ... with
an edge." What does that mean? I can't tell you. OK, I can. There is information out there (wherever "there" is) in its embryonic stages as I speak that soon will find its way onto this page. Because it will be here "soon," you will see it in its raw form. In a word, edgy.
As far as improvements go, the features desk is self-contained for the first time since the end of the Spring semester of 1996. Writing, editing and designing are all contained within the desk, instead of contracting out the different pieces. This should bring a higher level of congruity to each topic.
Coming soon
To get the ball rolling, let me tell you about some of the ideas already in store for the page. This week or next, we plan to look into the life of the live-at-home freshmen. What, if any, are the advantages besides free room and board? Also, we are kicking around the idea of an architectural "best of campus." What would campus be like if all the "best" buildings made up the skyline?
Something quite different we plan to include on a somewhat regular basis are quizzes, surveys and puzzles. Some serious, most probably not. These will give you an opportunity to learn more about what students around you are thinking, and may even reveal more about you.
Who are we?
My name is Bryan and I've been a Kansan staffer since Spring 1996. I was on the design desk for two semesters, then was the design editor. This is the first time I've been involved with story assignment and so I am thrilled to jump in. For national security purposes, this is all the material that has been cleared to be printed.
That is HillTopics in a banana peel. Let me now introduce the players. The voice you've been hearing, mine, belongs to me.
The associate features editor I mentioned earlier is Tim. Tim, say hello to the nice readers.
"Hello, readers. Like Bryan, I'm here to serve at your pleasure. Talk to me. Tell me what you know and what you want to know about. I'm not pictured above, so look for the guy in the newsroom that's about 5-feet 9-inches tall with sexy, sandy blonde hair. I don't see it, but some have used the term 'strikingly handsome.' Or you can just call and ask for 'Tim Harrington. Please call and help us help you."
In your hands
The bottom line is, we want to make you happy. We want to make you laugh. We want to make you think, maybe even a little angry. We want you to look forward to HillTopics — which, by the way, should be in your hands every Monday and Friday, and hopefully Wednesdays as well. Let me reiterate, this is your page. We are at your command. Can I get you a soda, or maybe a backbub? Just let us know.
Take it from here
One final thought. This is not a one-time-only offer. If you have any ideas you would like to see covered, call or come into the newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall and let us know.
Why are these people
I can't repeat it enough — this page is for you. Unless, of course, you all want to read about alien abductions twice a week. I will not stand for that.
Why are these people smiling? The editors of the University Daily Kansan are excited to start a new semester of service to the readers. This especially is true for the purveyors of HillTopics, the Kansan's features page. Bryan Volk (back row, glasses) and Tim Harrington (not pictured) plan to bring edgy, raw topics to the University community twice a week, if not more.
LET US KNOW
We have provided two identical coupons in case you change your mind, come up with more ideas or want to share with a friend.
What do you want to see covered on this page? To the right are some potential topics, as well as ample space to suggest your own. Please check all topics that interest you. We will compile that information, analyze it and study it so we can identify the pulse of the University.
Bryan Volk
Please return coupon to:
Lawrence, KS 66045
Or, stop by the newsroom (same address) and put it in the TopTops box, near the mailboxes. If you are unsure where the mailboxes are, ask anyone you see. They all are friendly and want to help you.
111 Struffer-Flint Hall
The deadline for submittal is Friday, Jan. 23.
Clip-n-return
Please check all boxes next to topics that interest you and would like to see on this page.
Also, if you have other ideas not represented here, please write in your candidates.
The arts
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Toys
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___
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Please cut out and return to the HillTops box in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stuffer-Flint Hall. You also can call 864-48-10 to vote for your favorites, or e-mail Bryant at bkwl@kansan.com.
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Clip-n-return
rease check all boxes next to topics that interest you and that you would like to see on this page. Also, if you have other ideas not represented here, please write in your candidates.
The arts Lawrence life Toys
Books Movies Travel
Business Music
Campus life Nightlife
Contests Photo stories
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Please cut out and return to the HillTopics box in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stuffer-Flint Hall. You also can call 864-4810 to vote for your favorites, or e-mail Bryant at bvlack@kansan.com.
If you would like to be contacted about an idea, please include your name and phone number:
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Inside Sports
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MNAS
Sports
Photos from the Kansas men's and women's basketball games during winter break. See what you missed.
SEE PAGE 2B
'The Stilt' Returns
Wilt Chamberlain will return to Allen Field House this weekend to have his jersey retired.
SEE PAGE 6B
FANATIC
Monday
January 12, 1998
Section:
B
Page 1
Broncos, Pack cruise
Denver dumped Pittsburgh and Green Bay beat San Francisco yesterday to advance to the Super Bowl.
SEE PAGE 8B
WWW.KANSAN.COM/NEWS/SPORTS
Contact the Kansan
Sports Desk: (785) 864-4810
Sports Fax: (785) 864-5261
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Sports Forum: spfforum@kansan.com
Y chromosome missing in best game of week
Chancellor Robert Hemenway could propose a steep tuition hike, rename Fraser Hall after himself and appoint Ted Kaczynski as chairman of the chemistry department all on the same day, and it wouldn't cause as much of an uproar as his announcement last spring that he will not cancel class if Kansas wins the men's NCAA basketball championship.
At the University of Kansas, people take sports seriously. It's our job as the Kansan's sports staff to give you all of the information you need to be a well-informed fan.
We have several changes in store for this semester. There will be more scores, more graphics and more behind-the-scenes information about all Kansas athletic teams.
Enough about that. Let's talk basketball.
P
Saturday morning I watched the Kansas men's basketball team dismantle a sorry Texas Longhorn squad. A dunk here, a dunk there, some threes from guard Billy Thomas, and the third-straight Big 12 Conference blowout for the Jav Hawks
Eric Weslander
sports@kanasan.com
Ho-hum.
The night before that I watched the New York Knicks and the Chicago Bulls live from Madison Square Garden. It was Friday night in New York City, and all of the stars were out, from Elle McPherson to Spike Lee.
Sparks flew. Emotions ran high. Dennis Rodman yuked it up, Michael Jordan scored a whole bunch of points and the Bulls escaped with a narrow victory.
Ho-hum.I say.
In fact, there wasn't any testosterone.
The most exciting basketball game I saw this weekend had no dunks, no overinflated egos, and no testosterone surplus.
I'm talking about the unranked Kansas women's basketball team surprising No. 16 Nebraska on Saturday in front of an enthusiastic Allen Field House crowd.
Kansas was down on its luck, coming off two disappointing Big 12 losses to Kansas State and Baylor. The favored Cornhuskers were led by All-America candidate Anna DeForge.
If the women's basketball players wanted to win some fans, this was the time to do it. It was the fifth annual Fill the Field House, an event designed to generate support for the often-overlooked women's team.
Despite a lot of publicity for the event, only 4,500 people showed up, virtually none of them students. (When the band played the Alma Mater, the only person swaying was an old man behind whom I suspect had hit the Wild Turkey for breakfast.)
But the team was excited, and they got the crowd into it.
The Jayhawks stormed to a 28-13 lead in the first half behind the sharp shooting of guard Suzi Raymant, who finished with a career-high 22 points. At halftime, Kansas held a comfortable 11-point lead.
See JAYHAWKS on page 6B
The Kansas track and field team began its indoor season Saturday with the Kansas Invitational. See page 6A
ABOVE THE RIM
VIRGINIA
Forward Paul Pierce, center Eric Chenwoth and forward Lester Earl attempt to tip in the ball in Kansas 'game against Nebraska. The frontcourt helped Kansas win 10 games in the absence of injured players T.J. Pugh and Raef LaFrentz. by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Kansas melts break with winter wins
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansas sportwriter
Despite injuries to two starters during the winter break, No. 4 Kansas added 10 victories to its win column, and several players reached personal milestones.
The Jayhawks defeated Texas 102-72 on Saturday in Austin, Texas, in their first Big 12 Conference road game this season. Kansas improved to 3-0 in the conference and 19-2 overall.
Forward Paul Pierce had 31 points and 10 rebounds, and guard Billy Thomas connected on eight of 11
three-point attempts, tying a career-high 27 points.
"Idon't think we're by any means satisfied," Robertson said. "I think we're getting better. I remember back to last year when we were good the entire year, and this year you can definitely see a steady improvement."
Kansas guard Ryan Robertson said Wednesday that the team would not become complacent after getting off to a good start in Big 12 play.
The Jayhawks have been impressive early in conference play, defeating Nebraska by 20 points and Colorado by 49 without big men Raef LaFrentz and T.J. Pugh.
"That's exciting, and it's a positive
for this team," he said. "It's scary. When Raef gets back, and when we can substitute another layer of guys, that will be very tough for the opposition to handle."
LaFrentz broke his right (nonshooting) hand Dec. 26 in practice as the Jayhawks prepared for the Rainbow Classic in Hawaii. He is expected to miss the next four weeks. The target date for his return is Feb. 8, a home game against Missouri.
Pugh has a stress fracture in his right foot and could play either Wednesday at Texas A&M or Saturday against Kansas State in Allen
See PLAYERS on page 6B
What break?
The Kansas men's basketball team didn't see much time off during the holiday vacation. Highlights:
Kansas 73, UMass 71
DEC.
10
Kansas 73. UMass 71
A thriller in Allen Field
House nearly breaks the
Jayhawks' streak of 49 con-
secutive home wins.
DEC.
13
Kansas 103.
Middle Tennessee St. 68.
Billy Thomas sets the
Kansas record for career
three pointers
DEC.
18
Kansas 96,
Pepperdine 83
Raef LaFrentz and Paul Pierce each score 23 points and Ryan Robertson has 10 assists as Kansas wins at home again.
DEC.
20
Kansas 94, TCU 78
DEC.
23
After sitting out the fall semester because of NCAA regulations, Lester Earl makes his debut with five points and six rebounds.
Kansas 74,
Southern California 69
DEC.
26
Raef LaFrentz grabs his 1,000th career rebound — becoming the third Kansas player to do so — in the Jayhawks' first road game.
Raef spelled backward.
...is fear, which is what comes true for the 'Hawks when LaFrentz breaks his right hand (non-shooting) during practice Dec. 26.
Kansas 69, Ohio St. 56
DEC.
26
Kansas 89. Vanderbilt 82
DEC. 27
Billy Thomas scores a career-high 27 points, hitting six of nine three-point shots.
Pierce scores a career-high 34 points, adding seven rebounds and six blocked shots as Kansas survives a second-half scare.
DEC.
28
Hawaii 76 Kansas 65 Kansas takes its second loss of the season in the Rainbow Classic tournament final.
IAN. 3
JAN. 6
Kansas 96, Nebraska 76
The Jayhawks open their
Big 12 season at home.
"I'm coming back!"
Kansas officials announce that Wilt Chamberlain will return to Lawrence to have his jersey retired Jan. 25.
JAN.
7
Kansas 111, Colorado 62
Kansas routs its second Big
12 opponent in guard
Kenny Gregory's first start.
IAN.
10
Kansas 102, Texas 72
Just before classes start again, the Jahywhips whip the Longhorns to extend their Big 12 record to 3-0.
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
NEBRAKA 32
HAWKS
Kansas freshman Jacklyn Johnson dives for the ball in the Joy-hawks' victory against Nebraska. The game marked the fifth annual Fill in the Field House. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
'Hawks knock off No.16 at field house
Kansas pulls off upset of Nebraska
By Kevin C. Wilson Kanson sportswriter
A raucous crowd of 4,500 fans showed up Saturday to cheer on the Kansas women's basketball team in an 83-74 upset victory against the 16th-ranked Nebraska Cornhuskers in the fifth annual Fill the Field House.
Guard Suzi Raymant led the attack with a career-high 22 points, and the Jayhawks used an intense swarming defense to gain their first victory in Big 12 Conference play.
Despite the fact that many students had not yet returned from winter break, the
crowd was the sixth-largest ever to see a women's basketball game at Allen Field House.
"I want to thank the fans; it makes a difference having them there helping us out," said Coach Marian Washington. "Anytime you have a lot of fans, it's exciting. The players played hard and had a good time."
Raymant, a junior from Melbourne, Australia, shot 7-of-14 from the field, including 3-of-4 from three-point range, and led the Jayhawks to their second-highest scoring output of the season.
10 shots. which is good for me."
Point guard Jennifer Jackson, who scored 11 points and dished a career-high six assists, attributed the high score to an aggressive attitude and the support of the fans.
"After the first two losses in the conference, we were tentative," Jackson said. "We decided to come out and attack. I had
The Jayhawks, 9-3 overall and 1-2 in the Big 12, limited the Cornshukers to 1-of-15 shooting from three-point range and a dismal 4.8 percent from the field.
"We wanted to make them beat us from the outside — they didn't," Washington said.
This unexpected defensive pressure forced the Cornushkers to commit 19 turnovers and catapulted the Jayhawks to their 11th-straight victory against Nebraska.
Forward Lynn Pride led the Jayhawks' defense with five steals. She also had 14 points, seven rebounds and five assists. Kansas applied a full-court press at times to stifle Nebraska's potent scoring attack.
"Nebraska likes to press and use different defenses," Washington said. "We decided to press back and see how they handled it."
"We played a great game," Washington
The Jayhawks began the winter break by defeating University of Missouri-Kansas City 70-56 on Dec. 20 in the Sprint Shootout in Kansas City, Mo. They recorded their second victory of the break when they upended Oregon 59-53 on Dec. 29.
said. "We beat a nationally ranked team and put up a lot of of points. It was a tough win. After losing two on the road, to respond means a lot."
1
The Jayhawks stumbled in their next two games, losing at Baylor 65-59 on Jan. 3 and Kansas State 53-47 on Jan. 7.
Jackson said although her team finished 2-2 for the break, there was reason for optimism.
"We went to Oregon and got a really tough win on the road," she said. "We were not too happy about opening the conference with two losses, but we are getting better. I think Nebraska is the turning point."
(
Section B·Page 2
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 12, 1998
KANSAS 44
3
VRISE
COLORADO
32
TREVOR ROBINSON
WHILE YOU WERE GONE
ABOVE: Kansas forward Lester Earl goes up for a shot against Colorado. Earl became eligible to play Dec. 19 and played his first game Dec. 20 against TCU.
RIGHT: Kansas guard Kenny Gregory lays the ball up while getting fouled from behind by a Pepperdine defender. Gregory started his first game for the Jayhawks against Colorado on Jan 7.
LEFT: Kansas coach Roy Williams skips down the sidelines after a loose ball came his way. The Jayhawks defeated former Big Eight coach Billy Tubbs and his TCU Horned Frogs on Dec. 20 at the Sprint Shootout in Kemper Arena.
KANSAS
20
AWREN
FAVORITE
FOOD STORES
50
ABOVE: Kansas center Nokia Sanford calls for the foul as forward Lynn Pride gets thrown to the ground by a UMKC defender. The Jayhawks defeated the Kangaroo 70-56 on Dec. 20 at the Sprint Shootout in Kansas City, Mo.
FLORENCE 5
KANSAS 44
BELOW: Kansas center Eric Chenowith blocks a shot by Nebraska's Larry Florence. Chenowith broke the freshman career blocking record of 34 blocks in the Jayhawks' 96-76 victory against the Cornhushes on Jan. 3 in Allen Field House.
Photos By • Steve Puppe
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Date And Time
Sports Page
Brewery
1
)
1
Monday, January 12, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
YESTERDAY'S SCORES:
NFL:
NBA
AFC Championship: Denver 24, Pittsburgh 21
NFC Championship: Green Bay 23, San Francisco 10
Big 12 men's basketball:
Nebraska 87, Colorado 72
Men's College Basketball (Top 25):
No. 8 Connecticut 80, Boston College 68
No. 20 Marquette at Cincinnati
Kansas men's basketball Big 12 box scores:
No. 4 KANSAS 102, TEXAS 72
KANSAS [19-2]
NBA
Atlanta 107, Washington 102
Detroit 115, LA Clippers 85
New York 92, Seattle 91
Miami at Vancouver
Charlotte at L.A. Lakers
NHL
Detroit 2, Washington 0
Philadelphia 5, Tampa Bay 2
Anaheim 2, Dallas 1 (OT)
Ottawa at Phoenix
TEXAS (6-8)
Earl 5-15 5-6 15, Pierce 11-20 9-13 31, Chenowith 7-0 1-4, Robertson 1-4 4-4 6, Thomas 9-13 1-2 27, Nooner 1-1 0-0 3, Gregory 3-7 1-4 7, Bradford 2-3 0-0 4, Janisse 1-1 0-0 2, McGraath 0-0 1-2 1, Martin 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 36-7 5 21-32 102.
Mauenke 5-10-2 12, Vazquez 1-3-4-6, Mihm 3-13-1 6,
7, Wagner 4-12-1 4 10, A仕ell 5-18-7 6 18, Pernam 1-6-0 1,
0, Goode 0-0 0 0, Smith 4-7-0 0 10, Carter 1-1-0 0 2,
Clark 2-5 0 0, Drakes 0-0 0 0, Totals 26-7 4 15-2 37.2
Halftime -Kansas 39, Texas 25, 3-point goals -Kansas 9-
17 (Thomas 8-11, Nooner 1, Gregory 0-1, Pierce 0-2,
Robertson 0-2), Texas 5-20 (Smith 2-3, Axtell 2-7, Peryman 1-
6, Vazquez 0-1, Wagner 0-3). Fouled out—Chenowitt.
Rebounds -Kansas 51 (Pierce 10), Texas 48 (Mihm 13).
Assists -Kansas 22 (Robertson 6), Texas 14 (Wagner 4).
Total fouls -Kansas 17, Texas 22. A—13,296.
Jan. 7 at Allen Field House
Earl 8-12 4-6 20, Pierce 7-8 0-1 16, Chenowith 7-11 2-4
16, Robertson 7-3 7-3 20, Gregory 6-11 1-2 13, Nooner 0-3 0-0, Thomas 3-5 0-0 8, Bradford 4-6 1-1 9, Janisse 2-2 0-0
5, Mcgrath 0-4 4-4, Martin 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 44-6 15-20
111.
Smith 2-10-2-12, DeGray7-12-13-15, Mehlin 1-2-0-2,
Price 5-14-6-17, Jones 1-4-0-03, Frier 1-2-0-2, Bell 0-2-1-
3, Hughes 1-6-0-02, Renfroe 3-4-0-06, Thomas 1-4-0-02,
Mosley 2-8-2-2, Totals 2-8-2-11 6-1-16.
Halftime 14-Kansas 52, Colorado 27, 3-point goals—Kansas B-14 (Robertson 3, Thomas 2, Pierce 2, Janisse 1-1, Nooner 0-3, Gregory 0-1) Colorado 3-14 (Price 2-6, Jones 1-2, Smith 2, Thomas 2, Hughes 0-1, Bell 0-1). Fouled out -Melvin. Rebounds—Kansas 37 (Earl 9) Colorado 36 (Moseley 7). Assists—Kansas (Bradford 6) Colorado (Jones 2). Total fouls—Kansas 17, Colorado 19. A—16,300.
No. 4 KANASAS 111, COLORADO 62
Nanals, (18-2)
KANSAS (18-2)
COLORADO (6-6)
Jan. 3 at Allen Field House
Jdn. 3 of Aflah Field House
0. KANSAS 96, NEBRASKA 76
KANSAS [17-2]
Earl 3-6-5-5-11, Pierce 6-14-5-5-17, Chenowith 9-11-1-1
Earl, Robertson 3-9-1-4-7, Thomas 7-0-0-1-0-19, Nooner 0-0-2-
2, Gregory 4-7-4-8-12, Bradford 2-3-3-3-7, Jonisse 0-1-0-0,
McGrath 0-0-0-0, Martin 0-0-2-2-2. Totals 34-66 22-26
96
NEBRASKA [9-4]
Florence 3-7 0-0-6, Markowski 1-3 0-0-2, Hamilton 5-9 5-8
15, Lue 4-19, 10-10 18, Belcher 7-1.5 0-17, Johnson 0-0 0-
0. Piatkowski 7-8 0-1 0, Harriman 1-1 0-0.
Halftime—Kansas 49, Nebraska 37, 3-Point goals—Kansas 619 (Thomas 5-10, Robertson 1-4, Pierce 0-3, Gregory 0-2), Nebraska 5-13 (Belcher 3-6, Piatkowski 2-3, Lue 0-4). Fouled out—Markowski. Rebounds—Kansas 34 (Earl 10), Nebraska 33 (Hamilton 11). Assists—Kansas 21 (Robertson 8), Nebraska 13 (Lue 7). Total fouls—Kansas 17, Nebraska 23. A—16,300
Kansas women's basketball
Kansas women's basketball Saturday at Allen Field House KANSAS 83, NO.16 NEBRASKA 74
NEBRASKA[12-5]
McDill 0-4 2-2-2, DeForce 6-16 7-8-20, Thompson 2-8 1-1
5, J.Kubik 1-4-2-2, N.Nukib, 10-19 2-4-22, Gusso 0-0 0-0,
Schwartz 0-2 0-0-0, Williams 1-4 1-2-3, Rogers 2-4 2-2-6,
Gilmore 2-5 4-6-8, Benson 0-3 4-4-4. Totals 24-69 25-31 74
KANSAS (9:3)
Pride 4-13 5-16 14, Johnson 2-8 4-7 8, Sanford 2-4 1-3 5,
Raymont 7-14 5-2 12, Jackson 6-10 0-12, Pruitt 1-1 0-0 3,
Scott C-0-2 2-2, Robbins 3-5 0-0 6, White 4-7 3-1 11, Totals
29-62 20-29 83.
Halftime—Kansas 39, Nebraska 28. 3-Point goals—Nebraska 1-15 (DeForce 19, 7, Jubik 10, Williams 1-0, Benson 0-1, N.Kubik 0-5), Kansas 5-9 (Reymant 3-4, Pruitt 1-1, Pride 1-2, Robbins 0-2) Fouled out—J.Kubik, Rogers, White. Rebounds—Nebraska 54 (Deforege 12), Kansas 33 (Johnson 9). Assists—Nebraska 8 (Deforege 5), Kansas (Johnson 9). Total foulss—Nebraska 24, Kansas 25. A—4,500.
Applications for the Admission to the School of Education teacher education, community health and sport science programs are now available in 117 Bailey Hall.
Students who are accepted will be admitted for the Fall 1998 semester.
Applications and all supporting materials are due on February 15, 1998.
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Section B·Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 12, 1998
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Monday, January 12, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 5
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Housing hazards hound students
Campus police Legal Services provide advice
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
Many students coming back from break are returning to housing problems on top of the normal challenges associated with a new semester.
Students returning from break might face conflicts with roommates, eviction notices from landlords, burglaries and frozen pipes.
"When I got back here on Tuesday she had already moved her stuff out," Shopper said. "It really upset me."
Sally Shopper, Lenexa senior,
returned from her winter break ski
trip only to discover that one of her
three roommates had moved out.
Shopper and her roommates now must enforce the lease or find another roommate to pay the rent.
Jo Hardesty, director of Legal Services for Students, said her office handled a lot of cases in which roommates didn't return to apartments after break.
The office also works with students who return to school and find eviction notices on their doors for failing to pay rent before winter break.
"That happens all the time," Hardesty said.
She said students could receive free counseling from Legal Services for housing-related problems.
Other students returned from break to find that their dwellings had been burialized.
Drew Nelson, Salina junior, witnessed a theft in his room at the Tau Kappa Epsilon house during break. About $160 was stolen from his wallet, he said.
"It's a safeguard," he said. "It gives good peace of mind."
"It was scary to wake up and find a big guy in your room at 5 in the morning." Nelson said.
Burdel Welsh, KU police officer, offered suggestions for students who find out they've been burglarized during break.
"They need to call the police, whichever jurisdiction they're in, to make a report on it, work up a list of what was taken, and do it as soon as possible," Welsh said. "If they wait too long, then evidence might be lost."
Campus staff has worked during break to ensure that frozen pipes don't greet residence hall and campus apartment residents.
He recommended students living on and off campus obtain renter's insurance.
Michael Stifter, complex director for Jayhawker Towers, Stouffier Place and Sunflower Apartments said the complexes were staffed 24 hours a day and seven days a week during break in order to prevent frozen pipes and other problems.
"I do rounds to check the building," he said. "We do a walk-through to make sure the windows are closed and set the thermostats at 69 to 70 degrees to keep the building and the pipes warm."
Where to get help:
Student Development Center:
General advising on students' problems;
academic support programs;
planning and budgeting programs;
22 Strong Hall, Walk in or call for an appointment at 864-4064.
Legal Services for Students:
Counsel for students on all legal matters, including most residential disputes; court representation; presentations for groups on legal matters;
148 Burge Union; Call for appointment at 864-5665.
Office of Public Safety:
Police and safety concerns; 302
Carnuth O'Leary; Emergency calls;
911; Business office: 864-5900.
Office of Public Safety:
Office of Student Financial Aid:
Grants, financial aid, student loans,
temporary loans (Kansas University
Endowment Student Loan), budgeting
and financial planning programs;
50 Strong Hall; 864-4700.
FREE INTERNET TRAINING Academic Computing Services January 12-15
Connecting to the Internet ------Overview of connecting to the Net
Tues, Jan 13 3-5 p.m. / Computer Center Auditorium
E-mail: Introduction -------Get the basics for using your *Pine* e-mail account
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Web browsing - Learn to Surf the Web using Netscape Navigator
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Wed. jan. 14 10:11 3:08 a.m./ Computer Center Auditorium
Windows 95: Demonstration - > Get an overview of the Windows 95 operating system during this one-hour presentation
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All classes are held in the Computer Center located across from the Dale Center at Sunnyside and Illinois. Class schedules. Pick up a Driver's Ed. at the Computer Center or go online at http://www.cc.ukans.edu/~acs/training/index.html
Local businesses await student shoppers
Retail, restaurants ready for business
By Jeromy M. Doherty
Kansan staff writer
Business in Lawrence remained steady during the winter break but local retail and eating establishments are eagerly anticipating students' return to classes at the University of Kansas.
Randy Heavener, manager of Wal-Mart, 3300 Iowa, said he could not say whether his store had experienced any serious decline in business during winter break but said he had a full staff ready for the new semester.
"We've ordered extra stationery and storage plastics for dorm rooms." Heavener said. "There are also pillows in a seasonal shop that we've set up in our lawn and garden section."
Sportcenter, a sporting goods outlet at 840 Massachusetts, is
offered spectals about four times a year.
"We tend to peak right when the students come back," Shadel said. "They make up about 40 to 50 percent of our business at those times, which is a lot. We're also busy on game days because there will be a lot of out-of-town business and parents coming through."
using the opportunity to launch a week-long sale. Manager Ryan Shadel said Sportcenter regularly offered specials about four times ___
"We had a pretty good increase," said Wade Chalstrom, manager of Hy-Vee, 3504 Clinton Parkway "It's one of the best Decembers
Other business
"Our business goes up, because people want to stock up. I've noticed that during the summer, it gets slow again. It's not as strong as the winter break because of the holiday shopping season."
Ryan Shadel
Sportcenter manager
Other business managers that expect a boost in sales in the upcoming weeks said they did not suffer during the winter break.
we've ever had. Typically, during November and December, business falls off."
Max Wright,
manager of
The Yacht
Club, 530 Wisconsin,
said business
remained consistent during the break.
"Our older clientele makes up about 25 percent of our
business," Wright said. "But they're our more stable, returning customers, so our business really didn't dwindle that much over the
break."
Shadel said activity at Sportcenter was always more impressive earlier in the second semester.
"Our business goes up, because people want to stock up," Shadel said. "I've noticed that during the summer, it gets slow again. It's not as strong as the winter break, because of the holiday shopping season."
Shadel also items commonly bought by students result in a good profit for the store.
"When a student comes in here, sometimes with their student loan money, they usually buy a pair of shoes, and then maybe a hat, too. An average pair of shoes costs about $70, and the hats go for about $13 to $20. So, when someone comes in, they could spend about $90 to $100."
Kenny Gall, manager of Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire, said the break left him without a significant portion of his clientele.
"Students make up about half of our customers," Gall said. "When they leave, things get dull."
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Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 12. 1998
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Wilt Chamberlain returning for ceremony to retire jersey
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansas sportwriter
P. R. K. M. S. C. B. S. E.
The man who once scored 100 points in an NBA game will return to Lawrence on Saturday to have
Chamberlain: the Kansas legend who played in 1956-58 will return to campus Saturday.
numerous scoring and rebounding records at Kansas that appear to be untouchable.
Chamberlain's No. 13 jersey was unofficially retired a few years ago, but his banner never was hung in Allen Field House because he had not returned for an appearance.
topic of conversation since well before the Jan. 5 announcement that he would return.
Chamberlain considered returning in February 1993, but he had schedule conflicts. Manning could not return until December 1992 because of conflicts with his NBA schedule.
Kansas began retiring jerseys during the 1991-92 season in anticipation of the 100th anniversary of Kansas basketball, and every living player whose jersey was retired showed up that season except Chamberlain and Danny Manning.
Chamberlain has not returned to Lawrence since 1975, and his unexplained absence had been a hot
One rumor said that he was bitter about a triple-overtime loss to North Carolina in the 1957 NCAA championship game. Another rumor claimed that he was angered by the racial segregation that was prevalent in Lawrence at the time.
In a recent interview on radio station KLWN's "Sport-2-Sport" program, Chamberlain said he had no ill feelings toward Kansas and that those rumors were false.
"That is totally ridiculous." Chamberlain said. "I have never been bitter at the University of Kansas for anything. I would be a Jayhawk again tomorrow if it was possible. The times were quite different then than they are now."
Chamberlain's return was spurred by Bob Billings, a guard for Kansas in the Chamberlain years who is now president of Alvamar Golf Club. Billings also was Chamberlain's closest teammate partly because he was his roommate on road trips.
Billings said that Chamberlain had discussed plans to return for several years, but with all the publicity surrounding this season, perhaps the time had finally come.
"Wilt has been talking about this for five or six years now," Billings said. "But it just didn't work with the scheduling. With the publicity about the 100th anniversary of Kansas basketball, with all the players and coaches coming back in February, I think that might have piqued his interest."
Chamberlain will not return Feb. 8 for the 100th anniversary weekend and grand reunion because of a prior commitment to the NBA AllStar weekend, Billings said. Regardless, Chamberlain will have
WILT'S ACCOMPLISHMENTS
Consensus All-American in 1957 and 1958
All-Big Seven selection in 1957 and 1958
Most outstanding player of the 1957 NCAA Tournament
Owns Kansas single-game scoring (52), rebounding (36), field goals made (20) and free throws made (18) records.
Owns Kansas career scoring and rebounding records with 29.9 points and 18.9 rebounds per game.
Member of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame
Had 52 points and 31 rebounds in his varsity debut Dec. 3, 1956, as Kansas defeated North western.
Set an NBA-record on March 2,
1962, when he scored 100 points
in a game for the Philadelphia Warriors.
his special day almost 40 years after leaving Kansas.
Jerry Waugh, now the Kansas women's golf coach, served as an assistant basketball coach for the Jayhawks from 1957-1960. He said Chamberlain may have wanted to rekindle some of the old friendships that helped make his college years memorable.
"As you get older, you begin to reflect on some things that were important at one point in your life," Waugh said. "Once you leave college and carve out another life, you don't have time to reflect back on those things."
"But maturity and aging bring you back, and he might want to renew some of the old friendships and ties that he had forgotten about," he said.
Youthful team sweeps competition
Kansan sportswriter
By Angela Johnson
The Kansas track and field team opened its indoor season Saturday at the Kansas Invitational in Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Freshman Scott Russell shattered the school record in the 35-pound weight throw. Russell threw a distance of 63 feet, 2 inches on his final attempt, breaking Bill Penny's 1970 record of 59 feet, 3 inches.
"I had three faults in my first three throws, and in my final throw I told myself to relax and just go for it," Russell said. "I was a little nervous because it was my first collegiate meet, but I plan on throwing better."
Russell easily beat the rest of the competition. Adam Beltran of University of Missouri-Kansas City, placed second with a distance of 51
feet,3 inches.
The Jayhawks swept the competition in most individual events.
Junior heptathlete Candy Mason dominated three of her four events. She placed first in the pole vault, high jump and 55-meter hurdles.
"I had a personal best in hurdles and pole vault, so it's a good start for this season." Mason said.
"It was good to see them for the first time in real competition, and to see who stayed in shape over Christmas break." he said.
Head Coach Gary Schwartz said he was pleased with the team's level of fitness.
"We have better balance than past years," Schwartz said. "We're young and sometimes we'll be
Schwartz said the team showed promise for this year, even though there were 53 freshmen.
inconsistent, but I'm very pleased with the overall attitude of this team."
Senior runner Lynn LoPresti carried her success from her cross country season, winning the mile run with a time of 5-minutes, 25 seconds.
"It's where I want to start," she said. "It's the first speed race I'd done since cross country. I felt well-rested after break."
"The turns are tighter, and it kind of feels like you're going faster," LoPresti said.
She said minor adjustments had to be made with the smaller track. On the Anschutz track seven laps equal one mile, instead of the usual four.
The Jayhawks take a break this weekend, then head to Columbia, Mo., for the Missouri Invitational.
FROM THE SPORTS FRONT...
Continued from page 1B
Field House.
Players peak with career pinnacles
Guard C.B. McGrath said the lack of post players has changed the way the team practices.
"We've been practicing without them for so long that we've sort of gotten used to it," McGrath said. "But if people keep getting injured, that's tough. It's definitely weird not seeing anybody post up there."
Helping a thinned frontcourt is forward Lester Earl, who made his debut Dec. 20 against Texas Christian. He recorded five points and six rebounds in 17 minutes. Earl has started the last six games and has averaged 10.1 points and 8.6 rebounds.
In the first few games without LaFrentz at the Rainbow Classic, Pierce and Thomas had career
Pierce recorded a career-high 34 points in a second-round win against Vanderbilt. He averaged 27.6 points for the three-game tournament.
performances.
Thomas had a career-high 27 points in a first-round win against Ohio State, and he recorded his first double-double with 22 points and a career-high 11 rebounds against Vanderbilt. Thomas also had a career-high six assists in that game.
Pierce and Thomas were selected to the all-tournament team. The Jayhawks lost the championship game to Hawaii, 76-65.
Thoma, became the most prolific three-point shooter in Kansas history on Dec. 13, surpassing Terry Brown by making his 201st three-point field goal. Thomas
Most recently, center Eric Chenowith broke the Kansas freshman blocked-shot record. He had four blocked shots against Colorado, surpassing the record set by Danny Manning and Greg Oostert. Chenowith has 40 blocks this season.
"I'm more relieved that it's out of the way because sometimes it was in the back of my head," Chenowith said. "I would go home and talk to Dad, and he would say, 'You're five away. You're four away.'
"I just want to go out there and play," he said. "If I get blocks, I get blocks. I think I was suffering from analysis paralysis."
now has 239 in his career.
Chenowith said he was pleased to have broken the record because the chase had altered his concentration on the court.
Jayhawks fill field house with energy
1
Continued from page 1B
They stomped their feet on the bleachers, made noise during Nebraska's free throw attempts and yelled at the referees. The screams of hundreds of adolescents and their parents filled the field house with every made Kansas shot or missed Nebraska shot.
With 2:16 remaining and Kansas leading by four.
forward Jaclyn Johnson put back an offensive rebound, was fouled and hit the free throw. The lead was seven, and after a barrage of missed three pointers by Nebraska, the game was out of reach.
As the clock ran down, guard Shandy Robbins twirled a towel on the sidelines, exhorting the fans to make a little more noise.
It was no crowd of 16,300, but Allen Field House was indeed filled with noise, enthusiasm and support for the Jayhawks.
Westlander is a Floyds Knobs, Ind., junior in journalism.
The University Daily Kansan
Section B - Page 7
Kansan Classified
1
100s Announcements
11.5 On Campus
11.5 Announcements
11.5 Entertainment
14.0 Lost and Found
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
Classified Policv
325 Stereo Equipment
320 Tickets
300 Auto Sales
300 Merchants for Sale
300 Miscellaneous
300 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
A
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
410 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
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 Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or the Fair Law.
I
limitation or discrimination. " Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
100s Announcements
105 - Personals
---
St. Patrick's Day Parade Applicant wanted
Call, 841-2182, Deadline Jan. 27, 1998.
110 - Business Personals
---
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU CENTER
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
120 - Announcements
Snring Break Mazatlan
F
Don't miss on the HOTTEST destination in Mexico. Airfare, 7 nights hotel, transfers, FREE drinks, 15 FREE meals, parties. For Free brochure 1-800-392-4898 (www.collegetours.com)
BEST HOTELS, LOWEST PRICES. ALL
SPRINGBREAK locations. Cancun, Jamaica,
from $99. Florida, from $99. Texas, Mazatlan.
from $39. New York, from our Campus
Rep. 803-372-6013 www.ipc.tn
Instructional & Educational video's CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited internet
allow for only $15.90/mo, tell your parents.
friend, teacher, shopper, shopping
http://www.intelin.com/edl.
Now's your chance to be on the stage! The University theatre auditions: January 12, 15, murray Hall. Sign up for auditions: noon-4:00 p.m. Monday, January 12, Murray Hall Lobby. Open to all students regardless of major. You have 2 minutes to call you! Call: 834-3831 for more information.
Don't miss Auditions for the University Theatre spring productions: Open Call, 7:00 p.m. Monday & Tuesday, January 12-13, Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall; Callbacks, 7:00 p.m. January 14-15th, Murphy Hall. Audition sign up: noon-4:00 p.m., Monday, January 12, Murphy Hall Lobby. Open to all KU students regardless of family status. Bedroom FaceRice: and "The Seagull." For more information, contact The University Theatre, 317 Murphy Hall, 864-331-881.
Kansan Ads Work for YOU
125 - Travel
+
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IF YOU FIND A BETTER AVAILABLE RATE ON THE SAME PROPERTY WE'LL MATCH OR BEAT IT, OR TELL YOU WHY YOU SHOULD NOT TAKE IT!! FOR INFO AND RESERVE CALL: 1-800-292-7520 VISIT our WEB SITE: www.pirentals.com "Arrival March 21 only. Choose 2 of schmooze cruise, party card, Mexico shopping店, or Airtar shuttle transfers. Tax and cleaning fee included.
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Child care in home. 3 kids. 3 days/wk. Reliable,
non-smoker, car owner. (913) 845-3633
205 - Help Wanted
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a busy woman stay active & involve young children! Ask us for details.
Female figure model needed for artist's project.
Experience not necessary. Must be 18. Stable personality required. Leave name and number at 691-9789.
205 - Help Wanted
200s Employment
---
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning & afternoon teachers aides. Experience with children helpful. Apply 2014 W. 15th St.
Marketing Intern/Personal Assistant Interesting and challenging position for the right person. A unique opportunity with flexible hours. Call Dick at 843-4527
Student hourly office assistant needed for 10 to 20 hours a week at a $15.1/hr. Must have computer and office experience and be a current KU student. Apply at 4037 Dole between 9:00 am-5:00 pm.
$expansion 98 `Nat` co-immediate PT/FT
$expansion in Lawrence/JOCO & entry level all-area
$expansion schedules around us
$expansion schedules around us
no exper. nee. cond. apply C193-913-967511-5
M
Customer service positions available immediately for enthusiastic, motivated individuals. full pay for part time hours. Great for college students. half hour. Start today Call 841-604. Ask for Melanie
Brookcreek Learning Center, an early childhood early intervention program, is hiring PT teaching assistants M-F for spring semester. Complete information call 865-902-9211, Cape Court. For more information call 865-902-9211.
Men & Women Needed. Headquarters Counseling Center needs caring volunteers. No exp. necessities provided. Interested? Info. Meetings: 7:00 p.m. Tues. Jan. 13 at EMC, 124Oreand, or 7:00 p.m. Sun. Jan. 18 at Community Support Services, 714 Vermont. Questions? 841-2454.
PERFECT JOB FOR STUDENTS: evening hrs. flexible scheduling. $65/hr. + commission + incentives + paid training. Telemarketing for Multiple Sclerosis Association of America and Students against Driving Drunk 30 positions on call, call American Direct 943-510 EOE
Students in the Special Education/Nursing Curriculum. Looking for responsible individuals to assist in caring for disabled children, ages 4-15. Shifts available: Early AM, Weekend (TAM 8-24) or Monday through Friday to $7.50/hr. Must have reliable transportation. Contact: tazl at Hands 2 help. 832-2515
Tired of flipping burgers?
---
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
205 - Help Wanted
- Part Time Evenings (Sun-Thurs 2 OR 3 hrs nightly)
We Employ Students!...
A Division of Buckingham Palace, Inc.
Part Time Evenings (Sun thurs 2 OR 3 nightly)
• Part Time Days (Mon-Fri 8am-12pm OR 1pm-5pm)
Mon/Wed/Fri or Tues/Thrs day schedules also available.
• We provide on-job transportation once you get
- Friendly Environment * Professional Training
Call 842-6264 or apply in person at 939 Iowa.
- $6-7 Potential * Fax 842-6250
- here (dayjob only)
- $6-7 Potential * Fax 842-020U
* Friendly Environment * Professional Training
CUSTOMER SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference,
205 - Help Wanted
---
Rainforest Montessori School is interviewing for late afternoon positions (3,15-5:30 M.F.) and pilot position (6,30-8:45 M.F.).
Tutors-Part time positions, approx. 6 hrs per week. Individual and small group tutoring with children age 6-18. Requirements: Baccalaureate Degree with major or minor in education or student teacher with supervision. Resume to colleges, Inc. 221 SW 29h, Tepake, Ks618 EOE
CNA/CHAHI Our busy no for profit home health agency is recruiting caring, team oriented CNA's/CHIAH' to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Even hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, 336 Missouri. Lower Level or call 841-4634 for Pat.
Raise all the money your student group needs by sponsoring a VISA Fundraiser on your campus. No investment & very little time needed. There's no obligation, so don't delay. Call 1-800-792-8445 today. Call 1-800-792-8445 today.
KU FIT TEAM
Job Opportunity
EARN
EARN
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
The KUFT TEAM staff is looking for an energetic and friendly personal Weight Room Assistant to assist participants in one-on-one instruction in the Robinson Weight Room. Personal assistance is preferred. Came by 208 Robinson for information and a job application or call 684-3546.
STUDENT HOURLY: WAREHOUSE/SHIPPING POSITION to start ASAP; appl. 15-20 hrs/wk (Mon-Fri, 1-5pm); 6 hrs or more enrolment (or require enrolment) shipping books from university library Kwaidan University Kansas warehouse St. (west campus); must be able to lift 50 lbs parcels; $%25 hr.start, daily $$ incentives, & raises every 3 mos. come by 2501 W. 15th St. (ph. 724-735) for application. An EEO/AA employment
SUMMER CAMP ABOWS in the Pocos Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in the summer season. Athletics Specialists and more!! GREAT SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to "the finest summer you will ever have." On campus interview Wed, Feb. 4 at kansas University Balloon Campus. 809-923-CAMP staff@camptowanda.com.
WE ARE A FORTUNE 500 COMPANY GROWING LOCALLY IN LENAKE. WE ARE SEEKING ALTENED INDIVIDUALS TO FILL POSITIONAL OFFER: $19,000-20,000 BASE, WEEKLY COMMISSIONS, NO TRAVEL, FULL BENEFITS, OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT! IF AVAILABLE, OR NOT, TO INTERVIEW OR SCHEDULD AN INTERVIEW PLEASE CALL (913) 487-8908 FOR KENNEDY
Growing 1 *Residential Home Improvement Co.* seeked motivated, dependable people to take inbound calls. Nice phone service, PC skills a must. $100 sign on bonus after working 30 continuous 6 hours a week. Send resume based on your performance. Flex schedules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at: Kantel, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this ad with you to qualify for bonus.
205 - Help Wanted
$$$ BONUS! BONUS!$$$
205 - Help Wanted
University of Kansas Survey Research Center will be hiring 30-50 students to conduct telephone surveys. Surveys do not involve soliciting. Must have general knowledge of computers. Must have good command of English language and good reading skills. Applicant must have salary up to $7.25 per hour DQO/E. Applications may be completed at 607 Blake Hall, KU. (785-864-4891). AEO.
手拉手 手拉手 手拉手
Community Living Opportunities (CLO) is currently accepting applications for teaching counselors to work with and enhance the vocational and daily living skills of men and women with disabilities in the men's and women's with developmental disability community based settings in Lawrence. Positions available include full-time, part-time, and substitute day from 7a to 3p or 9a to 2:30p. apply in person on Tuesdays, noon to 3p or Thursday, 9a to 11am, Lawrence, or call 885-5320 for more information.
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
Escape to the *Pecos Canyon-warm days*, cool nights, good friends, and great kids!! Opportunities for leadership, experience, personal and professional growth. In 1988 summer session. Teach one or more of the following: Art, dance, drama, music, fencing, rifley, tennis, soccer, swimming, archery, mountain biking, flyfishing, horse course, back riding, nature, backpacking. Also hiring for instructor training. Scott at 1-800-722-3456 for an application or send resume to PO Box 5259 Santa Fe - MN 87502
GET OUT OF TOWN!!
Student Housing
**Dining Services**
* Start at $5.50/hr.
* Flexible Schedules
* New Friends
* Scholarships
* Scholarships
Call or stop by any
DH Dining Center:
GSP * 613-3120
Eckahl * 869-2200
Groth * 403-2040
Oliver * 804-4978
Now hiring for the Spring 98 Semester in the following positions:
We offer great pay and a chance to earn bonuses and win prizes. Choose a weekly schedule that fits your busy life, network with KU's alumni, learn new skills, and make new friends!!
NOTE TAKERS* earn $10-$15 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in large kU lecture classes for the entire semester. Must have already had class with grade of A. Must have 3.3 + GPA courses open. Bio 570+ EGVN 148, Geog 304, PHIS 115 MW 8:30) PICS 110 (MW 148,
ADVERTISERS - Distribute fliers before class outside of lecture. Earn $6 for 30 minutes work. Punctual, dependable, cheerful students need only apply.
WANTED
Student Health Insurance Representative For Students at the University of Kansas Medical Center
Think KU is the coolest school on Earth? Love the campus? KU Basketball? Your professors? What are the things you love about KU? Share your enthusiasm for KU with our alumni around the nation!!
Underwriting Agency will train the right person to become a Student Representative for the University of Kansas Medical Center on a part time basis. Students who have in need of students may have in respect to their health insurance and keeping the Account Executive up-to-date. We are willing to work around your class schedule. Requirements are: Microsoft Word and PowerPoint, people and people skills. Please forward resumes to
Chris Nowland
G-M Underwriters Agency, Inc.
89 W South Blvd.
Suite 100
Trow, MI 48908
KU NEEDS YOU!!
205 - Help Wanted
If you have lots of energy, a positive attitude, and love to talk, then we have the perfect part-time job for you!! The Kansas University Endowment Association is looking for students to call alumni and raise funds for KU.
To grab this terrific opportunity.
call 832-7423 or pick up an application at The Kansas University Endowment Association.
Youngberg Hall on West Campus! FOE
205 - Help Wanted
+ + + + +
Earn $75 / 80 (full-time students) can earn extra $25 / 90 (half-time assistance) working part-time as a weekend Teaching Counselor. These positions require an MPA in tuition assistance and Inc. COL). Positions involve teaching daily living skills to adults with developmental disabilities or special needs in apartments, CLO provides excellent training using components of the internationally know Teaching-Family Model. Tuition assistance proves valuable for those who are also full-time students, with work schedules that won't interfere with school. Applications accepted during walk-in interviews on Tue 12 and Thurs 4-11 at 2131 Lawrence, Delaware EOE
Juicers Showgrounds Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly.
Now hiring managers, DJs,
attractive dancers and
waitresses 18+. Apply in person.
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
300s
Merchandise
S
---
X
305 - For Sale
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases. Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
400s Real Estate
$
405 - Apartments for Rent
Sublease BDRM in 3 n BDRM townhouse on Monterey BDRM. Great price treat at $34.88 or 434.88.
B2Ai Ravail now Top Level Spacios, quiet locat-
ion 4452 B18 Avail 390 ft DW, balcony bus-
road 4452 C44-694-001 to DW, view
button 4452 C44-694-001
Heatherwood Valley Apartments now starting short term leasing for 3 bedroom apartments
BDRM S may驻 now. Spacious location. New car-
room. Wi-Fi. WI-70 location $50/choose, $64 943-001.
1 BR, walk to KU. Avail, now leave through Lejury.
2 BR, walk to La Jolla, now free, lean
cable and flash. Call Laura C. 831-952-8632.
2 Bedroom near campus, dishwasher, some kitchen in 480ft²/month; mattress, love seat, sofa in 165ft²/month.
Unfurnished Room
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
terry way. Great price can ryan at 913-438-4506.
1, and 2, bdmr. Near KU & Downtown w/ parking lot.
No pets. $345/mo + deposit. Call 843-0561 or 749-3794.
Leanna Mar Townhomes
4 Bedroom/3 Bath
**Early Sign Up Special**
($40 off per month)
Washer/Dryer Trash Compactor
Dishwasher Gas Flipspace
Microwave Cash Paid
Cooler Cart Cash
Walk-in Closet Covered Parking
For More Info: (785) 841-7849
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
$ 3 / 2 $ E.8TH ST., LAWRENCE
WIN A COLOR TV
& 1ST MO. FREE!
Looking for a place to rent? FREE RENT REFERRAL!
A&S
RENTAL SOLUTIONS
1314 E STAFF LANDLENCE
841-5454
405 - Apartments for Rent
THE STUDIO
On KU Bus Route
1809-11 w Wth Brand New duplexes just completed. Available at St. Jan 1.4 Bedroom, Bath. FULL size wash and dryer, range, microwave, dishwasher, refrigerator. On route $89.50 Call 841-2503
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Sign lease for 1B apt. before Jan. 31st and be in drawing for a color TV. Great location on KU bus LE, 1BR. apt. with water pad. $465 all apples W/ D/B built in bookcases. Avail. Notebook, CD, Printer, MacBook. Hurry. Don't miss this great opportunity! Equal Housing Opportunity
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
M
mastercraft
management
Wait, the image shows a line with three dots.
Let's count them.
One dot above the first dot.
Two dots above the second dot.
Three dots above the third dot.
Yes, that's correct.
The text says:
"Writing with E-book readers."
Wait, let me look at the word "writing".
It has three dots above it.
Then a period.
Then two dots above the last dot.
Then three dots above the third dot.
Then a period.
Then two dots above the second
1
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana * 841-1429
WALK TO CAMPUS
Completely Furnished
and Unfurnished
Apartment Homes
designed with you in mind.
Hanover Place 14th & Mass 841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-4226
Regents Court 10th & 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
Equal Housing Opportunity
415 - Homes For Rent
Houses
Large house for lease. Beginning in May, June, or August. Also furnishes room with bath half year old.
430 - Roommate Wanted
1 RM wanted to share 3 DBR house. M or P, n-poss-
nudent/student preferrer $2 & utilities <
$6 per person for each room.
Female RM needed to share 3 BDM apm:
$229.00 + $103 utilities. January rent pd Call
$487.00 + $160 utilities.
One nice NS female roommate needed. 52ed 2
Roommate available as soon as possible. Uuillity
Available as soon as possible.
Sublease female roommate wanted for spring semester $300/mo, will pay first months rent. Call (913) 685-9037 or 841-4300.
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt, at 1128 Ohio. Between campus and downstreet. Close to GSP-Corin. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No pairs 841-1207.
We're looking for another female to share 3 bmrn,
home. On bus route, washer, dryer, Cable, water,
paid +1 / 3 other utilities $255/mo Call #43-6121 for
as Susan or leave mms.
.
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 7
Kansan Classified
T
100s Announcements
115 On Campus
115 Announcements
130 Entertainment
130 Lost and Found
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s Merchandise
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 that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
Classified Policy
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
325 Stero Equipment
330 Tickets
400 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
405 Real Estate
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin.
410 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
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
105 - Personals
St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen applicants wanted. Call 841-2218, Deadline Jan. 27, 1988.
110 - Business Personals
BUSINESS PERSONALS
HEALTH
Since 1906
Watkins
Caring For KU
CENTER
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
120 - Announcements
Don't miss out on the HOTTEST destination in
Mexico. Airfare, 7 nights hotel, transfers. FREES
drinks, 15 FREE meals, parties. For FREE
brochure 1-800-395-4968 (www.collegetour.com)
F1
BEST HOTELS, LOWEST PRICES, ALL
SPRINGBREAK locations. Cancun, Jamaica,
from $999. Florida to $89, Texas, Mazatlan,
Hawaii, or be at the or Campus
Rep. 809-372-6013 www.jcep.org
Instructional & Educational video's CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited internet
access for only $19.50/mo. tell your parents,
children, teachers, staff, and others.
shopping http://www.inetlist.com/edi.
Now's your chance to be on the stage! The University theatre auditions: January 12, 18月 hall-Mayhall Hall. Sign up for auditions: noon-4 p.m. Monday, January 12, 9月 Hall-Mary Lobley. Open to all KU students regardless of major. You have 72 minutes to your stuff. Call 864-3381 for more information
Don't miss Auditions for the University Theatre spring productions: Open Call, 7:00 p.m. p.m. & Tuesday, January 12-13, Crain-Freyer Theater, 7:00 p.m. p.m. April 14-15th, Murphy Hall. Audition sign up: 4:00 p.m. p.m., Monday, January 12, Murphy Hall Lobby Obey in all to all UK students regardless of gender. Open Call, 7:00 p.m. p.m. & "The Seagull." For more information, contact The University Theatre, 317 Murphy Hall.
Kansan Ads Work for YOU
125 - Travel
SPRING BREAK '98
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
BEST RATES ON SOUTH PADRE'S
HOTTEST CONDOS AND HOTELS
$196 for a week!*
IF YOU FIND A BETTER AVAILABLE RATE ON THE
SAME PROPERTY WE'LL MATCH OR BEAT IT,
OR TELL YOU WHY YOU SHOULD NOT TAKE IT!!
FOR INFO AND RESERVE CALL: 810-292-7520
VISIT OUR WEB SITE: www.pirentals.com
*Arrival March 21 only. Choose 2 of schmooze
party, party card, Mexico shopping店, or Orpat
shuttle transfers. Tax and cleaning fee included.
Men and Women
205 - Help Wanted
205 - Help Wanted
Child care in home. 3 kids. 3 days wk. Reliable,
non-smoker, car (913) 845-3636
Help Wanted
200s Employment
Female figure model needed for artist's project.
Experience not necessary. Must be 18. Stable personality required. Leave name and number at 691-9708.
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disa-
laborate person with a small project to help
learn, some lifelong involved. Call 842-763-9120
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning & afternoon teachers aides. Experience with children helpful. Apply 2104 W. 15th St.
Marketing Intern/Personal Assistant Interesting and challenging position for the right person. A unique opportunity with flexible hours Call Dick at 843-4527
Student hourly office assistant needed for 10-20 hours a week at a rate of $15.15/mr. Have computer and office experience and be a current KU student. Apply at 4037 Dole between 9:00 a.m - 5:00 p.m.
Expansion $^8$$ Nat.1 co-mimmediate PT/FTP
openings in Lawrence /JOCO or entry level-al.
Openings in Lawrence Up to $1.45 Up to $1.45
No exper. nec. cond. apply. Call 131-381-9671 1-5
Customer service positions available immediately for enthusiastic, motivated individuals. full time pay for part time hours. Great for college students. 8-hour hour. Start today Call 841-6054 Ask for Melanie.
Brookcreek Learning Center, an early childhood early intervention program, is hiring PT teaching assistants M-F for spring semester. Complete Job Description. Court For. More information call 855-0022
Men & Women Needed. Headquarters Counseling Center needs caring volunteers. No exp. necessities trained. Interested? Info. Meetings: 7:00 p.m. Tues. Jan. 13 at EMC, 1042 Ordea, or 7:00 p.m. Sun. Jan. 18 at Community Support Services, 714 Vermont. Questions? 841-2454.
Students in the Special Education/Nursing Curriculum. Looking for responsible individuals to assist in caring for disabled children, ages 4-15. Shifts available: Early AM, Weekend (7AM - 9PM). Attendance to $7.50/hr. Have reliable transportation. Contact: terr at Hands 2 Help, 832-2515
PERFECT JOB FOR STUDENTS: evening hrs.
flexible scheduling. $63/hr. + commission
+ incentives + paid training. Telemarketing for
Multiple Sclerosis Association of America and
Students against Driving Drunk 30 positions
available now, call American Direct 845-310
EOE
Tired of flipping burgers?
A Division of Buckingham Palace, Inc.
205 - Help Wanted
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
We Employ Students!...
- Part Time Evenings (Sun-Fri 2 or 3 or nightly)
* Part Time Days (Mon-Fri 8am-12pm OR 1pm-5pm)
* Mon/Wed/Fri or Tues/Thurs schedule also available.
* We provide on-job transportation once you get
- Part Time Evenings (Sun-Thurs 2 QR 3 hr nightly)
* Part Time Down (Mon-Fri 8am-12pm or Sunday)
- here (dayjob only) #87 Potential
- Friendly Environment - Professional Training
Call 842-6264 or apply in person at 939 Iowa.
- $0.7 Potential
- Friendly Environment
- Fax 842-6250
- Professional Training
CUSTOMER SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS
Rainret Montessori School is in interviewing for late afternoon positions (3:15-5:45 MF) and subordinate positions (5:45-7:15 MF).
205 - Help Wanted
---
Tutors-Part time positions, approx. 6 hrs per week. Individual and small group tutoring with children age 6-18. Requirements: Baccalaureate Degree with major or minor in education or stu-
dieship. Send Resume to The Villages, Inc. 2215 SW 2MN, Tampa, KS 3601 EOE
CNA/CHIAH Our busy not for profit home health agency is recruiting care, team oriented CNA/s/CHAIh to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Evening hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Dougles Country Visiting Nurses Association, 308 Lower Level or call 841-2663 for Pat FEOF
Raise all the money your student group needs by sponsoring a VISA Fundraiser on your campus No investment & very little time needed. There's no obligation, why not call for information today
EARN
$750-$1500/WEEK
KU FIT TEAM Job Opportunity
205 - Help Wanted
The KUFT TEAM staff is looking for an energetic and friendly personal Weight Room Assistant to assist participants in one-on-one instruction or training. The training experience is preferred. Come by 208 Robinson for information and a job application or call 864-3546.
STUDENT HOURLY: WAREHOUSE/SHIPPING POSITION to start ASAP; approx 15-20 hrs/wk (Mon-Fri, 1-5pm) & 6 hrs or more enrolment @ KU required. Pack & ship books from UniCarl (Mon-Fri, 1-5pm) to campus (St. west campus); must be able to lift 50 lbs parcels; $2.5r her/day, daily $$ incentives & raises every 3 mos. Come by 250 W 15th St. (ph. 4812) for an application. AEE/AO/WEA
SUMMER CAMP JOWAS in the Poco Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in fantastic camp setting. Counselors, WSL Arts, IEAR, and staff training are available at SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to the "first summer you'll have" on Campus interviews Wed., Feb. 4, at kansas Union Ballroom 809-923 CAMP, staff@camptowanda.com
WE ARE A FORTUNE 500 COMPANY GROWING LOCALLY IN LENEXA. WE ARE SEEKING VALENTED INDIVIDUALS FORFULL POSITION. OFFER: $19,900-000 BASE, WEEKLY COMMISSIONS, NO TRAVEL, FULL BENEFITS, OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT? IF AVAILABLE, ENTER THE TERM OF TION OR SCHEDULING AN INTERVIEW PLEASE CALL (913) 472-8500 OR KASKNENY
$$$ BONUS! BONUS!$$$
Growing #1 Residential Home Improvement Co. seeks motivated, dependable people to take inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PC skills a must. $100 sign on bonus after working 30 continuous 6-ounce aluminum cup hr. to start, and raises base cost per performance. per day vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at: KanTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this ad with you to qualify for bonus.
205 - Help Wanted
will be hiring 90-50 students to conduct telephone surveys. Surveys do not involve soliciting. Must have general knowledge of computers. Must have good command of English language and good computer skills. Salary up to $6.25 per hour DQ/E, Applications may be completed at 607 Blake Hall, KU. (785-864-4891). AAEO.
Community Living Opportunities (CLO) is currently accepting applications for teaching counselors to work with and enhance the vocational and daily living skills of men and women with developmental and daily living skills of men and women in community based settings in Lawrence. Persons available include full time, part-time, and substitute day from 7a to 9a or 9a to 3a; apply in on Tuesday, noon to 3p or Thursday, 9a to 1p at 2113 Delaware, Lawrence, or call 865-520-3200.
GET OUT OF TOWN!!
Student Housing
Dining Services
Coffee Shop
* Flexible Schedules
* New Friends
* Convenient Locations
Dish Dining Center:
DSP * 864-3120
Hashinger * 864-1014
Hashinger * 864-1087
Oliver * 864-4087
Escape to the Pecos Canyon-warm days, cool nights, good friends, and great kids! Opportunities for leadership, experience, personal and professional growth. We are currently hiring for the following: Art, dance, drama, music, fencing, riffles, tennis, soccer, swimming, archery, mountain biking,飞溅ing, ropes course, horse-back riding, nature, backpacking. Also hire for administrative and management. Call Tamara or resume to PO Box 5759 Santa Fm. NM 87920
Now hiring for the Spring 88 Semester in the following positions:
NOTE TAKERS* earn $10-$15 per course taking comprehensive notes in large KU lecture classes for the entire semester. Must have already had class with grade of A. Must have 3.3 + GPA Course opens. Bio 570+ EVRN 148, Gregg 104, HMS 115 WM 830) POLL 101 (WM 114 30)
ADVERTISERS - Distribute fliers before class outside of lecture. Earn $6 for 30 minutes work Punctual, dependable, cheerful students need only apply.
KUNEEDS YOU!!
Underwriting Agency will train the right person to become a Student Representative for the University of Kansas Medical Center on a part time basis. Students must have received a student students may have in respect to their health insurance and keeping the Account Executive up-to-date. We are willing to work around your class schedule. Requirements are: Microsoft Word skills, Please forward resumes to:
Student Health Insurance Representative For Students at the University of Kansas Medical Center
NOV 2014
G-M Underdeck Emergency, Inc.
89 W. South Blvd.
Suite 100
Mt. Tonyro 1998
We offer great pay and a chance to earn bonuses and win prizes. Choose a weekly schedule that fits your busy life, network with KU's alumni, learn new skills, and make new friends!!
Think KU is the coolest school on Earth? Love the campus? KU Basketball? Your professors? What are the things you love about KU? Share your enthusiasm for KU with our alumni around the nation!!
If you have lots of energy, a positive attitude, and love to talk, then we have the perfect part-time job for you!! The Kansas University Endowment Association is looking for students to call alumni and raise funds for KJL.
Jumping for Joy
205 - Help Wanted
To grab this terrific opportunity.
10 grab this terrific opportunity, call 832-7423 or pick up an application at The Kansas University Endowment Association Youngberg Hall on West Campus! EOE
205 - Help Wanted
---
Earn $7.50/h (full-time students) can earn extra $2.00/h in tuition assistance) working part-time as a weekend Teaching Counselor. These positions are offered to students from schools such as Inc., COL). Positions involve teaching daily living skills to adults with developmental disabilities in apartment buildings. Students in apartments, CLO provides excellent training using components of the internationally know teaching facility Model 'untouch assistance program' that is designed for students who are also full-time students, with work schedules that won't interfere with school. Applications accepted during walk-in interviews on Tue 12-4 and Thurs 9-1 at 2131 Davie, Lawrence EOE
Juicers Shenghs
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly.
Now hiring managers, DJs, attractive dancers and waitresses 18+. Apply in person,
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
S
300s Merchandise
X
$
S
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
---
305 - For Sale
400s Real Estate
Sublease BDM in 3 in BDM townhouse on Monterey Way. Great price call Ryan at 913-438-8358.
405 - Apartments for Rent
1 BR wake to KU. Avail now, lease through July 31. Welcome to Serenity Inn, free, no charge and trash. Call庐庐 913-842-3833.
CITY OF NEW YORK
WESTVILLEN CITY
MAY 19, 2015
Sublease B'BRM in GRM townhouse on Monterey Way. Great price call Ryan at 819-436-858.
i, 2 and 3 DdmR. Near KU & Downtown w/ park收费 $345/mo + call Devil 844-6384 or 847-3994
R2B Avail now > Top Level Spaces, quiet locu-
tory 485 Call 645-743-8911, DW, balcony bus
rout 485 Call 645-743-8911
BDRM $85 awail now. location new. Car-
rying $85; sale $49; visit W1-70 location
$85; sale $49; visit W1-70 location
Heatherwood Valley Apartments now starting short term leasing for 3 bedroom apartments.
2 Bedroom near campus, dishwasher, some utilities incl. 480/month, matched offs, loveset & ~360/month, kitchen appliances
Unfurnished Room
BEST BUILDING
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Washer/Dryer Trash Compactor Dishwasher Gas Pipelace Microwave Cable Paid Back Tap Ceiling Fans Water Potato
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($40 off per month)
}
For More Info: (785) 841-7849
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
131/2 E.8TH ST., LAWRENCE
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
841-5454
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
WIN A COLOR TV
& 1ST MO FREE!
405 - Apartments for Rent
Sign lease for 1B apt. before Jan. 31st and be in drawing for a color TV. Great location on KU bus levies, 1.BR, apt. with water pd. $495 all appls W & D/7, built in bookcases. Now! Call: Curtis 200 2.000 Heathrow A4 2 Harry. Don't miss the opportunity! Equal Housing Opportunity
1809-11 W 8th St. Brand New duplexes just completed. Available Jan. 1 4 Bed, 2 Room, FULL size wash and dryer, range, microwave, dishwasher and refrigerator. On bus route. Bm99/630. Call 841-2593.
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842 5111
On KU Bus Route
1&2 Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
WALK TO CAMPUS
M mastercraft management
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Completely Furnished and Unfurnished
Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana 841-1429
Hanover Place 14th & Mass 841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold * 749-4226
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass *749-0445
Mon-Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
415 - Homes For Rent
---
430 - Roommate Wanted
Female RM needed to share 3 RBM apm. $243/mo + $100 utilizes. January rent pd Call
I RM wanted to share a BDRDM屋 M or M f. Or
I RM wanted to share a BDRDM屋 M or M f. Or
I Call collect 913 - 899 - 4603 call 331-728-4603
One nice NS female roommate needed: 2bed 2 bath api. on bus route: 27/m +/- 1/2 unithitched bed; 2 bedrooms in one apartment.
Sublise female roommates wanted for spring semester $200/mo, will pay first months rent. Call
Male roommate to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. to 1128 Ohio. Between campus & downstown. Close to GSP-Corbin. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No付 841-1287.
)
We're looking for another female to share 3 bmr.
home On bus route, washer, dryer, Cable, water,
paid + 1/3 other utlts $255/mo Call 843-6121 as
for Susan or leave moss.
Section B · Page P
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 12, 1998
Last year's experience helps Packers best Young,49ers
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
SAN FRANCISCO — Brett Favre and the Green Bay defense made the big plays. The San Francisco
49ers made the big mistakes.
G
Favre threw for 222 yards, including a 27-yard touchdown pass to Antonio Freeman.
The result was a 23-10 Packers victory Sunday in the NFC championship game. The wins sends them to San Diego, where they will play for their second straight Super Bowl victory.
Levy returned a kickoff 95 yards with 2:52 left.
The Packers also impacted the Niners' running game. Former Kansas lineman Gilbert Brown, Brian Williams and LeRoy Butler limited it to 32 yards on 17 carries.
The Green Bay defense allowed only three points the other seven came when San Francisco's Chuck
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
While the 49ers made a few big plays, they also made huge mistakes — 59 yards of penalties in the first half.
While it wasn't a blowout, the outcome of the game seemed almost certain when Favre hit Freeman on a slant early in the second quarter, giving the Packers a 10-0 lead.
They included two consecutive holding penalties that negated major gains, a pass interference call that set up an early Green Bay field goal, and a botched reverse that eventually led to Eugene Robinson's interception.
The Niners also allowed a 40-yard Favre-to-Freeman connection in the final seconds of the first half that set up a field goal.
PITTSBURGH — This time, John Elway didn't need a fourth-quarter comeback to get back to the Super Bowl.
Broncos win AFC championship
After the game, Elway said the victory was one of the greatest of his career and that he was confident this team could win the Super Bowl.
C
The Associated Press
One year after they couldn't get there even with home-field advantage, the Denver Broncos took a 10-point lead on Elway's two touchdown passes in the final two minutes of the first half, then held off turnover-struck Pittsburgh
burgh for a 24-21 victory yesterday in the AFC championship game.
Elway also led a tense drive in the final minutes to keep the ball away from the Steelers, who pulled within three points on Kordell Stewart's touchdown pass with 2:46 left for the only points of the second half.
The score seemed to electrify the Steelers and their bench, and they held Denver to three yards on the the Broncos' next two plays.
Elway finished 18-of-31 for 210 yards, two touchdowns and an interception, while Stewart was 18-of-36 for 201 yards and a TD. Both of the big backs, Denver's Terrell Davis (26-139) and Jerome Bettis (23-105) rushed for more than 100 yards.
But Elway found tight end Shannon Sharpe over the middle for 18 yards and the first down, and, with only 1:52 to wind off the clock, Denver had its fifth AFC championship.
Elway managed the clock and his offense to perfection late in the second quarter, masterfully driving the Broncos to two touchdowns in a span of 1:34 to put Denver up 24-14 at halftime.
This is Elway's fourth trip to the big game. He lost in his previous three trips.
ONLY 68 DAYS UNTIL SPRING BREAK!
Until then: Shop us for the greatest selection of used books & all necessary & frivolous supplies!
including:
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AEROSPACE
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at the top of Naismith Hill! (1420 Crescent Road)
www.jayhawkbookstore.com OPEN Tonight til 7:30pm
Shop the Classifieds to save money!
Purchase Any Pyramid Pizza and Receive A FREE PIZZA of Equal Value. Good Mondays Only.
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GRAND EMPORIUM
"STUDENT LOAN MONDAY"
Non-advance ticket shows on Monday are FREE for students.
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Wireless service is easy to get into with a Southwestern Bell Wireless Prepaid Cellular Card. It's a calling card with prepaid airtime minutes – when you run low, you just get a refill! It's wireless service on your own terms (pretty important when you're on a budget). Southwestern Bell Wireless. Get carded.
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AUTHORIZED RETAILERS
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2736 Oregon
(785) 841-2924
Service available only at participating locations.
Dillons
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Available at participating local
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1
Tomorrow's weather
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PO BOX 3545
TOPEKA, KS 64601-3545
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Tomorrow will be cloudy and cold.
Kansan
HIGH 37
HIGH 37
Inside today
Tuesday
January 13, 1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 • No. 78
100 ANNIVERSARY
PLACE CORPS
1966 E. 1096
Former Kansan reporter and Peace Corps volunteer Kathleen Stolle shares her traumatic departure from riot-torn Albania, a country she grew to love.
SEE PAGE 8A
Sports today
MICHIGAN
Lester Earl received a second chance when he transferred to Kansas. Since he became eligible to play, he has made an impact on the court.
WWW.KANSAN.COM
SEE PAGE 1B
Contact the Kansan
News: (785) 864-4810
Advertising: (785) 864-4358
Fax: (785) 864-5261
Opinion e-mail: opinion@kansan.com
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Advertising e-mail: onlineads@kansan.com
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Long lines cause traffic jam
THE STUDENTS ARE IN FOR THE FETCHING OF THEir OPTIONS.
(USPS 650-640)
Students line up at the Enrollment Center in Strong Hall for late enrollment. Some exasperated students waited in line for more than two hours to enroll. Photo by GR Gordon-Ross/KANSAN
1
Late enrollment clogs Strong Hall makes students wait
The line for refund checks in the basement of Carruth-O'Leary Hall stretches the length of the building with about 100 students waiting. The wait for the checks was about an hour and a half most of the day. GR Gordon-Ross/KANSAN
By Gerry Doyle gdoyle@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Students entering Strong Hall yesterday morning were greeted by a throng of people enduring late enrollment.
Monday was the first day for students to enroll late, said associate registrar Brenda Selman. Students flocked to the registrar's office, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Records office and the enrollment center, causing lines that filled the first floor of Strong Hall.
Students participating in late enrollment were not assigned appointments and could come any time yesterday, Selman said. About 1,000 students were processed, a number that wasn't out of line, she said.
"It varies, but it's really not that unusual," she said. "We're too much in the thick of it to really get an exact count."
The lines were phenomenal because students wanted to enroll in classes before they were closed, said Seth Hoffman, Lenexa sophomore.
"I had to go get a permit to enroll," Hoffman said. "Then I had a hold, and had to go to Carruth-O' Leary to pay it. When I got back from paying my hold, I ran into the mother of all lines.Total, I waited in line for about two hours and 45 minutes. We mostly spent the time listening to other people complain about the wait."
Crowds thinned later in the day and Strong's hallways were not quite as hectic. While the lines in the morning forced students to wait more than an hour, there were shorter waits and fewer hassles in the afternoon. At 10:30 a.m., the line from the enrollment center almost reached the registrar's office. At 2:20 p.m., the enrollment line consisted of 15 people and didn't stretch around the corner.
"I just went in to get my thesis hours," said
Students enrolling late can do so through their last day of add-drop, which is based on KUID number.
Makeup times for students who were unable to enroll today have been changed from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. and from to 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., Selman said.
Daniel Charkin, Hollywood, Fla. graduate student: "It took about five minutes."
Friends remember caring professor
By Sara Anderson
Kansan staff writer
Victor Papanek, University of
Victor Papan Kansas distinguished professor of architecture 72, died Saturday at Shawnee Mission Medical Center.
Papanek entered the hospital about a month ago after fighting an illness that lasted more than three years. John Gaunt, dean of
Paparek: Studied with Frank Lloyd Wright
architecture and urban design,saic the cause of Papanek's death was unknown.
Papanek came to the University in 1981 and taught part-time last year because of prolonged health problems, Gaunt said.
He most recently taught courses in introductory architecture and design ethics.
"Victor was a really caring teacher," Gaunt said. "He loved teaching and sharing his insight and knowledge with the students."
Papanek was a global traveler and a well-known designer. He studied with Frank Lloyd Wright and taught at many different institutions including the Ontario College of Art and the Royal Academy of Architecture in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Papanek received numerous honors such as Distinguished Designer Fellowship, NEA and the UN(UNESCO) Award for outstanding Design of Developing Nations.
Papanek's assistant, Lisa Robinson, said Papanek also spent time in Bali and Indonesia, lectured throughout Europe and Asia and spoke a dozen languages.
"He was one of the most interesting people I've ever known," she said. "He was interested in absolutely everything."
Papanek also was well published. His last book, "The Green Imperative: Ecology and Ethics in Design and Architecture," was among five or six well-known works of Papanek's career.
Papanek was closely connected with folk art and crafts including Oriental, Eskimo and American Indian cultures. He combined design and anthropology and studied exotic cultures to help understand basic human needs and their relationship with design.
"Victor was concerned with how we live, and his designs were based on it," Gaunt said. "He also was interested in the ethics of design—how we design in a responsible manner."
Donna Luckey, chairwoman of the architecture program, said Papanek's reputation brought students from all around the world to study with him.
Gaunt said he thought that students appreciated Papanek's methods and love of teaching.
"For us, he was a teacher designer of world acclaim and very highly recognized and honored," he said. "We will miss him."
Papanek's family members could not be reached for comment.
Kansan staff writer
Custodian charged with sale of cocaine
By Laura Roddy
Kansas staff writer
A University custodial worker charged with the sale of crack cocaine appeared in Douglas County District Court yesterday afternoon.
Albert E. Crane, Jr., 52, was arrested Wednesday morning after a month-long investigation by the Douglas County Drug Enforcement Unit, said Loren Anderson, Douglas County sheriff.
Crane was charged with three counts of the sale of crack cocaine, one count of possession of crack cocaine, one count of possession of marijuana and one count of possession of paranhernalia.
Anderson said the Drug Enforcement Unit arranged three controlled buys with Crane and arrested him after the third buy.
Ken Stoner, director of student
housing, said the arrest took place on the loading dock outside of Ellsworth.
A subsequent search of Crane's residence uncovered one gram of crack and a small amount of marijuana, Anderson said.
Crane, a lifelong Lawrence resident, has been employed by the University since April 1995, said Carol Cooper, employment manager for student housing.
Douglas County District Court Judge Jack Murphy granted a continuance yesterday for Crane a preliminary hearing at the request of prosecutor Dan Dunbar. The hearing is scheduled for 1:45 p.m. Feb. 9. Murphy also reduced Crane's bond from $5,000 to $4,000.
Crane was released on bond at 3:30 p.m. yesterday.
Stoner said that to his knowledge, no students had been involved in the incident.
Parking department to crack down on booth runners with fines
By Marc Sheforgen
Kanson staff writer
Beware booth runners. Students without on-campus parking passes may face a $50 fine for disregarding stop signs on the traffic information booths at campus areas.
The parking department's rules committee is expected to form a plan that would first warn cars caught passing by the parking attendants without permission and then fine them $50.
If the department passes the plan at their February meeting, the fines would not go into effect until August 1, 1998, leaving this semester's runners free from consequence.
growing number of drivers that illegally are congesting campus roads.
"People are so excited about running the boots, that they aren't paying attention to what's going on in front of them. So I think it's become a safety issue," said Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking.
Hultine said that the new plan would first give offenders a verbal warning if the car could be stopped by the booth attendant. On a second offense, the license plate number of the car would be written down, and a written warning would be sent to the violator.
Parking officials are concerned with the
Finally, if the same car was seen running a booth for a third time, a the driver would be fined $50.
PROPOSED PLAN
Yesterday, between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. 75
- Second offense: record license plate number; written warning told to driver
First offense: verbal warning
Third offense: $50 fine
cars ran by the parking booth on Sunflower Road without proper documentation. The booth attendants record the number of runs per day and then turn that number into the parking department.
McCabe also said she thought it would be difficult to write down license plate numbers.
Stephanie McCabe, Lawrence junior and parking booth attendant, said she thought the plan would help, but it would be impossible for attendants to verbally warn the drivers.
Because the stop signs on the traffic information booths are not official, violators are not breaking a city law by blowing past them. However, the new plan would allow the parking department to regulate such violations.
Brandon Bartkoski, Burlingame freshman, said that a $50 fine would probably solve the problem.
Traffic control booths
Marsworth Dr.
Jayhawk Blvd.
National Dr.
Oread Ave.
Summer Ave.
BMT STREET
Sunnyside Ave.
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
.
"It would stop me from going across," he said. "If they want you to stop, they ought to make you pay something for not stopping."
5
2A
The Inside Front
Tuesday January 13, 1998
News
from campus, the state, the nation and the world
CHAZY
PARIS
HONG KONG
LOS ANGELES
CAMPUS
Tickets for the 49th annual Rock Chalk Revue went on sale yesterday in the Kansas Union.
WORLD
PARIS — Less than a week after an American scientist announced he would clone a child, 19 European nations signed a treaty yesterday that said cloning people violated human dignity and was a misuse of science.
HONG KONG — As senior officials from the United States and the International Monetary Fund launched an emergency effort to calm East Asia's economic turmoil, Hong Kong's stock market became the latest victim, falling sharply today.
NATION
CHAZY, N.Y. — With a forecast of subzero temperatures threatening to bring another wave of misery to four Northeastern states this morning, the National Guard searched by air and foot for people still isolated by last week's deadly ice storm.
LOS ANGELES — Prices at the nation's gasoline pumps fell 2.5 cents per gallon in the past three weeks because of lower crude oil prices and a decrease in driving in the winter months, an industry analyst said.
CAMPUS
Rock Chalk Revue tickets can be purchased in Union
Tickets for the 49th annual Rock Chalk Revue went on sale yesterday in the Kansas Union.
The three performances for this year's Rock Chalk Revue, Two Truths and a Lie, will be March 12-14. Tickets will be on sale on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union until the last performance.
Mike Cain, Rock Chalk Revue's senior advisor, said ticket prices would be the same price as last year.
The March 12 performance costs $10, the March 13 performance costs $12 and the March 14 performance costs $14, Cain said.
Tickets can also be reserved until the night of the show by calling 864-4033.
"The Saturday night performance is usually a guaranteed sellout, and we usually do pretty good with the Friday night show," Cain said. "It's Thursday that we usually have the most trouble selling tickets."
This year, the three shows will be performed by five sets of fraternities and sororites including Delta Delta Delta and Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Delta Pi andLambda Chi Alpha, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Phi Gamma Delta, Gamma Phi Beta and Delta Chi, and Pi Beta Phi and Phi Delta Theta.
Last year, the Revue donated nearly $30,000 and 34,000 hours of community service to United Way of Douglas County
Kansan staff report
Cain said that although he expected crowds to be about the same as last year, the amount of revenue generated could vary depending on the show's expenses.
WORLD
European nations' treaty puts ban on human cloning
PARIS — Less than a week after an American scientist announced he would clone a child, 19 European nations signed a treaty yesterday that said cloning people violated human dignity and was a misuse of science.
Britain and Germany, however, balked at signing the measure that London considers too strict and Bonn too mild.
Although yesterday's signing was planned months ago, it clearly took on a greater significance with the announcement last week by Chicago physicist Richard Seed that he will clone a child within two years.
"This is a horror story that the states present here ... will use every effort to prevent," said Jean Boucauris, Greece's director for European affairs.
The signing by 19 members of the Council of Europe — in a room filled with professors, philosophers and physicians as well as diplomats — came the same day French President Jacques Chirac called for an international ban on human cloning, and two days after President Clinton urged Congress to do the same.
Many U.S. and international leaders renewed their condemnation after Seed said that he planned to begin working on human cloning using a newly developed technique. Some physicians questioned whether Seed, who is not a doctor, had the expertise to successfully complete such an experiment.
The July 1997 presentation of Dolly the sheep, the world's first cloned mammal, set off an international outcry over the implications for human biology.
Seed, unaffiliated with any institution, said he would move his enterprise to Tijuana, Mexico, if Congress banned human cloning in the United States.
The treaty said that cloning was contrary to human dignity and thus constitutes a misuse of biology and medicine. Signatory nations agreed to enact laws that outlaw human cloning, but the protocol itself makes no mention of sanctions against those that do not carry it out.
Medical ethicists praised the treaty for drawing attention to an issue for which, they say, the vast scientific complications are dwarfed by the moral questions.
"There will always be mad people out there, and I could name one in Chicago," said Francoise Shenfield, a fertility expert who teaches medical ethics at University College London.
Hong Kong stocks become latest victim of Asia crisis
HONG KONG — As senior officials from the United States and the International Monetary Fund launched an emergency effort to calm East Asia's economic turmoil, Hong Kong's stock market became the latest victim, falling sharply today.
Rattled by rising interest rates, reports that a major Hong Kong-based investment bank may shut down and the sharp decline on Wall Street on Friday, the Hang Seng index tumbled 10 percent, or 905.77 points, to 7.988.87.
Last week, the index dropped 16 percent.
A Hong Kong bank clerk, Chau Hoeyung, said his $9,000 investment was now worth $1,300.
"I'm expecting the worst. I've lost everything, and I'm now only holding on to a pile of wastepaper," Chau said.
Share prices also fell in Singapore, Japan, Taiwan, Malaysia and Australia.
But market prices were higher on two of the region's most troubled economies: Indonesia and South Korea.
In Hong Kong, the stock market was rattled by doubts over the future of Peregrine Investment Holdings, which surfaced when Zurich Centre Investments abandoned plans last week to take a 24 percent stake in the troubled company.
On Friday, there was 2.82 percent decline on Wall Street because of growing concern over Asia's economic turmoil, which began last summer and has since forced the IMF to give large bailout loans to Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea.
Peregrine is heavily exposed in Indonesia, where a massive decline last week slashed the value of the runiah currency
Such concerns prompted Stanley Fischer, the IMF's first deputy managing director, to begin talks Sunday with officials in Indonesia on its $40 billion IMF-led rescue package.
Forecast still miserable for those in Northeast
CHAZY, N.Y. — With a forecast of subzero temperatures threatening to bring another wave of misery to four Northeastern states this morning, the National Guard searched by air and foot for people still isolated by last week's deadly ice storm.
Hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses remained without electricity in northern New York, New Hampshire, Maine and Vermont. The combination of no power and a forecast of bitter cold had officials worried about residents who may try to tough it out in unheated homes.
"We are checking on anything that's living," National Guard Sgt. Nicholas Contempasis said Sunday as his humvee slid on an ice-packed road in Chazy, near the Canadian border.
Contompasis was among the Guardsmen who went door-to-door in New York to deliver food, water, and kerosene and to make sure everyone was healthy. Helicopter crews rescued at least 16 people Sunday, and they were to continue searching by ground and air today.
The huge storm caused floods across the South and spread thick, clinging ice across the Northeast and the eastern third of Canada. Eleven deaths were blamed on the storm in Canada, plus three in New York and two in Maine. Seven deaths were counted in Tennessee flooding plus two in North Carolina and one in South Carolina.
Gov. George Pataki and James Lee Witt, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, also were to survey the damage today — and there was plenty to see. Northern New York, like the three other states, was buried in a sheet of ice that brought trees and power lines down by the hundreds.
Utilities estimated 230,000 homes and businesses still had no electricity Sunday in Maine, with 20,500 blacked out in New Hampshire and 9,600 in Vermont. New York utilities estimated about 500,000 people were without power. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. said it could be a month before power is restored to all its customers.
Conditions were even worse in Canada, where more than 2 million remained without power and the Canadian military deployed 11,400 soldiers to help aid people and repair power lines.
New Hampshire alone had more than 500 utility line crews from as far away as Delaware busy cutting through downed trees to get at broken utility poles and drooping lines. They were helped by National Guardsmen.
Although frigid temperatures were expected today, the sun came out Sunday and brought warmer temperatures. That caused a new problem: Ice began falling from trees and power lines. The
National Weather Service issued an unusual winter storm warning—not for precipitation from the sky, but from the melting ice.
Meanwhile, people just tried to cope. William and Doris Belanger of Auburn, Maine, relied on a kerosene heater in their kitchen.
"We manage. There's no water, no heat, no electricity. Nothing. So you get along with what you got," said Mrs. Belanger, 73.
Mrs. Belanger said her husband went out Sunday to survey the broken tree limbs and power lines littering streets in their neighborhood. "After that, he told me 'We ain't never getting power back,'" she said.
Officials have repeatedly urged people to go to public shelters — especially Sunday night because of the expected below-zero temperatures, but they recognized that some may be reluctant to leave.
"People are very proud in Maine and they would rather ride it out in their own home than go to a shelter," said Paul Halvachs, a nursing supervisor at St. Joseph Hospital in Bangor, Maine.
Maine Gov. Angus King added: "I'm a little worried that we're moving into the time when people are starting to lose patience. Even though it's sunny now, it isn't over. Tonight is the night that we've really got to look after one another."
Oil prices drop, leading to decrease in gas prices
LOS ANGELES — Prices at the nation's gasoline pumps fell 2.5 cents per gallon in the past three weeks because of lower crude oil prices and a decrease in driving in the winter months, an industry analyst said.
"The expected demand for crude oil, especially in some Asian markets, has drastically reduced because of the economic crisis there," analyst Trilby Lundberg said Sunday.
The overall average gasoline price, including all grades and taxes, was about $1.18 per gallon on Friday, according to the Camarillo-based Lundberg Survey of 10,000 stations nationwide.
At self-service pumps, regular gasoline was $1.13 per gallon, mid-grade was $1.23 and premium was $1.31.
That was down 2.5 cents since the last survey Dec. 19. Prices are down 12.5 cents per gallon since a year ago, Lundberg said.
At full-service pumps, regular was $1.54.
mid-grade was $1.63 and premium was
$1.69.
The Associated Press
On the record
A KU student's $15 stolen between 5 p.m.
Jan. 10 and 11:30 p.m. Jan. 11 from his
apartment in the 1800 block of Kentucky
Street.
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VANSAN
The Kansan is your best source for campus news
Tuesday, January 13, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 3
Plan calls for three new polling sites
Elections commission to consider voting location bill, resolution
By Melissa Ngo
Kansan staff writer
Problems surrounding the Daisy Hill polling site for Student Senate elections may be resolved at an Elections Commission meeting tonight.
The commission will consider the original Daisy Hill bill and a compromise resolution.
The original bill would have changed Student Senate rules and regulations mandating that the commission set up a polling site outside Ekdahl Dining Commons. If the bill passes, Daisy Hill will have a site during April's Student Senate elections.
The resolution is nonbinding, which means it is only a recommendation to the commission. It calls for sites at Ekdahl, Oliver Hall and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall cafeterias. If this year's commission accepts the resolution, it would not affect 1999 elections because such decisions only are valid for one year.
Kaiser said he thought the resolution would be more acceptable because it resolved some of the technical issues that had been debated about the bill.
The compromise was reached in December when Seth Hoffman, All-Scholarship Hall Council senator; Scott Kaiser, transportation coordinator; and members of the Association of University Residence Halls met.
Hoffman, the author of the original bill, has been working on the compromise since September. Kaiser consistently has opposed the bill.
"The original bill went against a Senate rule which says that the Elections Commission will make any and all decisions regarding polling sites," he said. "This compromise gets around the sticking points by making recommendations to the commission, not telling it what to do."
Kaiser said it was important that Senate not try to force the commission into any decision because it might lead to political manipulation.
"What if Senate got enough votes to decide that there would be only one polling site and it'd be at GSP? That would be ludicrous." he said.
The resolution and original bill also will be debated at Senate committee meetings tomorrow.
The original bill caused heated debate at last semester's final Senate meeting, but Hoffman said he didn't foresee such debate at tomorrow's meeting.
First snow of semester greets students
"People have had time to evaluate the legislation. Hopefully, they'll put all the prejudices against the legislation behind them and look at it for what it is — a way to include more people in the legislative process," he said.
Tonight's decisions about polling sites and other election issues will be a first draft. Brad Finkeldei, elections commissioner, said the commission would decide on a final draft in a few weeks after getting feedback from students and faculty.
Crews prevent major problems by acting early
By Emily C. Forsyth
Kansan staff writer
Despite the blanket of ice that covered the city yesterday morning, the first day of school proceeded with only a few minor setbacks.
Robert Porter, associate director of Facilities Operations, said his office called crews in at 5:15 a.m. instead of the regular time of 7:30 a.m. to begin distributing sand and salt on the campus roads and sidewalks.
Scott Kaiser, transportation coordinator for KU on Wheels, said the roads were cleared on time and continuing snowfall did not detain yesterday's bus schedule from running smoothly.
"As far as on campus, Facilities Operations does a great job of clearing the roads," Kaiser said. "Buses rarely have,problems stopping or maneuvering."
Kaiser said the most frequent problem caused by inclement weather is a delay in the bus schedule.
"Because the bus drivers are driving slower, it sometimes makes the routes late," Kaiser said.
Other students who drove to campus experienced some difficulty on the ice.
Charlie Parekh, Leawood graduate student, drove on K-10 highway early yesterday to go through late enrollment.
"K-10 wasn't that bad, but it was definitely icv." Parekh said.
Sgt. Chris Keary of the KU Police Department said one minor accident occurred around 9 a.m. because of the weather.
The plows were out in force to handle the snow and ice that blanketed the campus. This plow cleared the sidewalks between Budig and Marvin Hall yesterday. Photo by Geoff Krieger/Kansas.
The accident occurred behind the Spencer Museum of Art when the driver, who was turning into lot 91, slid into a car that was parallel parked in the lot, causing the car to slide into a second parked car.
Keary said the chance for accidents could be decreased by taking a few precautionary measures.
"The key is to leave early," he said.
Getting an early start allows drivers to slow down, to put a reactionary distance beween themselves and the car in front of them and to travel a different route with
fewer hills if possible, Keary said. He also advised drivers to properly warm up their cars and remove ice from all window surfaces.
TIME MAGAZINE'S "MAN OF THE YEAR"
Dr. David Ho
Agouron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
60th Anniversary
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
1938 - 1998
Dr. David Ho. the developer of the miraculous AIDS cocktail, will speak about the latest advances in the search for a cure.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 13th, 1998
8:00 P.M.
LIED CENTER
FREE ADMISSION
Vouchers available in SUA Box Office - Jan. 12 w/KUID
Call 864-Show for more info. Jan. 13 General Public
KANSAS AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER
KC ARC
GAMAS CITY
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Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
Opinion
Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor Marc Harrell, Business manager Dave Morantz, Managing editor Colleen Eager, Retail sales manager Kristie Biasi, Managing editor Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser Tom Eblen, General manager, news advisor Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
Tuesday, Jan. 13, 1998
WAYS YOU CAN TELL IT'S WINTER IN LAWRENCE
snowman beeramid
...KU STUDENTS ARE SPORTING THE LATEST IN FLUFFY HEADGEAR
...SNOW SCULPTURES ARE BEING BUILT ALLOVERCAMPUS
What's he gawkin' at?
Come, humans! Partake in the delight of a frozen treat!
ICE IS FORMING AT THE TOP OF KU BASKETBALL PLAYERS HEADS
THE MAGICAL KU ELVES ARE GIVING OUT POPOLES
W. David Keith / KANSAN
Editorials
Diversity discussion leaves out disabled students at University
One of the most highly publicized problems for the university is the lack of diversity on campus — the University is beginning to push for a more well-rounded student population. But even with all the attention focused on making the campus more racially and religiously diverse, nothing has been said about the shamefully low number of disabled students.
It is true that the University needs to concentrate on developing a more racially diverse campus, but attention also needs to be directed to the relative lack of physically disabled students. Of the 23,290 people enrolled for the fall 1997 semester at the Lawrence campus, only 26 were classified as having permanent mobility impairment, according to the Office of Services for Students with Disabilities. That means that about 1 percent of KU students are in wheelchairs or have their mobility impeded in other physical wavs.
Only 26 students are in wheelchairs or have their mobility impeded.
This shockingly low number shows that there is something wrong with our campus, even with the programs set up to make life easier for physically disabled students, such as the newly renamed Services for Students with Disabilities office and the demand-response lift-van service run by KU on Wheels. The service gives an average of 400 rides per month to students with disabilities.
according to KU on Wheels.
Of course, the campus itself does not make getting around any easier. It is naturally hilly and probably will always be difficult for those with physical disabilities to manage. This makes it even more important for the University to accommodate students with disabilities.
So, it is a distressing when two soda machines can effectively block two of Wescoe Hall's wheelchair accessible water fountains for weeks, as was the case last semester. Luckily, staff and faculty members noticed the situation, and administrators took action to remedy it.
The University must make an effort to change the disproportionately low number of physically disabled students to make this a truly diverse University.
Susan Dunavan for the editorial board
Consider the challenges faced by others
The Kansan has instituted a new program called "Editor for a Day." Students who don't understand how things work in a daily newspaper can shadow an editor to learn about the job and its responsibilities.
The idea is that this *defacto* baptism by fire will cause students to step outside their routine and play another role: After all, empathy is fine, but it's no substitute for experience.
Imagine how life would be different if we all had to go through a one day program to teach us about the thing we know the least about. Could there be a better cure for ignorance than to be its victim?
What it is like to be handicapped is one insight too few students consider.
Could there be a better cure for ignorance than to be its victim?
Most students go through their day without devoting a second thought to things like transportation or mobility, but disabled students can't do that. Few of us have made any significant effort to understand the needs of our disabled schoolmates.
In any community, when people try to understand one another's lives and problems, everyone benefits
crosswalks, inattentive drivers, crowds, narrow hallways and steep inclines. It's hard to go even a day without taking the stairs two at a time, let alone resting at the landing. Most of us have gone through our lives being noted for exceptional abilities, not for deficits in them. And it's important to note that no disabled person wants to be felt sorry for or singled out for being different. But just overlooking differences ignores individuality and objectifies people, neither of which help improve the human condition.
Just like being "Editor for a Day," students should consider what it's like to be disabled for a day. Try to think at stairs, handrails, ice.
The concept of understanding is a vital step toward building a campus where disabled students are welcome and feel comfortable instead of considered an obstacle.
Kansan staff
Andy Obermueller for the editorial board
News editors
Paul Eakins . . . Editorial
Andy Obermueller . . . Editorial
Andrea Albright . . . News
Jodie Chester . . . News
Julie King . . . News
Charity Jeffries . . Online
Eric Weslander . . Sports
Harley Rattliff . Associate sports
Ryan Koerner . Campus
Mike Perryman . Campus
Bryan Volk . Features
Tim Harrington . Associate features
Steve Puppe . Photo
Angie Kuhn . Design, graphics
Mitch Lucas . Illustrations
Corrie Moore . Wire
Gwen Olson . Special sections
Lachelle Rhoades . News clerk
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"The avoidance of taxes is the only intellectual pursuit that carries any reward." — John Maynard Keynes, economist
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 home-town 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 letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stuaffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermueller (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Perspective
Genetic engineering runs risk of perfection
It was bound to happen. When Dolly the Sheep was cloned at the Roslin Institute in Scotland, all of the red lights and alarm bells sounded. How close were we coming
bells sounded. How close to the reality of a Huxian human production center?
A.
According to Richard Seed, pretty damn close. He is determined to make the cloning of humans a reality. The first question is: can he do it? Well, he's pretty bright—he's a Harvard physicist. He has also been studying genetics for the past 12 years, a period that saw genetics go from a fringe science to the center of understanding in a biological world.
Tom
Winter
twinter@eagle
Some biologists think the number of unfertilized eggs that Seed would need to pull the experiment off would be about 300 — assuming the Scottish trial-and-error system is a genetic standard and can be applied to humans. The high number of eggs required means there would have to be quite a few participants willing to ovulate for Seed, no pun intended.
I don't think this will be a problem, nor do I think he will have trouble funding his research. If it doesn't come from the U.S. government, which it won't, it will come from private organizations that are already profiting from biotechnology. It's also possible that the funding could come from a foreign economy. In the world of science, there is always some country willing to foot the bill. We know that the Food and Drug Administration isn't going to approve it, but maybe a European country, Asia, or even a former Soviet Bloc country will decide that they are going to trailblaze the future. They could easily get a jump on the moralists and show what genetic engineering is all about.
While the Soviet Union may have had problems keeping their people clothed and fed, they didn't have any problem putting the first man in space or developing nuclear weapons or orbiting a space station around the Earth.
But what we really need to ask is 'Is this the right thing to do?'
The truth is, no matter how distant the real
ity of human cloning seems, the closer it brings us to genetic engineering. Cloning is the exact replication of an existing organism. Genetic engineering is the creation of an organism from scratch. This application of genetics is becoming an incredibly real possibility, especially because the entire human gene is expected to be mapped by 2005.
A computer-guru friend of mine once said that we as a species have stopped evolving. We control our climate with air conditioners and the like; we control our health. In essence, we adjust our environment to us instead of the other way around. In this light, it seems that genetic engineering is adjusting us to some vague notion of perfection.
Let's assume that we are God. We want to create perfect children, or at least, initially, disease-free children, which is what Richard Seed claims he wants to eventually do. Our children would have had all possibility for human ailments genetically removed. Their generation might lack the ails of cancer, muscular dystrophy and other physical diseases. They would also lack alcoholism, manic depression, schizophrenia and other mental diseases.
What you then have is someone who never gets sick and never eats a cheeseburger because the "fat-craving" gene has been kicked out of their system. They would not have long bouts of depression, fits of anger or thoughts of suicide. Of course, this application of genetic engineering is still theoretical.
Now let's add into the equation that people want to choose the height, stature and attractiveness of their offspring. Now we might not all jump on the bandwagon and say we want tall, beautiful children, but believe me, if genetic engineering becomes widespread, people's insecurities about their own physical inequities will be whispered in a doctor's confidence. The use of technology is often driven by fear — I want my children to be in the fraternal order of personal insecurities. I'd rather be 58" with bad vision, clumsiness, an air of contemplation and a hell of a lot of skepticism.
It just makes that pint of beer taste so much sweeter.
Winter is a Blue Springs, Mo., senior in advertising and biology.
Pouring out a little liquor for the human experience
A few weeks ago I was at a party and I poured out a little liquor for Chris Farley. I was immediately accosted by the
people around me who wondered how I could pay respect to an uncouth, coke-addicted slob. I couldn't respond amid the fury that I illicited and the wailing of Jerry Garcia in the background.
Jerry Garcia? A little ironic, don't you think?
CITY OF MICHIGAN
Now I'd like to respond without derision and without Jerry Garcia egging me on.
Nick Zaller
nickzaz@falcon
We are drawn to people with eclectic talents. Artists, writers, musicians, actors and athletes are often idolized and we pay our obeisance to the little bit each contribute to interpreting the human experience.
The shrines we have built are mere dreams, dreams that help us understand what it means to be a human being. Often there is confusion as to what is important and what the difference is between reality and dreams. What are we admiring and respecting in artists and entertainers?
During the years, there have been many tragedies involving people who have impressed us with great artistic talent but who were not necessarily great people. Chris Farley was overweight and had serious drug problems. He glamorized the live-fast-and-die- young mentality that so many entertainers have championed. Del Close, a friend of Farley, said in a recent interview, "When a fat kid desperately wants acceptance, he'll do what it takes to be accepted, even if that's being the most outrageous guy in the room." Farley saw himself as the fat kid seeking acceptance in the shadow of fallen star comedian Jim Belushi, whom he emulated.
I'm not saying that I want to be like Chris Farley when I pay respect to him as a comedian. I'm saying that when I watch Chris Farley on television, I laugh. I escape to another place for a short time, and I just laugh. That's
what I respect.
There are countless other examples of entertainers who lived on the edge. Charlie Parker, Janis Joplin, Jerry Garcia, Jim Belushi and Tupac Shakur are just a few. None of these people were deities. They were people with gifts and they gave their gifts to whoever would accept them. I do not condone the lifestyle of any of these people, but they have all given me perspective through their artistic expression of the human condition. Even though I did not know any of those people, each one has affected me in some way. Their creative expression and interpretation of humanity on an internal and external plane is what has affected me, not their drugs, violence or countless other vices. For example, I like jazz music and I like Charlie Parker. But Charlie Parker's music, not his heroin, is what takes me to another reality that invigorates my thoughts and emotions.
Thus far I have only mentioned figures in the public eye who have achieved fame and notoriety. But everyone of us has a unique piece of the puzzle which defines the human psyche. Chris Farley is not any better than a friend who makes me laugh. Jerry Garcia is no better than someone singing in the shower. A Monet painting has no more meaning than a little girl's painting of her interpretation of the sunset. Each of us is capable of expressing our feelings.
We are all emotional beings. The rich, famous and impersonal do not have a greater impact than neighbors, friends and family members. So when I poured out a little liquor for Chris Farley, I was really pouring out a little liquor for creative expression which is an essential part of our existence.
In addition, we can and do have an impact on one another. Artistic expression of feelings greatly broadens this impact, but everyday interactions can play an integral role as well. One does not have to be famous or have special talents to have a meaningful interpretation of life. Conversely, because a person is famous or has special abilities does not necessarily mean their interpretations should be more reverently received than anyone else's.
Zaller is a Tulsa, Okla., senior in Chinese and biology.
Online Opinion
Each week we will describe an interesting web site for our readers. Web site of the Week:
http://www.emilyslist.org/
Emily's List identifies viable pro-choice Democratic women candidates for key federal and statewide offices and supports them in three ways: By raising campaign contributions, by building strong campaigns and by mobilizing women voters.
Tuesday, January 13, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
中華醫院東區门诊部
The Stoneridge Plaza shopping mall, which will be located at Clinton Parkway and Wakarusa Drive, is expected to bring a downtown flavor to West Lawrence. Plans for the new Plaza were approved last week by the Lawrence City Commission and construction should be completed by late 1998. Art by Northstar Venture Group, LLC.
West Lawrence to develop its own downtown plaza
By Jeremy M. Doherty
Kansan staff writer
Last week, the Lawrence City Commission approved a preliminary development plan for Stoneridge Plaza.
Some local downtown merchants say it is unlikely that they will be hurt by nearly 50,000 square feet of commercial development that will reside in Lawrence's west side.
Stoneridge, a proposed fiveacre site at Clinton Parkway and Wakarusa Drive, is intended to bring downtown flavor to the residential area of western Lawrence.
Construction will begin after a contractor is selected this spring. Stoneridge is expected to be completed in late 1998 or early 1999.
"Right now, you've got to drive miles to get to the stores and restaurants," said Art Cromer, a broker with Lawrence-based American Real Estate & Investments Inc."This center will help fill that niche."
Some downtown merchants do
not foresee problems from the potential competition.
Brad Parsons, owner of Marks Jewelry, 817 Massachusetts St., said he did not expect trouble.
"With all the housing and growth developing, I don't think there's any jeopardy to downtown Lawrence," Parsons said. "It makes Lawrence more of a package."
Gary Toebben, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said he supported Stoner idee.
"This will not affect downtown at all," he said. "It's going to be an office complex with a restaurant and retail facilities for the neighborhood."
Developer Stephen Wilson arreed.
"Our belief is that it won't even compare to the type of business going on downtown," he said. "Given the amount of retail downtown, we won't even be a blip on the screen."
Cromer is the leasing agent for North Star Venture Group, the company developing the plaza.
and must bring in prospective tenants.
Only 12,700 square feet will be made available to retail and dining outlets, which Wilson said will give homes to about five or six establishments.
Space in Stoneridge has not been leased yet, but a European-style cafe, a personal project of Wilson's, is a high priority.
Cromer said the developers were interested in opening specialty stores such as gift shops, beauty salions and jewelry stores.
15th St.
Wekorusa Dr
23rd St.
Stoneridge Plaza
Area of detail
South Lawrence Trafficway
Inverness
Crossgate Dr.
928 Mass. Downtown 843-0611
The Etc. Shop
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Section A · Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 13, 1998
Microsoft gives choice for surfing students
New browser eases campus navigation
By Aaron Knopf
Kansan staff reporter
Academic Computing Services has bucked the exclusivity trend set by the University of Kansas' deals with Coca-Cola and Nike by providing campus computer users with a choice of Web browsers.
Microsoft Internet Explorer is now installed side-by-side with Netscape Communicator on PCs in Budig Hall and the Computer center labs. Soon, it will be installed on all Macintosh computers. The Academic Computing Services' staff installed the Microsoft browser for the convenience of people who were more familiar with it than the Netscape browser.
These two software applications allow computer users to access pages designed for the World Wide Web. The University receives both the Netscape and Microsoft browser for free educational use.
"Some people will be using one. Some people will be using the other. By having them both available, it just makes it a little bit easier for people to use the lab," said Wes Hubert, Academic Computing Services assistant director.
Hubert said offering both
Wes
"By having them both available, it just makes it a little bit easier for people to use the lab."
Wes Hubert
Academic Computing Services
browsers was similar to the policy of providing two different word processing packages, Microsoft Word and Word Perfect, on the lab computers.
Hubert said Academic Computing Services decided in the summer of 1997 to have both browsers installed by the fall semester. However, a lack of time and a pending new release of Internet Explorer prevented the staff from including the Microsoft browser.
Although the new version of Internet Explorer came out in the middle of the 1997 fall semester, Academic Computing Services decided not to add it then.
"For the most part, we try to make changes between semesters." Hubert said.
N
Students had the first opportunity to use the new browser yesterday morning. Stephen Grigsby, Salina junior, took advantage of the opportunity.
Grigsby said he was relatively new to Web browsing, and it was the first time he had ever
used the Microsoft browser.
Netscape
Internet Explorer
4. dots above represent version
4.0; use only the 'e' if you want an earlier version.
Before, Grigsby had browsed through Netscape Communicator in the labs. He also installed the Netscape browser on his own PC, because it was available with the KU Internet Pack
Grigsby said he did not have trouble using the Microsoft browser, but he found no reason to switch from the Netscape browser.
"I don't know the advantages and disadvantages. I'd probably just use what I was familiar with," he said.
Aaron Lindberg, Kansas City, Kan. freshman, also tried the Microsoft browser. He said he had used an earlier version of the Internet Explorer. Ultimately, he settled on the Netscape Gold browser, because he could use Gold to design his own Web pages.
He noticed that his personal home page, created in Netscape Gold, did not look quite the same when viewed with the Internet Explorer. Like Grigsby, he did not see any reason to switch from the Netscape browser.
"I like Netscape better. I just kind of grew up on it, I guess you could say," Lindberg said.
Lost dial-in accounts can be renewed online through new web site
By Aaron Knopf
Kansan staff writer
You've just returned from break and want to check your e-mail from home. But midial, your modem suddenly hangs up. You try connecting again. No luck.
Students who can't dial in to the University of Kansas Internet service should know that all dial-in accounts not set for automatic renewal were canceled December 31, 1997. Students can manually renew these accounts throughout January by logging on to the KU Account Registration page from any of the computers in the Computer Center, Budig Hall or other campus labs.
Jeremy Huffman, Wichita junior and customer assistant at the Computer Center, said that he received calls over the weekend from concerned students whose dial-in accounts had been canceled.
Students should not worry that their basic KU Internet accounts, including e-mail and home page space, have been deleted. These basic accounts, which are available free to all students, exist so long as a student remains enrolled. These accounts always are accessible from any campus computer with an Internet connection.
Dial-in accounts are available for an initial $30 fee and allow students to access the Internet and their e-mail from a home computer via modem.
Students can renew existing dial-in accounts or establish new accounts from the KU Account Registration Page, http://www.ukans.edu/account.htm
To renew dial-in access, choose "Renew a dial-in account." New users should choose "Get new account(s)."
After selecting the appropriate link, students should follow the instructions that appear on screen. Lab assistants are available to help with any problems.
Jerree Catlin, Academic Computing Services supervisor of documentation and training, said the dial-in account renewal option will exist only in January. After that, users will have to establish new dial-in accounts.
"The advantage of renewing is that your same login name and password are automatically available. If you're going to have to sign up again, then you are going to have to enter all that information," Catlin
DIAL-IN INFO
To renew a KU diol-in account or establish a new Internet and/or dial-in account, go to the KU Account Registration page at http://www.ukans.edu/account.htm Direct any problems or questions to a lab assistant or call System Access at 864.0439.
A basic Internet account is free to enrolled students. Dialog-in accounts cost $30 for access through July.
said.
When establishing or renewing a dial-in account, students can select an automatic renewal option. By choosing automatic renewal, the Computer Center will keep the accounts active as long as students remain enrolled and pay their dial-in access fees.
Students who have established or renewed their dial-in accounts, will receive a bill for $30 for dial-in access through July. With automatic renewal, enrolled students will receive another bill approximately six months from now to continue service for the rest of the year. Access fee payments must be sent to the billing office or made directly at the cashier's window in Carruth-O'Leary Hall.
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Tuesday, January 13, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 7
SenEx Committee elects librarian as chairwoman
Melissa Ngo
Kansan Staff Writer
Mary Hawkins, who has worked at the University of Kansas for more than 25 years and has spent the last two years on the University Senate Executive Committee, has been elected as SenEx's new chairwoman.
"I know that this semester will be challenging, but I look forward to it." Hawkins said.
Hawkins, a librarian at Spencer Research Library, was elected in December by the members of SenEx. The previous chairman, Mohamed El-Hodiri, professor of economics, resigned to do a project in Russia.
Provost David Shulenburger said he was pleased Hawkins would take over the position.
"She has been a most able and diligent participant in faculty governance and is certainly up to speed on the many pressing issues facing us this year." Shulenburger said.
Hawkins came to the University in 1970 as a science cataloger with the libraries. She became assistant personnel director for the libraries in 1974. From 1976 to 1983, she was assistant dean of the libraries.
In 1983, she became assistant dean for public services, a position she held until 1994 when she began her current job at Spencer Research Library.
SenEx, a group of 13 faculty, staff and students, sets the agenda for University Council and University Senate, which pass policy proposals affecting the University community. Chancellor Robert Hemenway has final approval of SenEx decisions.
Student and Faculty Senate only make decisions concerning their
respective groups. SenEx differs in that its policies can affect the entire University.
Two important issues that SenEx will work on this semester are intellectual property rights and program review, Hawkins said.
The proposal has suggested departmental self-study and external review of programs as ways to improve the University's academic program, Hawkins said.
Program review is key, Hawkins said, because the University must prepare a proposal for evaluating its own academic programs by March, and SenEx must give feedback about this proposal by Feb. 13.
Intellectual property rights is a pressing issue at the University because of the increase in distance learning and questions about ownership of electronic courses, Hawkins said.
Chancellor retreats to country
Peace sought in cabin at Lone Star Lake
By Brandon Copple Kansan staff writer
If he is not at the office, not at home and cannot be found, Chancellor Robert Hemenway might well be at the lake house, reading a book or playing cards with his kids.
Hoping to establish a refuge, a private place off campus and away from the pressure of running a big state university, Hemenway and his wife Leah have purchased a cabin at Lone Star Lake southwest of Lawrence.
"When I first came to KU, a friend of mine, a former university president, told me I'd need to find a retreat, a place to go and think." Hemenway said.
"At first I didn't think much about it, but after two and a half
years, I understand. It's a high-pressure job," he said.
And the pressure rarely lets up. Hemenway works at least 65 hours a week, and he lives on campus in the chancellor's home. The Outlook.
Everybody knows who lives in the big white house, and nothing keeps people from dropping by. Mary Burg, the chancellor's executive assistant, said it was not uncommon for students to stop by late in the evening.
"Students come to his door all the time, and he always tries to invite them in to visit, if that's what they want to do," she said.
Living on campus and working long hours also makes it tough for Hemenway to spend time with his two boys, Zack, 14, and Arna, 10.
The chancellor said he hoped the Lone Star cabin will be a good place for spending time with his children.
Lone Star Lake
DOUGLAS CO.
"We wanted a place to be alone
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
with the boys before they get to the age where they're not at home as much." Hemenway said.
The cabin is sparsely furnished,
but livable and, besides, the chancellor's plans probably will not require any Persian rugs.
"I contemplate sitting on the dock, doing some reading and spending some time with the family," he said. "If I can do those things, I'll be satisfied."
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Section A · Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 13. 1998
MISSION TO THE WORLD
Countries with Peace Corps
programs:
Currently Activ
IN BLUE
Armenia
Belize
Benin
Bolivia
Botswana
Bulgaria
Burkina Faso
Cameroon
Cape Verde
Chad
Chile
China
Costa Rica
Cote d'Ivoire
Czech Republic
Dominican
Republic
Eastern
Caribbean
Ecuador
El Salvador
Eritrea
Estonia
Ethiopia
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Guatemala
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
Hungary
Jamaica
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kiribati
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Lesotho
Lithuania
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Macedonia
Mauritania
Micronesia
Palau
Moldova
Mongolia
Morocco
Namibia
Nepal
Nicaragua
Niger
Niue
Panama
Papua New
Guinea
Paraguay
Philippines
Poland
Romania
Russia
Senegal
Slovak Republic
Solomon Island
South Africa
Sri Lanka
Suriname
Tanzania
Thailand
Togo
Tonga
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu
Uganda
Ukraine
Uruguay
Uzbekistan
Vanuatu
Western Samoa
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Formerly Active IN RED
Afghanistan
Albania
Argentina
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Brazil
Burundi
Central African Republic
Colombia
Comoros
Congo
Cook Islands
Cyprus
Equatorial Guinea
India
Indonesia
Iran
Liberia
Libya
Malaysia
Malta
Marshall Islands
Mauritius
Nigeria
Oman
Pakistan
Peru
Rwanda
Sao Tome & Principe
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
South Korea
Sudan
Swaziland
Tunisia
Turkey
Uruguay
Venezuela
Yemen
Zaire
By Kathleen Stolle
Former Kansan staff writer, Peace Corps volunteer
35th ANNIVERSARY
PEACE CORPS
1961-1996
I stood just inside the door of my host family's concrete ground floor apartment, sobbing as my 15-year-old host sister softly dabbed my eyes with toilet tissue.
"You'll be back. Don't cry, Ketlin.
You'll be back." she assured me.
I remember being struck by her calm. I wouldn't be back — why didn't she see that? Did she not understand the extent to which her country was imploding this awful spring day? Did she not realize the implications of a full-scale evacuation of all U.S. citizens, including the 80some Peace Corps volunteers?
Perhaps not. Confusion and denial were clouding all of our minds in those days and weeks of early spring 1997 in Albania. Throughout late March and April, the unstoppable anarchy, sparked by civilian riots against the government, would result in thousands of deaths and forever alter the lives of those who survived.
But on that mid-March morning everything was relatively normal throughout most Tirana neighborhoods and seemingly completely routine in the Sinani household.
As I came to the end of the line, I noticed a commotion growing at a bread kiosk up ahead. Shortages had been predicted for weeks. I watched as two dozen or so customers crushed at the kiosk window, waving their Leks at the vendor, who hid behind a grill of iron, between his precious few loaves
Having been officially notified of our impending evacuation earlier that morning, I rushed from the Peace Corps compound across town to my host family's house to say goodbye. Tatjana and Eqarem, my host mom and dad, had just left for the outdoor market. I walked quickly and anxiously up the garbage-littered path, past the fruit and vegetable sellers and their make-shift stands, my eyes scanning the shoppers for Eqarem's shiny, bald head.
and the impatient pack. From the back of the crowd, a trio of hooligans lifted a small, leather-jacketed kid up over the mob, launching the boy to the front of the line. Boots first, he crashed down upon the heads of two older women at the front. Shoving and shouting ensued, with the young thugs at the back drinking it in with yelps and laughter.
My throat caught as I watched this, imagining Tatjana somewhere in that hoard, being bustled and shoved about. I turned away, troubled
and scared, to resume my search. But as I walked I grew aware of an eerie tension in the faces of the people I met and decided to head back across town to the safety of the PC compound.
Within 24 hours I sat strapped into a Chinook helicopter, U.S. gunmen hanging from their perches on either side, their automatic weapons training on the terrain below, reptilian tails of ready ammunition ominously snaking around their booted feet.
As the chopper swept us away, headed for an aircraft carrier in the Adriatic, we all watched numbly through the small bubbled windows as those magnificent, treacherous Albanian mountains disappeared below us. I glanced across the aisle and my eyes froze on the face of a fellow PC volunteer — a trash-talking guy from New York. Giant kindergarten tears were wetting his unshaven cheeks and his deep sobs were drowning in the chopper's din. The fading site of those damn mountains was killing us all.
I was too confused to cry then. In that moment — and other people guiltily admitted this later — excitement was coursing through my veins. It had been an exciting day.
Grief didn't wait long, though. For me the dam cracked our second night in Romania, where we'd been flown to do the necessary paperwork to close our service with PC or transfer to another PC program. We were all gathered in a small auditorium of an old, decadent, communist-era hotel on the skirts of Bucharest. Our country director, Nelson Chase, was leading the community meeting, with most of our questions focused on our chances of returning to Albania
(zilch), and our options for the future.
buture.
But some of the wagging raised hands wanted to know things like, how much per diem were we getting? Did the hotel provide laundry service? When was breakfast served? I felt my nerves begin to strain. Finally someone asked, could the hotels please provide bottled mineral water instead of carbonated water at our dining tables because the carbonated water tasted funny.
My weary mask of tolerance broke and I cried boiling hot tears into the muffling crook of my sweat shirt sleeve. Where had everyone's priorities gone, I wondered bitterly. That night I used the fword with my mother in a frustrated phone call home, hung up on her, then went and sat in a hot bath and bawled. I hated everyone.
Throughout that week emotions raged. Dissension amongst PC volunteers swelled, with one camp wanting to skip all the touchy-feely stuff and just be cut loose; the
others wanting to hang on to what would be our final days together. Some people hibernated in their hotel rooms all week; others found solace in drunken reverie.
By the end of that week, we'd all taken steps to move on. What other choice was there? Some elected to go home, others to travel. A handful chose to transfer directly to other PC programs. A few brave souls independently ventured back inside Albanian borders.
I was a transferee, having endured a phone interview with Peace Corps-Washington from someone's hotel room one night in Bucharest. Why did I want to transfer? Was I prepared to learn a new language? How did I feel as a woman adjusting to an Arab Islamic country?
I don't recall all of the questions. I just recall promising emphatically that I was ready to commit, meanwhile knowing inside that philanthropy wasn't the motive. It was fear.
I wasn't really interested in Morocco, or in experiencing a new culture, or even in being a humanitarian anymore. I was simply afraid of going home to nothing. I had a vision of getting back to Kansas, receiving rejection letters from graduate programs I'd applied to, and sitting in that big swing in my parents' yard, looking across the fields that stretch till Highway 24, and wondering what the hell I'd do now.
So I took the transfer offer, determined to love my new assignment like I'd loved the old one.
I've finally stopped waiting and have begun accepting this land of
I spent the first six months here in Morocco waiting for a feeling to strike. Waiting for this culturally rich place to capture my heart as it had captured the hearts of other volunteers who had worked here.
camels and mint tea and haunting calls to prayer cannot compete with my memories of Albania.
The streets in Morocco are relatively clean. The busses run on schedule. My classroom windows have glass. It's just not the same at all.
But I'll still go — my best friend there is getting married.
Ana started out as my language tutor. She was the assistant director of a new English library in town. In three years, she and a handful of other ambitious student volunteers had organized and were running the library, which was supported by a U.S. organization.
In May, I read with sickness and horror Ana's letter describing how the library's custodian had refused Ana's pleas for help to guard the library against vandalism during the riots, and how, consequently, it was raided, wrecked and finally burned by a mob of rufians.
Ana will receive her university degree in elementary education next month. She has abandoned her dream of pursuing library science in the United States. She's waiting for the government to notify her of an open teaching position somewhere. Meanwhile, she writes letters to her fiance, who like a lot of Albanian men, works in Greece. They hope to settle there to start their new life together.
While visiting Albania, I also plan to visit some of my former students, both those from the village high school where I taught my first year and those I worked with my second year at the university. My anticipation is not dampened by the knowledge that amongst their eager faces I will not find that of Johan, surely one of the greatest young hopes his beleaguered country has known in recent years.
Johan was a vibrant, hard-working English student, co-editor of his provincial university's first student newspaper and an unofficial student leader. He was popular and admired — characteristics which undoubtedly made him an even bigger target for the ignorant cowards whose violence extinguished one of Albania's few remaining bright lights.
His badly beaten body was found in a concrete bunker in a nearby village the day after fighting broke out in his city, the day Americans were being airlifted to safety. His family estimates that Johan was murdered sometime after leaving home that morning to buy bread. By nightfall, anarchy was shaking the normally quiet streets of Korce. Johan was last seen around noon, spotted by a friend near the downtown tourist hotel. His family launched a search for him that night, and by morning his brother had found him. His friends say his killers still walk amongst them, though they can't say with certainty who they are.
I'll visit Johan when I'm back, and in the Albanian tradition take the prettiest plastic flowers I can find to his grave.
Finally, I will stop and see my host family. I have so much to ask them.
University Christian Fellowship
Tuesdays, 7:30 pm Burge Union Sunflower Room 841-3148
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Inside Sports
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Sports
After three Super Bowl beatings in the late '80s, John Elway will try to lead the Broncos—and the AFC—to victory this year. Can he?
SEE PAGE 3B
Tuesday
January 13, 1998
Section:
B
Page 1
Norm gets ticked
SEE PAGE 3B
P
Norm Stewart said yesterday that Big 12 officials like to target his rough-and-tumble players.
CINCINNATI
Colts get new coach
The Indianapolis Colts hired Jim Mora, ex-Saints coach turned commentator, as head coach yesterday.
SEE PAGE 5B
Contact the Kansan
WWW.KANSAN.COM/NEWS/SPORTS
Sports Desk: (785) 864-4810
Sports Fax: (785) 864-5261
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Sports Forum: sptforum@kansan.com
The Starting Lineup
KU
KANSAS JAYHAWKS 9-3 Big 12, 1-2 overall
G SUZI RAYMANT 5-11 Jr.
B JENNIFER JACKSON 5-10 Fr.
F LYNN PRIDE 6-2 So.
C JACEYN JOHNSON 6-1 Fr.
F NAKIA SANFORD 6-3 Jr.
c
TEXAS LONGHORNS 5-7 BIG 12. 1-2 overall
**G** VANESSA WALLACE 5-9 JR.
**K** KIM LUMLIMS 5-8 FR.
**F** EDWINA BROWN 5-10 JR.
**F** DEE SMITH 5-11 JR.
**C** ANGELA JACKSON 6-4 SR.
Allen Field House • Lawrence
TV: Ch. 3, 13 and 29
Radio: KLWN, 1320 AM
AP TOP 25
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' men's basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through yesterday, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
rank team rec ps pre ps
1.N. Carolina (68) 17-0 1,748 1
2.Duke (2) 14-1 1,676 2
3.Kansas 19-2 1,527 4
4.Utah 13-0 1,512 5
5.Arizona 13-3 1,431 5
6.Kentucky 14-2 1,401 6
7.Stanford 14-0 1,394 7
8.UCLA 12-2 1,185 10
9.Purdue 14-3 1,152 9
10.Connecticut 14-2 1,074 8
11.Mississippi 14-1 1,066 14
12.Princeton 13-1 899 15
13.Iowa 13-2 812 11
14.S.Carolina 10-2 747 16
15.New Mexico 11-2 718 12
tie Syracuse 14-1 718 18
17.Florida St. 12-4 573 13
18.Xavier 10-3 541 19
19.Michigan 13-4 472 17
20.Rhode Island 10-2 431 23
21.West Virginia 14-2 423 25
22.Akansas 13-2 411 22
23.Marquette 10-2 133 20
24.Hawaii 11-2 115 21
25.Oklahoma St.12-1 —
Other receiving votes: 41, Wisconsin 95, Cincinnati 79, Maryland 52,
Clemson 64, Illinois 91, Ball St. 23, Colorado St. 26, Georgia
Tech. 23, Texas Christian 19, Wyoming 13, Tennessee 12, Indiana
11, Georgia Washington 10, Michigan State 7, Vanderbilt 8,
Illinois 11, Kansas City 12, Oklahoma State 7, Washington 4, Illinois St. 3, Illinois-Chicago 2, Oklahoma 2,
Alabama-Birmingham 1, Arizona St. 1, Gonzaga 1
Free Bird
Kansas forward Lester Earl goes up for a rebound against Nebraska. Earl became eligible to play Dec. 19th and played in his first game against Texas Christian Dec. 20th. Photo by Steve Pupke/KANSAN
Earl gets second chance
Kansas frees Lester from 'savior' status
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansas sportwriter
ketball prospect, Earl had surrendered to hometown pressure in Baton Rouge, La., when he selected LSU instead of Kansas, which he always had said was his No. 1 school.
When Kansas crushed Louisiana State 82-53 in the first round of the Maui Invitational last season, then-Tiger Lester Earl just wanted the game to end. A highly unrouted high school bee
Earl said that the Maui game served as a reminder of his original decision.
"I should have been on the other side. I should have been in a Kansas uniform," Earl said about the game, "I just wanted to hurry up and get the game over with because I felt bad by me not being there. I told some of the (Kansas) coaches that this was my school, and I
kind of went back on my word."
A highly recruited high school basseason her team has struggled.
Earl, who transferred last spring,
made his Kansas debut with five points
and six rebounds in the Jayhawks' 94-
78 victory against Texas Christian on
Dec. 20. Recently, his play has been crucial to No. 3 Kansas because of injuries to forwards T.J. Pugh and All-American Reaf LaFrentz.
Earl has started in seven-of-eight games in which he has played and has averaged 10.7 points and 8.5 rebounds.
See EARL on page 2B
MAYNAWISON 25 SKA 1 KU 5
Kansas center Koya Scott looks for an open teammate while surrounded by Nebraska defenders. The Jayhawks defeated No.16 Nebraska 83-74. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Kansas strives to defeat struggling Texas Longhorns
By Kevin C. Wilson
Kansan Sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team will look to continue its winning ways when it plays host to the Texas Longhorns at 7 tonight in Allen Field House.
Coach Marian Washington said that her team was working hard and that a lewdown after Saturday's emotional victory was unlikely.
The Jayhawks will face a Texas team that is coming off an 82-59 loss to No. 5 Texas Tech. The Longhorns, 5-7 overall and 1-2 in conference play, are looking to win their first game on the road this season.
The Jayhawks defeated the No. 16 Nebraska Cornhuskers 83-74 Saturday and will attempt to claim their second Big 12 conference victory of the season.
"It was a high on Saturday, but the team is focused and we're trying to get better everyday." Washington said.
Texas, a traditional women's basketball powerhouse, is under the direction of Jody Conradt, who is now in her 22nd season as the Longhorns head coach. Conradt entered the season as the all-time winningest women's coach in history, with a record of 697-198 in 27 years, but so far this
Washington said that she was a supporter of Conradt and that she was looking forward to facing her again.
"I consider her one of the special people in our business. We always have had a mutual respect for one another," Washington said.
The Longhorns are led by sophomore forward Edwina Brown, who averages a team-high 16.4 points per game and pulls down 7.3 rebounds a game. In the middle, Angela Jackson, a preseason 1st队 AllBig 12 Conference selection and last year's leading scorer, averages 14.6 points and 7.1 rebounds a game.
Despite their sub-par record, Washington said that the Longhorns possessed talented players and that the Jayhawks would need to play great defense to stop them.
"There is no question we are aware of Jackson," Washington said. ("Kim) Lummus is a great outside shooter and (Vanessa) Wallace and E. Brown are perimeter players who can break you down off the dribble."
She said that if the Longhorns ever got their chemistry to click, they would be outstanding.
College sports fill break with new memories
"Hopefully they won't get it together against us," Washington said.
Time for a reality check.
Welcome back.
A lot has happened in the sports world since we last spoke, so snap on the seat belt and get those eyes focused because we're going fast...
The holiday presents have been replaced by book bills and those home-cooked meals have turned into giant helpings of gourmet chicken-flavored ramen. And what happened to the New Year's Eve parties we all had so much fun at? Well, simply try to hang on to the sweet memories while you're sitting through that 8:30 a.m. chemistry lecture.
What was Kansas State head coach Tom Asbury thinking when he said..."I think that it is good that we played against a team of this caliber." often his Wildcats!
after his whitsuc humiliating 38 point loss to Arizona. "We won't play a team of this caller again, unless we get in the NCAA tournament."
P
Huh?
Maybe someone should check what they're putting in the drinking water in Manhattan—because the last time I checked, the power kittens were still in the same Big 12 Conference as Kansas. Yep, that would be the same Kansas that beat Arizona earlier this season.
Harley Ratliff
spoets@kansan.com
I guess we'll all see what kind of caliber team the Jayhawks are on Saturday when they host the Wildcats. Have fun. Tom.
Kansas basketball fans don't know how good they have it until...they attend a home Oklahoma basketball game. I had the privilege of attending two of the Sooners home games during the break. Sure, the tickets were easy to get, there was an abundance of available fold-out seats, a wonderful new jumbo-tron and, oh, about two hours of mind-numbingly boring basketball.
Going to a Sooner home game is like watching a bad movie inside a half-empty cave — albeit a very blush cave.
Sure, my grandma's fruitcake made me ill,
but not as much as...ABC's coverage of the Rose
Bowl. The camera angles were too low, the postgame hype was out-of-control and if I had to hear one more thing coming from Brian "Daddy's Boy" Griese's big mouth, I was pretty sure I would have lost my lunch. Or my fruitcake.
Unfortunately, the number 38 is bad because... it is also Kenny Gregory's free throw percentage. The freshman guard is beginning to blossom as a star player. He's got bundles of athletic ability and seems to play better and better with each game. And those dunks... .000000... they are nasty. But, if there's room to improve, I think it could be at the charity strike.
It is a true sports travesty that...the Nebraska Cornhuskers weren't awarded the No.1 ranking in both the Associated Press poll and the USA Today CNN coaches poll. Hey, I'm with Nebraska quarterback CNN Scott Frost on this one. If you really believe that Michigan could beat the Cornhuskers, then you must be sippin' from the same water supply as our good friend coach Asbury.
The number 38 is good because...since breaking the Kansas record for career 3-point field goals against Middle Tennessee State Dec. 13, Billy Thomas has dropped in 38 more threes during a phenomenal nine-game winter-break stretch. Rarely do you see a player shoot with such supreme confidence and accuracy. And until he cools off—and I pray he never does—Thomas will be one of college basketball's most exciting players to watch.
You may leave Allen Field House with a throbbing headache, a raspy voice, two aching knees, and a wrenched back, but you had one helluva time. The old field house offers you something you can't buy with a thousand jumbo-trons: Flavor.
You're lucky Kansas fans. Don't ever forget it.
The only thing worse than Big 12 football is..Big 12 basketball. As pathetic as the football side performed, the conference basketball teams seem to be one-upping their pigskin counterparts for futility. It's Kansas and then...nobody. I'm starting to long for the days of the Big 8.
I may not have covered everything, but it should at least keep you entertained through that chemistry lecture.
Ratliff is a Norman, Okla., junior in journalism.
More basketball photost
Catch more of the Winter Break basketball action.
See page 68
2
2B
Quick Looks
Tuesday January 13,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 13)
A new year brings much joy and happiness to your life. Something you always have wished for will begin to come true. Give it time, and don't give up.
Aries: Today is a 9.
Today you are rich with energy. Fun, romance and activities with children are all high on the list. Even being stuck with overtime hours at work will be a rewarding experience.
Taurus: Today is a 5.
Smooth interpersonal relationships are not your strong suit today. The best way to get along with someone may be to recognize that you'll disagree about everything. Sibling rivalry reaches new heights
Gemini: Today is a 7.
Stretching the truth is fun today, but there could be unpleasant
consequences later. Keep fact and fiction in their separate boxes in case someone takes you literally Put a theory into action.
Cancer: Today is an 8.
This is good time to spend money for yourself. After all, if you don't treat yourself right, who will? Even as you splurge today, be sure to save some for tomorrow.
Leo: Today is an 8.
If ever it were possible for you to be more energized than usual.
today is the day. Not only does the world revolve around you, you are the one making it turn. Keep this knowledge a secret in case another Leo feels like challenging your claim.
Virao: Todav is a 6.
When it comes to your health, you may be walking a thin line today. If stress overwhelms you, take one step backward and ten deep breaths. Make sure you leave some time for yourself in your busy schedule.
You somehow find yourself in a leadership position today. Your opinions carry weight and a sense of authority. Use your sudden empowerment to empower others.
Scorpio: Today is a 6.
Libra: Today is a 9.
Sagittarius: Today is a 7.
Capricorn; Today is a 6.
Aauarius: Todav is a 7.
Compromise is always better than continued hostilities. You can tap untold energy resources today. You may have to spend everything just to finish with your patience intact.
This is your day to bet against the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Take a chance, and do something unusual or daring. Not everyone agrees with your opinions, but at least they get you noticed.
Take the good with the bad today, and choose wisely. Others prove to be unreliable, and results seem unclear. Postpone big decisions that absolutely do not have to be made at this time.
Pisces: Today is a 5.
A full schedule has no place for health crises, but that could be.
Two people sitting together.
2
what caused them in the first place. Refusing to acknowledge a problem will not make it go away. Embracing it may not be the best solution either.
O
Big 12 Men's Basketball:
NORMAN, Okla. — Corey Brewer scored a career-high 36 points Monday night and Oklahoma used solid 3-point shooting in the second half to beat Texas, 91-75, in a game that included five technical fouls.
Brewer and Michael Johnson had two 3-pointers each in a 13-3 run that broke a 57-all tie and gave the Sooners (13.4, 4-0 Big 12) control for good. Evan Wiley added 18 as Oklahoma won its eighth straight game.
Oklahoma made six of eight 3-pointers in the second half and outscored the Longhorns 27-15 from beyond the arc.
LION
Brewer, who went 11-of-15 from the floor, eclipsed the 33 points he scored against Missouri.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Gabe Monueke scored 17 and DeJuan Vazquez 16 for Texas (6-9, 0-4). The Longhorns are 0-4 in league play for the first time since 1993.
Sports on TV tonight:
6:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Purdue
Uilinois
X
ESPN2 --- NCAA Basketball, Prov.
体
M
idence at Syracuse
M
P
TNT -- NBA Basketball, Seattle at Chicago
7 p.m.
USA — Boxing, champion Israel Cardona (27-2) 0. v. Sam Girard (17-3-1) for USBA lightweight championship; middleweights, John Mugabi (41-4) 0. v. Undra White (19-8-0); women's boxing, featherweights, Melinda Robinson (6-5-0) v. Deborah Nichols (3-0-0), at Ledyard, Conn.
8 p.m.
SCORPIO
ARCHERY
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, South Carolina at Kentucky
8:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball, Fordham at Duquesne
Tonight's NCAA men's Basketball Games (Top 25):
7 p.m. - No. 20 Rhode Island at La Sale
7:30 p.m. No. 23 Marquette at North Carolina Charlotte
7:30 p.m. - No. 9 Purdue at Illinois
7:30 p.m. - No. 10 Connecticut v.
Seton Hall at the Hartford Civic
7:30 p.m. - No. 15 Syracuse v.
Providence
8 p.m. - No. 17 Florida State at Clemson
9:30 p.m. - No. 6 Kentucky v. No.
14 South Carolina
Center
SPORTS, ETC.
1987 — Lewis Lloyd and Mitchell Wiggins of the Houston Rockets become the third and fourth National Basketball Association players to be banned from the league for using cocaine.
Today in sports:
1974 — The Miami Dolphins win their second straight Super Bowl in their third straight appearance with a 24-7 victory over the Minnesota Vikings. Larry Csonka, the game's MVP, gains 145 yards on 33 carries and scores a touchdown.
1962 - Wilt Chamberlain scores an NBA regulation-game record 73 points to lead the Philadelphia Warriors over the Chicago Packers 135-117.
-The Associated Press
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' women's basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through yesterday, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
AP TOP 25
| rank | team | rec | pts | pvs |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Tennessee(38) | 17-0 | 950 | 1 | 1 |
| 2. Old Dominion | 13-0 | 912 | 2 | 1 |
| 3. Connecticut | 15-1 | 870 | 3 | 4 |
| 4. Louisiana Tech | 12-2 | 830 | 4 | 1 |
| **5.Texas Tech** | **10-2** | **786** | **5** | 5 |
| 6. Vanderbilt | 13-1 | 759 | 6 | 8 |
| 7. N.Carolina | 12-2 | 714 | 8 | 8 |
| 8. Illinois | 12-4 | 618 | 11 | 10 |
| 9. Arizona | 9-3 | 574 | 10 | 10 |
| 10. N.Carolina St. | 14-1 | 566 | 17 | 14 |
| 11. Stanford | 6-4 | 353 | 17 | 14 |
| 12. Florida | 11-4 | 472 | 12 | 7 |
| 13.Washington | 10-2 | 455 | 17 | 7 |
| 14.Wisconsin | 13-3 | 434 | 15 | 9 |
| 15.Virginia | 11-3 | 426 | 9 | 9 |
| 16.SW Missouri St. | 12-1 | 353 | 13 | 13 |
| 17.Utah | 12-0 | 301 | 22 | 19 |
| 18.W.Kentucky | 13-4 | 226 | 19 | 19 |
| 19.Georgia | 10-4 | 220 | 20 | 10 |
| **20.Nebraska** | **12-5** | **75** | **15** | 16 |
| 21.Auburn | 11-3 | 157 | 18 | 18 |
| tie.Fla.International | 13-1 | 157 | 21 | 18 |
| 23.Clemson | 13-3 | 153 | — | 1 |
| 24.Purdue | 10-5 | 133 | 23 | 25 |
| 25.Duke | 10-4 | 113 | 25 | 25 |
Earl has shed role of savior he had at LSU
Continued from page 1B
At LSU, fans looked upon him as a savior for a struggling basketball program that had fallen from grace. He was expected to carry the program on his shoulders, but Earl said he could not handle the pressure that came with such high expectations straight out of high school.
why I decided to come to Kansas."
"It was like everything was on me," Earl said. "I had to do this and I had to do that, and I can't do it. You should never say you can't, but I couldn't carry the whole program by myself. That's not easy, and that's
When Earl transferred to Kansas, LSU refused to release him from his scholarship. He had played just 11 games for the Tigers, averaging 9.3 points and 5.7 rebounds, but that was enough to convince Earl that he had made the wrong decision.
"When I made my decision to transfer, I felt that you get two chances in this life," Earl said. "That was my second chance. I felt like I had made the best decision for me and my family, and hopefully, down the road, I will benefit from that."
A decision by the Collegiate Commissioner's Association in August granted Earl a mutual release from LSU, but his status was bumped from a sophomore to a junior. Earl chose to wear No. 3 at Kansas because it represented the number of years that he can play college basketball.
LSU is currently under investigation by the NCAA for possible rules violations, which may include the recruitment of Earl. If the NCAA finds any wrongdoings in recruitment of Earl or any other player, the NCAA may give him another year of eligibility.
by Kansas basketball officials in media guides, programs, rosters and other such items.
On Dec. 18, two days before Earl's debut, Williams said he was tired of answering questions about him.
Earl has been listed as a sophomore
"He is not the savior," Williams said.
"This team does not need to be saved."
This team does not need to be saved. Earl did not want to be the savior of LSU's basketball program. He just wanted to be surrounded by more experienced players while he learned the ropes.
At Kansas, he has that chance. A second chance.
Today:
SPORTS
CALENDAR
7 p.m. in Allen Field House - Women's Basketball v. Texas
Wednesday:
7:05 p.m. at College Station, Texas -
Men's basketball v. Texas A&M
Saturday:
1. 05 p.m. in Allen Field House - Men's basketball. v. Kansas State
2 p. m. at Columbia, Mo.- Women's Basketball at Missouri
1 p.m. at Carbondale, ill.- KU Swimming and Diving v. Southern Illinois University
TV TONIGHT
TUESDAY PRIMETIME
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO 3 Moesha ☑ Clueless ☑ Moesha (R) ☑ Clueless ☑ Xena Warrior Princess ☑ Mad Abo. You ☑ Hard Copy ☑ Cops ☑ LAPD
WDAF 4 "To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, julie Newman" *&*¹ News ☑ News ☑ Real TV ☑ H. Patrol ☑ Keenen Ivory
KCTV 5 JAG "With Intent to Die" ☑ Michael Hayes (In Stereo) ☑ Dellaventura (In Stereo) ☑ News ☑ Late Show (In Stereo) ☑ Seinfeld ☑
KCPT 7 Scientific American Frontiers ☑ Science Odyssey (In Stereo) ☑ Part 3 of 5 ☑ Business Rpt. ☑ Spilled Milk ☑ Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
KSNT 6 Mad Abo. You ☑ Newsradio ☑ Frasier ☑ Just Shoot ☐ Dateline (In Stereo) ☑ News ☑ Tongtight Show (In Stereo) ☑ Late Night ☑
KMBC 3 Drew Cary ☑ Souman ☐ Home Imp. ☐ Grace Under ☐ NYPD Blue (In Stereo) ☐ PA (A) ☑ Rosanne ☑ Grace Under ☐ M"A'SH" ☑
KTWU 1 Searching for the Maya ☑ Science Odyssey (In Stereo) ☐ Part 5 of 5 ☑ All Aboard ☐ Business Rpt. ★Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
WIBiw 1 JAG "With Intent to Die" ☑ Michael Hayes (In Stereo) ☐ Dellaventura (In Stereo) ☐ News ☐ Late Show (In Stereo) ☐ Late Late ☑
KTKA 4 Drew Cary ☐ Souman ☐ Home Imp. ☐ Grace Under ☐ NYPD Blue (In Stereo) ☐ PA (A) ☑ News ☐ Seinfeld ☑ Married ☑
CABLE STATIONS
AAE 2 Biography: Calvin Klein ☐ "Ghost in the Machine" (1988, Mystery) John Thaw. ☐ Law & Order ☐ Biography: Calvin Klein
CNBC 3 Equal Time ☐ Hardball ☐ Rivera Live ☐ News With Brian Williams ☐ Charles Grodin ☐ Rivera Live (R)
CNN 4 Prime News ☐ Burden-Proof ☐ Larry King Live ☐ World Today ☐ Sports Illus. ☐ NewsNight ☐ Showbiz
COM 2 All Renews ☐ Bill Maher-Funny ☐ Viva Variety ☐ Make-Laugh ☐ Daily Show ☐ Stein's Money ☐ Saturday Night Jay ☐
COURT 5 Prime Time Justice ☐ Cochran & Company ☐ Trial Story ☐ Prime Time Justice (R) ☐ Cochran & Company (R)
SPAN 4 Prime Time Public Affairs ☐ Prime Time Public Affairs ☐
DISC 2 Wild Discovery ☐ New Detectives: Case Studies ☐ Esc. Alcatraz ☐ Justice Files "Con Artists" ☐ Wild Discovery (R)
ESPN 16 (6:30) College Basketball: Purdue at Illinois. ☐ College Basketball: South Carolina at Kentucky, (Live) ☐ Sportscenter ☐ Strongman
HIST 5 In search of History (R) ☐ Desert Storm ☐ Great Shifts "The Catina at Kentucky, (Live)" ☐ Sportscenter ☐ In search of History (R)
LIFE 1 Unsolved Mysteries ☐ "Child in the Night" *¹⁰ (1990, Drama) Jacob Williams ☐ Almost ☉ Golden Girls ☐ Mysteries
MTV 3 Music Videos ☐ Beavis-Butt. ☐ MTV Live (R) ☐ Beavis-Butt. ☐ Loveline (In Stereo) ☐ Singled Out ☉ Viewers
SCRI 3 Sightings (In Stereo) ☐ Forever Knight "The Code" ☐ Tekwar "Deadline" (In Stereo) ☐ Sequester DSV "Lostland" ☐ Sightings (In Stereo)
TLC 2 Trauma II in Life (R) ☐ Turning Point (R) ☐ Super Structures ☐ Trauma II in Life in the ER (R) ☐ Turning Point (R)
TNT 2 NBA Basketball: Seattle SuperSonics at Chicago Bulls. (In Stereo Live) ☐ Inside-NBA ☐ "House Party 3" *¹⁴ (1994, Comedy) Christopher Reid.
USA 2 Walker, Texas Ranger ☐ Boxing: Iloe "Plo" Cardona vs. John John Molina. ☐ Silk Stalking "Dead Asleep" ☐ Highlander: The Series (R)
VHI 1 Hollywind-Vinyl ☐ Backed in the Music ☐ Legends (R) ☐ Legends (R) ☐ Legends (R)
WGN 2 "The Cover Girl Murders" *¹⁰ (1993, Jennifer O'Neill ☐ Honeymrn ☐ News ☐ Beverly Hills, 90210 ☐ In the Heat of the Night (R)
WTBS 1 "Quigley Down Under" *¹⁰ (1990, Westm) Tom Selick. ☐ Evils on Ice ☐ "The Deep" *¹⁰ (1977)
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 2 "Vegas Vacation" *¹⁰ (1979) Chevy Chase. ☐ "In the Goosem" *¹⁰ (1979) Glenn Close. ☐ Tracy takes ☐ "Drive" *¹⁴ (1966, Adventure) Mark Dacosco. ☐ Max 3 ☐ "D.O.A." *¹⁸ (1988, Suspense) Dennis Quad. ☐ "Little Witchs" *¹⁶ (1990 Mini Reichsmacher. ☐ "Access Denied" *¹⁹ (1968) Cole McDermott.
SHOW 2 "Above the Law" *¹⁰ (1988) Steven Seagal. ☐ "Balance of Power" (1997, Drama) Billy Blanks. (In Stereo) ☐ Red Shoe ☐ Beverly Hills ☐ "Drunkne" *¹⁰ (1977)
KANSAN ADVERTISING GETS RESULTS
Tuesday, January 13. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
Kansas' depth overwhelms Big 12
The Associated Press
KANSA CITY, Mo. — Winning 599 games has made a realist of
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Oklahoma a State coach Eddie Sutton. When he goes hunting for No. 600 tomorrow at Missouri, he just
oSu
will be glad he is not facing Kansas. Sutton and the rest of the Big 12 Conference coaches agree: Finishing second to the Jayhawks this year would make it a successful season.
"I'll admit it," Sutton
said Monday during the Big 12's weekly conference call. "I don't think anybody is going to beat Kansas. Kansas has got just too many warriors. No one will beat them unless they fall flat on their
face or lose three players."
"We certainly would like to compete better than what we are able to with Kansas," Sutton added. "Hopefully, we'll get a few more soldiers that would allow us to do that, and I hope the other teams in the league do too."
Most league coaches agree that the talent level in the Big 12 is down from last year because of the early defenses of several players to the NBA. But they say the influx of talented freshman like Ryan Humphrey at Oklahoma means the conference should become more competitive soon.
Still, there is Kansas to deal with this year.
"I do think there's no question Kansas is an elite team," said Baylor's Harry Miller, whose team is 3.
KU
We're not at Kansas' level, and we'll not go to that level this year."
"Kansas is different from the rest of us. Our program is in its infancy. (Finishing second) would make the alums happy. We'll have a ticker tape parade in downtown Waco," he said.
Kansas is 3-0 in Big 12 play and 19-2 overall, despite the loss of Raef LaFrentz and T.J. Pugh to injuries.
Texas A&M coach Tony Barone said that even though Raef LaFrentz was the key to the team last year, losing him to injury has not let Kansas miss a beat. Texas A&M gets the Kansas test Wednesday in College Station.
("Lester) Earl has come in and done a good job for them," he said. "Ryan Robertson finds ways to get the ball to the right guys. Paul Pierce is like a silent assassin out there. He hangs around, gets an offensive rebound. All of a sudden, he steals the ball and gets a dunk. Then he hits a 3-pointer."
Injuries have hit several Big 12 teams this year. Oklahoma coach
Q
Kelvin Sampson needs a couple of minutes to run through his injury list.
When the
Sooners got home Saturday from playing Texas A&M, four players immediately went to the hospital.
Baylor has been through injuries. Texas has lost Kris Clack to a knee
injurv.
The most puzzling illness so far is the anemia suffered by Humphrey. He was held out of the Texas A&M game and has performed several tests during the week.
BU
"Kansas is a
great, great team and a great program," said Texas coach Tom Penders. "They're the standard bearer for the league."
U.S. coach has plan for Goodwill Games
The Associated Press
NEW YORK- Minutes after Clem Haskins was introduced Monday as coach of the U.S.'s men's bas
100
Haskins: Already knows who he wants to play for him at the Goodwill Games.
ketball team at the Goodwill Games, he made it clear what kind of player he wants on his team.
Atlanta, did not mention any names
"There are a lot of players I know I want on the team, but it's not fair to reveal their names," he said at Madison Square Garden, the site of the men's basketball competition July 19-24. "Number one, you have so many who may be involved with the NBA draft. That's a big concern between now and when we hold the trials for this team in May."
The deadline for underclassmen declaring for the draft is May 10. This will affect which individuals play for Haskins, not what type of player.
"I have a feel for and understand
what we need at each position to win. We need shooters," said Haskins, The Associated Press coach of the year last season. "We at USA Basketball realize that over the last two decades, our shooters have gone away, gone the way of the buffalo. We have to find shooters at the one and three positions and even the four."
"We need people who also know how to defend because these other countries have really good shooters, even to the point of 6-11, 7-foot guys playing on the perimeter," he said.
Haskins also knows what he wants from the 12 players selected as far as character.
"When you represent this country, you should do it in a first-class manner," Haskins said. "I don't think earrings, tattoos, shirts pulled out, baggy pants are ways of doing that. You can be sure of one thing, we will have 12 guys you will be very proud of because that's what I'm all about."
"Winning is important, critical, but to do it the right way is more important than winning the wrong way," he said.
The United States has been on a downhill curve in the Goodwill Games. Led by Lute Olson of Arizona, the United States took the gold in the inaugural games in 1986. Duke's Mike Krzyezwski led the team to a silver in 1990, and George Raveling of Southern California took the team to a bronze in 1994.
Stewart claims bias of officials plaguing Mizzou player Hardge
The Associated Press
Stewart: Thinks referees were out to get his players.
KANASAS CITY. Mo. — Missouri coach Norm Stewart said Monday
Stewart said he would not stand for it.
"I want to serve notice," he said during the weekly
telephone news conference between Big 12 coaches and
Hardge, Missouri's 6-foot-11, 300-pound center, fouled out early in the second half of Missouri's loss at Iowa State Saturday.
After fouling Iowa State's Marcus Fizer for his fourth foul, Hardge was given a technical for his fifth foul to eliminate him from a game in which Iowa State rallied to win 73-62.
With Hardge gone, the 6-foot-7 freshman Fizer, considered one of the brightest young talents in the Big 12, had free reign in the middle.
Sutherland was a rough player who even Stewart admitted at times overstepped the boundaries. Stewart sometimes took Sutherland out
of a game when he thought the player had stepped across the line.
But the presumption always was that officials were watching Sutherland more closely than other players. Now, Stewart said the same thing is happening with Hardge.
"No one else had to operate by the rules that Jason Sutherland had to operate under," Stewart said. "We all remember the play. He was put in a lock and a foul was called on him. Now, we have the same thing starting all over again. It started Saturday in Ames.
"We have a player who happens to be the biggest player in the league and a foul is called. It's not observable. But when he makes a simple turn and people flop on the floor, it's called a foul. I'm not going to allow another individual to be placed in a special situation and a special set of circumstances."
Hardge said he did not know what he had done to deserve the technical.
"I don't know what I said that was bad," Hardge said. "I can't even tell you. He made the call, so I shouldn't have said anything at all."
Iowa State coach Tim Floyd stayed away from the situation.
"As to whether or not he's guilty of his foul, Norm would probably be the best judge of that." Flood said
Fizer said Hardge did not complain to him.
"He was mostly telling me,'Good play, way to hustle.'" Fizer said. "He was very friendly. He was a nice guy."
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一叶堂
Section B · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 13, 1998
Oddsmakers bet Packers
Super Bowl game spread reaches almost 14 points
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — It's become a January ritual in the sports books on the glittering Las Vegas Strip. Throw out a big number on the NFC's Super Bowl team and watch betters quickly push it higher.
This year is no different, with bettors so confident in the chances of the Green Bay Packers that they are willing to give away nearly two touchdowns on the point spread to the Denver Broncos.
The 12 1/2-point line posted at most books following Sunday's conference title games wasn't enough to stop bettors from putting money on the Packers.
who quickly went to 13 1/2-point favorites around the city.
"It does seem kind of high, doesn't it?" a book writer at a Texas hotel-casino said, even as he accented bets on the Packers.
It would be quite high in the regular season, where oddsmakers say Green Bay would be only a 10-point favorite, even at home.
"This line is always out of whack for the Super Bowl," said Bally's sports book manager John Avelo. "We just throw a number out and say do with it what you've got to do with it."
Bettors are putting their money on Green Bay, ignoring the spread. Some Denver money appeared after the initial Packer rush, but Green Bay remained a 13-point favorite at most books yesterday.
It's the fifth year in a row that the NFC's Super Bowl representative has been a double-digit favorite, and the second year in a
row that the line has been in the two touchdown range.
Though Green Bay is a favorite, sports book operators were more than happy to see Denver in the title game. Denver fans historically have backed their teams with money.
Roxborough said the attractive matchup combined with gamblers stopping in Las Vegas to bet on their way to San Diego should help betting top the $70.9 million record set in 1996.
Also, bettors had a good day versus the sports books Sunday, betting on the Broncos and Packers, who both covered the spread.
"I think we'll get a lot of money on the underdog," Avelo said. "People may not feel Denver can win the game, but they feel Denver can hang around and stay close enough."
"That's probably the most important thing of all," Roxborough said. "They're walking around with a lot of money in their pockets."
Baseball star hit with cancer
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The tumor found in the brain of former baseball star Dan Quisenberry last week was cancerous, Research Medical Center said yesterday.
Hospital spokesman Jim Gember described it as a grade IV malignant tumor, a potential worst-case scenario for the popular relief pitcher who spent most of his career with the Kansas City Royals.
"The grade four is the most serious," Gember said.
Most of the walnut-sized tumor was removed in a 1/2-1 hour operation Thursday. Pathology tests indicating the tumor's classification were released to Quisenberry yesterday. Neither
KING KONG
his neurosurgeon, Jonathan Chilton, nor Gember would speculate about the survival rate of patients with such tumors.
"With his projected type of therapy, we now measure these situations in months to years." Chilton
said in a statement released by the hospital.
"It is very unlikely that the malignancy will (spread) to other areas of his body," *hilton* said.
Gember said it was not known whether Quisenberry would choose radiation or chemotherapy treatments..
Quisenberry, 44, reported headaches and blurred vision to doctors more than a week ago.
He was released from the hospital Saturday, less than three days after more than 80 percent of the tumor, known medically as an astrocytoma, was cut from the right side of his brain.
By Dave Goldborg The Associated Press
Broncos saddle AFC's hope
It's been nine seasons since John Elway has been to the Super Bowl.
An AFC team still hasn't won.
When Elway and the Denver Broncos were pasted by the Giants, Redskins and 49ers after the 1986, 1987 and 1989 seasons, those were the third, fourth and sixth straight wins for NFC teams.
"You know how these things are," said George Young, then general manager of the Giants, after the third one. "They work in cycles. The AFC will start winning again."
Last week, Young left for the NFL front office, Elway made it back to the Super Bowl and the AFC now has lost 13 straight NFL title games. The early line for this year's championship has Green Bay a 13 1/2-point favorite over Denver.
Why are the Packers such heavy favorites?
Brett Favre is the NFL's best quarterback, as good or better than Elway was a decade ago.
Green Bay's defense is the league's strongest now. It hasn't surrendered a touchdown pass in 31 quarters.
It hasn't surrendered a touchdown pass in 31 quarters. This Denver team is the best that Elway has played on. When Terrell Davis runs the ball instead of Sammy Winder and Gerald Willhite, it makes a difference.
The receivers — Rod Smith, Ed McCaffrey and Willie Green — don't have a moniker like the old Three Amigles, but they're as good or better. And Shannon Sharpe, the tight end who runs like a wideout, can be impossible to cover. The offensive line, anchored by Gary Zimmerman and center Tom Nalen, is very good.
But Green Bay can score with Denver: Favre vs. Elway; Dorsey Levens vs. Davis; Robert Brooks, Antonio Freeman and Derrick Mayes vs. the Denver wide receivers; and Mark Mcmura vs. Sharpe at tight end.
Add an underrated offensive line and it's pretty much a wash. But defense is another story.
"We don't care about individual honors, we play team defense," said strong safety LeRoy Butler, the only Packer defender to make All-Pro. "We're just as happy when someone else makes a play."
Many Packers' defensive players are big-time players, starting with Gilbert Brown. He's the reason teams don't run on Green Bay — the 49ers got 33 yards on 18 attempts Sunday.
There's also Reggie White, not the force at 35 he was a decade ago but still a player who makes big plays — like three sacks in last season's Super Bowl.
There's Santana Dotson, an excellent inside pass rusher, and Brian Williams, a speed linebacker who styles him
18 7
Denver Broncos' quarterback John Elway avoids the outstretched arms of Kansas City linebacker Derrick Thomas. Elway, 37, earned his fourth trip to the Super Bowl when Denver defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday. The Broncos will play the Green Bay Packers Jan. 25 at San Diego. Photo by Steve Puppe/Kansan
self after this year's two all-Pro outside linebackers -- Denver's John Mobley and the Giants'杰里 Armstead.
And there is cornerback Doug Evans, who was assigned every week to the opponents' best receiver and usually shut him down.
Denver's defense has solid players such as Mobley and cornerback Ray Crockett. Safeties Steve Atwater and Tyrone Braxton are the only two starters besides Elway who played with the Broncos in their last Super Bowl.
But like those Super Bowl Broncos of the late '80s, these Broncos can be run on.
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The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 5
Cowboys try to wrangle new coach
Jones may corral Broncos' assistant, former coach hints
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — Leaks keep hindering Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones' secretive coaching search.
The man he just paid off, Barry Switzer, has been one of the loose cannons Jones would like to tie down.
Switzer told an Oklahoma television station Sunday that George Seifert would not be the coach of the Dallas Cowboys.
Seifert's contract with the San Francisco 49ers end Feb. 1, and he is one of the NFL's hottest coaching candidates. Seifert has said he would be interested in coaching the Cowboys.
The Dallas Morning News reported yesterday that Switzer,
acting on a request from Jones, had called Denver coach Mike Shanahan about offensive coordinator Gary Kubik.
Shanahan gave Switzer an uplifting report about Kubiak, who has been offensive coordinator three years. He also was a backup to John Elway for nine
seasons.
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Switzer: May be saying too much.
Under Kubiak, the Broncos offense has ranked first in the NFL the past two seasons. Offensive problems sank the Cowboys this season. They plummeted to a 6-10 record and failed to
make the playoffs for the first time in seven years.
could call Kubiak with Denver's permission. Kubiak hasn't said whether he is interested.
This is an off-week before the Super Bowl, and the Cowboys
Jones was working the telephones yesterday but was not returning calls to the media.
However, one source at Valley Ranch said, "Barry may not be as clued in as 'he thinks he is."
A. P.
Jones:Wants to quiet his former coach.
"There will be no details about the candidats."
Switzer's resignation stung Jones last week when it became public before he wished. Jones has vowed that his coaching search will be bug free.
Jones said he would announce Switzer's replacement next month.
Switzer had no comment about former Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz, former UCLA coach Terry Donahue, Philadelphia offensive coordinator Jon Gruden or candidates from Dallas' assistant ranks.
Meanwhile, the assistant coaches were studying film from this season while awaiting word from Jones if they will be retained.
Offensive coordinator Ernie Zampese has a guaranteed contract through next season but thinks he will be fired anyway. Quarterback coach Jack Reilly has a year remaining on his contact. Defensive coordinator Dave Campo and special teams coach Joe Avezzano are expected to return.
Jones has given contracts to several new assistants but refuses to name them. That's one secret that has yet to be leaked.
The Associated Press
Former Saints' coach returns to football to lead woeful Colts
INDIANAPOLIS—Jim Mora, who spent his entire NFL coaching career the New Orleans Saints,
C
He succeeds Lindy Infante, who was fired
returned to pro football today as coach of the Indianapolis Colts.
after a season during which the Colts finished a league-worst 3-13 and lost their first 10 games. The appointment was announced at a news conference at the RCA Dome.
"Maybe I was burned out a little," Mora said. "But I think the year and a half off was probably good for me. One of the problems is maybe in this business that you can stay someplace too long. Over a period of time, a lot of things happen."
Mora, 62, whose son Jim coaches the defensive backs for the San Francisco 49ers, is the NFL's second-oldest player, behind 66-yearold Ted Marchibroda of Baltimore, a former Colts coach. Mora was considered for the St. Louis Rams' coaching position a year ago, a job that eventually went to Dick Vermeil.
"The last two or three years in New Orleans were tough years in the organization," Mora said. "We weren't as good a team as we had
been earlier. I chose to resign... It felt at the time that it was the right thing to do. I still think it was the right thing to do. It was a great 10 1/2 years. Now, I feel like I'm getting a second chance."
When he left the Saints following a loss to Charlotte and a profane postgame tirade, Mora had had the longest tenure with one team of any coach in major professional sports.
"That is a moment I feel poorly about. I don't feel good about that press conference," he said. "Every time I see it, I want to crine. I'm extremely embarrassed about it. I'm an emotional guy, but I carried it to an extreme. I hope the media and the fans in Indianapolis will not judge Jim Mora on that news conference."
Mora coached the Saints from 1906-96 and compiled a 93-78 record, making him the winningest coach in the team's 30-year history. With a 2-6 record in 1996, however, he announced he was leaving for personal reasons. The Saints finished 3-13 after former Colts defensive coordinator Rick Venturi took over as interim coach.
Mora's first season at New Orleans produced a 7-9 record, but the 1987 team had a franchise-record nine-game winning streak and posted the NFL's second-best record at 12-3, the Saints' first winning season.
Baltimore Ravens' player sent to jail
Bam Morris violates parole, plea bargains sentence to 120 days
The Associated Press
ROCKWALL, Texas— With tears in his eyes, Bam Morris was taken from a courtroom in handcuffs Monday to begin a 120-day jail sentence for violating his probation for a 1996 marijuana possession conviction.
B
Morris admitted to missing seven meetings with his probation officer since going on deferred adjudication in June 1996.
He denied two other allegations and, as part of a plea bargain, was sentenced to four months instead of a possible 10 years.
State District Judge Sue Pirtle told Morris, a free-agent running back who played for the Baltimore Ravens this season, that if he made another mistake, he would have to serve the remainder of the sentence in prison with no chance for appeal.
"It may look like you're getting off, but if you don't report to all meetings, (or) if you are involved with drugs or even alcohol, you have a sentence for 10 years already in place." Pirtle said.
Morris denied that he violated his probation by consuming alcohol and assaulting Dallas resident
April Dawn Brittain at a Nov. 16
birthday party in Woodlawn, Md.
Morris' denial of the allegations was not contested by prosecutors as part of the plea bargain.
Morris, 25, also arranged a plea bargain two years ago, when he pleaded guilty to charges of marijuana possession in exchange for prosecutors dropping cocaine possession charges. Although he could have been given the 10-year sentence at that time, Morris instead received probation for six years and no time behind bars.
Before Pirtle approved the plea bargain yesterday, she warned Morris that this was his last chance.
"I know that you have many agents and other people who try to protect you, but if you come back here, there will be no one who can protect you from this." Pirtle said.
Morris missed some meetings because he was confused about whether he could attend the meetings in Baltimore or in Rockwall, an east Dallas suburb, attorney Keith Wheeler said.
Pirtle said all of Morris's future probation meetings would be in Rockwall. She also sentenced him to 300 hours of community service in Rockwall, fined him $2,000 and said Rockwall officials will have the right to demand the result of any of his future NFL drug tests.
After winning the Doak Walker Award as the nation's top collegiate running back in 1993, Morris entered the NFL and starred with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
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Dakotah Reservations Services, Inc. is seeking qualified candidates to answer inbound phone calls in our Lawrence and Mission offices. We provide answering services for some of today's biggest, most exciting companies.
We are looking for individuals with:
- Strong Communications Skills
- Strong Communications Skills
* Accurate Keyboard Typing Skills
- Accurate Keyboard Typing SKILLS
- High Energy Level
- We offer:
- $7.00 per hour
* Paid Training
- Professional Casual Dress Environmen
* A variety of Flexible Work Schedules
(fits well with school schedules)
To find out how to join our teams, please apply in person between 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. at:
1601 West 23rd Street
Suite 206
Lawrence, Kansas
Or Call: (785) 331-4900
Get on the line for today's biggest names.
DaKO TaH
DAKOTAH
Reservation Services, Inc.
A unit of Gensale Talesery Corporation
Gensale
Genesis
SOLAR TURBINES
- $ \mathrm {A} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {B} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {C} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {D} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {E} ^ {\prime} $
$ \mathrm {B} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {C} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {D} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {E} ^ {\prime} $
$ \mathrm {A} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {B} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {C} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {D} ^ {\prime} \mathrm {E} ^ {\prime} $
Tuesday, January 13, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
TCU
21
After diving and knocking the ball loose from a Texas Christian University player, Kansas guard Billy Thomas hits the floor. Thomas raised his average points per game to 22 during the winter break and broke the Jayhawks' three-point shot record of 200 baskets. Thomas also made the All-Tournament team in the Rainbow Classic, setting tournament highs of 27 points 11 rebounds and 6 assists. Photo by Steve Pupke/KANSAN
KANSAS
24
MISSION
50
Kansas guard C.B. McGrath attempts to leap through Colorado defenders while driving for the basket. McGrath had one of his best games of the season against Texas on Jan. 10 with five rebounds and four assists. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
KANSAS
20
COLORADO
3
Sprint
MR. GOODGENTE
K. STATE
ABOVE*Kansas forward RaeF LaFrentz listens to an offical explain a call during the Sprint Shootout. The Jayhawks defeated former Big Eight coach Billy Tubbs and his Texas Christian University Horned Frogs on Dec. 20 at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
NISSAS
5
LEFT:Kansas guard Shandy Robbins jumps to avoid the ball with Kansas State's Jenna Cooney in pursuit. The Joyhaws lost to Kansas State 53-47 Jan. 7 in Manhattan. Tonight the women's basketball team will face Texas in Allen Field House. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
ABOVE: Kansas guard Kenny Gregory goes up for a dunk. Gregory had back-to-back dunks during the first half of Kansas' 111-62 victory against Colorado. The Jan. 7 game marked Gregory's first start as a Jayhawk. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
LEFT: Kansas forward Paul Pierce struggles with a Pepperdine defender for a loose ball. Pierce scored 23 points during the Jayhawk's 96-83 victory Dec. 18 in Allen Field House. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
BELOW: Kansas forward Paul Pierce takes two Texas Christian University defenders for a ride as he goes up for a basket. The Jayhawks defeated TCU 94-78. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
E-Mail the Kansan photo staff at photo@kansan.com
1997
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 7
7
Kansan Classified
II
100s Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
L15 On Campus
L15 Announcements
L15 Entertainment
L07 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
Classifled Pollcv
ity or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
325 Stereo Equipment
330 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
345 Miscellaneous for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
366 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
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, nationalwill be hiring 30 students to conduct telephone surveys. Surveys do not involve solicitation. Must have general knowledge of computers. Must have good command of English language and good computer skills. Salary up to $12.52 per hour DOE/QE, Applications may be completed at 607 Blake Hall, KU (785-864-4891), AAEO
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
410 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
I
100s Announcements
105 - Personals
♥ ♥
St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen applicants wanted. Call 841-2512. Deadline Jan. 27, 1998.
110 - Business Personals
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
CENTER
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
120 - Announcements
Spring Break Mazatlan
F
BEST HOTELS, LOWEST PRICES. ALL
SPRINGBREAK locations: Cancun, Jamaica,
from $399, Florida, from $89, Texas, Maxian,
from $499, New York, from $129, we are our Campus.
Rep. 802-376-6013 www.tripadvisor.com
Don't miss out on the HOTTEST destination in
Mexico Airfare, 7 nights hotel, transfers, FREE
drinks, 15 FREEC meals, parties. For FREE
brochure 1-305-395-4896 (www.collectour.com)
Instructional & Educational video's & CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited Internet
access for only $19.50/mo., tell your parents,
shopping http://www.infotutorial.com/p-line
SPRING BREAK trips to Mexico, Jamaica, and Florida. From $99 & $89 Call Jason at 40-814-9188.
125 - Travel
T
Spring Break '98. South Padre Island.
www.pirentals.com 1-400-292-7520
男 女
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
Child care in home: 3 kids; 3 days/wk. Reliable,
non-smoker, house (913) 845-3603
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for safe Ride drivers. Must be 23 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 p.m.
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS Avail from nonn (at least) any wkdies. Need experience, ref., own transportation. Work may extend into summer & fall. Call Judy or John 842-3581.
205 - Help Wanted
Female figure model needed for artist's project.
Experience not necessary. Must be 18. Stable personality required. Leave name and number at 691-9798.
Graphic Design and Advertising Internships still available for Sp. semester. Get some real world experience in Design, Web, Advertising, and Printing. Call for more info Pilgrimage Page 841-1221.
Marketing Intern/Personal Assistant Interesting and challenging position for the right person. A unique opportunity with flexible hours. Call Dick at 843-4527
$Expansion 98 $Nat. co-immediate PT/FT
inquiries in Lawrence/JOCO & entry level air-
conditioning in Melbourne
no experer, cond. apply. Call 913-381-9675 11-5
Customer service positions available immediately for enthusiastic, motivated individuals. Full time pay for part-time hours. Great forcolleagues who need a full hour. Start call Today 814-641-654. Ask for Melonie
PT student aide positions available at Hilltop Child Development Center, Mon.-Fri. 12:30:2-3 p.m and Mon.-Fri. 7:15:0-30 m. His call number is 6824739. He will hit the cross from the Kansas University (Kansas) access.
PT assistant teacher positions available at Hilltop Child Development Center, Mon.-Fri. 11-30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Please call 864-4940 for more info from the Kansas Union) for an application.
Brookcreek Learning Center, an early childhood early intervention program, is hiring PT teaching applications at 200 Milpitas Court. For more information call 865-0922
Men & Women Needed Headquarters Counseling
Sessions. Please email your name to:
sary-training provided. Interested? Meetings:
7:00 p.m. tues. 13:14 at婴CM. 1204 Orden,
or 7:00 p.m. sun. Jan. 16 atCommunity Support
Center, 555 West 48th Street, New York, NY
Part time recycling technician need in the Office of Resource Conservation & Recycling (RCR). Duties will include collection & processing of recyclables & minimal data entry. Some heavy equipment required. Contact Student Placement 47425 code serial code 98-01 OR contact RCR at r4-4069
Students in the Special Education/Nursing Curriculum. Looking for responsible individuals to assist in caring for disabled children, ages 4-15. Shifts available: Early AM, Weekend (7-8AM). afternoons, and evenings. Hourly wage assistance. Volunteer assistance. Association: contact tn hands At HZ, 822-351
Tutors-Part time positions, approx. 6hrs per week. Individual and small group tutoring with children age 6-18. Requirements: Baccalaureate Degree with major or minor in education or student teacher with supervision. Send Resume to Incwil, inc. II25W, SW 20th, Keswick, Ka651 JEOE
Assistant Director of the Learning Center at Saint Mary College; 15 hours/week, Tues.-Thurs. afternoons (flexible). Requirements: ability to tutor in math, science, and computer use. Bachelors degree required. Send resume to New Hove Academy, Learning Center, 275 W. Lakewood Blvd., South 8th sath, Leavenworth, KS 60443. AA/EOE
CNA/CHIAh Our busy not for profit home health agency is recruiting caring, team oriented CNA's/sCHIA's to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Even hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, 336 North Country Visiting Level or call 641-4683 for PAT EOE.
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference,
The Rock Chalk Café at College Park-Naismith Hall seeks part-time Dish Room Attendants and a full-time Chef. Weekdays 8:00 p.m., weekends 11:00-4:00. Positions require customer friendly attitudes and the desire to have fun at work. Competitive wages, a good work ethic and job application between 9:00 m. to 5:00 p.m.
The KU FIT TEAM staff is looking for an energetic and friendly personal Weight Room Assistant to assist participants in one-on-one instruction in the Robinson Weight Room. Personal experience is preferred. Come by 288 Robinson for information and a job application call 864-3544.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
KU FIT TEAM
Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/V/H.
205 - Help Wanted
---
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disa-
nage woman day active & involved Hustle easy to do. Visit us at www.rh.com/business.
to learn, some lifting involved. Can be used.
STUDENT HOURLY: WAREHOUSE/SHIPPING POSITION to start ASAP; 15-20 hrs/hw (Mon-Fri, 1-5pm); 6 hrs or more enrollees needed for fieldwork on Uniress Press of Kansas warehouse at a423 W.19th St. (west campus); must be able to lift 50 lbs parcels; $25 hr/start, daily $$ incentives, & raises every 3 mos. Come by 250 W.19th St., (ph. 864-4154), to complete application.
WE ARE A FORTUNE 500 COMPANY GROWING LOCALLY IN LENEXA. WE ARE SEEKING TALENTED INDIVIDUALS TO FILL POSITIONES FOR THE FORTUNE OFFER: $199 - 800 OLD BASE, WEEKLY COMMISSIONS, NO TRAVEL, FULL BENEFITS, OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT? IF YOU MISS OUT OF THE COMMISSION OR SCHEDULING AN ANSWER PLEASE CALL (913) 492-8780 FOR KENNYC
$$$ BONUS! BONUS! $$$
Growing #1 Residential Home Improvement Co. seeks motivated, dependable people to take inbound calls. Nice phone. PC skills a must. $100 sign-on bonus after working 30 continuous 6-hr minimum shifts. $45/hr to start, and raises $75/hour after. Inbound vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at: Kantel, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this ad with you to qualify for bonus.
Community Living Opportunities (CLO) is currently accepting applications for teaching counsellors to work with and enhance the vocational and daily living skills of men and women with developmental and daily living skills of men and women in a community based settings in Lawrence. Positions available include full-time, part-time, and substitute day from 7a to 9a or 9a to 3a. apply in on Tuesdays, noon to 3p or Thursday, 9a to 10a for more information. Lawrence, or Lawrence, 865-5520 for more info.
GET OUT OF TOWN!!
Escape to the Pecos Canyon-warm days, cool nights, good friends, and great kids! Opportunities for leadership, experience, personal and professional growth. We are currently hiring for the following: Art, dance, drama, music, fancy riffles, tennis, soccer, swimming, archery, mountain biking, flyinghiking, ropes course, horseback riding, nature, backpacking. Also hiring for positions in our training program. Scott at 1-800-723-2843 for an application or resume to PO 1-800-5795 San Diego Ft. X. ^87502
Now hire for the Spring '88 Semester in the following positions:
NOTE TAKERS: earn $10-$15 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in large kU lecture classes for the entire semester. Must have already had class with grade of A. Must have 3.3 + GPA. Course open: B170 + 60VN14, Meg 104, MW 8:30). P110 (MW 114), Meg 104. Goel 10.
Earn $7.50/hour (Full-time students can earn extra $2.00/hour in tuition assistance) working part-time at a weekend Teaching Counselor. These positions involve teaching school and faculty roles, Inc. (COL). Positions involve teaching daily living skills to adults with developmental disabilities in casual, family style group homes and institutional settings. Use components of the internationally known Teaching-Family Model. Tuition assistance programs that are also full-time students, with work schedules that won’t interfere with school. Applications accepted during walk-in interviews on Tue 12-4 and Thurs 8-12 at 213 Lawrence, Delaware EOE
ADVERTISER'S. Distribute fliers before class
outside of lecture, Earn $6 for 30 minutes work.
Punctual, dependable, cheerful students need
only apply.
205 - Help Wanted
205 - Help Wanted
Hands holding balloons
Raintreit Montessori School is interviewing for late afternoon positions (3:15-5:30 M-F) and F-M-F from 10am to 6pm.
STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT I Deadline: 01/16/98. $7.15/hour. Under direction of the ITC I of System Access Management, duties include changing passwords on all systems at KU, use of the lark system, create and update password database, send e-mail accounts, keep records on Kubuh and Kuhub 2 time accounting. Also duties including typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned clerical duties with System Access Management; maintaining all procedures necessary for office in the absence of ITC I. Required: Enrolled in 6 hours at KU, able to work in 3-hour blocks, 20 hours a week, follow complex verbal and written instructions, 6 months typing experience. To apply complete a job application available in the Computer Center. EO/EA Employer
Chris Nowland
G-M Underwriters Agency, Inc.
89 W. South Bldd.
Trox, M 4006
Trox, M 4006
Underwriting Agency will train the right person to become a Student Representative for the University of Kansas Medical Center on a part time basis. You will receive training and students may have in respect to their health insurance and keeping the Account Executive up-to-date. We are willing to work around your class schedule. Requirements are: Microsoft Word skills. Please forward resumes to:
Student Health Insurance Representative For Students at the University of Kansas Medical Center
National Computer Systems. Inc. has 40 immediate long-term temporary Customer Service & Data Entry positions available on Jobsite, Jockshire, Flexible scheduling between 7 a.m. & 7 p.m.
1st & 2nd shift options in Data Entry
-A casual work environment
-Length of service pay increases
-Opportunity to work on employment *
-Training scheduled weekly (D/E) & monthly
Both positions require a 3,000 kph (test required)
Walk in today and apply
East Hill Public Park of K-10)
3833 Greenway Drive
Lawrence, KS
Juicers
Shenmongs
Showgirls
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly.
Now hiring managers, DJs,
attractive dancers and
waitresses 18+. Apply in person.
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-1122 after 7 p.m.
225 - Professional Services
---
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 Ease 39th 516
205 - Help Wanted
Tired of flipping burgers?
MEN WOMEN MEN WOMEN MEN WOMEN
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
A Division of Buckingham Palace, Inc.
We Employ Students!...
- Part Time Evenings (Sun-Thurs 2 OR 3 hrs nightly)
- Mon/Wed/Fri or Tues/Thurs day once a week
* We provide on-job transportation once you get
- $6-7 Potential
- Fax 842-6250
* Professional Training
- Friendly Environment
Call 842-6264 or apply in person at 939 Iowa.
CUSTOMER SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS
300s Merchandise
305 - For Sale
S
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases. Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Education Center for sale! $100 call 841-925-8116
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 call 841-925-8116
370 - Want to Buy
$$
$$$$
WANTED:
$1,000 Reward
Your used computer (PC or Mac) We are paying up to
for your good used computer.
UNI Computers 841-4611
A
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
Sublease BDM in 3 in BDM townhouse on Monterey BDM. Great price call ryan at 914-836-4388.
Walk to campus. Room for rent in lovely family home $300/mo. Female, non-smoker. B4-6500
1, 2 and 3 bdm. Near KU & Downtown w/park
charge. $34 per mls. $45/mo. Call 854-6815
868-7029
1 BR, walk to KU. Avail, now, lease through July.
$405/mo. Two months rent for Very clean, free cab and call. Traash L泉 913-891-9923
2 BRAvail now. Top Level Spacious, quiet loca-
tion, 10 min walk from bus stop, balcony,
phone: $25 413-8001 1 to view
BDRM's avail now @ 325ac location. New car-
kingship call now at 811-706-9100 or $50/loy $104 to view it.
Heatherwood Valley Apartments now starting short term leasing for 3 bedroom apartments.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE Coed student housing alternative to private landlords. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by 1406 Tennessee st. 81-0484
Leanna Mar Townhomes
4 Bedroom/3 Bath
**Early Sign Up Special**
($40 off per month)
Washer/Dryer Trash Compactor Diswasher Gas Fireplace Macrowave Back Potto Ceiling Fans Walk-In Closets Covered Parking
For More Info: (785) 841-7849
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
13'1/2 E. 8TH ST., LAWRENCE
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
841-5454
405 - Apartments for Rent
Unfurnished Room
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
GREAT LOCATION!!!
2 BEDMOTT APART. AVAILABLE JAN 1
1st month Free $280/mo + utilities
LOCATED ON 134 VERMONT #CALL 841-9115
D1 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
COLONY WOODS
1301 W.24th & Nalsmith
On KU Bus Route
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
M mastercraft management
designed with you in mind.
the following locations
Hanover Place
14th & Mass 841-1212
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana 841-1429
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold *749-4226*
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am - 4pm
At some locations
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
415 - Homes For Rent
Houses and Trees
Large house for lease. Beginning in May, June, or August. Also furnished room with bath available on request.
430 - Roommate Wanted
I'M wanted to buy 3 BDM M house. M or F, non-smoker/student preferred. $24 & tuition required. (313-875-4100) 313-875-4100. (313-875-4100).
Female RM needed to share 3 BDRm apt.
$250 to $100 utilities. January rent pd. Call
0123456789.
One nice NS female room needed. 3bed 2 bath apt. on bus route. 272/mo +1/8 utility room. Room is available.
Sublease female roommate wanted for spring semester $200/mo. will pay first month's rent. Includes $40/mo. of rent.
SPACIUS Sr/Grad folks dspk 2 N/Sem. Avail no Bright vaulted skylight dspk. nr. campus. Quit clean air away from traffic, on park (birds, trees, buildings). D $20 Ulds Pd. #842/146 tree 5am./09m.
Male roommate wanted to share his specimen 2 bedroom apt. at 1128 Ohio, between campus & downstream. Close to GSP-Corbin. Your share $250 *Utilities, no bills* 843-197-202
We're looking for another female to share 3 berm
home. On bus route, washer, dryer, Cable, water
paid +1/3 other utills $255/mo. Call 843-6121 ask
for a leave or miss leaves.
.
Section B·Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 13, 1998
KASSIS ATHLETICS
Judd Blake, St. John sophomore, catches a ball thrown by his sister in the physical therapy room at St. Joseph Health Center. Blake has been a patient at the hospital since he broke both legs in a Nov. 26 collision. Photo by Lisa Stevens John/KANSAN
Sophomore recuperates from near-fatal collision
Spirits soar high strong for Blake
By Lisa Stevens John Kanson staff writer
As students at the University of Kansas begin a new semester, one student wishes he could join them.
Judd Blake, St. John sophomore, was injured in a head-on vehicle collision Nov. 26. Once an active student in Lawrence, Blake now spends his time recuperating in an apartment at St. Joseph Health Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Metallic balloons hover above a desk covered with flower arrangements, the antiseptic smell of a hospital fills the air and a football game blares from a television. Blake enters the room in a wheelchair and reaches for crutches that lean against the wall.
The accident shattered Blake's right knee and crushed the heel of his right foot. He suffered compound fractures of the tibia and fibula in his left leg, a broken left femur, six fractured ribs, a punctured lung, a ruptured spleen, cerebral hemorrhages and facial injuries.
The driver and passenger in the other truck suffered only minor
Although Blake is looking forward to returning to the University, he will have to sit out the spring semester while he undergoes rehabilitation.
He is scheduled to leave the hospital Thursday and will travel to Ulysses, where he will live with his father and continue physical therapy.
injuries.
"I'd rather come back to Lawrence, but I've got to get better first," he said. "You can't skip steps."
Blake can't recall the accident that nearly took his life. He remembers packing his clothes that morning, going to the Student Union to pick up his paycheck for his job at Wescoe Terrace and heading east out of Lawrence to visit relatives in Pittsburg.
Approximately 45 minutes later, Blake's Toyota truck crossed the center line on a highway in Miami County and collided with an oncoming truck. Blake said.
It took one hour and 45 minutes to remove the roof of the cab and lift Blake from the truck. He was flown by helicopter to St. Joseph Health Center and in surgery for over ten hours.
Blake's sister, Erica Westoff, Pittsburg, said rescue workers didn't think Blake was alive.
"But then they heard him gurgling." she said.
Blake spent 11 days in the intensive
"There are times I get bummed out,but you can't let it get you down. You've got to work hard to get better."
Judd Blake
St. John sophomore
care unit. Then the grueling work of physical therapy began.
"The first time they hed me stand up, I wanted to say," Lay me back down again. "It hurt so bad, and I was so weak." he said.
Each time, therapy took him to his limit, he said.
"They would have me work until I would start shaking all over, and then they'd let me rest," Blake said.
He said his strength was coming back.
"I've been in rehab for a month," he said. "In the last week, I've noticed a lot of improvements. I'm able to do a lot more things independently."
Courage and determination seemed to run through Blake's comments.
"There are times I get bummed out, but you can't let it get you down. You've got to work hard to get better," he said.
Paleontologist cries fowl play in bird-origin debate
Fossils may prove feathered friends evolved elsewhere
By Susie Gura
Kansan staff writer
searching for fish fossils in China.
In 1990, Zhonghe Zhou, graduate research assistant at the University of Kansas' Natural History Museum, discovered the first fossil of the prehistoric bird cathayornis while
the discoveries of Zhou's bird fossil and a prehistoric dinosaur found by Larry Martin, senior curator of the museum, fueled a debate among scientists whether all modern birds descended from the same ancestors and whether birds were related to dinosaurs.
The cathayornis fossil showed that it was related to archaeopteryx, an older bird. Other studies done by Zhou and Martin showed that cathayornis was older than the
dinosauras that were thought to have looked like birds.
Martin argued that birds did not descend from dinosaurs.
"The origin of birds split into two lines, one that is extinct and the other that gave rise to modern birds," Martin said.
Last spring, the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia sent Martin and three other researchers to China to explore fossil beds.
In China, Martin found fossils of birds and dinosaurs in the same deposits. Among those fossils found by Martin was the
130 million-year-old dinosaur,
sinasuratteryx.
The dinosaur was found below birds' fossils. Scientists previously believed sinosauratteryx had a crest of primitive feathers, but Martin said that he now thought they were not actually feathers.
After the discovery Martin questioned whether feathered dinosaurs existed and whether birds descended from dinosaurs.
"We structured the model from sketches, built a body and then filled it in with clay," Martin said.
A model of sinosauratteryx will be on display next week in the Natural History Museum.
"It is rare to find that many specimens of a bird, especially one that is extinct." Zhou said.
Of the 30 Cathayornis specimens that exist, Zhou has found 15.
A model of cathayornis already is displayed in the museum.
Several of the fossils are located in the University's Natural History Museum, but the original specimen is in Beijing.
Iraq ready to block inspection
The Associated Press
In New York, U.N. chief weapons inspector Richard Butler said the monitoring teams — including the one led by ex-Marine Capt. Scott Ritter — would continue as planned.
BAGHAD, Iraq (AP) — Iraq will block U.N. weapons inspections led by an American Gulf War veteran it says is a spy, the government vowed Monday, setting the stage for a new confrontation with the United Nations.
Iraq has criticized Ritter, claiming he is an intelligence agent for the United States. Ritter denies the charge.
The agency's statement came after Ritter and a team of U.N. inspectors reportedly visited a hospital and a prison in Baghdad. It said the ban on Ritter would begin today.
An Iraqi government spokesman said the presence of too many Americans on the teams was prolonging the inspections program and delaying the lifting of U.N. sanctions on Iraq, the official Iraqi News Agency reported.
Other U.N. inspection teams will be allowed to continue their work, said Iraq's U.N. ambassador, Nizar Hamdoon.
The inspectors are trying to verify that Iraq has destroyed its weapons of mass destruction, a condition that must be met before the United Nations will lift trade sanctions imposed after the country's 1990 invasion of Kuwait.
In Washington, President Clinton said the United States has had nothing whatsoever to do with choosing members of the U.N. teams.
"Certainly Saddam Hussein shouldn't be able to pick and choose who does this work," Clinton said. "That's for the United Nations to decide."
He said he expects the U.N. Security Council to take strong action if the inspectors are denied their right to do their job.
The American ambassador to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, said the Iraqi move would be discussed at a Security Council meeting Thursday.
"Iraq is up to its old tricks," Richardson said. "We feel the Security Council should make a strong response."
星
1998 Is YOUR Year to Get KU FIT!
Attend any of our 60+ weekly aerobics and strength classes
KU FIT offers everything from traditional high/low impact to slide, slide, aqua, strength classes, boot camp, basketball inspired classes, boxing aerobics and much more! In addition. all KU FIT members have free access to our Personal Weight Room Assistance Classes begin January 20. Sign up today!!!
For more information contact Reed Rathbrough 864-3546 or stop by 209 Robinson
STUDENT
SENATE
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- Louise's Downtown
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- Fatso's
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- Quinton's
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- Dos Hombres
- Pool Room
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Barefoot Iguana
9th & Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center
An ad in the Kansan is the best way to deliver your message to KU students
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
RECREATION SERVICES SPORT CLUB PROGRAM
Looking for something FUN and EXCITING to do??
Badminton Rugby-Men's
Crew Rugby-Women's
Cycling Sailing
Fencing Soccer-Men's
Judo Soccer-Women's
Kempo Tae Kwon Do
Ki-Aikido Ultimate-Men's
Kuk Sool Won Ultimate-Women's
Lacrosse-Men's Volleyball-Men's
Lacrosse-Women's Volleyball-Women's
Racquetball Water Polo
Rock Climbing Water Ski
Roller Hockey Wrestling
10
跑
Cycling
A
Taekwondo
10
Wrest
The Sport Club Program at the University of Kansas consists of student organizations sponsored by the Office of Recreation Services. The Clubs are designed to serve student interests in different sports and recreational activities.Sports and/or activities within the Sport Club Program can be competitive, recreational or instructional in nature. Sport Clubs may represent the University of Kansas in intercollegiate competition or conduct club activities such as practice, instruction, and social play
For more information concerning:
**The above Sport Clubs**
**Starting a New Sport Club**
STUDENT
SENATE
Please call 864-3546, or stop by the Office of Recreation Services, 208 Robinson
STUDENT
SENATE
Tomorrow's weather
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KS STATE
PO BOX 35
TOPEKA, I
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PD BOX 3585
OPPEKA, KS 66601-3585
kansan
Warmer today with a chance for rain by mid-afternoon. Chance for rain tomorrow.
Wednesday
January 14, 1998
Section:
A
HIGH 46
Online today
HIGH LOW 46 26
The UDKI's photo section, the Gallery, is online and ready to view. Check out the shots didn't make the paper.
Sports today
A
TOLUNA
Vol. 108·No.79
http://www.kansan.com
P
The Kansas women's basketball team erased a 15-point halftime deficit to defeat Texas 76-71 last night in Allen Field House.
SEE PAGE 1B
Contact the Kansan
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News: (785) 864-4810
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(USPS 650-640)
Elections Commission OKs polling sites
Students to vote at three dining center locations
By Melissa Ngo Kansan staff writer
The Elections Commission voted last night to set up three polling sites at residence hall dining centers during the April 1989 Student Senate elections.
The polling sites will be at Oliver Hall, Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall, and Ekdahl Dining Commons at Lewis Hall, as suggested in the compromise resolution, said Brad Finkeldei, commission member.
The tentative times that the sites will be open are from 4 to 7 p.m. the first day of elections and from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. the second day of elections, Finkeldei said. The commission will confirm the times at a later meeting.
R. J. Woodring, Association of University Residence Halls nurse who helped draft the compromise resolution, said he was excited about the commission's decision.
"I think it's definitely laying the groundwork for full-time polling sites at all three locations for next year," Woodrood said. "It's good to see they're taking an active role in increasing voter turnout."
Both the original Daisy Hill pollling site bill and the compromise resolution will be discussed at Student Senate committee meetings tonight. Meetings will start at 6
p. m. in the Kansas Union.
The commission's decision came after debate about whether setting up the site at Ekdahl Dining Commons would violate the commission's directive to ensure free and fair elections.
Audrey Nogle, elections commissioner, said one problem with setting up a site at the cafeteria could be that Lewis residents might put campaign fiers in their windows. This would violate the rule against campaigning within 100 feet of a pollling site.
Nogle said her concern was that the commission would have trouble enforcing this rule because it might not ensure that residents remove the campaign material.
Other commission decisions regarding the elections code included putting the code into Senate candidate packets and clearly discussing it at mandatory candidate workshops.
The commission also decided that candidate eligibility would be determined by both official enrollment records and a dean's stamp. This decision stemmed from a problem with a candidate running for a Nunemaker seat last year, Nogle said.
The candidate's hours were in question because he had Advanced Placement hours that pushed him over the 60-hour limit imposed on Nunemaker senators.
The commission also ruled that during the 1998 elections, presidential and vice-presidential candidates would need 500 signatures before they could be put on the ballot.
All other Senate candidates have the choice of filing a $10 fee or getting 100 signatures, the commission ruled.
The commission will make a final decision after presenting the first draft to Senate on Jan. 21 and receiving feedback on it, Finkeldei said.
Who voted where
Number of voters at each polling site in last year's Student Senate elections:
Wescoe Beach: 1,307
Haworth Hall: 265
Strong Hall: 752
Kansas Union: 706
Burge Union: 262
SHAUN
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
Desktop casinos
By Melissa Ngo
Kansan staff writer
Wanna bet on tonight's Kansas-
Texas A&M game? Just log on to the
Internet, place a bet, sit back and
watch the game on TV.
The growth of online casinos — gambling through the use of a computer without leaving the house — has allowed more and more students to gamble in the comfort of their easy chairs.
But what many students don't know is that online gambling is illegal in Kansas and Missouri. Jake and Sam, two University of Kansas students, didn't know.
Jake, 21, Wichita senior, and Sam,
21, Wichita junior, have been gambling online for more than a year.
The two asked that their real names not be used.
Jake said he liked online gambling because of the convenience.
"It's right here at home instead of having to drive 45 minutes just to play a few hands of blackjack," he said.
Sam found the "cyber casinos" after searching online for other games. He said he started playing a couple of years ago when online gambling was still new.
"I was basically paid to test out Island Casino's software," he said. "I made an initial deposit of $500 and they added another $500 to it. And they added 10 percent to all the deposits you made for the first year."
Forms of gambling other
than blackjack and sports betting include video poker, bingo, roulette and baccarat.
In Kansas, gambling that is not conducted on an Indian reservation has to be authorized by the state. Missouri law is similar to Kansas law but it is broader, including some exceptions for riverboat casino gambling.
Mary Horsch, spokesperson for the Kansas Attorney General's office, said that the office had not prosecuted anyone for Internet gambling.
But Missouri prosecutors are breaking new legal ground.
Missouri Attorney General Jeremiah "Jay" Nixon is prosecuting the Interactive Gaming Corp., which offers gambling online, and its president, Michael F. Simone, on the charge of promoting gambling in the first degree.
Missouri's case against Simone and IGC is the first criminal case of its kind in the country. It's the second case Nixon has brought against IGC. The first one was a civil lawsuit in April.
Scott Holst, spokesman for the Missouri Attorney General's office, said that in the April lawsuit, IGC was representing that their gambling services were legal for Missourians.
In the lawsuit's May ruling, a Missouri circuit judge ordered IGC to stop taking bets from Missourians and to pay $66,050 in penalties and costs to the state.
The latest charge against Simone and IGC of promoting gambling in the first degree is punishable by up
See RULES on page 6A
AIDS expert says new drug halting virus
By Lisa Stevens John
Kansan staff writer
David Ho gives hopeful speech at Lied Center
The man who invented the AIDS cocktail told a Lied Center audience last night that HIV is no longer viewed as invincible.
David Ho, a physician/researcher, was named Time magazine's Man of the Year in 1997. He said that a new three-drug combination he developed gave hope to AIDS patients.
"For the first time in this epidemic in the U.S., we have turned a corner with the use of combination therapies," Ho said. "We have shifted HIV care from the inpatient setting to the outpatient setting."
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Agouron Pharmaceuticals, the Kansas AIDS Education and Training Center and the Kansas City AIDS Research Consortium brought the SUA forum to the University of Kansas.
Donna Sweet, a Wichita physician and educator, introduced Ho to the crowd of about 2,000.
"The bad news is, AIDS continues to spread here and across the globe," Sweet said. "The good news is that now we can do something about it."
He gave a statistical overview of what he called a horrific disease. In 1983, there were 1,000 documented cases of AIDS in the United States, he said. Today the number of AIDS patients in the United States is close to 1 million.
Worldwide, the count totals 30 million. Each day, 16,000 people become infected with the AIDS virus. He said.
Howard Milton, SUA graduate adviser,
said the lecture cost $9,800, including a
$7,800 speaker fee.
"For most of them, the therapy is not available, so basically, this is a death sentence." Ho said.
He explained how the combination therapy of three drugs: AZT, protease inhibitors, and 3TC, work. Researchers have seen improvements in as many as three-fourths of patients who are compliant to the treatment regimen and who have no major side effects.
People everywhere must educate themselves about AIDS, he said.
"It's easy sitting here in Lawrence thinking this is not our problem, but our world is in effect becoming smaller, so this is everybody's problem." Hoasid.
"During treatment, the amount of the virus falls precipitously and becomes undetectable in the blood." He said.
This leaves researchers confronted with the task of flushing out residual HIV in the lymph glands, tonsils and gastrointestinal tract. Ho said.
"We can do a great deal to put out the fire, but we cannot stop the viral embers altogether at this point," he said.
I am a musician. I play the piano and sing. I love music. I enjoy playing with others. I love music. I enjoy playing with others.
David Ho spoke to the crowd last night at the Lied Center. He was last year's *Time Man* of the Year. Photo by Geoff Krager/KANSAN
Saferide in need of fuel from city
By Marc Sheforger Kansan staff writer
Saferide is a free driving service that provides University of Kansas students with a safe alternative to drunk driving. Scott Kaiser, transportation coordinator, said the $80,000 allocated by Student Senate for Saferide was $20,000-$30,000 less than the cost required to sustain the service.
Financial woes have Saferide facing a potential breakdown and the Student Senate facing choices.
"If we don't do anything, Saferide will run out of money in April." Kaiser said
The state attorney general ordered the city to use a portion of liquor sales tax revenue for alcohol awareness. The money can be used for prevention, education, detoxification or treatment, and Kaiser said the transportation board hoped Saferide would be considered a service of prevention.
Mike Wilden, city manager, said the money was to be used to prevent alcohol intake, not to drive drunk people around.
"Certainly it's good to have inebriated people off the streets, but why are they inebriated in the first place?" he asked.
Mike Walden, student body vice president, said that without funding from the city, Saferide had nowhere to turn.
"At this point in time, we've exhausted all of our options," Walden said. "We have to make a decision as to how we are going support Saferide."
Kaiser said options included cutting Saferide, reducing the hours of the service or taking $30,000 from the Senate reserve account to keep the service running full time for the rest of the semester.
Tom Preheim, Student Senate treasurer, said he hoped Senate would decide to take the money out of the reserve account because the money was available and the problem was temporary.
Last June, Senate's transportation board was forced to renegotiate its contract with the Lawrence Bus Company, which operates Saferide. The new contract raised Saferide's hourly service costs from $23.85 to $27, creating the funding problem.
Last semester, Senate raised student transportation fees from $14 to $16 per year.
SAFERIDE OPTIONS
- Cut Saferide for the rest of the semester
- Reduce the hours that Saferide operates
- Take $30,000 from the Student Senate reserve account
CURRENT SAFERIDE BASICS
Phone number: 804-SAFE
Hours of Operation: 11 p.m. to 3 a.m.
Section A • Page 2
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 14, 1998
Students say 'hola' to new Spanish format on Mondays
By Susie Gura
Kansan staff writer
Students who began Spanish classes this semester welcomed changes to the Spanish 104 and 105 lecture format.
The University announced the format change last semester. Previously, students in Spanish 104 attended five one-hour sections taught by a graduate teaching assistants, and students in Spanish 105 attended three one-hour sections taught by GTAs.
This semester, students from both courses will attend a one-hour lecture on Mondays. Lee Skinner, assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese, taught the first combined lecture on Monday in 130 Budig Hall.
Spanish 104 students also will meet in smaller discussion sections led by GTAs for an additional four hours a week. Spanish 105 students will meet in smaller discussion sections led by GTAs for an additional two hours a week.
With the announcement of the change, some students were apprehensive about the new format.
"At first I was scared and really worried, but it was nice to focus on the grammar in lecture and then go over it in class," said Amy Lingenfelter, Overland Park senior.
"It is nice to see and learn everything we are going to know at the beginning of the week so we can review it and be ready for class," Lauffer said.
Nick Lauffer, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, agreed.
GTAs who lead Spanish 104 and 105 discussion sections said that they were happy about the change, and that it would be advantageous for students as well as GTAs.
The new format is intended to help students learn grammar before they attend their individual discussion sections.
"It is helpful to me in class because the grammar has already been so clearly explained that I just have to review it," said Adele Daidzic, Spanish and Portuguese GTA. "I think it won't be as overwhelming for students."
She said the first day of class went well.
"No student had too many questions," Daidzic said. "I think I prefer it this way because I now spend more time practicing rules than teaching them."
Jaquel Keim-Gonzalez, Spanish and Portuguese GTA, said one grammar lesson a week allowed each section to move at the same pace, learn the same information and stay on the same level throughout the semester.
"I think it is great because it is more uniform, and it gives students the chance to deal with a professor and a teaching assistant," Keim-Gonzalez said.
Skinner taught two weeks of grammar rather than the usual one week because of the Martin Luther King holiday next Monday.
Liz Wristen, Leawood sophomore, said she was concerned by the large amount of information covered on Monday.
"I didn't like the big lecture as well as the small class discussions because we went through information too quickly." Wristen said.
A KU student reported a domestic disturbance to the Lawrence Police Department at 2:07 p.m. Jan. 11, at her home in the 800 block of Louisiana, Lawrence police said.
ON THE RECORD
The exterior window pane of a KU student's door in the 500 block of Michigan was destroyed about 1:45 a.m. Jan. 13, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $250.
A 25-inch television was taken from the fifth-floor lobby of Oliver Hall Sunday, KU police said. The television was valued at $250.
Advisers untangle enrollment woes
Center helps students plan schedules and endure Add/Drop
SALMON
By Gerry Doyle gdoyle@kansan.com Kansan staff writer
Many students at the beginning of the new semester need help finding their way out of the labyrinth of late enrollment and class changes.
Fortunately, help is what the Freshman-Sophomore Advising Center provides.
In its second semester, the center provides assistance to students lost in a maze of add/drop forms and schedule conflicts.
Katie Condon, Leawood sophomore, seeks schedule advice from Lloyd Spohnholtz, an adviser at the Freshman-Sophomore Advising Center. Advisers are often available for students who walk in. Photo by Ronner Nomer/KANSAN
FINDING HELP
Freshmen-Sophomore
Advising Center
132 Strong Hall
864-4371
Hours:
Mondays 8 a.m.-7 p.m.
Tuesdays - Fridays
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
The center helps more than 100 students each day, said K a t h r y n Nemeth-Tuttle, director of the center. Nemeth-Tuttle said the center would
be fully utilized by next fall's incoming freshmen.
This semester the academic advising center added a new associate director and assistant director to the staff. Dave Goodsell, associate director, and Tammara Durham, assistant director, were added to the staff in an effort to increase the availability of advising to freshmen and sophomores.
"We're just starting to get a good team together," she said. "There are a lot of people coming in now, and we would like to see more after this summer."
"This is a year where we're gearing up," said Goodsell, who was an
assistant director of the undergraduate academic center at Virginia Tech University last year. "The scope is bigger than what we did at Virginia Tech. The staff and faculty are high-quality here and make it a good place to be."
The center is expanding to assist freshmen and sophomores in all phases of advising, such as helping students resolve conflicts with class schedules and helping students understand the enrollment process, Nemeth-Tuttle said.
The center offers advising services to Oread Scholars, who were outstanding high school seniors, but it
is expanding its advising program to offer similar services to all freshmen and sophomores, said Lloyd Sponholtz, director of the Oread Scholars program.
"The program is fairly embryonic right now," Sponholtz said. "It's terrific. It shows the University is finally giving some tangible commitment to the advising process."
The center's advisers are invaluable in helping sort out confusion about class schedules, said Sylvia O'Connell, Norman, Ill., sophomore.
"I came in with some problems with my schedule," O'Connell said. "They showed me where I needed to
look and what I needed to do to fix it."
Often, students' problems can be solved without the help of a center adviser. Many questions can be answered by the students who help staff the center, said Rachel Smith, Liberal junior, who has worked at the center since September.
"They need to know things like how to add or drop classes or whether a class they need is open or not," Smith said. "We can check and see on our computer if the class is open or not. So far, I think it's been very helpful."
Computing services plan for millennium
Employees spend extra time updating records to avoid computer bug
By Aaron Knopf
Kansan staff writer
The Office of Computing Services' plan to upgrade and fix student records, library and financial computer systems for the millennium is going smoothly, computing services officials said.
fix the problem at the University in 1995.
"We actually began work on modifying programs in 1996," he said.
The problem with the programs is their inability to recognize years beyond the twentieth century. When the new century rolls around, the programs will interpret the year as 1900 rather than 2000. The problem is referred to as the millennium bug.
"The work has been going faster than what we had estimated," said John Dillard, Computing Services assistant director of programming and LAN support services. "At this point in time we're feeling pretty comfortable that we are going to get the critical things done."
He said problems such as the incorrect computer projection of graduation dates began showing up in 1996.
Dillard said Computing Services began formulating a plan to
"Those things were fixed right away as soon as they were discovered," Dillard said.
have year 2000 compatible soft ware.
Now Computing Services is fixing problems ahead of time. The plan is to prevent problems by modifying programs ahead of time, Dillard said.
Not every problem is addressed the same way, he said.
"During the '90s the University has been on a path of implementing a strategy of replacing these very old systems such as its human resources/payroll system," he said. "The potential
In the financial and library systems, the
"At this point in time we're feeling pretty comfortable that we are going to get the critical things done."
University purchased new software packages. The University recently purchased a new student-records system, but the inability to implement it before 2000 has forced Computing Services to fix the existing system.
John Dillard
Computing Services assistant director of
problems from the millennium bug simply provide additional motivation to replace older software now."
Dillard said the University did not purchase new systems just to
Dillard said one of the biggest challenges to his staff was that it must spend a significant amount of time completing year-2000 projects at the expense of small but important projects.
Richard Hermesch
Computing Services
Application Program
Manager, said his team had spent 4,000 hours since July fixing problems in 1,500 affected programs. He estimated his team had completed 30 to 40 percent of its work.
The team is on schedule to complete the work before the year 2000, Hermesch said.
Time bombs
At the stroke of midnight ending this century, these calendar anomalies will emerge:
1999
11:59:59 P
The 'zeroes' problem
Older computer programs.store dates in two digits, dropping the century from the year. This means that in the year 2000 many computers will be unable to operate reliably.
The 'leap year' problem
Ordinarily, every fourth year has an extra day at the end of February. But the figure of 365.25 days per Earth orbit, which mandates the leap day, is not exact. As a result the first year of every new century is not a leap year. But every fourth century is a leap year. And the year 2000 is one of those centuries. So many computers will not recognize Feb. 29, 2000, as a valid date.
The 'rollover' problem
Computers that do not abjectly fail will simply "roll over" to the date 01/01/00, or January 1, 1900. This means that credit-card balances carried over from the end of 1999 will be charged for 99 years of interest — not exactly a balanced calculation.
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Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
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Wednesday, January 14, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Patrons party vintage style
By Tamara Miller
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence residents have a new jazzy bar with a vintage '40s and '50s flavor.
The Hi-Jinx bar, hidden behind the Lawrence Cigar Company, opened on Nov. 24 and has attracted patrons looking for a bar with a vintage theme.
The Lawrence Cigar Company, formerly at 900 New Hampshire St., moved to 1117 Massachusetts St. on Oct. 31.
Jonathan Levine, who owns and manages the Lawrence Cigar Company and Hi-Jinx bar with Stewart Colgate, said after the cigar store moved to the building on Massachusetts Street, it expanded, adding the Hi-Jinx bar.
"We started putting it together with a crew of friends," Levine said. "We made it into a place we'll go to to."
Hi-Jinx has a lounge atmosphere that is reminiscent of the '40s and '50s. The bar is decorated with vintage red vinyl booths, and a bubble-shaped jukebox plays music ranging from country to swing. Levine said the variety of music helped business.
Todd Karnahan, bar employee, said Hj-Iin attracted a diverse crowd.
Lawrence resident Jill Hilton agreed.
"This bar is very jazzy and laid-back," she said.
Levine said the crowd should become more diverse with time.
"I think that eventually the college scene will drift in," Levine said. "There aren't very many visual bars. There is a trend right now, and for us it's lucky, but I wouldn't want to own a different kind of bar, whatever trend it might be."
The bar has reserved three nights for specific activities. Colgate said the nights should attract a wide range of customers.
Monday's theme is gay and lesbian "Pride Night." Tuesday's "Tracks on Wax" allows patrons to bring their favorite vinyl records to the bar for a record party. Wednesday is "Bad Film Night," where the bar shows 16 millimeter films that the staff thinks are, well, bad. The bar is open from 5 p.m. to 145 a.m. every day.
JOHN BROWN
Hi-Jinx usually has live bands on Friday and Saturday. It costs $3 per person and $5 per couple to attend on nights when bands play.
Samantha Florek, the Key West resident and lead singer of the Key West Jazz
Samantha Flores, Chicago resident, sings at Hi-Jinx, a new bar at 1117 Massachusetts St. Florec is the singer for the Key West Jazz Quartet that performed Friday night. Photo by Augustus Anthony Niazza/KANSAN
Quartet, said she enjoyed performing in the bar.
"It's what jazz is meant to be played in," she said.
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AND, Registration is still OPEN for...
"This class is designed as a condensed version of the class I teach in the Fall semester. This is a special opportunity for students to examine issues of sexuality and I appreciate the willingness of ECM, Canterbury, Lutheran(ELCA), and other groups to sponsor this opportunity for any KU student who might be interested and have not taken my regular class because they are leaving the University this May or just haven't been able to fit it into their regular schedules." Dennis Dalley, Professor of Social Welfare, KU.
Human Sexuality in Everyday Life with Dr. Dennis Dailey
Spring Semester '98- No Credit Thursdays 6:30-8:30pm beginning Jan. 15, 1998 (10 sessions) at the ECM Center
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Information Call 843-4933
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Sponsored by Ecumenical Christian Ministries at KU1Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren Denominations. Lutheran Campus Ministry(ELCLA), Canterbury House(Episcopal)
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor Marc Harrell, Business manager Dave Morantt, Managing editor Colleen Eager, Retail sales manager Kristie Blasi, Managing editor Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser Tom Eblen, General manager, news advisor Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
Wednesday, Jan. 14, 1998
AND THIS WILL BE THE ROB'T J. DOLE SPECIAL COMPUTER MONITOR,
AND THIS...
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Tina Connolly / KANSAN
State of the State Address Excerpt
Governor recommends changes in taxes, partial birth abortions
The fiscal condition of Kansas is outstanding. This is confirmed by the recent Standard and Poor's rating of AA+ ,the highest rating possible for the State of Kansas. In reaching that conclusion, Standard & Poor's noted as a significant factor in this high rating the fact that Kansas has
A sampling of Bill Graves' State of the State address to the Kansas House on Monday
"conservative fiscal management and sound financial operations with ample statutory-mandated cash reserves."
-
We must not deviate from these conservative policies. Short-term political gain shall not be substituted for long-term fiscal responsibility. We cannot spend money we do not have, nor spend money we hope will be there.
-
percent of estateswill be entirely exempt from federal and state death taxes.
Last year, I asked you to address the inequity between single and married taxpayers. To add a tax burden on young people starting their careers, on single parents struggling to keep their families intact, or on those who have lost their spouse just isn't right. You agreed; but because we lacked the financial resources, the decision was made to phase in tax justice over four years. Now we have the resources. I strongly urge you to provide tax justice to single taxpayers.
Also included in my recommendations (is a) tax relief initiatives which provide deductions for savings for all
Kansas must address its death taxes...our inheritance tax is much too high and much too complicated.
post-secondary education.
Therefore, I am recommending on July 1 of this year,
Kansas move to a federal pick-up estate tax under which 90
I am fully aware some will not find our tax relief efforts adequate. But they underestimate; they undervalue; and they do not understand the Kansans I know. Kansans are not selfish, nor greedy. They want balance. They may not hire special interests, but they convey the interest they have in building a better future.
I am recommending major technology investments in the amount of $23 million for K-12, Regents institutions, Washburn and community colleges, area vocational technical schools, School for the Blind, School for the Deaf, and assistive technology for special education students.
An issue of great importance to all Kansans is public policy regarding abortion. I strongly urge passage of a bill to ban partial birth abortions. The argument about when this procedure is done or how many times it's done is not the issue. The issue is that it is an abhorrent procedure that is currently legal in Kansas; and it should be banned so it will never be performed in Kansas.
Editorial
Mr. Pell Grant goes to Washington
If you are a student then the re-authorization of the Higher Education Act of 1965 affects you. It is the most important piece of legislation that the 105th Congress will address for colleges and universities.
A $40-billion package of loans, tuition tax subsidies, financial aid and grants for research, it is the primary statute governing the flow of federal dollars to college students.
There is more at stake here than just federal dollars. The very nature of higher education in the United States is about to become a major part of the Washington agenda.
Whether it will mean meaningful reform of a system that needs it or a flamboyant debate will largely be determined
by the participation and reaction of those most affected by it - students.
Rep. Michael Castle, R-Delaware, has estimated that between 1984 and 1994 the cost of higher education has outpaced almost everything else, soaring 150 percent, growing faster than even medical care, which rose 111 percent.
Students too often are unaware that their dollars and future are being bdebated and that they have a voice in that debate. These dollars are not abstract amounts that are relevant only on the evening news — they are the very dollars that many students have deposited into their bank accounts.
Students should be aware of the pending legislation, be mindful of the debate and make their opinions known.
Kansan staff
Tom Moore for the editorial board
Paul Eakins ... Editorial
Andy Obermueller ... Editorial
Andrea Albright ... News
Jodie Chester ... News
Julie King ... News
Charity Jeffries ... Online
Eric Weslander ... Sports
Harley Rattifl ... Associate sports
Ryan Koerner ... Campus
Mike Perryman ... Campus
Bryan Volk ... Features
Tim Harrington ... Associate features
Steve Puppe ... Photo
Angie Kuhn ... Design, graphics
Mitch Lucas ... Illustrations
Corrie Moore ... Wire
Gwen Olson ... Special sections
Lachelle Rhoades ... News clerk
News editors
Kristie Bislel . Assistant retail. PR
Leigh Bottiger . Campus
Brett Clifton . Regional
Nicole Lauderdale . National
Matt Fisher . Marketing
Chris Haghirian . Internet
Brian Allers . Production
Ashley Bonner . Production
Andee Tomlin . Promotions
Dan Kim . Creative
Rachel O'Neill . Classified
Tyler Cook . Zone
Steve Grant. Zone
Jamie Holman . Zone
Brian LeFevre . Zone
Matt York . Zone
Advertising managers
LetterS: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
"After all, what is a life, anyway? We're born, we live a little while, we die. By helping you, perhaps I was trying to lift my own life up a little. Heaven knows anyone's life can stand a little bit of that." —Charlotte A. Cavatia, Charlotte's Web
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 letters 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 Andy Obermueller (andyo@kansan.com) or Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff [opinion@kansan.com] or call 864-4810.
For the board
Dole Institute funding: 'We just can't win'
We, the Kansan Editorial Board, would like you to seriously reconsider a recent request you made of the Kansas Legislature.
Memo to the Governor:
Your request for the legislature to appropriate $3 million for the construction of the Robert J. Dole Institute for Public Policy at the University of Kansas, is inappropriate.
It isn't that we don't want the money or even that we oppose capital improvements to our University, but there certainly are better ways the money could be spent.
After all, classrooms are crumbling, buses need replacing, parking garages need building, technology needs upgrading, scholarships need creation, minority recruitment programs need cash and recycling is almost non-existent. For heaven's sake, we don't even have pencil sharpeners in most classrooms.
The University must prioritize and at this point the Dole Institute seems to epitomize luxury over necessity.
The Dole Center would no doubt be an asset to the University. But let's be honest: It should not be a priority just because Bob Dole's name is attached.
The building, for which plans haven't even been drawn, would primarily house the documents Dole donated to the University after his 27 years of public service. The Institute would also play host to forums for national, state and local policy discussions and hold programs for scholars, elected officials and other public groups.
Obviously, Dole's documents will attract national researchers, and having a place to hold forums would draw groups from across the state and nation.
But that isn't reason enough to ask the Kansas Legislature to pony up money so that Bob Dole can have another building with his name on it.
We aren't opposed to Bob Dole. Some of us may even have voted for him when he ran for president the last time. But this is not a good reason to ask for $3 million from a legislature so tight-fisted with state education dollars someone once called them, "not cheap, just uninterested."
We understand the problem facing the University. The building will cost an estimated $6 to $8 million, and only $2 million has been raised.
But raising another $6 million shouldn't be that tough. After all, Dole is popular in Kansas.
The University may not need the legislature's money to build the institute. Consider these facts:
The first $2 million was raised by the Endowment Association in less than a year. At that rate, it won't be long before the Endowment Association can raise most, if not all, the money needed. And it's not like Endowment is hurting for cash anyway. Maybe they could name the Chancellor's plane for Bob Dole too.
Dole may not have the money himself (his loan to Newt Gingrich notwithstanding), but he has friends who do. With a little coaxing from the former Senator, it is hard to believe that supporters with deep pockets could not find the money. They paid for his election, why couldn't they cough up some bucks for the building that would be home to the remnants of Dole's career? Maybe he could harness his ability to score mid-court basketball tickets.
■ when it was announced in early 1997 that the Dole Institute would be constructed, Chancellor Robert Hemenway said the money could be raised through private funds in 18 months to two years. Publicly, Hemenway has not announced that the timetable needs to change. If state money wasn't needed then, it shouldn't be needed now.
We don't want it to sound as if we, or even the University as a whole, are not honored by your gesture, Gov. Graves, to beg the legislature on our behalf. It's just that the Dole Institute will get built without a $3 million nod from the legislature. There are, however, many things on this campus that will never get done unless the state steps in and flexes its monetary muscle.
We are not saying don't send us the money, we are just asking that it be sent for better reasons. If Dole could get Visa to underwrite a new recreation center, then maybe we'd be less upset.
Perspective
Spencer Duncan for the Editorial Board
CNN begs the question: Are they unaboxers or briefs?
returned to my final semester of undergraduate school with great tales of what I did during my winter break. None of my friends could match my narrations of the joyful bliss.
I spent most of my break in front of the television eating Oatmeal Cream Pies. I watched so much ESPN, C-Span, CNN and so many rumors of *Lau* and *Order on A&E* that not even showering occupied my mind.
After such a break, it only seemed natural for me to dedicate my first column of the semester to its memory. Everything I needed to know I learned from CNN:
*Unaboxers or briefs*
Until last week, I'd always
negged the Unahomber as a
IRELAND
Erin Rooney opinion@kansan.com
man who goes commando (you know: swings in the wind, skips the skivies). Finding out that he attempted suicide with a pair of underwear turned my life tops turv.
At first I thought he was more of a boxer man. He seems to be a guy who walks on the wild side. However, there's no way his head could have fit down the leg shaft of the not-so-giving cotton-blend boxer. Without his tangled mop his head is still the size of a large melon.
Just one conclusion remained: Ted wears tighty whites.
My second thought was that Marky Mark, oops, I mean Mark Wahlberg, looks like he lives on the wild side and he's a boxer-briefs man. Maybe the Unabomber wanted to meet the Grim Reaper with his head in a pair of trendy panties. I doubt, though, that the prison system is shelling out the big bucks for stylish underwear.
I can only hope that they were 1) clean and 2) not Spiderman Underroes. At least he was, for a
short time, free at last.
- When did trees become humanity's greatest enemy?
Sonny Bono made his exit from the stage of life when he ran into a tree. Michael Kennedy had the same fate. Last Sunday's XFiles told the story of killer trees. John Denver, who sang the National Arbor Day Foundation theme song Plant a Tree. also died.
These wooden, leafy, plants of goodness don't seem to be so good after all. The trees are fighting back. In fact, they have a plot to finish off the human race. The leaders are the Blue Spruces, the Ornamental Pines and Eddie Albert.
The two types of trees are being distributed at no cost by the NADF in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa. The rumor is that the heartland needs to replenish the trees that were lost in the October Snowstorm Disaster of 1997.
Only one problem here — I can't remember an October Snowstorm Disaster of 1997. Are these trees even native to this area? How did acting in Green Acres qualify Eddie Albert to become the NADF spokesman?
- Does the president smoke crack?
There are laws in this country against stealing, murdering, raping, pillaging and urinating on the sidewalk, but people still commit all of these crimes.
The president honestly believes that if he puts a ham on human cloning — for five whole years
— that no one in the world even would think about duplicating humans.
Reality check Mr. Clinton: you can't even get Socks and Buddy to get along. What makes you think the evil-doers who want to clone a master race will respect your ban? Is anybody home in the big white house?
1 guess Mr. Clinton plans another program of forming his own race — the old fashioned way.
Rooney is a Tapeke senior in journalism.
She's not allowed to watch any more TV.
Legislation pending Student Senate
A Bill to Fund Saferide
A $30,000 allocation from the Senate Reserve Account to continue running Saferide.
Account to complete timely sales
Sponsor: Tom Preheim, Treasurer
Referred to University Affairs and Finance Committees
A Bill to Fund the KU Lecture Series
Speaker Al Franken
A $8,000 allocation from the Unallocated Account for the Lecture Series.
Sponsor: Larry Gibbs, LA&S Senator
Referred to University Affairs and Finance Committees
A Resolution Concerning Polling Sites
Sponsor: Seth Hoffman, ASHC Senator
Referred to University Affairs and Student Rights Committees
Sponsor: Kevin Yoder, IFC Senator
A Resolution to Support a University Policy Protects Student Ethical Choice in the Dissection of Animals in Education
Referred to University Affairs and Student Rights Committees
Sponsor: Mike Walden, Student Body Vice President
A Resolution Supporting Improvements to Robinson Center
Referred to University Affairs and Student Rights Committees
Finance and Student Rights Committees will consider the Daisy Hill polling site student initiative.
Full copies of all legislation are posted in the Student Senate office, 410 Kansas Union.
Wednesday, January 14, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 5
University begs for state surplus
By Brandon Cople
Kanson staff writer
The State of Kansas has a lot of money to spend, and a short time to spend it.
The University of Kansas has four months to lobby, beg, reason and work with the legislators who decide how much the University gets and where the money goes.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway's goals this legislative session include securing funding for major technological upgrades and for faculty pay raises. Marlin Rein, university director of governmental relations, said the University also would watch developments in a plan to bring community colleges under the Board of Regents control, urge approval of a bill to reorganize the University of Kansas Medical Center and seek health insurance coverage for GTAs.
Of those goals, Hemenway's top priorities are the Med Center and funding for technology and faculty raises. Both have strong support from the governor and key legislators, but both face a hard road to passage, Rein said.
"Right now, everybody is feeling good," he said. "The legislators have plenty of time, and they're pretty agreeable to a lot of ideas. But as the session wears on, there are conflicts and issues that overlap, and it's harder to reach people, which makes it much more difficult to get your concerns addressed."
With state revenues high, the spending measures stand a better chance in 1998 than in previous years.
On Monday, Governor Bill Graves delivered his budget message to the legislature, which included technology funding and
PETER SCHNEIDER
Graves: Proposed budget is being evaluated in the Legislature.
faculty salary increases in his budget requests.
The governor recommended a 4 percent increase in faculty salaries. All raises would be merit-based, according to Graves' budget report. For a technology upgrade, the governor
proposed that $5 million be spread among regents institutions. Graves recommended an additional student fee of one dollar per credit hour to be matched by two dollars per credit hour from the state.
Assistant Provost Rich Givens said the University's share of the one-time, $5 million allocation would go toward an update of technological infrastructure across campus, especially in Malott and Learned Halls. Givens said about
one third of that money would go into computer systems. The remainder will help update communications and laboratory equipment.
Rein said that the abundant resources and the governor's recommendation were encouraging.
"We have to be optimistic about our budget," he said. "If we can't do well this year, then you have to wonder when we can."
The Med Center reorganization has a running start because the bill was proposed in the 1997 session. It passed the Senate last year and had the governor's endorsement, but the legislature was not able to agree on a series of controversial amendments.
The goal is to establish the Med Center as a public authority that could compete in the private market. The bill moves the Med Center governance from the Board of Regents to a hospital board of directors. It also creates a public authority that would be free from bureaucratic procedures.
At the end of last year's session, the bill got caught in the political switches. Legislators were unable to compromise on amendments prohibiting abortion, allowing legislators to sit on the board, and allowing the sale of the Med Center to a private company.
State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, chairwoman of the Senate Public Health and Welfare committee, said the same thing could happen this year.
Legislative issues
Higher education governance
GTA health insurance
The legislature deals every year with how it could reduce community college reliance on local property tax. Those institutions may removed from the authority of the state Board of Education and brought under the control of the Board of Regents. Hemenway said he planned to fight to make sure the Regents system, if changed, is not dismantled.
The University will propose a plan to bring graduate teaching assistants into state employee health plans, Marlin Rein said. The governor did not approve the University's request, and the issue has never been addressed.
Tuition accountability
Tuition accountability allows universities to retain a portion of unexpected tuition revenue. The University opposes any attempt to curb or eliminate tuition accountability.
"It if doesn't get done fast, it will probably get caught in the same kind of political dealing," she said. "Last year it became a battleground for all kinds of issues."
A conference committee composed of three members each from the House and the Senate may convene as early as this week to take up the issues remaining from last session.
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The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 14, 1998
RECYCLE your Daily Kansan
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Restrictions apply. Fares are each way based on round trip travel. Prices include $1 per segment FETT. 7-day advance purchase. EQUIPED. Round trip and one night stay required. Fares are non-refundable. Blackout dates may apply Seats are limited and may not be available on all flights. Prices are subject to change and do not include PFCs of up to $12 round trip. More circulous routings may require additional per segment charges.
Lawrence broadcasts support for KAW-FM
By Jeremy M. Doherty
Kansan staff writer
A feeling of activism swept through last night's meeting of the Lawrence City Commission amidst the routine land-use disputes and rezoning issues.
Commissioners unanimously voted to join a community letter-writing campaign to the Federal Communications Commission in support of 88.9 KAW-FM.
KAW supporters said they hope the FCC will grant the unlicensed community station a waiver so that it can continue to operate
City Manager Mike Wildgen said the commission had no jurisdiction over the 10month-old station.
Lawrence resident and KAW representative Steve Stemmerman said he appreciated the commission's gesture.
"There's no licensing procedure for those of us without a waiver," Stemmerman said. "We know that it's a David and Goliath issue. We're David fighting the Goliath."
The commission also discussed whether the proposed Lawrence Equestrian Center on Clinton Lake property might violate U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers' alcohol policies. The corps, which leases the property to Lawrence, forbids facilities whose primary purpose is the sale of alcoholic beverages.
The equestrian center plan submitted to the Planning Commission includes a clubhouse. The proposed clubhouse would contain a restaurant with full-service kitchen and beverage facilities.
The commission decided by a 3 to 2 vote to uphold the corps policy.
In other business commissioners:
Authorized Wildgen to execute an annual cooperative agreement between Youth Sports Inc. and the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department.
Voted to establish a bus-loading zone from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday along the west side of Mississippi Street north of 6th Street.
Approved the $34,200 purchase of polymer from Nalco Chemical Company for the Clinton Water Treatment Plant.
Haskell opens more doors
Adopted a resolution to annex 10.268 acres west of Monterey Way, north of W. 6th Street and south of Trail Road.
New residence hall may help boost enrollment figures
By Sara Anderson Kansan staff writer
With the construction of a new residence hall and the renovation of three others, Haskell Indian Nations University is hoping to increase enrollment.
"We had about 675 students living in the residence halls before the opening of Roe Cloud Dormitory," said Bob Martin, President of Haskell Indian Nations University. "By the end we will be able to house about 950 students on campus."
Approximately 850 students live in residence halls, Martin said. The opening of the new residence hall added 300 spots for students.
Martin said the additional residence hall and renovations would help increase the campus enrollment from approximately 1,100 to 1,150.
Cloud Dormitory Jan. 7.The $8.5 million residence hall was the first building constructed on the campus since 1980.
Students moved into Roe
The $7.2 million renovations began Jan. 5.
"Because we had to close down three of the dorms, we will lose some space while the renovation is in progress, and we'll lose some rooms because of the space we will need to make the improvements in the buildings." Martin said. "But in the end, we will have an increase of about 300."
Martin said that the loss of space had not been the only setback.
"We started trying to get funds from the early '90s, so we experienced lots of delays," Martin said, referring to construction. "It's taken more time than hoped."
Martin said the renovations were scheduled to be completed by the spring of 1999.
"Right now we are doing some asbestos work in the buildings," said Virgil Allen, facilities manager. "We want to be finished in a year, but it depends on how fast we find a
"We are also working to do classes by satellite and an extension program. Over the next five years we hope to increase enrollment to 1,500."
Bob
Martin
president of Haskell Indian Nations University
contractor."
The major changes in the buildings will include electrical upgrades and new heating and air conditioning systems. The basic layout of the buildings will stay the same.
Martin said that Haskell had other plans to increase enrollment as well.
"We are also working to do classes by satellite and an extension program," he said. "Over the next five years we hope to increase enrollment to 1,500."
Revue countdown begins
JACKETT
Rock Chalk Revue participants from the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority wait in line for cast pictures to be taken. Revue participants met last night at the Union for group pictures. Rock Chalk will be performed March 12, 13 and 14 at the Lied Center. Photo by Tara Bradley/KANSAN
Rules vague for online gambling
Continued from page 1A
to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine for Simone. IGC could face a fine of up to $10,000.
Holste said that the Attorney General's office was not targeting the people who gambled online, but rather the operators. He said he wasn't aware of any local district attorneys who were prosecuting people for participating in online gambling.
"Missouri law makes only narrow exceptions for the kind of gambling that is legal in our state. Internet gambling falls outside of those bounds," Nixon said. "There is also no protection for the participating consumer or to keep minors from gambling over the Internet. It's a bad bet all around."
Peter Martin, Cornell law professor who teaches a course on copyright law as it applies to the Internet, said that the internet makes things complicated for any doctrine of law that deals heavily with jurisdiction issues.
"It it gets much more complicated when the crime is taking place in digital space," Martin said. "It's far from clear which territory
has jurisdiction, whether it's the place where the sender or receiver is."
Legal gambling has brought a lot of money to Kansas and Missouri. Because there are no reliable figures on online gambling, state officials are unable to determine the extent of the problem.
Legal gambling figures include the Kansas Lottery sales, which took in more than $185 million in fiscal year 1987, and the Missouri Lottery sales, which took in more than $435 million. Both figures are unaudited.
Although Jake and Sam profited from gambling online, neither would recommend it to others.
"I realize it's a bad habit," said Jake, who continues to gamble on the riverboats. "I wouldn't want to see people lose money because of this."
Sam agreed that one of the problems with online gambling was that it was easy to lose money.
"It causes people to lose more' cause the money's not in front of you. You don't see the bill immediately," Sam said. "I lost $1,000 in 10 minutes once."
COMPUTER ENGINEERING·COMPUTER SCIENCE·PHYSICS·CHEMICAL ENGINEERING MATH·ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING·MECHANICAL ENGINEERING·BUSINESS ANALYSIS
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MATH • ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING • MECHANICAL ENGINEERING • BUSINESS ANALYSIS
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EXPECT GREAT THINGS
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VAAAAAAA
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Basketball
Inside Sports today
Big 12 standings and statistical leaders. Billy Thomas leads the conference in three-point field goal percentage and Paul Pierce is third in scoring. SEE PAGE 6B
KU
Yesterday's game - Kansas vs. Texas
KANSAS TEXAS
10-3, 5-8,1-3
UNRANKED UNRANKED
WWW.JHAWKBBALL.COM
SECTION B, PAGE 1
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1998
Soccer team exports coaches
Two assistants pursue foreign opportunities
By Erin Thompson Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas soccer team lost two assistant coaches during winter break, both of whom plan to pursue opportunities in other countries.
Assistant coach Kris Zeits will leave for Nagano, Japan, on Friday to work as a Japanese interpreter at the Winter Olympics. She will work for a television company that provides the big screens for all the Olympic venues, said head coach Dan Magner.
After her seven-week stint as an interpreter, Zeits plans to continue working for the television company.
Prairie Hargrove
At Kansas, Zeits specialized in coaching goalkeepers. Before coming to Kansas, she played four years professionally in Japan, where she became fluent in Japanese.
Assistant coach Lisa Unsworth left Dec. 18 for Calgary, Canada.
Leitis: Will be an interpreter at the Winter Olympics.
where she hopes to find a teaching job or to coach soccer at the national level.
Unsworth played five years, 1988-92, at the University of Calgary in Alberta and competed internationally with the Canadian National team for a year.
"She is looking at coaching for a provincial team, which is comparable to a state team here," Magner said. "She would be coaching the best players in her province."
Unsworth was at Kansas for only one season and handled several aspects of the team, including onfield coaching, individual and team coaching
public relations, scheduling and camp involvement.
Both coaches provided good leadership and would be missed by the players, said team captain Jackie Dowell.
"It's unfortunate that they are leaving
because they are great coaches and great people as vell," Dowell said. "We all understand they have to pursue other things and I'm sure the University will find other good people."
Magner said assistant coaches in all sports tend to have a high turnover rate.
"Coaching can be a very transient job," Magner said. "People either use it as a stepping stone to move on to other things or they test it out and find out it is not just two hours of coaching a week. It is 80 hours of flying and recruiting."
Last spring the soccer team lost its head coach, Lori Walker, and an assistant coach. Losing more assistive coaches less than a year later makes it hard for the team to build for next year. Dowell said.
Concessions drain pockets of sports fans
"Getting new coaches throws a little curve ball, but our program is all about development and changes," she said.
You had to feel sorry for the woman
You had to be tolerant for the woman.
She was thirsty and wanted some water.
Not that yellow Kansas stuff, but an import. Something in a bottle.
She pulled a crinkled $1 bill from her purse and began to rub it so the wrinkles would disappear and the vending machine would accept it.
After about five minutes of rubbing, she sauntered to the Naya bottled water vending machine and inserted her dollar.
It was Saturday night at a Kansas basketball game, and the machine had been shut off.
You could see a tear form in the left corner of her right eye. All that rubbing and nothing to show for it.
She still needed water, so she turned to the concession stand on her right.
The stand had bottled water just like the machine.
So she took her dollar and walked to the concession stand.
PETER
"I'll have one bottled water please," she said.
Spencer Duncan sports@kansan.com
"That'll be $2," the man at the counter replied.
The woman shrieked, "Two dollars!!! Are you crazy. It's just water."
The man looked her in the eyes and, with a shrug, said, "That's what it cost."
In the vending machine, the same bottle of water was just 85 cents.
Eighty-five cents at the vending machine,
$2 at the concession stand. Same size, same company, same stuff.
MICHIGAN
11
TEXAS
15
TARGET
Steve Vormehr, President of MidAmerica Concessions, the group that operates concessions at athletic events, said he had a reason for the higher price.
"Prices are based on what we have to make to pay rent." Vormehr said. "You sell a product at a price that will help keep you running."
Kansas guard Suzi Raymont goes for a lay-up. Raymont corresed 15 points and helped bring the Javahays back to a 76-71 victory against the Texas Longhorns. Corresponded by Steve Paukney/KANSAN
And for those who don't want to pay $2 for the water, Vormeh offered this advice.
"There is a drinking fountain at the end of the Field House," he said.
And why not just leave the vending machines on?
Field House goers see a vending machine sticker that reads 85 cents and then turn to the concession marquee that charges much more for water. People are being ripped off, and some know it.
When Coca-Cola and the University signed their exclusive contract last summer, they agreed that Coca-Cola would turn off the vending machines during basketball games.
"Coca-Cola operates the vending machines not us." Vormehr said.
Great for MidAmerica Concession, bad for everyone else. Patrons are being asked to pay too much for bottled water and are being slapped in the face.
Vormehr said MidAmerica had received complaints about the cost. But he also said prices wouldn't fall and sales were fine.
Kansas ropes 'Horns
What's worse: The fact that people are being blatantly robbed, or the fact that they accept that they are being blatantly robbed?
Maybe someday people will wise up and stop buying the stuff.
Until then, that'll be $2.
KANSAS 76. TEXAS 71
NACADE
Pride 4-13 11-13 19, Johnson 4-6 6-8 14,
Sanford 5-13 1-14 11, Raymant 6-14 2-12 15,
Jackson 5-13 1-2 7, Prutt 0-1 1-2 1, Scott 0-
0-0, Robbins 2-6 1-2 5, White 0-4 4-6 4.
Totals 24-64 2-37 96.
KANSAS (103-22)
TEXAS (5-8, 1-3)
Smith 5-10 6-1 7-6, E. Brown 3-8 0-1 6, A.
Jackson 2-3 1-1 5, Wallace 1-6 8-10 10, Lummus
5-9 0-1 3, M. Brown 0-9 0, T. Brown
TEXAS (5-8, 1-3)
Halftime —Texas 41, Kansas 26, 3-point goals —Kansas 1-11 (Rayman 1, Pride 0, Prutt 0-1, Robbins 0-3) Texas 3-9 (Lummus 3-6, Wallace 0-2, E. Brown 0-1). Fouled out—E. Brown, A. Jackson, Wallace. Rebounds —Kansas 44 (Sandford 10), Texas 31 (Smith 10), Assists —Kansas 12 (Johnson, Jackson 4), Texas 15 (E. Brown, Wallace 4). Total fouls —Kansas 21, Texas 30, A -650.
2-3, 0-0, 4, Vivertec 6-7 0-10 12, Balley 0-2 5-6
Totals 24 48 20 25 71.
by Kevin C. Wilson
Kansan Sportswriter
Forward Lynn Pride cashed in on 11 of 13 free throws in the second half and scored 15 points after the half. Forward Jaclyn Johnson also supplied 12 second-half points and tied the game at 67 with 1:45 remaining on a crucial 3-point play.
The Kansas women's basketball team mustered a 23-6 run in the last 3:52 of play to overcome a 20 point second-half deficit and beat the Texas Longhorns 76-71 last night in Allen Field House.
Jayhawks try sweep of Texas tonight
"It was a tremendous game and a tremendous win," Coach Marion Washington said. "You have to give that young club a lot of credit. They did not give up and they kept working at it."
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansas sportwriter
Johnson, a freshman, said that she wanted to provide her teammates with the spark they needed.
Washington also attributed the comeback to a switch in the Longhorns' defense.
"In the second half I told myself to suck it up and play," she said. "I didn't want to lose."
Despite hitting only 4 of 13 shots from the field, Pride led the Jayhawks in scoring with 19 points, including 9 in the final 3 minutes of the game.
Pride said that she had not intended to take over the game down the stretch but that it just happened.
"We went into the 51 zone defense and it slowed them down a bit," Washington said. "Then we decided to extend it and pressure them full-court, and it gave us a shot at getting back in the ball game."
"Me and Jaclyn were real intense. We really wanted to win this game," Pride said. "We just had a lot of confidence when the ball was in our hands."
With 10 minutes to play in the second half, the Jayhawks trailed 58-38. Washington used a pressing defense in an attempt to set back in the game.
Desp.'s the team's overall youth — there are two freshmen and a sophomore in the starting lineup — it displayed a calm confidence that allowed them to complete such a substantial comeback.
"They were very tentative, and when they went to a zone we found some opportunities," Washington said. "Jaclyn gave us a spark. She drove it to the basket and got some easy buckets."
"A person shouldn't be judged by their class," Johnson said. "In the end, it's all about heart and determination."
Washington said that her team had not had a full day off since Dec. 30.
"The team will get a very deserving day off tomorrow and then get ready for Columbia." Washington said.
When Kansas plays at Texas A&M tonight, it will try to complete a Texas two-step and remain undefeated in Big 12 Conference play.
Texas A&M coach Tony Barone said the Jayhawks' post play without All-America forward Raef LaFrentz has been nothing short of spectacular.
The No. 3 Jayhawks crushed Texas 102-72 on Saturday in Austin, Texas, and they now will face a team that has lost four straight games.
Forward Lester Earl and center Eric Chenowith have been filling the void for Kansas.
"I think the thing that jumps out at me is: 'Who was the key to the team last year?' Barone said. "Well, it was Raef LaFrentz. They lose Raef LaFrentz, and they really haven't skipped a beat."
Also missing inside has been forward T.J. Pugh, who is expected to play tonight for the first time since Dec. 13. He was forced to the sidelines with a stress fracture on his right foot.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said that both players have shown vast improvement since returning to Kansas after the Rainbow Classic in Hawaii.
Earl has started the last six games at forward and averages 10.7 points and 8.5 rebounds. Chenowith has started the last seven games and averages 7.5 points, 5.7 rebounds and 1.9 blocked shots.
After returning from Hawaii, Williams made Earl and Chenowith watch a highlight tape of Richard Scott, a 6-foot-7-inch forward at Kansas from 1991-94. Williams considers Scott the best post player in Kansas history.
"Both Lester and Eric particularly understand that they have to produce for us," Williams said. "It's not just, 'Well, I can do any thing, play four or five minutes and Raef will take care of it.' That is why I really like what those two are doing."
Earl said the tape helped him become a more effective offensive player.
I'm posting up a lot stronger and working a lot harder in the post, so the tape helped me tremendously." Earl said. "Everyone can score on a team, and this is a great ball club. It's just a matter of whose number is going to get called on any night."
While the Jayhawks' depth has compensated for numerous injuries, Texas A&M has not had that luxury.
Aggie forward Calvin Davis, who averages 15 points and 7.4 rebounds, probably will not start against Kansas because of a pulled muscle in his lower back. He played just 11 minutes in a loss to Oklahoma on Saturday.
However, many Aggie fans might not notice. Texas A&M has had an average of 2,716 spectators at its nine home games.
The Starting Lineup
KU
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
19-2 overall, 3-0 Big 12
G RYAN ROBERTSON 6-5 Jr.
G BELLE LEMMING 6-4 Sr.
F PAUL PIERCE 6-7 Jr.
F LEFTON FARL 6-9 Sr.
C ERIC CHENOWITH 7-0 Fr.
XTN
TEXAS A&M
AGGIES
6-7 overall, 0-3 Big 12
STEVE HOUSTON 6-1 So.
G JERRY BROWN 6-8 So
F SHANNE JONES 6-5 Jr.
A ARDEN JACK 6-8 So
LARRY THOMPSON 6-9 Sr.
White Coliseum • College Station, Texas
White Colleague=College Station, Texas
TV/Radio: Ch. 4 and 13, 105.9 KLZR-FM
Radio: KLWN, 1320 AM
2B
Quick Looks
Wednesday January 14, 1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 14)
The stars are shining on you tonight. Even though you are feeling a lot of stress, forget about everything tonight and go out. You will be the highlight of the evening.
Aries: Today is an 8.
Today you are at the center of the action, possibly even the cause of the action. The Leo moon adds a party atmosphere to the driving force of Mars. You attract people who can match your pace.
Taurus: Today is a 5.
Today you may feel like you bought a one-way ticket for the voyage of the damned. You seem to be surrounded by unpleasant people and acts of meaningless antagonism. Stop and think about this. Maybe it's just your own bad trip.
Gemini: Todav is a 7.
Whether by phone, Internet, or face to face, this is a day to network like crazy. You don't need to be carrying a message just to check in and say hello. Keeping yourself in circulation will pay off in a big way.
Cancer: Today is a Z.
Today may be more of a day to make an arrangement than it is to see the result. You are comfortable with organizational tasks and official business. Someone else can learn a lot from watching you.
P
Leo: Today is a 9.
When the moon is in Leo's house, it becomes the towering inferno. You are hot stuff today, even for a fire sign. If you reign in your arraignance, you could be unstoppable for the next few days.
Two People
Virgo: Today is an 8.
Keeping yourself busy and in constant motion has a double edge. You may get a lot accomplished, but you do so at the risk of losing yourself. Daydreaming is both productive and healthy today.
Scorpio: Today is a 7.
Saqittarius; Today is an 8.
Libra: Today is a 7.
LION
Capricorn: Today is a 7.
SUN
The entire human race feels like a family divided today. Focus on the self only enhances and aggravates the differences. Set aside your own concerns as much as possible and try to be a healing force.
Go and introduce yourself to the people next door today. A larger sense of community begins in your own neighborhood. Creative outreach can be a contagious force.
图示
Aquarius: Today is an 8.
Today people could call you the temp based on how quickly you do one job and go on to the next one. You are light on your feet, a moving target, a verb instead of a noun. Efficiency is your middle name.
The Leo moon brings a burning secret to your otherwise free and open life. Silence can be a terrible burden, even if you have only the best reasons for it. Sudden changes in your environment can affect everything.
You may be eager to hurry sundown, but you are stuck in the oppressive glare of a day that seems to last forever. An unsound business practice makes everyone's life difficult. A shortage of something vital slows time to a crawl.
Pisces: Todav is a 6.
M
You feel like a Silhouette today, a flat moving shape with no substance. If you go looking for attention, you may attract the wrong kind. Come out of the shadows before inviting someone else into your world.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Big 12 Conference:
LUBBOCK, Texas — Brian Skinner scored 25 points, and his Baylor teammates hit 113-pointers last night as the streaking Bears beat Texas Tech 90-78.
Rodrick Miller added 24 points for Baylor, including four longrange bombs. The Bears were more accurate behind the 3-point arc, shooting 11-for-23, than their 19-for-44 clip from inside it.
It was the fifth consecutive victory for Baylor (9-5, 4-0 Big 12), which had just one road win this season and hadn't won in Lubbock since 1993. Likewise, the Red Raiders (7-6, 1-2) saw a five-game home winning streak end. The loss spoiled a 35-point game by Tech's Cory Carr.
Top 25:
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Jeff Shepard scored 16 points to lead five Kentucky players in double figures and the sixth-ranked Wildcats gained a measure of revenge against No. 14 South Carolina with a 91-70 victory last night.
South Carolina (10-3, 2-2 Southeastern Conference) swept the Wildcats last season, winning the conference regular-season title. Kentucky (15-2, 4-0) could gain a sweep this year when the teams meet again Feb. 28 at South Carolina.
SCARAB
Wayne Turner finished with 15 points and Allen Edwards had a career-high 12 of Kentucky's season-high 25 assists. B. J. McKie topped South Carolina with 24 points.
The victory was the 1,700th for Kentucky, the winningest program in college basketball history.
+ -
P
CLEMSON, S.C. — Point guard Terrell McIntyre scored 15 points
V
The Seminoles (12-5, 1-4) made some national noise with victories against Connecticut and defending NCAA champion Arizona earlier this season. But in league play, they have fallen to last place, losing to Maryland and Duke before Clemson's victory.
and was back at full speed for Clemson, which used a 17-8 run to hand No.17 Florida State its third straight Atlantic Coast Conference loss, 86-65 last night.
弓
Neither Clemson nor Florida State could afford another loss and hope to stay close to the ACC's—and the country's—top two of North Carolina and Duke.
With new coach Steve Robinson, Florida State looked like it was ready to challenge in ACC basketball as it has dominated league football the past six seasons.
But against Clemson, the Seminoles were careless with 23 turnovers and too aggressive. Second-leading scorer Randell Jackson fouled out with 11 minutes remaining after he scored 13 points.
It was only the second victory for Providence (7-7, 2-3 Big East) in 17 games in the Carrier Dome, and it was sweet. The Friars lost 77-59 at home to Syracuse (14-2, 4-1) last week.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Jamel Thomas scored 19 points and Kendrick Moore added 17 as Providence atoned for a humiliating loss to Syracuse six days earlier by beating the 15th-ranked Orangemen 76-64 last night.
The Friars scored the first 18 points of the game and their tough defenses proved too much for the Orangemen to overcome. Syracuse shot 30.8 percent and was just 2 of 18 from 3-point range against the Providence defense, which kept switching from man-to-man to zone.
From the outset, the Friars seemed intent on proving that last week's loss was a fluke. In that game, Providence shot a woeful 28.3 percent from the field and was 3-of-19 from 3-point range.
Providence, which led 33-28 at halftime, hit 50 percent of its 26 shots in the first period and 48 percent for the game.
Jason Hart led Syracuse with zz points, while Ryan Blackwell had 19 and Todd Burgan 10.
Last night's scores:
Men's Basketball (Top 25)
No.6 Kentucky 90, No.14 South Carolina 71
No.9 Purdue 68, Illinois 58
No. 10 Connecticut 80, Seton Hall 59
Providence 76, No.15 Syracuse 64 Clemson 86, No.17 Florida State 65
No. 20 Rhode Island 84, LaSalle 73
North Carolina Charlotte 66, No.
23 Marquette 53
NRA·
San Antonio 97, Boston 88
Atlanta 91, New York 89
Philadelphia 107, Vancouver 89
New Jersey 81, Charlotte 68
Chicago 101, Seattle 91
Houston 100, Dallas 87
Orlando 98, Denver 84
Cleveland 102, Phoenix 84
Miamiat Portland
NHL:
Washington 4. Ottawa 0
Sports on TV tonight:
6 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Duke at Wake Forest
ESPN2 NCA4 Basketball, Penn St. at Wisconsin
TBS — NBA Basketball, San Antonio at Washington
7 p.m.
8 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, North Carolina at Maryland
9:30 p.m.
ESPN2 - NHL Hockey, Colorado at Anaheim
Tonight's men's basketball games:
No. 1 North Carolina at Mary land, 8 p.m.
No. 13 Iowa at Ohio State, 7 p.m.
No. 18 Xavier at George Washington, 6 p.m.
No.2 Duke at Wake Forest, 6 p.m.
No.3 Kansas at Texas A&M, 7
p.m.
No. 25 Oklahoma State at Missouri, 7 p.m.
No. 22 Arkansas vs. Florida, 7 p.m.
Sports,etc.
Today in sports:
1973 — The Miami Dolphins, after going 14-0 in the regular season and winning two playoff games, beat the Washington Redskins 14-7 in the Super Bowl and become the only undefeated team in NFL history.
1968 — The Green Bay Packers won their second straight Super Bowl. The game draws the first $3 million gate in football history. Bart Starr, the game's MVP, completes 13 of 24 passes for 202 yards.
1990 — Joe Montana set an NFL record when he completes his 30th and 31st post-season touchdown passes as the San Francisco 49ers beat the Los Angeles Rams 30-3 in the NFC championship game. Terry Bradshaw had thrown 30.
1990 — John Elway passed for 385 yards and three touchdowns as the Denver Broncos advance to their fourth Super Bowl with a 37-21 victory against the Cleveland Browns in the AFC Championship.
SPORTS CALENDAR
Today:
Saturday:
7:05 p. m. at College Station, Texas— Men's basketball v. Texas & M
1. 0.5 p.m. in Allen Field House—Men's basketball v. Kansas State
2 p.m. at Columbia, Mo — Women's Basketball mv. Missouri
1 p.m. at Carbondale, Ill.—KU Swimming and Diving v. Southern Illinois University
TV TONIGHT
WEDNESDAY PRIMETIME
JANUARY 14,1998
© 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 College Basketball: Kansas at Texas A&M. (Live) Earth: Final Conflict Mad Abo. You Hard Copy® Cops® LAPD
WDAF 8 Beverly Hills, 90210® Party of Five "Parent Trap" News® News® Real TV® H.Patrol Keenen Ivory
KCTV 8 Nanny® Murphy Public Eye (In Stereo) Chicago Hope (In Stereo) News® Late Show (In Stereo) Seinfeld®
KCPT 7 Searching for the Maya Science Odyssey (in Stereo) Part 4 of 5® Business Pt. Trailsle Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
KSNT 8 Censored Bloopers 3rd Rock-Sun Working Dateline (in Stereo) News Tonsight Show (in Stereo) Late Night®
KMBC 8 Spin City® Dharma-Greg Darey Carey Ellen Primetime Live® News Roseanne Grace Under ™ M"A$H™ KTWU 1 Into the Future (in Stereo) Science Odyssey (in S stereo) All Aboard Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
IBWB 8 College Basketball: Kansas at Texas A&M. (Live) Chicago Hope (in Stereo) News® Late Show (in Stereo) Late Late®
KTKA 1 To Be Announced News® Seinfeld® Married… Nightlife®
CABLE STATIONS
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THE GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
---
5 blocks east of Iowa on 6th to Michigan. South on Michigan 1 block.
630 Michigan 1-A
Features
Home
749-7279
- Bedroom
unfurnished apartments
- Affordable rates
- Quiet
- On KU bus route
- Close to daycare, elementary & middle schools
- Microwave, dishwasher and disposal
- Washer/dryer or hookups available
- Central air conditioning and
- Pool and picnic area with barbecue grill
* 12 *morning* options
* Low security deposit
* 24-hour maintenance
* No pets
OFFICE HOURS
9-6 M, T, TH, F, S
Juice's Shotogirls
New Girls!
Juicer's Showgirls
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"Wearing nothing...
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• Wednesday's: Student Night
$3 with college ID
- FREE ADMISSION on your birthday
- Bachelor, fraternity, and group parties
We're open at 7:30 p.m. Near Riverfront 841 - 4122
Did you know...
KANSAS & BURGE
UNIONS
KANSAS & BURGE
UNIONS
Tuesday - Sunday
Did you know...
KANSAS & BURGE
UNIONS
The Kansas & Burge Unions Offers All These Services:
KU
KU
500 STORES
60th Anniversary
KU
STUDENTS AND ADMINISTRATORS
2UK
1938 - 1998
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
Jaybowl
GREEN UNION
KANSAS UNION
Who Can Counten
& Post Office
Union
FOOD SERVICES
union technology center
WESCOE TERRACE
snack bar
phone: 864-4651 • web page: www.jayhawks.com/union.info.html
KU KU BOOKSTORES
60th Anniversary
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
National of Canada
1938 - 1998
OREAD
BOOKSTOP
ACTIVITIES GROUP
Jaybowl
SUNDAY DUCKS
UNION
ROUTERSICS
union technology center
WESCOE TERRACE
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WEISCHER REALITY
3
Wednesday, January 14, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 3
Kansas draws football stars
Allen goes after top running backs from Texas schools
Kansan staff report
With the Feb. 4 National Signing Day only 23 days away, the Kansas football team has received seven nonbinding oral commitments from high school players.
The commitments will not become official until each player signs his letter of intent.
In his first full year of recruiting, head coach Terry Allen has picked up notable commitments from several regional talents. Most recently, the Jayhawks received the commitment of Shawnee Mission East running back/defensive back Henri Childs.
Childs, an all-stater, is the son of Kansas State and NFL tight end Henry Childs. Although he played both tailback and defensive back in high school, Childs has been projected to play defense in college.
The Kansas City Star reported that the Jayhawks have secured one visit and will get another this weekend from two of the top running backs in Texas. Dwain Goynes, a 5-foot-11, 175-pound running back from Lamarque, Texas, was in Lawrence last weekend, while Tellis Redmon, 6-0, 175 pounds, from Coffeyville Heritage, Texas, will be on campus this weekend.
Both Goynes and Redmon, along with current committed player Demond Benford, are members of The Dallas Morning News Texas Top 100 list.
Football recruiting 1998
Nonbinding oral commitments:
Algie Akinson DE 6'5 220
Evanston (I.) Township
Demand Benford DL 6'3 245
Killeen (Texas) Ellison, Texas
■ Kyle Grady OL 6'4 275
Mesquite (Texas) Poteet
M. Abdul-Rahim D 6'0 200 Scottsdale (Ariz.) CC
T. Newman DB 6'0 170
Salina Central
Henri Childs RB/DB 6'2 190
Shawne Mission East Eagle
Justin Sands OL/DE 6'7 245
Lawton-Bronson (lowa)
No Nebraska plans await KU assistant
By Erin Thompson Kansan sportswriter
Since Nebraska football head coach Tom Osborne announced his retirement last month, there has been speculation that Kansas football administrative assistant Dave Gillespie will leave Kansas to be an assistant coach for the Cornhuskers.
During semester break, The Kansas City Star and The Lawrence Journal World reported that Nebraska was considered Gillespie to replace Frank Solich as running back coach when Solich takes over for Osborne in February.
Gillespie was a three-year letterman for Osborne at Nebraska and later served eight years as a recruiting coordinator before coming to Kansas in 1994.
Thus far, Gillespie said he had no plans to join his alma mater's coaching staff.
"There is a potential opening, but not until Coach Osborne steps down," Gillespie said. "As an alum and former staff member, my name might have been
mentioned as a potential candidate."
PETER L.
no candidates, semi-finalists or finalists have been listed for the job yet and likely will not be announced until Febru-
Gillespie: Has no plans to join coach stuff at Nebraska
ary. Nebraska assistant athletic director Chris Anderson said.
"The position isn't effective until after recruiting, so we're not on a real fast track to fill the position. An appointment could be made earlier but most likely won't be made until after recruitment sign day," Anderson said.
Gillespie has held numerous positions at Kansas, including tight end coach, recruiting coordinator and defensive line coach. Gillespie now works as an administrative assistant to head coach Terry Allen and helps with recruiting.
Freshman competitor nets tennis victories
Kansan staff report
In her first collegiate tournament, freshman tennis player Christine Sues advanced further than her older teammates.
Sues advanced to the semifinals of the Milwaukee Tennis Classic last week, where she fell to Alison Nash of Arizona State. 3-6,6-4,6.4.
"For a freshman to come in and do that well is rare. She has tremendous potential," head coach Roland Thornvist said.
Senior Kyle Hunt and sophomore Julia Sidorova also competed, Hunt, in her first singles action of the season, advanced to the quarterfinal, losing to Nash 7-7.5-6.4.
Sidorova lost to Stephanie Tibbets of California in the third round 6-3, 6-0.
Thornqvist was pleased with the performances.
"It was a great way to start the year," he said.
The next match for the Jayhawks is January 30 at Alvamar Tennis Club in Lawrence against Wichita State.
Other tennis news:
The men's tennis team signed its first player for the 1998-99 season, head coach Mark Riley announced yesterday.
Quentin Blakeney, a senior from Charlotte, N.C., signed a national letter of intent to play at Kansas yesterday. Blakeney recently was ranked the No. 4 player in the South.
S. S.
PEACECORPS
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PEACE CORPS
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Beginning and Intermediate Knitting Classes Starting Soon!
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20% off class yarns.
Beginning Knitting: Learn by making a sweater or vest!
800-424-8580
INFORMATION TABLE
Reps will be at KU!
Jan. 19 (Mon.), 7-9 p.m. (Sweater)
Jan. 22 (Thurs.), 7-9 p.m. (Vest)
Jan. 27 (Tues.), 7-9 p.m. (Sweater)
Complete schedule of all classes available at Yarn Barn.
Classes in knitting, weaving, spinning, tatting, & rug braiding.
0 Mass. St. VARN BARN 842-4333
or look us up on the WEB www.peacecorps.gov
Williams is looking for talented, dedicated and creative employees to join us in our quest to be among corporate America's top performers. Building on a foundation of impressive growth and
WILLIAMS Where talent meets opportunity
success, we are well-positioned to meet this aggressive goal. With headquarters in Tulsa, Oklahoma, we are a multi-billion-dollar corporation with operations in
We will be conducting interviews for both internship and full-time positions on campus on Tuesday, February 10th. We're looking for students majoring in electrical and industrial engineering, management information systems, and computer science. Please notify the Career and Employment Services office if you are interested in scheduling an interview.
We offer competitive salaries and benefits, and the prestige of working for a company that plays a key role in shaping the future of the energy and communications industries.
30 Mass. St. YARN BARN 842-4333
For more information about our company or job opportunities, visit our Internet site at http://www.twc.com.
50 states and international locations. Our companies consist of the nation's largest-volume system of interstate natural gas pipelines; business units offering a complete array of traditional and leading-edge energy solutions; and single-source providers of national business communications systems and international satellite and fiber-optic video services.
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Section B · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 14, 1998
UDKI Check Us Out! THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN www.kansan.com
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Interested in writing for the Kansan?
Some experience? No experience? All majors welcome. KANSAN
Come to the Informational meeting for Kansan Correspondents.
Thursday, January 15 4:30pm in 100 Stauffer Flint
Or contact Gwen Olsen at 864-4810 for more information
Wednesdays
at Henry T's
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Troublesome Texas team struggles for improvement
AUSTIN, Texas — Texas coach Tom Penders is being tested.
The Associated Press
First, he underwent surgery to have a pacemaker and defibrillator placed in his chest to monitor an enlarged heart. His team opened 0-2 while he was recovering.
Then, as he struggled to find a consistent lineup — namely a point guard — his star player and leading scorer, Kris Clack, suffered a knee injury and has to sit out a month.
The Longhorns have lost four straight since Clack went down and lost 91-75 at Oklahoma Monday night.
After opening the season ranked No. 22, Texas has fallen to 6-9 and 0-4 in the Big 12, its worst start since 1993, when it opened Southwest Conference play 0-4 and finished the season 11-17.
The Longhorns, who have lost four straight for the first time since losing five in a row in 1993, also have suffered their worst home loss in
"This is a special group that is going to be excellent, and if people can't see it, I don't think they are looking at it with a critical eye. We've got the makings of a fine basketball team. With the schedule we play, it's hard to win if you don't play great," Penders said.
Penders, whose nonconference losses have come against Princeton, Georgia (twice), Illinois and Arizona, says he has been forced to be patient with this year's team because his primary rotation includes three freshmen and two sophomores.
who has battled a sprained thumb in his shooting (right) hand, is averaging nine points and seven rebounds per game.
Luke Axtell, a 6-9 freshman guard, is averaging 14 points per game, and 7-foot freshman center Chris Mihm.
While it's clear that both players will be cornerstones of the program for the next four years, Axell still was feeling his way on set plays, and Mihm has struggled with his shot inside while his weakened hand has allowed opponents frequently to strip the ball from him.
The team relies on the 3-pointer, which has been shot poorly, and Penders still is trying to find a point guard.
Penders knows he has a point guard arriving next year in William Clay, from San Jacinto Junior College, and possibly even Vaughn Hunter, one of New York City's top high school players who has committed to Texas.
It appeared that Ivan Wagner, a sophomore transfer from North Carolina State, would play point. But his shot has been suspect, as has senior Brandy Perryman's.
NFL scores big deal with CBS
Other two networks forced to scrimmage for Monday night slot
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — When the NFL's version of musical chairs ends, either NBC or ABC will be left without a seat in the broadcast booth.
CBS made sure it wouldn't be the odd network out again, buying its way back into the NFL on Monday night with a stunning $4 billion, eight-year deal to televise the AFC package formerly held by NBC. The CBS deal more than doubles the per-season rate that NBC paid in 1997.
Earlier Monday, Fox and the NFI settled on a $4.4 billion, eight-year contract that allows the network to keep the Sunday afternoon NFC deal.
TNT and ESPN are expected to retain their Sunday night cable packages, but at close to double the price. ESPN paid $524 million, and TNT paid $496 million in the previous deal.
That leaves Monday Night Foot
ball, which ABC has held since its inception in 1970. But NBC, which also has been broadcasting NFL games for 28 years, has made a bid to challenge ABC for the Monday night package, said a source familiar with the negotiations.
In 1983, ABC paid $20 million during four years for *Monday Night Football*, a 2 percent increase from the previous four-year deal. It will
"Even though the Monday night ratings are off a little bit, it is still one of the top
cost much more
to keep it this
time, maybe
more than double
the previous
price.
ranked programs in prime time every year," said Ron Frederick, a media buyer at the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency. "It is three hours of guaranteed quality programming. The question is how much is ABC prepared to ante up to keep one of the cornerstones of its prime time schedule."
NFL
When the NFL's deals with all five
of its network partners are completed, the packages could be worth as much as $16 billion more than the combined total of the nine previous deals with the league since 1962.
ABC and NBC each have one game left in the current contract — the Super Bowl on NBC on Jan. 25 and ABC's Pro Bowl coverage on Feb. 1. The network that loses out on Monday Night Football will be out of the NFL for at least five years.
If NBC wins the bidding war, the No.1 network in prime time would get another night of dominance at a crucial time for the network. NBC's Thursday night schedule for next fall is unsettled, with *Seinfeld* ending production and the contract for *ER* expiring at the end of this season.
From a football standpoint, the new contract will result in an increase in the salary cap. And while the smallest increase will be next year, it's still likely to be in the area of $10 million, allowing teams hard pressed under the salary cap to retain important free agents.
Among them are Dorsey Levens, Green Bay's star running back, and Dana Stubblefield of San Francisco, the NFL's defensive player of the year.
I
100s Announcements
Kansan Classified
1015 Personals
1020 Business Personals
1025 On Campus
1030 Announcements
1035 Travel
1040 Entertainment
1040 Lost and Found
男 女
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
200s Employment
X
300s Merchandise
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
325 Marine Equipment
330 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
351 Motorcycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
400s Real Estate
The Karasi will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that ...criminates against any person or group of persons based on sex, age, race, color, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Karasi will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that ...exists in a real estate advertisement this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1975.
405 Real Estate
405 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
425 Apartments
430 Roommate Wanted
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
... which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on any choice made by the respondent" (national original, an intention to make such any preference, limitation or discrimination).
I
Our readers are hereby informed that an jobs and housing advertisement in this newspaper an available on an equal opportunity basis.
864-9500
100s Announcements
105 - Personals
St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen applicants
wanted. Call 841-2218. Deadline Jan. 27, 1998.
❤️❤️❤️
---
110 - Business Personals
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU CENTER
120 - Announcements
Spring Break Mazatlan
H
Don't miss out on the HOTTEST destination in Mexico. Airfare, 7 nights hotel, transfer, FREE drinks, 15 FREES parties. For FREE brochure 1-800-395-4986 {www.collegetours.com}
BEST HOTELS. LOWEST PRICES. ALL SPRINGBREAK locations. Cancun, Jamaica, from $99. Florida, from $89. Texas, Mazican, from $125. New York, from our Campus Rep. 809-327-6013 www.icp.com
Instructional & Educational video's *C-DROMs*, subjects from all walks of life. Internet access is limited to only $1.85/mo. tell your instructor how to make a shopping http://www.intellm.com/ edl.
Men & Women Needed. Headquarters Counseling Center needs caring volunteers. No exp. necessary-trained provided. Interest? Info. Meetings: 7:00 p.m. Tues. 13 at ECM. 18 Oread, or 7:00 p.m. Sun. Jan. 18 at Community Support Services, Volunteer Questions? 84
125 - Travel
travel
SPRING BREAK trips to Mexico, Jamaica,
Florida. From $9 & $38 Call Jason at 840-914-8
Spring Break '98. South Padre Island.
www.pirentals.com 1-800-292-7520
Kansan Ads Work for YOU
***Spring Break '88 Get Going!** Cancun, Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida. Group discounts & Free Drink Parties! Sall $1 go free! Book www.smalltrip.com/234-709-7887 http://www.endsummerturtles.com
Male and Female
205 - Help Wanted
Hard working, energetic persons to teach behavioral program to 2 year old with Autism.
200s Employment
Kennel help needed. Must be reliable & hardworking. Applicant in person at Clinton Parkway.
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
with 20% profit plus profit offer and
profit at 78% (upgrade) to 85%.
Rainine Montessori School is interviewing for
an internship at the school's two co-
position sites, 47.7 per hour, Call 843-2561.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for Safe Ride drivers. Must be 21 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 pm.
Christian Daycare has 2 part-time openings for morning or afternoon. Must be highly reliable and available to work long time. For interview call 843-2088.
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wkdays. Need experience, ref, own transportation. May work extend in summer & fall. Call Judy or John #42-3581.
Female figure model needed for artist's project.
Experience not necessary. Must be 18. Stable personality required. Leave name and number at 691-9788.
Kansan Ads Pay
The University Daily Kansan
205 - Help Wanted
+ + + + +
Child care in home. 3 kids. 3 days/wk. Reliable.
n-mother. carer (913) 845-3683
FEMALE VOCAIST wanted for pro-band.
High-strong voice and personality. All styles.
Also, DRUMMER/PERCUSSION/vex w/操
exp.$ and fun. 799-369
Graphic Design and Advertising Interests still available for Sp. semester. Get some real world experience in Design, Web, Advertising, and Printing. Call for more info on Pilgrim Page M1-1211.
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning & afternoon teachers aides. Experience with children helpful. Appliance 2104 W. 15th St.
Marketing Intern/Personal Assistant
Interesting and challenging position for the right person. A unique opportunity with flexible hours.
Call Dick at 834-4527
Marketing Interv./Personal Assistant
Intervoting and chaplaincy position on the staff
**Expansion** ****Nat co. immediate FT/PT*
openings in **NatTech** *Jacob entry & level-a-
nagement*
No exper. cond. apply. Call 813-381-9671 11-5
Up to $10.45
Up to $10.45
Adams Alumini Center《The Learned Club adult to campus, has openings for part dishwashers for all shifts. Above minimum wage, wages up to $250. Dawn Range at 864-787 for more information.
Customer service positions available immediately for enthusiastic, motivated individuals. Full time pay for part time hours. Great for college students or any half hour. Start today Call 816-5454. Ask us.
HELP WANTED: THE MAIL BOX
HELP WANTED: THE MAIL BOX is seeking part time help; mostly mornings & customer hours. Computer, cash register & customer hours. Helpful. Apply in person only. 3115 W. els, Suite C
PT student aide positions available at Hilltop Child Development Center, Mon.-Fri. 12:30:2-3 p.m. and Mon.-Fri. 7:15:9-30 m. Please call 684-211-7640 for information on the Kansas Union (an) application for
PT assistant teacher positions available at Hilltop Child Development Center, Mon.-Fri. 11-30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Please call 864-4940 for more info on the Kansas Union) an application for this position.
Graduate Teaching Assistant, School of Education.
Tuition waiver included. 20 hours a week
Begin 01/01/98/05/16/98. Duties: Assisting with TEL 400, assisting in Robinson Computer Lab.
Application forms and detail job description in 2001 Dole, 864-364. Deadline is January 18th.
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club adjacent to campus, has openings for banquet services, bar leaders and hosts. Flexible hours, daytime and weekend availability preferred. Below minimum wage, employee meal plan in a professional setting. Shifts average 6 hours. Apply at 1286 Oread Ave.
Part time recycling technician need in the Office of Resource Conservation & Recycling (RCR). Duties will include collection & processing of recyclables & minimal data entry. Some heavy lifting & working in inclement weather will be required. Job code 98-001 OR contact RCR at 4-4069
obtained job code 98-001 OR contact RCR at 4-4069
Students in the Special Education/Nursing Curriculum. Looking for responsible individuals to assist in caring for disabled children, ages 4-15. Shifts available: Early AM, Weekend (7AM) afternoon, and evening. Hourly wage to $7.00 per hour. Contact: terri at Hands 2, Help 832-2515
Tutors-Part time positions, approx. 6hrs per week. Individual and small group tutoring with children age 6-18. Requirements: Baccalaureate Degree with major or minor in education or student village. with supervision. Send Resume to Eagle II, Inc. 223W 92H, Skopi, Koea 3681 EOE
CNA/CHAIIa Our busy not for profit home health care is recruiting caring, team oriented CNA's/CHIAIIa to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Evening hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply to Missouri County Visiting Nurses Association, 356 Missouri, Lower Level or call 811-4634 for PAT EOE.
TELEMARKETERS!
* Earn up $10/hour with bounces
* 100 sign on bonus (paid at 60 days)
* Attendance Bonus
* Casual dress, Upbeat environment
* Casual working at 12:00 a.m.
* HOURS Working: 8:00-M-F and
Saturdays 10:02-0:2
* Call Lori @ 843-9094
The Rock Chalk Chafe at College Park-Naismith Hall seek part-time Dish Room Attendants and Buffer Servers. Shifts available, 4:00-8:00 p.m., weekend days 11:00-4:00. Positions require customer friendly attitudes and the desire to have fun at work. Competitive wages, travel allowance, and job application for jb application between 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/V/H.
KU FIT TEAM Job Opportunity
University of Kansas Survey Research Center will be hiring 30-69 students to conduct telephone surveys. Surveys do not involve soliciting. Must have general knowledge of computers. Must have good command of English language and starting salary up to 7.25 per hour DQ/E, Applications may be completed at 607 Blake Hall, KU (784-654-881), AAEO.
The KUFT TEAM staff is looking for an energetic and friendly personal Weight Room Assistant to assist participants in one-on-one instruction in the Robinson Weight Room. Personal assistance is preferred. Comes by 280 Robison for information and a job application or call 864-3546.
STUDENT HOURLY: WAREHOUSE/SHIPPING POSITION to start ASAP; approx 15-20 hrs/wk (Mon-Fri, 1-5pm); 6 hrs or more enrolment @ KU requested. Pack & ship books from UniMarks (St. Petersburg, St. (west campus)); must be able to lift 50 lbf parcels; $25/hr starting, daily $29 incentives, and raises every 3 mos. Come by 250 W. 15th St., (ph. 422-778) for complete application. An EFQ/AA certificate is required.
SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Pocono Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in fantastic camp setting. Counselors WLTA, Arts, Eng., Math. and Science at SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to "the finest summer you will ever have." On campus interviews Wed, Feb. 4th at Kansas Union Ballroom, 809-623-9348. staff@campwanda.com
WE ARE A FORTUNE 500 COMPANY GROWING LOCALLY IN LENOXA. WE ARE SEEKING TALENTED INDIVIDUALS TOFILL POSITIONS OFFER: $19,000-$82,000 BASE, WEEKLY COMMISSIONS, NO TRAVEL, FULL BENEFITS, OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT! IF YOU NEED HELP OR ADVICE, THEN TION OR SCHEDULING AN INTERVIEW PLEASE CALL (913) 492-870 ASK FOR KENN
205 - Help Wanted
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$$$ BONUS! BONUS!$$$
Growing *I* Residential Home Improvement Co. seeks motivated, dependable people to take
inductions call. New phone voice: PC skills in
business, telephone skills, plus ous-
sibilities or minimum skills. $80/hr to start,
and raises based on your performance. Flex-che-
ses, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at:
www.gametheatre.com
GET OUT OF TOWN!!
Tel, 291 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this
ad with you to qualify for bonus.
Community Living Opportunities (CLO) is currently accepting applications for teaching counsellors to work with and enhance the vocational and daily living skills of men and women with developmental and daily living skills of men and women in a community based settings in Lawrence. Positions available include full-time, part-time, and substitute day from 7a to 3p or 9a to 2:30p, apply in person on Tuesday, noon to 3p or Thursday, sa 1 to 4p, Lawrence, or call 865-8520 for more information.
Escape to the Pecos Canyon daydream, cool nights, good friends, and great kids!! Opportunities for leadership, experience, personal and professional development. 1988 summer session. Teach one or more of the following: Art, dance, drama, music, fencing, riftery, tennis, soccer, swimming, archery, mountain biking, flyfishing, ropes course, horseback riding, nature, backpacking. Also hiring for photography. Attend the Palm Springs Scott at 1-800-272-844 for an application or send resume to PO Box 5295 Santa Fe, MN 87502
Student Housing
Dining Services
Transportation
* Flexible Schedules
* New Friends
* Convenient Locations
Call or call by any
DH Dining Center:
GSP * 864-3120
Hashinger * 864-1014
Hashinger * 864-1087
Oliver * 864-1087
Earn $7.50/hour (Full-time students) can earn extra $2.50/hour in tuition assistance) working part-time as a teacher or an instructor and are available at Community Living Opportunities, Inc. (COL). Positions involve teaching daily living skills to adults with developmental disabilities in casual, family style group homes and residential care. Applications must be using components of the internationally known Teaching-Family Model. Tuition assistance programs that are also full-time students, with work schedules that won't interfere with school. Applications accepted during walk-in interviews on Tue 12:30pm and Thurs 9-11 at 2113 Lawrence, Davenport.
STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT I. Deadline: 01/16/98. Salary: $7.15 hour. Under direction of the ITC I of System Access Management, duties include changing passwords on all systems at KU, use of the lark system, create and update system configurations, e-mail accounts, keep records on Kukub and Kuhub 2 time accounting. Also duties including typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned clerical duties with SysTape documentation for this position and covering office in the absence of ITC I. Required: Enrolled in 6 hours at KU, able to work in 3-hour blocks, 20 hours a week, follow complex verbal and written instructions, 6 months typing experience. To apply, visit job application online Room 202 of the computer Center, EO/AA Employer
WANTED
Underwriting Agency will train the right person to become a Student Representative for the University of Kansas Medical Center on a part time basis. Students must have in contact with students may have in respect to their health insurance and keeping the Account Executive up-to-date. We are willing to work around your class schedule. Requirements are: Microsoft Word experience, strong organizational and people skills.
Student Health Insurance Representative For Students at the University of Kansas Medical Center
Chris Nowland
G-M Underwriters Agency, Inc.
89 W. South Blvd.
Suite 100
JOIN NCS TODAY!
National Computer Systems. Inc. has 40 immediate long-term temporary Customer Service & Data Entry positions available. Job location: Jacksonville, FL - Flexible scheduling between 7 a.m. & 7 p.m.
An ad in the Kansan is the best way to deliver your message to KU students
*7.90/hr./Spanish Speakers *7.35/hr.
*1st and 2nd shift options in Data Entry
A casual work environment
1 month of work experience
Opportunities for regular full-time employment
Training scheduled weekly (I/D/E, & monthly
Both positions require a 3,000 kph (test required)
Walk-in today and apply:
East Chicago Panthers (off K-10)
3833 Greenway Drive
Lawrence, KS
WKD
Juicers
Shenawang
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Now hiring for the Spring '98 Semester in the following positions:
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly.
NOTE TAKERS * earn $10 & $15 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in B14 lecture classes for the course A. Must have grade 3.3 or higher with grade of A. Must have 3.3 + GPA. Courses open. Bio 414 * 500+* COHE, 601 * Geog 304*, 608
Now hiring managers, DJs,
attractive dancers and
waitresses 18+. Apply in person.
Jon's Notes
OFFICE ASSISTANT: Service customers at our Kansas University bookstore location. 1R, 12:30 to 4:00 P.M. Duties include proofing and lecture documentation notes to customers. Pay $1.5 per hour
ADVERTISER$- Distribute fliers before class, outside of lecture. Earn $8 for 30 minutes work. Punctual, dependable, cheerful students need only apply.
Complete an application at our office at the 2nd floor, Kansas Union bookstore between 9 and 5.
205 - Help Wanted
500 SUMMER CAMP JOBS/58 CAMPS/YO CHOOSE! JN, NY, PA, NEW ENGLAND, TEN- LACROSE, BASKETBALL, GYMNASTICS, RIDING, SWIMMING, WS, MT BIKING, PIO- DANCE, PIANO ACCOMPANIST, THEATER, CERAMICS, JEWELRY, WOODSHOP, PHO- CHEFES, PE MAJORS, ETIC ARLNE STREISAND 1-800-443-6242; FAX: 151-693-7494
A NEWYEAR-
A NEW CAREER!
Upbeat, Professional Work Environment
These positions offer paid training for qualified individuals possessing outstanding customer service and sales skills. Permanent placement with great benefits and advancement opportunities are guaranteed to those exhibiting excellent performance and attendance after only 90 days!
Ask up about our $50 referral bonus!
Call now to request a confidential interview!
ENCORE
STAFFING SERVICES
7:30 am - 5:30 pm M-F (785) 331-0044 24 hour staffing and information (785) 887-7635 13 East 8th Street EOE
IS THIS JOB FOR YOU?
Flexible Schedule,
Up to $8.50/hr
Upbeat,
Professional Work
Environment
We have over 100 positions for qualified individuals possessing Excellent customer service skills, desiring longterm or possible permanent
opportunities and great benefits!
Ask us about our $50 referral bonus!
Call now to request a confidential interview!
ENCORE
STAFFING SERVICES
7:30 a.m.- 5:30 p.m.M-F
(785) 331-0044
A DIVISION OF SPENCER REED GROUP, INC.
24 hour staffing and information
(785) 887-7635
JOBS, JOBS, JOBS!
13 East 8th Street EOE
We are bursting at the seams with great positions for people willing to make LONG-TERM or PERMANENT COMITT
- Customer Service
MENTS!
- Machine Operator
Call now to explore your new career options!
We have many opportunities
- Warehouse
ENCORE
225 - Professional Services
- Assembly
STAFFING SERVICES
Ask us about our $50 referral bonus!
A DIVISION OF SPENCER REED GROUP, INC
including:
13 East 8th Street EOE
- Office Management
7:30 a.m..-5:30 p.m.M-F (785)331-0044 24 hour information on jobs
RESUMES
• Professional Writing
• Cover Letters
TRANSCRIPTIONS
Linda Morton
Certified Professional Resume Writer
RESUMES
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842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
X
CPRM
Certified Professional Nurse Ringer
305 - For Sale
300s Merchandise
S
---
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-9115
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your audio equipment, arms, tape decks. (t85) 229-6393.
325 - Stereo Equipment
340 - Auto Sales
1995 Jeep Cherokee, 35,000 miles, 4 wheel drive,
automatically loaded when it名我它 it名 115,500
km/h.
370 - Want to Buv
S
$$$$$$
EASY CASH!
Needed: A student. Call tomorrow's K-State game. Will pay $2 cash. Please call 749-2793.
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
MERCURY HOMES
3 bdm, 2 bath on bus route. W/D, brand new
anartment "775/mo. ASAP!" ACP1 331-3832
Sublease BDRM in 3 BDRM townhouse on Monterey Way. Sale call pryR at n193-438-6358
1BDRM unfurnished ap, at 703 Arizona. Near KU
routes, DW share, whirlpool, garage. KU
routes, DW share, whirlpool, garage.
1, 2 and 3 bdm. KU & Downtown w/park
bds. Belmire $34/mr. Call dem. Call 849-7384 or
769-7384.
1 BR Downtown Sublease (816 1/2 Mass ) Central Air/Heat, Skylight, Rock walls, Washer/Dryer, Security doors, $550 Call 749-3033 for appointment
1BR, walk to KU. Avail now, lease through July.
680/mo. Two months rent free. Very clean, free
room. 2-car garage.
B2A Bavail now. Top Level. Spaciosa, quiet locat-
ion. B2A Bavail 8-901-400-101 to view.
$245 Bavail 843-901-101
BDRM's avail now no Spacious location. New car
card: BDRM call $95,000 W17. 70 room
card: BDRM call $48,000 W17.
Heatherwood Valley Apartment now starting short term leasing on bedroom apartment
Unfurnished Room
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
Hey! Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the lap, of your choice this fall? We have some of the biggest asphalt in town for $49.95 per square foot. Call #642-1455. Park 25 Apartments, 2401 W. Shrimp Creek
4 Bedroom/3 Bath
**Early Sign Up Special**
($40 off per month)
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Washers/Dryer Trash Compactor
Dishwasher Gas Fireplace
Coffee Maker Coffee Machine
Back Patio Ceiling Fans
Walk-in Closets Covered Parking
For More Info: (785) 841-7849
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Looking for a place to rent? FREEST RENT REFERRAL?
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
$ 13^{1/2} $ E.8TH ST., LAWRENCE
405 - Apartments for Rent
841-5454
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE Coed student housing alternative to private landlords. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by 1406 Tennessee st. 841-0484
Sublease. Roommate will share to a 4 bdm
apartment at Surrieu Village $350/mo./¼-14 mo.
and $2,700/mo./½-10 mo.
WIN A COLOR TV
& 1ST MO. FREE!
all appls & W/D, built in bookkhels. Avail.
New Call: 7021 2100 Heatherwood #A-2
Email: info@appleschool.com
SignLEASE for 1 BR apt. before Jan. 31st and be entered in a drawing for a color TV. Great location on KU bus rie, 1 BR, apt. with water pds. $49 all apis & W/D, built in bookshelves. Avail.
Hurry..Don't miss this great opportunity!
Equal Housing Opportunity
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
On KU Bus Route
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
M
mastercraft
management
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes
Apartment homes designed with you in mind.
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Visit the following locations Campus Place
Visit the following locations
Hanover Place
14th & Mass 841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold · 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Tanglewood
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon- Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am- 4pm
At some locations
MASTERCRAFT
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
405 - Apartments for Rent
Walk to campus. Room for rent in lovely family home. $300/mo. Female, non-amoker, 842-6360.
GREAT LOCATION!!!
2 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE JAN. 1
1st Month Free $280/mo. + utilities
LOCATED ON 1345 VERMONT C# BALL 841-9115
---
415 - Homes For Rent
Large house for lease Beginning in May, June, May 2014. Room 129 to 168. Very near, very close to KU. Leave number @ 691 9798.
Sublasee-2 BBR 1,BBR 1,W-D book up,deck and pat4 84H,plus deposit call 321-8683 or (913) 505-7563.
RM needed immediately to share a 1/bath, 1 bath
Close to Campus Rent is $185/mo + 2½ jall. Tax
Rent is $30/mo + 4½ jall. Tax
Roostmate wanted. Call for info, @43-1103. Good location. $250 plus utilities.
1 M wanted to hire a BDM house. M or F, non-
niskorer/student preferred, $240 & utilities—huh,
no phone!
Female RM needed to share 3 BDRm APt
Female RM needed to share 3 BDRm APt
2074 leave a message
Female roommate would immediately to share
Walk to campus $197.50 + 1/2 usel call
832-904-8968
Open-minded, responsible, s/ f/male room,
room number 634; open-ended, s/ female room,
room number 820 a month plus 2 /utilities call 791-824
bathroom number 520
One nice NS female roommate needed. 2 bed 2
room available. Call 895-9048
Available as soon as possible. Call 895-9048
Roommate Wanted! 2nd semester sublease
paid. W/D $2000
month. 4/utilities. Call 842-7123
Roommate needed for a 3 bedroom apt., has 2 bathrooms, washer/dryer, great campus location! $220 a month.
Sublease female roommate wanted for spring
room. Call (913) 685-070 or 841-4380. Call
(913) 685-070 or 841-4380. Call
How to schedule an ad:
SPACIUS S/S /Grad folks seek 2 N/N Fem. Avail now Bright awlanted skilt vdll nr. campus. Quit clean air away from traffic, on park (birds, trees, bushes). D/$07 Uld Pld $84-214 leave ample. 8am; 1pm.
A P. H. **Student needs to share a quiet and room**
two bedroom apartment. $250 for rent +洗衣
and dryer + fully furnished. Contact Yong at 838-
9455
M/F roommate needed ASAP. Spacious 2 BR duplex, w/d. DW. Jan rent free. No deposit. $250/ml + 1/2 utils. Call Brian at 749-487 or 864-9749.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. at 1128 Ohio. Between campus & downtown. Close to GSP-Corbin. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No pets 841-1237.
1 male roommate wanted. 3 bdrm, house off 9th & 10th. Fully furnished in walking distance to campus. Park, grocery, and more on the street. House cost $20/mo. + 1 more utilities. 865-5053 819-843-6453
We're looking for another female to share 3 dbm home. On bus route, washer, dryer. Cable, water +1/3 other utilities $255/mo. Call 943-6121 ask for Susan or leave msg.
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In american: 119 StairFillet Flat
- By Mail: 119 Stuart Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60445
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 Keggan offices. Or you may choose to have it gifted to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
References
When cancelling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on an unclassified ads that were pre-paid by or with cash or are not available.
advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
A classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
| Name. of insertions: | 1X pin | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 3 lines | 2.50 | 2.50 | 1.40 | 1.20 | 1.00 | 0.68 |
| 4 lines | 2.30 | 1.55 | 1.85 | 0.95 | 0.60 | 0.70 |
| 5-7 lines | 2.25 | 1.40 | 1.00 | 0.65 | 0.50 | 0.68 |
| 8+ lines | 2.18 | 1.25 | 0.95 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.68 |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classifications
161 Personnel Personnel Personnel
162 The Company Personnel
163 The Company Personnel
192 Amencenomics
192 Travel
192 Equipment
140 Lest & Found
182 Help Wanted
202 Professional Services
202 Typing Services
202 Typing Services
202 Auto Sales
202 Carrier
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 Wanted to Buy
408 For Rent
410 Candidates for Rent
415 Names for Rent
400 Real Estate for Sale
420 Resumes Wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper___
Name: ___ Phone: ___
VISA
Account number:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daly Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your sd:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
Feniration Nala·
MasterCard
The University Daily Kamsan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
Section B · Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 14, 1998
SUA
Woodland Auditorium
Level 5 Kansas Univ.
804.310.WOW
THE BREAKFAST CLUB
FRI-SAT: 9:30PM
FRI-SAT: MIDNIGHT
L.A. Confidential
FRI-SAT: 7:00PM
SUN: 1:00PM
SUA FILMS
---
Tired of running around looking for a bargain?
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
RAY-BAN SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB
THE WORLD'S FIRST SUNGLASS™
Shop the Kansan Classifieds!
Over 10 Toppings to choose from!!!
.357 Special
Wednesday carry out only
$3 small I topping
$5 medium I topping
$7 large I topping
Open 7 days a week
Dine-In or Carry-Out Only
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
704 Mass.
HELP WANTED PART-TIME (2 days a month-2 weeks a year)
Great pay and excellent benefits!
Truck Drivers, Mechanics, Cooks, Medical Specialists Military Police, Supply, Administration, Aviation, Field Artillery, Armor Crewmen and Infantry Prior military service not required, we will train Prior service may enter at last rank held up to E-6. No Basic Training for Prior Service!
For more information, call today! 842-9293, 842-0759 Kansas Army National Guard
Kansas Army National Guard
Credit Within Reach
KU
Earn University of Kansas college credit through
Independent Study
ENGL362c Technical Writing (3)
GEOL 105c. History of the Earth (3) E-mail H A 535c. Impressionalism (3).
CPSY 210c. Career and Life Planning: Decision Making for College Students (3)
TH & F 382c. History of the American Sound Film (3)
Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, just north of the Kansas Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for information.
On-line Catalog and Enrollment
www.cc.ukans.edu/cwis/units/IndStudy/MENU
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL
Instant Scheduling: Tuesday, 1/20 & Wednesday, 1/21 from 8:30am to 4:00pm, 308 Robinson. To receive priority, a team member must attend the Managers' Meeting!
Would you like to be an official or scorekeeper? Meeting on Sunday, 1/18 at 8:00pm, 156 Rob. no experience necessary! Training will follow
$25 Entry Fee Due at Instant Scheduling
BASKETBALL W
For more information, contact Recreation Services: 864-3546,208 Robinson.
Managers' Meeting:
Sunday, 1/18, 7:00pm
115 Rob (east pool balcony)
Budweiser and
The Yacht Club Present..
BUD CRAWL '98
- The Yacht Club
- Louise's Downtown
- Louise's West
- The Hawk
16 oz.
- The Wheel
- G Willikers
Bud and
- Fatso's
- Quinton's
Bud Light
Specials
- Dos Hombres
- Pool Room
7:00 PM - 1:00 AM Friday, January 16th
Tickets Available at The Yacht Club
- 3 Busses • 3 Busses • 3 Busses • 3 Busses • 3 Busses • 3 Busses
$5.00
$7.00 at the door
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Men's basketball statistics leaders As of Monday. Jan. 12
SCORING
1. Cory Carr, Texas Tech 23.1
2. Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 21.1
3. **Paul Pierce, Kansas** 20.8
4. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 19.4
5. Brian Skinner, Baylor 18.0
6. Rayford Young, Texas Tech 17.1
7. Kris Clack, Texas 16.6
8. Shannne Jones, Texas A&M 16.5
9. Adrian Peterson, Okla. St. 16.0
10. Desmond Mason, Okla. St. 15.5
11. Billy Thomas, Kansas 15.3
12. Kelly Thames, Missouri 15.2
13. Calvin Davis, Texas A&M 15.0
14. Manny Dies, Kansas St. 14.7
15. Marcus Fizer, Iowa St. 14.7
(Min. 5 of 10 made per game)
1. Brian Skinner, Baylor 59.2
2. Desmond Mason, Oklahoma St. 56.5
3. Manny Dies, Kansas St. 56.5
4. Brett Robisch, Oklahoma St. 54.3
5. Calvin Davis, Texas A&M 54.0
6. Marcus Fizer, Iowa St. 52.0
7. Shanne Jones, Texas A&M 50.9
8. Paul Pierce, Kansas 50.5
9. Billy Thomas, Kansas 48.8
10. Adrian Peterson, Oklahoma St. 45.3
FIELD GOAL PCT
3-POINT FG PCT
1. Billy Thomas, Kansas 44.6
2. Duane Davis, Kansas St. 43.1
3. Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech 42.9
4. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 42.0
5. Luke Axtell, Texas 41.7
6. Kenny Price, Colorado 41.3
7. Patrick Hunter, Baylor 39.7
8. Roddrick Miller, Baylor 39.7
9. Jerry Curry, Iowa St. 35.5
10. John Woods, Missouri 34.3
BLOCKED SHOTS
1. Brian Skinner, Baylor 4.1
2. Calvin Davis, Texas A&M 2.4
3. Chris Mihm, Texas 2.4
4. Venson Hamilton, Nebraska 2.3
5. Ronnie DeGray, Colorado 1.9
6. Eric Chenowith, Kansas 1.9
7. Manny Dies, Kansas St. 1.8
8. Paul Pierce, Kansas 1.5
9. Ryan Humphrey, Oklahoma 1.4
10. Kris Clack, Texas 1.3
REBOUNDING
ASSISTS
1. Brian Skinner, Baylor 10.7
2. Venson Hamilton, Nebraska 10.3
3. Brett Robich, Okla. St. 9.1
4. Klay Edwards, Iowa St. 8.9
5. Ronnie DeGray, Colorado 8.2
6. Paul Pierce, Kansas 7.9
7. Desmond Mason, Okla. St. 7.8
8. Manny Dies, Kansas St. 7.6
9. Calvin Davis, Texas A&M 7.4
10. Chris Mihm, Texas 7.2
TEAM STANDINGS as of today
1. Steve Houston, Texas A&M 2.9
2. Kris Clack, Texas 2.4
3. Cookie Belcher, Nebraska 2.2
4. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 2.2
5. Brian Barone, Texas A&M 2.9
1. Doug Gottlieb, Okla. St. 7.2
2. Ryan Robertson, Kansas 6.5
3. Steve Houston, Texas A&M 5.3
4. Michael Johnson, Oklahoma 4.8
5. Brian Barone, Texas A&M 4.8
6. Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 4.6
7. Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech 4.4
8. Rayford Young, Texas Tech 4.3
9. Cookie Belcher, Nebraska 4.2
10. Patrick Hunter, Baylor 4.0
3-POINT FG MADE
Team Conf. Overall
1. Oklahoma 4-0 13-4
2. Baylor 4-0 9-5
3. Kansas 3-0 19-2
4. Oklahoma St. 2-1 12-1
5. Nebraska 2-1 11-5
6. Iowa St. 1-1 8-7
7. Texas Tech 1-2 7-6
8. Kansas St. 1-2 10-3
9. Missouri 1-2 8-6
10. Colorado 0-3 6-7
11. Texas A&M 0-3 6-7
12. Texas 0-4 6-9
1. Billy Thomas, Kansas 3.6
2. Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech 3.0
3. Luke Axtell, Texas 2.5
4. Kenny Price, Colorado 2.4
5. Rodrick Miller, Baylor 2.3
6. Patrick Hunter, Baylor 2.3
7. Jerry Curry, Iowa St 2.2
8. Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 2.2
9. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 2.2
10. Cory Carr, Texas Tech 2.2
| Next game | Date |
| :--- | :--- |
| at Nebraska | Jan. 18 |
| vs. Oklahoma St. | Jan. 17 |
| at Texas A&M | Tonight |
| at Missouri | Tonight |
| vs. Oklahoma | Jan. 18 |
| at Kansas St. | Tonight |
| at Texas | Jan. 17 |
| vs. Iowa St. | Tonight |
| vs. Oklahoma St. | Tonight |
| vs. Missouri | Jan. 17 |
| vs. Kansas | Tonight |
| vs. Texas Tech | Jan. 17 |
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
RECREATION SERVICES SPORT CLUB PROGRAM
Looking for something FUN and EXCITING to do??
Badminton
Crew
Cycling
Fencing
Judo
Kempo
KI-Aikido
Kuk Sool Won
Lacrosse-Men's
Lacrosse-Women's
Racquetball
Rock Climbing
Roller Hockey
Rugby-Men's
Rugby-Women's
Sailing
Soccer-Men's
Soccer-Women's
Tae Kwon Do
Ultimate-Men's
Ultimate-Women's
Volleyball-Men's
Volleyball-Women's
Water Polo
Water Skiff
Wrestling
Soccer
跑行
骑车
拳击
(1)
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TROPHUS
The Sport Club Program at the University of Kansas consists of student organizations sponsored by the Office of Recreation Services. The Clubs are designed to serve student interests in different sports and recreational activities. Sports and/or activities within the Sport Club Program can be competitive, recreational or instructional in nature. Sport Clubs may represent the University of Kansas in intercollegiate competition or conduct club activities such as practice, instruction, and social play
For more information concerning:
**The above Sport Clubs**
**Starting a New Sport Club**
Call 864-3546, or stop by the Office of Recreation Services, 208 Robinson
STUDENT
SENATE
---
-
Tomorrow's weather
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
1
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 6601-3585
ansan
Still very cold, lingering clouds will keep the sun hidden for several more days.
HIGH 32
LOW 18
Thursday
January 15, 1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 : No. 80
HIGH LOW 32 18
Online today
Administratively dropped from your principal science course? Check the University's online timetable of classes. http://www.ukans.edu/~registr/ timetable/spring_98
INDIA
Sports today
Vol.108·No.80
The Kansas Jayhawks defeated the Texas A & M Aggies last night 83-65 in College Station.
SEE PAGE 1B
Contact the Kansan
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
News: (785) 864-4810
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Opinion e-mail: opinione@kansan.com
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
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WWW.KANSAN.COM
Burglars plague campus parking
(USPS 650-640)
By Laura Roddy
Kansan staff writer
Five University of Kansas students' vehicles were burglarized Monday and Tuesday in four campus parking lots.
Stereo equipment was taken from four of the vehicles, and a citizens band radio was stolen from the other vehicle. It is not clear if the burglaries are related, KU police said.
"There is no way of knowing," said Sgt. Chris Kearv.
Keary said the police would continue to investigate.
Two of the burglaries took place early Monday morning in the Oliver Hall parking lot. The locations of the other burglaries were the South Robinson Center lot, the West Lewis Hall lot and the Stouffer Place lot.
Chris Chambers, Overland Park sophomore, discovered his car had been burglarized in the Oliver parking lot. One amplifier and six CDs were taken, and $300 in damage was done to Chambers' vehicle.
Chambers expressed concern about the frequency of thefts in the Oliver parking lot.
He said three people from his wing in Oliver Hall had their cars broken into last semester.
"It's happening a lot." he said.
Chambers said something needed to be done to prevent the thefts. He suggested installing video cameras.
Keary advised students to call the police department if they saw anything suspicious in the parking lots.
"If you have a removable face plate, take it with you or at least put it somewhere that is not visible," Keary said.
Burglary locations
West Lewis Hall lot
Stouffer Place lot
Smith Robinson
Center lot
Oliver Hall lot
Kristi Elliott / KANSAN
Open court
TOMMY KING
Anthony Thomas, Lawrence high school junior, glides through the air during his lay up attempt at the Holcom Park Recreation Center, 2700 W. 27th St. The recreation center offers an alternative gymnasium to the crowded courts of Robinson Gymnastium. The center has free play basketball on Monday; 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday; 1 p.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday; 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Photo by Augustus Anthony
Pinyan (KANSAI)
Students can use city gyms
Piazza/KANSAN
By Jeremy M. Doherty
Kansan staff writer
See CITY on page 2A
Students waiting for a chance just to dribble the ball at Robinson Center now can shoot hoops in area gymnasiums.
"In the winter time, we have facilities for basketball and volleyball use," Murphy said. "We try as much as possible to serve as many people as we can, but we felt that we needed to branch out and move to the schools."
For the Adult Free Play Program, five elementary schools will provide free recreation space from 8:30 to 10 p.m. two nights a week. The program, a cooperative effort between Unified School District #497 and the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, will continue through March 22.
The program attempts to lessen overcrowding experienced at other athletic centers, said Janet Murphy, facilities supervisor for parks and recreation.
As reflected by the program's title, participants are asked not to bring young children to any of the schools.
Open gym locations
1. Dearleaf School 101 N. Lawrence Avenue, Th; 8:30 p.m.
Thursday
2. Dearleaf School 1605 Dove and Mon, and Wed. 8:30 p.m.
3. Prairie Park School
2711 Kensington Road
Mon, and Wed. 8:30-
10 p.m.
4. Sunflower School
2521 Inventor Dr.
Tue. and Wed. 8:30
10 p.m.
1
6
8
5
2
4
7
3
5. Cordray Elementary
1837 Vermont St.
Thur, 8-10 p.m.
6. Community Building
Mon. 1:30;3:00 Tue.Fri. 1:30;5:00
7. Mallows Park
8. East Lawrence Center 1015 F. 4th St.
2700 West 27th St.
Mon., Wed, Fri. 11:30 a.m.-5 p.m: Tue, and Thur, 11 a.m-
5 p.m:
Sat, 2:30 p.m-6 p.m: Sun, 14:30 p.m.
Mon, 1:10 p.m. *Tue*, and Thur, 1:6-30 p.m., Wed, 1:3 p.m.; Fr.
1:4-30 p.m.; Sat, 2-6 p.m; Sun, 12-5 p.m.
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
A fireman boxes down a dumpster behind Malott Hall. An explosion ignited the fire last night and was contained within 15 minutes. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Explosion sparks fire near Malott
By Marc Sheforgen
Kanson staff writer
An explosion ignited a fire last night in a dumpster at the southeast corner of Malott Hall.
Richard Jump, Malott custodial supervisor, called the fire department about 9:30 p.m. after one of his workers told him about the flames.
"I could see flames up about two or three feet above the level of the box." Jump said.
Heliushka Wells, Santa Barbara, Calif., junior, was in the parking lot between Malott and Haworth halls when he heard the explosion.
"It was pretty loud but not loud enough to get my attention," Wells said. "I thought it came from farther away."
The fire fighters extinguished the flames in about 15 minutes. They then filled the dumpster with water to drown the embers. The procedure took less than an hour.
Fire department officials said the cause of the fire was unknown.
Among other things, Malott houses the University's chemistry and pharmacy departments and labs. However, fire department officials said smoke from the fire was not toxic.
Committees check 'yes' for bills providing polling sites
By Melissa Ngo Kansan staff writer
Senate to decide at next meeting
All that keeps the Daisy Hill polling site from becoming a reality is 70 student senators.
The original Daisy Hill bill, a bill to fund the site, and a new bill created by the Student Rights Committee were passed at Student Senate committee meetings last night. The bill created last night is similar
to the original Daisy Hill bill but would expand the polling sites to Oliver Hall and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall.
The bills will go into effect if passed Wednesday at the Senate meeting.
Seth Hoffman, author of the original bill and All Scholarship Hall Council senator, said he was pleased with the result.
"I'm definitely very happy that both bills passed and that the companion piece could offer more sites," he said. "I hope that the enthusiasm shown for these bills tonight will be at the next Senate meeting."
During the Student Rights Committee meeting, both the original bill and the new bill were passed after debate about the bills' fairness. The debate focused on whether the
polling sites would be used primarily by a certain portion of the student body.
"My main objection to the first bill was that it was unamendable. I wanted to extend the sites to all residence halls, not just one specific group," said Scott Merchant, business senator. "If we're going to do it, we should do it right."
The new bill to add Oliver and GSP-Corbin halls can be amended.
In the Finance Committee meeting, Hoffman, R.J. Woodring, Association of University Residence Halls senator, and Anthony Nicholson, Student Rights Committee mem-
The original bill, as a petition, could be amended only if more than 1,000 people sigmed a new petition including the changes.
ber, asked for $875 for the Elections Commission to pay for a Daisy Hill polling site for two years. They asked for two years because the commission's funding is block allocated, meaning it receives its money in two year increments. That did not include funding for the additional polling sites because the Daisy Hill funding bill was passed by the Finance Committee before the new bill was passed by the Student Rights Committee.
Aravind Muthukirnishar, Finance Committee member, said he voted against the
After discussion about whether the commission had sufficient funds to pay for the site, the bill was passed with one dissenting vote.
"The discretionary fund is for unexpected expenses that come up," Muthukrishnan said. "I think this is one of those expenses."
funding because he did not think committee financing was necessary.
Brad Finkeldei, Elections Commission member, said that the money in the discretionary fund had not yet been allocated, so that nothing had barred the commission from spending that money on the Daisy Hill site.
The commission has about $2,000 in its discretionary fund from fines paid for campaign violations last year.
If residence-hall voting sites are not approved next week, the sites will go to the student body for a vote.
2A
The Inside Front
Thursday January 15,1998
News
from campus,the state, the nation and the world
UNITED NATIONS
CHICAGO
WASHINGTON
GAINESVILLE
UNITED NATIONS: The Security Council says Iraq's refusal to allow inspections by an American-led team is a violation of U.N. orders.
From the WORLD:
From the NATION:
WASHINGTON: Whitewater prosecutors question Hillary Rodham Clinton about the White House gathering of FBI background files.
WASHINGTON: President Clinton is preparing an education shopping list for Congress.
CHICAGO: A new study says that Americans with college degrees get less sex.
GAINESVILLE, FLA: The president of the University of Florida apologizes for a racial remark.
NATION
Clinton pledges to aid education in address
WASHINGTON President Clinton is preparing to hand Congress an education shopping list for this election year that will include billions of dollars to recruit new teachers and build or repair schools and hundreds of millions to help Hispanic students.
The teacher recruitment initiative, which is expected to cost about $7 billion, would represent an unprecedented move by the federal government to involve itself in the hiring of teachers.
But the Department of Education expects classrooms to become seriously overcrowded if new teachers are not hired in the coming decade.
Clinton will make a 1999 budget proposal for teachers a key part of his State of the Union speech in two weeks. His aides were trying to guard as many details as possible.
Congressional Republicans also have recognized the need for teachers and have offered proposals, setting the stage for fights about issues such as tenure and qualifications.
Although Clinton wants to create new funding, some Republican plans would use existing money and force cuts in administration programs.
The school-construction proposal, which was abandoned when it was offered last year during budget negotiations, would cost at least $5 billion. That decision angered urban Democrats.
Clinton also will request at least $200 million to boost spending for bilingual education, education aid for migrant children and colleges with high enrollments of Hispanic students.
The numbers for programs developing during the next five years come from congressional and administration sources.
First lady denies knowledge of violations
WASHINGTON — Prosecutors questioned Hillary Rodham Clinton yesterday at the White House about the gathering of FBI background files about past Republican political appointees — her fifth session of sworn testimony for the Whitewater investigation.
The questioning took just 10 minutes. Clinton said she knew nothing about any collection of files by White House security, according to lawyers and other people familiar with her testimony. She also said that she was unaware of how the White House came to hire Craig Livingstone, the aide who ran the security office, said those sources, speaking only on condition of anonymity.
Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr questioned Clinton under oath in the Treaty Room on the second floor of the White House family residence, where investigators have interviewed the Clintons several times in recent years.
"As the president has previously announced, he and Mrs. Clinton are cooperating fully with the independent counsel," said Mike McCurry, presidential representative, reading a statement by White House counsel Charles F.C. Ruff. "Mrs. Clinton voluntarily agreed when an interview was requested."
Starr's office declined to comment.
Additional time in school leads to less time in bed
CHICAGO — So maybe ignorance really IS bliss.
Americans with college degrees get less sex than those who finished only high school, and those who went to graduate school get even less, according to a study in February's American Demographics magazine.
The study, which is based on 10,000 interviews with Americans, was conducted during the past decade by the National Opinion
Research Center at the University of Chicago
Research Center at the University of Chicago. High school graduates average 58 sexual contacts a year, while those with some college experience average 62. Those with four-year college degrees average 56, and those who have been to post-graduate school average a paltry 50.
"Americans who have attended graduate school may have the money and the smarts, but they report being the least sexually active educational group," said the study's authors, John Robinson of the University of Maryland and Geoffrey Godbey of Penn State.
However, book smarts may not be what is at work here, according to one researcher.
Tom Smith, director of the National Opinion Research Center's General Social Survey, said people with two-year college degrees tend to be younger adults and are naturally more sexually active.
Florida university president apologizes
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The president of the University of Florida is apologizing for using a racially insensitive remark to describe his future boss, the new chancellor of the State University System
At a holiday party in his home, John Lombardi referred to Adam Herbert as an "oreo," a derogatory term suggesting a person who is black on the outside is white on the inside. Herbert was not present.
"I was trying to find a shorthand way to explain his incredible effectiveness in dealing with the white institutions," Lombardi said.
Board of Regents Chairman Steve Unifhfelder had urged Lombardi to apologize to Herbert and others at the party. Herbert takes over Friday as chancellor of the entire State University System, of which the University of Florida is a part.
Herbert said he would have no comment "until I have had an opportunity to sit down and have a discussion with John."
Some black leaders accepted the apology and praised Lombardi.
"This is a man who has taken tremendous strides to bridge the gap between the University and the African-American community," said state representative Cynthia Chestnut. "I told him I was sorry it happened, but it didn't change my feelings toward him."
Whether the comment will threaten Lombardi's position as the university's president is uncertain. The decision is up to the Board of Regents.
Iraq refuses to cooperate with UN
UNITED NATIONS — A day before the chief U.N. weapons inspectors leave for Baghdad, the Security Council deplored Iraq's refusal to allow inspections by an American-team yesterday, branding the action unacceptable violation of U.N. orders.
Council diplomats said even Iraq's friends on the council — Russia, France and China — were growing frustrated by Baghdad's continued refusal to cooperate fully with U.N. inspectors.
"From our point of view, all issues concerning the work of the (U.N.) inspectors ... should be settled through talks," Foreign Ministry representative Valery Nestrushnik told the Interfax news agency in Moscow.
However, Russia quickly followed up its vote by objecting to the use of military force against Iraq.
Wednesday's unanimous council statement was sought by the United States as a show of support for chief U.N. inspector Richard Butler, who leaves for Baghdad tomorrow to demand unrestricted access to all suspected weapons sites.
U. S. Ambassador Bill Richardson hailed the council action and said the Clinton administration was anxious to exhaust all diplomatic avenues to resolve the crisis with Iran.
The statement said the council "deplores" Iraq's moves to bar American Scott Ritter and his team from conducting inspections and "Iraq's subsequent failure to fulfill its obligations to provide the (inspectors) with full, unconditional and immediate access to all sites."
City schools open gyms for students
Continued from page 1A
Dave Wright, Prairie Village senior, said Robinson's courts had always been overcrowded.
"You wait 45 minutes to get into a game, then if you get out, you wait another 45 minutes," Wright said.
KU students who must wait until 5 p.m. during the week to use one of the six basketball courts available at Robinson will benefit from the program.
He said he liked the idea of the Free Play Program.
"It's probably not the same competition you get at Robinson, but you would definitely get to play more," he said. "As long as it got two baskets, it's OK with me."
A proposal to construct a new recreation center for noneducational use would have provided more basketball courts, but it was voted down by students in 1996.
"Over the years, people would bring their kids, and they would bring their toys," Shaw said. "Of course, then people would step on them. That's school property that they're playing on, and we've got to protect that. We can't do that with kids running around."
Craig Fiegel, assistant superintendent of the Lawrence school district, said the program was a continuation of other joint activities with the parks and recreation department.
"What we try to do is provide space for gyms," Fiegel said. "After all, we use their baseball fields. The park's department has priority for the space available for free play." The school district can alter the program's hours and reserve the gyms for other activities.
A 1 percent sales tax and other tax dollars help fund the program. Murphy said.
Murphy said the Free Play program would not be maintained year-round
"I think winter is the busiest time for indoor programs," Murphy said. "As the facilities outside free up after the basketball season, we won't need the gyms that much for Free Play."
In addition to the elementary schools, the Community Building, Holom Park Recreation Center and East Lawrence Center also are available for basketball and other recreation activities.
ET CETERA
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer Flint Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stuart-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
BANSAN
UNION
Nation/World stories
http://www.kansan.com/news/nation/
Top Stories
http://www.kansan.com
The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's speaker and 30 CDs were taken from a vehicle in Lot 112 early Monday morning, KU police said. The damages and losses totaled $330.
A KU student's amplifier and six CDs were taken from a vehicle in Lot 112 early Monday morning, KU police said. The damages and losses totaled $860.
A KU student's citizens band radio and storage unit were taken from a vehicle in Lot 90 Monday morning, KU police said. The items were valued together at $270.
A KU student's CD player was taken from a vehicle in Lot 102 between 6:25 p.m. Monday and 11:22 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. The damages and losses totaled $350.
A KU student's stereo face plate was taken from a vehicle in Lot 114 Tuesday morning, KU police said. The loss and the damages to the vehicle and CD player totaled $250.
An automobile accident occurred behind Spencer Art Museum Monday morning because of slick roads, KU police said. One vehicle slid on ice and struck another car, causing minor damage.
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KANSAS & BURGE
UNIONS
Eat a Warm Meal Union Food Services
Get A Hot Cup of Coffee or Cappucino Hawk's Nest or Crimson Cafe
Take a Study Break
Take in an SUA Movie
Check Out KU Gifts
& Clothing
KUI Bookstores
Play a Game of Pool or a Video Game, or Bowl a Round Jaybowl Recreation Center
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TIRED of being crammed into small living areas? Visit Meadowbrook Apartments
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Sat. 10-4pm Sun 1-4pm
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TOKY
O
School of Fine Arts
The University of Kansas
Lied Center
Swarthout Chamber Music Series
presents
Sunday, January 18, 1998
Sunday, January 18, 1998
3:30 p.m.
Lied Center of Kansas
"If the Tokyo String Quartet isn't the world's best chamber music ensemble, it's hard to imagine which group is."
The Washington Post
Performing Mozart,
Shostakovich and Smetana
Visit our website at www.ukans.edu/lied
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (785)864-ARTS or call ticketmaster at (785)234-4545 or (816)931-3300.
handicap
Visit our website at www.uksans.edu-lied
& K STUDENT SENATE
ALL TICKETS 1/2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
THE LION GENIUS
Thursday, January 15, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Rules may silence bands
Southpark policies change rental price
By Chris Horton
Kansan Staff Writer
The center has been rented for private events such as meetings and live concerts. However, recently adopted policies about the use of recreation center could eliminate concerts there, said Janet Murphy, center supervisor at Lawrence Parks and Recreation.
Last semester, the South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St., was a popular concert venue where Lawrence residents of all ages could watch their favorite bands. That may be ending.
One of the center's new policies allows only one band per building rental and charges an additional $25 per hour to groups or individuals claiming nonprofit status without legal documentation.
Murphy said there had been problems with groups staging nonprofit events because the groups received a lower rate for renting the center and then charged a cover at the door.
A recreation-center policy also forbids alcohol and tobacco consumption within the buildings, she said.
"We've had difficulties regarding the alcohol and smoking policies, and the noise ordinance has also been violated," Murphy said.
Murphy said that one complaint from a neighboring business or resident could put the center in violation of the city's noise ordinance.
Adam Mitchell. Lawrence resident, organized several shows at the center last fall.
"I was trying to bring bands I wanted to see and that other people might want to see," he said, "The recreation center was a relatively inexpensive place devoid of alcohol, age limits and cigarette smoke."
Mitchell said he and his friends
did the best they could to follow the center's policy about alcohol and tobacco.
Acknowledging that he and his friends are not legally a nonprofit group, Mitchell said that money taken at the door was used to pay bands. The remaining proceeds went to local charities.
"Our last show's proceeds went to Anti-Racist Acts, and we've also had benefits for the Lawrence Skateboard Association and Food not Bombs," Mitchell said. "Our shows were all $5 or under, but we were supposed to be calling it a donation instead of a cover."
Luke Stemmerman, Lawrence resident and guitarist for the band One Concern, said the center's rules were not community-minded.
"The idea of a recreation center is for it to be something for everybody, especially youth. Parents would drop off their twelve year olds, who are unable to see live music regularly any where else in town." Stemmerman said.
Saferide funds to face Senate vote
by Marc Sheforgen
Kansan staff writer
A bill to finance Saferide with $30,000 unanimously passed through Student Senate's University Affairs and Finance committees last night.
The bill, presented by Senate treasurer Tom Preheim, proposed taking $30,000 from the Senate reserve account to help Saferide complete its 12th year of service.
The bill still must pass through the full Senate on Wednesday.
Preheim said that Senate budgeted $80,000 for Saferide this year, but that costs for the service would total about $105,000. Without additional funding, the service is expected to run out of money by April.
"I think it needs to be funded," said Molly Wilder, University Affairs Committee member. "It's an asset to the school."
Although no committee members voted against giving Saferide additional money, taking $30,000 from the reserve account concerns some senators.
Matt Dunbar, Finance Committee member, said, "I have kind of mixed emotions. I think it's a valuable service, but at the same time, that's a lot of money. I would have liked to see other options like cutting hours."
Many members of the committees said they were not aware of Saferide's budget problems but thought keeping the service running was important.
Saferide's financial problems stem from its renegotiated contract with the Lawrence Bus Company, the service's operator. In June, the bus company opted not to renew its previous contract for the first time since becoming Saferide's vendor.
Unsuccessful efforts to find a new vendor forced Senate's
transportation board to renegotiate the contract, raising hourly service costs per car from $23.85 to $27. Because Saferide's budget already was set, the increased costs could keep Saferide's cars in the garage.
Next year, student transportation fees will increase $2$, which will generate an additional $86,000 for Saferide. Preheim said the extra money not only would keep Saferide going and but also might allow for the purchase of a new car when the fee becomes effective in Fall 1998.
MORE INFORMATION:
61-II Field
■ Website http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Campus/6332
■ Dion Jones 842-3540
Sigma Gamma Rho
■ Kansas State 1-888-362-4563,
press 2, ext. 744612922
Applications for the Admission to the School of Education teacher education, community health and sport science programs are now available in 117 Bailey Hall.
Students who are accepted will be admitted for the Fall 1998 semester.
Applications and all supporting materials are due on February 15, 1998.
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS
IF YOU PLAN TO REGISTER WITH UNIVERSITY CAREER & EMPLOYMENT SERVICES THIS FALL FOR ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWING AND REFERRAL TO EMPLOYERS, YOU MUST ATTEND ONE OF THE FOLLOWING ORIENTATION SESSIONS
Wed. January 14 3:30 p.m. Mon. February 16 9:30 a.m.
Thur. January 15 3:30 p.m. Tues. February 17 2:30 p.m.
Tues. January 20 9:30 a.m. Wed. February 18 2:30 p.m.
Wed. January 21 9:30 a.m. Thur. February 19 2:30 p.m.
Thur. January 22 2:30 p.m. Mon. February 23 2:30 p.m.
Mon. January 26 2:30 p.m. Tues. February 24 3:30 p.m.
Wed. January 28 9:30 a.m. Wed. February 25 2:30 p.m.
Thur. January 29 2:30 p.m. Tues. March 3 2:30 p.m.
Mon. February 2 3:30 p.m. Wed. March 11 3:30 p.m.
Tues. February 3 3:30 p.m. Thur. March 19 3:30 p.m.
Wed. February 4 2:30 p.m. Wed. April 1 3:30 p.m.
Thur. February 5 9:30 a.m. Thur. April 9 2:30 p.m.
Mon. February 9 2:30 p.m. Wed. April 15 3:30 p.m.
Tues. February 10 9:30 a.m. Tues. April 21 2:30 p.m.
Wed. February 11 2:30 p.m. Wed. April 29 3:30 p.m.
ALL SESSIONS WILL BE HELD IN ROOM 149, LEVEL ONE, BURGE UNION
ESSIONS WILL BE HELD IN ROOM 149, LEVEL ONE, BURGE UP SIGN UP NOW AT UNIVERSITY CAREER & EMPLOYMENT SERVICES 110 BURGE UNION 864-3624 upc@ukans.edu www.ukans.edu/~upc
realize your potential. . .
realize
. . . AΞΔ.
Planning for Life After College? Your first step... join Alpha Xi Delta.
In addition to helping develop the skills you will need to succeed, your membership opens the door to a nationwide network of professional women.
Whether you are researching career areas or considering a move to another part of the country, the friends you meet through Alpha Xi Delta will be there to support you along the way.
To learn more about membership call Cassie Barnhardt at 913-865-3581.
ALPHA XI DELTA
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, *Editor* Marc Harrell, *Business manager*
Dave Morantz, *Managing editor* Colleen Eager, *Retail sales manager*
Kristie Blasi, *Managing editor* Dan Simon, *Sales and marketing adviser*
Tom Eblen, *General manager, news advisor* Justin Knupp, *Technology coordinator*
Thursday, Jan. 15, 1998
Here at KU we have various groups that will help you with your problems.
Which one is this?
S.c.w.o.t.b! Students coping without the Bull!
It's Show and Tell' week! What did you bring, Charks?
My first beer cup!
How can the city pick this?
What am I gonna do after midnight A NOW?
Isn't this America?
That's where I first met Kevin!
Great!
Why, here is one of those groups right now...
W. David Keith / KANSAN
Editorials
Kudos to the parking department for ending disabled parking fee
Hats off to the KU Parking Department.
It finally opened its heart and closed its wallet, taking away the $6 parking fee for disabled motorists who park in the garage north of Allen Field House. Last Wednesday the department discontinued the fee permanently, according to a Jan. 8 Lawrence Journal-World article.
Of course, the fee already was suspended on Dec. 4 because of the threat of legal action by state officials, but was reinstated for the Dec. 18 men's basketball game against Pepperdine.
By state law, people with state-issued handicapped-parking permits do not have to pay at meters of a state, city, county or other political subdivision. The University did not consider the garage to be metered because there are
The KU Parking Department was right to suspend its fee for disabled basketball fans
toll gates and a standard parking fee. Despite the threat of legal action the department took a risk and levied the charge for the Dec. 18 basketball game.
What kind of message does this send to people with physical disabilities? Perhaps it says that the Parking Department doesn't really care about their needs. If it can make a buck from disabilities, it will.
The department had never charged disabled motorists to park at the garage prior to this basketball season.
Why, then, did the department begin
charging the fee in the first place? Did it hope it could squeeze a few more dollars out of KU basketball games at the expense of disabled basketball fans?
Perhaps the department simply overlooked the fact that there were few other options for disabled motorists. True, it did provide a shuttle from the Lied Center parking lot to the Field House for disabled fans. But the parking garage is the closest that one can park to the Field House, and affording its use to disabled fans is the right thing to do.
Most game-goers must walk several blocks to the games, so of course those who park in the garage should be charged for the luxury. For physically disabled fans however, it is not a luxury
it's a need.
Paul Eakins for the editorial board
Apathy is the problem, not proximity
The biggest election issue of the year is already settled: the residence halls will have polling sites. The dining centers at Oliver, Lewis and Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corin Halls will have open polls at various times during Student Senate elections in April.
This issue has been the subject of banter, belligerence and bovine scatology for as long as most students can remember. There have been debates, conferences, and even legal opinions written about its constitutionality. The elections commission approved the new polling sites this week.
That is up for interpretation.
Some have called this proposal the best thing to happen to student government since students. Others think that it is no more than gerrymandering.
But one thing is certain. The polling sites are a misplaced effort to try to get students to vote. Proximity is no cure for student apathy. No matter how close the polling site is to where students live, if they don't care, they won't vote.
Senate is like the Western Civilization requirement: it seems irrelevant and a waste of time, but it is actually important and something we should care about.
We all gripe about the problems we perceive on campus. We whine about the Coke deal, grouse about Chancellor Robert Hemenway's jet and moan about the buses. At every moment there is some complaint found in the conversational din of the studentry. But when it comes time to do something about it—
like vote — we plant our collective butts in the couch and stay home. And this is what needs fixing, not necessarily the election system.
Students' concerns are important. But why only 16 percent of students vote is anyone's guess.
There is no guess though, as to why students are overlooked by government. As U.S. Sen. Wych Fowler so eloquently said: "Students don't vote. Do you expect me to come here and kiss your ass?"
The polling site issue is finished. We'll know who won later, not in terms of the candidates but in terms of the students.
But the apathy issue will remain until students begin to really care, not merely show up at the polls.
Kansan staff
Andy Obermueller for the editorial board
Paul Eakins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editorial
Andy Obermuelter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editorial
Andrea Albright . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . News
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Charity Jeffries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Online
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Harley Ratliff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate sports
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Angie Kuhn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Design, graphics
Mitch Lucas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Illustrations
Corrie Moore . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wire
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News editors
Advertising managers
"Right now, the value of a tree is measured by pulp and 2x4s. The market simply refuses to acknowledge the value a tree has on the environment, how it protects the soil and produces oxygen, something we've all grown rather fond of."
How to submit letters and guest columns
-David Brower, environmentalist, from a speech at Woodruff Auditorium last April.
**Students:** Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify 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 letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stufa-
fer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions.
For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermuehler (andy@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
How is school going? Don't ask, I won't tell
Perspective
I'm back from my first college winter break. And I'm relieved.
My family wasn't mean to me, and it's not that my room was rented out when I arrived
I never have to answer the question: "How is everything going at school?" Each person I met — friend, foe, or family — felt comforted to ask.
A. C. H.
Clay
McCuistion
cinquin@pandas.com
It became annoying.
I visited a close family friend. She'd known me for eight years, talked regularly with my mother, and was a good (I thought) judge of character. Yet when we met, the first words out of her mouth were "How is everything
going at school?" My mother had told her everything I'd done, she knew me well enough to understand I wasn't failing, and yet she still had to ask the vague, meaningless question.
How could I answer? I muttered something about the University not throwing me out yet, and turned the conversation to more specific matters.
"Have you gained weight?" I asked her.
Shopping in a Wichita mall I ran across two high school acquaintances. While they acted happy and pleased to see me, I couldn't quite shake the thought that they didn't particularly care for me in high school. I wasn't part of their clique, didn't converse with them often and frequently hid myself behind large objects when they walked by. Yet they approached me—both flashing white teeth—and asked in unison: "How is everything going up at school?"
Noting the absence of any nearby large objects to hide behind, I shrugged and said, "Pretty good. By the way, did you know I've become a terrorist?"
Another frustrating example: the pastor at my church. When I attended a service, he didn't ask about my spiritual well-being or inquire if
I'd fallen into deviant lifestyles. Instead, he
had "How is everything going at school?"
Resisting the temptation to reply "I'm being possessed by the devil right now, you fool. Run for your life! I smiled and said "fine."
I'm having a great time! Right now I'm taking a really interesting class on making mail bombs. It's fascinating to see how powerful these modern explosives are. What's your address again?
After a while, I couldn't bear to be polite. I began to say outrageous things for the sake of my own sanity. Such as:
"I never started school. I got a job as a hairstylist during my first week in Lawrence at this great little place called the 'Curl Up and Dye.' You want a coupon for a free mohawk?"
"Not that well, actually. I dropped out of school and I'm now living in a cardboard box on Massachusetts Street."
"Lawrence is a great town. I really love it. Someday I even might check out that 'University of Kansas' I hear so much about."
These phrases could only work with certain people, though. That is, non-gullible individuals with a sense of humor. I misjudged once, and told a friend about dropping out and living in a cardboard box. He paled, and for a second I could tell he absolutely believed me and was terrified for my future.
Thankfully, he recovered in the next second, but I felt guilty. I tried to change the subject.
"Have you gained weight?" I asked.
I admit I'm gripping for the sake of gripping. But for any parent or friend of a college student who may read this, please do NOT ask that student in a hearty voice: "How is everything up there at [insert name of college here]?" Ask about more specific, interesting things, such as sex, drugs, and rock n' roll. The student doubtless will be so glad at not having to answer the "How is everything up there at [insert name of college here]?" question that he or she will love and treasure you for all time.
Or at least they won't want to hurt you.
McCuistion is an El Dorado freshman in journalism.
No need for textbooks; just make it up as you go
After a long and relaxing break I'm glad to be back in Lawrence. I missed the friends I've made in my years at the University of Kansas. Now I
years at the university can spend time with acquaintances like the bouncer at Juicers and the Lawrence police sergeant in charge of enforcing the numerous restraining orders against me, including the nearly impossible order to maintain a 500-foot distance from my roommate.
Coming back to school has one peril: the bookstore. Nothing makes me feel more welcome than the privilege of paying
MARK SHELTON
Nick
Bartkoski
opinion@kansan.com
Another factor running up the price of my books was that the "Norton Anthology of British Literature" has issued a new edition, forcing the purchase of a new book. This doesn't make any sense, because the high academics that dictate what is printed in the anthology are generally too intellectually snobbish to consider anything written in the past 20 years as literature.
I of course brought this mistake to the attention of the cashier. She conceded the mistake and corrected it immediately. As it turns out, the computer had rung up the used price, and I had a new packet. If I hadn't pointed it out, I might have cheated the bookstore out of about $20.
But I've got to assume that anytime someone finds new letters from a great author, the champagne flows at the Norton offices. As far as I can tell, the actual anthology hasn't changed since the first edition. As a cap-
I think the entire inflated prices issue came to a head this semester when my "understanding the Bible" workbook rang up at $999.00. Not to gripe, but for a thousand bucks, the packet had better include an actual part of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
$50 for a book that can be sold back for $2.50.
Not that it's always that bad. Sometimes it's worse and the book costs $70.
What can we as students do to stop this?
The obvious thing would be to storm the bookstore and burn it while singing about how we are oppressed by the French monarchy ... whoops, that's what we should do if we're ever in "Les Miserables."
italist, I couldn't complain too loudly about the vicious overpricing, but then one day the truth hit me. It's not as if the bookstore hourlies are driving BMWs. So where does all the ill-gotten loot go? I realized there's only one class of human being that needs a lot of cash for no apparent reason: the James Bond villain. I've got to assume that each dollar is spent on some giant super laser or nuclear warhead that one day the bookstore will use to hold the United Nations ransom.
All one needs is to remember phrases like "his/her prose was very eloquent" or "I couldn't decide which of the themes was most important, what were you looking for?" and the popular "Can I answer that question after I return from the bathroom?"
It's also important not to ask questions that showcase your ignorance; for example, "As interesting as Stephen Daedalus and Leopold Bloom are, when are we getting to this Ulyses character?"
Actually, the clearest solution is to not buy books at all. That plan by itself doesn't seem to be cost-effective because by saving $300 you end up losing more than $1,000 when you flunk all of your classes.
Proper usage of those phrases probably can be parralled into a quick Ph.D.
And once you get to that level, maybe you can be instrumental in adding Thornton Wilder's letter to his milkman, "Three quarts and stay away from my wife," to the 500th edition of the Norton Anthology.
So, to compensate for not having legitimate knowledge from books at your fingertips, do what I Do: Just make it up.
Bartkoski is a Basehor junior in journalism and English
This plan of attack doesn't work very well in legitimate, fact-based majors like engineering. But it works like a charm in majors like journalism and English.
Feedback
Hey, something needs to be done about Village Inn
I can understand the sudden dramatic and often devastating changes that serious injury can bring. Like Obermueler, I was involved in an accident over the past summer. I broke both my legs in a work-related accident and was confined to a wheel chair for the next four months of my life, crutches for another month and had never-ending therapies.
Even though the chair is
gone, the memory of what it was like will never leave me.
Imagine for a moment that you found yourself urgently called by nature, and yet no matter how you tried you could not fit through the door to the bathroom, that even if you could fit through that door that you would have to drag your body across the bathroom floor in order to reach the toilet. And then realize that this is not some fantasy in your mind but a reality at the Village Inn of Lawrence, located on Ninth
and Iowa streets.
Sam Raisbeck
You have the power to do something to change that. The next time you're at the Inn, the next time you are in a place that is obviously inaccessible, drop a comment card to the management and let them know, "Hey, something needs to be done about this!"
Sam Raisbeck Peculiar, Mo., senior in math
The writer is responding to
Obermueller's Jan. 14 Editorial
Thursday, January 15, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Local police learn Spanish
Course teaches basic commands
By Ronnie Wachter Kansan staff writer
Through the years, the Lawrence Police Department has become good at tracking down the bad guys. In 1998, they are getting even better by learning how to track them down in two languages.
Lawrence police officers began taking a class about basic communication skills in Spanish on Monday. As part of a state-mandated In-Service Mini-Academy, all commissioned employees will take the two-hour course.
"We are in no way trying to teach the language of Spanish in two hours." said department spokesperson Sgt. Susan Hadi, who has a bachelor's degree in Spanish. Hadl and Lt. Ed Brunt are teaching about 110 police officers basic orders in Spanish.
"It's survival Spanish, things we'll use in the field," Hadl said. "If we want to try to interview someone,
we're going to bring them back to the station where we can get an interpreter."
Officers will be given repetitive oral lessons about pronunciation and will carry laminated language cards.
"I thought it was great, and it was very timely," said officer "Tom Moore. "It was very well presented. We learned where to place accents, and a few things about Hispanic cultures, so that our actions don't accidentally offend someone."
Hadi said the Hispanic population in Lawrence was growing, along with the chance that an officer would need to communicate with someone who does not understand English.
"If you want to stay in this business for the next five to 10 years, this is
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something you'll need." Moore said.
Most of the non-English speakers the Lawrence police encounter are transients. They are traveling through the area on their way to a job somewhere else, Hadl said.
The Spanish lessons are the first block of the eight-hour mini-academy. Officers also are studying various aspects of law enforcement, including a workshop about animal control and instruction about Computer-Aided Dispatch. The final portion of the academy is an address from Ron Olin, police chief, about the state of the police department.
Police departments are required by state law to give 40 hours for miniacademies each year. These language activities are the first eighth-hour session, with four more sessions to come.
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
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SUAFILMS
Jerree Catlin, supervisor of documentation and training, said. "We
Computer Center offers expertise
By Aaron Knopf
Kansan staff writer
Novice computer users looking to build on their computer skills and experienced users ready to make the jump to power-user status can do so now at the Computer Center.
Beginning this semester, the Computer Center has a new schedule of free and fee-based classes for all levels of computer users at the University and in Lawrence. Topics range from a basic Windows 95 introduction to Java programming for Web pages.
The Computer Center's Spring 1998 Driver's Ed for the Information Superhighway publication contains a timetable, class descriptions and registration and fee information. The information is available online at http://www.cc.ukans.edu/~acs/training/index.shtml.
New to the schedule this semester
like people to come to our training. That's why we're here."
Catlin said the Computer Center was offering 10 more courses this spring than it did in the 1997 spring semester.
Courses are free unless the Computer Center has to pay for the software involved. Catlin said.
The courses, including all Internetrelated training, vary in length and format. Some are taught at computer labs as hands-on seminars while others are taught at the Computer Center auditorium as presentations. Pre-registration for these courses is unnecessary.
The fee-based courses are all three-hour, hands-on seminars about business applications. The cost for these of courses is $20 for University students, $40 for University faculty and staff and $75 for non-University enrollees. Registration for fee-based classes is required
are five free presentation classes. The topics include a survey of popular software packages used for designing World Wide Web pages and an introduction to scanning and working with graphics online.
COMPUTER RESOURCES
Driver's Ed for the Information Superhighway: a timetable of computer-training classes, course descriptions, registration and he information.
864-0446: To suggest the addition of a course to the schedule, ask for Jerree Cattin.
```http://www.co.ukans.edu/~acs/training/index.shtml
864-0494: fee-based class registration
Both publications are available at the Computer Center.
Computer Training Class Schedule Spring 1998
Wednesday Evening Appointments Available
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Section A·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Thursday. January 15. 1998
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Rats sniff out fix for disease
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
Analysis shows drills may slow Parkinson's
Research by two University of Kansas professors suggests that the cliche "use it or lose it" may take on new significance in the fight against Parkinson's disease.
to how exercising the brain may slow the degenerative effect of Parkinson's.
Richard Tessel, professor of pharmacology and toxicology, and Stephen Schroeder, director of the KU Institute for Life Span Studies, are about to publish the results of their research that shows mental exercise may help fend off the effects of Parkinson's disease.
The results, which have been confirmed only in rats, will appear in the journal Brain Research, but the publication date still is unknown, Tessel said.
"The data we collected suggest that using it decreases the degree of losing it," Tessel said, referring
Doctors who treat Parkinson's already believe in the importance of activity for their patients.
Mental exercise may delay, reverse or prevent Parkinson's disease
"I don't think we have specific evidence, but in general, people with degenerative conditions like Parkinson's tend to do better if kept as active as possible," said Robert Satake, a neurologist.
Though the cause is unknown, Parkinson's disease is a slow degeneration of the neurons that produce dopamine, a neuro-transmitter crucial to brain activity. The condition can affect brain activities such as mood and memory but begins and most clearly affects the basal ganglia area of the brain, which controls movement.
Most treatments for people with the disease focus on drugs and surgery that replace the function of dead dopamine neurons.
Tessel and Schroeder's experiment involved four sets of rats. Two sets were normal rats, and the other two had most of their dopamine-producing neurons killed, causing the same effects as Parkinson's.
One set of Parkinson's rats and one set of normal rats were then given four months of mental training. The other sets of rats received no training.
In response to testing, the untrained Parkinson's rats acted excited, as if they still suffered from a lack of dopamine. The trained Parkinson's rats acted normally, suggesting their dopamine neurons were working again.
Tessel and Schroeder said they did not know how the effect was achieved but that they knew training could slow and reverse the loss of dopamine.
"We don't have all the answers yet," Tessel said. "We have the questions, but except for our research, these questions would not have occurred."
Two win United Way award
By Carl Kaminski
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Two members of the United Way of Douglas County were named recipients of a national award for spearheading a project that included volunteers from the University of
Kansas.
Barb Smith Reavis, former executive director of the United Way,
and Dwayne Peasele, current board member, were named recipients of the Mary M. Gates Volunteer/Staff Achievement Award last weekend at a national United Way meeting in Birmingham, Ala.
HANDS IN THE HEALTH CARE AREA
The award is given to only two United Way chapters nationwide once every two years. The two Douglas County Chapter recipients were honored for their work coordinating the renovation of the new United Way building in Lawrence
This is the first time Douglas County chapter members have received the award.
The building, which had held the Valley View Nursing Home, was leased to the United Way of Douglas County during September 1996, and the building's makeover began immediately.
Reavis said Rock Chalk Revenue volunteers helped clean the building to prepare it for renovation.
"At the time we were going to move in, Rock Chalk volunteers helped with painting and other things," she said.
Originally, the renovation was estimated at $1 million. Contractors doing work at cost and hundreds of volunteers, including Rock Chalk volunteers, helped keep costs down. The final bill was
about $380,000.
Drywall work, new plumbing, new windows and a new roof were included in the renovations.
The new center, which opened Feb. 28, 1997, after a year and a half of work, helps coordinate services among several agencies. Reavis said.
Peaslee said moving all the organizations into one place had made it easier for those who required the agencies' services.
"Now they can go door to door instead of shuffling all over town," he said.
The 20,000 square-foot building houses 19 agencies, including the United Way, the American Red Cross and the Jayhawk Area Agency on Aging.
"To bring 19 agencies all together was a pretty significant act," Reavis said. "Before, we were renting space in an office building downtown. We were scattered all over the place."
Williams is looking for talented, dedicated and creative employees to join us in our quest to be among corporate America's top performers. Building on a foundation of impressive growth and
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We offer competitive salaries and benefits, and the prestige of working for a company that plays a key role in shaping the future of the energy and communications industries.
We will be conducting interviews for both internship and full-time positions on campus on Tuesday, February 10th. We're looking for students majoring in electrical and industrial engineering, management information systems, and computer science. Please notify the Career and Employment Services office if you are interested in scheduling an interview.
For more information about our company or job opportunities, visit our Internet site at http://www.twc.com.
Someone misses you.
1-800-COLLECT
JAYHAWK
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Basketball
---
Inside Section B today
Sometimes grades don't go as planned — especially for freshmen. Learn how to avoid a GPA downfalls.
SEE PAGE 6B
ku
Yesterday's game - Kansas vs. Texas A&M
KANSAS
20-2, 4-0
NKED NO.3
83 A TM
TEXAS A&M
6-8, 0-4
UNRANKED
SECTION B, PAGE 1
WWW.JHAWKBBALL.COM
65
THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1998
KANSAS
34
Jayhawks agonize A&M
ABOVE: Kansas forward Paul Pierce dunks the ball in G. Rolle White Coliseum. Pierce scored 15 points in last night's B-35 victory against Texas A&M by Geoff Kreeger/KANEAM
By Tommy Gallagher Kanson sportswriter
COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Center Eric Chenowith turned in a career game as No. 3 Kansas crushed Texas A&M 83-65 last night.
Chenowith had his best game as a collegiate — 16 points and a career-high 20 rebounds — as the No. 3 Jayhawks held the Aggies to just 29 percent shooting in the second half and 40 percent for the game.
Chenowith said he had no idea about the kind of game he was having.
"I had no clue," Chenowith said. "I did a good job of boxing out and anticipating where the ball was going to go. I made sure my guy had no chance to get the rebound. I really don't like to get caught up with statistics."
And while forward Lester Earl had only five points on 2-for-8 shooting, he had 15 rebounds, including 10 in the second half. The Jayhawks outrebounded Texas A&M 56-40.
LEFT: Kansas forward Lester Earl fights for the back between Agel defenders Jerald Brown and Aaron Jack (21) as Aaron forward Paul Pierce looks on. Earl and center Eric Chenowith combined for 35 rebounds last night, the most by a duo in the Roy Williams era. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
Kansas coach Roy Williams said that his team played well but that there were vast improvements that could be made as the season progressed.
"We're glad to have two road wins in the conference, but we realize that there's a lot of basketball to be played yet," Williams said. "We crashed the boards and were aggressive on defense, but we had a lot of mistakes tonight. We were just the more gifted team. We had more talent than they did."
What had been a nip-and-tuck game entering halftime turned into a rout in the second half.
With Kansas leading 39-37 less than two
minutes left before halftime, the Jayhawks went on a 6-0 run, including four points by forward Nick Bradford.
The eight-point lead was extended to 17 less than three minutes into the second half after a 7-0 run.
Kansas led by as many as 21 points during the second half, and the Aggies hardly helped their cause.
Texas A&M made only two of its first 20 field goal attempts in the second half and never made a serious rally. Texas A&M guard Brian Barone said the Jayhawks punished the Aggies throughout the second half.
"Coach told us to come out with reckless abandon in the second half," Barone said. "After all, (the Jayhawks) are just people. There's no reason why they should be able to take us out in an alley and beat us up. But in the second half, that's what they did."
Forward Paul Pierce scored 15 points, including seven in a row during a 9-0 run midway through the second half. He also had three rebounds and four assists.
Bradford had 11 points and six rebounds, and guard Kenny Gregory had 13 points, hitting all three of his 3-point attempts. Guard Ryan Robertson recorded 13 points, eight assists and four rebounds with just one turnover.
But the Jayhawks rallied as Earl scored inside and Robertson hit a three-point shot. The Aggies tied the game at 23-23, but Kansas regained the lead and never relinquished it.
The Aggies took their first lead when forward Shanne Jones scored on a layup, and they extended the lead to 21-18 after guard Steve Houston nailed a jump shot with 10:59 left before halftime.
21
No. 3 KANSAS 83, TEXAS A&M 65
KANSAS (20-2)
Earl 2-1-8 4-1-5, Pierce 5-12 3-4 1-5,
Chenowith 6-12 4-7 1-4, Robertson 5-10 1-4 1-3, Thomas 3-7 0-6 0, Nooner 0-0-0-0,
Gregory 5-7 0-0 1 13, Bradford 4-9 2-2 1-1,
Janisse 1-1 0-0 2, McGrath 0-0 0-0 , Martin 0-0-0-0 , Pugh 1-2-0 0 2. Totals 32-68
11-21 83.
TEXAS A&M (6-8)
Davis 0-6 0-0 0, Jones 5-12 1-2 11, Thompson 7-14 0-2 14, Houston 1-9 0-0 2, Brown 1-6 3-4 13, Barone 0-2 0-0 0, Schmidt 6-9 3-4
16, Jack 3-6 1-3, 78 Brown 0-1 0-0, Richards
1,2-2,2,2. Tailors 26-76 10-17 65.
Haltime—Kansas 45, Texas A&M 37. 3-Point goals—Kansas 81 (Gregory 3-4), Pierce 2-3, Robertson 2-4, Bradford 1-4, Thomas 0-2), Texas A&M 3-14 (Brown 2-7, Schmidt 1-3, Barone 0-1, Houston 0-3). Fouled out—Jack. Rebounds—Kansas 56 (Chenwith 20), Texas A&M 40 (Thompson 12). Assists—Kansas 23 (Robertton 8), Texas A&M 18 (Barone 6). Total fouls—Kansas 14, Texas A&M 21. A—6,548.
Baseball team fields veteran roster
By John Wilson
Kansan sportswriter
Randall's squad still was outgunned. Despite a 327 average, the team gave up 5.79 earned runs per game while posting a 30-26 record.
University of Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall led his team to the highest batting average in school history last season.
"When you have teams like Texas and Oklahoma State and Oklahoma in your conference, you have to play sound baseball in terms of hitting, fielding and pitching," Randall said. "Our pitching and defense just couldn't keep us competitive with the big boys last year."
This is not good enough to contend in the Big 12 Conference, Randall said.
Randall said his team had worked harder than ever in the
Last year, the team struggled to the conference's lowest fielding percentage (.947) along with the highest ERA.
"Our pitching staff was very young last year — the top two ERA's on our staff were freshman," Randall said. "We also return starters at three of four positions on the infield. These players should all improve with experience."
off season, both in the weight room and on the field.
"We improved natural talents like throwing strength through conditioning and lifting." Randall said.
Sophomore pitchers Rusty Philbrick (3-1 record, 4.71 ERA) and Mark Corson (2-3, 4.86) are the early favorites to lead the rotation,
Randall sees improvement stemming from experience and preparation.
but pitching coach Wilson K il m e r stressed the depth of his staff.
"The guys who had a bunch of appearances for us last year have looked solid through fall ball and winter break."
PQ
Kilmer said. "But we do have newcomers and other veterans who have a strong chance to contribute."
Senior Casey Barrett looks to return to 1996 form with which he saved eight games and earned All-Big Eight injuries. Honors limited
Randall: Led team to highest batting average in school history last year.
Barrett to just 12 appearances last season.
Junior Andy Juday (.365 average, 10 home runs, 3RBI) will anchor a veteran infield along with returnees Chad King and Sparky Wilhelm.
Senior Josh Dimmick (.313, 5,
38) will handle the catching.
The outfield spots still are up for grabs, with transfers Cliff Bryson and Clint Wyrick pushing for spots.
Randall said he thought improved pitching and fielding coupled with the extensive off-season preparation would translate into success.
"I told the guys the other day that we are finally at a point where we should expect big things," Randall said. "Nothing is guaranteed, but they have worked hard and put themselves in a position to excel."
JAYHAWK BASEBALL
- Kansas finished 30-26 overall and 12-18 in the Big 12 Conference last season.
Sophomores Rusty Philbrick (3-1 record, 4.71 ERA) and Mark Corson [2-3, 4.86] lead a more experienced pitching staff this season.
Junior second baseman Andy Juday (.365 batting average, 10 home runs, 37 RBI) and senior catcher Josh Dinnick (.313, 5, 38) lead an experienced infield that returns four of six starters.
The team's nonconference schedule includes national powers Creighton, Arkansas and Wichita State.
Junior college transfers Cliff Bryson and Clint Wryrick may start in the outfield.
Conference championship is in the bag; NCAA is not
Will a real Big 12 opponent please show up?
After another dominating performance last night, the Kansas Jayhawks proved once again that they are the best team in the conference.
However, this year a conference championship will be even less of an accomplishment, considering that the coaches are conceding the regular season to the Jayhawk.
This is news to no one, except maybe those of you living in a cave. Roy Williams and company will have no problem winning the Big 12 Conference title this year.
Oh, haven't you heard?
ALEXANDER
That's the right attitude, coach. Boy, that will fill your team with confidence. I thought that part of a
"I'll admit it," said Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton last Monday during the Big 12's weekly conference call. "I don't think anybody is going to beat Kansas."
Adam
Herschman
aherschman@kansan.com
coach's job — just listen, party people — was to prepare the team for a victory against every opponent.
After losing to Kansas by 30 points Saturday, Texas coach Tom Penders devalued a regular-season conference championship.
Granted, I like the honesty of Sutton. But it is not a comment that should be shared publicly. Comments like that make the conference look pathetic.
"The way it is today, nobody remembers who wins league championships anymore," Penders said. "It's what you do in the tournament."
That may be true to some extent, Tom, but people also do not remember a crybaby coach who does not consider winning a 16-game conference schedule memorable.
The Big 12 Conference is weak because so many talented players either graduated or left for the NBA after last season. Among those players were Reggie Freeman, Tony Battie, Nate Erdmann, Dedric Willoughby, Kelvin Cato, Jason Sutherland, Chauncey Billups, Scot Pollard and Jacque Vaughn.
Recruiting is tough for most Big 12 schools because the conference is not considered a basketball Mecca, like the Pac-10 and the ACC. For example, who wants to take road trips to Ames, Iowa, and Waco, Texas?
Up to this point, fans are dine dancing and practicing complicated high-five drills as a result of the Jayhawks' performance. But I am not.
First of all. I do not line dance.
Second, I cannot tell if the team is playing well or if the competition is so pitid that it makes this team look better than it really is.
There is no denying that some players stepped up their play after Raaf LaFrentz was sidelined — most notably Eric Chenowith and Billy Thomas.
But my memory is decent, and it was not too long ago that Kansas got upset up by a smaller, less physical team in Hawaii. We will not know for a few months if the easy conference schedule will benefit this team or hurt it.
The pessimist may think that Kansas will be overwhelmed by the change in competition and the sense of urgency that results from the single-elimination format of the NCAA Tournament.
The optimist would consider Kansas' conference schedule a relief. If the team continues to win by large margins, Williams will have the luxury of resting his starters. Giving the reserves more experience likely would help the team in the NCAA tourney.
The real battle in the Big 12 is for second place.
Baylor coach Harry Miller said, "Man, if we finished in second place, there'd be a ticker-tape parade."
That's too bad for the Big 12 Conference.
As for Kansas' future this season, let's hope the optimist is right.
If they are, I may have to learn to line dance.
Basketball Roundup:
No. 1 North Carolina goes down; Missouri upsets Oklahoma State. Top 25 and Big 12 men's basketball stories.
See page 4B
2B
Thursday January 15,1998
Quick Looks
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 15)
The middle of the week finally is past, and there is only one more day until the weekend. Today may be a day of stress but do everything to get through it and start preparing for an exciting weekend.
Aries: Today is a 6.
Your competitors are no match for you. Recognizing this, they are unlikely to compete today. You exhale viable ideas and strategies with each breath.
Turn inward from a cruel world and find ways to beautify your or enhance your home. Buy yourself a gift. Throwing a little money around makes you feel better, even if it does not solve a problem.
Gemini: Today is a 7.
This is a good day to socialize with others like yourself. You see your image reflected positively by people who like and understand you. A long-term relationship could develop from the initiative that you take today.
Cancer: Today is a 7.
This could be a favorable day for moneymaking active sites. With a broad perspective, your chances for success are better. Hiding behind your opinions is no substitute for understanding the heart of the matter.
Leo: Today is an 8.
The spotlight is on you today. Your public goes wild with applause about your beauty, your accomplishments and your potential. Do not disappoint those who have high expectations for you.
Scorpio: Today is a 7.
C
Virgo: Today is a 5.
Libra: Today is a 6.
2
Sagittarius: Today is a 7.
Friends and acquaintances are able to help you today. Temper someone else's extravagant ideas with your good judgment. This is one of those days when the sum is much greater than its parts.
This is a favorable day to plan a trip. Even if you have to lower your standards to match your budget, your expectations are high. You are adaptable enough to have fun with what comes your way today.
Employers or judges may seem profoundly unfair in their demands and decisions, but you are powerless today. Do your best with what remains to you. If you are the good soldier or model employee, there is nothing to worry about today.
Capricorn: Today is a 6.
LAWRENCE COUNTY
Aquarius: Today is a 7.
Secret dealings violate your sense of ethics, but these might be the only way to get the job done. Wear your poker face until it starts to hurt. Leave yourself an easy way out just in case it all falls apart.
Submerge your ego today and join in a team effort. The solo hotshot is going to ruin things for everyone. A project takes on a life of its own as it nears completion.
Pisces: Today is a 7.
This is a favorable time to rearrange your life. If you begin a routine today, there is a better chance you will stick with it. Organize your desk, start a diet or address a medical condition that you have been avoiding.
舞
Forward T.J. Pugh saw his first action last night since the Dec. 13 game against Middle Tennessee State University. He scored two points in 1-of-2 shooting and had one rebound in 12 minutes of play.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
■ Guard Kenny Gregory broke a three-point shooting slump, hitting all three of his three-point attempts. He had missed nine straight and had not hit a three since Dec. 13.
Kansas basketball notes:
Forward Nick Bradford hit his first three-pointer since Feb. 15, 1997.
Chenowith and forward Lester Earl combined for the most rebounds by a duo in the Roy Williams' 10 years at Kansas. Earl added 15 rebounds to Chenowith's 20.
Chenowith is the first player in the Roy Williams era to get 20 rebounds in a game. The previous high was 19, shared by Raef LaFrentz and Paul Pierce.
Men's basketball (top 25)
Nike Rafaela Wala (top 52)
JUDICATE
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Shane Battier led Duke's stifling defense to an 88-52 victory against Wake Forest yesterday night. It was the Demon Deacons' worst loss in the nine-year history of Lawrence Joel Coliseum.
Duke, which has an average winning margin of 28 points in conference play, got 15 points from Chris Carrawell, 13 from Trajan Langdon, 12 from Steve Wojciechowski and 10 apiece from Roshown McLeod and Mike Chappell. Battier had four points, 10 rebounds, four steals and three assists in 20 minutes.
The Blue Devils (15-1, 5-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) won their sixth-consecutive game by scoring 29 points from 20 turnovers.
Tony Rutland had 15 points for the Demon Deacons (8-6, 1-3), who lost for the sixth time in eight games and are off to their worst start in the
The Hawkeyes came in averaging 87 points a game but had 21 turnovers and shot 43 percent from the field.
Iowa (4-2, 3-1 Big Ten) won for the eighth time in its last nine games. It was the Hawkeyes' eight-straight win against Ohio State — their longest winning streak in the 122-game series.
No. 15 IOWA, OK.
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Dean Oliver doubled his average with 17 points, and Iowa floundered offensively but still had enough firepower for the win.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Kareem Reid scored 18 of his 25 points in the first half and made free throws with 24 seconds left as the Razorbacks survived an impressive Florida rally.
ACC in six years.
No 13 Iowa 61 Ohio St 46
Jason Singleton scored 16 points and matched his career high with 10 rebounds for Ohio State (7-9, 0-3), which has lost six in a row.
Reid's free throws made it 87-84 and came after Tarik Wallace stole an inbound pass following a Florida timeout. Wallace made two free throws 13 seconds later for Arkansas (14-2, 3-0 Southeastern Conference).
Kenyan Weaks had 22 points for the Gators (8-5, 2-2), who trailed by as many as 13 points in the second half but went ahead 82-81 on Dan Williams' layup with 340 remaining.
Last Night's Scores:
NBA
No. 22 Arkansas 89. Florida 84
Toronto 109, L.A. Clippers 101
Indiana 100, Detroit 93
Atlanta 108, Dallas 82
San Antonio 89, Washington 79
Milwaukee101, Golden State 95
Denver at L.A. Lakers
Orlando at Sacramento
NHL
Boston 5, Pittsburgh 2
Chicago 4, Carolina 1
New Jersey 4, N.Y. Rangers 1
Montreal 3, Philadelphia 3 (OT).
N.Y. Islanders 7, Tampa Bay 1
Buffalo 4, Toronto 1
鱼
Detroit 4, Vancouver 0
Dallas at St. Louis
Florida at Phoenix
Calgary at Edmonton
Los Angeles at San Jose
Colorado at Anaheim
COLLEGE BASKETBALL:
Mon (Top 25)
Maryland 89, No.1 North Carolina 93
SCorpion
16. TJ Stanford 61, Ohio State 34
Gavin Washington 78, No. 20
Xavier Johnson 78, No. 20
No 2. Duke 88, Wake Forest 52
No 3. Kansas City, Texas A&M 65
No 13 Iowa 61, Ohio State 46
No 14 Kansas City, Texas A&M 65
No.22 Arkansas 89,Florida 84 Missouri 70,No.25 Oklahoma State 64
Kansas State 75, Iowa State 59
Big 12:
Women (Top 25)
No. 3 Connecticut 83, Pittsburgh 46
No. 5 Texas Tech 74, Oklahoma State 48
South Carolina 70, No.6 Vanderbilt
66
No. 1 Tennessee 96, No. 19 Georgia 71.
No. 12 Florida 65, No. 21 Auburn 61
No. 20 Nebraska 88, Texas A&M 74
Big 12:
Sports on TV Tonight:
Baylor 67, Oklahoma 64
6 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball,
Atlantic 10/Conference USA
Challenge, game 1, N.C. Charlotte
vs. Massachusetts at Providence
,R.I.
A
ESPN2 - NHL Hockey, Chicago at Washington
GOAT
ESPN - NCAA Basketball,
Atlantic 10/Conference USA
Challenge, game 2, Tulane vs.
Rhode Island at Providence, R.I.,
8 p.m.
11 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, New Mexico State at Long Beach State
Tonight's Men's Basketball Games (Top 25):
No. 4 Utah vs. Colorado State, 8:30 p.m.
No. 5 Arizona vs. Arizona State, 7:30 p.m.
V
No. 8 UCLA vs. California at San Jose Arena. 9:30 p.m.
No. 15 New Mexico vs. UNLV, 8 p.m.
No. 20 Rhode Island vs. Tulane at the
Providence Civic Center, 8 p.m.
No. 21 West Virginia vs. Notre Dame, 6 p.m.
No. 7 Stanford vs. Southern Californi nig. 9:30 a.m.
Sports, etc.
1967 — The Green Bay Packers of the National Football League open the Super Bowl series by defeating the Kansas City Chiefs of the American Football League 35-10.
Today in sports:
1972 — Joe Frazier knocks out Terry Daniels during the fourth round at New Orleans to retain his heavyweight title.
1978 — The Dallas Cowboys take advantage of eight Denver turnovers en route to a 27-10 victory against the Broncos during the Super Bowl. Butch Johnson's diving catch in the end zone completes a 45-yard touchdown pass from Roger Staubach to put the Cowboys ahead 20-3 in the third quarter.
1990 — Golden State coach Don Nelson becomes the second in National Basketball Association history to appear in 1,000 games both as a player and coach as the Warriors dropped a 144-105 decision to the Indiana Pacers. Lenny Wilkins was the first to accomplish the feat.
1994 — Ricky Watters of San Francisco scores a National Football League postseason record of five touchdowns as the 49ers beat the New York Giants 44-3.
SPORTS CALENDAR
1:05 p.m. in Allen Field House —
Saturday:
1:05 p. m. in Allen Field House — Men's basketball vs. Kansas State
2 p.m. at Columbia, Mo. — Women's Basketball vs. Missouri
1 p.m. at Carbondale, Ill. — KU Swimming and Diving vs. Southern Illinois University
NEXT WEEK:
Monday:
8:35 p.m. at Columbia, Mo. — Men's Basketball vs. Missouri TV: ESPN, Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM
Wednesdav:
7 p.m. in Allen Field House Women's Basketball vs. Oklahoma State
Jan. 24:
3 p.m. in Allen Field House — Men's Sports Complex, Tech Zone
Saturday, 15th June
TV: Big 12 Network. Radio: KLZR
105.9 FM
All day at Columbia, Mo. — Track and Field at Missouri Invitational
7 p.m. at Lubbock, Texas — Women's Basketball vs. Texas Tech
TV TONIGHT
THURSDAY PRIMETIME
JANUARY 15,1998
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO ❶ Star Trek: Voyager (in Stereo) Sentiment "P prisoner X" Nightman "Constant Crawing" Mad Abo. You Hard Copy Cops LAPD
WDAF ❷ King of Hill Aak Harriet New York Undercover News News Real TV H. Patrol Keanen Ivory
KCTV ❸ Promised Land (in Stereo) Diagnosis Murder 48 hours: Devil on Main Street News Late Show (in Stereo) Selfeld KCPT ❹ Ruckus This Old Hase. Science Odyssey (in Stereo) Part 5 of 5 Business Pkt. Ruckus (R) Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
KSNT ❺ Friends Union Square Seinfeld Veronica's Cl. ER "Sharp Relief" (in Stereo) News Tonight Show (in Stereo) Late Night KBMC ❻ Prey "Existence" 🔴 "On the Line" (1998, Drama) Linda Hamilton, Jeff Fahey. News Roseanne Grace Under MA*A*H™
KTUW ❽ Sunflower Travels Science Odyssey (in Stereo) All Aboard Business Pkt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
WIBW ❿ Promished Land (in Stereo) Diagnosis Murder 48 hours: Devil on Main Street News Late Show (in Stereo) Late Late KTKA ❾ Prey "Existence" 🔴 "On the Line" (1998, Drama) Linda Hamilton, Jeff Fahey. News Selfeld Maried... Nightlife
CABLE STATIONS
A&E ❽ Biography: Carol Burnett New Explorers (R) Unexplained (R) Law & Order "Switch" Biography: Carol Burnett NCBC ❹ Equal Time Hardball Riva Live News With Brian Williams Charles Grodin Rivera Live (R)
CNN ❹ World Today Larry King Live World Today Daily Sports Moneyline NewsNews Showbiz
COM ❹ "Still Smokin'" ★(1963) Tommy Chong Canned Ham Offside (R) Make-Laugh Daily Show Stain's Money Saturday Night Live
COURT ❹ Prime Time Justice Cochran & Company Trial Story Prime Time Justice (R) Cochran & Company (R)
CSPN ❹ Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
DISC ❹ Wild Discovery: Scandinavia Strange-True Movie Magic Wings "Doomsday Mission" Justice Files (R) Wild Discovery: Scandinavia ESPN ❹ College Basketball: Mass. v. N.C.-Charlotte College Basketball: Rhode Island vs. Tulane Sportscenter College Basketball (Live)
HIST ❹ In search of History Knightts of Desert Storm History Undercover World at War In search of History (R)
LIFE ❹ Unsolved Mysteries "Captive" (1991, Suspense) Barry Bowieck, Joanna Kerns Almost Golden Girls Golden Girls Mysteries
MTIV ❹ Music Videos Beavis-Butt. MTIV Live (R) (in Stereo) Grudge Match Grudge Match Loveline (R) (in Stereo) Singled Out Viewers
SCIFI ❹ Sightings in Stereo (Masters of Fantasy) Robocop The Series Sightings (R) Sightings (R)
TLC ❹ Medical Warning Fugitive Son: Alex Kelly Tallest Tower Remot. Robot MedicalWarning Fugitive Son: Alex Kelly
TNT ❹ "The Beguiled" ★** (1971) A union soldier bigger tension a girls school. Rough Cut "The Beguiled" ★** (1971) Suspense Clint Eastwood
USA ❹ Walker, Texas Ranger "The Godfather" ★** (1972) Drama) Marlon Brando. Silk Stalking "Mother Love" Highlander: The Series VAH ❹ Hollywind-Vinyl Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video Legends (R)
WGN ❹ "The Hunt for Red October" ★** (1990, Adventure) Sean Connery. News Beverly Hills, 90210 In the Heat of the Night
WTBS ❹ Thunder ★** "White Men Can't Jump" ★** (1992, Comedy-Drama) Woody Harrison. Thunder
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO ❹ Real Sports (R) (in Stereo) "TMT" (1998, Adventure) Oliver Guerner, NR" Comedy Jam Inside the NFL (In Stereo) ★** (1/96)
MAX ❹ "To be or not to be" ★** (1983, Comedy) Mel Brooks, PG "Secretes & Lies" (1998) A black option
SHOW ❹ "Phat Beach" ★** (1986, Comedy) ★"Showwild Murders" ★** (1986) Maria Fort.
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Interested in writing for the Kansan?
No experience?
Some experience?
All majors welcome. KANSAN
Come to the Informational meeting for Kansan Correspondents.
Thursday. January 15 4:30pm
In 100 Stauffer-Flint
Or contact Gwen Olsen at 864-4810
for more information
.
Thursday, January 15, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 3
Cowboys still considering Seifert
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — Put George Seifert's name back on the candidate list in the Dallas Cowboys' coaching search.
Dallas' interest in Seifert seemed minimal Sunday when Barry Switzer told an Oklahoma television station that the former San Francisco coach was not a candidate to be his successor.
However, on Monday, a team source said, "Barry may not be as clued in as he thinks he is."
That was confirmed Tuesday when Dallas team owner Jerry Jones told The Dallas Morning News and the Fort Worth Star-
Telegram that Seifert is still an option.
"I certainly have not ... ruled out G e o r g e Seifert," Jones told the Star-Telegram in a telephone interview from New York.
P. R. SMITH
Swit zer
resigned last
week after the
Seifert: remains a contender for the Cowboys coach.
Cowboys went 6-10, missing the playoffs for the first time in seven years. At the time, Jones said he
would not discuss who would become the next coach, the fourth in team history.
"This is not the kind of process where I'm going to give regular progress reports," Jones told the Morning News in yesterday's edition. "When we've made a decision, we'll let everyone know it's done."
It's not clear whether Jones has contacted Seifert, who is under contract with the San Francisco 49ers until next month. San Francisco team president Carmen Policy has said the Seifert is free to pursue other opportunities.
Seifert was the 49ers' defensive coordinator from 1983 to 1988, then went 108-35 as the team's head
coach. He resigned after 1996 season.
Dallas quarterback Troy Aikman has had little to say publicly about his preferences
Leigh Steinberg, Alkman's agent,
said Aikman's silence
is intentional.
"Troy in no way wants to Steinberg said, this to be a Jerr
1948-1956
Jones: says that Seifert has not been ruled out for coach.
pick the coach." "He clearly wants Jones decision."
NCAA relinquishes core-class decision
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — The NCAA has decided that high schools should determine which core courses meet requirements for college freshman athletic eligibility.
The new plan, approved Tuesday by the NCAA Division I board of directors, will require the signature of a high school principal to attest that the courses submitted satisfy the core-course requirements.
Previously, the process was done by the NCAA's clearinghouse, which received course titles from the athlete and the high school and then determined if incoming freshmen academically were eligible to play sports.
The clearinghouse process often had been criticized as slow and cumbersome.
"This changes the role of the clearinghouse so the primary responsibility for identifying
the core courses rests with the high school," said Stephen Morgan, chief of staff for Division I.
The clearinghouse still will verify that the principal's assessment is correct.
The board said the only instances during which additional support for a new course submission would be required were those during which:
A high school wants to have a course approved retroactively for a student who already had graduated.
- The course title suggests offerings that typically do not meet the 75 percent instructional-content criteria.
- The submission is for a course that previously has been denied.
The board said the procedural change did not reflect any change in initial eligibility standards and added that high schools would be notified of the change in February.
Legendary Elway sentimental favorite
Associated Press Writer
GREEN BAY, Wis. — When the Green Bay Packers ended last season as Super Bowl champions, everyone knew they faced a big challenge to return to the title
Now the defending champs, who had not reached the Super Bowl in 29 years
G
2
before last January, know the sentimental stories are focusing on the Server Broncos — and especially quarterback John Elway — as the teams prepare to meet in San Diego on Jan. 25.
"The fans are going to pull for a guy like John Elway, a good person, a great quarterback, one of the greatest of all time," said Packers receiver Don Beebe, who will be playing in his sixth Super Bowl.
"He has never won it and has been there three times. Obviously, people are going to pull for that."
Beebe said.
"We are not going to go there and just lie down and say,
'OK,
John. You can have this one.'
That is the last thing on our minds. We want to go and repeat."
Packers coach Mike Holmgren said not only would there be those pulling for Elway finally to succeed but also for an AFC team to win after 13 straight losses.
In the twilight of a 15-year career, Elway has led the Broncos to four Super Bowls during eight playoff appearances. But his three previous Super Bowl losses have made Elway and his team a symbol of failure.
Asked whether Elway was the public's choice to win the Super Bowl, Packers backup quarterback Steve Bono said, "He probably will be. I don't want him to win. We will need to play our best game of the year, no question about it."
Chinese swimmers suspended for drugs
Four team members pulled from world championship meet
The Associated Press
PERTH, Australia — Four Chinese swimmers were suspended for drugs yesterday, strengthening accusations that have shadowed the team for years and prompting calls for China to be removed from the world championships.
FINA, swimming's governing body, said Wang Wei of China's men's team and Wang Lua, Cai Huijue and Zhang Yi of the women's team tested positive for the banned diuretic triamterene and immediately were suspended.
Yuan Yuan, a swimmer caught Jan. 8 by Australian customs with human growth hormones in her suitcase, was given a four-year suspension. Coach Zhou Zhewen, who said he placed the drugs in the suitcase, was banned for 15 years, although FINA said it would review his case after 10 years.
Australian coach Don Talbot wants China kicked out of the championships.
The federation also announced suspensions of two other Chinese team members involved in last week's seizure of a banned performance-enhancer.
In New York, International Olympic Committee president Juan Antonio Samaranch said drug use by Chinese athletes would hurt that country's hopes of holding the summer games.
"They should not compete anymore at this meet," he said. "The medals should be returned or taken back."
"They have the right to pursue a bid," he said. "But it is up to the IOC members what is acceptable. I think they would be in trouble."
The positive tests for the banned drug came from samples collected Jan. 8. FINA said the four Chinese swimmers were suspended until another sample taken at the same time could be analyzed.
There were 12 samples taken on that day, a FINA official said, and not all have been returned, raising the possibility of more positive tests. The Chinese also were tested Friday, but those results were not known.
Diuretics sometimes are used by athletes to reduce weight quickly. Medical officials say diuretics also are used to reduce the concentration of drugs in urine in an attempt to flush drugs from the system.
Chinese swimmers have spent years dealing with drug accusations.
"It just proves something is going on," U.S. coach Jon Urbanchek said.
Urbanechek said Chinese officials turned away drug inspectors Jan. 7, questioning if the tests were sanctioned by FINA.
"The next day, FINA turned up in their jackets with their official badges and did the testing," the U.S. coach said.
Also yesterday, FINA suspended Ukrainian swimmer Olena Lapunova for four years because of a positive test in 1997 for a metabolized form of a banned drug. She may be able to return to competition after six months if she undergoes drug monitoring.
It also suspended Australian swimmer Scott Miller for two months for testing positive to marijuana on Sept. 22.
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Section B - Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Thursday, January 15, 1998
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Maryland defeats No.1 North Carolina
The Associated Press
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Topranked North Carolina and coach Bill Guthridge finally ran out of luck yesterday night.
Maryland handed the Tar Heels their first loss of the season and the first in the Guthridge era, as Laron Profit scored six points during overtime to lead the Terrapins to an 89-83 victory.
Antwain Jamison scored 27 points for North Carolina (17-1, 4-1 Atlantic Coast Conference), but he missed four foul shots during overtime and his one free throw with 7.4 seconds left was his only point during the final 18 minutes.
CC
Profit scored 19 points for Maryland (10-5, 3-2), which lost by 32 points at home to Duke just 11 days earlier. Profit
It was the second time in three years the Terrapins beat No. 1 North Carolina in Cole Field House. They did it during the 1994-95 season.
clinched the win by making two foul shots for an 87-82 lead with 18 seconds left.
North Carolina had won 34 of 35, including 17 straight under Guthridge, who took over for Dean Smith this season. The Tar Heels
This time, however, North Carolina never led after Profit made two foul shots for a 84-82 lead with 2:11 left.
had won three games by five points or less, including a win by two points during overtime against Georgia.
The Tar Heels had won 15 straight ACC games, and their loss put Duke alone in first place in the conference. Maryland has won three of four against UNC.
North Carolina faced the prospect of losing in regulation when Maryland got the ball with 7.5 seconds left and the game tied.
But a wild shot by Sarunas Jasike-vicius failed to draw iron, and the Terrapins appeared to be in trouble
because center
Obinna Ekezie
放出 late on regulation
and forward Rodney
Elliott got his fifth
foul one minute
into overtime
M
Both scored 16 points.
North Carolina trailed 51-50 before Jamison scored two straight baskets and Ademola Okulaja added a threepointer for a 57-51 lead.
Maryland cut the gap to four points on five occasions during the next eight minutes. Jasikevicius got the Terrapins to 65-63 with a jumper, and Maryland finally pulled even at 70 when Profit made
two foul shots with 4:51 left.
North Carolina took the lead three times down the stretch, but Maryland answered each time, the last on a layup by Mike Mardesich with 46 seconds to go.
Maryland closed the first half with a 7-0 run to take a 41-37 lead, only the third time the Tar Heels have trailed at halftime this season. Jamison had 16 points, but only five in the final 12 minutes.
The Tar Heels went up 9-2 early, conjuring up memories of Maryland's debacle against Duke. In that one, No. 2 Duke took a 12-3 lead and went on to hand the Terrapins their worst home loss in 29 seasons.
Under pressure, freshman spurs GW to win
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Calm and confident, freshman Mike King didn't need a pep talk as he stepped to the free-throw line alone with his team trailing by two points and no time left on the clock.
"Take my time," King said he was thinking. "And relax."
Meanwhile, on the sideline, coach Mike Jarvis was a nervous wreck.
"I knew it was money. I told Coach that was money," said point guard Shawna Rogers, who, like King, comes from Baltimore.
"That's why I told Coach to relax."
King, playing only his third collegiate game, made both to tie it 68-68, then scored six of his 16 points in overtime as George Washington beat No. 18 Xavier 78-73 last night.
"I couldn't believe it," Jarvis said. "He didn't hit nothing but the bottom of the net."
King, who became eligible after meeting NCAA academic requirements Dec. 29 and made his debut just one week ago, scored all his points during the final 6:16 of regulation and during overtime as George Washington (14-3, 3-1
Atlantic 10 won for the ninth time in 10 games. King was getting steady playing time only because of a second-half injury to leading scorer Yegor Meschierakov.
"A lot of people get in the zone like that," King said. "I was feeling it out there." I felt as though I could score, so I asked for the ball, and Shawnta gave it to me."
Xavier (10-4, 2-2) has lost both its road conference games after being ranked as high as No. 7 earlier this season. Lenny Brown led the Muskeeteers with 23 points, while Darnell Williams had 20 points and 12
rebounds.
"We need to close games like this out," said coach Skip Prosser. "I thought offensively in the first half we became stagnant. But we'll be back, you can mark that down. It will help us to get home. But just being back home isn't itself enough."
Xavier, which usually goes just six deep, blew an 8-point lead with 6:30 to play and had three players foul out.
"We ran out of some guys," Prosser said. "I thought (the officiating) was curious. But I don't think officiating was the reason we lost the game by any stretch."
At the end of regulation, King was fouled trying to put back an offensive rebound as time expired. Referee Joe Mingle went to the sideline and studied the instant replay for nearly a minute before allowing the foul shots.
Rogers matched a career high with 25 points for the Colonials, who won even though they were outbounded 47-35 and shot just 59 percent from the free-throw line. Alexander Koul had 15 points, including 8 points during the final six minutes of regulation as GW came back.
Missouri victory denies Sutton career milestone
The Associate Press
COLUMBIA, Moe. — Freshman Brian Grawer, made seven of eight free throws during the final three minutes as Missouri held off No. 25 Oklahoma State 70-64 yesterday.
M
Albert White had 16 points for Missouri (9-6, 2-Big 12), which denied Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton on his 600b
career victory. Sutton's next chance to become the 20th Division I coach to reach the milestone is Saturday at Baylor.
Missouri beat Oklahoma State (12-2, 2-2) for the 26th time in 28 games at the Hearnes Center despite going without a basket during the final 5:58. White's three-pointer had provided a
seemingly cozy 58-48 lead at that juncture, but the Tigers made nine of the next 10 free throws to help the lead stand up.
Missouri is 7-1 at the Hearnes Center and has beaten two ranked teams, including then No. 18 Maryland on Dec. 30.
The game was Oklahoma State's first since entering the Top 25 this week. The Cowboys had not been ranked since the 1994-95 season when they reached the Final Four.
Grawer entered the game a
66.7 percent free-throw shooter.
He hit two free throws at the
2:50 mark for a 62-56 lead, hit
one of two with 1:56 left for a
63-60 lead, hit two more with 1:20
for a 65-62 lead and two more
again with 47 seconds left for a
67-62 lead.
Adrian Peterson tied his career high with 27 points for Oklahoma State, which has lost two of three
since an 11-0 start. Peterson was 8-of 19 from the field, had three 3-pointers and added seven rebounds.
SU
Brett Robisch and Desmond
Mason added 15 points apiece for Oklahoma State, which shot only 38.7 percent.
White had a strong game off the bench for Missouri. He missed one of Missouri's three previous games with a sprained left ankle and played a total of 26 minutes in the other two. Kelly Thames and Tyron Lee added 12 points apiece for Missouri.
Oklahoma State was held to 10 points during the final 8:40 of the first half as Missouri took a 35-28 lead. Missouri, which got nine points from Thames and six rebounds from Loe, led by as many as nine points.
'Cats offense quiets Iowa State standout
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Manny Dies got his points and helped make sure Marcus Fizer didn't get his.
Dies had 27 points and hounded the Iowa State freshman star on defense, holding Fizer to 12 points, as the Kansas State Wildcats beat Iowa State 77-59 Wednesday.
"From watching the film, we knew we had to go at Fizer," Dies said. "He was our focal point. Then you had (Paul) Shirley sprout up, he was the lone gun.
"We play a lot better at home." Dies said. "For the little crowd that comes, they really give us a lot of support. At home, we just come more focused and do what it takes."
Dies, who scored 11 of Kansas State's 13 points in one run, helped to hold Fizer to just one field goal in the first half.
Shirley had 19 points for Iowa State (8-8 overall, 1-2 Big 12), but that was all the offense for a Cyclones team that shot 36 percent. Fizer had scored more than 20
points in each of his last three games.
The Wildcats started the game with a 10-3 run, and then went on a 13-4 run about five minutes into the half with Dies getting 11 of the points.
With 3:22 left in the game, the 6-foot-8 Fizer ebowed 0-Wildcats guard Aaron Swartzendruber in the eye, knocking Swartzendruber to the floor and knocking out a contact lens. Swartzendruber had gotten position on Fizer for a rebound.
The game was halted for about five minutes, Iowa State coach Tim Floyd took Fizer out of the game.
The Wildcats are now 8-0 at home this year and ended a two-game losing streak to Iowa State.
Josh Reid added 11 for Kansas State, including three of four 3-pointers.
"I just have a shooter's mentality like everyone else," Reid said. "I'm going to come out shooting until I start hitting. Right now, I'm pretty shaky."
Klay Edwards had nine rebounds for the Cyclones.
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Thursday, January 15, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 5
Y
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
100s Announcements
125 On Campus
129 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Kansan Classified
200s Employment
男 女
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
X
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, national
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
325 Stereo Equipment
330 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
345 Motocycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
300s Merchandise
Classified Policy
400s Real Estate
ity or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
All real estate advertisement in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
405 Real Estate
A
4.10 Condos for Sale
4.15 Homes for Rent
4.20 Real Estate for Sale
4.30 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
I
440 Queens Row 63
105 - Personals
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
St. Patrick's Day Parade Applicant wanted
Call: 641-2812. Deadline Jan 27, 1998.
110 - Business Personals
---
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120 - Announcements
H
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Men & Women Needed. Headquarters Counseling Center needs caring volunteers. No exp, necessary-training provided. Interested? Info. Meetings: 7:00 p.m. Tues. Jan. 14 ECM, 124Oread, or 7:00 p.m. Sun. Jan. 18 at Community Support Services, 714 Vermont. Questions? 841-2345.
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Men and Women
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205 - Help Wanted
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Kennel help needed. Must be reliable & hardworking. Appl in person at Parkinson Awareness Centre, 46-50 West Street, London WC1N 2AQ
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disabled woman stay active & involved. Routine easy to learn, some living involved. Call 842-1794.
Mass. Street Dell Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
with 20-50 position with plus profit share.
Apply to 750 (upsets)
Rainforest Montessori School is interviewing for late afternoon positions (3, 1-15 M, 5 F) and F-M positions (4, 10 M, 7 F).
Attention, Lawn渡宝 Co. is currently taking app. for Safe Ride drivers. Must be 21 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-9654 after 4 pm.
Christian Daycare has 2 part-time openings for morning or afternoon. Must be highly reliable and available to work long time. For interview call 842-2088.
Female figure model needed for artist's project.
Experience not necessary. Must be 18. Stable personality required. Leave name and number at 691-9798.
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wkdays. Need experience, ref, own transportation. Work may extend into summer & fall. Call Judy or John 842-3581.
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for pro-band.
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Num. fum. 349-784
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning & afternoon teachers aids. Experience with children helpful. Appl 2104 W. 158th St.
Graphic Design and Advertising Internships still available for Sp. semester. Get some real world experience in Design, Web, Advertising, and Printing. Call for more info PilgrimPage 841.1221.
Customer service positions available immediately for enthusiastic, motivated individuals. Call久for part time hours. Great for college students. Call us hourly. Start today. Call 811-6956. Ask for Melissa.
Adams Alumni Center《The Learned Club ad-
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requires a valid student ID. Dawn Dunge
at 864-787 for more information.
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*PT student aides position at Hilton Child Development Center, Mon-Fri. 12:30-2:30 p.m. and Mon-Fri. 7:15-9:30 a.m. Please call 864-685-3700 for information from the Kansas Ansonian.
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205 - Help Wanted
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PT assistant teacher positions available at Hilltop Child Development Center, Mon., Fri. 11-30 a.m.; 5:30 p.m. Please call 864-4940 for more info or visit www.kansasunion.com to loss from the Kansas Union) for an application.
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Brookcreek Learning Center, an early childhood early intervention program, is hiring PT teaching assistants M-F for spring semester. Complete resume to info@brookcreekpeace court. For more information call 855-0922
graduate Teaching Assistant, School of Education,
begin 01/01/06/08/15/08; Duties: Assess
with T&L 400, assisting in Robinson Computer Lab.
application forms; detail job application at
2300 Cedar Street, Chicago, IL 60607.
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club adjub-
ture to campus, has openings for banquet servi-
ces, barenders and hosts. Flexible hours, day-
time and weekend availability preferred. Above
minimum wage, employee meal plan in a profes-
sional kitchen. Shifts average 6 hours. Anlysis at 1286 Oread Ave.
KU FIT TEAM
Part time recycling technician need in the office of Resource Conservation & Recycling (RCR). Duties will include collection & processing of recyclables & minimal data entry. Some heavy lifting & working in inclement weather will be required. Job ID #4-4089 OR contact RCR #4-4089
The KU FIT TEAM staff is looking for a friendly, energetic, responsible, fitness-oriented supervisor. Some by 208 Robinson for information and a application, or call Becky Shamrock at 654-327-6100.
CNA/CHHA Our busy not for profit health health agency is recruiting caring, team oriented CNA's/CHA's to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Even hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excelent job offered. Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, 336 Missouri. Lower Level or call 841-4663 for Pat. EOEW.
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference,
Students in the Special Education/Nursing Curriculum. Looking for responsible individuals to assist in caring for disabled children, ages 4-15.
Shifts available: Early AM, Weekend (7AM-8PM).
Emergency transport available to $7.50/hr. Have reliable transportation.
Contact: terr at Hands 2 Helo. 832-2515
EARN
41500/WEEK
EARN
Raise all the money your student group needs by sponsoring a VISA Fundraiser on your campus. No investment & very little time needed. There's no obligation, so why wait? Visit us today. Why wait?
TELEMARKETERS!
*Earn up to $12/hour with bonuses*
*$10 sign on bonus (paid at 60 days)
*Attendance Bounty*
*Casual dress, Upbeat environment*
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*HOURS 12:00 - 3:00 P.M. and
Saturdays 10:00 - 9:00
The Rock Chalk Chair at College Park-Naismith Hall seeks part-time Dish Room Attendants and Buffer Servers. Shifts available, evening, 4:00-8:00 p.m. weekend 11:00-4:00. Positions require customer friendly attitudes and the desire to have fun at work. Competitive wages, pay rate, sick leave for jib application between 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Equal Opportunity Employer M/E/V/H
University of Kansas Survey Research Center will be hiring 30-50 students to conduct telephone surveys. Surveys do not involve soliciting. Must have general knowledge of computers. Must have good command of English language and good communication skills. Training provided. Start training on the DQI/E. Applications may be completed at 679 Hawk Hall, KU (874-854-481). AEAO
WE ARE A FORTUNE 500 COMPANY GROWING LOCALLY IN LENOX. WE ARE SEEKING TIONS IN THE OUR SALES DEPARTMENT WE OFFER: $19,000-0,000 BASE, WEEKLY COMMISSIONS, NO TRAVEL, FULL BENEFITS, WE ARE INVESTIGATED IN MORE INFORMATION OR SCHEDULING AN INTERVIEW PLEASE CALL (913) 492-8798 ASK FOR KENN
KU FIT TEAM
The KU FIT TEAM staff is looking for an energetic and friendly personal Weight Room Assistant to assist participants in one-on-one instruction in the Robinson Weight Room. Personal assistance is preferred. Come by 208 Robinson for information and a job application or call 864-3546.
500 SUMMER CAMP JOBS/50 CMAS/YOUC
ECHOES!!!! NY, PA, NEW ENGLAND, TEN-
LACROSSE, BASKETBALL, GYMNASTICS,
RIDING, SWIMMING, WT. MKIBI, PIO-
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CERAMICS, JEWELRY, WOODSHOP, PHO-
CHEFS, PE RADIO, AUTURE, NURSES,
STREISAND 1-800-443-6222 FAX: 519-933-7940
inbound calls. Nice phone voice. must. $150 sign-up on bonus after registration, start, and raises based on your performance. Flex schedules, vacation. casual atmosphere. Apply at kkpl.org. 928-767-3980.
Escape to the Pecos Canyon daydream, cool nights, good friends, and great kids!! Opportunities for leadership, experience, personal and pro-practice growth. We are currently hiring for the 1988 summer program, following: Art, dance, dance, music, fencing, riffery, tennis, soccer, swimming, archery, mountain biking, flyfishing, ropes course, horseback riding, nature, backpacking. Also hire for administrative and maintenance. Call Tamarra or resume to PO Box 5235 Santa Fe NM #0752
3, 2001 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this ad with you to qualify for bonus.
GET OUT OF TOWN!!
Growing $k$ #Residential Home Improvement Co.
seeks motivated, dependable people to take.
Student Housing
* Start at $5.00/hr.
* Flexible Schedules
* New Friends
* Convenient Locations
* Call or stop by any
DHining Center
GSP *864-3120
Hashinger *864-1014
Oliver *864-1087
Student Housing
205 - Help Wanted
Tutors-Part time positions, approx. thurs per
tutorial. Individual and small group tutoring with
children age 6-18. Requirements: Baccalaureate
Degree with major or minor in education or stu-
dentship with supervision. Send Resume to
The Villages, Inc. 2135 WB 290, Kesape, Kaiga 6614 EOE.
STUDENT Clerical ASSISTANT I 1 Deadline: 01/16/98. Salary: $7.15/hour. Under direction of the ITC I 0 System Access Management, duties include changing passwords on all systems at KU, use of the link system, create and update e-mail accounts, record e-mail accounts, keep records on Kubuh and Kubuh 2 time accounting. Also duties include typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned clerical duties with System Access Management; maintaining all process requirements for office in the absence of ITC I 1 Required: Enrolled in 6 hours at KU, able to work in 3-hour blocks, 20 hours a week, follow complex verbal and written instructions, 6 months typing experience. To apply complete a job application available in the Computer Center. EO/AA Employer.
Student Health Insurance Representative For Students at the University of Kansas Medical Center
Underwriting Agency will train the right person to become a Student Representative for the University of Kansas Medical Center on a part time basis. You will be responsible for the health students may have in respect to their health insurance and keeping the Account Executive up-to-date. We are willing to work around your class schedule. Requirements are: Microsoft Word experience, strong organizational and people skills.
Chris Newland
G-M Underwriters Agency, Inc.
89 W. South Blvd.
Suite 100
Truv. M140896
National Computer Systems, Inc. has 40 imme-
ate late-term temporary Customer Service &
Data Entry positions available;
Job expansion team and envoi-
Flexible聘工 7 yrs. or more
Join our expanding team and enjoy
-Flexible scheduling between 7 a.m. & 7 p.m.
*$7.00/hr./Spanish Speakers $7.35/hr.
-1st & 2nd shift options in Data Entry
-A casual work environment
-Length of service pay increases
important for job security
Both positions require 3,000 kph (test required)
Office Building East Hills Business Park (off K-10)
3833 Greenway Drive
Lawrence, KS
FIVE
-Both positions require 3,000 kph (test required)
Wolfgang Gartner
Jucers Showupkids
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly.
Now hiring managers, DJs, attractive dancers and nirteses 18+ Apply in person
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Now hiring for the Spring '98 Semester in the following positions:
NOTE TAKERS earn $10-$15 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in KU lecture classes for the first semester. Must be already had with grade of A. Must have 3.3 - GPA. Course resumes on Bio: 414 MW 600, CHEM: 1205, Geog: 304, PHISX 115(MW 8:30), POLS: 110(MW 11:30). Note that students are cheerful and outside of lecture. Earn $6 for 30 minutes work. Punctual, dependable, cheerful students need
OFFICE ASSISTANT: Service customers at our Kansas University bookstore location. TR, 12:30-5:00 midsite includes proofing and filing lecture notes, distribution notes to customers. Pay $1.5 per hour.
Complete an application at our office at the 2nd floor, Kansas Union bookstore between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m.
225 - Professional Services
SPEEDING? DU? USUSPENDED DL? Call
SERVICE KS/MO/CA? USUSPENDED TOL? Call
SERVICE KS/MO/CA? USUSPENDED TOOL? Call
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
X
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
305 - For Sale
300s Merchandise
---
S
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Entertainment Center for sale! $10 Call 841-9115
315 - Home Furnishings
SUNSHINE
2 twin beds, frame, box springs, and mattress, $25 each, #4 set. Call @ 839-1085
325 - Stereo Equipment
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your audio equipment, amps, tape decks, etc. (785) 232-9639
1995 Jeep Cherokee, 35,000 miles, 4 wheel drive,
we got it! $15,000 in Tulsa at (913) 285-8681
or call Tulsa at (913) 285-8681
$
370 - Want to Buy
$$$$$
$$
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
MUSEUM
3 bdm, 2 bath on bus route W, brand new apartment. $757/mo. ASAP) FD 331-3932
Sublease BAYM in 3 BDMK townhouse on Monterey Way. Great price call Ryan at 918-435-6838
Walk to campus. Room for rent in lovely family room. $300/mo. Female, non-smoker. 824-6360.
1BDM urn furnished apt. at 703 Arizona. Near KU
route. wns shared, whirlpool, call
KU route.
1, 2 and 3 dbm. Near KU & Downstown w / park-
ing area. Bucks $45/mo + deposit. Buford $43-9561
749-3794
1 HR, to walk to KU. Avail now, lease through July.
2 HR, to call KU. Avail now, lease through July.
friendly and clean, free of crush and trash. Call Manager 913-546-3030.
2 RHt Avail now. Top Level, Spacious, quiet location. 810 Calgary DR, DW, balcony, banc... $52 Calgary DR-601 to view
BDRM'R bedrawn now. Spacious room. New car-
riage. £109; £249; £399; £799; £1019; £1319;
£350/$8, call 845-901 to view
Heatherwood Valley Apartments now starting short term leasing in bedroom apartments 1-16pm
Sublease. Roommate wants to share a 4 bdm
apartment at Sunrise Village $200/mo +1/4 utl-
me fee for rent.
2 bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a.s.a.p.
call 749-7261
Unfurnished Room
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
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841-5454
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Visit the following locations
Campus Place
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Hanover Place
14th & Mass 841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
10th & Arkansas 749-2415
Tanglewood
Mon- Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am- 4pm
At some locations
7th & Florida • 841-5255
MASTERCRAFT
Kansan Ads Pay
Equal Housing Opportunity
405 - Apartments for Rent
Hey! Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the lap at your choice? We have some of the biggest apes, in town for Apes 13. Call # 682-4555. Park 25 Apartments, 2401 W. 25th
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE
House housing alternate
experiences. Experiential com-
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and divers membership. Call or drop by 146 Tempest Ave., Suite 205.
GREAT LOCATION!!!
2 BEDROOM APPT. AVAILABLE JAN. 1
1st month Freed $280/mo. + utilities
LOCATED ON 136 VERMONT 2 CALL841-9115
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
1 & 2 Bedrooms
On KU Bus Route
Exercise Room
415 - Homes For Rent
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Large house for lease. Beginning in May, June, or August. Also furnished room with bath available for lease.
Sublease- 2 BBR, 1 BTH, W-D hook-up, deck and pardon $40 mk. plus deposit call 331-0862 or (913) 522-2570.
420 - Real Estate For Sale
Save up to $60,000. Free analysis. No obligation.
Call 785-804-6449 for details
Ranch house on basement at Straford on Straford 3+ bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office entry. Walk to class. Prices at $199.00. Call Leta Lehra CB/MCGREW E. 843-2055 for info.
430 - Roommate Wanted
Roommate wanted. Call for info, 843-1103. Good location. $250 plus utilities.
RM needed immediately to share 2 Dr. bait, 1 bath ap.
Mr. Spencer, Jan. 18th. Jan. 18th. Jan. 18th. Jan.
rental already paid. Call 331-2879 to view us.
4 bdm, 3 bath, WD, nice location on Clinton
24 bdm, 3 bath, in anytime. Call Jalie 1-800-866-
2004 (exl 210)
1 RM wanted to share 3 BDRM house. M or F, non-smoker/student preferred. $240 & utilities - hage bdm! Call collect 919-894-6651 or call 331-278-
Desperately need female roommate to share new room
with you. Call us 1-800-752-2645 / us/
utl. Avail. Immediately. Call Us!
Female RM needed to share 3 BDRM apt.
$224 male in facilities. January rent pn. Call: 800-765-7656
Female roommate would immediately to share
walk to Campus. $197.50 + 1.2u call using
87-204-3631.
Non-smoking female to share 2 bdrm, 2 bath
professional female. Call 838-4658. Now
available.
Open-minded, responsible, /u/s, female roommates
and roommates with 1/2 use of bath and
bath plus 1/2 use of kitchen.
roommate needed to share a berm, 2 bath duplex in W. Lasterwood, GARD, W/ DBASE, basement next to the house.
Roommate Wanted! 2nd semester sublease needed ASAP!, January payment & bill paid $D/$2000
Roommate needed for a 3 bedroom apt., has 2 bathrooms, washroom/water, great campus location.
Rommate needed. $190 a month + 1/4 utilities. 4
big kitchen. Big kitchen route!
FREE JAN RENT!
SPACIOS Sr/Grad folks seek 2 N/N Fem. Avail now Bright wavetable skylift dxpl. nx. campus. Clean air away from traffic, on park (birds, trees, grass). $800 U9ll Dua 84-2147 leave amm. 8am-10pm.
A P. H. H. Student needs to share a quiet and roomy two bedroom apartment. $250 for rent + washer and dryer + fully furnished. Contact Yong at 838-9455
M/F roommate need AESAP. Spacious 2 BR duplex, w/d. DW. Jan rent free. No deposit. $250/m + 1/2 units. Call Brian at 749-4487 or 864-9749.
We're looking for another female to share 3 dbrm home. On bus route, washer, dryer, Cable, water add +1/3 other ushts. $255/mo. Call 943-6121 ask for Susan or leave msg.
1 male roommate must 3 bdm. house off 9th & 10th. Iowa. Fully furnished in walking distance to campus. Park, grocery, and more across the street. $28/$80/mo + 1/3 utilities. 865-583 or 816-843-644.
Section B · Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Thursday, January 15, 1998
Wake-up call in the mail box
Students find switch to college can be a challenge
GRADE REPORT
+ DIV. LVL TERM YEAR
FALL 1997
CREDIT HRS GRADE POINTS
3.00 C 2.0
3.00 F 0.0
3.00 F 0.0
3.00 D 0.0
Many freshmen entering college are shocked when they receive their first report card. Photo illustration by Steve Purpe/KANSAN
By Carrie Patton Special to the Kansan
By Carrie Patton
Chad Horsley spent his first semester at the University of Kansas slacking. He didn't care about his academic performance until his grades and a strong dose of reality arrived in the mail.
"When I saw that my grade point average was under 2.0, after having a 3.8 in high school, I said to myself, "This is impossible," recalled Horsley, now a Toppea graduate student. "I didn't care until it was too late."
The first semester at the University can be a wake-up call for many students who coast through high school. Picking up the pieces after a bad start requires a strategy for academic success, say those who have been there.
Most college students discover that they need to study more than they did in high school, said Kathryn Nemeth Tuttle, director of the Freshman-Sophomore Advising Center.
"A lot of high-ability students have been able to succeed in high school without needing much study time, and when they come to KU it can be a shock," she said.
Students who were high achievers in high school sometimes start questioning their own abilities when they come to the University and compare themselves to other students, Nemeth Tuttle said.
"For the first time, some of the students are in classes with a large number of students who are as smart or smarter than they are," she said. "Here you're a fish in a very big fish bowl, and it can be intimidating to see how many very bright students are out there."
Horsley said his poor grades freshman year initially made him question his own intelligence.
"I said to myself, Maybe this is what you're destined to live with. Maybe you're just not cut out for college," he said.
In addition to the shock of coming to college, many freshmen don't have social relationships with other students, faculty and staff, Nemeth Tuttle said.
"Feeling connected to the University and finding a place here is a key issue," she said.
Nemeth Tuttle urged struggling students to develop strategies for using campus resources. This way they can change the issues or behaviors that cause the initial academic problems, she said.
One way to alleviate these problems is to visit with a professor outside of class, she
said.
"It is absolutely essential to make the connection with the faculty member," she said. "At the very least the student can make the connection with that faculty member and show that they care."
After his initial problems, Horsley discovered the importance of talking with professors.
"If you go to a professor and tell them flat-out that you're having a hard time in their class, they are usually more than willing to help," he said.
Horsley also advised freshmen to seek help from other sources.
"Find a mentor — an older student, a professor, an RA, anyone you see as a role model—and ask them how they succeeded, and then pattern yourself after them," Horsley said. "Make those steps, because if people know how hard you're trying to do better, then you will be surprised how often those people are there to back you up."
Another strategy for succeeding at the University is to utilize academic supportive services.
"We have a lot of resources at KU that students are either unaware of or just don't use," Nemeth Tuttle said.
Such resources include the Freshman Sophomore Advising Center, the Student Development Center and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Advising Services.
Mary Myers, assistant director of the Student Development Center, said her office conducted academic success workshops throughout the school year. It offers programs on study skills, time management, memory and note taking, and exam preparation, as well as workshops for learning foreign languages and calculus.
But hard work does not automatically equal success, Horsley said. Students must realize the purpose of being in college.
"People often call it the moment of clarity, when you suddenly realize that there is more than just you to think about," Horsley said. "I'm the first person in my family to go to college. It wasn't just about me anymore. It was about my family, the future, everything." he said.
Nemeth Tuttle stressed the importance of having a sense of direction or purpose to motivate one's studies.
"It's fine to be undecided in your major, but when you have direction, it helps a great deal," Nemeth Tuttle said.
"Motivation is one key thing that's not very teachable. Somewhere, deep inside, a student needs to find the guts to say that 'this does matter to me.'" Nemeth Turtle said.
Horsley said students find that college is about much more than studying and partying.
"Find a focus, something that you enjoy
doing, whether it's academic or not. To have a well-rounded education means to experience a wide variety of things, from going to museums to attending plays to just drinking coffee at Perkins. Simple things like that can expand your horizons," he said.
For Horsley, extracurricular activities during his second semester helped him pull himself out of his academic trench.
"That definitely boosted my interest in
school," he said. "I felt like a role model to the other people in my organizations. We all tried to do well in our classes because we felt we owed it to the group," he said.
both Nemeth Tuttle and Myers stressed that academic success is attainable for anyone who is committed to getting a degree.
"All students, if they put their minds to it, can succeed at KU or at other schools," Myers said.
Publicity leads to growth in removing hair
CINEMATOGRAPHY
Violet Mulford, an Epilaser technician at the University of Kansas Medical Center, aims a beam of light from a laser hair-removal system at another technician, Carol Brown. Each beam of the ruby laser light covers an area about the size of a pencil eraser and destroys the follicles of at least a dozen hair shafts. Photo by Lisa Stevens John/KANSAN
Med Center busy using EpiLaser
By Lisa Stevens John
Kansan staff writer
A ruby laser light treatment at the University of Kansas Medical Center has made unwanted body hair a thing of the past.
"Men, as well as women, are using our treatment," Mulford said. "Men usually come in to have hair removed from their backs. Women are interested in having hair removed from their faces, underarms, bikini area or legs."
Since publicity last fall about the Med Center's hair removal system, Violet Mulford, an EpiLaser technician, said the Med Center had been swamped with requests for the treatment.
EpiLaser targets the pigment and melanin in the hair and follows it down the root, destroying the follicle.
Anne Cramer, plastic surgeon in charge of the Epilaser program the Med Center, said there were times when hair removal was medically necessary.
Cramer said that a health-insurance company had agreed to pay for hair removal on a female patient diagnosed with hirsutism, which is the presence of excessive body and facial hair.
"Also, we have some post-mastectomy patients whose underarm areas wind up being too irregularly-contoured to be shaved." Cramer said. "Not only are these women dealing with the emotional and physical trauma of cancer and surgery, but they're having to put up with hairy armpits as well."
Cramer said it had been an eye-opening experience to see how hair removal positively could affect peoples' lives.
cian at the Med Center. Brown said the EpiLaser system could zap a dozen hairs with a single beam of light. This is faster than electrolysis, which targets one hair follicle at a time.
"The laser uses the hair as a wick to get into the follicle," Mulford said.
It takes 15 minutes for an EpiLaser technician to remove all the hair from a woman's upper lip. Two follow-up appointments made at eight-week intervals finalize the procedure.
"Having unwanted body hair is a much bigger problem than most people imagine," Cramer said. "If you don't have the problem, it's hard to take it as seriously as it really is."
The cost for removal of hair from the upper lip is $500. If done by electrolysis, the process could cost from $500 to $1,000, and it could take from one to two years to complete, Brown said.
For men, the cost of using Epi-
Laser to remove hair from their backs and shoulders ranges from
$550 to $1,000. Brown said.
"A lot of the men who have come in for treatment were embarrassed to go to the swimming pool because of all the hair on their backs," Brown said. "From what we're hearing, they've been very happy with our treatment."
EpiLaser is not only for the young. 1 Mulford said she treats people of all ages, the oldest so far being an 83-year-old grandmother.
Carol Brown, a licensed Lawrence electrologist for 20 years, is also an Epilaser techni-
The addition of several new members could help resurrect an old sorority and begin a new fraternity.
Students try to establish breathe life into chapters
Members of Sigma Gamma Rho, which is historically an AfricanAmerican sorority, are trying to rejuvenate the chapter at the University of Kansas. Members of Iota Phi Theta, a historically African-American fraternity that has been active for a little more than a semester, are attempting to get their fraternity on its feet.
By Carl Kaminski
Kansan staff writer
"There is a seven-year period where if it is not restarted, you have to start over," she said.
Stacy Yeager, president of the Sigma Gamma Rho sorority at Kansas State University, said that she had made progress reviving the chapter at the University of Kansas. The chapter almost dissolved two years ago when all of its members graduated.
There are at least four women at the University who have expressed interest in starting a chapter.
There are eight historically African-American fraternities and sororities at the University.
Yeager, who plans to attend graduate school at the University next fall, said she wanted to have the chapter back on its feet in February.
Chris Simkulet, Port Crane, N.Y., junior, has been working to jump start Sigma Gamma Rho.
The Iota Phi Theta fraternity has initiated two members. It needs five members to have an official chapter.
"That looks very promising to happen by the end of the semester," said Dion Jones, St. Croix, Virgin Islands, junior, founder of the University's iota Phi Theta chapter.
Jones said he took steps to start the new Iota Phi Theta fraternity at the University because he believed in what the fraternity stood for.
Simkulet said she wanted to help restart the chapter because there were so few African-American Greek organizations.
"We can't really do much more than just find other people," she said.
Website http://www.geocieties.com/CollegePark/Campus@6332
Iota Phi Theta
CHAPTER INFORMATION
Kansas State University 1-888
362-4563, then press 2*744219212
Sigma Gamma Rho
UDKI
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Dion Jones 842-3540
Explore Your World
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. Parking in the rear
---
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Thursday Special!!!
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704 Mass.
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HUMAN RESOURCES AND SERVICES
To The Men of Kappa Sigma,
Thanks for all your hard work for Rock Chalk Revue.
-The women of Alpha Gamma Delta
LAWRENCE Sportcenter KANSAS
francis sporting goods, Inc.
731 Massachusetts
843-4191
840 Massachusetts 848-NIKE
• Shoe Sale •
• Both Stores • 30% off all footwear •
adidas, Nike, Asics, Converse, New Balance, Saucony & more.
January 12th through 18th. Hurry while quantites last.
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---
The weekend's weather
Tomorrow: partly sunny
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
K
HIC 4
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PD BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
Sunday: P sunshine.
Kansan Weekend Edition
HIGH 37
LOW 20
HIGH LOW 37 20
Friday January 16,1998 Section:
A
Vol. 108 . No.81 Saturday & Sunday
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WWW.KANSAN.COM
(USPS 650-640)
It's not too cold for Ice's singing
By Tamara Miller
tmiller@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Stop, collaborate and listen.
Vanilla Ice is back and will be performing in Lawrence on Saturday, Feb. 21 at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St.
Tickets go on sale at 4 p.m. tomorrow
I
Vanilla ice: He's back! And he will be in Lawrence.
at the Granada for $10, said Marissa Byrne, Topea sophomore and Granada employee. Tickets can also be bought through Ticketmaster.
Byrne said she had already received calls about the show.
"I think people just want to see what's come of him," she said "it's."
going to sell out fast.
Some students are proud of their Vanilla Ice fannish. Steve Devine, Olathe junior, said he was not surprised to hear the upcoming concert would sell out.
"Not since M. C. Hammer has there been someone so cool," he said. "Ice is a rap legend, you know."
Other students think Vanilla ice is not only a legend, but he is also a memento from their childhoods. Cory Silverman, Atlanta freshman, said she listened to Vanilla ice when she was in junior high school.
"I did my first cheerleading exercise to Ice, Baby," she said.
"I hope he still has his sliced eyebrow," she said. "I hope he plays 'Having a Ron'"
Kyleen Hamill, Overland Park freshman, said she planned to go to the concert and hoped the singer's style was still the same.
Hamill and Silverman have even put Vanilla Ice's song 'Having a Roni' on their answering machine. Although both are planning to attend the concert, Silverman said she thought Vanilla Ice would be unsuccessful in the '90s.
...
CONCERT CALENDAR
Tonight
Bambino's Italian Cafe: Mike Roberts
The Bottleneck: Virginia Keen, Jupiter Hollow
Brown Bear Brewing Co.: Zoe and the Mo Foes
Free State Brewery: Free State Jazz Quartet
Milton's: Key West Jazz Quartet
■ The Jazzzahs: Tim Mahoney and the Meenies
TOMORROW
Rambingo's Italian Cafe: Alonge
Bambino's Italian Cafe: Alonzo
The Bottleneck: Panel Donor, The What Gives, Mark Henning
Brown Bear Brewing Co.: Woody Davis Blues Band
Hi-Jinx Lounge: Key West Jazz Quartet
Milton's: Marvin Hunt
The Bottleneck: Swing Set Anniversary Party
Sundav
The Granada: MU 380, Norman 360,
Ruskabank. The Decepticonz
Replay Lounge: House of Large Sizes
Monday The Bottleneck: Open Mike
Monday
Index
News ...2A
Features ...8A
Sports ...1B
Game times ...2B
Horoscopes ...2B
Television ...2B
Poster ...4-5B
Opinion page ...4A
The University Daily Kansas 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.
[Image of two people holding hands in front of a large archway with a window behind them. The person on the left is wearing a light-colored shirt and dark pants, while the person on the right is wearing a white shirt and light-colored pants.]
Same-sex ceremonies are held at Danforth Chapel. Although same-sex recognitions are permitted on campus, they are not recognized by the state of Kansas. Photo illustration by Tara Bradley/KANSAN
Recognizing LOVE at Danforth Chapel
Same-sex commitment ceremonies held on campus to celebrate all relationships
By Deanna Engel Special to the Kansan
Forrest Swall never thought he would see his daughter's wedding day.
Swall, assistant professor emeritus of social welfare, and his wife had been told by their daughter, Tara, who was 23 at the time, that she was a lesbian.
Tara was in her 30's before she and her partner decided that they wanted to formalize their commitment to each other.
"They exchanged vows, and they exchanged rings." Swall said.
Same-sex commitment ceremonies like the one Tara Swall and her partner had are becoming more common in society. They also have become more common at the University of Kansas' nondenominational Danforth Chapel.
The University does not have a policy that would prevent homosexual couples from using the chapel for a wedding. The one guideline that does exist requires that the focus of the event be religious in nature, said Anna Kraxner, Danforth Chapel reservation clerk.
"I know of at least one or two bookings for gay couple recognitions," Kraxner said. "It is something that is certainly permissible. We welcome any religious ceremony that allows people to celebrate their lives."
No one can say how many same-sex ceremonies have been performed at Danforth. Reports compiled and submitted to the Department of Student Life each year do not distinguish same-sex marriages from other ceremonies.
Same-sex are permitted within Danforth, but they are not legally recognized in Kansas, said Michele Kessler, associate director of Legal Services for Students.
"There really isn't something that forbids
them," she said.
Kansas is not alone. No states recognize same-sex marriages, although some legislation has been proposed in Hawaii.Unions that occur in university chapels do not entitle the couple to the same rights as a married heterosexual couple.
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, said that homosexual couples used the chapel because it provided a safer, easier way to have a religious context for the service.
"It's probably a little bit easier to arrange a ceremony at Danforth than it would be to arrange a ceremony at one of the local churches," he said. "There are only a few churches that would even consider that activity."
While many organized religions accept gay couples, only a few actually perform commitment ceremonies. One church in Lawrence that allows the ceremonies is the Unity Church.
"Our church is based on teachings of Jesus Christ," said Sherry Schultz, who leads the Unity Church. "We believe that Jesus taught us to love one another. He did not tell us who to love or who not to love. If there are two people of the same gender who want to make a commitment to one another, that works for us."
Although Schultz has never performed a ceremony, she said that commitment ceremonies such as those performed at Danforth were not that different from traditional heterosexual marriages.
"Obviously you change gender lines in the ceremony," Schultz said. "Sometimes it's appropriate to acknowledge that love comes in many forms and that we're here to honor one of those forms."
See CAMPUS on page 2A
New comptroller to take reins in February
By Gerry Doyle
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas can count on filling its vacant comptroller position by February.
On Feb. 3, Mel Klinkner, former associate vice president of finance at Central Missouri State University, will take the duties of financial management.
The University has been without a comptroller since Sept. 13, when former comptroller Kathe Shinham stepped down to take the job of associate vice president for finance and facilities at Northern Illinois University.
"We conducted a national search and found a number of really good applicants," said Lindy Eakin, associate provost. "Mel understands KU management and the services we operate."
Klinkner has been at Central Missouri State for the last year and a half. His duties CMSU were largely the same as those he will have at the University.
"CMSU is a lot smaller," he said. "It's a
lot different scope. Otherwise, it will be very similar."
Klinkner had worked at the University of Kansas before, serving as accounts receivable manager in the comptroller's office, business manager of computing services and director of Perkins Student Loan Programs from 1987 to 1991. He said he had enjoyed his time at the University of Kansas, but he hadn't planned on returning as comptroller.
"It's really the only job I would have considered," he said. "I have already been there and enjoyed it. Every place is unique, and the University of Kansas has a lot of camaraderie. It's like coming home."
Shinham, the former comptroller, left the University to take a higher administrative position at Northern Illinois University. She said she enjoyed her new job and Klinkner was a great choice as her successor.
"I love it here," Shinham said. "I'm having a blast. The staff at the KU office thought extremely highly of Mel. KU is very fortunate to get someone as terrific
...
as him."
The search for a new comptroller began immediately after Shinham resigned, said Deb Teeter, director of institutional research and planning and head of the search committee.
The committee first developed a job description and an application form. The job opening was advertised in local newspapers as well as nationally in The Chronicle of Higher Education.
Applicants filled out a 10-page essay application, answering questions like "What are your management principles and how do you practice them?" and "How would you develop a mission statement for the comptroller's office?" Their responses were reviewed by committee members individually.
Klinkner was offered the job on Dec. 8, and accepted it about a week later.
"It was a very fast search," Teeter said. "There was a strong need to fill the position quickly. Mel Klinkner in his responses and experiences was an incredible match with our needs. I'm personally very excited that we
keeping the dream alive
For a schedule of events call
COMPTROLLER'S DUTIES
- Process the University payroll
- Coordinate bursar's office activities
- Pay University bills
- Manage the University' s funds
Klinkner worked as associate university controller and assistant controller for accounting services at Kansas State University from 1991 to 1996; as a business manager in Church Administration in DeQueen, Ark., from 1982 to 1987; as an assistant business manager, the acting director of student financial assistance and student financial assistance loans officer at Ouachita University from 1974 to 1981 and served in the U.S. Army from 1969 to 1974.
attracted someone like Mel."
Klinkner has a master's degree from Baker University, and a bachelor's degree in Business Administration and Economics from Ouachita University in Arkadelphia, Ark.
schedule of events celebrating Martin Luther King Jr., see page 6A
...
N'S
HOOPS
Kansas tries to tie the school record for the longest home winning streak at 1:05 p.m. tomorrow against K-State. See page 1B
Easy livin'
More than 700 KU students avoid the costs and roommate hassles of campus living by staying at home with Mom and Dad. See page 8A.
RETIRING 13
Wilt Chamberlain returns to campus to see his jersey retired.
See page 1B
待
2A
The Inside Front
Friday January 16, 1998
Crime doesn't pay, but call-in tips can
Board offers awards for help solving cases
By Laura Roddy
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas is eager to award students who help take a bite out of campus crime.
Last month, the University Crime Stoppers Board paid a student $200 for calling the Crime Stoppers line and giving police information regarding a string of false fire alarms Oct. 2- at Oliver Hall.
The student's tip led to the apprehension of Anthony T. Schulte, Salina freshman, who was charged with the crime.
KU police notify Ann Eversole, the board's chairwoman, whenever a caller's tip results in a suspect's apprehension, said Sgt. Chris Keary.
The 10-member board, which consists of representatives from various University departments and media groups such as the news director of KJHK, a representative from the Provost's Office and editor of the Kansan, meets and decides if the tip merits an award.
The amount of the award varies depending on the severity of the crime and the role the tip had in the suspect's apprehension.
The program is effective because of the anonymity granted to callers, Keary said. Callers receive an identification number the first time they call so they don't have to
CRIME STOPPERS
864-8888 Open 24 hours
Keary also said calls were not recorded.
use their name.
Really also calls were not recited. Because the caller's anonymity is protected, board members must arrange to deliver cash to the caller in person.
"It's kind of cloak and dagger," Eversole said. "We'll arrange a password."
Since its inception in October 1990, the board has paid $1,400 in cash awards on five separate occasions, including the Oliver Hall case.
Keary said one case involved petty larceny, one involved fake IDs and the rest involved false alarms.
Eversole said Crime Stoppers funds came from the Provost's Office.
Although the Provost's Office pays for the awards, the University asks that the amount be repaid by the court system when a suspect is convicted.
Keary said, excluding the Oliver false alarms, convicted criminals have put $1,000 back into the system.
"A lot of times people are reluctant to get involved in the criminal justice system," Keary said.
The Crime Stoppers line allowed people to help the community without becoming too involved, Keary said.
"At least we get the information," he said. "That's the important part."
Fire it up!
MARTIN WILSON
Creating a unique gift, Molly Peterson, Manhattan junior, designs a pottery plate at Sun Fire Ceramics, 1002 New Hampshire St. Students can pick from a variety of ceramic pieces and decorate them with paints. Photo by Corie Waters/KANSAN
School of Fine Arts hires new associate dean, fills vacancy
By Chris Horton
chortion@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
By Chris Horton
A two-year vacancy at the associate dean post of the School of Fine Arts has been filled.
Phillip Hofstra, associate professor of design, was named to the position Wednesday by Peter Thompson, dean of fine arts.
Hofstra will continue instructing design courses in addition to his new administrative responsibilities.
Thompson said he was pleased Hofstra accepted the position and that Hofstra was highly qualified for the job. Among Hofstra's new responsibilities are: grant writing, alumni and faculty development, public
relations and development of school policies and procedures.
"Phillip had a lot of experience in business before joining the University, which will help in working with faculty in developing grant opportunities," Thompson said. "He's been here for over 10 years and he's done a great job."
Hofstra's experience should prepare him for his new duties, he said.
"There are challenges to me in this new job that I am facing with positive anticipation," Hofstra said. "Working within this framework I can provide a good liaison between the dean's office and art and design, particularly regarding development of outside funding for research which could be of particular interest
to the school."
Hofstra fills the vacancy created in the spring of 1996 when Stan Shumway, associate dean, retired.
After receiving his bachelor's degree in architecture from the University of Kansas in 1970, Hofstra earned master's degrees in marketing and computer resource management from Webster University. There he was awarded a United Telecom Award for Excellence in computer resource management in 1984.
Hofstra also has studied design and the language of design at Harvard University.
He has been a member of the fine arts' design faculty since 1987, and also has professional experience with Kansas City architectural and interior design firms as a director and vice president.
Campus chapel allows services for all couples
Continued from page 1A
Schultz said that one main difference with same-sex commitment ceremonies was that the word "marriage" was not used.
Swall said that his daughter and her partner had written their own vows, and that they had been traditional with some variation for the couple's situation.
"Some of the words might change a little bit, but generally speaking, the feeling of the ceremony is very much the same," Schultz said.
Same-sex commitment ceremonies can create controversy, even on a college campus. Last May, an employee at Emory University in Atlanta tried to schedule a ceremony with his male partner in one of the university's chapels. Because Emory was affiliated with the United Methodist Church, officials there denied the employee use of the chapel.
"Every university has an equal opportunity policy, which does not discriminate against people based on their sexual orientation," said Glenda Schulz, chapel assistant at Emory's Cannon Chapel. "That's what started the whole thing. The Methodist Church then started questioning who could use the chapel."
"There have been a few on both sides — there are some people in the gay community that are not very happy — but they are very, very small," Schulz said. "Actually, the reaction has been very positive. We've had good feedback where people feel this is a very fair policy."
Emory is a private school affiliated with a church. At the University of Kansas and other public schools, same-sex marriages performed in campus chapels go mostly unnoticed.
But there are some people who object to couples using Danforth for the ceremonies.
Carl Burkhead, professor of civil engineering, said that society should not condone same-sex relationships.
"I think when the University agreed to include sexual orientation in their non-discrimination policy, then that opened up a Pandora's box of possibilities as to what could happen, which could include same-sex marriages," he said.
Swall said that he thought the ceremonies were perfectly appropriate in the context of Danforth and that he thought the University would go one step further in recognizing those commitments.
"The University should, and I expect at some point will, as the universities in California have, acknowledge same-sex relationships in their policies so they can apply benefits to those partners in the relationship," he said.
ET CETERA
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kenyan interactive
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650.640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stuart Fluffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60645, 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. 60644. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
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The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's parking permit was taken from Lot 127 north of Oliver Hall between 8 a.m. Dc. 8 and 5 p.m. Dec. 15, KU police said. The permit was valued at $110.
A KU student's backpack and checkbook were taken from the fifth floor of Watson Library Tuesday morning, KU police said. The backpack was valued at $40.
A KU student's bus pass and KUID were taken from the fourth floor of the Kansas Union Tuesday morning. They were valued at $60.
A KU student's parking permit was taken from Lot 111 west of Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall between 1 p.m. Dec. 18 and 7 p.m. Jan. 14, KU police said. It was valued at $75.
A KU student was arrested shortly before 2 a.m. yesterday for operating under the influence, driving while suspended, speeding and refusing a preliminary breath test near the intersection of 11th and Mississippi streets, KU police said.
An unattended vehicle rolled into a light pole Wednesday evening in lot 54 west of Murphy Hall KU police said. Minor damage was caused to both the pole and the car.
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Friday, January 16, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Field house cleanup not easy
Athletic Department reduces paycheck for grade-schoolers
by konnie wachter
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas Athletics Department shortchanged a group of elementary school students who cleaned Allen Field House following the Jan. 7 Kansas vs. Colorado men's basketball game.
About 15 Prairie Park Elementary School students cleaned the field house in an effort to raise money for a class trip to Washington, D.C. Despite their efforts, the department said the students did an inadequate job of cleaning and cut their pay from $1,400 to $750.
The students felt they did what they were supposed to, said Kendra Grosdidier, fifth-grade teacher and leader of the group of students who cleaned the field house.
Students, along with some parents, worked into the early hours of Jan. 8. The group returned to work several more hours on the evenings of Jan. 8 and Jan. 9 in an attempt to finish the job before the field house was needed again. The field house was scheduled to play host to the fifth annual Fill The Field House women's basketball game on Jan.10.
"It was quite obvious they hadn't finished," said Ron Penny, facilities maintenance supervisor. "We had to do a considerable amount of it the night before a women's basketball game."
Grosdidier said her group of students and parents did not know what
was required of them until the night before the Colorado game. She said Penny called her that night to discourage her from taking the job.
"We weren't even given a list of what we needed to do until the second night." Grosdidier said.
"Knowing firsthand what it's like to handle a backpack blower, it's ludicrous to think that children could handle a job of that size," one said. "The supervisors should have been more attentive of the situation." Others felt the damage.
Some of the field house janitors, under the condition of anonymity, supported the students' effort in cleaning after the sellout crowd.
Others felt the department was being too stingy.
"Withholding the money is unacceptable," one janitor said. "The Athletic Department should grow up and pay the full amount."
Fee for basketball-game parking repealed for disabled motorists
By Marc Sheforgen Kanson staff writer
Motorists with disabilities no longer are charged a $6 fee to park for Kansas basketball games.
Beginning with the Jan. 7 men's home game against the University of Colorado, automobiles with state-issued tags were allowed to park for free in the 58 handicapped spaces in the parking garage north of Allen Field House.
The parking department also began running a shuttle service for motorists with disabilities from the Lied Center lot to the field house.
The fee retraction pleased Lona Downing, a disabled Topeka resident who had been parking for free for 10 years before the fees were imposed. Downing said she was
happy the parking spaces would again be free but she was dissatisfied with having to park at the Lied Center after the 58 spaces were filled.
"If you are going to make people go to the Lied Center, it ought to be the healthy ones," she said.
Debate began at the beginning of the basketball season about whether the $6 fee, which had never been charged to motorists with disabilities, was in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). The act states that people with handicapped-parking permits are exempt from metered parking fees.
This year, when motorists with disabilities drove up for the first game, this was not the case.
"I was rather shocked when I went
to the first game, and they said,
"That'll be $6, please," said Downing,
The University's parking department did not consider the charging the motorists with disabilities to be in violation of the ADA because the open toll gates and standard parking fee made the spaces non-metered.
However, after several complaints from motorists with disabilities and a meeting with Kansas ADA Coordinator Anthony Fadale, in which Fadale indicated the new fee may raise legal questions, the fee was suspended on Dec. 4.
On Dec. 18, the fee was temporarily reinstated for the men's home game against Pepperdine University.
On the night of the Colorado game, the parking department permanently retracted the fee.
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We offer competitive salaries and benefits, and the prestige of working for a company that plays a key role in shaping the future of the energy and communications industries. We will be conducting interviews for both internship and full-time positions on campus on Tuesday, February 10th. We're looking for students majoring in electrical and industrial engineering, management information systems, and computer science. Please notify the Career and Employment Services office if you are interested in scheduling an interview.
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Library Orientation Tours
Date and Time Corrections
Several dates and times from last week's tour announcement were incorrect. We apologize for the error and are re-printing information for all remaining tours.
Staff tour guides will introduce information resources and services available through the University of Kansas Libraries. Scheduled tours are approximately 45-60 minutes long.
Music Library 448 Murphy 864-3496
Tuesday, January 20 10:30 am
Wednesday, January 21 2:30 pm
Watson Library 864-8991
Saturday, January 17 11:00 am
Tuesday, January 20 1:00 pm
Wednesday, January 21 11:30 am
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Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor
Dave Morantz, Managing editor
Kristie Blasi, Managing editor
Tom Eblen, General manager, news adviser
4A
Marc Harrell, Business manager
Marco Enger, Retail sales manager
Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser
Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
Friday, Jan. 16, 1998
Perspective
White protesters in California show King's dream is still unfulfilled
Recently, a school board in Riverside, Calif., voted to name a local school after prominent civil rights Martin Luther King Jr. The board's decision was unanimous.
Unfortunately, so was the opposition of a group of white protesters. The protesters were angered because they felt the school should he named after something relevant to the county such as an orange. In addition, some of the protesters expressed fear that if the school was to be named after a black man, then it would be perceived as a black school. This, they argue, would limit their children's college opportunities.
Opponents of the school board's decision to name Martin Luther King Jr. High School claim the issue of race is not the reason for protest. However, the protests shed a saddening light on how far we have to go toward race relations.
The United States was supposedly founded on the premise that all men are created equal. The founders fled from the oppressive tyranny of the British crown to ensure the blessings of liberty and e quality for themselves and their posterity. This notion has bloodied the storied history of this country.
But citizens of the first colonies were not united. For
M. R. L.
nearly one hundred years after its establishment, America was divided as to what our founders meant in their discussion of liberty and equality. The idea of equality about which Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence was engrossed by the ominous cloud of slavery, which was not lifted until a great war nearly tore the United States apart.
But the Civil War still did not provide a concrete definition of liberty and equality, as many had hoped it would. For another hundred years America was still a divided nation, disjointed and unequal.
In the 1960s the civil rights movement was ushered in so that the American dream of liberty and equality, denied to so many, could be expanded to all Americans as it should have upon the inception of this country.
King was at the forefront of this movement. He sought to provide us with a definitive interpretation of the founders' abstract ideas of liberty and equality. King reminded us that in order to form a more perfect union, we must finally assert what has been an illusion for 200 years—that all of us are equal.
equality for minorities but to all Americans. Thus, it seems hypocritical for the school protesters in Riverside to argue that King had nothing to do with them. One protester suggested the school should be named after Bob Hope saying, he entertained the troops from World War II to Vietnam. Bob Hope may have sought to entertain some, but Martin Luther King sought to enlighten all. Thus, King has something to do with all of us.
King not only sought to ensure equality for minorities bu
The founders, for whom so many schools are named, used words to invoke high ideals of liberty and equality, but people like King put meaning to those words. If Riverside residents believe as they claim that their protests do not have racial overtones, then why do they object to their children attending a school named for a man who wanted to make the American dream a reality for all people?
King said in his famous "I Have a Dream" speech, "I have dream that one day this nation will rise up, live out the true meaning of its creed; we hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal." King's speech now seem like a cliche to some. We have listened to it over and over.
Have we really heard it?
Nick Zeller is a Tulsa, Okla., senior in Chinese and microbiology.
Dates in the Life of Martin Luther King Jr.
Tina Connolly/KANSAN
1929—Born Jan. 15 in Atlanta.
1954 (age 25) — In May became pastor of Dexter Avenue, Baptist Church, Montgomery, Ala. (this was the same month as the Supreme Court decision on segregation of public schools.)
1955 (age 26) — Received Ph.D. at Boston University. Montgomery Bus Boycott began. Montgomery Improvement Association organized, King chosen as president.
1958 (age 29) — Published Stride Toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story. Stabbed in New York while autographing the book.
1960-62 --- Sit in, freedom rides, organization of movement throughout the South.
1963 (age 34) — Birmingham movement. Thousands jailed. Church bombed. King wrote "Letter from Birmingham Jail," and Why We Can't Wait. Aug. 28, March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. "I Have a Dream" speech.
1969 (age 39) Assassinated in Memphis, Tenn. on April 4 while joining in a strike by sanitation workers.
1964 (age 35) - Received Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo on Dec. 10.
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"Everyone thinks of changing the world. No one thinks of changing himself." —Leo Tolstov
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 home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
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All letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stufaer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermuller (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Excerpt
'I am in Birmingham because injustice is here'
This page commemorates the legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., for whom we take pause on Monday.
The following is an excerpt of his Letter From Birmingham Jail, written in April, 1963. Bob Shelton, professor of religious studies,
assisted the editorial editors with selecting the excerpts. The letter is widely considered to be one of the most eloquent pieces of American writing. If you have not read it, please read it. If you have read it, read it again.
can be found online at Stanford University's web site, which contains King's papers and other historical documents.
The full text of the speech
The art on today's opinion page was drawn by Tina Connolly, a Lawrence senior in English and French.
I think I should give the reason for my being in Birmingham, since you have been influenced by the argument of "outsiders coming in." I have the honor of serving as president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, an organization operating in every Southern state, with headquarters in Atlanta.
Georgia. We have some eighty-five affiliate organizations all across the South-one being the AlabamaChristian Movement for Human Rights. Whenever necessary and possible we share staff, educational and financial resources with our affiliates. Several months ago our local affiliate here in Birmingham invited us to be on call to engage in a nonviolent direct action program if such were deemed necessary. We readily consented and when the hour came we lived up to our promises. So I am here, along with several members of my staff, because I have basic organizational ties here.
Moreover, I am cognizant of the interrelatedness of all communities and states. I cannot sit idly by in Atlanta and not be concerned about what happens in Birmingham. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly. Never again can we afford to live with the narrow, provincial "outside agitator" idea. Anyone who lives inside the United States can never be considered an outsider anywhere in this country.
gospel of Jesus Christ to practically every hamlet and city of the Graeco-Roman world, I too am compelled to carry the gospel of freedom beyond my particular home town. Like Paul, I must constantly respond to the Macedonian call for aid.
Beyond this, I am in Birmingham because injustice is here. Just as the eighth century prophets left their little villages and carried their "thus saith the Lord" far beyond the boundaries of their home towns; and just as the Apostle Paul left his little village of Tarsus and carried the
You deplore the demonstrations that are
图
presently taking place in Birmingham. But I am sorry that your statement did not express a similar concern for the conditions that brought the demonstrations into being. I am sure that each of you would want to go beyond the superficial analyst who looks merely at effects, and does not grapple with
ti
You are exactly right in your call for negotiation. Indeed, this is the purpose of direct action. Nonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and establish such creative tension that a community thatas constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue. It seeks so to dramatize the issue that it can no longer be ignored. I just referred to the creation of tension as a part of the work of the nonviolent resister. This may sound rather shocking. But I must confess that I am not afraid of the word tension. I have earnestly worked and preached against violent tension, but there is a type of constructive nonviolent tension thatis necessary for growth. Just as Socrates felt that it was necessary to create a tension in the mind so that individuals could rise from
You may well ask: "Why direct action? Why sit-ins, marches, etc.? Isn't negotiation a better path?"
underlying causes. I would not hesitate to say that it is unfortunate that so-called demonstrations are taking place in Birmingham at this time, but I would say in more emphatic terms that it is even more unfortunate that the white power structure of this city left the Negro community with no other alternative.
Tina Connolly/KANSAN
In any nonviolent campaign there are four basic steps: 1) Collection of the facts to determine whether injustices are alive. 2) Negotiation. 3) Self-purification and 4) Direct action. We have gone through all of these steps in Birmingham. There can be no gainsaying of the fact that racial injustice engulfs this community.
"We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressors; it must be demanded by the oppressed...We must come to see...that justice delayed is justice denied."
Martin Luther King Jr.
the bondage of myths and half-truths to the unfettered realm of creative analysis and objective appraisal, we must see the need of having nonviolent gadflies to create the kind of tension in society that will help men to rise from the dark depths of prejudice and racism to the majestic heights of understanding and brotherhood. So the purpose of the direct action is to create a situation so crisis-packed that it will inevitably open the door to negotiation. We, therefore, concur with you in your call for negotiation. Too long has our beloved Southland been bogged down in the tragic attempt to live in monologue rather than dialogue.
-
My friends, I must say to you that we have not made a single gain in civil rights without determined legal and nonviolent pressure. History is the long and tragic story of the fact that privileged groups seldom give
up their privileges voluntarily.
individuals may see the moral light and voluntarily give up their unjust posture; but as Reinhold Niebuhr has reminded us, groups are more immoral than individuals.
We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be
demanded by the oppressed. Frankly, I have never yet engaged in a direct action movement that was "well timed," according to the timetable of those who have not suffered unduly from the disease of segregation. For years now I have heard the words [sic]" Wait!" It rings in the ear of every Negro with a piercing familiarity. This "Wait" has almost always meant "Never." We must come to see with the distinguished jurist of yesterday that "justice too long delayed is justice denied."
I must make two honest confessions to you, my Christian and Jewish brothers. First, I must confess that over the last few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in the stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Councilor or the Ku Klux Klaner, but the white moderate who is more devoted to "order" than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says "I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I can't agree with your methods of direct action;" who paternalistically feels he can set the timetable for another man's freedom; who lives by the myth of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait until a "more convenient season." Shallow understanding from people of goodwill is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will.
Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.
Friday, January 16, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Education policy under scrutiny
Board of Regents
State committee studies options for education
"We need to be supportive of anything that's going to improve education in Kansas. Nobody knows what will come of this, but we're all after the same thing."
By Brandon Copple Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Robert Hemenway
1945-2018
A special Kansas legislative committee, created to restructure the state's system of higher education, met yesterday for the first time.
The Select Committee on Higher Education is working on legislation that addresses governance and financing of Regents institutions, community colleges and vocational-technical schools.
The nine-member committee will focus on the institutions' financial needs and on how the legislature provides for those needs.
Committee Chairman David Adkins, R-Leawood, said a constitutional amendment may be required to overhaul the system.
"Ultimately, I think we'll recognize that higher education has been the subject of legislative
neglect," he said. "If we want world-class standards at our institutions we need to ensure they have the resources they need, and we need to make sure they use those resources efficiently. We have not done those things in the past."
Adkins, once a student body president at the University of Kansas, also said the Board of Regents would probably retain its autonomy. But he expressed that Regents institutions should have greater control of their budgets.
KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway said yesterday afternoon that the committee should proceed with caution when approaching
the Regents system.
"If we're going to make major changes in structure, I hope the obvious beneficial effects of the Regents structure will not be undercut," he said.
The Regents system causes the six member institutions to work together without losing their autonomy, and it causes them to consciously prepare for the future, Hemenway said.
He said although the Regents system was recognized for excellence across the nation, there may be room for improvement.
"One area we are all interested in is how we can manage every college more efficiently," he said. "If the committee produces ideas that will help us do that, we will certainly be interested."
who is running for state treasurer in the fall election, promised in December to appoint a committee to study higher education governance.
Hemenway also noted the committee had the support of Speaker of the House Tim Shallenburger, R-Baxter Springs. Shallenburger.
On Wednesday, Shallenburger announced creation of the committee at a press conference with House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer. D-Wichita.
Shallenburger gave the select committee 30 days to come up with a report.
Yesterday, Mike Farmer, chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Education and Legislative Operations, announced his committee would postpone testimony on post-secondary education budget measures until the Higher Education committee completed its report.
Adkins said once the committee submitted its report, members would begin campus visits. He said he hoped to discuss the issues and the report with Board of Regents members and students and faculty from every post-secondary institution.
Hemenway said he was encouraged by the legislature's commitment to higher-education issues.
"We need to be supportive of anything that's going to improve education in Kansas," he said. "Nobody knows what will come of this, but we're all after the same thing."
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Section A·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Friday, January 16, 1998
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University
Career & Employment Services Spring Workshop Series
DRESS FOR SUCCESS
Tuesday, March 10, 7:00pm Alderson Auditorium UCES and area employers will co-sponsor a "Dress for Success" presentation where experts on today's clothing styles will discuss proper attire for the job search/interviewing process. The presentation will include a display of appropriate clothing styles.
Tuesday, April 7, 7:00pm Alderson Auditorium Real employers will discuss with students the "ins and outs" of being successful in interview situations.
Wednesday, January 21, 3:30 - 149 Burge Union Wednesday, April 8, 3:30 - 149 Burge Union Learn the value of complimenting your academic learning with "real world" work experience to enhance your employability at graduation.
EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION/INTERNSHIPS
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King holiday means more than day off
Sign-up for these workshops at the UCES 110 Burge Union 864-3624
The University of Kansas will sponsor the National Days of Dialogue on Race Relations Monday in honor of Martin Luther King Jr.
By Sara Anderson
Karen staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The free event, which is an effort to improve community race relations, will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in the Multicultural Resource Center's main auditorium.
USING THE INTERNET IN THE JOB SEARCH Monday, February 16, 3:30 - 149 Burge Union Tuesday, April 14, 3:30 - 149 Burge Union Learn about the Internet as it relates to the job search process. A brief overview of the Internet and an introduction to the resources available online to assist you in your job search.
The format for the event will be an open forum discussion. A designated individual will lead groups of participants in a series of questions.
The activity is a complement to President Clinton's commission on race relations, Thompson said. Ideas from the event will be forwarded to the Days of Dialogue's national headquarters and then forwarded to the presidential commission.
"We want to give people a chance to talk about their fears and solutions for eradicating racism," Thompson said.
Ben Sutherland, Wichita graduate student and coordinator of the Lawrence area dialogue, said the purpose of the event was to have an
"We want to engage people in the issues and talk about them," he said. "Even if we disagree, it gives the opportunity to go beyond your own perspective."
open discussion where people could work on racial tensions and relations together.
While the University has held similar programs in the past, Thompson said more should be done to stress the importance of the holiday.
"We need to have a more comprehensive set of programs so the whole community can become involved," he said. "Students are just relaxing in their dorm rooms enjoying the holiday, not fully emerging themselves. It has taken on the shape of just another holiday."
Monica Hubbard, Colorado Springs, Colo., sophomore, and vice president of the Black Student Union, said more could be done to recognize the holiday.
"I know from being on the Big 12 Council on Black Student Government that we do more than other schools, but I do think that more could be done, not just on a University level," she said. "He has done so much, and things wouldn't be the way they are without him. It is an underrated holiday."
KING CELEBRATIONS
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By Sara Anderson Kansan staff writer
program will be held at 4 p.m. in the Big 12 Room at the Kansas Union.
The Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity will honor one of its most famous members this afternoon. The fraternity will conduct a program to celebrate the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.
Robert Page, the fraternity's adviser, will speak, and several fraternity members will read from King's works. The KU Inspirational Gospel Choir also will perform. The
"Martin Luther King was one of our fraternity brothers," said Malik Abdul-Aziz, Kansas City, Kan., junior and president of Alpha Phi Alpha. "We felt we needed to honor his memory."
The event was planned to be outside but was moved indoors because of weather conditions.
"We originally planned to have candles and a small march from Wescoe Beach to the Union," Abdul-Aziz said.
Page said he would focus his speech on the impact King had on education.
"It if wasn't for Martin Luther King's work in civil rights and education, what would KU be like
today?" he said.
Abdul Aziz said the fraternity was trying to make the celebration an annual event.
"It's going to be a short program, but it's really important to have as brothers of Dr. King," he said.
Terrell McTyer, Kansas City, Mo., junior and member of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, said he was excited about the program and hoped to have a diverse attendance.
"We're not trying to target any particular group because Martin Luther King awareness is something that needs to be global," he said. "It's important for us to show appreciation and let him know, even though he is not with us anymore, that he has made it a better place for us right now."
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Friday, January 16, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 7
Spencer Museum still growing at 20
chorton@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
By Chris Horton
Tomorrow night offers an opportunity for the University of Kansas to celebrate the Spencer Museum of Art's 20th anniversary — and to consider its future.
From 7 to 10 p.m. the museum will feature brief, informal speeches by curators, live music and, of course, birthday cake.
Live music for the celebration will be provided by jazz group The Ben Graham Trio and the country-rock band Fear and Whisky.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway is one of several speakers scheduled for the celebration.
"I think Spencer is one of the unsung treasures of the University, and we should both recognize and celebrate it," Hemenway said. "It is essential that the museum is an integral part of the education offered at the University."
Andrea Norris, museum director since July 1988, has witnessed the museum's growth in the last 10 years.
Norris said 2,000 objects had been added to the collection
"The museum is bursting at the seams," she said.
since her arrival.
The building was completed in 1978, financed by a $4.6 million gift to the University by Helen Foresman Spencer. Since then, it has become home for an art collection of all styles. Norris said.
"In the last decade, we've experienced a great diversification of artist demographics, whether it be African-American or Hispanic art, or art by women," she said.
The Asian collection also has flourished, with acquisitions including a wooden Amida Buddha sculpture and a collection of 18th- and 20th-century Japanese screens, she said.
At the top of Norris' wish list is more space, which she said could be satisfied by expanding the building into the Memorial Stadium parking lot north of the museum.
"We'd like to provide more teaching spaces," Norris said, adding that orientation spaces and classrooms would complement the museum. She said a north entrance also would provide more access for visitors with handicaps.
Joe Murray
Museum worker Janet Dreiling assembles a display case for a Chinese calligraphy exhibit in the Spencer Art Museum. The exhibit will open tomorrow during the museum's 20th anniversary party. Photo by Roger Nomer/KANSAN
No Band-Aids at Johnson and Johnson show
KU professor Ted Johnson, son exhibit work at Lawrence Art Center this month
By Tamara Miller Kansan staff writer
Ted Johnson used to teach his son, Stephen, about life and art with building blocks. Now the two are using pencils to demonstrate the relationship between life and art in a father-and-son illustrations exhibit at the Lawrence Art Center.
The exhibit, "Drawings from Life," features figure illustrations by Ted Johnson, professor of French, and his son Stephen Johnson, a 1987 KU alumnus with bachelor's degrees in illustration and drawing.
"I find these five people to be very lively persons," Ted Johnson said. "They're diverse and open up per-
The exhibit opened Jan. 5 and runs through Feb. 6. Accompanying the exhibit tonight from 7 to 9:30 is a poetry reading by five area poets.
spective."
Rick Mitchell, director of special programs at the art center said he came up with the idea about two years ago to open an exhibit with Ted Johnson's figure drawings. When he found out about Stephen Johnson's work through Kansas Alumni magazine, he asked the two if they wanted to do an exhibit together
"We were thinking about increasing the variety," he said. "I thought it would be good to have a father-and-son exhibit."
This isn't the first time that an art exhibit was a Johnson family affair. Ted Johnson's father, J. Theodore Johnson, was a professional artist until his death in 1963. In 1989, the center played host to an exhibit that contained work by all three.
"It was called the Three Generations of Johnsons," Stephen
Johnson said.
Art always has been a centerpiece of the Johnson family's life, Ted Johnson said. In addition to French literature, he also teaches a humanities course that uses art to enhance understanding. For example, students in the humanities course are asked to draw the Natural History Museum.
"Drawing is an important element in the courses that I teach," he said. "I want to teach the correlation between life and art."
Ted Johnson meets weekly with a group, called the 500 Locust Group, to work on drawing and illustrations, he said. Most of his work in the exhibit comes from his participation with this group.
Stephen Johnson contributed work he had done for the book Hoops by Robert Burleigh. His illustrations are of basketball players from a New York high school. Johnson lives in New York as a professional illustrator and came back to Lawrence before the opening to help set up the show.
"We were thinking about increasing the variety, I thought it would be good to have a father-and-son exhibit."
Rick Mitchell
director of special programs, Lawrence Art Center
Mitchell said both artists' work represented classical figure drawing, but had their own identities.
"Ted's work is really classical figure drawing and very much in the tradition of art training," he said. "Stephen's work shows that classical training, but he's taken that into contemporary illustration."
Ted Johnson said many of his influences were from the 17th century, but now his biggest influence.
"Stephen's my favorite artist," he said.
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daily kansan
friday ▲
1.16.98 ▲
eight.a ▲
A new meaning for homework
Living at home has benefits, drawbacks
X+Y=7
story by laura roddy ● illustrations by dave schell
HOMEBODY
Living at home — ah, the good life. Or is it? Having mom make your bed or do your laundry might be handy, but what if you meet that special guy at a party and want to bring him home to “get to know him better?”
Pros
fewer adjustments to college life
- saves money
- more privacy
and comforts of home
- stability
- stability
Cons
- feel like you are out missing on college life
- hard to connect to University
- adds stress to process of becoming independent from parents
- restrictive
raegann Urish, like most freshmen spends her days balancing school and work.
More than 700 KU students live at home with their parents. Saving money is the most common motivation, but some students feel they miss out on the college experience.
But unlike most University of Kansas freshmen, she never has had to fight for an open washer or wait in line for a hot meal. Urish still lives at her parent's home in Lawrence.
Making the transition from high school to college can be difficult for new students, but more than 700 KU students like Urish have had to make an even greater effort to adjust.
"At times, I do feel like I am missing out," she said. "I'm not as involved on campus as I would like to be."
Kristin Adkinson, assistant director of the Office of New Student Orientation, said that students who live with their parents have to take a conscious step to experience the non-academic aspects of college life.
"The most challenging thing is feeling connected to the University," she said.
Students like Urish find both advantages and disadvantages to living at home.
"My life hasn't changed a tremendous amount since high school, but the homework is really twice as hard," Urish said.
Urish works 30 hours per week at SuperTarget and takes a course load of 15 hours. She has class Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, leaving Tuesdays, Thursdays and evenings available to work.
Mary Ann Saul, a clinical social worker at Counseling and Psychological Services, said it could be difficult for students living at home to feel connected to the University while juggling multiple obligations.
"It can get overwhelming." Saul said.
"They really are limited with their time."
Often, living at home simply is not a choice for students but a financial necessity.
Urish said the main advantage of living at home was saving money, although privacy and stability were additional benefits.
Saul stressed that much of the experience of living at home depended on the particular student and family. She said students went through a gradual process of gaining independence, beginning with their senior year of high school or the summer afterward.
"Some find that home provides the struc-
ture and quietness that they need." he said.
Erin Easley, a Kansas City, Kan., sophomore who lived with her father last year in Lawrence, said that she tried to be both respectful and responsible.
and quietness that they need," she said. For others, home can be restrictive. Saul advised that stay-at-home students and parents deal with problems by communicating with each other rather than ignoring them.
"At times, it was really frustrating, but as long as you let your parents know what you are doing, it will all work out," she said.
Shelly Thornton, Christina's mother, said the situation has worked well.
Christina Thornton, Lawrence freshman, said that she still had plenty of freedom and did not feel restricted.
"She follows the guidelines," she said. "Because of the person she is, I think the transition has been much easier."
For Urish, who lives with her mother, having a parent around has made the transition to college easier. She does not have a curfew and said her mom has been understanding.
It helps, Urish said, to have friends in the same situation. Several of her friends from work also live at home and attend the University.
"If I want to get away, I can," she said.
Although slightly more than 3 percent of KU students live at home with parents, the majority are freshmen. Nationally, 30.5 percent of college freshmen in 1996 planned to live with parents or relatives, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education.
Laura Morgan, assistant director of the Student Development Center, said that living at home did not classify students as non-traditional, but that other factors might place them in the category.
The University defines a non-traditional student as any undergraduate three or more years older than his or her peers or who is a parent, married, a veteran or a commuter of more than 10 miles. Morgan said.
U
Morgan, Adkinson and Saul agreed it was important for students to get involved with campus organizations that they have an interest in by contacting the Student Organizations and Leadership Development Center in the Kansas Union.
"For folks who live farther away, but at home, there might be greater barriers to connecting with classmates." she said.
"It's another piece of the social experience — getting to know other people your age." Said said.
at
Adkinson said that other options included forming study groups for classes, going to football and basketball games or attending concerts at Murphy Hall. For students who work, Adkinson recommended a campus job.
Putley, joining a sorority helped her connect with other University students. Easley also said that live-at-home students should try to spend extra time on campus by studying at the library instead of at home.
A short journey to college life
map
They
a
Area high schoolers stay close to home
By Tim Harrington
tharronint@kansas.com
Associate features editor
Although 3 percent of KU students alive at home, about 21 percent more of last year's KU freshman did the next best thing.
Ten area high schools, including Lawrence High School, fed the University 24 percent of its first-time freshman last year, according to the University of Kansas Profiles for 1997. This does not include freshmen that transferred from other universities or would-be freshmen that earned enough college credit in high school to enter the University at the sophomore level.
Lawrence High School contributed the most freshman in 1997 with 211. The other high schools that frequently spill over into the University are, in order of the most freshman to the least: Shawnee Mission South, Shawnee Mission East, Blue Valley Northwest, Shawnee Mission Northwest, Blue Valley North, Washburn Rural, Shawnee Mission North, Shawnee Mission West and Olathe East.
Local student enrollment
Douglas County Students Johnson County Students Total Enrollment
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
0
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996
Between 1991 and 1996, an average of 56 percent of the students enrolled at the University's Lawrence campus were from either Douglas or Johnson counties. All the schools listed above, except Washburn Rural, are in those two counties.
map and copy those names down.
They will come up frequently.
Robyn Brooks, Shawnee Mission sophomore and
University students not from any of these high schools may want to grape
Enrollment of students from Douglas and Johnson county high schools at the University of Kansas has been maintained at high levels since 1990.
Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning M.D. Bradshaw/KANSAN
Shawnee Mission East graduate, said that she was apprehensive about coming to the University for that very reason. She said she considered going to college in Santa Cruz, Calif., to try to escape the high school atmosphere. Brooks said she now thought she made the right decision.
"In the beginning I thought it would be just like high school, but it isn't. It's completely different," Brooks said. "You see the people that you want to, and you don't see the one's that you don't."
Brooks said she had become even closer to some people she knew only casually in high school.
"But the majority of the friends I hang out with here are new," she said.
DON'T I KNOW YOU?
Ten Johnson and Douglas county high schools send 24 percent of their graduates to the University. Here's how the top 10 breaks down:
Lawrence ... 211
Shawnee Mission South ... 111
Shawnee Mission East ... 105
Blue Valley Northwest ... 100
Shawnee Mission Northwest ... 81
Blue Valley North ... 70
Washburn Rural ... 63
Shawnee Mission North ... 60
Shawnee Mission West ... 59
Olathe East ... 58
Source: Student profile 1997
Inside Sports
VIEWS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall will be inducted to the Kansas Baseball Hall of Fame this weekend.
Basketball Stats
SEE PAGE 8B
KU
An update on the Kansas men's basketball team's individual statistics.
SEE PAGE 8B
Friday
January 16, 1998
Section:
B
Page 1
PETER M. SCHNEIDER
Swimming & Diving
Coach Gary Kempf and the Kansas swimming and diving teams face Southern Illinois tomorrow.
SEE PAGE 8B
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KANSAS
32
12
AGGIE
Record at stake vs. K-State
Kansas forward T.J. Pugh tries to block a shot by Texas A&M guard Brian Barone in College Station, Texas. Pugh played Wednesday night for the first time since suffering a stress fracture in his right foot. Photo by Geoff Kringer / KANSAN
Homecourt win streak longest since 1984-88
By Tommy Gallagher
igallgher@kansan.com
Kansas sportwriter
No. 3 Kansas will try to match the longest home-court winning streak in school history when it plays Kansas State at 1:05 p.m. tomorrow.
The Jayhawk record is 55 games, a streak that started in 1984 and ended in 1988. But with a possible record and the halftime jersey retirement ceremony of Wilt Chamberlain, Kansas faces a lot of distractions against its in-state rival.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said the Wildcats will play as if they have nothing to lose, and that should work in their favor.
"I'd like to go into a place where somebody thought that we had no chance," Williams said. "I'd like my odds. In college basketball today, we've already seen some crazy things. But it's been a while since we've lost at home, and I hope it stays that way."
Williams said he mentioned the homecourt winning streak to his team for the first time after Wednesday night's victory at Texas A&M. He said he mentioned the streak only out of his concern about the various subplots and feature stories which surround this game.
blazing 9.0 start. K-State lost
After a blazing 9-0 start, K-State lost three of its last five games. All three losses have come on the road, including back-to-back losses against Big 12 Conference opponents Oklahoma and Baylor last week.
Forward Lester Earl and center Eric Chenowith have had some impressive performances early in conference play, which comes as a slight surprise because both players are newcomers.
Earl has averaged 12.8 points and 10.5 rebounds in conference games, while Chenowith has averaged 13.8 points and 10.3 rebounds. Their play has helped Kansas through injuries to frontcourt players.
And with forward T.J. Pugh recovered from a stress fracture on his right foot, the Jayhawks finally found some needed depth in the frontcourt. With an undersized roster, the Wildcats could have a tall order.
K-State coach Tom Asbury said his team has rebounded the ball well this season, but more improvement was necessary to win games on the road.
The Starting Lineup Allen Field House • Lawrence 1:05 p.m. tomorrow
"The last game is absolutely no good in the next game," Asbury said. "You have to crash the boards every night out. You can't pick and choose your spots when you're going to be good and when you're going to be effective. You've got to do the whole thing against well-coached, well-scouted teams on their home floor."
KU
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
20-2 overall, 4-0 Big 12
G RYAN Robertson 6-5 JR.
G BILLY THOMAS 6-4 SR.
F PAUL PIERCE 6-7 JR.
F LESTER EARL 6-9 Sr.
C ERIC CHENOWITH 7-0 FR.
C
KANSAS STATE WILDCATS 11-3 overall, 2-2 Big 12
G DUANE DAVIS 5-11 So.
G Avome "Paco" May 6-5 Jr.
F JOSH REID 6-6 So.
F MANNY DIES 6-8 Jr.
C SHAWN RHODES 6-11 Jr.
Wait for Wilt to halt when jersey hangs
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallogher@kansan.com
Kansas sportwriter
Finally, the Big Dipper will loom in the Allen Field House rafters.
Wilt Chamberlain will attend his official jersey retirement ceremony at halftime of the Kansas State game tomorrow, and he also will visit campus today for a 2:30 p.m. press conference in Hadi Auditorium.
While Chamberlain has not visited Lawrence since 1975, he said in a recent interview on 1320-AM he continued to follow Jayhawk athletics — and not just basketball — from a distance.
Chamberlain said the Kansas track and field program was, in his words, depressed because of the cancellation of the Kansas Relays last fall. And he questioned the absence of minority players on the volleyball team.
Chamberlain:
Returns to campus today for the first time since 1975.
.
Chamberlain said he was eager to see if the same atmosphere that surrounded him
at Kansas in 1955-58 could be rekindled in the near future
"Change was about to happen, and people around me were for that change," Chamberlain said. "One of the things that I'm looking forward to as I go back is to see if we can perpetuate how that started and keep it going."
Coming out of high school, Chamberlain was recruited by more than 200 schools. By the time he turned 21, he had been featured in Life. Time. Look and Newsweek.
In two years playing varsity basketball at Kansas, Chamberlain averaged 29.9 points and 18.9 rebounds per game, both school records. He also earned letters in track and field.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said yesterday that most young basketball players today did not know about Chamberlain and about Kansas' basketball tradition.
"Kids don't know tradition and history," Williams said. "You'll find one every now and then, but most of those kids nowadays think that Michael Jordan invented the game. They don't know anything else."
"My first year here, I went into 18 homes and asked 18 different kids where they think Wilt Chamberlain went to school," he said. "One kid knew. That was Adonis (Jordan), and I gave him a scholarship.
Kansas center Eric Chenowith knew about Chamberlain before coming to Kansas. His father is an avid Los Angeles Lakers fan.
Chenowith said he was eager about Chamberlain's return and about the halftime ceremony.
"I remember watching him with the Lakers," Chenowith said. "As a California kid, I still have tapes of him playing with them. So to find out that he's coming back is really special because I want to meet him. He was a great, great player, so this is going to be real exciting for me."
LaFrentz longing for return to boards
By Eric Weslander Kansan sports editor
Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz paused for a few tedious moments.
A reporter had asked him whether the broken bone in his right hand — an injury that will bench him for at least two more weeks — made him regret returning
10
A thoughtful expression crossed his face. The room grew quiet.
kansas for his senior year.
Raef LaFrentz:
Says time on the bench is toug
After about five seconds of serious contemplation, he answered with a firm "No." The assembled media members eased back from the edge of their seats.
"There are ups and downs," he said. "With each passing day, it's tougher and tougher for me."
Yesterday, at his first press conference since the Dec. 26 injury, LaFrentze made no pretense that his time spent on the bench has been easy.
He misses the rivalries — this weekend, he will watch from the sidelines as his teammates take on Kansas State and Missouri
After about five seconds of serious conduction
He misses practicing, something he said he had become tired of before the injury.
"It if was my decision, I would have probably sat out the games in Hawaii, and when we got back here I would have started playing again," he said. "It's just my right hand. I never use that anyway."
But most of all, he said, he missed playing the game.
That argument doesn't work on Coach Roy Williams. "I'm not going to take chances with him," Williams said.
See X-RAYS on page 2B
Kansas to confront hostile Tiger country
By Kevin C. Wilson Kansan sportswriter
On the road again.
That's where the Kansas women's basketball team is headed when it travels to Columbia tomorrow to take on the Missouri Tigers.
Unfortunately, the Jayhawks have yet to notch a Big 12 Conference road win this season and they are looking to beat a Missouri team that is 7-1 at the Hearnes Center this season. The Tigers' only home defeat came at the hands of No. 5 Texas Tech.
"I know there won't be a lot of people there cheering for us," Johnson said. "It's going to be tough, but we need to match their intensity if we want to win."
Kansas forward Jaclyn Johnson said she was looking forward to playing in front of a hostile crowd.
Coach Marian Washington said it was important for the team to get its first conference road win of the season, especially since Kansas has not beaten the Tigers in Columbia since Jan. 25, 1995.
Kansas is 2-2 within the Big 12 and 10-3 overall.
Washington said playing at Missouri presented a real challenge.
She said her players always get up for the Missouri game and this year the Jayhawks have an added incentive to win.
"We picked up their media guide and in the players section a lot of them listed that their highlight of last year was beating Kansas," Washington said. "We've decided to present that to our players because we,
especially our young players, need to know how important that game was to Missouri."
The Tigers, 9-5 overall and 1-3 in the Big 12, are coming off Tuesday night's 72-56 home win against Kansas State. The Wildcats defeated the Jayhawks on Jan. 7 by a score of 53-47.
Center Kesha Bonds and guard Julie Helm provide the Tigers with a potent inside and outside attack. Bonds has averaged a double-double for the season with 14.8 points and 11.2 rebounds a game and leads the team in field goal percentage at 57.6 percent. Helm, last year's Big 12 Freshman of the Year, leads the Tigers in scoring with 21.1 points a game and has been their leading score in 13 of their 14 games this season.
Coach Marian Washington said this was probably one of Missouri's most experienced — all five starters returned from last year's squad — and strongest teams in awhile.
The Jayhawks seek to ride the momentum they created in their last two emotional home wins to their third straight victory. Johnson said yesterday's day off would help keep the winning streak intact.
"It was great to be able to go home yesterday and not have anything to do," Johnson said. "We needed to recuperate and get ready for Saturday because I've heard it's hard to win in Columbia."
"Right now the Big 12 is wide open," Johnson said. "Anyone can take it."
Johnson said the team will continue to play hard and hopefully wins and a Big 12 title will follow.
KYDANES
Kansas guard Shandy Robbins drives for the basket during a game against Arizona State during winter break. The Jayhawks travel to Missouri on Saturday. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
2B
Quick Looks
Friday January 16, 1997
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 16)
Like most winter-born individuals, the chill in the air has nothing in common with your personality — especially this year. Your relationship vibes have never been warmer. Look for those close to you to get even closer in 1998.
Aries: Today is a 4.
Today you may feel self-conscious about your importance in the lives of others. Be helpful and considerate. A small kindness makes a big difference to somebody else.
A hedonistic mood threatens to drag you away from your usual moderate behavior. Give in to the spirit, but try not to make it a habit. You might consider using this sudden energy to try a new sport.
Gemini: Today is a 7.
Turn your focus inward to the issues and moods of your domestic life. Chores must be done, bills paid, personal space renegotiated. Consider how things will look if you rearrange the furniture.
Cancer: Today is an 8.
This is a busy day for details. You are in your element fine-tuning a plan or attending to the minuitae of a system already in motion. Time flies when you're having fun, but remember to stop for a rest at some point.
C
Leo: Today is a 7.
Today your mind is occupied with thoughts of financial security. Tally up your assets and calculate how long they'd last if you retired tomorrow. You may still have a lot of work ahead of you to get where you want to go.
Virgo: Today is a 9.
Expect to achieve great things today. Your best activity might be related more to fun than to work Be careful not to overindulge in your pursuit of a full and perfect experience.
Scorpio: Today is a 9.
Sagittarius: Today is a 7.
II II
2
Capricorn: Today is a 9.
The weight of your workload paralyzes you into inaction. You may not get much done, but at least you won't be making any mistakes. All you have to do now is live with the shrill voice of your conscience.
You are the model employee today — organized productive, cheerful. If selfemployed, you are the model boss as well — eager to reinforce positive behavior. Reward yourself with an efficient, economical treat.
Aquarius: Today is a 6.
Libra: Today is a 6.
Pisces: Today is a 5.
You connect with others who share your interests or goals. Set the tone by being the generous friend or gracious host. There is room for all opinions today.
Do not presume too much about others in personal relationships. There are things you have yet to learn, and things you will never know. Do not be the first to laugh — the joke may be on you.
You enter a time of rebirth and regeneration. Change may hurt a little, but think of what you are gaining rather than what you are losing. When this is over, you may kick yourself for not doing it sooner.
LION
Your ability to persuade people comes in handy today. By way of your reputation, status, or just plain charm, you may have to force a reluctant party into a state of agreement. Be gentle and civilized when pushing.
TOP 25 MEN
Notre Dame 74, No.21 West Virginia 72
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Keith Friel hit a 15-foot jumper with a second left last night as Notre Dame beat No. 21 West Virginia 74-72, snapping the Mountaineers' nine-game home winning streak.
Pat Garrity, last season's Big East Player of the Year, led the Fighting Irish (9-5, 3-3) with 27 points. Derek Manner added 15 points for Notre Dame and Friel had 11.
West Virginia (14-3, 4-3) was coming off back-to-back wins against Georgetown and Miami. Damian Owens led the Mountaineers with 22 points.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Jarrod West's 3-pointer with 16:11 remaining in the second half sparked a 14-2 run for the Mountaineers. Owens' slam put West Virginia ahead 51-44 with 13:40 left.
West Virginia's Brian Lewin made two free throws with 1:08 remaining to tie it 70-70. Friel then drove the right side, dribbled behind his back and hit a leaning jumper from the foul line for the game winner.
Y
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
Notre Dame shot 58.5 percent from the field and outrebounded West Virginia 41-32 while holding
McKinney, whose total is the second-highest in Atlantic Coast Conference history, gave Virginia a 100-96 lead in the third overtime. Erin Stovall made three free throws in the final 9.5 seconds to secure the win and give the Tar Heels their first home loss after 23 straight wins.
West Virginia only trailed 36-32 at halftime despite making just 14 of 41 from the field.
North Carolina's Nikki Teasley couldn't save her team as she had done in the first two overtimes, when she hits shots at the buzzers to tie the score and send the game into another extra period. She also hit a free throw to tie the game at the end of regulation.
the Mountaineers to just 39.5 percent shooting. West Virginia had 12 steals to Notre Dame's two.
M
TOP 25 WOMEN
No. 15 Virginia 105, No. 7 North Carolina 103, 10T
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. - Mimi Mckinney scored a school-record 48 points, including 11 after regulation time, as No. 15 Virginia outlasted No. 7 North Carolina 105-100 in triple overtime last night.
All-American Tracy Reed led North Carolina (13-3, 4-2) with a career-high 42 points, plus 14 rebounds for the 40th double-double of her career.
DeMya Walker finished with 16
The Cavaliers' win thwarted North Carolina coach Sylvia Hatchell's chance at victory No.500 for her 23-year coaching career.
points and Stovall added 15 for Virginia (12,3, 3-ACC).
Tomorrow's Games
No. 1 North Carolina vs.
Appalachian State. 3 p.m.
Appalachian State, 3 p.m.
No. 2 Duke vs. Clemson, 12 p.m.
No. 3 Kansas vs. Kansas State, 1
p.m.
No. 7 Stanford vs. No. 8 UCLA, 3 p.m.
No. 4 Utah vs. Wyoming, 8:30 p.m.
No. 6 Kentucky vs. No. 22 Arkansas,
3 p.m.
No. 10 Connecticut vs. Georgetown at the Hartford Civic Center, 1 p.m.
No. 11 Mississippi at Tennessee, 5 p.m.
No. 18 Xavier v, Virginia Tech, 11 a.m.
No. 23 Marquette vs. Boston College, 12 p.m.
No.20 Rhode Island at State Bonaventure, 5:30 p.m.
No.19 Michigan at Ohio State, 12:30 p.m.
SCORPIO
No. 24 Hawaii vs. Southern Methodist, 3 a.m.
No. 25 Oklahoma State at Baylor, 2 p.m.
N
Sunday's Games
Today in sports:
No. 15 Syracuse vs. Miami, 10 a.m.
No. 15 New Mexico at No. 5 Arizona
2 n.p.
No. 9 Purdue at Indiana, 10 a.m.
No. 13 Iowa at Minnesota, 2 p.m.
No. 14 South Carolina at Georgia, 2
p.m.
1972 — The Dallas Cowboys dominate the Miami Dolphins setting a Super Bowl record of 252 yards rushing en route to a 24-3 victory.
No.17 Florida State at Georgia Tech, 2 p.m.
Sports, etc.
1974 - Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford are elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Mantle makes it in his first year of eligibility and Ford in his second year.
No. 21 West Virginia at Villanova,
12 p.m.
1988 — Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder, the CBS TLI today for 12 years, is fired for his racial comments during an interview with WRC-TV in Washington, D.C. the previous day.
X-rays scheduled today to assess LaFrentz's hand
Continued from page 1B
"When the doctors say he can play, we'll let him play.
As LaFrentz went up for a rebound, center Eric Chenwith came across LaFrentz's hand and made a clean break of the bone.
The injury occurred Dec. 26 in Honolulu during a practice in preparation for the Rainbow Classic.
Today, a doctor will X-ray the arm and check on the bone's healing
"I just want to get back and start playing as soon as possible so I can
progress.
If that holds true, he will have missed 13 games.
"He'll make a decision if I can get into a brace and hopefully get out there and practice a little bit," LaFrentz said. "It feels fine. There is absolutely no pain."
Feb. 8, when the Jayhawks play Missouri in Allen Field House, is the target date for LaFrentz's return.
finish out the season strong," LaFrentz said. "I've got to make sure for myself and for our team that when I come back, I'm as strong as I was when I left."
LaFrentz said he had been keeping in shape in whatever way possible, whether bicycling, running laps around Allen Field House, or even lifting heavy objects with his right hand.
But those exercises are no substitute for basketball conditioning, he
said.
LaFrentz talked about all of the possible silver linings to the injury: the rest it has given him, the improved play of Chenowith and forward. Lester Earl, and the different perspective he has seen from the sidelines.
"I kind of have a new appreciation for what I'm doing," he said. "I can't wait to get back there, whether it's a game or whether it's in practice. I just want to play basketball."
SPORTS CALENDAR
Tomorrow:
1:05 p.m. in Allen Field House Men's basketball vs. Kansas State
TV: CBS, Radio; KLZR 105.9 FM
Basketball vs. Missouri
1 p.m. at Carbondale, Ill. KU Swimming and Diving vs. Southern Illinois University.
2 p.m. at Columbia, Mo. Women's
Basketball Minute.
NEXT WEEK:
Monday:
Wednesday:
8:35 p.m. at Columbia, Mo. Men's basketball vs. Missouri.
TV: ESPN.
Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM
7 p.m. in Allen Field House Women's Basketball vs. Oklahoma State.
Jan. 24:
All day at Columbia, Mo. Track and Field at Missouri Invitational.
3 p.m. in Allen Field House Men's Basketball vs. Texas Tech.
TV: Big 1/2 Network,
Podio KLZ 180-745
7 p.m. at lubback, Texas Women's
Tennis team, TeenTech
p. m.t at laddock, texas women's Basketball vs. Texas Tech.
TV TONIGHT
FRIDAY PRIMETIME JANUARY 16, 1998
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
KSMO **3** "Air America" *★★★* (1990) Two Vietnam War-era pilots run drugs for the CIA. Highlander: The Series (R)
WDAF **4** Visitor "The Tairf" in Stereo Millennium (in Stereo) (PA) News ☐ News ☐ News ☐ Real TV ☐ H.Patrol
KCTV **5** Kids Say Gregory Farm. Mat. Step by Step Nash Bridges "Live Shoot" ☐ Late Show (in Stereo) Seinfeld
KCPT **6** Wash. Week Week-Review Kansas Week: State Antiques Roadshow ☐ Business Rpt. Alfred L duPont Awards "Jane"
KSNT **7** Players "Con-traband" Dateline (in Stereo) Homicide: Life on the Street News Tonight show (in Stereo) Late Night
KMBC **8** Sabrina-Witch Boy-World Sabrina-Witch Ten Angel 20/20 News Roseanne Grace Under M"A'SH"
KTUW **9** Wash. Week Wall St. Week Kansas Week Special McLaughlin Healthweek All Aboard Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
IBWU **10** Kids Say Gregory Farm. Mat. Step by Step Nash Bridges "Live Shoot" News Late Show (in Stereo) Late Late
KTKA **11** Sabrina-Witch Boy-World Sabrina-Witch Ten Angel 20/20 News Seinfeld Married... Nightlife
AAE 62 Biography: Dionne America's Castles 20th Century Lew & Order "Family Values" Biography: Dionne
CNBC 61 "Barbarians at the Gate" **** (1933) A fact-based face about greed and corporate intrigue. "Barbarians at the Gate" **** (1933) James Garner.
WORLD TODAY 61 World Today Larry King Live World Today Splits Illus. Moneyline Showbiz
COM 61 "Johnny Dangerously" **** (1984, Comedy) Michael Keaton "Morny Python and the Holy Grail" **** % (1975, Comedy) "This is a Spin Tap" (1984)
COURT 61 Prime Time Justice Cochran & Company Trial Story Prime Time Justice (R) Cochran & Company (R)
CSPAN 61 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
DISC 61 Wild Discovery: Red Desert News World-Wond. Discovery Atlantis (R) Justice Files "Parole" (R) Wild Discovery: Red Desert
ESPN 61 NASCAR 50 Winter X-Games (Live) Sportscenes (R) Wheelchair XGames
HIST 61 In Search of History (R) Desert Storm: The Ultimate War (R) Sacrifice at Pearl Harbor (R) In Search of History (R)
LIFE 61 Unsolved Mysteries "Call Me Ann?" **** (1990, Biography) Patty Duke Almost Golden Girls Mysteries
MTV 61 Music Videos Beavis-Butt. You (In Stereo) Top Ten Videos of the Week Loveline (R) In Stereo Beavis-Butt. Beavis-Butt.
SCIFI 61 American Gothic (In stereo) "Don't Look Now" (1973) An English couple in Venice meets a blind psychic Night Stalker "Chopper" Amner, Gothic.
TLC 61 Real American: 48 hours Waco II (R) Real Blonic Man (R) Real Americas: 48 hours Waco II (R) Waco II (R)
TNT 61 NBA Basketball: Orlando Magic at Phoenix Suns. (In stereo Live) Inside-NBA "Split Decalation" **** (1988, Drama) Gene Hackman.
USA 61 Walker, Texas Ranger "The Godfather" **** (1972, Drama) Martin Brando "Back to the Future Part III" (1981) Michael J. Fox: LEGENDS (R)
VH1 61 Hollywood-Vinyl Pop-Up Video "Pink Floyd: The Wall" **** % (1932, Fantasy) Bob Goldberg Classic Album (R)
WGN 61 "Chicago Joe and the Showgirl" **** % (1930, Drama) In the Heat of the Night Homewinner News In the Heat of the Night
WTB 61 "Airborne%" **** % (1960) Vietnam War-aerial plots run for the CAI "Smokey and the Bandit" **** (1977) Burt Reynolds
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 60 "Tango & Cash" **** (1989) Sylvester Stallone, (1989) Suspense) John Allen Nelson NR" Dennis Miller Comedy Hall "Courage"
MAX 61 "The Relic" **** (1997, Horror) Penelope Ann Miller, R" Independence Day" (1997) Survivor band together to regain an alien invasion Hot Line
SHOW 61 "The Mirror Haunt Face" **** (1992) Barbara Simsandi Staterun 2014 Cold Lagoon Humans At a Hotel of Angels (1992)
- The KU
Did YOU See It???
women upset #16 Nebraska 83-74 in the Fifth annual Fill th
foot exciting basketball game I saw this weekend had no dunks, no overinflated egos, and no testosterone surplus... liking about the unranked Kansas women's basketball team surprising No. 16 Nebraska..."
slander - University Daily Kansan
Down by 20, the Jayhawks never quit and stunned Texas when they came back for a thrilling 76-71 victory.
"We showed great character. Texas was like, 'We got this'. But we didn't die. We didn't get expected us to lay down... I knew we could do it, but we needed a sparkplug." Jaclyn Johnson -- Freshman Forward who added a spark with 14 points
Don't Miss Out Again!!
ction is Wednesday night at 7:00 against Oklahoma State.
Friday, January 16, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
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Wed, Jan 21 4-6:30 pm / Computer: Center Mac Lab
Web page editors: ... See Pagemill demonstrated and compared
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Thurs Jan 22 noon—1 30 p.m. / Computer Center Auditorium
Windows 95: Demo Overview of the Windows 95 system
Fr Jun 23 room 1 ppt Computer Center Auditorium
UNIX: Introduction Overview of the UNIX operating system 32-bit environment Computer Center RC lab
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bookstore
Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Friday, January 16, 1998
Eagle
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F PAUL PIERCE 6-7 JR.
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---
Friday, January 16, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page '
Men & Women Needed. Headquarters Counseling
- for clients with mental illness.
- training provided. Interested? Meetings:
7:00 p.m. tues. Jan. 13 at ECM, 1240 Ordea,
or 7:00 p.m. thurs. Jan. 13 at Community Support
& Wellness Center.
120 - Announcements
H
NEED GLASSES?
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON EVERY FRAME. ANY DESCRIPTION, NO HASSLE. $29 for Mass., downtown Lawrence. 843-6283. We carry Giorgio Armani, Alfred Sung. Next, Dakota Smith, Santa Fe Eyewears, Nicole Miller, Perry Nails, Elastica. We proudly use the highest quality lenses at GREAT PRICES. We also supply contact lenses at GREAT PRICES.
!!!!JUST FOLLOW OUR GOLDEN ANGELS!!!!!
125 - Travel
SPRING BREAK trip to Mexico, Jamaica,
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perpirants.com 1-800-272-7520
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140 - Lost & Found
CD case found on Campus Hill Sunday, Jan. 11th
843-0125 evenings to identify.
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
Child care in home. 3 kids. 3 days wk. Reliable.
non-smoker, car owner. (913) 845-3633
Hard working, energetic persons to teach behavioral program to 7 year old with Autism.
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant P.T. NEW
Apt./Twn. 748-1298 imissable in 2030 Wakarau Rum
Kennel help need. Must be liable & hardworking. Apply in person at Parkway Animal Hospital.
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disabled woman stay active & involved. Routine easy to learn, some lifting involved. Call 892-1794.
Christian Daycare has 2 part-time openings for morning or afternoon. Must be highly reliable and available to work long time. For interview call 842-2088.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app. for Safe Ride drivers. Must be 21 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 p.m.
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wakds. Need experience, ref, own transportation. Work may extend in summer & fall. Call Judy or John #42-381.
Female figure model needed for artist's project.
Experience not necessary. Must be 18. Stable personality required. Leave name and number at 691-9798.
Immanuel Lutheran Childhood Center is now accepting applications for morning & afternoon teachers aids. Experience with children helpful. Apply 2104 W. 158t St.
Graphic Design and Advertising Internships still available for Sp. semester. Get some real world experience in Design, Web, Advertising, and Printing. Call for more info PilgrimPage 841-1221.
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for pro-band.
High-strong voice and personality. All styles.
Also, DRUMMER/PERCUSSIONIST/vox w/ exp. $ and fun. f49-3649
Marketing Intern/Personal Assistant
Interesting and challenging position for the right person. A unique opportunity with flexible hours.
Call Dick at 843-4527
$$Expansion $$ Nat. co-immediate PT/FT openings in openings/JAWS/COO & entry-level all areas. Flexible schedules around classes.
10 to 18 to 45
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club adj
citate to campus, has openings for part dije-
sinesswashers or Above minimum wage.
Wage is uniform; no uniforms dawn Dawn
臂e 864-787 for more information.
COMPUTER SERVICE TECHNIAN in shop on sight PT./PST. Must be able to do trou- ness in computer work independently. Apply in person. Microtouch computers 492 Legends Dr. Lawrence KS EOE.
205 - Help Wanted
Omsight manager for small apt. complex near campus, full time, upperclassman or graduate student, salary and free apartment, send resume to: P.O. Box 628 Lawrence KS 69044
COMPUTER SERVICE TECHNICIAN in on/sight FT/PT. Must be able to do troubleshooting. Must be able to work independently with computers. #21.4eg leads Dr. Lawrence KS. EOE.
HELP WANTED: THE MAIL BOX
Customer service positions available immediately for enthusiastic, motivated individuals. Full time pay for part time hours. Great for career pursuits. Email resume to: start.ctd.com Call 841-7434 for Molone
is seeking part time help; mostly mornings &
some afterschools. Computer, cash register and
customer service experience helpful. Apply in
person only 3115 W. 8th Suite C
Pt student aide positions at Hilton
Child Development Center, Mon.-Fri. 12:30-3:00
p.m. and Mon.-Fri. 7:15-8:30 a.m. Fee: call 644-
252-2955 or visit www.hiltonchildren.com
for the Kansas Area for an application.
PT assistant teacher positions available at HIIT
Child Development Center, Men. FI. 11:30
a.m.-3:30 p.m. Please call 864-4940 for more info.
(please refer to the brochure from the Hanson
Union) for an application.
Brookcreek Learning Center, an early childhood early intervention program, is hiring PT teaching assistants M-F for spring semester. Complete job description and Hope Court. For more information call 855-293-6152.
205 - Help Wanted
Graduate Teaching Assistant, School of Education. Tuition waived include; 20 hours a week. 01/08/1985-16/98. Duties: Assisting with TBL 40, 405, assisting in Robinson Computer Lab. Application forms and detail job description at 200 Dole 864-3644. Deadline is January 18th
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club adjude to campus, has openings for banquet services, barium tenders and hosts. Holiday hours, time and weekend availability preferred. Above minimum wage, employee meal plan in a professional setting. Hours average 8-11 hours. Apply at 1266 Great Ave.
KU FIT TEAM Job Opportunity
The KU FTTE TEAM staff is looking for a friendly, energetic, responsible, fitness-oriented supervisor. Come by 800 Robinson for information and enrollment, or call Becky or Shannon 804 346.
Part time recycling technician need in the Office of Resource Conservation & Recycling (RCR). Duties will include collection & processing of recyclables & minimal data entry. Some heavy lifting & working in inclement weather will be required. Please contact RCR by email or job code #9-0001 OR contact RCR at 4,0001.
Students in the Special Education/Nursing Curriculum. Looking for responsible individuals to assist in caring for disabled children, ages 4-15. Shifts available: Early AM, Weekend (7:8AM-9:0AM), afternoons, and evenings. Hourly wage: $14-$24 per hour. Contact: terri at Hands 2, 823-215-2345
Tutors-Part time positions, approx. 3hrs per week. Individual and small group tutoring with children age 6-18. Requirements: Baccalaureate Degree with major or minor in education or student teacher with supervision. Send Resume to village office, Inc. 2239 SW, Sw108, Kaşa, K6511 EOE
CNA/CHAIR We busy not for profit health home agency is recruiting caring, team oriented CNA'S/CHAIR to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Evening hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, 338 Lower Level or call 841-4643 for Pat EOE.
DPRA is seeking skilled computer professionals with a minimum B.S./B.A. degree and one to two years of professional experience to become an important communication skills team in our client-oriented consulting firm. DPRA is located in beautiful Manhattan, Kansas. Review job description online and call 800-251-7692.com see how you can join our team. EOE/AA/
EARN
EARN
50-$1500/WEEK
Raise all the money your student group needs by sponsoring a VISA Fundraiser on your campus. No investment & very little time needed. There no obligation, so help with your students today. Call 1-800-2345-945 x 95
The Rock Chalk Cafe at College Park-Naitimah Hall seals part-time Dish Room Attendants and Buffer Servers. Shirts available, 4:00-8:00 p.m., weekends 11:00-4:00. Positions require customer friendly attitudes and the desire to have fun at work. Competitive wages, uniforms, and free meals. Visit us for jib application between 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. F/W/M/U
SUMMER CAMP JOBBs in the Poco Mountains of
P.A. CAMP JOBNDA has openings for qualified,
caring students to be great help models in
Athletics Specialists and more! GREAT
SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to
"the finest summer you will have." on campus
interviews Wed, Feb. 6 at Kansas Union Ball
@890-823-6490. staff@campwonda.com.
WE ARE A FORTUNE 500 COMPANY GROWING LOCALLY IN LENOXA. WE ARE SEEKING TIONS IN OUR SALES DEPARTMENT. WE OFFERT: $19,000-$29,000 BASE, WEEKLY COMMISSIONS, NO TRAVEL, FULL BENEFITS, OR ADVANCEMENT IF YOU INTERESTED. IF YOU INTERESTED OR TION OR SCHEDULING AN INTERVIEW PLEASE CALL (913) 4927-8780 FOR KORKNEY
205 - Help Wanted
205 - Help Wanted
Growing #1: Residential Home Improvement Co.
seeks motivated, dependable people to take
charge.
$$$ BONUS! BONUS!$$$
Operation of Cash
Rainforest Montessori School is interviewing for late afternoon positions (3:15-5:45 M/F) and subcontractor position (6:00-8:30 M/F).
Escape to the Pecos Warm-warm days, cool nights, good friends, and great kids! I opportunities for leadership, experience, personal and professional growth. We are currently hiring for the summer session. Teach one or more of the following courses: water polo, fencing, rifley, tennis, soccer, swimming, archery, mountain biking,飞鱼滑, coarse course, horseback riding, nature, backpacking. Also hire for a special event: We welcome Scott at 1-400-722-2848 for an application or send to PO A 5795 Sfgna FM 87802
**bound calls.** Nice phone voice. PC skills must $100 sign-on签 on after working 30 continuous 6hr. minimum shifts. $450 hr. to start, and then 9hr. for each additional vacation. jobs. vacation. casual camisole. Anvl at:
- Start at $5.50/hr.
* Flexible Schedules
* Convenient Locations
* Scholarships
* Cars Available
DSH Dining Center:
GSF * 864-3120
Ekahln * 866-2500
Kenney * 867-8900
Oliver * 864-8077
STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT 1 | Deadline: 01/16/89. Salary: $7.15/hour. Under direction of the TFC I of System Access Management, duties include changing passwords on all systems at KU, use of the lark system, and create update e-mail accounts. E-mail accounts, keep records on Kukub and Kukub 2 time accounting. Also duties include typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned clerical duties with System Access Management; maintaining all processing records in office in the absence of TFC I. Requires: Enrolled in 6 hours at KU, able to work in 3 hour blocks, 20 hours a week, follow complex verbal and written instructions, 6 months typing experience. To apply complete a job application available in the Computer Center: EO/AA Employer
GET OUT OF TOWN!!
WANTED
Underwriting Agency will train the right person to become a Student Representative for the University of Kansas Medical Center on a part time basis. Students with experience in health care students may have in respect to their health insurance and keeping the Account Executive up-to-date. We are willing to work around your class schedule. We also offer Microsoft Word experience, strong organization and people skills. Please forward resumes to:
Student Health Insurance Representative For Students at the University of Kansas Medical Center
Kantel, 201 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this
with you to visit me for优惠
IN NCS TODAY!
National Computer Systems, Inc. has 40 immediate long term temporary Customer Service & Support staff.
Join our expanding team and enjoy
-Flexible scheduling between 7 a.m. & 7 p.m.
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1st & 2nd shift options in Data Entry
- A casual work environment
Opportunities for regular full-time employment
Trained scheduled weekly (D/E) & monthly
Both positions require a 3,000 kph (test required) Wednesday and apply:
East Hills Business Park K-10
3833 Greenway Drive
Lawrence, KS
NSW
Huey Shin
Exciting teaching positions open immediately in a new Early Ed. setting overseas.
Early childhood or Education background preferred but not necessary. Airfare included! Send Resume to Human Resources Dep. P.O. Box 3188
Lawrence, KS 65046
Churice@usda.us.net
Montessori
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.2 a.m.
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Now hiring managers, DJs,
attractive dancers and
valetresses 18+. Apply in person
Juicers Shongrids
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly.
Cottonwood inc, is currently looking for enthusiastic individuals interested in providing supports to adults with developmental disabilities in their community, and able with a variety of schedules that include evening, night and weekend hours. Some schedules may include sleep overs. Responsibilities may vary. In order to provide group living site, implement a person-centered approach to consumer services, assisting in the development of house management skills and leisure time opportunities. Minimum of a High School diploma/GED and driving record acceptable to our insurance carrier is required. Released to work in a related experience helpful. Starting hourly pay of $6.00 to $7.55, depending on position. Apply at Cottonwood, 9201 W. 31st st. Call Joan at 842-650-1234 or email us at kansasunion.com/hrm-1pm, july 23, E.O.E.
PROFESSIONAL-JANITORIAL SERVICES
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OFFICE ASSISTANT: Service customers at our Kansas UNistock location. ST 12: 10-35-00 P.M. Duties include proofing and filing lecture attributes notes to customer. Pay $1.5 per月.
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These positions offer paid training for qualified individuals possessing outstanding customer service and sales skills. Permanent placement with great benefits and advancement opportunities are guaranteed to those exhibiting excellent performance and attendance after only 90 days!
NOTE TAKERS-earn $10.45 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in KU 14 lecture classes for the course. Please note that you must have a grade of A. Must have 3.5 + GPA. Cources open. Bio 414 M+-600 CHEM 126, Geog 304 M+. Bio 414 M+-600 CHEM 126, Geog 304 M+.
ADVERTISERS- Distribute earns before class, outside of lecture. Earn $6 for 30 minutes work. Punctual, dependable, cheerful students need only avail.
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Now hire for the Spring 98 Semester in the following positions:
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Call 842-6264 or apply in person at 899 Iowa.
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SPEEDING? DUI? SUSPENDED DL7 Call
Serving KSM,MO: 200-892-0222 Toll Free
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Fake DU's and alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters COCKFIGHT
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation
300s Merchandise
A Division of Buckingham Palace, Inc.
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305 - For Sale
$
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Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases.
Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
315 - Home Furnishings
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-9115
图示
2*win beds,frame box,springs and mattress, 32ch each $48,
Call: 0414.968.1000
325 - Stereo Equipment
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your audio equipment, amp, tape decks, etc. (785) 229-9639.
340-Auto Sales
P
1936 Jeep Chloroke, 35,000 miles, 4 wheel drive,
call in Moorhead, MN to飞它. $11,500
cal call in Topeka at 1031 228-1088
Needed? A student ticket for Saturday's K state game. Will pay $2 cash. Please call 749-7383.
$$$$$
图
370 - Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
Walk to campus. Room for rent in lively family home. $300/mo. Female, non-mother. 845-6800
3 bdm, 2 bath on bus route W/D, brand new
apartment. $77/mo. ASAP! Call 311-3832
3 Bedroom apc. across at st. from mem. stadium
Free cable and water. Available immediately. $89.97
Free cable and water. Available immediately. $89.97
Sublease BDA in 3 bDMR townhouse on Monterey Way. Great price call RYAN at n318-4536.
1 BDRM unfurnished ap, at 703 Arizon. near KU bus route, WD shared, wipoor, garage. OOP
1) BB, walk to KU. Avail now. lease through July.
4) #6/mo. Two month rent. Free, very clean. Free
departure. 20% off room rate.
B2R BAv now! Top Level, Spacium, quiet loca-
tion. R48 call 643-001 to DW, balkon, bus-
port. R48 call 643-001 to DW
BDRM's avail now. Spacious location. New car-
manage to assist you w/ W7/location. $50/300,
843-0110 to view.
2 BR/ 8A WD, close to KU, great view.
Call Dev. Brian B4-9061. 22 Eremy Rd. #b904
84-9061. 22 Eremy Rd. #b904
Heatherwood Valley Apartment now starting
shortest tenet to room in bedroom apartments.
1 hour, 74 minutes, 1 hour 69 minutes.
2 bedroom apartment
Sublease. Roommate will to share a bdmr
spairment with Sumitomo (Sumitomo
1-913-817-6844, 1-913-817-6311) or
331-277-1.
2 bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a s.a.p. p.
call 749-7261
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE
laboratories. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere.
Experience democratic control. Call or drop by 1-800-753-9244 or 1-800-753-9245.
Laboratories al. 811-462-7541.
2 Bedroom apt. acc.st. from mem. station.
$47/month. Great location, only pay electric & phone.
Free cable and water. Available immediately.
942-9786
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
2 BEDROOM APT, AVAILABLE JAN 1
3 BEDROOM APT, AVAILABLE JAN 2
LOCATED ON 1068 VERMIDY #2 CALL 841-9151
LOCATED ON 1068 VERMIDY #2 CALL 841-9151
841-5454
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
13'1/2 E. 8TH ST., LAWRENCE
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405 - Apartments for Rent
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Hey? Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the apt. of your choice this month? We have some of the biggest apts, in town for the moors. Call us @ 843.155.2455. Park 25 Apartments, 200 W. Fifth St.
Sign lease for 1 BR apt. before Jan. 31st and be in drawing for a color TV. Great location on KU bus rte., 1 BR apt, with water pdp. $465 all apples w/ book in bookshops. Wallet No. 741-2819-741-741-741
M mastercraft management
Visit the following locations
Apartment homes designed with you in mind.
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
WALK TO CAMPUS
Completely Furnished
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Apartment Homes
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas * 749-2415
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance 7th & Florida • 841-5255
Hanover Place
14th & Mass • 841-1212
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold *749-4226*
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
Houses
Large house for lease. Beginning in May, June, and July, rent at $270 per month, very close to KU. Lease number @ 691-798
Sublease-2 BBR, 1 W-D-hook up, deck and patio 650 mm, plus deposit 351 cm² (or 913 m²)
420 - Real Estate For Sale
OPEN HOUSE
Ranch house on basement set up on Straford Rd. 3+ bedroom; bath area, outside office entry. Walk to class. prices at $19.99, 900. Call Leta White, CB/McGrew R.E. 845-2055 for info.
430 - Roommate Wanted
Roommate wanted. Call for info, 843-1103. Good location. $290 plus utilities.
RM needed immediately to share a 1 bath, bath
Close to campus. Rent is $185/mo + no jt. Attend. Jtl
Room is $270/mo.
4 bdrm, 3 bath, WD, nice location on Clinton Parkway, move in early. Call Julie 1-800-865-2977
I RM wanted to share 3 DBM校房 M. or F. non-
studenter/ student preferred. $24 & $38 for
each room.
Desperately need female roommate to share new
3km town house. Jan rent free. 200 +. no./+15
(no. phone) (876) 459-1234 or (876)
555-1234.
Female RM needed to share 3 DBRM apm:
2014 have a message.
2019 have a message.
Female Roommate Needs ASAP. Share Town
Roommate Needs ASAP. Share Town.
$20 more
plus utilities, please call 329-181
Female roommate wanted immediately to
2 BR Apat. Walk to campground $175.00 + 1/2 tUl call
Non-smoking female to share 2 bdm, 2 bath
/wf professional female. Call 838-4485. Now or
visit www.gamersdale.edu
Non-smoking male wanted to keep 2 bd apart.
No to campfire 820/month + 1/2 utilities. Call
613-549-6786.
Open-minded, responsible, n/s; femal room
bathroom; child room; and bath.
a month plus 1/2 utilities per month.
Roommate needed to share 3 bdrm, 2 bdmupe in W. Lawrence; Garage W/D, basement, new room, apartment with large space.
Roommate Wanted! 2nd semester sublease
Roommate Wanted! 1st half paid W/D/3000
month/14 hrs Call: 865-227-3948
Roommate needed for a 3 bedroom apt., has 2 bathrooms, washer/dryer, great campus location! $220 a month.
Roommate needs $190 a month + 4 / utilities.
Bedroom 3, Bath 8. Big kitchen. On bus route!
Bedroom 2, Bedroom 1. Parking.
A P R. Student needs to share a quiet and rooom
two bedroom apartment. $250 for rent + washer
and dryer + fully furnished. Contact Yong at 838-
9455
M/R/mommate needed ASAP. Spacios 2 BR duplex, w/d. W.D. Jan. rent free. No deposit $250/mo + 1/2 units. Call Brian at 749-4897 or 884-9746.
1 roommate wanted. 3 bdmr. house at 9th & lowa. Fully furnished in walking distance to campus. Park, grocery, and more across the street. no contract. $200/mo. + 1 utilities. 805-5633 or 819-440-460
Seeking female roommate for 3 bedroom nicely furnished townhome located in new development in N. W. Lawrence, 5 months minimal lease, $190 plus 7/8 units / 13 deposit, $16 deposit. Call 381-3427.
Section B · Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Friday, January 16, 1998
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Break practice a day at the beach for swimming and diving team
The Kansas swimming and diving team lost a leader and a friend last year when team captain Seth Duncsbom died of an enlarged heart during a Jan. 22 practice.
By Erin Thompson
Kansan sportswriter
The team, searching for a break from the emotion surrounding Dunscomb's death and from troubles with the pools in Robinson Gymnasium, traveled to Cocoa Beach. Fla., during semester break.
"We went down there for a lot of different reasons," said head coach Gary Kempf. "We've had a long
Last fall, the Robinson pools had a ventilation problem, and chlorine vapors made it impossible to breath. The
1
Dunscmbo:Team remembers him after his death last year.
"We've had a difficult year because we've had a lot of troubles with the pool," said junior Brant Peoples. "And the stuff with Seth was obviously hard to deal with."
"Training in Robinson indoor all the time gets a little boring," said junior Quincy Adams. "Swimming outdoors provides a totally different experience that was a nice change."
team had to practice at the Lawrence Aquatic Center and Lonestar Lake.
In Florida, the team trained twice a day at a 25-meter outdoor pool next to the beach.
Despite a rigorous training schedule, the team had time to relax at the beach and make a trip to Disney World.
The team swam against Southern Illinois last year on Jan. 25 — three days after Dunscomb's death. In a meet dedicated to Dunscomb, Kansas won 145-106.
Tomorrow the team goes to Carbondale, Ill., to compete against Southern Illinois University.
This year's meet also should be emotional because the team will be dealing with memories of Dunscomb.
"I'm sure it will bring back a lot of memories and will be emotional," Adams said. "But we'll stand up and race for Seth again."
Baseball coach swings into Kansas Hall of Fame
By John Wilson
Kansan sports writer
Kansas baseball head coach Bobby Randall said he was honored and surprised to be inducted into the Kansas Baseball Hall of Fame Saturday in Wichita.
The 49-year-old Randall, who will be among three inducted, said he never expected any honors playing baseball.
"I just do what I love to do," Randall said. "Whatever comes from that is wonderful."
Randall has been coaching for 17 years in both professional and college baseball. He vaulted into his first college head coaching job at Iowa State University in 1984. He was head coach for 11 years in Ames, compiling a 308-311-1 record. In his two seasons at Kansas, he is 57-55.
Randall discovered his love for baseball in Gove, Kan., 70 miles west of Hays. He played three years of baseball and one year of basketball at Kansas State University, graduating in 1970. After his junior season, he was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers and later signed a minor league contract. He worked his way up through the minors for six seasons before a trade brought him to the Minnesota Twins in 1976.
RANDALL'S CAREER
Randall started for the Twins from 1976-79. He was known for defense, and in 1979, he helped the
■ Randall's career batting average was .255 in a little more than four seasons with the Minnesota Twins.
In 1969, he hit .394 and earned first team All-Big Eight accolades as a shortstop for Kansas State University
Randall played freshman basketball at North Carolina and then K-State.
He was recruited to pla basketball at K-State by current Chicago Bulls assistant Tex Winter
Twins turn a league record 203 double plays from second base.
RINGS
Bob Ramsey
Randall played against KU in Allen Field House.
"His strength in playing the game was certainly with his glove," said Dodger's scout John Kenan, who signed Randall to his first professional contract. "He was probably the premier double play second baseman in the American League."
Randall observed the focus of great players such as Rod Carew, and he relays that focus to his players.
"I saw how hard the really great ones work." Randall said.
Randall instills this experience in areas such as hitting and fielding.
He jumps into the batting cage
Kansas baseball coach Bobby Ran-
dall, shown here with the Twins in
1980, will be inducted into the Kansas
Hall of Fame.
and shows us all the little things he understands," said senior catcher Josh Dimmick. "I have gotten a great deal better at the plate directly because of coach."
Kenan, who has watched Randall from the dusty sandlots of Western Kansas to the manicured grass of the Major Leagues, said Randall had been successful both on the field and in the dugout. But he thought the most important part of the man came off the field.
BASKETBALL'S TOP FIVE
Minutes:
1. Ryan Robertson .. 681 .. 31.0
2. Paul Pierce .. 650 .. 31.0
3. Billy Thomas .. 594 .. 27.0
4. Rae LaFrentz .. 472 .. 31.5
5. Eric Chenowith .. 464 .. 21.1
(Min. 50 shots)
Three pointers:
1. Roef LaFrentz. .550 (120-218)
2. Kenny Gregory. .531 (85-160)
3. Paul Pierce. .502 (157-313)
4. Eric Chenowith. .497 (71-143)
5. Billy Thomas. .486 (121-249)
Free throw percentage:
1. Billy Thomas ... 769
2. Rael LaFrentz ... 731
3. Paul Pierce ... 714
4. Ryan Robertson ... 696
5. Eric Chenowith ... 660
1. Billy Thomas . 75-170 (441)
2. Paul Pierce . 27-63 (429)
3. Ryan Robertson . 25-59 (424)
4. Kenny Gregory . 8-28 (286)
5. Terry Nooner . 3-9 (333)
Assists:
Rebound average:
1. Roef LaFrentz...11.4 (161)
2. Lester Earl...9.2 (83)
3. Paul Pierce...7.7 (161)
4. Eric Chenowith...6.4 (141)
5. T. J. Pugh...4.4 (57)
ASSIST:
1. Ryan Robertson . 144
2. Billy Thomas . 61
3. Paul Pierce . 53
4. Nick Bradford . 42
5. C. B. McGrath . 37
Steals:
1. Billy Thomas...37
2. Ryan Robertson...29
3. Nick Bradford...26
4. Paul Pierce...22
5. LaFrentz...14
1. Raef LaFrentz ... 21.2 (318)
2. Paul Pierce ... 20.5 (431)
3. Billy Thomas ... 14.9 (327)
4. Lester Earl ... 10.1 (91)
5. Kenny Gregory ... 8.7 (192)
Scoring Average:
Maryland's upset win gives boost in ACC
Tar Heels may lose No.1 ranking after upset by Terrapins
The Associated Press
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Gary Williams' hair was mussed and matted. His tie was loosened, his white shirt was soaked with sweat and he was wearing a Maryland warmup jacket.
"My coat? It shrunk," the Maryland coach quipped, moments after the Terrapins handed previously unbeaten and top-ranked North Carolina an 89-83 overtime defeat Wednesday night.
It should have been a time for celebration. The Terrapins, who lost to Duke at home by 32 points just 11 days earlier, had just registered their third straight Atlantic Coast Conference victory to move into third place.
But Williams couldn't help looking ahead, because nothing comes easy in the ACC.
four in the ACC.
It wouldn't be a complete shock if Maryland (10.5-3.2) lost tomorrow night at Wake Forest. Just like it wasn't a total surprise North Carolina fell to the Terrapins after opening the Bill Guthridge era with 17 straight wins, including
"It's early. You can't get too carried away," he said. "I'm serious. In about an hour, I'll start thinking about Wake Forest."
The loss should end the Tar Heels' run at No.1, provided No.2 Duke survives tomorrow's game against Clemson. Duke is the only unbeaten team in league play.
"This is the ACC. You're not going to go undefeated," said North Carolina forward Antawn Jamison. "You can lose any given night, no matter how good you are."
Two weeks ago, the Terrapins were in the ACC cellar. Now, they're just a game out of second place and a good bet to climb back into the Top 25.
Maryland center Obinna Ekzie, who scored 16 points on 7-for-10 shooting Wednesday, was a high school senior when the Terrapins upended No. 1 North Carolina 86-73
at home in the 1994-95 season.
"I watched that game, and I was just hoping that in one point of my career at Maryland I would have the same kind of feeling," he said. "This was the best opportunity we had, and we took advantage of it. It was fun."
The Terrapins trailed by six with 7:49 left in regulation before rallying to force overtime on a basket by freshman Mike Mardesich with 46 seconds left. In overtime, Maryland got six points from Laron Profit and took advantage of three missed foul shots by Jamison.
Maryland frustrated North Carolina by switching to a 2-3 zone defense, limiting the Tar Heels to 47 percent shooting and forcing 16 turnovers.
AUDITION University Dance Company
Wednesday, January 21, 1998
7 p.m.
Studio 242, Robinson
No solo material required.
For further information, call 864-4264
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Douglas County Bank has free student checking with a $300 minimum balance.
Open a new account with us today at one of our convenient locations.
Main Bank
9th & Kentucky ATM
South Iowa
31st & Iowa ATM
Malls Bank
23rd & Louisiana ATM
Orchards Bank
15th & Kasold ATM
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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Kansan
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PD BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
Tuesday
January 20, 1997
temperatures with possible rain that could turn into snow.
Section:
HIGH 32
HIGH LOW 3216
Online today
Later this week, check out the Kansan's new and improved website dedicated to Kansas basketball.
Vol. 108·No.82
ANNAH
Sports today
http://www.jhawkkbball.com
A
10
Raef LaFrentz, who broke his hand more than three weeks ago, has been cleared to play and should return to duty at the end of the week.
SEE PAGE 1B
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THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Campus celebrates King's dream
(USPS 650-640)
Public accepts call for unity
By Sara Anderson Kansan staff writer
Martin Luther King's message could be heard yesterday at the Lied Center during the Ecumenical Fellowship's commemorative program honoring the civil rights activist.
The event included selections from the Lawrence Children's Choir, the Lawrence M.L.K. Adult Community Choir, Scripture readings and keynote speaker, Rev. Harold Carter.
The program was the final event in the 13th Annual King Holiday Celebrations. Attendance was estimated at about 1,000. The event was open to the public.
"It's always an uplifting experience when the community can come together," said Chancellor Robert Hemenway. "The birthday of Martin Luther King is probably the most important day we can do this."
Carter, pastor of the New Shiloh Baptist Church in Baltimore spoke at the University last year and was well received, said Paul Winn, Lawrence human relations specialist.
Carter focused his speech on the theme of the day, Justice and Mercy: Accept the Call. He said the nation
needed a divine mandate for the new millennium and questioned whether the nation had fulfilled Martin Luther King's vision.
"Has Martin Luther King lived when we look at the nation?" he asked. "We need a divine mandate because people never do great things without a divine vision. Martin Luther King knew that we needed something as a foundation to build on that was big enough for whites, blacks, reds and yellows to be a part of."
Carter also spoke about the need for love and continuing to teach King's message.
"There is power in love, hope and fellowship," he said. "If America is to be a great nation it is not because of
huge corporations. It will be because we suffer together, that's what builds us up. We need to take the movement back to our homes and jobs."
The program ended with audience singing, "We shall overcome." Kristen Spiewak, Chicago, Ill., senior said she felt that was the most unifying part of the program.
"The singing at the end brought people together," she said. "I thought it was wonderful and the speaker was fabulous."
MORE INFORMATION
A shooting occurred at a Martin Luther King Day rally in Baton Rouge, La.
See page 8A
More information
Iraq.
The Rev. Harold Carter speaks to about 1,000 people at the Lied Center to celebrate Martin Luther King Day. Photo by GR GORDON-Ross
Tradition Rival
KANLAU
13
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appointment for
ence to see
ld House
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It was a weekend of history, rivalry and disappointment for the Kansas men's basketball team.
An emotional Wilt Chamberlain returned to Lawrence to see his jersey officially retired and hung in the Allen Field House rafters at halftime of Saturday's game against Kansas State.
After years of speculation that he was bitter at the University, he told a standing-room only crowd that he was proud to be a Jayhawk.
Despite a 26-point effort by Kansas State's Manny Dies, Kansas won the game 69-62, holding off a Kansas State team that was determined to crash Chamberlain's homecoming party.
It was another chapter in a storied rivalry, and the win tied the school record for the most consecutive home victories at 55.
Although the Jayhawks continued their dominance at home, they were unable to beat Missouri on the road for the third year in a row, losing a one-point heartbreaker 74-73 last night in Columbia, Mo.
Coach Roy Williams reacts after a down-to-the-buzzer loss to Missouri. Missouri defeated Kansas 74-73 last night at the Hearnes Center in Columbia, Mo. Photo by Steve Prupe/KANSAN
Above left: Wilt Chamberlain speaks after his jersey was officially retired on Saturday. It was his first visit to Lawrence since 1975. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Above center: Kansas forward Lester Earl fights for a loose ball with Kansas State guard Duane Davis (30) and forward Manny Dies. The Jayhawks beat Kansas State 69-62 Saturday at Allen Field House.
Photo by GR Gordon-Ross/KANSAN
Students now can pay some utilities by phone
Service fee accompanies plan; students express mixed feelings
By Jeremy M. Doherty idoherty@kanson.com
Kanston staff writer
The city of Lawrence has a plan to help students ma out their credit cards while receiving hot, purifie water at the same time.
In a program that began earlier this month, the city is accepting utility payments by telephone with a Visa or Mastercard.
Ed Mullins, director of the city's finance department, estimated that about one-third of the city's 25,000 customers were students at the University of Kansas.
Called the Utility Service Bureau and, the payment system enables customers to dial a toll-free phone line that is kept in operation 24 hours a day. seven days a week.
"With the Utility Service Bureau now in place, the city of Lawrence is reinforcing its continued commitment to consumer satisfaction by providing our busy customers with an additional payment option that is simple and convenient to use." Mullins said.
In a prepared statement, Mullins spoke of the system's potential to please customers.
"I try not to use the credit card that often," Davis said. "Signing checks aren't too big of a deal, and when you have four roommates, someone always has to write up checks anyway."
Craig Davis, Omaha, Neb., graduate student, said he thought the system might encourage poor spending habits.
Some KU students who live off campus, however, are greeting the new option with mixed opinions.
Another element, which has given several students some pause, is that users of the new system will have to pay a little extra for the swift, convenient service.
Bills less than $50 instantly are tagged with a $2.95 service fee, and bills exceeding $50 will be charged $5.95 in service fees.
The city established the payment system through a
UTILITY SERVICE BUREAU
Call 888-255-0126 from a touch-one phone, toll-free, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
- The customer's utility bill account number, daytime phone number and credit card (Visa and MasterCard only) information are needed for the call.
U. S. Audiotex adds the service fee to the customer's charged amount, and the amount will be reflected in the customer's next credit card statement.
U. S. Audiotex keeps the customer's credit card information confidential.
partnership with U.S. Audiotex, a company based in San Francisco. Because customers have to cough up extra cash whenever they whip out their credit cards for the service, the city does not have to cover any fees prescribed by U.S. Audiotex. U.S. Audiotex helped to set up more than 90 other fully-automated payment
See CREDIT on page 2A
By Gerry Doyle
Perkins Loan cuts may hurt students
Kansan staff writer
The 1999 budget will be announced during the State of the Union Address Jan. 27.
Students with financial aid may be left short changed after the 1999 federal budget goes into effect.
The Clinton administration's budget proposal has not been released, but educational lobbyists say the new budget has no provisions for Perkins Student Loans. Although the federal government is increasing financing for other aid programs such as Stafford Loans and Pell Grants, the lobbyists say the growth would not cover the lost money.
The loans, founded in 1958, provide financial aid from the federal government to students based on need. The loans have a 10-year grace period and must be repaid at 5 percent interest, said Lisa Santa Maria, who is in charge of Perkins Student Loans at the University.
Although the lack of money allocated for the loans might not leave students short on cash, the idea of losing useful financial aid is frustrating, said Phil Stillwell. Lawrence graduate student.
Students with financial need who have Perkins Loans would not be left in the cold, she said. If the student qualified for federal loans, another loan would help cover the difference.
"It bothers me," he said. "I feel like education is a good investment. The government should be concerned."
Santa Maria said the move was surprising but might not be as final as the lobbying groups were painting it. She said the Clinton administration had announced about three months ago that the loans would be retained in 1999, so another shift in policy might not be final.
Diane Del Buono, director of student financial aid, said there were about 990 students at the University who receive Perkins Loans. The average loan amount is about $1,200 per semester, but the amount varies according to financial need. Although the potential move in principle is bad, the effects on students would probably be minimal. Del Buono said.
"This isn't the first time it's been talked about," she said. "It's a regrettable decision, but no need-based aid is in leonardy."
"Relative to the direct-loan program, Perkins Student Loans are a very small program," she said. "The impact may not be as significant as you might think."
The maximum amount for a Perkins Student Loan is $3,000 per year, Del Buono said. The loans are determined by financial need and usually come in conjunction with other federal aid.
Aid cuts
President Clinton's 1999 budget has no allocation for the federally-funded Perkins student loan program. Here's a closer look at the program:
Who's eligible? Any undergraduate or graduate student enrolled at least half-time at a participating institution. An estimated 788,000 students receive loans this year.
Federal funding of Perkins loans
How much: Undergraduates can borrow up to $2,000.
$180
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
1996
1998
per year, to a maximum of $15,000 for the time they are enrolled. Graduates can earn $5,000 per year up to $30,000. The average award is $1,342.
Paying it back! Interest accrues at a 5 percent rate,
starting after the student graduates or is no longer
enrolled halftime. Repayment begins nine months
after that time, and is complete in 30 years.
Bonus Some of the loan can be cancelled for community or military service.
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
---
2A
The Inside Front
Tuesday January 20,1998
News
from campus, the state the nation and the world
LEXINGTON ST. MARY'S CITY WASHINGTON JERUSALEM HAVANA
In the NATION:
The first female cadet to officially enroll in the Virginia Military Institute withdraws.
Five college students on an educational tour of Guatemala are named by four alumni.
The Associated Press takes a poll about abortion 25 years after the landmark Supreme Court ruling.
Israel's Cabinet delays a decision about how much land to give up in a West Bank withdrawal.
Cuban officials insist that Pope John Paul II's visit to Cuba this week will not improve hostile relations between Cuba and the United States.
WORLD
Israel Cabinet withholds decision about land pullout
JERUSALEM — Israel's Cabinet on Sunday
about how much land to give up in a much-awaited West Bank withdrawal until after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returns from a meeting with President Clinton today.
The United States had been pressing Israel to announce a speedy and significant pullout at the White House meeting. But deny defense
PETER L. MAYER
Netanyahu: Will meet with President Clinton today.
minister Silvan Shalom said the Cabinet ministers had not made any decision about percentages at Sunday's meeting.
A Cabinet statement said that after Netanyahu returned, the Cabinet would set a ceiling about the maximum amount of West Bank land it would give to the Palestinians in the promised withdrawal.
The statement added that the withdrawal only would take place if the Palestinians fulfilled their obligations.
The Cabinet last week issued a 12-page list of demands, most dealing with security, that it said the Palestinians would have to meet before Israel continued the withdrawal, promised in an accord signed by Netanyahu's government.
The Palestinians have accused Israel of trying to evade its U.S.-backed pledge to carry out three withdrawals by mid-1998.
Cuban officials say visit by pope not political
HAVANA — Cuban officials said that Pope John Paul II's journey to Cuba this week
was not likely to improve 38 years of hostile relations with the United States.
And they ridicule suggestions that the pontiff's five-day visit will produce changes on this socialist island.
PETER JOHN RUSSELL
"Many people have tried to politicize the visit and use it against the revolution," President Fidel
Pope John Paul II:
Will spend five
days in Cuba.
Castro complained in a weekend television appearance.
Carlos Fernandez de Cossio, head of the U.S. section of the Cuban Foreign Ministry, said that the pope's visit has nothing to do with the bilateral conflict that Cuba has with the United States.
Some Cuban exiles in the United States
and even White House officials — have suggested the pope, scheduled to arrive tomorrow, might somehow inspire changes in Cuba.
During his television appearance, Castro himself said many people think "the pope is coming to Cuba to meet with that demon Castro in the last bastion of communism, and the hope is that this will be the end of the Cuban revolution."
NATION
First female to enter VMI drops out after a semester
LEXINGTON, Va. — The first female cadet to enroll officially at the Virginia Military Institute has withdrawn from the school.
Beth Hogan, Junction City, Ore., who went to the formerly all-male military school with dreams of becoming a Navy pilot , dropped out of the school Friday, institute representative Mike Strickler said Saturday.
Hogan, 18, is the fifth woman to withdraw since 30 women enrolled in August, ending the school's 158-year, all-male tradition.
Sixty-five men also have quit, and a sixth woman was suspended for two semesters for striking an upperclassman.
Hogan returned to the institute after Christmas break. Three days later, she told school officials that the institute's rigorous testing of its freshmen was not for her.
Hogan made history by becoming the first woman to sign her name into the institute's leather-bound matriculation book. The signing of the book, an institute tradition since 1839, signifies official enrollment in the school.
College students raped by gunmen in Guatemala
ST. MARY'S CITY, Md. — Five college students on an educational tour of Guatemala were raped after their bus was ambushed by four gunmen, a college representative said.
Three staff members and 13 students from St. Mary's College were returning to Guatemala City Friday afternoon when a pickup truck stopped the bus and four men with semiautomatic weapons forced everyone into a nearby field, spokesman Torre Meringo said.
"The bus was held down by four armed bandits who proceeded to rob each of the individuals," he said. "Then they sexually assaulted five of the women, all students."
The gunmen held the group for 1 1/2 hours, the college said in a statement.
Guatemalan authorities had one man in custody, said a State Department official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Guatemalan authorities would not confirm the attack.
The students who were raped were treated at a Guatemala City hospital and returned to the United States Saturday night. The remaining students returned to Washington's Dulles airport Sunday night and were met by the college's president,
acting provost and dean of students.
"Our first concern is for the well-being of the students, faculty and their families," said Jane Margaret O'Brien, college president.
Poll finds opinion of abortion changes with circumstance
WASHINGTON — Twenty-five years after the landmark Supreme Court ruling, an Associated Press poll finds about 80 percent of Americans say abortion should be legal in some circumstances. But much of that support evaporates if a woman wants to end her pregnancy solely because she does not want a baby.
The poll portrays an ambivalent American public. On one hand, 83 percent said abortion should be allowed in at least some cases. But only 47 percent said they favored the 1973 Roe vs. Wade ruling, in which the Supreme Court ruled a woman could have an abortion at any time during the first three months of pregnancy. Forty-three percent said they opposed the ruling, with the rest either uncertain or not answering.
The ambivalence applied to opponents as well.
In one question, 21 percent said abortion should not be legal in any circumstances. But in a follow-up question, more than four in 10 of those all out opponents said abortion should be allowed in at least one of the following circumstances: when the health of the mother is seriously endangered, when the baby is likely to be born with serious defects, when a woman becomes pregnant through rape or when a woman does not want the baby.
But a majority, 56 percent, said abortion should not be legal in a case where a woman decided she did not want the baby. Thirty-six percent said abortion should be allowed in such a case.
One in four respondents said abortion should be legal in all circumstances.
The Associated Press
Credit cards may be used to pay some bills by phone
Continued from page 1A
systems across the country.
That part of the bargain already has turned off a few.
Other students who live off campus found the service fee a small price to pay for the convenience offered.
"I don't spend that much on utilities anyway," said Jonathan Helm, Rolla, Mo., graduate student. "I don't think my bills ever get that high."
ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Contact Friar Vince Krische, 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday at Dentorth Chapel. Contact Friar Ray May.
■ KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Monday and Wednesday and from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Friday at 207 Robinson Center, Contact Adam Carron, 842-9112
KU Environs will meet for vegetarian lunches from 11a.m. to 1p.m. Thursdays.
Contact Shannon Martin. 842-7170.
- Interactions will meet from 5 to 7 p.m.
Sunday. Contact Thad Holcomde. 843-493-393.
The University Forum will meet from noon to 1 p.m. tomorrow. Contact Thad Holcomde. 843-4933.
KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union. Contact Beng. 864-7754.
KU Democrats will meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight at the Parlors Room in the Kansas Union. Contact Allison Bernard. 842-5104.
The Feminist Union will meet at 5 p.m. Sunday at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. Contact Joan Benefiel, 840-9739.
Free job-search workshops will be presented this week about the following topics:
Interviewing Skills, 2:30 p.m. today, 119 Summerfield Hall; and Resume & Cover Letter Writing, 2:30 p.m. Thursday, 2029 Learned Hall.
ET CETERA
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
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The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the eUniversity community.
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Take a Study Break
Get A Hot Cup of Coffee or Cappucino Hawk's Nest or Crimson Cafe
Take in an SUA Movie
Check Out KU Gifts & Clothing KU Bookstores
Play a Game of Pool or a Video Game, or Bowl a Round Jaybowl Recreation Center
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Tuesday, January 20,1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 3
Monthlong fast celebrates Muslim faith, strength
Muslim ritual tough for those who attend classes at University
...
After breaking their daylong fast for Ramadan, members of the Muslim Student Association and the Lawrence community gather for prayer Friday evening. A wedding that evening drew a large number for prayer, feasting and conversation. Photo by Jay Sheperd/KANSAN
By Sara Anderson
Kansan staff writer
No food. No water. No sex.
For one month, University of Kansas students practicing Ramadan do without life's basic necessities, making it sometimes difficult to live in the University setting.
"Basically, we have to restrict ourselves from sexual pleasure, eating and drinking." It said Hussain Arab, Kuwait junior. "It's hard but no pain, no gain."
Ramadan, one of the five pillars of the Islamic faith, is when Muslims fast daily from sunrise to sunset. The month-long event focuses on self-purification and betterment. Ramadan is believed to be the month during which the first verses of the Qur'an were revealed to the prophet Muhammad.
"It can be hard especially because we have school." Arab said. "If I have a class at 8 a.m. without having had any water, breakfast or lunch and have consumed all that energy, it makes it hard. But it gives us time to think about the people who are hungry all the time."
Waseem Dalloul, Palestinian junior and treasurer of the Muslim Student Association, said fasting was difficult for the first few days but not having enough time to worship was one of the most difficult aspects of practicing Ramadan at the University.
"The first two days are difficult
because your body is not used to it," he said. "But after that, it's not hard. Back home, the life during Ramadan gives people more time to worship, and the working hours are less so people can have a break if they are weak from fasting. We don't have that here."
Ramadan's main focus is spirituality, not physical restraints.
"The one misconception people have is always looking at the physical aspect of no food, water or sex, and it's more than that," said Ahmed Zafer, Saudi Arabia doctoral student. "It's not to be slimmer or for personal gain. It is a month of atonement where you teach yourself to behave as a true Muslim. It's
the best month for Muslims."
Ramadan, the ninth month in the lunar calendar, began Dec. 31 and will end either Jan. 28 or Jan. 29, depending on the sighting of the new crescent moon. Using the lunar calendar, new months are determined by the appearance of a new crescent moon, moving the date of Ramadan earlier each year. Last year, Ramadan began Jan 10.
The Muslim Student Association has a gathering to break the fast at 1917 Nsmith Drive, said Zahida Shirin, the association adviser. The gathering begins after sunset and is held everyday for single people and Friday for families. Food is provided.
RAMADAN
Monthlong fast from sunrise to sunset abstaining from food, drink, and sex.
Month of self purification and betterment.
Dates and water are the traditional "breakfast" items.
Members of the Muslim Student Association and Lawrence community participate in a worship service. On Friday, the group enjoyed a meal and conversation after breaking their Ramadan fast with dates and milk. The evening also included an announcement from a member of his plans of marriage. Members of the association, many of whom are graduate students, represent countries from almost the entire Muslim world. Photo by Jay Sheperd/KANSAN
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
RECREATION SERVICES SPORT CLUB PROGRAM
Looking for something FUN and EXCITING to do??
Badminton
Crew
Cycling
Fencing
Judo
Kempo
KI-Aikido
Kuk Sool Won
Lacrosse-Men's
Lacrosse-Women's
Racquetball
Rock Climbing
Roller Hockey
Soccer Player
A
Tennis player
JUDO
Riding a bicycle.
Rugby-Men's Rugby-Women's Sailing Soccer-Men's Soccer-Women's Tae Kwon Do Ultimate-Men's Ultimate-Women's Volleyball-Men's Volleyball-Women's Water Polo Water Ski Wrestling
BREAKING DOWN THE COURT
---
TURKISH BATAR
The Sport Club Program at the University of Kansas consists of student organizations sponsored by the Office of Recreation Services. The Clubs are designed to serve student interests in different sports and recreational activities.Sports and/or activities within the Sport Club Program can be competitive, recreational or instructional in nature. Sport Clubs may represent the University of Kansas in intercollegiate competition or conduct club activities such as practice, instruction, and social play
For more information concerning: STUDE **The above Sport Clubs** SENA **Starting a New Sport Club** se call 864-3546, or stop by the Office of Recreation Services, 208 Robinson
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Opinion
Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor Marc Harrell, Business manager Dave Morantz, Managing editor Colleen Eager, Retail sales manager Kristie Biasi, Managing editor Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser Tom Eblen, General manager, news adviser Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
Tuesday, Jan. 20, 1998
The Jayhawks seem to have come on the court a bit distracted...
What about my cats?
Uhh... Boys! The game has started!
Wow.
Wilt Chamberlain!
A pleasure to meet you, Sir.
NO HARLO KSPANDI
Mister Chamberlain! Would you please sign my head?
I guess this is what happens when you're gone for 40 years..
W. David Keith / KANSAN
Editorial
Dole Center will be campus asset despite editorial board's opinion
Dear Governor Graves:
Not everyone on the editorial board agrees with Spencer Duncan's recent editorial representing the majority opinion of the board.
Duncan thinks there are better ways the $3 million could be spent. He cites crumbling classrooms, buses, parking garages, technology upgrades, scholarships, minority recruitment, and recycling. In almost every case, you have provided the University of Kansas with consistent commitments of state dollars. You supported legislation that brought more than $100 million in grants to Regents schools to start the Crumbling Classrooms Program. Buses, parking garages and recycling are problems that this university is working to solve on its own. In your budget recommendation this year you gave students the two-for-one matching increase in the base budget that will mean $1.8 million for the University to allow it to plan for technology upgrades. You also awarded $5 million to the Regents institutions for technology as well. You have recommended
Dissenting opinion concerning Gov. Graves' request for the Robert J.Dole Center
numerous scholarship program enhancements, minority scholarship, and tuition grants to keep financially needy students in college in every one of your budget recommendations since you were elected.
Duncan thinks that the University, and you, need to prioritize, and that the Dole Institute represents luxury over necessity. I disagree. By housing more than 3,200 boxes of documents that span some 35 years of Dole's career in Congress, the Institute would have more than just the dusty remembrance of the past. The building would give researchers and students the chance to study democratic government by reading the papers of a long-time Congressman. It is history itself that we have been given the privilege of watching
over and using.
Citing the time table given by Chancellor Robert Hemenway, Endowment association efforts, and Dole's own connections, Duncan wonders why public money is needed. The issue here is not whether it is needed or what the Chancellor says he can accomplish, but that it has been offered. If the Governor of Kansas were to recommend $3 million for something that solely would benefit this university, other institutions would feel left out. The Dole Institute is a global resource that will be used by all Kansans.
The Dole Institute represents a rare time when everything works to everyone's benefit, and that hard work pays off. More than honoring Bob Dole, it is a monument to the dedication of Kansans to good government, effective leadership, and yes, investment from the state in our collective future. Spencer Duncan's editorial plainly demonstrates lack of respect for these basic complexities.
It epitomized swift condemnation over careful consideration.
Tom Moore of the editorial board
Feedback
Dole Institute benefits University;
Governor's $3 million offer generous
The University of Kansas was given a great opportunity by Bob Dole. The opportunity to house one of the longest and most complete public service records in the United States. However, with this opportunity, the University and the State of Kansas have accepted the large responsibility of properly displaying and presenting Dole's record to the public. This is not only an archive that will honor a man who gave his life to public service, but an archive of great value to scholars, students, and Kansans alike. Governor Bill Graves
has accepted this responsibility and is ready to provide the financial support necessary to display the record in a manner worth merit.
The Governor's recommendation of $3 million to the Dole Institute is a gift that guarantees the center will be completed in the proper manner. Contrary to the belief of the editorial board, fundraising has not gone as well as was hoped with Dole's former financial supporters. The Governor's recommendation ensures that the resources of private financial supporters of the University of will not be exhausted by the Dole Institute with a University-wide capital campaign.
There is much to gain from the addition of a public policy institute at the University of and so much to lose by insulting the Governor's generosity. We believe that the Kansan editorial board must be more responsible and better informed when taking students interests into its own hands.
Korb Maxwell. Student Representative on Robert J. Dole Institute Committee, Lobby Coordinator for Student Legislative Awareness Board, Leawood sophomore
Samantha Bowman, Legislative Director, Wichita senior
Kansan staff
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Julie King . . News
Charity Jeffries . Online
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Ryan Koerner . Campus
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"All government is, in its essence, organized exploitation, and in virtually all of its existing forms, it is the enemy of every industrious and well-deposed man."
H. L. Mencken
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 home-town 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 letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staunfer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions.
For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermeyer (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff [opinion@kansan.com] or call 864-4810.
Reach out and touch 'Monodemonic Telecom'
Perspective
I just moved into a new apartment. I called Southwestern Bell to set up service and immediately was put through their phone maze. An automated operator was doing her
illusion that I had choices.
"If you are calling to change existing service, press 1. If you are calling to obtain new phone service, press 2. If you are contemplating an act of terrorism against your local phone carrier, please press *9 and stay on the line."
P. M. ROSS
You know the routine.
Before I could press '9,
a live operator came to my
rescue. She said her name
Ryan
Devlin
join@kansan.com
was Eve. She was very friendly, as evil temptresses go. She was very enthusiastic in explaining my many choices. Would I like call notes? Speed dialing? Call Waiting? Would I like a device to be implanted in my head that would allow me to receive calls telepathically? This month they're waiving the implantation fee.
What's a mindless consumer to do? I wanted it all — Even that Jedi mind-phone thing. "When can I get my phone?" I asked her.
There was a moment of silence. "For? Are you there?"
"Eye? Are you there?"
"Yes," she said, hesitating a little. "There is just one more thing you need to do. Give us $93 in advance. Go down to Fast Money. It's one of those shady, general-store-in-the Grapes of Wrath-type places. Payday loans, soul-pawning, cigarette outlet. Pay them $93, they'll brand you with your order number, and in two business days you'll have a phone."
I argued with her. "I thought the cost of phone service was going down! I'm a college student, Eve. I can't afford to put up $93 for anything." No dice. She was only interested in the $83. She only wanted me for my money.
I hung up. I had a tsunami in my soul.
Looking in the mirror, I saw for a second what I thought was Ralph Nader. Yessiree Jack, I would fight. Not just for me but for the liberation of all people who live under the evil hand of Southwestern Bell.
What other options did I have? Cellular? Tin cans and string? What happened to my choices? It was either Southwestern Bell or no phone.
I went to the library. I read up on the Telecommunications Act of 1996. The act's intent was to create lower phone rates, more choices, new technology and to kill the
monopolv.
Why hasn't this happened? The Baby Bells have since reneged on the agreement. They have filed lawsuits to contest it, thus preventing the act from taking shape. Besides spearheading lawsuits, SBC, parent company of Southwestern Bell, is planning to add a fourth Baby Bell to its arsenal and has applied for permission to enter the long-distance market in Oklahoma. Edward E. Whitacre Jr., CEO of SBC, when not busy thinking about new ways to cheat customers out of $93, can be found bulldozing brush off his 1,200-acre ranch outside San Antonio and contemplating changing the name of SBC to Monodemonic TeleCom. I saw a picture of him on microfiche. I swear his eyes flashed red.
I knew the only way to get any real results would be to bypass the bureaucracy and talk to the big cheese himself. Fighting a bureaucratic monopoly from the bottom up is like fighting a thousand Hydras. All attempts to contact Whitacre in San Antonio proved fruitless, especially considering that I have no phone.
I didn't want to be another armchair revolutionary, hanging out in the basement with an American flag for a curtain and a Che Guevara poster on the wall. So I've dedicated my first column to this subject. I also found I was not alone. Earlier this week, Edward Markey, ranking Democrat on the House Telecommunications Subcommittee, asked the Department of Justice to investigate SBC for violations of antitrust laws. Markey said that SBC has demonstrated clear intent to use every legal and regulatory device at its disposal to maintain its monopoly. In lieu of the recent investigation of Microsoft for similar allegations, perhaps the department will be quicker to investigate SBC. Also, the Supreme Court is planning to debate the legality of the Telecommunications Act.
To Congressman Markey, I say right on. Southwestern Bell has been the only choice consumers in this market have had for more than 100 years, and it's about time someone made them sweat. As for me, I plan to write Congress and urge them to back Markey's efforts. It could save you $93 in the long run.
Unfortunately, it's too late for me. I talked to Eve and she said my phone should be turned on Friday.
Ryan Devlin is an Overland Park senior in English. We hope he doesn't try to get cable.
The end of the textbook is nigh: Just don't buy
For those of you who have not yet taken your required inanities (classes), I can tell you in advance exactly what will be
Yolanda
Your speech textbooks.
Now I know how some of you feel about textbooks.
For some, the phrase planned obsolescence springs to mind. For those of you who have not encountered that phrase, it means that there will be exactly $85 and two words worth of difference between the present, required 14th edition and the previous, used 13th edition.
Tina Connolly opinion@kansan.com
your most worthwhile in your stay here at the University of Kansas.
For others, textbooks are a joy. They ensure that you will not have to purchase cinder blocks for your bed. By the end of your college career your bed will be high off the ground and you will be able to store large, bulky items there, such as your scientific calculator and your Western Civilization notes.
For those of you who feel that textbooks are a waste of money that could easily be spent buying better cinder blocks, let me give you a little fact:
The average college student has more Tarzan novels than textbooks.
Kind of gives you something to think about. Of course this statistic is completely accurate only when the average post-college student is your dad, or more specifically, my dad. But it's still something to think about.
So how, you ask, in the interest of getting back to the subject, can any textbook be a worthwhile investment?
Well, that's simpler than it seems. Any fifth-year senior can tell you the secret of textbook investing, which is this:
They depreciate the moment you leave the store.
If this reminds you of another excessively high-dollar item that does the same thing, there's good reason for that. But instead of daydreaming about cars, you should be asking the next question: Why speech textbooks specifically?
Well, this is where personal testimony comes into play.
Personal testimony, or PT in academic circles, is an old standby of speechifying
Now you can make your investment in one of two ways. You can go get slobbering drunk at the establishment of your choice, or you can wait around with me for the day when they have to start paying us to take books away. I'm confident it will happen.
So to finish your economics lesson, just think about this: The more you pay for books, the less they sell back for, right? Therefore, the less you pay for them, the more they sell back for. And if you don't pay anything at all, you get to keep 100 percent of the purchase price.
Once we convince students to strike back against the evil games being played on our poor, feeble minds, the bookstores will be left high and dry. No longer will they be able to run any of these profitable little scams, including the most tempting one that we have all succumbed sometime in the last year.
And we all know which one I'm talking about, don't we?
That's right. The soda machine right outside Jayhawk Bookstore. And if they don't want that to be their only source of income, they'll have to make textbooks more tempting somehow. So they'll pay us.
This course of action, unfortunately, largely depends on your GTA. As we all know, GTAs love to teach introductory classes, which is why they get to teach all of them. If you can manage to get the right set of GTAs, you may not have to buy books for any of your required inanities, that is to say, for your entire college "career." Although this notion may seem eerily liberated at first, in time you will grow to embrace it as sound financial sense.
wherein I get to tell you a bunch of stories off the top of my head and you believe them. This bit of personal testimony that I absolutely positively am not making up is that speech textbooks are endlessly entertaining, a wonderful source of knowledge and will be treasures for years to come.
Oh wait, that wasn't actually my personal testimony. That was what my graduate teaching assistant was paid to say about them.
No, my pertinent bit of PT is that I bought neither book and aced the classes. (Applause all around)
Or they'll just start selling us cinder blocks instead.
Tina Connolly is a Lawrence senior in English and French.
Tuesday, January 20. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Committee combats campus clutter
Advertisements in Kansan prompt recycling proposal
By Marc Sheforgen
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate's University Affairs Committee wants to clean up campus by making the Kansan's glossy insert advertisements easier to recycle.
Last week, the committee elected Erin Carlson, student senator and University Affairs committee member, to head a subcommittee that will work with the Kansan's advertising department to look for ways to prevent the advertisements from being littered across campus.
Carlson said that she understood
that the Kansan needed the advertisements to produce the daily paper but that something needed to be done about the paper's inserts, which readers seem to immediately discard.
"We want to work with both sides of the issue," Carlson said. "We want to work with the environmentalists, and we want to work with the Kansan to understand their business needs."
Carlson said she planned to propose putting recycling bins near the Kansan's distribution boxes so that readers not interested in the ads could properly recycle the ads instead of dropping the ads on the ground.
Nicole Lauderdale, McPherson sophomore and national sales manager for the Kansan, said a recycling program should be initiated.
"I think that would be wonderful. We need recycling for a lot of things. Why not recycle?" Lauderdale said.
"We want to work with the environmentalists, and we want to work with the Kansan to understand their business needs."
Erin
Erin Carlson student senator
Rob Flynn, student senator and subcommittee member, said that when he picked up his copy of the Kansan, he took out the glossy inserts first. Flynn said the advertisements blew across campus and were an eavesdrobe.
Flynn said this issue had long been a concern of many students and that
it was time for the students' representatives to take action.
"I think student opinion is that Student Senate is out of touch. Maybe this is an issue that will hit home with some students," he said.
Flynn, a journalism major, said he understood advertising and its necessity.
The subcommittee, to be composed of student senators, environmentalists and Kansan staff members, will meet for the first time this week.
"It's a business like anything, but if the students feel that it's a pollutant, it needs to be taken into account," Flynn said.
Carlson stressed that the subcommittee planned to work with the Kansan's advertising staff to better understand the paper's needs before trying to pass a resolution through Senate.
"We do not want to hurt our student newspaper," she said.
Alumnus wins KU journalism award
National citation honors Bill Kurtis
By Melissa Ngo
mngo@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Bill Kurtis, University of Kansas alumnus, will receive the 1998 William Allen White Foundation's national citation.
Kurtis will speak at the awards ceremony at 1:30 p.m. Feb. 6 in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. The topic of Kurtis' speech has not been announced. The ceremony is free and open to the public.
and history.
The award has been given annually since 1950, and it is given in honor of the late publisher of the Emporia Gazette, William Allen White. also a University alumnus.
Kurtis, an Independence native and 1962 KU journalism graduate, is best known for creating a new form of documentaries in 1985.
While working in Chicago, Kurtis expanded the traditional long news reports into areas such as science
IED
Calder Pickett, professor emeritus of journalism who taught Kurtis at the University, said Kurtis showed promise while he was a KU student.
Kurtis; Will accept the William Allen White citation.
"I saw a foretaste of what he was going to be later," Pickett said. "He was
Kurtis began his journalism career at KANU-FM, the University's public broadcasting station. In the late 1960s, he worked at WIRW-TV in Tonkea.
extremely good in news writing classes and always showed promise."
It was at WIBW that Kurtis got his big break, said Jerry Holley, who was general manager of WIBW-radio while Kurtis worked there.
"At that time, news was a double department, so Bill worked for both the radio and news sides," Holley said.
Kurtis' break came in 1966 when a tornado hit Topeka. His broadcast was shown to a national audience on CBS news.
"He was seen by the president of CBS news and invited to go to Chicago to work for the network," Holley said.
"His wife was on the Washburn campus when it (the tornado) hit, and the vacuum almost sucked her up the elevator shaft." Holley said.
Holley said that the tornado meant a lot to Kurtis because of how personal its effects were.
Kurtis went to Chicago, where he worked with Walter Jacobson at a CBS affiliate.
In 1975, Kurtis covered the Vietnam War as the first local foreign correspondent, bringing international issues and the effects of the issues home to Chicago. He also covered the sectarian war in Northern Ireland and environmental tragedies such as the plight of the black rhinoceros in Kenya and Tanzania.
For more than three years, beginning in 1982, Kurtis anchored the CBS Morning News and produced documentaries for CBS Reports.
"I saw a foretaste of what he was going to be later. He was extremely good in news writing classes and always showed promise."
Calder Pickett
professor emeritus of journalism
Kurtis continues to produce documentaries but is now at the Arts and Entertainment network.
He is the host and producer of three documentary series for the station. The series are The New Explorers with Bill Kurtis, American Justice and Investigative Reports.
Kurtis has won numerous other awards including the 1995 Excellence in Journalism Award from the Chicago Chapter of the International Press Center and more than 20 Emmys from the Chicago Chapter of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.
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Chinese Students and Scholars Friendship Association
TWO Special Announcements from ECM. . .
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Check out the Alternative Spring Breaks sponsored by ECM.Call 843-4933 or drop into ECM center (across the street from Glass Onion and the Crossing),or come to informational meeting on Feb.1,7:15pm at ECM.
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Section A • Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 20,1998
Museum curator goes fishing
Ichthyologist explores fish in Cuban waters during monthlong trip
P
Scientists and filmmakers use a diving rig to explore the waters off the coast of Cuba. The 41-member crew investigated the previously unexplored region for a Discovery Channel documentary, which is planned to air early next year. Contributed photo.
By Carl Kaminski
Kansan staff writer
A University of Kansas ichthyologist returned last week from the expedition of a lifetime.
"They're going to make a film of it like they did for the Galápagos. Robins said
Richard Robins, curator emeritus at the Natural History Museum, joined a team of scientists and filmmakers on a month-long trip to Cuba. The team, which was sponsored by the Discovery Channel, investigated coastal waters that had been relatively unexplored.
The Discovery Channel, which plans to air the documentary early next year, assembled an award-winning film crew. Members have been responsible for several projects, including underwater photography in the film The Abyss and documentaries like Galapagos: Beyond Darwin and Carrier: Fortress at Sea.
Robins joined 41 crew members and scientists aboard the research vessel Seward Johnson after he was invited by his friend, Grant Gilmore, the mission's chief scientist. Robins, who had sailed with Gilmore during previous trips, was listed as a consultant to the group.
It was the first time Robins had been on an oceanographic trip since he retired from the University of Miami and moved to Lawrence in 1994.
"KU has given me a place to hang my hat," he said.
The trip allowed Robins to confirm his theories about aquatic life off the coast of Cuba, life that had not been studied with modern Western technology.
The Soviet Union explored the waters in 1985, but lacked the sophisticated technology scientists on this expedition had at their disposal.
Robins said that the submarine, which was used to explore the waters at depths of
up to 2,000 feet, had equipment that could drug the fish and could suck them into buckets of seawater in the submarine. The fish then could be studied and released.
In addition to the aquatic life around Cuba, the crew encountered the diving rig of a French diver while at a depth of more than 700 feet. The diver had tried to set a deep sea diving record there three years ago. Robins said.
"He was long gone." Robins said.
Now that there has been some initial exploration, Robins said that he thought Gilmore would like another opportunity to go back when the weather was better.
Robins, on the other hand, is not so sure if he wants to go back.
"I'm getting on in the years,"Robins,69. said. "I don't know how many more trips like this one I can take."
He also said that getting permission from Cuba for another trip also may pose a problem.
"With the situation with Cuba you never know," he said. "With Cuba you live with that uncertainty."
While docked on Jan. 2, the crew did receive a visit from Cuba's dictator, Fidel Castro, Robins said.
"The visit was not a political visit," he said.
Robins said that he did not get to talk to Castro. But Robins listened to what Castro had to say while he was aboard the ship.
Robins said Castro was very interested in the technology aboard the ship during his for two-hour visit.
U.S.A.
Miami
THE
BAHAMAS
Havana
CUBA
Expedition route
JAMAICA HAITI
Ancient art of calligraphy gets modern look in show
By Chris Horton
horton@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Making its third stop on a five-city tour of the country, "Abstract Expression in Chinese Calligraphy" opened at the Spencer Museum of Art this weekend in conjunction with the museum's 20th anniversary.
The exhibit, drawn from the personal collection of H. Christopher Luce, opened at the China Institute in New York in October 1995 and also stopped in Seattle before arriving in Lawrence. Luce said that because he had made several acquisitions since the exhibit's opening, each show was bigger than the last.
"This is the most complete collection vet." he said.
Luce majored in philosophy and history at Yale, where his passion for art was nurtured by classes in Italian Renaissance and Chinese art. Luce attended graduate school at Harvard, where he studied Chinese and Japanese language.
The exhibit features calligraphy written upon scrolls, wall hangings and albums, which Luce said were small, folding pads used by calligraphers because of their portability.
A freelance photographer from 1973-1987, Luce had a brief hint at the Topeka Capital-Journal. He also has worked as a contract photographer for Time magazine.
Luce has been collecting Chinese calligraphy from the 16th-through 20th-centuries since his graduation from Yale about 20 years ago, he said.
At his presentation "Looking at Chinese Calligraphy through Western Eyes," Luce used familiar modern Western art to illustrate the timeless qualities of Chinese calligraphy.
Luce used works by Salvador Dali, Joan Miro, Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, among others, to depict the similarities he sees between Chinese calligraphy and 20th century Western art.
The exhibit, which runs until March 8. is intentionally different from any previous exhibits of Asian calligraphy, he said.
"This is the first exhibit in the United States in which there is no English translation," he said. "I didn't want people to read the
"This is the first exhibit in the United States in which there is no English translation." H.Christopher
translation and walk to the next piece without appreciating the individual characters."
Luce said he did not want to provide a lengthy historical analysis or chronology of Chinese calligraphy because it would detract from the focus of the collection.
"The point is that this is art," he said. During a question-and-answer session, Luce was asked to explain what was needed to be an art connoisseur.
"Experience is most important. If you look at anything for 20 years, you should hopefully figure out what you like," he said, "A little education doesn't hurt, either."
Alex Tunstall, Bethesda, Md., graduate student in Chinese art history, attended Luce's presentation.
"I liked the show a lot,"she said, "He did a nice comparison of Chinese calligraphy and modern Western views."
John Teramoto, curator of Asian art at the museum, said Luce's approach injected a freshness into appreciating Chinese calligraphy.
"I think it's great to have Christopher come speak to us about his collection because he knows it so intimately," Teramoto said. "The quality of the pieces and calligraphers represented in the exhibit is very fine."
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SUA Spring Orientation Spike Lee Sonny Cher DAY ON THE HILL
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60th Anniversary
KU
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
1938 - 1998
After 60 years of quality programming, Student Union Activities continues to bring superb movies, comedians, lectures and music to campus. Come be part of an organization for students, run by students.
When: Tues., January 20, 7:30p.m.
Where: Kansas Union Ballroom
Free Food & Drinks
Tuesday, January 20, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 7
Active members sought by SUA
Student group hopes to find new members in tonight's meeting
By Marcelo Vilela
mvilleja@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
Student Union Activities wants YOU to be a new member of one of its committees.
SUA is holding a meeting tonight at 7:30 in the Kansas Union Ballroom for those students interested in participating in one of its seven entertainment-promoting committees. The committees are feature films, spectrum films, live music, special events, fine arts, travel and recreation
During the meeting, coordinators from all committees will explain to students about the work each committee does.
and forums.
"It's a chance to let people come and see what SUA is all about," said Michelle Dennard, Abilene senior and SUA president.
She said that memberships were open and voluntary and that each committee will have weekly meetings.
Joshua Mermis, Houston senior and SUA membership vice president, said that willingness to have hands-on experience is needed to be part of SUA.
"We're looking for students who want to be active," he said.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK
About 100 people attended the meeting last semester, and Mermis said he expected better attendance tonight.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
"We have some big events coming up.
and we'll need as much help as we can get," he said.
Mermis is referring to events like Day on The Hill, the KU Lecture Series and the much anticipated 60th anniversary celebration of SUA.
He said SUA would take as many volunteers as they could, and the more the better.
"It's one of the best opportunities on campus to help other students, learn skills and meet fascinating people," Mermis said.
Shots not foolproof for avoiding flu
New strains may infect those with vaccination
By Lisa John
Kansan staff writer
If you haven't heard a lot about the flu on campus this semester, it's because there's not a lot of it around.
But even if you have had your flu shot, you still may be susceptible to the flu.
Some vaccinated students are showing up at Watkins Memorial Health Center with influenza-like symptoms, said Randall Rock, physician and chief-of-staff at Watkins.
Although the flu vaccine is altered annually to help combat specific strains, Rock said this year's vaccine does not immunize against the Sydney strain, a new strain spreading across the country.
This year's vaccine includes three strains of influenza: Type A Bayern, Type
A Wuhan and Type B Beijing.
The Centers for Disease Control attribute the cause of 40 percent of flu cases reported nationwide since October to the Sydnev strain.
Rock said he has sent cultures to the state epidemiologist to find if the symptoms he's seeing are influenza and what type.
Even if it the virus is the Sydney strain, the flu shots still may afford protection. The Sydney flu is related to the Wuhan, included in the current vaccine.
"We're pleased that we haven't seen the number of cases that we had thought we might." Rock said.
Close to 1,800 KU students and faculty took advantage of $5 flu shots in the fall, said Cathy Thrasher, pharmacist-incharge at Watkins Health Center.
For those who have not had a flu shot this season, Rock still encouraged them to do so.
"We have 100 doses of the flu vaccine left," Rock said. "It's not too late to get it."
FLU SYMPTOMS
Flu symptoms include:
fever, cough, sore throat, runny or stuffy nose, headache, muscle aches and extreme fatigue.
Recipe for recovery:
Rest and liquids are usually adequate treatment for influenza, which can take from one to two weeks to run its course.
"It takes two weeks to develop an immunity after getting the shot," Rock said. "The flu shot isn't something that will help when you're already ill or after you've been exposed."
Unless a secondary infection develops, the flu usually is not something to be overly concerned about. Rock said.
"But if the symptoms seem to be unusual or extremely severe, then we would prefer they would come in for an opinion, rather than to guess or worry about it," Rock said.
A 13-year-old Lawrence girl reported Thursday that she had been raped during a dance party for high school students Jan. 10 at the Varsity Theatre, a representative for the Lawrence Police Department said.
17-year-old boy charged with rape of 13-year-old girl at Varsity dance
Kansan staff report
The victim identified a 17-year-old Lawrence boy as the suspect. Sgt. Susan Hadl said that the boy had been charged with rape and aggravated sodomy but was not in jail.
Hadi said that the victim knew the suspect and began talking with him around 8:30 p.m. The couple moved to an upstairs area of the Varsity, 1015 Massachusetts St., where they
Off-campus crime
engaged in consensual kissing.
"It reportedly went far beyond her desires," Hadl said.
The victim said that by 11:30 p.m., she had been raped. She reported it to the police shortly afterward, but Hadl could not confirm when.
Mike Elwell, owner of the theater, said he did not learn of the incident until Jan. 13 when he was notified by Lawrence police.
Several uniformed police officers attend all high school functions. Elwell said.
Robbery of liquor store could be linked to gang activity in Lawrence, police say
Kansan staff report
The Lawrence Police Department is investigating a liquor store robbery in north Lawrence that it says could be connected to gang activity.
Three men wearing red bandannas robbed Kolele Retail Liquor, 1805 W. Second St., about 11 p.m. Thursday. The men took an undisclosed amount of cash from the register and several unidentified bottles of liquor.
"We're looking at the possibility this could be a gang-related crime but are not calling it a probability," said Sgt. Susan Hadl, representative for the Lawrence police. "It's not the focus of the investigation."
Hadi said that the suspects were African-American men in their late teens or early 20s, and that all were wearing dark clothes.
Off-campus crime
According to reports, the first two suspects walked into the store and appeared to be discussing a purchase. The third man entered the store minutes later and immediately pointed a small, silver handgun at the clerk, a 44-year-old Lawrence man.
The suspect threatened to kill the clerk and demanded the money in the register. Meanwhile, the two other men began grabbing bottles of liquor.
The three men ran out of the store and headed northeast. A witness spotted three men with similar descriptions several blocks away climb into a dark-colored 1970s Chevy Malibu.
"It appears as if a four person was in the car." Hadl said.
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Section A · Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 20, 1998
Spanish, Portuguese GTAs' offices combine
One workspace holds 60 GTAs,all office hours in two rooms
By Susio Gura
Kansan staff writer
Students looking for their Spanish and Portuguese graduate teaching assistants will have to look a little harder because of the restructuring of the GTAs' offices.
A decision made last fall by the Wescoe Task Force to restructure Wescoe Hall turned separate offices into a large room for 60 Spanish and Portuguese GTAs.
Many of the GTAs are pleased with the new office, but still prefer their own space and desk.
The previous office for Spanish and Portuguese GTAs was in Blake Annex, which will be destroyed this semester.
"The office is very nice, but it's upsetting not having my own office space because I used it everyday last semester," said Omega Burckhardt. Spanish and Portuguese GTA.
The room is not accessible to students because the door is shut with a combination lock.
Two small offices, complete with cubicles, allow GTAs to hold regular office hours. The new offices are shared by all of the Spanish and Portuguese GTAs and are divided into office hours by sign-up times.
GTAs feel that not only are they losing an office, but they are also losing valuable time with their students who can't easily stop in, said Jennifer Cavanaugh, Spanish and Portuguese GTA.
"The space is a terrific addition, but I pre
ferred having office space for my students to drop by all day. It makes it hard for students to find their GTAs." Cavanaugh said.
Ariel Strichartz, Spanish and Portuguese GTA, agreed.
"It is still early so it is hard to tell since students aren't coming in to see us. Our main concern is for our students, and whether or not we will be able to interact with them as well." Strichartz said.
Work is still being done on the large office that presently has computers, four phones and various desk space.
Lockers for the GTAs to house their belongings are not vet available.
"We feel very mobile because we can't leave our stuff anywhere, and there are also no desks for us to put files," Burckhardt said.
William Blue, chairman of the Spanish and Portuguese department, said it was too early to tell how the office space was going to work out.
"All of the furniture hasn't arrived, and we are still purchasing new computers," Blue said. "I have only heard general feedback, but it has been positive."
"We have heard rumors that this is the way all offices might be changed. We hope that they reconsider the idea," said Helen Sheumaker, Western Civilization GTA and GTA grievance committee member. "It is bad enough sharing an office with two other GTAs."
GTAs in other departments are worried that the restructuring of Wescoe may result in handling other GTA space similarly.
Rich Givens, assistant provost, said if the use of the office space worked well they would consider doing other offices this way.
"I haven't seen the office yet or heard any type of reaction," he said.
Flyin' high
100
Chris Streitberger, Lawrence resident, flies his radio-controlled helicopter at Shenk Recreational Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. Yesterday, Streitberger flew one of his three helicopters for the first time this year. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
Four shot at parade for King
The Associated Press
Police were searching for at least one shooter, who was thought to be black, said Don Kelly, a police spokesman.
BATON ROUGE, La. — Gunshots were fired Monday into a crowd of marchers at a parade honoring the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., killing one person and wounding three young children.
The motive was not known, but race was not believed to be a factor, Kelly said.
"The only thing we know at this point is that a man in an orange-looking shirt came out of the crowd and started shooting," said Charles Armstrong, a police spokesman.
Kelly described the scene immediately after the shooting as mass pandemonium.
A 25-year-old man was shot to death, police said.
A 6-year-old girl was critically wounded with a gunshot wound in the back. Kelly said.
An 11-year-old girl was listed in serious condition with gunshot wounds to the leg and hand, and a 9-year-old boy was listed as stable with a leg wound.
Greek community officers establish priorities during retreat
By Carl Kaminski
Kansan staff writer
During the weekend, the leaders of the greek community had a retreat and shared their visions for the upcoming semester.
The retreat took executive officers of the Interfraternity Council and and the Panhellenic Association to Tall Oaks Conference Center in Linwood, where they learned more about one another and develmore about another item than
oped goals for the upcoming semes
ter, said Lung Huang, Goodland junior and council vice president for public relations.
"We developed ideas of a model greek community and what we can do to get there," said Cory Littlepage, Tulsa, Okla., junior and council president.
The priorities discussed at the retreat included improving relations between the greek community and other University of Kansas organizations.
"We want to work better internally and externally." Huang said. Huang said the council planned to meet with individual chapter leaders in the University's greek community to break down existing barriers.
He said he hoped to change the perception of the council as being above the rest of the community.
and Ann Eversole, associate dean of student life, attended the retreat and offered advice to help meet those goals.
Littlepage said that students at the retreat set personal and group goals. Danny Kaiser, director of the Student Organization and Leadership Development Center
Libby Sigg, Iola junior and Panhellenic Association President, said that one of her goals was to make sure that the IFC and Panhellenic worked together more as one greek community instead of two separate entities.
Huang said they also discussed many of the plans made during the LeaderShape Institute retreat earlier this month.
The LeaderShape retreat, sponsored by the Department of Student Housing, brought together students from many different campus organizations.
Huang said the students attending the conference learned a lot about the barriers between Greek and non-greek students at the University and hoped to take steps toward breaking them down.
He said he hoped to continue working on an exchange program, discussed at the LeaderShape retreat, in which students from greek chapters would spend a day at a residence or scholarship hall and vice-versa.
"We are all really similar in ways we don't know," he said.
Sigg said that she hoped to work closely with the IFC so the two groups could continue to make progress toward meeting their goals and keep tabs on how each other is doing throughout the semester.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Basketball
Inside Sports today
The Kansas women's basketball team defeated Missouri 74-62 on Saturday at the Hearnes Center.
SEE PAGE 3B
Yesterday's game - Kansas vs. Missouri
KU
KANSAS 73
21-3
RANKED NO.3
SECTION B, PAGE 1
M
WWW.JHAWKBBALL.COM
MISSOURI
10-7, 3-3
UNRANKED
74
TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1998
MISSOURI 74, KANSAS 73
KANSAS [21-3.5-1]
Earl 1-2 2-2 4, Pierce 8-15 7-10 23,
Chenowith 0-8 2-4 2, Robertson 5-11 4-6
18, Thomas 6-12 0-2 16, Gregory 3-4 0-9,
Bradford 0-2 0-0 0, McGrath 0-3 0-0 0,
Pugh 2-0 3-0 0, Totals 25 50 12 54 73.
MISSOURI (10-7.3-3)
Thames 4-13 4-14 12, White 9-20 2-2 23,
Hardge 3-6 1-2 7, Grawer 3-5 2-3 9, Hafer
1-1 2-2 4, Lee 2-6 3-3 8, Decker 1-2 1-1 3,
Ray 1-1 0-0 2, Parker 1-2 1-2 4, Woods 1-4 0-
0, Totals 26 60 16 19 74.
Halftime —Kansas 41, Missouri 36.
Three-Point goals - Kansas 8-17 (Robertson 4-6, Thomas 4-8, Pierce 0-3), Missouri 6-16 (White 3-8, Lee 1-1, Parker 1-2, Grawer 1-3, Woods 0-2).
Rebounds—Kansas 45 (Chenowith 11),
Missouri 30 (Hardae 6).
Assists—Kansas 11 (Roberson 5), Missouri 17 (Graver 7).
Fouled out—White.
Technical foul—Missouri coach Norm Stew art.
Total fouls - Kansas 18, Missouri 19.
Attendance - 13.330
AP Men's Top 25
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' men's basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 18, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
rank team rec pts pvs
1.Duke (50) 16-1 1,729 2
**2.N. Carolina (14)** 18-1 1,672 1
3.Kansas (3) 21-3 1,550 3
4.Utah (2) 15-1 1,501 4
5.Fanford (1) 16-0 1,466 7
6.Arizona 15-3 1,447 5
7.Kentucky 16-2 1,391 6
8.Connecticut 16-2 1,235 10
9.UCLA 13-3 1,082 8
10.Iowa 15-2 1,028 13
11.Princeton 13-1 1,013 12
13.Purdue 15-4 976 9
13.Mississippi 12-2 838 11
14.South Carolina 11-3 718 14
15.Syracuse 15-2 696 15
16.Michigan 14-4 681 19
17.New Mexico 13-3 627 15
18.Arkansas 14-3 478 22
**19.Xavier** 11-4 399 18
20.Florida State 13-5 394 17
21.Cincinnati 13-2 344 —
22.Rhode Island 12-3 305 20
23.West Virginia 15-3 302 21
24.Hawaii 12-2 225 24
25.Clemson 11-6 120 —
**Others receiving votes:** Others receiving votes: Maryland 98, Indiana 92, Georgia Washington 82, Texas Christian 47, Michigan State 38, Windelle 25, Tennessee 22, Georgia Tech 17. *Okahoma* 15, Murray 14, Colarboro 20. Massachusetts 10, Gonzaga 8, Santa Clara 7. Arkansas 6, Missouri 6. Marquette 4, Miami 4. Oklahoma State 6, Arizona State 3, Baylor 3, Ill-Chicago 2, Utah St. 2, Washington 2, Saint Louis 1, Temple 1
AP Women's Top 25
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 18, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
rank team rec pts pvs
1.Tennessee (39) 19-0 975 1
2.Old Dominion 14-0 936 1
3.Connecticut 16-1 893 3
4.Louisiana Tech 14-2 853 4
**5.Texas Tech** 12-2 **825** **5**
6.Illinois 13-4 723 8
7.Arizona 11-3 690 9
8.N.Carolina St. 15-1 685 10
9.Vanderbilt 14-2 680 6
10.Florida 13-4 550 12
11.N.Carolina 15-2 522 7
tie Virginia 13-3 522 15
13.Stanford 8-5 480 11
14.Utah 14-0 421 17
15.Washington 11-3 360 13
16.W.Kentucky 15-4 344 18
17.Wisconsin 14-4 323 14
18.Georgia 11-5 294 19
19.Clemson 14-3 219 23
20.SW Missouri St. 12-2 209 16
**21.Nebraska** 14-5 **207** **20**
22.Fla. International 14-1 186 21
23.Purdue 12-5 133 24
24.Duke 11-5 91 25
25.Stephen F. Austin 13-2 86 —
Others receiving votes: Hawaii 70, Auburn 67, Manatee 63, Akron 45, Arkansas 36, Ocala 34, N.C. C-Valley 18, N.C. C-State 18, N.C. C-State 18, Michigan 11, Colorado 10, Kansas 10, Tulane 9, St. Louis 9, Oklahoma 9, American U. 2, Youngstown 18, 2, Oakland 18.
Tigers claw their way past Jayhawks
Kansas drops third straight at Missouri
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Kansas forward Pierce scored 10 of his team-high 23 points in the final 4 minutes, 14 seconds, but that was not enough as No. 3 Kansas lost at Missouri for the third consecutive season, 74-73.
CORNELIAS
The Jayhawks led 73-72 with 24.2 seconds left, but center Eric Chenowith failed to make either of his free throws. Guard Ryan Robertson was whistled for a foul with 11.4 seconds remaining and Missouri guard Tyron Lee made the game-winning free throws.
Pierce had the ball stripped by a Missouri defender and time ran out.
Chenowith said he wanted to erase some of Kansas' memories from last season's game at the Hearnes Center, a 96-94 double-overtime loss, but he could not do it.
"Last year I was watching the game on TV, and (the Jayhawks) made a great comeback, but they lost," Chenowith said. "This year I had the game in my hands, and I couldn't do it. It was disappointing."
Kansas outrebounded the Tigers 25-11 in the first half, and shot 50 percent to Missouri's 39 percent. Yet the Jayhawks, who led by as many as 11 points, clung to a 41-36 halftime lead.
Robertson extended the lead to 44-36, but the Tigers rallied for a 10-0 run and took the lead four minutes into the second half. 46-44. Both teams exchanged blows, but Koreas still led 53-51 midway through the half.
Forward Paul Pierce dives for a lose ball. The Jayhawks 74-73 loss to Missouri in collisions, Mo., last night is the third time in a row that Missouri has won at home against Kansas. Photo by Steve Puppe / KANSAN
The Tigers responded with a 6-0 run and led 57-53 when their bench was called for a technical foul. Robertson, a St. Charles, Mo., native, missed both attempts, and the Tigers' lead eventually grew to five points.
Robertson, who finished with 18 points, four rebounds and five assists, said he wished he had another chance to make those free throws.
"I think I played pretty well with the exception of those free throws," Robertson said. "That was a big play. But you have to give the Tigers credit because they made the big plays and the free throws when they needed to."
Pierce, who sat out for crucial moments of the second half because of foul trouble, rallied Kansas, which led until Lee's free throws in the final minute.
Robertson said he had no answers for why Missouri played so well against the Jayhawks but seemed mediocre against its other competition.
"They play like an average team when it's anyone else," Robertson said. "They play like a Top 10 team when they play us, especially when it's in this building. I don't know why it's like that, but you have to give them credit."
Guard Kenny Gregory gets tangled with a Missouri player. Kansas lost to Missouri 74-73 last night at the Hearnes Center. Photo by Steve Puppe
KANSAS 10
INGA
Wil Chamberlain talks with fans in Allen Field House. Chamberlain's jersey was officially retired Saturday at hattime of the Kansas-Kansas State basketball game. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
The Big Dipper's star now shines from inside of Allen Field House
By Tommy Gallagher
tgailagher@kansan.com
Kansan sportswriter
Wilt Chamberlain said he would not become emotional when his No. 13 jersey was retired Saturday during halftime of the Kansas State game. He was wrong.
When his banner was unfurled, and when he spoke in front of 16,300 fans in Allen Field House, Chamberlain shed some tears. He had been overwhelmed by the fans and the emotion.
"A little over 40 years ago, I lost the toughest battle in sports in losing to the North Carolina Tar Heels by one point in triple overtime." Chamberlain said. "It was a devastating thing to me because I thought I let the University of Kansas down and my teammates down.
Chamberlain choked up when he spoke about the devotion that Jayhawk fans had toward the Kansas program and its players.
"But when I come back here today and realize not the simple loss of a game, but how many people have shown such appreciation and warmth, I'm humbled and deeply honored," he said.
The loud reception caught Chamberlain by surprise. So he told Bob Frederick, director of athletics, that he wanted to sign autographs after the game, an impromptu move to show how much he
Forward T.J. Pugh said he was in disbelief of Chamberlain's 7-foot-1-inch frame and small feet.
"He made Rafe (LaFrentz) and Eric (Chenowith) look small, and they're big men," Pugh said. "But he has a size-14 shoe. I have a size-14 shoe and he's got eight inches on me."
appreciated the fans' support.
Chamberlain stayed for more than two hours signing posters, cards, books, programs and other items, and he did not leave until he had worked his way back to the last person in line.
Guard Billy Thomas said that he noticed a change in the crowd because of Chamberlain's presence.
"There were more older people in the crowd, more people from his generation," Thomas said. "You could hear a difference in the crowd. When we came out for the shoot-around, the crowd was really into it."
"I've learned over the years to take the bitter with the sweet, and how sweet this is." Chamberlain said. "I'm a Jayhawk, and I now know why there's so much tradition here."
At the end of his speech, Chamberlain spoke about the significance of having his banner hung from the rafters.
"Some wonderful things have come from here, and I'm now very much a part of it by being there," he said. "I'm very proud of that. Rock Chalk Jawhawk."
LaFrentz to return to play on Saturday
LaFrentz broke his hand Dec. 26 during practice in preparation for the Rainbow Classic in Honolulu. He was cleared to play for the Jayhawks' 69-62 victory against Kansas State on Saturday, but Kansas coach Roy Williams said he did not want to take any chances with the injury.
"The doctors said there was a small risk involved with letting him play today." Williams said after the game. "If the doctor said he has no reservations about playing him next Saturday, then I'm comfortable with that."
LaFrentz now wears a splint on his right index finger, and the splint could be removed after a week or two. He had been expected to miss at least six weeks because of the injury, but he will have missed only four weeks if he plays Saturday.
Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz had the cast from his right hand removed Friday, although the wait to play probably will last until this Saturday's game against Texas Tech.
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansan sportswriter
LaFrentz returned to practice Friday after receiving medical clearance to play. He saw only limited action, participating in non-contact offensive drills.
At the K-State game, LaFrentz practiced with the team during warmups. He participated in passing and catching drills, and he shot the ball from close range. LaFrentz did the same last night when the Jayhawks played at Missouri.
"At this time I feel comfortable that Raef will be playing one week from today."
Williams said he wanted to see how LaFrentz could perform various basketball skills — such as dribbling and passing — before allowing him to play during any game.
LaFrentz, who has missed the last nine games, said his absence from the starting lineup may have helped Kansas in the long run.
LaFrentz: Will return this week after injury.
Williams said in a press release Friday. "But, I don't feel comfortable about anything else."
"Maybe this was a blessing in disguise." LaFrentz said.
"Some of my teammates became better players while I was out. There were a lot of holes on this team when I got hurt, especially on defense.
CITY OF
On Saturday, Kansas tied the school record for consecutive home court victories with 55. The Jayhawks also won 55 straight at home from 1984 to 1988.
Basketball notebook
Now those holes aren't there because we are a much better defensive team."
They have not lost a home game since Feb. 20, 1994, against Missouri. Kansas can break the record Saturday against Texas Tech.
Kansas guard Billy Thomas scored his 1,001st point Saturday against K-State when he connected on a three-point shot early in the second half. He is the 37th Jayhawk to score 1,000 points and the second player to reach that mark this season — forward Paul Pierce scored his 1,000 point Nov. 14.
Pierce tied Wilt Chamberlain at 1,433 points on the Jayhawks' all-time scoring list against K-State with Chamberlain watching in the field house. Pierce passed Chamberlain's mark during last night's game at Missouri.
A
2B
Quick Looks
Tuesday January 20,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 20)
Talk to some friends about a problem that has been bothering you. The sooner you get it figured out, the better you will feel and the faster you can move on.
Aries: Today is an 8.
The stars are begging for you to cast off your shyness and make bold moves in your relationship - or the one that has been hovering on the horizon. Be charming and cute.
Taurus: Today is a 9.
Get ready, as something's about to happen that will shake your ordinary routine quite delightfully. A new toothbrush? Changes on your favorite sitcom? Au contraire, Taurus. Bet on something much sexier.
Gemini: Today is a 9.
Partnered Gemini will find some very good reasons to stay home tonight - just when did your familiar amour get so sexy? You have energy to spare, and you know just how to use it.
Cancer: Today is a 6.
Cancer, you'd best cast an eye toward home, where a problem you thought insignificant may be careening out of control. A willingness to listen to others and see the validity in their opinions – particularly those of Libras - is key.
Leo: Today is an 8.
You're wonderfully in sync with the world today, thanks to the friendly Libra moon. Committed Leas can look forward to a harmonious evening with their partner, while single Leas should head out on the hunt.
Virgo: Today is an 8.
You don't like to be splashy and grab attention, but give it a try. It could have quite wonderful effects. Part nered Virgos may be ripe for spats with their lovers this evening; take care.
Libra: Today is a 9.
Scorpio: Today is 7.
Sagittarius: Today is a 7.
The Moon's flirtation in your own sign has made you practically irritable, libra, so make the most of it. Bat your lashes, accept every compliment and see what – or who – turns up.
Capricorn: Today is 6.
You have a decision to make, and it hasn't been easy. You've knocked so many ideas around for so long that none of them sound great. My advice? Heed your dreams; they may give you the answers you crave.
Power can be an aphrodiac, as you'll discover today—be careful whom you attract. Your partner knows your secret and finds it amusing, but we wouldn't suggest discussing it directly.
Aquarius: Today is an 8.
C
'Pisces; Today is a 5.
Some Capricorns have been looking for love in unbe lievably wrong places. Dates you meet in bars are worthy only as drinking partners. Why not meet someone special while browsing through a museum or taking in a concert?
The old gypsy fortune teller's maxim for you today:
you will travel to exotic lands and meet a dark
stranger. If you're not up for a trip to Bali or Tibet, just
try doing something out of the ordinary and see who
crosses your path.
男女同居
Pisces, one of your finest qualities is your dedication and touching helpfulness toward the ones you love. But no one told you to let yourself be used and mistreated. Stop that person from dragging your heart around with firm words and even firmer convictions.
2
LION
M
KANSAS TRACK
Mason and three other athletes competed at the Wildcat Pentathlon/Heptathlon competition in Manhattan.
University of Kansas track and field co-captain Candace Mason scored 3,947 points Friday to set a new Kansas record in the women's indoor pentathlon.
Kansas athlete sets school track record
The previous record of 3,843 points was set by Ann O'Connor at the 1988 Big Eight Conference Indoor Track and Field Championships.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Senior Amber Mounday placed seventh overall with 3,239 points, and freshman Erika Hamel finished 10th with 2,849 points. In the men's heptathlon, freshman Andy Morris placed sixth overall in his first collegiate multi-event competition with 4,664 points. Morris recorded his best performance, winning the 1,000 meters with a time of 2:43.
Mason placed second overall in Friday's competition, trailing Jill Montgomery, a post-collegiate athlete, who scored 4.235 points.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
SCORPIO
YESTERDAY'S SCORES
New York 98, Boston 82
Philadelphia 98, Sacramento 85
Minnesota 117, L.A. Clippers 109
L.A. Lakers 92, Orlando 89
New Jersey 95, San Antonio 94
Charlotte 109, Toronto 88
Seattle 114, Houston 80
Detroit at Utah
BASKETBALL NBA
College Top 25 Men
Women
Missouri 74, No.3 Kansas 75
No.10 Connecticut 67, St. John's 64
No. 23 Marquette vs. Deraui
No. 24 Hawaii vs. Texas Christian
射
No. 3 Connecticut 93, No. 2 Old Dominion 72
Indiana 80, No.6 Illinois 67
No. 24 Duke 75, No. 8 North Car-
olina State 61
2
V
SPORTS ON TV
10:30 a.m.
ESPN2—NFL Press Conference, Super Bowl XXXII Media Day, Denver Broncos, at San Diego.
1 p.m.
ESPN2—NFL Press Conference,
Super Bowl XXXII Media Day, Green
Bay Packers, at San Diego
ESPN2—NCAA Basketball, Minnesota at Michigan
6:30 p.m.
ESPN2—NCAA Basketball, West Virginia at Rutgers
TN T— NBA Basketball, Seattle at Dallas
7 D.m.
USA- Boxing, Jesse James Leija (34-3-2) vs. Joel Perez (23-1-2) for vacant NAFB lightweight championship; junior welterweights, Diosbelys Hurtado (22-1-0) vs. Aaron Zarate (26-7-1) at San Antonio
R n.m.
ESPN2—NCAA Basketball, St.
Joseph's at Taylor
8:30 n.m.
11:30 p.m.
ESPN2—Tennis, Australian Open, early round coverage, at Melbourne, Australia
SPORTS, ETC.
American League
SEATTLE MARINERS—Signed third baseman Russ Davis to a two-year contract.
National League
CINCINNATI REDS—Agreed to terms with infielder/outfielder Willie Greene.
BASKETBALL
NEW YORK METS—Agreed to terms with right-handed pitcher Rick Reed and right-handed pitcher John Hudek about two-year contracts.
tion
DALLAS MAVERICKS—Placed forward Bubba Wells on the injured list. Activated center Chris Anstey from the injured list.
BASKETBALL National Basketball Associa
DETROIT PISTONS—Signed guard Steve Henson to a 10-day contract.
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS—Activated forward Jerome Kersey from the injured list. Placed guard Eric Snow on the injured list and traded him to the Philadelphia 76ers for a second-round draft choice in 1998 or 1999
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS—Waived guard Rex Walters.
NEW JERSEY NETS—Signed John Nash, general manager, to a multi-year contract extension.
FOOTBALL
National Football League BUFFALO BILLS -Named Bishop Harris running back back and Bill Bradley defensive secondary coach.
HOCKEY
Weekend Transactions
National Hockey League WASHINGTON CAPITALS— Agreed to terms with right wing Peter Bondra about a four-year contract.
BASEBALL
UDKi
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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Wednesday:
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3 p.m. at Allen Field House - Men's Basketball vs. Texas Tech
i: Big 12 Network. Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM
7 p.m. at Lubbock, Texas—Women's Basketball vs. Texas Tech
All day at Columbia, Mo. — Track and Field at Missouri Invitational.
Jan.27:
7 p. m. at Allen Field House—Women's basketball vs. Texas &M
Jan.28:
7. 05 p.m. at Allen Field House—Men's basketball vs. Baylor
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Tuesday, January 20, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
Women's basketball victory means progress in Big 12
By Kevin C. Wilson
Kansan sportswriter
Guard Suzi Raymant scorched the Missouri Tigers Saturday with a career-high 30 points as the
P
Raymant: Scores a career-high 30 points.
K an s a s women's basketball team won its first road game in the Big 12 Conference, 72-64.
The Jayhawks, 11-3 overall and 3-2 in the Big 12, will seek their fourth-straight conference victory tomorrow
they play host to Oklahoma State
Forward Lynn Pride added 20 points Saturday as the Jayhawks defeated the Tigers in the Hearnes Center for the first time since Jan. 25,1995.
"I take this win as a real positive step in our program," said Coach Marian Washington. "For them to come here and do this is quite an accomplishment."
Raymant, after being held to five first-half points, exploded in the second halffor 25.
"In the first half, I was not playing well," Raymant said. "They
PETER C. SCHMIDT
Pride: Scored 20 points against Missouri.
12 free throws to go along with her nine rebounds and four steals.
Washington said that she was impressed with the way her team responded to playing in the Hearnes Center, especially her two stars.
"We have to have Lynn and Suzi to be very consistent in their performances to be successful," Washington said. "For my young team
to do what they did against a victim eran club, I'm very, very pleased."
In addition to scoring 20 points, Pride had six rebounds, five steals and three blocked shots.
The Jayhawks rejected a season-high 10 shots. That total is the fifth-highest in Kansas history, and it helped add to the team's defensive effort.
JAYDEN
Washington: Said she was proud of the big win.
rebounds and seven assists.
Raymant said, "To beat Missouri at Missouri, which we haven't done in a while, was a good win. We ought to walk out with our heads up."
Guard Julie Helm paced the Tigers, 9-6 overall and 1-4 in the conference, with 20 points. Center Kesha Bonds scored 14 points and grabbed 12 rebounds.
Swimmers win but disappoint
The Kansas women's swimming and diving team won 13 of 16 events and the men's team won 12 of 16 events this weekend, but head coach Gary Kempf was disappointed with his teams' performances.
Both teams were victorious Saturday at Carbondale, Ill., against Southern Illinois University. The men won 164.5-133.5 and the
By Erin Thompson Kansan sportswriter
Kansas teams defeat Southern Illinois remember teammate
women won 182-108.
"We weren't very fast. We need to adjust to the speed work we're doing." Kempf said. "Their bodies need to make an adjustment to the type of work we've been doing."
Kansas swimmer finishes eighth at world match
Until now, the team has worked on endurance, but with the conference championships in the last two weeks of February, the team members have been working to fine tune their races.
Both the men's and the women's teams had four swimmers win two events each. Erin Staten, Carolyn Grevers, Rebecca Eustice and Kristin Nilsen won two events each for the women. Brandon Chestnut, Brian Klapper, Kostaki Chilligiris and diver Brian
Tyler Painter established himself as a world-class swimmer this weekend and set up a good opportunity to make the Olympic team.
(1)
Last year's meet against Southern Illinois was dedicated to Seth Dunscomb, who passed away Jan. 22. Although the team did not discuss it, it was in the back of their minds, Nilsen said.
KU SWIMMING
By Erin Thompson Kansan sportswriter
Humphrey won two events each for the men.
"Even though our times were off, people stepped up and got the job done," said Kristin Nilsen, team captain.
"Seth's mom came down to watch, and that was special," Nilsen said.
Painter. a
Painter: Close to making the U.S. Olympic team.
"He has as
good an opportunity as anyone else to make the Olympics right now," said Gary Kemp, Kansas head coach. "All you really want is a good opportunity. But quality is not for another year and a half."
Painter was the top American finisher in the event with a time of 15:23.40. His time was well behind his career best of 15:17.01, and he was disappointed with his performance, Kemof said.
"He was a little frustrated," Kempf said. "He had hoped to place a higher, swim a little faster."
On Thursday, Painter finished 16th in the 400-meter freestyle with a time of 3:57.30.
This summer at the Phillip's 68 National Swimming Championships in Nashville, Tenn., he qualified to represent the United States at Australia. He finished second in the 1500-meter freestyle and third in the 400-meter freestyle.
His career best, which he set during the summer in Fukuoka, Japan, established Painter as the 15th-fastest American in the 400-meter freestyle and the 16th-fastest American in the 800- and the 1500-meter freestyle.
Kempf said Painter performed well.
"I told him he did a phenomenal job," he said. "He's still basically a rookie at the international level."
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JANUARY
FLAG FOOTBALL
1998
Congratulations to the winners of the NIKE College Flag Football National Championship held during Sugar Bowl week in the Big Easy. Over 2,000 athletes competed; here are the champs:
• Men's Division: Ohio State University, Med-Staff Raiders
• Women's Division: Instituto Politecnico Nacional (Mexico)
• Co. Rec Division: Northeast Louisiana University
S M T W
IN CREATING `POSTS/2/PAGE` NIKKE makes easier access to BE A CERTAIN WEIGHT. We REQUIRE YOUR IT WORK MARK. LET US LOOT THE NIKKE WE REQUIRE.
18
19
MEN'S BASKETBALL/V
AT MISSOURI
8:35 PM
20
21
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL/V
VS. OKLAHOMA STATE
ALLEN FIELDHOUSE
7:00 PM
25
26
27
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL/V
VS. TEXAS A&M
ALLEN FIELDHOUSE
7:00 PM
28
MEN'S BASKETBALL/V
VS. BAYLOR
ALLEN FIELDHOUSE
7:00 PM
Welcome back! I trust all of you had happy and safe holidays. If you did anything out of the ordinary (like deep-sea diving, hang gliding, mountain climbing or parachuting) over the beach, drop me an e-mail. I just might profile you in the next **Sports1/2Page**. And no, TV-watching marathons don't count, even if you were watching Bowl games ... Keep on keepin' on, and I'll see you on campus!
---
Hi, I'm Drew King, your NIKE student rep. Sports1/2Page plugs you into upcoming sports and NIKE events at the University of Kansas. Ernail me at drew.king@nike.com with events, athletes or teams you think deserve a mention. To reach NIKE HQ, try sports.halfpage@nike.com . . .
TABLE OF FOOTBALL PLAYERS
Co=Corecreational / V=Varsity / C=Club / I=Intramural
DOING IT
"I love the feeling of being on the water; it's such a rush," says Laura Lohrmann. The senior Exercise Science major has been a water rat since the ripe old age of six when she first tried water-skiing in her hometown of Elkhorn, Wisconsin. She joined
an amateur show ski team and, since arriving at KU four years ago, she's been making a splash on the Club Waterski team. Now team president, Lohrmann placed first in Trick Skiing at the Purdue Fall Classic and fifth in the Region in Trick Skiing. During the last four summers, she honed her skills at Marine World in Vallejo, California, by performing swivels, doubles, pyramids and other spectacular stunts in two shows every weekday and up to four on weekends.
When she graduates, Lohmann has no intention of taking a "dry," boring desk job: Her goal is to get sponsored and join the pro-waterskiing tour.
7
---
Section B · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 20, 1998
Connecticut sees red as St. John's streak continues
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Lavor Postell scored all 13 of his points in the second half and came up with two of the biggest plays of the game to help St. John's beat No.8 Connecticut 64-62 last night, the Red Storm's fourth straight victory.
St. John's (13,6, 5-1 Big East) matched last season's victory total and is on its longest winning streak since it started the 1994-95 season 7-0. The Red Storm are on their longest conference winning streak since they won five straight in the 1992-93 season.
Huskies
The Red Storm used a 13-0 run to
take a 44.28 lead with 12:40 to play and the crowd of 11,768 at Madison Square Garden.
The Huskies (16-3, 6-2), who had won three
straight and 12 of 13, got back in it despite an off night by leading scorer Richard Hamilton and limited minutes by starting point guard Khalid El-Amin because of a lower left leg injury.
get the Huskies within 53-50 with 3:51 left, but Postell, who came in averaging 9.4 points, hit a 3-pointer to give the Red Storm a six-point lead with 3:24 left
Ricky Moore, who led Connecticut with 18 points, scored on a rebound to
As St. John's struggled from the free throw line, the Huskies were within 60-55 on two free throws by Moore with 1:46 to go.
Felipe Lopez, who led St. John's with 18 points, missed a 3-pointer, but Postell grabbed the rebound and made one of two free throws with 1:13 to play.
ST. JOHN'S 64, CONNECTICUT 62
Postell's last big play came with 6 seconds left after Connecticut got within 63-62. He made the first of two free throws for the final margin.
CONNECTICUT (16-3)
Freeman 1-1 1-4-3, R,Hamilton 6-17 2-4-17, Voskui 4-8 2-2-10,
Moore 6-15 5-18 18, El-Aimin 1-5 0-0-3, Hardnett 2-6 3-7-3, Wayne 0-1 0-0, Klaier 0-0 2-2 2, Jones 1-6 0-1 2, Harrison 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 21-59
15-14 26-42
ST. JOHN'S (13-6)
Grant 1-6 3-4 5, Postell 3-4 6-8 13, Z.Hamiliton 5-7 13-17, Turner 0-3 2-2 2, Lopez 5-11 5-10 18, Charles 1-1 0-0 2, Artest 1-7 1-2 3, Jessie 2-3 0-0 4, Crooks 1-0 0-0 0, Toules 18-43 24-39 64.
Halftime—St. John's 27, Connecticut 23. 3-Point goals—UConn 5-14 (R.Hamilton 3-5, Moore 1-3, El-Amin 1-3, Jones 0-3), St. John's 4-10 (Lopez 3-5, Postell 1-1, Artest 0-3, Turner 0-1). Fouled out—Voskui, Wayne, Grant. Rebounds—UConn 40 (Moore 9), St. John's 37 (Grant 9). Assists—UConn 9 (Moore 3), St. John's 11 (Lopez 4).
Total fouls—UConn 23, St. John's 23. A—11,768.
UConn dominates Old Dominion
The Associated Press
Huskies deal Lady Monarchs first, worst loss of regular season
HARTFORD, Conn. — Svetlana Abrosimova had a career-high 27 points and 11 rebounds as No. 3 Connecticut used a late-run to crush 2.0 Old Dominion 93-72 yesterday, handing the Lady Monarchs their first loss this season.
Abrosimova was 12-for-14 from the floor to finish with seven more points than her previous best, leading a balanced attack as the Huskies (17-1) overcame early struggles by leading scorer Nykesha Sales.
UConn point guard Rita Williams also made some key plays and hit crucial baskets down the stretch as the Huskies handed the Lady Monarchs their most lopsided loss since Tennessee beat them 69-47 in 1995-96.
Both teams did a good job shutting down the other's big guns. Sales was scoreless the first 19 minutes, and only had six points by the time she was called for her fourth foul.
age.
Natalie Diaz helped keep ODU (14-1) close in the first half, when its three top scorers were limited to 12 points combined. Diaz scored 11 of her 17 points before the break, and finished with three times her aver-
But she was helpless as the rest of her teammates once the Huskies went on a 27-8 run over the final 5:27 to break open a game that had not swayed more than four points either way.
With UConn leading 66-64 after Nyree Roberts hit a free throw, Sales, playing with four fouls, hit a jumper. Williams followed with a steal and a coast-to-coast layup that electrified the sellout crowd of 16.294.
All of a sudden, the Huskies couldn't seem to do anything wrong, at one point stringing together 11 points — including three 3-pointers at 95.00
The Lady Monarchs, meanwhile, were limited to one field goal in the final 7.25, relying on free throws for their only other nine points thereafter.
The Huskies extended their home winning streak to 41 games, second to Louisiana Tech run of 42. ODU dropped its first game to a Top 25 team in five tries.
The game see-sawed throughout the entire first half, with 10 ties and 12 lead changes. Sales gave UConn a boost in the last minute before the break with her first two baskets, a pair of jumpers, that created a 35-31 lead.
Ticha Penichelio's second field goal of the half, from just inside the 3-point line, cut it to 35-33 going into the locker room.
BOX SCORE
OLD DOMINION (14-1)
Andrade 6-10 9-9 21, Diaz
8-18 0-2 17, Roberts 7-11 2-6
16, Eblin 0-3 3-1 3,
Penicheiro 3-6 2-5 9, Eler-
man 1-4 0-0 2, Keanan 0-0
0-0, Small 2-4 0-0 4,
Williams 0-0 0-0. Totals
7-26 16-25 72.
CONNECTICUT (147)
Duran 5-8 3-4 15, Abrosimova 12-14 2-3 27, Sauer 6-10 3-4 15, Williams 5-9 1-2,
13. Sales 5-11 4-7 14, Abric 1-1 0-1 2, Schumacher 0-0 0-0, Glenney 0-0 0-0, Czel 0-0 0-0, Hansmeyer 3-3 1-2 7, Gaine 0-0 0-0, Hunt 0-0 0-0. Totals 37-56
14-23 93.
CONNECTICUT (17-1)
Halftime—UConn 35, ODU 33. 3-Point goals—UDO 29 (Diaz 1-2, Penicheiro 1-3, Eller-Paul 0-1, Eblin 0-3), UConn 5-12 (Duran 2-4, Williams 2-5, Abrosimova 1-1, Sauer 0-1, Sales 0-1). Fouled out—None. Rebounds—ODU 25 (Roberts 7), UConn 36 (Abrosimova 11). Assists—ODU 14 (Andrade 5), UConn 22 (Duran 7). Total fouls—ODU 21, UConn 19. A—16,294.
Olathe coach resigns in money cover-up
The Associated Press
OLATHE — A high school coach accused of taking money from the Kansas City Football Coaches' Association has resigned from his job, saying it was the only way to correct a mistake.
The association had accused Wayne McGinnis, who has left Olathe South High School, of taking an unspecified amount of money last year, adding that McGinnis returned the missing amount. No police report or charges were filed.
The Olathe School District started investigating McGinnis, who until late last week maintained he was innocent. McGinnis resigned last week; he had left the association as its secretary and treasurer last month.
"I tried to take care of it and cover it up," he said. "We know now that that didn't work. Now, I'm admitting to it."
McGinnis said his mistake was a one-time error spurred by desperation.
"I'm not really a bad person," he said. "The mistake I made was a bad mistake. It was just something that happened. I was trying to take care of my family."
financial strain, McGinnis said. To make ends meet, he had been working a second job in the school district supervising the nighttime janitorial staff at Olathe South.
School district superintendent Jody Shelton, who handled the district's investigation of McGinnis, said the school received his letter of resignation Friday.
Illness in the family has caused
But the Olathe School District will continue its investigation to ensure that stolen money has not been used for the school's football program, said Ron Wimmer, superintendent of the Olathe School District.
McGinnis said he was not sure whether the school board would have fired him but explained his resignation with concern for his players.
"It would be extremely difficult for me to work with these kids with the things I preach." he said.
The news of the resignation surprised Olathe South players.
"I'm shocked," junior receiver Joe Tomassi said. "All the things he taught in practice... He made sure we were doing the right thing, I never thought he would do something like that. Some of us were talking about it casually and were pretty mad because we wanted him back next year."
TOP 25 THIS WEEK
How the top 25 teams in The Associated Press' college basketball ball poll fared this week:
1. Duke (16-1) beat Wake Forest
88-52; beat Clemson 81-80.
2. North Carolina (18-1) lost to Maryland 89-83, OT; beat Appalachian State 96-63.
4. Utah (15-0) beat Colorado State 65-51; beat Wyoming 75-58
3. Kansas (21-2) beat Texas A&M
83-65; beat Kansas State 69-2
5. Stanford (16-0) beat Southern California 99-62; beat then-No. 8 UCLA 93-80.
6. Arizona (15-3) beat Arizona State 127-99; beat then-No. 15 New Mexico 89-70.
7. Kentucky (15-2) beat No. 14 South Carolina 91-70; beat then No. 22 Arkansas 80-77, OT.
9. UCLA (13-3) beat California 74
lost; to then 0. Seattle 93-60
10. Iowa (15-2) beat Ohio State
61-46; beat Minnesota 82-69.
8. Connecticut (16-2) beat Seton Hall 80-59; beat Georgetown 86-72; Monday night at St. John's.
11. Princeton (13-1) did not play.
12. Purdue (15-4) beat Illinois 68-58; lost to Indiana 94-88.
13. Mississippi (12-2) lost to Tennessee 77-67.
15. Syracuse (15-2) lost to Provi-
dence 76-64; beat Miami 85-67.
16. Michigan (14-4) beat Ohio State 79-61
17. New Mexico (13-3) beat Colorado State 78-64; beat UNL V 79-61; lost to then-No. 5 Arizona 89-70.
18. Arkansas (14-3) beat Florida 89-84; lost to then-No. 6 Kentucky 80-77, OT.
19. Xavier (11-4) lost to George Washington 78-73, OT; beat Virginia Tech 77-66.
20. Florida State (13-5) lost to No. 25 Clemson 86-65; beat Georgia Tech 70-67.
21. Cincinnati (13-2) ; beat Southern. Miss. 77-61; beat Louisville 71-57
22. Rhode Island (12-3) beat La Salle 84-73; beat Tulane 85-61; lost to St. Bonaventure 85-11
23. West Virginia (15-3) lost to Notre Dame 74-72; beat Villanova 79-65, OT.
24. Hawaii (12-2) beat Southern Methodist 77-68; Monday night v.
Texas Christian.
25. Clemson (11-6) beat Florida State 86-65; lost to Duke 81-80.
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Did YOU See It???
"The most exciting basketball game I saw this weekend had no dunks, no overinflated egos, and no testosterone surplus... I'm talking about the unranked Kansas women's basketball team surprising No. 16 Nebraska..."
- The KU women upset #16 Nebraska 83-74 in the fifth annual Fill the Fieldhouse.
Weslander - University Daily Kansan
- Down by 20, the Jayhawks never quit and stunned Texas when they came back for a thrilling 76-71 victory.
"We showed great character. Texas was like, 'We got this'. But we didn't die. We didn't go away. They expected us to lay down... I knew we could do it, but we needed a sparkplug." Jaclyn Johnson -- Freshman Forward who added a spark with 14 points
Don't Miss Out Again!!
Next action is Wednesday night at 7:00 p.m. against Oklahoma State.
KU Students FREE with KU ID
Tuesday, January 20. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 5
Big 12 coaches doubt job plan
Some prefer the idea of a full scholarship or NCAA stipends
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Everybody agrees college athletes deserve a little spending money.
After all, the young athletes generate hundreds of millions every year through their skill and hustle, but the schools and the NCAA keep every nickel, minus the cost of a scholarship which the NCAA admits does not cover the full cost of attendance.
But allowing athletes to hold part-time jobs will create even greater problems in the opinion of most coaches in the Big 12 Conference.
"I have mixed feelings about it," said Roy Williams of third-ranked Kansas. "I think they should have the opportunity to become more like normal students. But the fact is, the time demands on them are so great in men's basketball."
"It's going to be difficult on them to find time for a job," he said. "It's the idealistic approach, but in reality I think it's going to be very difficult to handle."
It also could be difficult to administer and monitor. Does anybody believe some schools and boosters
won't violate the rule and pay for work that isn't done?
"How do we monitor it?" asked Oklahoma coach Kelvin Sampson. "In the NCAA, we have a hard time enforcing the rules we have. We're opening a can of worms. I'm all for rules we can manage. My question is this — is this going to have an effect on your recruiting in certain situations? Then we've created more problems. Instead of this, I would probably be more in favor of coming up with some equitable stipend each kid can get."
NCAA officials and school presidents fear that giving a stipend would leave them vulnerable to the touchy issue of player compensation. Give them $100 a month now, and won't demand $200 a月 later?
The NCAA board of directors is expected to come out in April with some kind of rule allowing athletes to hold part-time jobs, starting Aug. 1.
But the anxiety about how to regulate the jobs says something about the state of college athletics, said Texas coach T Pendens.
"It itars people don't trust anybody," Penders said. "It would be a lot easier to set up a work-study program at each school where kids get paid a maximum or minimum and get what they used to call laundry money when I was in school."
The $15 monthly allowance athletes got in the 1960s was long ago outlawed by the NCAA.
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
they bring in, I can't understand why kids don't get that kind of stipend," Penders said. "When they came out and said NCAA scholarships ... are about $1,500 short of (the cost) a full scholarship, I think they admitted something there.
"They admitted that an athletic grant-in-aid is not in fact a full scholarship," Penders said. "I don't think you'll find a coach in the country who would be against players getting a full scholarship."
"Now, with all the millions of dollars
Kansas State coach Tom Asbury said, "It's great in theory. It's not workable. These guys do not have time to be student-athletes and hold down a job. Something is going to suffer. There are two things that won't suffer — basketball and their jobs. So what's left to suffer? It's going to be their academics."
On another point, Asbury still is fuming about being the only Big 12 school scheduled to host a game Sunday. At just about the same time the Super Bowl start in San Diego, the Wildcats will tip off against Colorado.
"It's stupid to have a game this Sunday," Asbury said. "To play a game this Sunday is ludicrous. It's a home game for us, and we're not going to drawfiles."
K-State forward wins player of week
The Associated Press
cats by only a point heading into the
DALLAS — Kansas State's Manny Dies, outwhosthed everybody but Wilt Chamberlain in Saturday's loss to Kansas, has been named Big 12 Conference men's basketball player of the week.
Luke Axtell of Texas was named top rookie for the second time this season.
Dies, a 6-foot-8 junior forward from Wichita, became the first Kansas State player to win the weekly honors in the Big 12, now in its second season. The last Wildcat to win in the former Big Eight Conference was Tyrone Davis in January 1996.
Dies dominated inside against No. 3 Kansas, with 26 points and 11 rebounds. Kansas missed the first seven shots it took and led the Wildhalftime ceremony at which Chamberlain, the legendary Kansas star of the 1950s, was honored with thunderous applause on his first return to Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks ended up winning 69-62, but
Dies: Named Big 12 player of the week.
Kansas State was in the game until the final minute. Kansas star Paul Pierce was held to just 11 points, and the Jayhawks' top scorer was guard Ryan Robertson with 15.
Dies had 27 points and 9 rebounds
Hills had 27 pts
in Wednesday's
77-59 victory
against Iowa
State.
Axtell, a 6-foot-9 freshman from Austin, got his first double-double with 13 points and 14 rebounds in a 91-75 loss at Oklahoma, and then scored 17 in an 88-79 victory over Texas Tech. He won the rookie honors in
NORTHERN SUMMER
a split vote against Oklahoma's Ryan Humphrey, who averaged 8.5 points and 10.5 rebounds in two games.
Axetl: Named top rookie for the second time this season.
BIG 12 MEN'S BOXSCORES
Najera 2-8 1-2 5, Humphrey 3-9 1-2 7, Stone 0-3 0-0
M, Johnson 2-9 0-0 4, Brewer 7-17 3-8 20, Martin
0-3 0-0 0, Spaulding 0-0 0-0, Allison 2-4 1-2 7
Totals 16-5 3-6 1-4 4.3
NEBRASKA 53, OKLAHOMA 43
OKLAHOMA (U.2.5)
SUNDAY:
Florence 3-12 0-2 7, Markowski 1-5 0-0 2, Hamilton 3-10 0-2 6, Lue 6-15 8-9 24, Belcher 2-1 5-2, C Johnson 0-2 0-0, Piatkowski 3-5 0-0 9, Harriman 0-1 0-0, Totals 18-55 9-15 53.
NEBRASKA (12-5)
at Lincoln, Neb.
OKLAHOMA [13.5]
Halftime—Nebraska 26, Oklahoma 22. 3-Point goals—Oklahoma 15 (Stone 0-1, M Johnson 0-4, Brewer 3-8, Allison 2-3), Nebraska 8-15 (Florence 1-1, Lue 4-8, Belcher 0-2, Piatkowski 3-4). Fouled out—M Johnson. Rebounds—Oklahoma 39 (Najera 10), Nebraska 44 (Markowiak 15), Assists—Oklahoma 9 (M Johnson 5), Nebraska 12 (Markowiak, Lue 4).
Total fouls—Oklahoma 19, Nebraska 14. Technical fouls—Najera. A=10,823.
SATURDAY:
BAYLOR 97, NO. 25 OKLAHOMA STATE 95,
20T
at Waco, Texas
OKLAHOMA ST. (12:3)
Peterson 8-18 9-11 29, Mason 6-8 7-9 21, Robisch 3-7 2-2 8, Kinglin 7-1 3-4 20, Gottlieb 1-7 2-2 4, Alexander 3-8 0-9, Montanart 0-2 0-0, Webber 2-4 0-0. Totaals 30-6 7-28 9-5.
Kendrick 7-13 1-2 16, Morris 2-3 1-0 5, Skinner 8-1 1-1 20, Hunter 7-15 1-2 15, Miller 5-13 7-8 22, Jones 0-1 0-0 0, McCaslain 0-0-0 0, Perkins 1-2 0-0 0, Gipson 0-0-0 0, Ramirez 0-0-0 0, Lewis 0-1 0-1 0, Totals 30.59 28.37 97
BAYLOR (10-5)
Halftime — Oklahoma State 36, Baylor 32. End of regulation — Oklahoma State 78, Baylor 78. End of first overtime — Oklahoma State 85, Baylor 85. 3-point goals — Oklahoma State 11-12. (Peterson 4.9, Alexander 8-3, Mason 2-3, Adkins 2-3, Gottlieb 0-1, Webber 0-1), Baylor 9-25 (Miller 5-1, Morris 1-1, Perkins 1-2, Kendrick 1-5, Hunter 1-5, Jones 0-1). Fouled out — Robisch, Kendrick, Rebounds — Oklahoma State 33 (Peterson 9), Baylor 39 (Skinner 1). Assists — Oklahoma State 14 (Gottlieb S), Baylor 16 (Hunter 7). Total foulss — Oklahoma State 26, Baylor 24. Technicals — Mason, Gottlieb, Morris, Miller, Baylor bench. A — 9,175.
COLORADO 81, MISSOURI 78
al Boulder, Colo.
MISSOURI (9.7)
Hafer 2-2 0-1 4, Thames 6-11 4-7 16, Hardge 6-15 8-11 20, Grawer 0-0 0-0 0, Woods 3-7 1-2 8, Lee 5-10 0-10 0, Decker 0-0 0-0 0, Ray 0-1 0-0 0, Parker 0-0 0 0, White 8-14 4-6 20, Totals 30-60 13-21 78.
DADG (Z 7)
Smith 2-6 5-9, DeGray 5-8 7-8 17, Melvin 9-14 0-1
18, Hughes 1-9 3-4 5, Jones 0-0 0 0E, Price 7-14
4-24, Frier 1-2 3-5 5, Renfroe 0 0 0 0O, Thomas 2-
4-0 0.4, Totals 27-57 22-28 81.
Halftime - Colorado 48, Missouri 45. 3-Point goals - MU 1-5 (Thames 0-1, Woods 1-2, Lee 0-2, Ray 0-1, White 4-6), CU 5-1 1 (Hughes 0-3, Price 5-7, Thomas 0-1). Fouled out - None. Rebounds - MU (Hardge 13), CU (Melvin 7). Assists - MU (Grawer)
5), CU (Frier 7). Total fouls—MU 19, CU 17. A—
5,762.
IOWA STATE 68, TEXAS A&M 59
TEXAS A&M (6-9)
IOWA ST. (9-8)
Jack 4-8 0-0 8, J. Brown 0-2 0-0 0, Thompson 4-7 0-1 8, Barone 1-6 0-0 2, Schmidt 3-11 0-0 1, Jones 9-1 8 0-2 1, Clayton 3-8 1-2 10, Houston 1-7 0-0 3, T. Brown 1-2 0-0 2, Reeves 0-0 0-0 0, Richards 0-3 0 0)
Totals 26-72 1-5 59
Fizer 6-12 3-5 15, 5, Johnson 2-6 7-8 11, Shirley 4-6 0-2 8, B, Johnson 1-2 1-2 3, Love 1-2 1-4 3, Knoll 0 0-1 0, Washington 1-3 2-3 4, Rancik 3-6 4-1 4, Curry 2-3 0-0 5, Edwards 2-3 3-4 7, Totals 22-43 21-32 68.
Halftime—Iowa St. 40, Texas A&M 24. 3-Point goals—Texas A&M 6-12 (Clayton 3-6, Schmidt 2-4, Houston 1-1, J. Brown 0-1), Iowa St. 3-7 (Ranick 2-5, Curry 1-1, Love Fail 0-1), Fouled out—Schmidt, Jack, Rebounds—Texas A&M 32 (Jones 12), Iowa St. 44 (Shirley 13). Assists—Texas A&M 10 (Barone 3), Iowa St. 14 (Love 3), Total fouls—Texas A&M 25, Iowa St. 9: A—11,830.
KANSAS STATE [11-4]
NO. 3 KANSAS 69,KANSAS STATE 62
Dires 11-7 4-16 2-6, Sims 2-3 0-0 4, Rhodes 4-11-2 1-2 11, Swartzendruber 1-4 0-0 3, Davis 1-5 0-0 3, Vasilievic 1-3 2-2 4, Griffin 1-4 0-0 2, May 4-7 0-0 9, Reid 0-0 0-0, Totals 25-5 4 8-10 6.
KANSAS [21-2]
Earl 5-9 2-14 12, Pierce 3-13 5-6 11, Chenwhitn 0-3
2-3 2; Robertson 4-9 6-16 15, Thomas 4-13 0-0 11,
Gregory 3-6 0-3 6, Bradford 2-3 0-0 4, McGrath 0-0
0-Pugh 0, Pugh 3-5 2-2 8. Totals 24 41 7-12 46-9.
Halftime—Kansas 32, Kansas State 11. 3-Point goals—Kansas State 4-15 (May 1, Swartzendruber 1.3, Rhodes 1.4, Davis 1.5, Vasiljevic 0.1, Griffin 0.1), Kansas 4-16 (Thomas 3-9, Robertson 1.3, Gregory 0.1, Pierce 0.3). Fouled out—None, Rebounds—Kansas State 36 (Dies 11), Kansas 36 (Earl 7).
Assists—Kansas State 13 (May 4), Kansas 14 (Robertson 6). Total fouls—Kansas State 20, Kansas 13. A—16,300.
TEXAS 88. TEXAS TECH 79
dAustin, Texas
TEXAS TECH (7.7)
TEXAS (7.9)
Mouneke 6-10 4-7 16, Vazquez 3-6 4-6 10, Mihm
5-11 5-17 5, Smith 1-3 2-25, Axtell 6-12 2-2 17,
Wagner 2-4 2-2 6, Perryman 0-3 3-4 3, Clack 3-6 1-29,
Goode 0-1 00 0, Clark 3-3 2-29, Drakes 0-1 00
O. Totals 29-60 23-34 88.
Halftime—Texas 38, Texas Tech 24. 3-Point goals—Texas Tech 8-21 (Young 2-3, Bonewitz 3-8, Carr 3-9).
Texas 7-18 (Smith 1-3, Axtell 3-7, Clack 2-3, Clark 1-1). Fouled out—None. Rebounds—Texas Tech 41 (Owens 18), Texas 39 (Muoneke 9). Assists—Texas Tech 17 (Young 5), Texas 16 (Muoneke 4, Vazquez 4). Total fouls—Texas Tech 23, Texas 20. A—8,307.
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Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 20, 1998
Kansas vs. Kansas State: At the Game
NSAS 24
Above: Kansas forward Paul Pierce faights for a rebound with Kansas State's Shawn Rhodes.
Right: Kansas forward Lester Earl lays up a dunk.
Below: Kansas guard Kenny Gregory and forward Paul Pierce sandwich Kansas State's Aaron Swartzendrub during the game at Allen Field House. Photos by Steve Paupe/KANSAN
20
E-mail the Kansan photo staff at:
photo@kansan.com
THOMAS
12
REVAT
21
Above: Kansas guard Billy Thomas pressures Kansas State's Aaron Swartzendruber. Photo by GR Gordon-Ross/KANSAN.
Right: Kansas center Eric Chenowith reaches for a shot above Kansas State's Manny Dies (left) and Aaron Swartzendruber (middle). Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN.
K-STATE
4
K-STATE
3
44
Tuesday, January 20.1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 7
Kansan Classified
I
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
100s Announcements
L3.5 On Campus
L3.6 Announcements
L3.7 Entertainment
L4.0 Lost and Found
200s Employment
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing a 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 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
300s
Merchandise
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
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305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
325 Stero Equipment
325 Ticket
340 Automobile
345 Motorcycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
Classified Policy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
410 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
110 - Business Personals
---
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
GUIDELINES
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
Y
100s Announcements
120 - Announcements
H
Spring Break Mazatlan
Don't miss out on the HOTTEST destination in
Miami. Airfare, 7 nights hotel, transfer, FREE
drinks, 15 FREES meals, parties. For FREE
brochure 1-800-385-4968 (www.collegiate.tours.com)
BEST HOTELS. LOWEST PRICES. ALL SPRINGBREAK locations. Cancun, Jamaica, from $99, Florida, from $89, Texas, Mazatlan, from $129, Orlando, to our Campus. BP. 803-374-6373 www.jcep.com
Instructional & Educational video's & CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited Internet
access for only $19.95/mo, tell your parents,
shopping http://www.inetlnt.com/edl.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
1988 SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN NORTHERN 1988SNOVA CASTEP Bucknuck has various positions available to work with youth who have academic and social skill difficulties (ADHD, ADD, ACH) at a school or county school credit. Salary + room & board. Camp is located on a lake in the Superior National Forest near Ely and the BWCAW. Contact: Time baskin@apacker.net
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON KU student FRAME. A PRSCRIPTION EVERY YEAR. SANTA FE. Mass., downtown Lawrence. 843-688-089. We carry Giorgio Armani, Alfred Sung. Next, Dakota Smith, Santa Fe Eyeworks, Nicole Miller, Perry Miller. Our special offers lab, optics lab in the midwest, Midway of K.C. "no cheap backroom grinding." We also supply contactless at GREAT PRICES.
Camp Takai for boys, on Long Lake, Naple. Mail Noted for picture搜集 location, exceptional facilities, and outstanding programs. June 22-23, 10 a.m., Lake Superior basketball, baseball, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, golf street hockey, roller rocker, swimming canoeing, waterskiing, scuba archery, rifley, weight training, journalism, photography, video, woodworking, music, radio study, radio & electronics, dramas, piano accompanist, music instrumentalist/band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater canoeing, ropes course instructor, general staff, backpacker/rock climber/staff. Call Mike Sherman at 1-800-299-6223.
125 - Travel
SPRING BREAK trip to Mexico, Jamaica, and Florida. From $99 & $39 Call Jason at 804-914-4172
HAIR CARE
***Spring Break '98 Get Going!**! Cancun,
Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida. Group discounts
and specials. Visit us on line Now!
!! Vita/MC/Cris/Amex 1-800-323-7050
http://www.mediterraneaurturies.com
SPRING BREAK!
CANCUN * BANHAMAS
24 HOURS OF
FREE DRINKS!
Z_nights from £299
included 10 nights of all three and optional weekly schedules of two nights of all three and optional weekend breaks (upon request in VISUAL AND REAL TIME)
$196 for a week!*
SPRING BREAK '98
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
BEST RATES ON SOUTH PADRE'S
HOTTEST CONDOS AND HOTELS
$196 for a week!*
CLASS travel
空间 is limited Call now!
1-800-B383-6411
or email to MALESICK@CLASSTRAVEL.COM
IF YOU FIND A BETTER AVAILABLE RATE ON THE SAME PROPERTY WELL **MATCH OR BEAT**, IT OR TELL YOU WHY YOU SHOULD NOT TAKE IT! FOR INFO AND RESERVE CALL 1-800-292-7520 VISIT OUR WEB SITE: www.pirentals.com *Arrival March 21 only. Choose 2 of schmoo cruise, parch card, Mexico shopping tour, or Aprilt shuttle transfers. Tax and cleaning fee included.*
COMMONWEALTH AVE LOWE, BOSTON, MA 02122
BOOK PDS 1-8-YT
Recycle the Kansan
140 - Lost & Found
CD case found on Campus Hill Sunday, Jan. 11th
码 843-0125 evenings to identify.
Male and Female
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
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Hard working, energetic persons to teach behavioral program to a year old. Daily upkeep in the library, evenings.
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PT. NEW
Apt. Twn./Tww. 1894-1898 inquire at 2030 Wakaran Kwai
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB Experience Wait
at 1890 CROSSGATE or call 843-8044. EOE
at 1890 BOSTON Gate or call 843-8044. EOE
Kennel help needed. Must be reliable & hardworking Applying in person at Parkinson Awareness Centre, Edinburgh, UK
Mass. & Smart Dell Kitchen Stool Position. StarTac
Mas. & Smart Dell Kitchen Stool Position. StarTac
Rainforest Montessori is interviewing for a job at the 7.9% per hour. Call 643-8000 at student positions. 7.9% per hour. Call 643-8000 at student positions.
Apt. Lening Position. Strong sales skills
Ant. Compensation. IBR Apt. 20-25 hrs.
Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000
Clinton Pkwy.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for Safe ride drivers. Must be 21 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 p.m.
Christian Daycare has 2 part-time openings for morning or afternoon. Must be highly reliable and available to work long time. For interview call 842-2088.
CLASSROOM ASSISTANT NEEDED. HOURS 8:30 OR 9:30 AM TO 12:00 PM year old classroom.
Contact Hilltop Child Development Center 1314 Jawaybhawk Bd. 864-4840. EOE
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wdays. Need experience, ref, own transportation. Work may extend in summer & fall. Call Judy of Call 842-3811.
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for pro-band.
High-strong voice and personality. All styles.
Also, DRUMMER/PERCUSSIONIST/vox w/ exp.$ and fm. 749/3649
Graphic Design and Advertising Internships still available for Sp. semester. Get some real world experience in Design, Web, Advertising, and Printing. Call for more info at PilgrimPage 841-1221.
Looking for a job? Turing positions available
Tuesday & Wednesday 9-11:30am. Tutor
Lawrence High School students. Call Dr. Todd
Martin at 846-8922.
Onsight manager for small apt. complex near campus, full time, upperclassman or graduate student, salary and free apartment, send resume to: P.O. Box 629 Lawrence KS 60944
Adams Alumini Center/The Learned Club adj-
cent to campus, has openings for part time dishwashers for all shifts. Above minimum wage,
apply for a full-time position at Dawn Rudge企
at 864-478 for more information.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES: Openings for 2/14
5 yrs. Educational activities, clean new facility.
Montessori teacher. Please call 865-9783 for more info
COMPUTER SERVICE TECHNICIAN in shop on site FT.PT. Must be able to do troubleshooting. Must be able to work independently. Quals Dr. Lawrence KS. Computer 49. Legends Dr. Lawrence KS. Computer 49.
Babytatier needed Tues. Taura 12:58:1pm for my old boy, must have car for noon pick at Lawrence Nursery school. References needed. 749-1592 after 5pm or 864-4545 during daytime.
**Expansion** # 43 `Nat. co.immediate PT/FT`
**Expansion** # 44 Flexible level-acquire level-acet-
Flexible flexible levels
COMPUTER SERVICE TECHNICIAN in shop on site FT/PT. Must be able to do troublebinding. Must be able to work independently. 420.Legs dr. Lawrence KS. EOE.
Up to $11.45
No expire. nec. cond. apply Call 131-871-9671 11-5
205 - Help Wanted
- - seeks motivated, dependable people to take inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PC skills a must. $100 sign-on bonuses after working 30 continuous hr. minimum shifts. $0hr to start, and $6hr to end. Vacation, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at: KanTei, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this
Assistant assistant MWF 8-1 for baby child care.
Experience preferred. Please call 865-0678.
HELP WANT! THE MAIL BOX is seeking part time help, most morrings & customer service helpful. Register and customer service helpful. Apply in person only 3135. W 8th, Suite C
PT student aid positions available at Hilli
Child Development Center, Mon.-Fri. 12:30-20:
p.m. and Mon.-Fri. 7:15-30:00 m. Please call 644-
819-5130 for information about the Kansas University
from the Kansas Union) for an application.
Adams Alumni Center *The Learned Club* adjudicates to campus, has openings for banquet services, bar tenders and hosts. Flexible hours, daytime and weekend availability preferred. Above minimum wage, employee meal plan in a professional setting. Hours average 5 hours. Applicate to 1268 Broad Ave.
PT assistant teacher positions available at Hilltop Child Development Center, Manh. Fri. 11:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Please call am84490 for more info.
Applications for application from the Kansas Union for an application.
The KUFT TEAM staff is looking for a friendly, energetic, responsible, fitness-oriented supervisor. Come by 208 Robinson for information and at 843-3546, or call by Becky or Shannon at 843-3546.
KU FIT TEAM
CNA/CHAIA Our busy hour for profit home health agency is recruiting caring, team oriented CNA'S/CHIA" to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Evening hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at County Visiting Nurse Association, 368 Missouri. Lower Level or call 841-4638 for PEEO.
The Rock Chalk Cafe at College Park-Nasimshi
part-time party Dish Room Attendants and
Buffet staff 8:00 p.m. weekend days 11:04-09:0
require customer friendly attitudes and the
uniforms, and free meals. Visit us for jib application between 9:04-10:59. to 9:00 p.m.
Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/V/H
SUMMER CAMP JAMBS in the Poco Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in fantasy camp setting. Counselors, WIrs, ARA, and SAR teachers. Visit SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to the "finest summer we'll have." On campus interview, Wed. Feb. 4th at Kansas Union Ballroom, 809-923 CAMP. staff @camptowanda.com.
Growing *R* 1 Residential Home Improvement Co. seeks motivated, desendable people to take
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference,
500 SUMMER CAMP JOB/SBs CAMP/YOUSE CHOSEN! MY, PA. NP. ENGLAND. TEN-CHANCES! MY, PA. NP. LACROSSE. BAKETKELL. GYMNASTICS. RIDING, SWIMMING WS. MT. BIKING, PIO-DANCE, POA. DANCE, POA. ACCOUNTIST, THEATER, CERAMICS, JEWELRY, WOODSHOP, PHO-CREFS, PE MAJORS, ETC. ARRENS STREIEND-1800 -443-4432, FAX 518-633-4938
ad with you to qualify for bonus.
Dining Services
* start at $5.50/hr.
* Flexible Schedules
* Convenient Locations
* Scholarships
Call or stop by any
DH Dining Center:
GSP * 864-3120
Hashing * 864-1014
Hashing * 864-1094
Oilver * 864-907
- Sound Production Asst. ascertains the sound mixes, edits and edits necessary sounds to produce show tapes. Should have some familiarity with sound equipment and calibrate listening skills.
- Box Office Asst. Mgr. completes tasks & office duties related to ticket sales. Takes as a stant, to Box Office Mgr. Works both daytime & evening hours. Some weekend hours required.
To be eligible, KU students must be enrolled in at least six credit hours or one thesis hour. Pick up application and job description in 317 Murphy Hall at KU.
KU's Univ. Theatre is埋建 3 student hourly
Univ. Employs: Aas. Bock Office Mngr. Sound Pro-
duction
- Inga Technical Directive coordinates technical aspects of Inga Theatre productions. Event production teams work directly with Inga.
up to 550 This Week
$360 This Month
By donating your life saving plasma!
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
EARN CASH
(Nabi
Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750
816 W.24th
Hours:
M-F 9 a.m.
6:30 p.m.
205 - Help Wanted
T T T T
child care & light housekeeping for suburban
Chicago family. Must be responsible non-smoking
employee. Please call 212-379-4680.
Cottonwood Inc., is currently looking for enthusiastic individuals interested in providing supports to adults with developmental disabilities in their home and school, as well as able with a variety of schedules that include evening, night and weekend hours. Some schedules may include sleep overs. Responsibilities may vary. Applicants should contact the group living base, implementation of a person centered approach to consumer services, assisting in the development of house management skills, helping with kitchen tasks, and ensuring leisure time opportunities. Minimum of a High School diploma/GED and driving record acceptable to our insurance carrier is required. References must be provided within the related experience helpful. Start hourly pay of $6.00 to $15.00, depending on position. Apply at Cottonwood, 2801 W. 318t; call Joan at 945-6500 or the Kansas University campus, January 23, E.O.E.
225 - Professional Services
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SPEEDING'D DUIT? SUSPENDED DL'Call
SPEEDING'K DUIT? 888-200-7711 Toll Free
SERVICED KM/O 888-200-7711 Toll Free
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
INTERNATIONAL INJURY PRESENTATION INJury Fake ID' and alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
The law offices of DONALD SCHOLLE
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-5116
16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation
RESUMES
COVER LETTERS
TRANSCRIPTIONS
Linda Morton
Certified Professional Resume Writer
CPRW
Professional Association for
Civil Procedure Lawyers
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
X
300s Merchandise
305 - For Sale
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S
S
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases.
Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
315 - Home Furnishings
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-9115
COFFEE TABLE
2win beds,frame box,boxes and mattress,$25,
each $4.50 . Call: @43-1085.
325 - Stereo Equipment
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your audio equipment, amps, tape decks, etc. (785) 236-9338.
Car Crash
340 - Auto Sales
192 mdaa mx3, 86,000 mi manual w/1/m
floo-heel teal in black in alarm new brw b60
192 mdaa mx3, 86,000 mi manual w/1/m
floo-heel teal in black in alarm new brw b60
1996 Jeep Cherokee, 35,000 miles, 4 wheel drive,
it has a windshield wiper, it has a blower,
it has a top in atop (1633) 232-1083.
370 - Want to Buv
$$$$
Want to buy queen size soft-sided waterbed, in good condition. 842-7095.
A
400s Real Estate
405 - Anartments for Rent
3 bdmr, 27 bus on bus route. W/D, brand new
apartment. 775/mh. ASAP! ASAP! 311-9332
2 Bedroom apt. accs at. from men. stadium
4½/month. Great location, only electricity & phone
services. Walk-in closet.
20% off w/ Room Rental.
Sublease BDRM in 3 in BDRM townhouse on Monterey Way. Great price call Ryan at 913-458-6386.
1 BDRM unfurnished apt. at 703 Arizona. Near KU bus route, WD shared, whip garage, Park office.
3 BR/2 BA/WD, close to KU, great view.
4 BR/2 BA/WD, close to CDP, call Dem Brian
5 BR/2 BA/WD, close to HW, call Dem Brian
6. 278 Emery Id. h/dw24
1 B Rowdown Sublease (816 / 1.7 Maa) Central
Bank of India Secured by MasterCard,
Security door code, Call 749-2934 for appointment
Heatherwood Valley Apartments now starring
room apartments. Call 843-7454, hourly 1-6pm.
Call 843-7454, hourly 1-6pm.
Sublease. Roommate will share to a bdmr
apartment at Survise Villa $300/mo + 1/4 mile
from the building. No deposit required.
2 bedroom apartment
Broad office appointment
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a.s.a.p.
call 749-7281
Unfurnished Room
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
Hey! Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting that you on the list for the apt. of your choice this month? We'll be in town in town for the money. Call or stop by to get details. Call @ 845-1455. Park 24 Apartments, 400 W. 21st St.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE
Cedar Grove housing alternative
College. Located in a community co-
ordinated with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere.
Open and divider membership. Call or do by phone.
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
On KU Bus Route
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
M
mastercraft management
WALK TO CAMPUS
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished
Apartment Homes
Completely Furnished
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana 841-1420
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold * 749-4226
Tanglewood
Regents Court 19th & Mass 749-0445
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Pri 8am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
MASTERCRAFT
842.441E
Equal Housing Opportunity
Kansan
Ads Pay
Big Dividends
405 - Apartments for Rent
HOTEL
GREAT LOCATION !!
2 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE JAN. 1
1st month Free $600/mo. + utilities
LOCATED ON 134 VERMONT #CALL 841-9115
2 Bedroom apt. acc. st. from mem. studium.
$475/month. Great location, only pay electric & phone. Free cable and water. Available immediately.
842-9796
WIN A COLOR TV &1ST MO, FREE!
Sign lease for 1BR apt. before Jan. 31st and be in drawing for a color TV. Great location on KU bus lea, 1 BR, apt. with water pd. $465 all apprs w/ATD, built in bookshelves. Avail. Now $795. See details below. Hurry…Don't miss this great opportunity! Enqual Housing Opportunity
410 - Condos For Rent
Avail. Feb. 1, share 2 bed/2 bath condo. Fireplace, dishwasher, washer/dryer, sun room, 1/3 utilities, $194/mo., on bus route. Please call 838-3226.
أُرْحَمَ الْعَيْنِ
415 - Homes For Rent
Sublease 2, BBR 1, BBR 1, W-D hook up, deck and patio 440 mph. plt deposit call 331-6852 or (913) 726-7650.
家园
420 - Real Estate For Sale
Ranch home on basement located on Stratford Rd. 3 + bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office entry. Walk to Class. Priced at $199,900. Call La Teila, BC/ McGhee R.G.E. M435 for information.
Homes
430 - Roommate Wanted
Roommate wanted. Call for info, 843-1103. Good location. $250 plus utilities.
@ bdmr $ bath WD, nice location on Clinton
@ bdmr $ in anytime. Call Julie 1-806-1868
@ bdmr $ ext 210 (expl)
RM needed immediately to share 2 bdr, 1 bath apt.
Close to campus. Rent is $196/u + 1/2 tuil. Rs.
rent already paid. Call 313-2857 to view the apt.
Desperately need female roommate to share new
10k square house. Jan rent 260/mo. + 1/2
$3,000/mo. for 4 months.
Female RM needed to share 3 BDRM apt. $24/mo and 1/8 utilitarian January pass, Call 865-970-2693
Female Roommate Needs ASAP. Share Town
phone 822-396-1951. Bills $230 per
plus utilities. please call 822-1961
Female roommate wanted immediately to share 2Rpt Awl. Meet campus. $159.0 + 1/2 ucl meal
Non-moking female to share 2 bdm, 2 bath
non-professional female. Call 839-4435. Now or
become a teacher.
Non-smoking male wants to share 2 baskets apm.
86140 Leave message. 1-/12 utilities. Call
86140 Leave message.
Open-minded, responsible, n/s, female roommate wakes up and beds in a bedroom/ own bedroom/bathroom
roommate needed to share 3 brim, 2 bath dupe in W. Lawrence. Gward W/D, basemen new W/D. Lawrence. Gward W/D, basemen new W/D.
Roommate needed for a 3 bedroom apt., has 2 bathrooms and driver/grass, great campus area.
Roommate needed: $190 a month + 1/4 utilities.
Roommate required: 4 roommates!
FARE JANE NANJI Call 718-594-7894
SPACIQUES Sr/Gr/folks see 2 N/W Fm. Avail now Bright wavture skylp dkpt. nr. campus. Quit clean air away from traffic, on park Girdes, trees, bridges. D $89 Udli Pd. K4/276 leaf word 10mm·lcm.
A P.H. Student needs to share a quiet and roomy
a two bedroom apartment. $250 for rent + washer
and dryer + fully furnished. Contact Yong at 838-
9455
R/M/roommate needed ASAP. Spacious 2 BR duplex, w/d. W/ d. WAN, rent free. No deposit. $250/mo + 1/2 units. Call Brian at 749-4487 or
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt, at 1128 Ohio. Between campus and downstreet. Close to GSP-Corbin. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No pairs 841-1207.
1. roommate wanted. 3. bdrm. house off &ff 1.
i. Iowa. Fully furnished in distance to camp-
ney Park, grocery, and more across the street.
ii. $300/mo + 1/3 utilities. 855-303-9
818-645-4003
Seeking female coachmate for 3 bedroom nicely furnished townhouse located in new development in N.W. Laundry, 5 months minimal lease, $190
plus 1/2 meals / 19$ deposit, $19$ deposit
381-3427
+ -
Section B · Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 20, 1998
Green Bay fans tap the Rockies at Packer home away from home
The Associated Press
GOLDEN, Colo. — They will gather Sunday in a dim roadhouse at the base of the Rocky Mountains in a blasphemous display of green and gold
to do the unthinkcowboys — the kind with spurs, not cleats. But on the Sunday of the NFC Championship game, about 200 Green Bay fans gathered, marking their hometowns with
G
For 19 years, Wisconsin transplants and Denver Broncos converts have gathered on game day to cheer for their team, surrounded by Packers flags, Packers posters, Packers dolls and, of course, Wisconsin bratwurst.
Hawley, a native of Ashland, Wis., bought the bar after moving to Colorado in 1967 when the Pack was riding high after winning the first Super Bowl.
“it's been a Packer bar ever since,” Hawley said. During the week, the bar stools are occupied by
them hometowns with pushpins on a large Wisconsin map.
"There's been some lean years", said James Johnson, who also goes by the name Coyote. As a young man, the Beloit, Wis., native cheered for Bart Starr.
"This here beard turned white waiting for last year's Super Bowl," he said.
Johnson, dressed in hiking boots, a Packers hard hat, Brett Favre's jersey and gold quilted long johns, explained his loyalty to the Pack bratauwet
"I screamed so hard that I blew out a lung and she had to rush me to the hospital."
James Johnson packers fan
his loyalty to the Pack as he fed his dog Chico a bratwurst.
ment while my wife was having a baby shower upstairs. I screamed so hard that I blew out a lung and she had to rush me to the hospital."
"I love 'em, and I never miss a game," he said. "I remember a few days after my daughter was born, I was watching them on TV in my baseday's championship game in San Diego against the Green Bay Packers.
Tracy Skagstad, 31, of Neenah, Wis., refused to accept a teaching job in Colorado until she located a Packers bar in her new home.
Others see Sundays at the lounge as a way to feel closer to home.
"I think I'm a bigger Packers fan now that I'm out here," said John Hanvey, who moved to Boulder from Stevens Point, Wis., four years ago. "Football to me is more about where you're from than the game itself, and coming here is like going home. There's herds of people here from Wisconsin."
"I found this place on the Internet," she said. "There's a Web site for Packer fans to find places around the country. I make all my travel arrangements around Green Bay games."
Lance Rogers arrived at the bar after the Packers clinched another trip to the Super Bowl. One of the few native Coloradans in the bar, Rogers looked right at home in his cheesehead hat, Green Bay terjev and Packer helmet beer holder.
"I watched the game at home," Rogers said. "I love the Pack and I love the bar — I just hate fighting to use the bathroom."
Broncos fans playing it cool for now
Denver forgoes the usual Broncomania to avoid jinx on team's Super Bowl hopes
The Associated Press
DENVER — Aching from four heartbreaking
PACO BELT
Super Bowl losses, Denver Broncos fans are doing everything they can to avoid jinxing their team.
They are buying T-shirts, cups and caps in droves and desperately seeking tickets to Sun
But the craziness that accompanied the pregame hype in years past is missing — at least for now.
"A lot of the old fans have a degree of, 'We'll wait and see,' but the spirit is extremely high anywhere we go," said Rocky Brougham, who dresses
as Rocky the Leprechaun for Broncs games.
"Everybody is kind of holding their breath, though, because they have lived through a lot of defeat."
Broncomania has made Mile High Stadium one of the NFL's loudest venues, where the cheers and stumping feet have been nicknamed Rocky Mountain Thunder.
In the past two decades, the Broncos have been to the Super Bowl four times, with no wins to show for it.
During the first few trips, Broncomania hit a fevered pitch. Fans jumped into vats of orange Jell-O to win tickets. One modern-day Lady Godiva rode down a pedestrian mall, wearing only orange-and-blue paint and a smile. Thousands of fans packed the stadium on a non-game Sunday in 1987 to show their appreciation for the team's AFC title and Super Bowl berth. That was the season the Broncos lost 39-20 to the New York Giants.
By 1990, fans were more subdued, with only about 500 assembling for a pep rally downtown. That year, San Francisco defeated Denver 55-10.
This year, restraint is the watchword. The pep rally was set for Wednesday, after the team left town. And Mayor Wellington Webb has forgone the traditional bet with the mayor of the opposing
"We would really like to see Elway take this home.I really feel this is his last shot.."
Carol Griffith
broncos fan
team's hometown, saying he doesn't want to jinx the Broncos.
But most fans believe Broncomania will pick up this week, as sentiment grows for John Elway to finally win a Super Bowl.
About 200 people gathered outside the stadium Friday in hopes of buying Super Bowl tickets from season ticket-holders.
"I think it's going up," said Jim Quint of Denver.
"More people are talking about it."
Added Carol Griffith of Wheat Ridge, "I think everybody was afraid to invest up until this point. I think, though, our feeling is that this is more of a sentimental thing.
"We really would like to see Elway take this home. I really feel this is his last shot."
Super Bowl presents advertising spectacle
Controversial ads compete for fans' attention, interest
The Associated Press
NEW YORK—Holiday Inn had strong hopes a year ago for its Super Bowl commercial underscoring the hotel chain's $1 billion makeover.
Designed to grab attention in television's most competitive commercial environment, the ad showed a beautiful woman shocking a classmate at a high school reunion after having had a sex-change operation.
Holiday Inn executives expected viewers to get a chuckle and
check out the changes made to the aging hotel chain. But not everyone was amused, and within 48 hours of the commercial's debut, Holiday Inn scraped the ad.
"People definitely noticed it," said Craig Smith, a spokesman for the
Atlanta-based chain.
"Patrones objediente la urbita."
NFL
"But some objected to the subject matter. Once we found the metaphor was offensive, we thought the best tactic was to remove that metaphor from use."
Holiday Inn's experience illustrates the risks of paying huge sums for a few moments in the spotlight during what is usually the year's biggest TV audience.
His firm, Gallup & Robinson Inc., has been conducting telephone surveys of Super Bowl viewers the day after the game for the past seven years, and last year's survey found the Holiday Inn ad irritated a lot of people.
Super Bowl ads for Sunday sold out two months ago at $2.6 million per minute — the most expensive TV commercial time ever.
"When you get caught up in this kind of thing, you tend to look for something that is different, that will stick out and be remembered." said Scott Purvis, who heads a New Jersey advertising research firm. "But you don't want to leave people with a negative impression."
Purvis said 16 percent of those surveyed said they strongly disliked the commercial, the highest negative response the firm has found for a Super Bowl ad.
Cadillac created a fantasy ad that ran on the same telecast featuring model Cindy Crawford as a bored princess who leapt at the chance to escape her castle in a new Catera.
The Holiday Inn ad wasn't the only Super Bowl commercial vanked soon after its debut.
The company questioned if a supermodel was the right messenger.
interested in the $30,000 car, said Cadillac spokeswoman Julie Hamp. Hamp said there were worries inside the company that the ad could have been alienating potential customers.
The makers of Dirt Devil vacuum cleaners got a letter from the late Fred
objected to three Super Bowl ads that made it look as if Astaire were using vacuumums as props in dance routines.
Ava McKenzie wrote Royal Appliance Manufacturing Co. that its "patry, unconscionable commercials are the antithesis of everything my lovely, gentle father represented." She also sent a copy of the letter to Daily Variety, which published it.
But the Cleveland company said the ads were made with the blessings of Astaire's widow and McKenzie's step-mother, Robyn Astaire, who has the sole right to make such decisions about Fred Astaire's image.
Consumers liked the ads, said Deborah Holtkamp, director of advertising for the Dirt Devil brand.
Players, coaches insist professional hockey still going strong
Critics challenge claim point to low scores stagnant attendance
The Associated Press
VANCOUVER. British Columbia
Scoring is way down, salaries are way up and attendance is flat. Wayne Gretzky and other NHL stars are aging, and there
NHL
could be trouble ahead for some young franchises.
Then again, next month's Olympics could provide enough exposure to solve a myriad of problems.
Still, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman insists these difficulties don't provide an accurate reading of the state of hockey entering the second half of what could be the most important season in the league's 81-
year history.
"The ownership of franchises has never been stronger," Bettman said during All-Star weekend in Vancouver, which finished Sunday with the North American team's 8-7 victory against a "World" squad of European stars.
"If you exclude Carolina this year, I believe (attendance is) down six-tenths of 1 percent — coming off a record年, when we played at 90 percent capacity. I don't view that as a problem.
"It may well be that we've gotten to the point where defense has gotten too much of the upper hand on offense, and we may need to turn the dial a notch or two. We're not talking about radical solutions.
"Actually, I think the state of the league is pretty good."
And it's bound to get better when NHL stars go to Nagano, Japan, to take part in the Olympics for the first time. The league will shut down for 16 days. NHL players make up the entire United States and Canadian teams, while Sweden, Russia, Finland and the Czech Republic also will
have large NHL contingents.
"The most important thing is for people in the hockey community to do what's best for the game," said Anaheim's Paul Kariya, who will play for Canada. "Just look at all the attention. This is good for hockey."
IRELAND
Gretsky: One of the older players in the NHL.
Bettman though, said nobody should overstate the importance of pros in the Olympics.
"This is an opportunity to take another step forward," he said.
having trouble reaching the mandatory 12,000 season-ticket sales the league requires. Another new market, Carolina, has had trouble selling tickets since moving from Hartford. The team, which eventually will be based in Raleigh, N.C., has been playing in Greensboro, N.C.
While average annual salaries have shot up to more than $1 million, the money isn't buying goals. At the AllStar break, scoring is at a 42 year low pace of 5.28 per game.
Bettman said he has confidence in both markets, part of the league's Southern push.
"Here is a perception that may not be as good ... as a more wide-open, more free-scoring game would be," Bettman said.
He listed experiments the NHL might try in minor league and preseason games; moving the goal a few feet from the end boards; prohibiting goaltenders from playing the puck outside the crease; eliminating the red line; mandating forechecking; making power plays last a full two minutes even if a goal is scored; playing four quarters instead of three periods.
Bettman's assistant, Brian Burke, added that the size of goallie pads might be reduced. But he didn't think there was much the league could do to prevent the dreaded "trap" defensive system that has become a way of
"Make the net bigger, that's what I say," Phoenix wing Keith Tchakuk said, laughing. "You can't change everything ... but fans don't want to see 1-0 games."
The midseason star fests have averaged 16.5 goals in the 1990s, and even the new North America vs. World format couldn't keep this year's game from becoming a wide-open affair.
That's not a problem come All-Star time.
life for coaches seeking to protect their jobs by keeping games close.
"This format is the closest you can get to making it a competitive situation," Colorado's Peter Forsberg said. "You're always going to have a lot of goals. I know the fans like this a
"The most important thing is for people in the hockey community to do what's best for the game."
People also got to see outstanding performances by some of their favorite stars of old-notably Gretzky, Mark Messier, Ray Bourque and Jari Kurri. Messier turned 37 Sunday, Bourque and Kurri were already there, and Gretzky hits that number next week.
"There's always so much talk about age," Gretzky said. "There are always people saying, 'Well, you guys are 37, maybe you shouldn't play because you're old, maybe you should rest more because you're old.' You know, we just love to play."
"Luburied since / 1933
anaheim player
Red Lyon Tavern
lot better. The scoring is down in the league, and people got to see some goals."
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---
9
Tomorrow's weather
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
ansan
The weather will be a little colder today with continuing cloudy skies.
HIGH 35
HIGH 35
Wednesday
January 21, 1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 • No. 83
Get the skinny on current political issues at Mother Jones' Web site.
Online today
http://www.motherjones.com
图1-30
Sports today
The NCAA alleged yesterday that Kansas forward Lester Earl received payments from Louisiana State before he became a Jayhawk.
SEE PAGE 1B
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NORTH KOREA
SOUTH KOREA
JAPAN
Asian
Malaise
NORTH KOREA SOUTH KOREA JAPAN CHINA ASIAN Malaise MYANMAR LAOS TAIWAN
(USPS 650-640)
CHINA
TAIWAN
MYANMAR LAOS
THAILAND
KAMPUCHEA
VIRTNAM
PHILIPPINES
MALAYSIA
INDONESIA
Graduate student Wuchien Yang monitors the Asian market. He is concerned with the recent drop in the value of the currency of his native Taiwan. Photo by Dan Elansky/KANSAN
MONEY & INVESTING
KU students caught in overseas turmoil
By Tamara Miller Kansan staff writer
Like many University of Kansas students, Andre Widjaja is worried about the cost of a college education.
Widjada, a senior from Indonesia, has an on-campus job to pay for living expenses, but his parents pay his tuition. Widjada now is worried that his parents will not be able to afford tuition this semester.
The currency in Indonesia has been devalued because of an economic crisis in Asia. David Lambertson, director of international development, said that the crisis is affecting many Asian countries, including Malaysia, Thailand, Korea, the Philippines and Indonesia.
The problem began when stock markets in these countries crashed, devaluing the currencies. Indonesia's currency, the rupee, has lost three-fourths of its value.
The economic crisis in Asia affects about 300 students at the University of Kansas, said Hodgie Bricke, assistant director for International Student Services.
Wuchien Yang, a graduate student from Taiwan, said that he was feeling effects of his homeland's financial problems.
"My financial source is my parents and since they're not making as much money as they did, they can't send me as much money," he said.
Bricke said that International Student Services was working with students affected by this crisis. The center is encouraging students to apply for graduate teaching positions or off-campus work permits.
The crisis affected students whose parents paid their tuition and students who had scholarships paid by their country's government.
"The Royal Thai scholarship has been suspended because of the economic crisis," she said. "Those currently on scholarship will continue to receive it, but no new people can receive the scholarship."
"It's easy to give up but if you ask the right offices, I think they will be able to help," he said.
Karen Bailey, University bursar, said that extending the tuition payment deadline was possible, but that each situation was reviewed individually. Students who cannot pay tuition on time also may enroll in the Academic Management Services payment plan.
The plan allows student to pay tuition in four installments. Because the plan began in December, students who enroll now must make the first three payments Feb. 3. The fourth and final payment would be due March 1.
Widjaja said he was trying to defer his tuition payment and was considering an off-campus work permit. He said students should explore their onions.
Regents to examine rights issue
By Gerry Doyle gdoyle@kansan.com Kansan staff writer
What if a University of Kansas student were to paint a picture and then publish a print of it in a coffee-table collection book?
Who would get the money?
The student? The University?
Who?
These questions and others will be addressed by all Regents schools, including the University of Kansas, in a presentation to the Kansas Board of Regents this afternoon.
The topic is intellectual property. It is an issue regarding laws that define who owns the copyright to a work, whether it is a paper, a piece of art, a poem or a computer program. The presentation will encompass the views of the Regents schools' administrations, students and faculty, Provost David Shulenburger said.
"We're all sort of desperate to find a natural solution," Shulenburger said. "There are a lot of things going on nationally that will affect what we do here."
Work done by the University faculty could fall under the control of the University under an item called "work-for-hire." According to the U.S. Copyright Office, this means "...the employer or other person for whom the work was prepared is considered the author for purposes of this title, and ...owns all of the rights comprised in the copyright."
Because of copyright issues, prices have risen to the point where University libraries have 65 percent more money than 10 years ago, but they have 35 percent fewer journals, he said.
One way this could be solved is to move the copyrights from
the professor to the University, he said.
"We have to find out how to balance the rights of the creator with the rights of society," he said. "Society is really built on ready access to information. Copyright law is built on that. Nobody's going to make a lot of money on this."
Students' work may or may not fall under work-for-hire, said Carl Locke, dean of engineering. There is no clear boundary on whether a student's class work belongs to the student or the University.
"Part of the policy will affect student work," Locke said. "Classroom projects have traditionally been the property of the student, but it hasn't been defined so far."
The student presentation to the Regents will state that all work done by students should be their property, regardless of whether it is created using University materials or equipment.
Most students won't face copyright issues, but some fields of study have more potential for conflict. For example, art students may create something that becomes famous or is reproduced for profit.
"It's been mentioned to me before," said Kevin Loecke, Des Moines, Iowa junior. "It's not something I worry about — it seems kind of silly, because I'm the one making the art, and I'm generally using my own supplies."
The debate gets down to the basics of scholarship and creativity at an institute of learning, said Laurence Draper, president of University Senate.
"Traditionally, intellectual property has belonged to the creator," he said. "The question is, 'What are the rights of the creator?'"
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
How it works: Copyrights for works of students and professors — including journal articles, art, books and software — can belong to the creator or the University. Employees who create something in the line of their work generally have the copyrights transferred to their employers because of a work-for-hire provision in U.S. copyright law. However, teachers historically have been immune to this by the "teachers' exemption." There are no definite policies regarding students' work, but in the past, copyrights have belonged to them.
Who it affects? students and professors who create works in the course of their time at the University.
Senate may bend rules to establish new polling sites
By Melissa Ngo
mngo@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
The Daisy Hill polling site controversy will be decided by Student Senate at 6:30 tonight in the Big 12 Room of the Kansas Unicn.
Two bills up for debate would require Senate to change its rules and regulations to mandate that the Elections Commission set up polling sites at Ekdahl Dining Commons, Oliver Hall and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall.
The original bill was a petition to create a polling site at the cafeteria. A second bill that added GSP-Corbin and Oliver Halls as sites was created in the Student Rights Committee last week.
The controversy centers on whether Senate has the jurisdiction to regulate these sites. Senate rules and regulations state that it is the responsibility of the Elections Commission to establish and
enforce all rules and regulations relating to Student Senate elections and election campaigns.
"I believe any piece of legislation that is brought up before Student Senate mandating on any aspect of Student Senate campaigns is improper," said Mike Walden, student body vice president.
Bradyinkelder, Elections Commission chairman, said it was not in Senate's jurisdiction to mandate that the commission set the new polling sites.
Brad Finkeldei. Elec-
"Once Senate starts down the road of how elections should be run, every decision on that road limits our impartiality
and fairness." Finkeldei said. "The question senators should ask when deciding how to vote on this legislation is 'Is it appropriate for Senate to be setting the policy for the Elections Commission even though the commission was set up to be an independent board?"
Finkeldei's question
10
Walden: Opposes legislation for Daisy Hill polling
was answered last year when Senate passed a bill that changed the type of campaigning that Senate candidates were allowed to do, said Seth Hoffman, All Scholarship Hall Council senator. Hoffman has been lobbying for a Daisy Hill polling site since September.
Walden said neither last year's legislation nor the polling site bills were in Senate's hurisdiction.
"It is inconsistent to say that Student Senate could regulate campaigns last year, but not this year," Hoffman said.
Walden has opposed the legislation for the new polling sites since the debate began. He ruled the legislation out of order at the last full Senate meeting, but Senate voted to overrule Walden's motion.
"I think (last year)'s legislation had the potential of making it a worse election," he said. "These decisions should be made without Senate intervention."
Finkeldei agreed with Walden and said that the policy was inconsistent, and last year's legislation was inappropriate.
"Student Senate should not be looking at this legislation at all," he said. "It should have been presented to the Elections Commission or put before the student body in a referendum."
ELECTION RULES In Senate Rules and Regulations [6.5.1]
The Elections Commission shall: Establish and enforce all rules and regulations relating to Student Senate elections and election campaigns.
Finkeldei said there was a site at the Kansas Union every year because the Elections Commission learned that it was a needed site.
"We have started down the road to finding out if the three sites are appropriate," Finkeldei said. "If they are sites that bring in voters and are in a fair environment, then we will most likely continue to have them in following years. What we want is the flexibility to decide which sites are appropriate and which aren't. We think the mandate is inappropriate, not the context."
4
Section A · Page 2
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 21, 1998
Cancer drug may slow Alzheimer's
By Graham K. Johnson gjohnson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer
Research conducted by two professors has strengthened the University of Kansas' ties to Taxol research and taken the research in a new direction.
Mary Michaelis, professor of pharmacology and toxicology, and Gunda Georg, professor of medicinal chemistry, have evidence that Taxol, a drug which kills cancer cells, also helps protect brain cells from the effects of Alzheimer's disease. Their research will be published in The Journal of Neuro-
chemistry in April.
Lester Mitscher, distinguished professor of medicinal chemistry, patented a process for harvesting Taxol from yew tree needles.
"Gunda and Mary have made a very surprising discovery," Mitscher said. "Taxol has been one of the most exciting developments in cancer research in years. To have it extended to Alzheimer's as well is really exciting."
Michaelis cautioned that the results applied only to lab cultures and have not been tested in animals yet, much less humans.
"I am pretty hopeful that if we can just understand the process well
Alzheimer's disease slowly destroys brain cells leading to a decline in a victim's mental capacities.
enough, we can try to delay Alzheimer's significantly," Michaelis said.
Scientists believe the mental decline is a result of the buildup of protein bits called amyloids, Michaelis said. This buildup weakens the protein called tau, which holds cell structures together.
Michaelis said University of Pennsylvania researchers theorized that Taxol, which prevents cancer cells from dividing by freezing their structure, might protect brain cells the same way. The drug could hold
Michaelis, Georg and their graduate students tested the theory on rat brain cells treated with Taxol before and after the introduction of the toxic amyloids.
the cell's structure together the way the *tau* protein is supposed to.
"It turned out that in all cases Taxol protected quite nicely," Michaelis said.
Milan Slavik, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, helped develop the method for measuring levels of Taxol in the blood.
"Many anti-cancer drugs, like Taxol, have been found to be useful in other diseases." Slavik said.
Where to get it? Taxol was originally discovered in the bark of the Pacific yew tree, a small, slow-growing tree native to the western United States and Canada. Recent experiments suggest that taxol can also be extracted from the tree's leaves
Taxol facts
what it does: Taxol forms stable microtubules in cell structure. This helps to stop the growth of tumors by keeping chromosomes from passing to new cells.
Side effects: Taxol is known to cause numbness, tingling in toes and fingers, and reduced effectiveness of white blood cells. It also leads to hypersensitivity and bone marrow depletion, two conditions which are dangerous but treatable by premedication.
Above: A rendering of the taxol molecule. Left, a branch of the Pacific yew tree, the primary source for taxol.
Internet users get more gigs
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
Computing service increases memory replaces old servers
By Aaron Knopf
Kansan staff writer
Internet users at the University of Kansas now can create larger Web sites and save more e-mail in their accounts because Academic Computing Services has upgraded the main Internet account servers.
The eagle and falcon Internet servers house approximately 21,000 University Internet accounts. During winter break, Academic Computing Services replaced the old eagle and falcon with more powerful servers and increased their disk space from 34 gigabytes to 126 gigabytes.
Academic Computing Services now will allow the University's Internet account holders to store five megabytes of information in their accounts — more than double the old limit. Users also should see faster load times when accessing Web sites and e-mail accounts.
"Right now there's excess disk capacity, but based on past experience, this never lasts long," said Wes Hubert, Academic Computing Services assistant director.
Other improvements made during break include 32 new telephone lines to the University's dial-in service in Lawrence and 16 lines to the Kansas City-area service. As a result, dial-in users should hear fewer busy signals when dialing the University for Internet service.
Internet usage at the University has grown significantly in the past three years. In 1994, there were only about 2,500 University Internet account holders. Now there are nearly nine times that many users, and more than 5,000 dial-in users from outside the campus network.
The dial-in service pays for itself through dial-in user fees, Hubert said. This year, the budgeted dial-in revenues and expenses are approximately $287,000. The addition of dial-in lines cost $47,000, $35,000 for equipment and $12,000 a year in ongoing line charges.
The total cost of the improvements to eagle and falcon, including the purchase of new equipment, was approximately $60,000. Hubert said the majority of money was spent on the increased disk space. Some money also paid for memory chips for the eagle and falcon servers.
The old falcon is now the server for Usenet newsgroups, a collection of online discussion forums for a growing number of topics. Listproc software, used to maintain and distribute e-mail messages to different University organizations and interest groups, also runs on this machine.
The old eagle server now stores the KU Facts Web site, which is the homepage for the University and several departments.
These services used to coexist on a single, less powerful server.
The movement of these services to the eagle and falcon servers did not go as smoothly as planned. Hubert said.
Richard Kershenbaum, Computing Services manager, was part of the team that moved the services and encountered some difficulties.
A major setback occurred when the migration team was unable to restore the Listproc mailing
THE KU
NETWORK
lists from backup tapes to the new location.
"We finally decided in the morning hours we weren't going to be able to get everything back," Kershbaum said.
Kershenbaum said that Computing Services had started using the backup program, Legato Networker, a month earlier. It had functioned properly during the comprehensive testing process, so its failure was surprising.
They decided to use a backup of the mailing lists that had been made before Computing Services began using Legato Networker but did not know what caused Legato to fail
"I'd say it was baffling in that we didn't know" whether it was hardware or software, "Kershenbaum said.
After all the hardware problems were resolved, Academic Computing Services was left with reconnecting nearly 900 Listproc mailing lists.
Carine Ullom, Academic Computing Services software trainer, administers the Listproc system. She said that ultimately 90 to 100 lists needed repairing. She also works with the users who maintain their respective lists.
"I'd say most of them are taking it in stride," Ullom said of the Listproc users' response to the difficulties.
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Film Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive.
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 $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsletter in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com - these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
CAMPUS BRIEFES
Interim director named for KU health services
Jim Boyle has been named Interim Director of Student Health Services, said University Relations News Coordinator Kathryn Clark, vested in.
Boyle has worked for Student Health Services at Watkins Memorial Health Center since 1987 and has served as associate director since April 1991.
Boyle is filling in for James E. Strobl, who is on an indefinite medical leave, Clark said.
Strobli began working at Student Health Services in 1972 as an administrative officer. He was appointed associate director of the health center in 1974 and was named acting director in 1984.
Man faces sentencing for Potter Lake fight
A man who was arrested for pointing a gun at a University of Kansas student at a fraternity party last fall will be sentenced at 11 a.m. Jan. 29 in Douglas County District Court.
Ernie L. Batsell, a St. Louis resident, pleaded guilty Dec. 9 on a felony charge of criminal threat.
The party followed Beach-N-Boulevard, a Hawk Week event. A fight ensued when members of the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity showed up at the party.
The charge stemmed from an Aug. 19 Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity party at Potter Lake Pavilion.
Batsell admitted to pointing a 9 mm semi-automatic weapon at a student. No shots were fired.
Facilities operations workers searching for a leak in a water line dug a hole eight feet deep on the northeast corner of the power plant yesterday.
University employees search for water leak
Rex Hays, facilities operations assistant director, said workers could not find the leak and would continue the search this morning.
"Typically a leak like that is on a mechanical joint," he said.
Hays said repairing the problem might require temporarily shutting off the water line that supplies Watson Library and Twente Hall.
Hays said that the leak was not related to winter weather.
Ambulance dispatched to help KU employee
The victim, a University of Kansas food-services employee, was not transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
An ambulance was dispatched at 11:47 a.m. yesterday to a bus stop at Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road to help a seizure victim. KU police said.
System defect triggers false alarm at Malott
The alarm was triggered by a system malfunction, Sgt. Chris Keary said.
A false fire alarm at 2:08 p.m. yesterday caused the evacuation of Mabot Hall, KU police said.
Keary did not have an estimate on the number of people evacuated.
April Wiley, who works in the chemistry department, said the evacuation lasted 15 to 20 minutes.
-- Kansan staff reports
ON THE RECORD
$1,000 in damage was caused to a vehicle in Lot 90 Thursday, KU police said.
■ A laptop computer and ethernet card were taken from Room 207 of Green Hall between 5 p.m. Dec. 29 and 10:30 a.m. Jan. 5, KU police said. The items were valued at $1,075.
A laptop computer and ethernet card were taken from Room 275 of Parrot Athletic Center between 5 p.m. Dec. 14 and 4 p.m. Jan. 15, KU police said. The items were valued at $2,180.
Less than $100 in damage was caused to a door in Corbin Hall Thursday night, KU police said. A towel hanging on the doorway caught on fire.
$1,100 in damage was caused to a KU student's vehicle in lot 114 between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 3 p.m. Thursday, KU police said.
A KU student's parking permit was taken from Lot 90 between 9 a.m. Saturday and 4 p.m. Sunday, KU police said. The permit was valued at $75.
A KU student reported an accident late Friday evening at lot 102 and Engel Road, KU police said. Another KU student was ticketed for
Two fire extinguishers were taken from the 3rd and 4th floors of Oliver Hall early Saturday morning, KU police said. The items were valued at $50.
A KU student's video game and control deck were stolen from a room in McCollum Hall early Saturday morning, KU police said. The items were valued at $174.99.
A cellular phone, keys and other items were taken from Room 211 of Robinson Center Saturday morning, KU police said. The loss was valued at $209.50.
n An accident in Lot 111 Sunday caused minor damage to three vehicles, KU police said.
$13 in cash, a black nylon purse and a black wallet were stolen from a Jayhawker Towers employee's car in the 1100 block of Tennessee late Thursday night. Lawrence Police said.
duty to report an accident.
Lawrence police responded to a KU student's report of domestic battery early Sunday morning. Police said the incident occurred in the 1400 block of Tennessee between 4:00 and 4:30 a.m.
A KU student's "hella" light and light covers were stolen from his car in the 1400 block of Tennessee early
Two Visa cards and an American Express were stolen from an employee of the Economics Department between 8:00 a.m. on Jan. 12 and 5:30 p.m. Jan 16, Lawrence police said. The cards had no dollar value.
- A black leather wallet, driver's license and social security card were stolen from a KU student in the 900 block of Massachusetts between 8:30 Friday night and 8:00 Saturday night, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $45.
A KU student lost $199 dollars in books, plus his driver's license and book bag, when they were stolen from his car in the 800 block of Michigan between 9:00 and 9:50 Sunday night. Lawrence police said
A KU student's license plate, valued at $5, was stolen from his car in the 300 block of Windsor place, Lawrence police said.
A KU employee's car was broken into, and a Burma leather coat taken from it, between midnight and 1:45 Thursday morning, Lawrence police said, causing $600 total damage.
meadowbrook
Monday morning, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $400
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Concert Series presents
Samuel Ramey
When the world's beloved bass-baritone performs a selection of evil arias, Kansas has
A Date with the Devil
Thursday,
January 29, 1998
8:00 p.m. Lied Center of Kansas
performing with the Kansas City Symphony
William A. Glagphin,
Music Director and Conductor
All tickets 1/2 price for students
THE LIED CENTER
STUDENT
SENATE
Wheelchair
K
K
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS);
Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); SUA Box Office (864-3477) or
Ticketmaster (785) 234-4545. Visit our website www.ukans.edu/~lied
Stand Out. Become an RA.
ALL application materials
are due to the
Department of
Student Housing
Corbin Hall, by
6:00pm Tuesday.
January 30,1988.
For more information,
contact Scott Strawn
...
at 785-864-8784
EO/AA Employer DSH
Wednesday, January 21. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 3
Haskell speaker highlights history
Kansas Woman of the Year shares university's pride
By Sara Anderson Kansan staff writer
A university founded to destroy the Native American culture now promotes self-determination and higher learning among Native Americans, said the keynote speaker at the Haskell Indian Nations University's spring convocation yesterday.
Dee Ann DeRoin, recipient of the William I. Koch Outstanding Kansas Woman of the Year award and a physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center, spoke to a group of about 200 Haskell students. A reception followed in the Stidham Student Union.
DeRoin, who is also president of
the Haskell Foundation Board of Trustees, focused her speech on the history of the university.
"I opted to do something that students don't have a chance to hear about," she said. "With freshman and the new students so worried about their new schedules, it gives them perspective about their history."
DeRoin said that the original purpose of the university, founded Sept. 17, 1884, was to extinguish Indian culture across the country.
But in the last three or four decades, a new philosophy of self-determination has evolved, she said.
"The policy was to move children farther from home so they were less likely to have their family come visit and have influence on them," she said. "We need to celebrate Haskell History. It's because of the traditions and strengths of Indian families, clans and tribes we have survived. I would like to remind you all that
"We need to celebrate Haskell History. It's because of the traditions and strengths of Indian families, clans and tribes we have survived."
Dee Ann DeRoin
William I. Koch Outstanding Kansas Woman of the Year
you are the reason that we're here and Haskell exists."
DeRoin was presented with a dance shawl in the university's purple and yellow colors after her speech.
Bob Martin, president of Haskell, said the university chose DeRoin because of her close connection with the university and because of her recent award.
"We want to acknowledge her achievements and contribution to Haskell and native education." he said.
Haskell has two convocation programs each year. Martin said that while most universities had only one, it was important to welcome the new and returning students each semester.
"We want to set the tone for the new semester and challenge students to stay focused on their educational goals," he said. "January is a new year, and we want to take the opportunity to gather as a body and welcome everyone as we begin the new semester and new year."
Lovella Yazzie, a first-semester freshman at Haskell from Window Rock, Ariz., said she enjoyed DeRoin's speech.
"I liked the part about the history of Haskell," she said. "I'm not from Kansas, so I didn't know all of the history myself. It makes me want to know more about it."
Commissioners debate anti-alcohol tax
City officials want specific spending guides
By Jeremy M. Doherty
jdoherty@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
Anti-alcohol statutes and building renovations were key concerns at last night's meeting of the Lawrence City Commission.
The commission received and approved draft copies of a charter ordinance which would exempt the city from a state law concerning the expenditure of alcohol tax funds.
Mike Wildgen, city manager, said the statute provided Lawrence with nearly $330,000 for drug- and alcohol-abuse prevention and treatment programs.
Marty Kennedy, commissioner, said the law was unclear on exactly how the funds would be allocated into prevention and treatment programs. The charter ordinance outlined seven circumstances that would be acceptable for tax use. The commission favored the ordinance because of the vagueness of the original alcohol tax law.
"We want to go with this option," Kennedy said. "It'll allow us more flexibility."
Wildgen said the charter ordinance could be voted on at next week's meeting.
Among other items discussed at the meeting was a $30,000 facelift of Holcom Sports Complex at 2700 W. 27th St.
The commissioners voted 5-0 to approve a resolution that called for $350,000 in bond funds to cover renovation and improvement activities at five city facilities, including Holcom.
Wildgen said that the complex needed new equipment for heating, ventilation and air conditioning.
In addition, nearly one-third of the funds would go toward bathroom upgrades and new furniture at City Hall. Window and door replacements as well as lighting upgrades are planned for the Fire Department at a cost of $90,000.
In other agenda items, the commission moved to begin negotiations with Lawrence-based Michael Treanor Architects to design a new indoor aquatic center.
Wildgen said that the commission was interested in installing a pool of 25 or 50 meters in length. The negotiations will determine a price range.
A final decision on the location of the indoor center had not been made yet, Wilden said. He said that the commission was looking at Centennial Park and Free State High School as candidates.
Other action
Awarded a construction contract to BRB Contractors, Inc., for the Biosolids Facilities project at the Wastewater Treatment Plant in the amount of $6,306,000.
■ Awarded a bid to Roy Conley Company for three rear loader refuse trucks in the amount of $231, 573.
■ Awarded a bid to Roy Conley Company for a roll-off refuse truck in the amount of $70,845.
Approved a recommendation to place the Ludington/Thacher residence at 1613 Tennessee St. on the Lawrence Register of Historic Places.
- Reviewed and approved the minutes of previous meetings of the City Commission, Bicycle Advisory Committee and Public Health Board.
- Approved Phase I of the site plan for Corpus Christi Church, located on the south side of West 15th Street and east of George Williams Drive.
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Opinion
Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor Marc Harrell, Business manager Dave Morantz, Managing editor Colleen Eager, Retail sales manager Kristie Biasi, Managing editor Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser Tom Eblen, General manager, news adviser Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
4A
Wednesday, Jan. 21, 1998
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THE SPOKESMAN REVIEW
Editorial
Roe vs. Wade and abortion debate requires open minds, tolerance
Abortion is a volatile issue, causing intense debate and dividing our consciences. Such issues have always been debated and open dialogue should continue if we are ever to reach any agreement of what is morally acceptable.
In a country where free speech is practiced, our universities should provide a forum for debate. Students are opinionated and vehement in supporting their opinions. Whether an abortion-rights advocate or anti-abortion, we seek to solve a moral dilemma. We also ask tough questions such as what human life is.
Amid our discourse on abortion, we must be careful not to become morally aloof and out of touch with reality. No one can interject a single moral code that everyone will uphold. Emphatic
The freedom to speak carries with it the responsibility to listen to others' ideas too.
assertions in favor or against abortion should be carefully thought-out and all circumstances should be taken into consideration.
Fred Phelps and other moral bigots only promote ignorance and misunderstanding. They fuel the flames of prejudice and hatred. When people like Phelps engage in moral mud-slinging, the debate becomes tainted to the point that right cannot be extricated from wrong.
While Roe vs. Wade made the abortion law clear, it did not settle the abortion
controversy. Government cannot legislate morality.
As the 25th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade on Jan. 22 approaches, we reflect on the controversial subject matter of the case. But we should also reflect on the freedom (and thus responsibility) with which we debate sensitive ideas.
Right or wrong, the moral question that abortion poses will not be solved easily or completely. However, discourse is the only way to narrow the vast rift between two sides. An old Native American proverb says, "Listen or thy tongue will keep thee deaf."
We must respect and listen to each other in order to overcome the divisive nature of the issues that separate us. If we cannot—or will not—then we lessen the very freedom to speak about them.
Nick Zaller for the editorial board
Saferide deserves to be bailed out
Last year 18,801 people used Saferide. Some were intoxicated drivers who could have killed themselves or someone else, contributing to the $460 million cost of alcohol-related traffic deaths and injuries in Kansas each year. Others may have been students on their way home from the library late at night who could have met trouble along the way. This life-saving service is in trouble of being terminated and deserves to be saved.
There isn't enough money to see the program through the year. It's short by $30,000. We hope that the money needed to keep the program running will be be taken from Senate's reserve account. This short-term solution is unquestionably needed, but a long-term plan must be found.
Senate's successful program is used by students to save them from others,themselves
This isn't just a service for drunks. In fact, according to a 1993 compilation of data for the Senate Saferide Proposal, only 25 percent of the calls originated from bars. That's still 4,700 passengers.
Both the KU police and the Lawrence Police Department support the program. Managers of Saferide are hoping it will qualify as a preventive measure so that it could acquire state funds reserved for alcohol awareness.
semester. This obviously is not a realistic option — students at the University need the program.
Cut Saferide for the rest of the
- Reduce the hours of Saferide. It runs from 11 pm to 3 am every night at a cost of $27 per hour. Taking off even a half an hour or 15 minutes from each end of the schedule would reduce costs by $400 a month. This rescheduling could help keep Saferide running.
Take $30,000 from the Student Senate reserve account. There is currently more than $250,000 in the reserve account. It seems that Saferide could function with a little help from Senate.
Student Senate should do everything in its power to save Saferide. Otherwise we will lose a program that likely has saved lives in the past and could save lives in the future.
Kansan staff
Paul Eakins . *Editorial*
Andy Obermueller . *Editorial*
Andrea Albright . *News*
Jodie Chester . *News*
Julie King . *News*
Charity Jeffries . *Online*
Eric Weslander . *Sports*
Harley Ratliff . *Associate sports*
Ryan Koener . *Campus*
Mike Perryman . *Campus*
Bryan Volk . *Features*
Tim Harrington . *Associate features*
Steve Puppe . *Photo*
Angle Kuhn . *Design, graphics*
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Corrie Moore . *Wire*
Gwen Olson . *Special sections*
Lachelle Roades . *News clerk*
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"I'm not one of those complicated, mixed-up cats. I'm not looking for the secret to life or the answer to life. I just go from day to day, taking what comes."
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 home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
-Frank Sinatra, The Chairman of the Board
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 letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stuiffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermuelmer (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the staff point (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Snow fights remind us that we can get along
This is not a unified campus, to say the least. And, rightly so.
Perspective
When you bring together 25,108 people of diverse backgrounds, religions, hues and
One thing that certainly unites us is basketball.
views, what brings us together is going to be more rare than what separates us. However, sometimes we manage to get away from the issues that divide us.
One thing that certainly writes us into shells.
PETER WEBB
Thousands of students stand behind 12 students with the goal of victory. And if Jayhawk basketball games are one of the top unifying factors, then surely another past time — arguing about basketball — unites us as well.
Sam Pierron
opinion@kansan.com
For freshmen, there may be no stronger unifier than shared experiences of nonsensical ENGL 101regulations and MATH 104 graduate teaching assistants who speak four languages, none of them English.
At the end of last semester, though, I discovered the greatest unifier: the first snow.
As the snow fell, people started to come outside and revel in the wondrous beauty of snow glistening in the streetlights, watching flakes make their way to the ground.
It's funny what you'll see people doing on the night of the first snow: making angels, running around like kids, kissing like sixth-graders behind the swings and sledding on dinner trays like college students have since the dawn of time, or at least since the dawn of hard plastic dinner trays.
Of course, all of these things are secondary to snowball fights.
On east Campus, a horde went from building to building, starting at the school halls and working its way down to the greek houses around them, gathering people as it went. About 200 Greeks and school hall residents all with the aim of getting one another wet. It was a beautiful sight.
Apparently, a grander melee took place on Daisy Hill, with a reported 900 people indulging in the simple pleasure of snowball warfare.
Getting 900 people on Daisy Hill to do anything other than eat at Mrs. E's is such a remarkable feat in itself that even the most hardened onlookers must have surely broken down in tears of joy.
Maybe that's what makes the first snow such a great unifier.
After nine months, we forget just how beautiful snow is. Instead of carrying on about the merits and demerits of campus issues, we sit back and let Mother Nature work her artistic wonders.
When the first snow comes, the world becomes a new place again, full of wonderment and awe. That's why we act like children on that night, a night which comes every late November or early December. Snow is new again, so different from the daily routine of classes and kegers. Snow is pure, clean and shining, free of complications. Childhood, unlike our lives now, is simple and uncomplicated, free of the burdens of adulthood. Snow reminds us of times past.
Tomorrow, the snow will either melt or stay as an icy nuisance.
Either way, it will become just another thing to complain about. Who likes dirty slush on their car? For that matter, who likes driving up one of Lawrence's many hills without any sort of traction? Like everything else, it becomes a complication.
For now, though — for tonight — we can forget about complications.
Heck, somebody slid into my car and dented it last night while it was parked on 14th Street thanks to our rediscovered friend. I didn't have the energy to be angry. The thought didn't even cross my mind. I took one look around, filled out the police report, and was on my way without so much as a frown. Who could be angry? The first snow was here.
Sam Pierron is an Oatle junior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Legislation before Student Senate
Sponsor: Tom Preheim, Treasurer
A Bill to Fund Saferide
Bill calls for a $30,000 allocation from the Senate Reserve Account to continue running Saferide.
A Bill to Fund the KU Lecture Series Speaker Al Franken
Bill calls for a $9,000 allocation from the Unallocated Account for the Lecture Series.
Sponsor: Larry Gibbs, LA&S Senator
A Resolution Concerning Polling Sites
Sponsor: Seth Hoffman, ASHC Senator
A Bill to Fund the "Unity in the Community - Jayhawk Stomp"
A Resolution to Support a University Policy Protecting Student Ethical Choice in the Dissection of Animals in Education Sponsor: Kevin Yoder, IFC Senator
Sponsor: Mike Walden, Student Body Vice President
A Resolution Supporting Improvements to Robinson Center
From Student Rights Committee
From Finance Committee
A Resolution Charging the Recreation Services Advisory Board with Examining the Feasibility of Construction Near Robinson Center
From Student Rights
Genuine reproductive freedom means that women and
A Bill to Add Corbin/GSP and Oliver Hall Polling Sites
Old Business
Brad Finkeldei, Elections Commission
Todd Moore, Big Brothers and Bie Sisters
Open Forum:
The meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. in the Big 12 Room of the Kansas Union. The Student Executive $\varphi$ Committee will meet at 5:15 p.m. in the Governor's Room. All legislation is posted in the Student Senate office, 410 Kansas Union.
Ron Thornburgh, Secretary of State Shari Sokol & Misti Spann, "One University" Task Force
Feedback
The consideration of the Daisy Hill Polling Site Bill.
On Jan. 22, this nation will commemorate an historic landmark that changed the lives of American women. The U.S. Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade, perhaps more than any other case, made it possible for women to fully participate in American life. By recognizing a woman's right to legal abortion, Roe allowed women, not the government, to decide when the time was right, and when it was not, to become a parent.
Reproductive freedom questioned despite Roe vs. Wade
Most KU students were born after the Roe decision was handed down, so we may think that the right to choose is protected. We may think that we are immune to what our mothers and grandmothers suffered in the days when abortions could only be sought in shadowy back alleys and in other countries. Yet, 25 years later, the promise of Roe is unfulfilled.
Women do not have the same level of protection the court recognized in 1973. The Supreme Court's decision in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey diminished protections for women by permitting states to impose restrictions that would have been unconstitutional under Roe.
Sarah Deer
Regan Cowan Scottsdale, Ariz., senior
Sarah Page Prairie Village senior
Stacey Mann Lawrence senior
Jennifer Curry
Lenexa sophomore
Sally Puleo St. Charles, Ill. sophomore
As we approach the 25th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, we must wake ourselves and our fellow students to the broader truth that reproductive freedom cannot be obtained without the ability to exercise that choice without violence, indignities, or interference.
men have the means to make informed, responsible decisions about sexuality, contraception, pregnancy, childbearing and abortion. Congress and the nation must adopt a coherent national reproductive health policy that would help reduce the need for abortion. As we continue through college and beyond, we must have a voice in advancing this policy; thus, realizing the promise of Roe v. Wade.
While $24,000 may seem like the going rate for "good speakers" for a university. I just thought that some of you might like to know that there are other good people out there. If you do the math, we could potentially bring 10 speakers from Speak Out to KU for the cost of Al Franken. Speak Out is the country's only not-for-profit national speakers and artists agency. They work with 200 progressive speakers and artists. See our web site for information. Some of the speakers who are available are Noam Chomsky, Jim Hightower and Jesse Jackson.
Speakers fee could be better spent to serve students
Costs range from $500 to $1000 per engagement plus travel, lodging and meals.
It makes you think what $24,000 could really do for the student body. And $24,000 is more than a living wage for a year in the United States.
Paying $24,000 to bring Al Franken (who is first and foremost a comedian) to the university for one night instead of paying about $2,000 for someone whose life is dedicated to their message just doesn't make sense.
Matt Bachand Yorktown, Va., senior and Student Senator
Wednesday, January 21, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
KU study examines toxins
EPA gives $650,000 to examine health near Kansas plants
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
Professor Dennis Lane did something unusual last Tuesday. Instead of answering student's questions, he went to Chanute to answer questions about his research from locals who normally wouldn't care.
Lane, professor of civil and environmental engineering, went to Chanute to help stimulate public participation for the Southeast Kansas Health Study. The study will evaluate the possible health risks of pollution from a high concentration of waste-burning plants in the Chanute, Fredonia, Independence and Coffeyville areas of southeast Kansas.
"People are very curious. Here is this KU professor setting up little black boxes and they want to know what's in them, why do you care?" Lane said. "I went down there to help answer those questions."
John Smith is the United States Environmental Protection Agency's project engineer for the
study. He said the agency had called for the study, in part, because of complaints and health concerns voiced by citizens of the region since the mid-1980s. The EPA also wanted to determine whether the close range of the four plants might increase the toxic effect despite individually meeting safety regulations.
"It's kind of unique to have four commercial waste-burning facilities in such close vicinity." Smith said.
The plants include three cement- mixing plants in Chanute, Fredonia and Independence, and an incinerator in Coffeville.
Last September, the EPA granted $650,000 to the University of Kansas Medical Center to conduct the study in conjunction with the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Lane and Glen Marotz, professor of civil engineering, will take air pollution samples and the Med Center will study human health issues.
The first phase of the two-and-a half year study will be dominated by "stakeholder's" meetings, community meetings to answer concerns and get citizens involved through their suggestions, and voluntary participation in medical testing.
Smith said the stress placed on community preparation and involvement made this study unique.
Chanute
Fredonia
59
75
69
Independence
160
7
169
96
Coffeyville
OKLAHOMA
MISSOURI
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
"It's a different way of doing studies," Smith said. "It's probably even less common to the average scientist."
But public participation will be necessary to gather good data about the health of those potentially affected by the pollution from nearby plants. Lane said.
"It was a little bit of an adjustment for me. But it was fun. It was very successful," Lane said. "If you can't get the community involved, then you aren't going to have good science."
Lane said the study was not merely an attempt by the EPA to quell the community's concerns.
"This is not just P.R.," Lane said. "There is a legitimate scientific question here."
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7:00PM Kid's Friday Night at the Movies
The Very Hungry Caterpillar - 30 minutes
Wind in the Willows - 60 minutes
7:00PM Darrell Lea & Maria Anthony
Folk Music in the Cafe Expresso
Saturdav. Januarv 24
11.00AM "Saturday Stories"
Reciting German Stories and
Angela Ballina's visits story time, lessons by
Dancers from the Lawrence Art Center
11.00AM Stacy Kueser - signing copies of her
book Color Me Crimson Color me Blue
11.00AM
11:00AM "Saturday Stories"
Performing Celtic Music in the Cafe Expresso
Signing copies of his book and demonstrating
Crap Shooting More Simple & Easy
formance
1. Luci Tang
Performing an act from Cinderella
12 00 Rov 'Kansas' Downs
Native American Flute Music & Chants
performing & singing
4:45PM Seem-To-Be-Players repeat of 12:00 performance
Reading & Signing: Blues Horses Rush in
performing & singing
3:00PM Claddagh Ring
Sunday, January 25
12:30PM Pamela Bruner - Celtic Harp & Vocals
1:30PM New Dawn Native Dancers Performance
2:00PM Caral Dressier - Falky/Blues
2:45PM Rick Averill Storffeilling
Free Balloons & Refreshments
Karen Jacks and Kelvin Schartz Art Work on display in the Cafe Express'
Hours:
Mon - Sat
9:00AM - 11:00PM
9:00AM & 8:00PM
M
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your potential.
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Looking for ways to enhance your college experience and prepare you for future success? Consider membership in Alpha Xi Delta. Our chapter programs encourage self-awareness and personal development so that you can fully realize your potential—now and in future years.
To learn more about membership in Alpha Xi Delta, visit our booth at the Information Fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Building or call Cassie Barnhardt at 865-3581.
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hilltopics
wednesday ◀
1.21.98
six.a ◀
daily kansan
Don't drink, don't smoke, what do you do?
tm!
The straightedge lifestyle is a stand against promiscuous sex and the use of drugs, including alcohol and nicotine. Straightedgers around the world often identify themselves by marking large black X's on their hands, like those put on underage people who enter bars.
"It just seems like drinking and smoking are more like diversions to steer you away from your internal self and from self-actualization. It's just like steering people away from looking inside themselves." Brian Macon chicago freshman
Straightedge students try to find refuge in the 'just do it' society
The year is 1981, the place is a live music club in New York City called CBGB's. A four-man band, calling themselves Minor Threat, comes out from backstage. The singer grasps the microphone, silently watching the crowd silently watch him. The drummer taps his sticks together four times.
story by ronnie wachter $ \textcircled{*} $ Illustration by travis m. millard
Ian Macaye begins screaming into the mike, which he now clenches.
I don't smoke! I don't drink! I don't f--t-
At least I can f--ing think!"
Minor Threat could not have known it at the time, but they were beginning a cultish, worldwide subculture known as "straightedge."
The straightedge lifestyle is a stand against promiscuous sex and the use of drugs, including alcohol and nicotine. To those who follow these beliefs, people known as "straightedgers," it is a method of self-improvement, and does not include
nor does it rule out - religion. It was rooted in the hardcore punk rock scene of 1980s New York, but was steadily expanded across the globe, including to the University of Kansas.
The year is 1997. Brian Macon, Chicago freshman, is one of the University's straightedge students.
"I had been into things like drinking ... and I smoked a little bit and I had experienced some pot, but I honestly woke up one day and said, 'I'm not doing this any more.'" he said.
Even though the University is listed as the No. 8 party school in the nation by The Princeton Review, students who refuse to have sex and use alcohol, tobacco or other drugs really are not all that hard to find.
Many people adopt a straight lifestyle as part of their religious beliefs; only a few because they identify with the straight-edge philosophy. They tend to see intoxicants and sexuality not as freedom or rebellion, but as a restraint. They see bars and house parties as uninteresting rather than entertaining.
"More people need to realize that by drinking and whatnot, it's not really rebelling." Macon said. "It's more or less conforming to what society's expectations are."
Straightedges around the world often identify themselves by marking large black X's on their hands, like those put on underage people who enter bars. Many of them identify with the punk rock scene as well. Macon, with his large eyebrow ring, and straightedge junior Jebon Carlson, who wears thick-rimmed glasses and sports a nearly-shaven head, do stand out in a crowd.
Other straightedgers blend into their surroundings, however. Kaitlin Giddings and Jeff Whittier, both Kansas City, Kan., freshmen and straightedgers, couldn't be picked out from the next student walking down Jayhawk Boulevard. Giddings often wears a white T-shirt and miniskirt, while Whittier prefers jeans and his Operation Ivy T-shirt.
"It just seems like drinking and smoking are more like diversions to steer you away from your internal self and from self-actualization." Macon said. "It's just like steering people away from looking inside themselves."
Many straightedgers are dissatisfied with the world around them, and believe that their lifestyle will help them find solutions to the problems they see.
"I was a mean drunk," Carlson said. "I watched my friends getting stoned, and I didn't like it."
"They're kind of boring." Jim Applehanz,
Topeka freshman and straightened, said
of non-straightenedgers. "The whole week-end involves standing in line to get beer, so they can work up enough courage to talk to a girl. Nothing ever happens."
"No one's got the courage to stand up and say 'Maybe this is wrong' or 'Maybe I should change,'" Macon said. "I try to sift through what they're thinking, and basically there there's no thought process there. It's like, whatever they're doing, if it doesn't affect them, it doesn't exist."
Besides wishing to heighten concern about the dangers of STDs, addictions, drunk driving and pregnancies, some straightedge people take up a variety of other causes, including vegetarianism, animal rights, environmentalism, politics — and atheism.
"I'm trying to better myself, and trying to come to conclusions and sort of sift everything out, and I think if I try to add religion to that, I would just get more confused." Macon said.
Of the non-straightedge students who are familiar with the scene, few seem to have a positive opinion of it.
"I think most of them are fake; most of the ones I run into," said Chris Miller, Topeka freshman. "If people are true with it, then it's cool, but it takes a lot to live like that."
Straightedgers feel that what they believe should not be an issue. "I say, 'I'm straightedge' and people go: 'You suck,'" said Whittier. "I don't see why other people care so much about what we choose to do. It's our life. If we choose not to drink or do drugs, why is it everyone else's problem that we do that?"
Most straightedge students said they felt like outcasts from society, and they have no regrets about that. But the perceived rift between themselves and other students means many straightedgers have different social activities than their peers.
"Being straightedge really improves your Nintendo scores." Applehanz ioked.
Straightedge parties usually involve live bands, dancing and moshing, and lots of caffeinated beverages. The eight-bit Nintendo has also become popular with the KU crowd.
In Lawrence, Macon said he enjoys skateboarding, bowling, going to concerts especially shows with straightedge bands such as CIV, Every Day Life or Youth Of Today—and hanging out.
"Whatever to keep myself busy," he said. "My idea of fun isn't always social. I find fulfillment in doing whatever I want."
As a freshman, Carlson went through fraternity rush, but didn't like what he found.
"I went through hazing, which was fun, but then I realized it was a drinking club, and I was like, 'Oh, this is boring,' so I got out of it," he said.
Despite their opposing viewpoints, straightedgers can have fun with the drinking crowd.
"Rolling drunks is a pastime I've found," Carlson said of literally rolling drunk people across floors or down hills. "They get drunk. They're sitting there on the ground. You just start rolling them. It's really fun. It's just a sadistic little pleasure, but they seem to like it. It helps if they're stoned, too."
Although most straightedge students say they face adversity, they compare their lifestyle to being in an exclusive, worldwide fraternity and sorority, and they admit no shame for the choices they make.
"Iam straightedge," Macon said, "and I'll be proud of it until death."
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Inside Sports
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
M
Sports
Wednesday January 21, 1998
Typically, the Missouri Tigers lose after defeating Kansas. What's next for Norm Stewart and company?
Tennis preview
SEE PAGE 4B
B
K.U.
Tennis
Kylie Hunt will lead an experienced Kansas women's tennis team this season.
SEE PAGE 3B
Big 12 Statistics
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Page 1
An update on Big 12 men's basketball standings and statistics.
SEE PAGE 4B
WWW.KANSAN.COM/NEWS/SPORTS
Contact the Kansan
Sports Desk:
Sports Fax:
Sports e-mail:
Sports Forum:
(785) 864-4816
(785) 864-5261
sports@kansan.com
optforum@kansan.com
ANSAS
MISSOURI
31
Earl's LSU recruitment in question
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansas forward Lester Earl defends Missouri guard Albert White. The NCAA alleged yesterday that Earl received cash payments at Louisiana State before transferring to Kansas last January. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas forward Lester Earl received cash payments while at Louisiana State, and he and his family got improper aid from the school's basketball staff, the NCAA alleged yesterday.
Earl will not lose any eligibility at Kansas because of the alleged actions at LSU, said Steve Mallonee, NCAA director of membership services.
"If some recruiting violation has occurred, it only affects that institution that has engaged in those violations," Mallonee said yesterday.
And if the NCAA's enforcement staff or infractions committee finds those alleged violations to be true, Earl could regain the one year of eligibility lost when he transferred from LSU last January.
Kansas basketball officials declined comment yesterday.
William Jenkins, LSU chancellor, said the university
would comply with the NCAA's investigation into any possible wrongdoings.
"We are taking these allegations very seriously and will address them with great attention," Jenkins said. "LSU has given its full cooperation to the NCAA and will continue to do
Steve Mallonee
"If some recruiting violation has occurred, it only affects that institution that has engaged in those violations."
so throughout this investigation."
NCAA director of membership services
After receiving a list of 10 possible violations in relation to the recruitment of Earl, Jenkins named a five-person committee to investigate the validity of the allegations. The NCAA has asked LSU to respond to the allegations by April 16.
The NCAA said the alleged violations occurred in 1983-96, before any member of the current LSU staff had joined the program.
Alleged NCAA violations
Earl, a McDonald's All-American from Baton Rouge, La., was a highly recruited prospect back home. He said friends and family pressured him to attend LSU.
Earl received medical attention from a former member of the LSU medical staff prior to his enrollment.
■ Earl received cash payments prior to and following his enrollment.
*Former LSU coaches placed telephone calls to Earl in excess of the number.*
allowed by the NCAA during recruitment. ■ Louis Earl, Lester's brother, received medical attention from the LSU medical staff prior to his enrollment.
Earl allegedly received cash before and after enrollment at LSU, but school officials did not say how much money was involved.
■ Former basketball staff members assisted in finding jobs for members of Earl's family.
■ Earl and his family received free meals at a Baton Rouge, La., restaurant.
One former LSU assistant coach engaged in unethical behavior while recruiting Earl.
One former LSU basketball player provided false information to LSU and the NCAA concerning his knowledge of the NCAA's allegations.
which was the hometown school.
Tulane also made a run for Earl, who said Kansas always was his top choice. Regardless, he stayed home and later said that he had reretted the decision.
As a freshman, EarlI quit the team in late December 1996 after being suspended by Tigers' coach Dale Brown for missing practices. Earl was reinstalled, but he never returned. He was kicked off the team Jan. 4, 1997.
About one week later, Kansas coach Roy Williams said on his radio show that Earl would practice with the Jayhawks in the near future. No confirmation of his transfer came until Jan. 13, 1997, when Earl watched the Iowa State-Kansas game in Allen Field House from behind the Jayhawk bench.
"We'll get him enrolled tomorrow and get him started in classes," Williams said after the game.
Enrolling Earl at Kansas was a simple matter. Brown granting Earl a release from his letter of intent was not.
"Lester Earl has not been released from LSU and he will not be released until he fulfills what we have discussed in our office." Brown said soon after the transfer was announced.
Nearly two weeks later on Jan. 27, 1997, Brown said he would not release Earl from his commitment. Kansas then turned to the Collegiate Commissioners Association, which ruled last August that Earl would be eligible to play after the fall semester.
He played his first game as a Jayhawk
on Dec. 20, 1997, against Texas Christian. He recorded five points and six rebounds in 17 minutes.
Earl has played in 11 games this season, starting the last nine. He averages 9.7 points and 8.7 rebounds per game and has been crucial because of frontcourt injuries to forwards T.J. Pugh and Raef LaFrentz during the past month.
Cowgirls to challenge home-court winning streak
Women to play OSU tonight at Field House
By Kovin C. Wilson
Kansan sportswriter
Roy's boys are not the only Jayhawk team that is perfect this season at Allen Field House.
The Kansas women's basketball team is 5-0 at home this season. It has lost at home only once in the last two years. That loss was a disappointing defeat to Vanderbilt in the second round of last year's NCAA Tournament.
"Our fans are great, and they are louder these ours never
indicate." forward Jaclyn Johnson said. "We definitely have a home-court advantage."
The Jayhawks, 11-3 overall and 3-2 in Big 12 play, are in the midst of a three-game winning streak that began on Jan. 10 against then-No. 16 Nebraska. The team followed that victory with a stunning come-from-behind win against Texas and a crucial 74-62 win Saturday against the Missouri Tigers in Columbia.
Oklahoma State, 11-4 overall and 4-1 in Big 12 play, has lost four games in a row to the Jayhawks. The team's last victory was Jan. 22, 1995 in Lawrence. Kansas recently
Kansas will use that home-court privilege tonight when it tangles with Oklahoma State.
"Oklahoma State is a ball club that has a great record in this conference," Washington said. "This is a team with great quickness out front, maybe the quickest point guard we'll face so far this season with (Sara) Jackson."
has dominated the Cowgirls, but Coach Marian Washington said Oklahoma State would present the Jayhawks with a difficult game.
Jackson is third on the team in steals with 17, and she has 51 assists. She is second to Renee Roberts, who has 54 assists and leads the Cowgirls in rebounding with 6.8 each game.
Kansas guard Lynn Pride reaches for a loose ball against Arkansas State in Allen Field House. The women's basketball team will try to defend its home-court win-ning streak against Oklahoma State tonight. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
"Renee will do most of their scoring for them," Washington said. "And they have a 5-foot-7-inch player (Devon Magness) that makes it real challenging with their high-light situation."
21
Oklahoma State holds a balanced scoring attack with four players averaging in double figures. Jennifer Crow leads the team with 12.0 points per game. Roberts' 11.9 points, Cheri Edwards' 11.0 points and Magness' 10.3 points per game round out the Cowgirls leading scorers.
Washington said that the team strategy would be to disrupt Oklahoma State's high-low offense for the full 40 minutes and to make them think about what defense the Jayhawks are running.
Kansas is led by forward Lynn Pride and guard Suzi Raymant, who pace the club with 16.4 and 15.1 points per game respectively. The duo scores 45 percent of all of the team's points, and they rank second and third in rebounding for Kansas behind forward/center Nakia Sanford.
Although Washington said she depended on Pride and Raymant to have big games, she said the play of her freshmen had been a pleasant surprise.
KU
The Starting Lineup
"Jennifer Jackson has done a great job of
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
3-2 Big 12, 11-3 overall
JENNIFER JACKSON 5-10 FR.
G 5 5 11 J
F JACLYN JOHNSON 6-1 FR.
L 5 2 5
NAKIA SANFORD 6-3 JR.
OSU
OKLAHOMA
STATE
COWBOYS
4-1 Big 12, 11-4 overall
G JENNIFER CROW 5-9 So.
G SANDRA BLANKINS 5-1 Sr.
F CHERI EDWARDS 6-2 Sr.
F SANDRA BLANKINS 6-10 Sr.
C DEVON MAGNESS 6-7 Fr.
**Alien Field House · Lawrence**
TV: Ch. 3, 13 and 29
Radio: KLWN, 1320 AM
Washington said that her young players had a lot of confidence in themselves, and that they knew what it took to win.
quarterbacking this team," Washington said. "And then you have Jaclyn coming off of some really spectacular games where she has ignited us with her performances."
"Overall, I think that this team realizes that if we come out and we work hard, we're able to be in the ball games," Washington said. "That's the bottom line for us. We must work hard in every ball game."
Changes keeping Kansas off-key
One day, you're on top of the world.
And the next day?
One day, you're on top of the world.
Everything you could want — big wins,
a famous alumnus, huge celebrations, high
rankings, star players — it all seems to be
resting firmly in the palm of your hand.
And the next day?
Well, in the blink of an eye that big ol' world is resting square on top of your shoulders — just waiting for you to break.
Thirty-six hours ago, the Kansas men's basketball team had its feet nestled comfortably on top of its world. The Jayhawks were coming off a 69-62 victory against instate rival Kansas State, they were undefeated in Big 12 Conference play, and everyone within a 100-mile radius of Lawrence still was basking in the afterglow of Wilt Chamberlain's triumphant return to Allen Field House, better known as Kansas Lovefest '98.
The news about Raef LaFrentz's possible early return from injury was like icing on an already seriously sublime cake.
How quickly things change.
Needless to say, life was good.
Déja vu. Again.
First, Kansas stumbles on the road, losing round one of the 1998 border war to Missouri 74-73. The loss, the Jayhawks'
How Missouri does it remains a mystery. For one game in each of the last three seasons, a mediocre Tiger team has somehow found a way to topple Kansas. It's hard to explain
first in conference play, was the third consecutive stunning defeat at the Hearnes Center — each one a heartbreaker.
VANCOUVER
Harley
Rattliff
sports@kansan.com
Mull this over:
- Maryland, who beat the Jayhawks 86-
83 on Dec. 7, lost to the Tigers 83-79 on Dec.
30.
Kansas State, whom the Jayhawks had beaten two days earlier, pounded the Tigers 111-62 on Jan. 3.
You can't
I tend to think it's something else all together. Maybe the heavens were misaligned. Maybe it's because the recently crowned "Unhappy Student Body in the Nation" needs something to cheer about.
Don't try to figure it out
"They play like a top 10 team when they play us," said Kansas guard Ryan Robertson. "I don't know why it's like that, but you have to give them credit."
Well put, Ryan.
Today, every local media outlet will be running stories about the NCAA's investigation into recruiting improprieties at Louisiana State concerning Jayhawk forward Lester Earl.
And then, just when Missouri hits you with the sucker punch, here comes the NCAA to kick you when you're down.
Who knows? Maybe it's karma. We've got Ryan Robertson. The Tigers are stuck with Brian Grawer.
The NCAA has given the school until April 16 to respond to a slew of allegations ranging from unethical recruiting behavior to cash payments for Earl.
However, it appears as if Earl's eligibility will remain intact.
Steve Mallonee, NCAA director of membership services, said that NCAA regulations would affect only the school under investigation—LSU.
But when you're dealing with the NCAA, never count your chickens before they hatch. Until further information comes from the LSU investigation, it may be too early to start making predictions.
Ideally, the Jayhawks can rebound from the Missouri loss, and Earl will remain a permanent fixture in the Kansas front-court. And it's not as if good times are too far away. A win this Saturday against Texas Tech would break the school record for most consecutive home wins, with 56.
But if you're having a tough time shaking these winter Jayhawk blues and you're worried it won't get better, remember:
How quickly things change.
---
2B
The University Daily Kansan
Quick Looks
Wednesday January 21,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 21)
The stars are shining in your direction today. Go for the best of every thing and don't give up. Someone you have had your eye on will surprise you tonight.
Aries: Today is a 5.
Taurus: Today is a 7.
It may be a sticky, emotional day, with surprising confessions and plenty of talking things out whether you're dealing with a partner, a friend or a family member. Listen carefully to what someone is actually saying, not to what you want to hear.
The Scorpion Moon has an odd effect on Taurus, intren-
sifying sises, especially jealousy. Tame your temper,
and you may have a powerful exciting day.
Sound off, and you'll get mud in your eye.
Gemini: Today is a 6.
Use your benevolent mood to ensure that future events will run smoothly. Making nice with a partner or someone else with power over your life will get you in good—a status which may be needed soon.
Cancer: Today is an 8.
Cancerian creativity is given a boost today, and it makes for some pleasant thoughts discovering just how to use that creativity. At work? At home? Romance is also in the air for the Crab. Does that give you any ideas?
Leo: Today is a 6.
Leo likes to take life lightly and doesn't want to peer beneath the surface and examine problems seriously. However, you can't rely on that attitude to get you through now. Take another approach instead.
Making phone calls and writing letters is in order; you have a lot to say and a lot of people who'd enjoy hearing from you. When your catching up is done, your state of mind would lend itself well to reading.
Virgo: Today is an 8.
Libra: Today is a 5.
Scorpio: Today is a 6.
Sagittarius: Today is a 5.
You may feel like shaking you up, but the unrest you feel is yours to conquer. Try examining what you want out of life. Take stock of the things you have and see if they are what you really need. You may want to be alone at this time.
Scorpio, keep an eye on your health and take steps to improve it. A few more lunch hours on the Stairmaster would do wonders, but if you can't manage that, even some brisk winter walks will suffice for a start.
Capricorn; Today is an 8.
The Scorpion Moon isn't the best influence on Sagittarius, but it isn't fatal. You may feel a bit moody and slowed-down today, but if you can feel yourself in dreams and fantasies you'll pass the time pleasantly enough.
Aquarius: Today is a 6.
Your power and prestige will be enhanced today, and that acts as a magnet to those around you. Take advantage of your appeal and woo someone you've admired from afar.
Privacy is a simple concept but it's not always that easy to work it out in real life. You need to take a look at the lines which divide what's yours alone from what you need to share. Make some decisions.
Pisces: Today is an 8.
P
Someone quite intriguing has ignited passions you didn't even know you had. Embrace life in all its complexity and dream big dreams. What you most desire has a way of coming to you.
C
2
男女共用
LION
B
LA JEUDICIA
SPORTS BRIEN
Cyclones wipeout
Texas Tech 82-78
Iowa St. 82, No. 5 Texas Tech 73 AMES, Iowa — Stacy Frese scored 24 points and hit seven of Iowa State's school-record 14 3-pointers last night, sending the Cyclones to an 82 73 victory against No. 5 Texas Tech.
Freshman Megan Taylor added 20 points for Iowa State (16-2 overall, 5-0 Big 12), which burned Texas Tech's zone with its outside shooting and shackled Te star Alicia Thompson in the second half with its own collapsing zone.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Tech (12-3, 5-1) was the highest ranked team Iowa State has ever beaten and left the Cyclones as the only Big 12 team unbeaten in conference play. Iowa State finished 14-for 24 on 3-pointers and shot a season-high 55 percent overall.
The old Iowa State record for 3-pointers in a game was 13 against Missouri-Kansas City and Truman State earlier this season. The highest ranked team Iowa State had beaten previously was No. 9 Texas last season.
Frese was 7-for-11 from 3-point range and her last one was the biggest. Iowa State was clinging to a 76-73 lead when Taylor drove the lane and had her shot blocked by Angie Brazil.
Iowa State's Amanda Bartz ran down the loose ball and got it to Freese, who nailed her 3-pointer from the left of the key for a 79-73 lead with 50 seconds left. The Cyclones then made three of four free throws to wrap it up as Tech's Rene Hanebut missed two 3-point shots.
Thompson's 19 points led Tech, which was coming off an 80-40 rout of Colorado. Julie Luke got open when Iowa State began collapsing on Thompson and scored all of her 17 points in the second half.
The game swung back and forth for first 36 minutes. Texas Tech led
SCORPIO
The Lady Raiders built their lead to six before Iowa State rallied again. The Cyclones made six straight shots, including five 3-pointers, during a span of 3:11 to take a 65-61 lead.
No. 1 Tennessee 125, DePaul 46 CHICAGO — Tamika Catchings scored a career-high 35 points and top-ranked Tennessee began the game with a 21-0 run last night to rout DePaul 125-46, the second-highest scoring game ever for the Lady Vols.
Tech led for the last time at 71-70 on Hanebutt's 3-pointer from the top of the key with 4:41 left. Taylor's steal and layup put Iowa State ahead to stay at 72-71 with 3:55 remaining.
The biggest scoring output and most lopsided victory in Tennessee history came Dec. 20, 1985, when the Lady Vols beat Hawaii Pacific by 92. 130-38.
by as many as nine points in the first half but was up only 35-33 at halftime after Bartz hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer.
With yesterday's victory, Tennessee (20-0) also reached 20 victories before Feb.1 for the first time
Tennessee women dominates DePaul
DePaul (5-11) committed eight turnovers in the first four minutes of the game and couldn't get off a shot in the first 31/2 minutes.
The Blue Demons finally scored with 12:56 to go in the half on a follow-up shot by Briana Fitzgerald.
DePaul, playing without injured scoring and rebound leader Mfon Udoka and No. 3 scorer Fuchsia Forrester, who is also hurt, trailed 58-18 at the half after 20 first-half turnovers and 22 percent shooting (5-of-23).
Tennessee, the two-time defending NCAA champion, has now won 26 straight dating back to last March.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
BASKETBALL NBA
YESTERDAY'S SCORES
Atlanta 103, Milwaukee 93
Portland 86, Cleveland 84
Dallas 107, Seattle 98
Denver at Vancouver
Phoenix at Golden State
College Top 25 Men
No.1 Duke 101, North Carolina A&T 66
No. 19 Xavier vs. St. Joseph s
No. 21 Cincinnati vs. Tulane s
No. 16 Michigan 65, Minnesota 57
No. 19 Xavier vs. St. Joseph's
No. 23 West Virginia 80, Rutgers
72
No.25 Clemson 69. Virginia 52.
HOCKEY
Women
No. 1 Tennessee 125, DePaul 46
Iowa State 82, No. 5 Texas Tech 73
No. 17 Wisconsin vs. Iowa
鱼
National Hockey League
Ottawa 0, Pittsburgh 0
Rangers 3, St. Louis 1
New Jersey 3, Detroit 1.
Philadelphia 3, Buffalo 0
Chicago 5, N.Y. Islanders
Phoenix at Edmonton
Calgary at Los Angeles
NBA TODAY
Indiana at New York (7:30 p.m.
EST). The Pacers, winners of five
straight games, face the Knicks in
an Eastern Conference matchup.
New York is 14-5 at home this season.
Wednesday, Jan. 21
弓
STARS Monday
89 victory against Detroit
- Karl Malone, Jazz, had 30 points and 15 rebounds in Utah's 98-.
— Shaquille O'Neal, Lakers, had 35 points, 15 rebounds and seven blocked shots in Los Angeles' 92-89 victory against Orlando.
R
-
— Allen Iverson, 76ers, had 24 points and 10 assists in Philadelphia's 98-85 victory against Sacramento.
— Glen Rice, Hornets, scored 38 points in Charlotte's 109-88 victory against Toronto.
SUPERR IN DEFEAT
STREAKING SIXERS
San Antonio's Tim Duncan had 24 points and 17 rebounds in the Spurs' 95-84 loss to New Jersey on Monday night.
STREAKING SIXERS Philadelphia won its fourth straight game for the first time since 1992, beating Sacramento 98-85 on Monday.
SWEEPING THE GLASS New outrebounded Boston 51-30 in its 98-82 victory Monday. Chris Dudley had 13 rebounds, and Charles Oakley added 12.
New York extended its winning streak against Boston to 21 games Monday with a 98-82 victory over the Celtics, who have not beaten the Knicks since Jan. 10, 1993.
STREAK
STRONG SPEAKER
Los Angeles Lakers announcer Chick Hearn reached a milestone on Monday when he broadcast his 3,000th consecutive game. Hearn last missed a broadcast on Nov. 20, 1965, when bad weather in Fayetteville, Ark., prevented him from getting to the game.
SPEAKING
"They are a much better basketball team than us. They beat us with Patrick (Ewing). They beat us without Patrick. Even if they lose (Chris) Dudley, they will be better than us. And if they lose somebody else, they still will be better than us." — Boston coach Rick Pitino after the Celtics' 98-82 loss to New York on Monday.
Today:
SPORTS
CALENDAR
7 p.m. in Allen Field House — Women's Basketball vs. Oklahoma State.
Saturday:
koreaji vs. texas tech
TV: Bia 12 Network: Radio: KL7R 105 9
3 p.m. in Allen Field House — Men's Baskathleth, Texas Tech
TV: Big 12 Network. Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM
7 p.m. at Lubbock, Texas — Women's Basketball vs. Texas Tech
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KTUW 12 Wanny® Murphy College Basketball: Nebraska at Texas. (Live) News® Late Show R() in Stereo) Late Late Dog®
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AAE 22 Biography: Malcolm Forbes American Justice (R) Foot Soldier "The Romans" Law & Order "Poison Ivy" Biography: Malcolm Forbes
Equal Time 12 Equal Time Rivera Live NeWS with Brian Williams Charles Grodi Rivera Live (R)
CNN 12 World Today! Lerry King Live World Today Sports Illus. Moneyline Night showbiz
COM 12 "Fatal Instinct" **●●** 1993, Comedy) Amand Assante South Park Make-Laugh Daily Show Stein's Money Saturday Night Live
COURT 12 Prime Time Justice Cochran & Company Trial Story: Breast Implants Prime Time Justice Cochran & Company (R)
CSPAN 12 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R)
DISC 22 Wild Discovery: Cats Discover Magazine Adventures-20th Century Justice Files (R) Wild Discovery: Cats
ESPN 12 (6:00) College Basketball College Basketball: Syracuse at Notre Dame. (Live) Sportscenter® World Cup Skating
HIST 12 In Search of History (R) Mission Berlin True Action Adventures (R) Weaponss at War "Top Games" In search of History (R)
LIFE 12 Unsolved Mysteries Visions of Terror" (1994, Suspense) Barbara Eden Almost Golden Girls Golden Girls Mysteries
MTV 12 Beavis-Butt. Beavis-Butt. MTV Live (R) in Stereo Real World Austins Streams Loveine (R) in Stereo Singled Out Viewers
SCFI 12 Masters of Fantasy" Forever Knight "Near Death" M.A.N.T.I.S." The Delusionist" Sequester DSV "Watergarten" Masters of Fantasy (R)
TLC 12 Ultrascience Sea Tek UFOs and Alien Encounters UFOs and Alien Encounters (R)
TNT 12 "Two for Texana" (1998, Western) Kristi Krofterson. Babywion 5 "No Compromise" Rough Cut "The FLY" **●●** (1986) Jeff Goldblum.
USA 12 Walker, Texas Ranger "Any Place but Home" **●●** (1997, Drama) Joe Lando. Silk Stalkings (in Stereo) Highlander The Series
VH1 12 Hollywood "闪现" Pop-Up Video Power to the People (R) Storytellers (R) Legends (R) Race to Erase MS Concert
WGN 12 "Flashback" **●●** (1990, Comedy) Denise Dencher (in Stereo) Honeymerr Honeymerr In heat of the Night (R)
WTBS 12 NBA Basketball: Los Angeles Lakers at Phoenix Suns. (Live) Inside the "Chained Heat 2" **●●** (1993, Drama) Brigitte Nielsen.
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 20 "Primal Fear" **●●** (1998, Suspense) Richard Gere. R' Sweet Nothing** **●●** (1995, Drama) R' TNT** (1998, Adventure) Olivier Gruner. NR
MAX 20 "Absence of Chance" **●●** (1981) Paul Newman. PG' The Relie' **●●** (1997, Horror) Annie Miller. R' "Two Friends" **●●** (1986)
SHOW 20 "The Defenders: Choice of Evil" (1998) Extras Dead Man.'s Fast Track "Real Time" Hard Rain (R') Balance of Power (1997)
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Wednesday, January 21. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
Tennis trio courts success
Women give skills experience to team
By Erin Thompson
Kansan sportswriter
Seniors Kyle Hunt, Christie Sim and Maria Abatjoglou provide more than wins for the Kansas women's tennis team.
The trio of seniors provides leadership and experience. They are the veteran members of a team that finished second in the Big 12 last season and are ranked second in their region this year.
"They're all great on the court, they've been there and seen it all," said coach Roland Thornvig.
Hunt was the runner-up in the NCAA individual tournament in 1996 before she injured her knee last January. After her injury, Hunt was forced to redshirt last spring.
Sim stepped up and played the No.1 position this fall, and she jumped from 90th to 29th place in the Rolex Collegiate Tennis Rankings. Abatjoglou was a member of the GTE Academic All America first team last spring.
Pamela C.
After playing doubles this fall, Hunt returned to singles play at the Milwaukee Tennis Classic, where she advanced to the quarterfinals earlier this month.
Hunt: Back on the court after injury.
"Usually, losing in the quarterfinals would
be a disappointment to a player of Kylie's caliber, but for her first time back, it was valuable match experience," Thornqvist said. "We were able to see where her endurance was and how her knee held up."
Sim had a big fall season in the top spot for Kansas, where she competed at a higher level.
"The experience she gained when Kylie was injured helped her improve. She saw it wasn't a big deal to play at that level of competition." Thornqvist said. "The awe was gone and she was able to settle down and play her game."
Abatajolou was the only team member to win a tournament this
fall, when she won the Washington Invitational in October.
"I was pretty excited to win because I'd never won a tournament in the fall," Abatajgou said. "That was the last chance I had to win one."
"The team has the ability to go this year," Abatjoglou said. "Things haven't gone our way in the past and the three seniors want to go once."
The seniors hope to beat Brigham Young University, which is ranked first in the region, on March 6, and lead the team to the NCAA finals.
Next year Sim and Hunt hope to play professionally, and Abatjogloou plans to attend law school after another year of classes. But for now, the seniors are concentrating on this season.
"Right now I just want to help the team out as much as I can by taking care of my knee and through my actions on the court." Hunt said.
The three have established a strong base for the underclassmen to build on next year.
"All three are showing the way for the freshmen, sophomores and juniors," Thornqvist said. "They're good leaders and are showing them what the program is about."
Rafter swings into Australian Open
Aussie draws victory opponent gets booed
The Associated Press
MELBOURNE, Australia — U.S. Open champion Patrick Rafter played two astonishing points for a key break in the next-to-last game before overcoming stubborn Jeff Tarango yesterday in the first round of the Australian Open.
Rafter's big serve and acrobatic volleying finally prevailed against the Tarango's baseline sharpshooting, 7-6 (7-4), 7-6 (7-4), 6-7 (4-7), 7-5 in the night match that lasted three and a half hours.
Some of the most devastating shots came at 5-5 in the final set. On the first point, Rafter surprised Tarango by chasing down shots on opposite sidelines and pressuring the American into netting a forehand.
Two points later, he went ahead 0-40 by curling a forehand passing shot down the line on a dead run.
That almost wasn't enough. Tarango, ranked No. 58, got back to deuce on two errors by the No. 2 seed and a passing shot that he punctuated with a fist gesture toward Rafter that drew boos from the crowd.
But two Tarango errors gave Rafter the game, and he served out the match, ending with his 26th ace.
Earlier in the final set, Tarango was given an unsportsmanlike conduct warning after holding up two fingers and shouting at the umpire: "That's two (line calls) you owe me, and you know it."
He had just been broken to trail 3 2 but immediately got the break back.
Tarango refused to discuss the incident.
Andre Agassi and third seed Michael Chang also had to struggle
through their first-round matches.
In contrast, women's defending champion Martina Hingis' match was easy enough to allow her to try out new strategies to defend her No. 1 ranking against a wave of teenagers.
Agassi took an early 3-1 lead, but then lost five straight games against Italian qualifier Marzio Martelli, ranked 133rd, and let the second set's second game slip away after six break points and 11 deuces.
Then he rallied for a 3-6, 6-7(3), b-2, 6-2 victory, finishing the 2-hour, 22-minute match with a trademark play, forcing a short return and putting away a forehand crosscourt.
Coming back from a year-end slump and a strained stomach muscle, Cheng needed slightly more than three hours to overcome Denmark's Kenneth Carlsen 6-3, 7-6 (7-2), 5-7, 6-3.
The muscle injury was not bothering him, he said.
Did YOU See It???
- The KU women upset #16 Nebraska 83-74 in the fifth annual Fill the Fieldhouse.
"The most exciting basketball game I saw this weekend had no dunks, no overinflated egos, and no testosterone surplus... I'm talking about the unranked Kansas women's basketball team surprising No. 16 Nebraska..."
Eric Weslander - University Daily Kansan
- Down by 20, the Jayhawks never quit and stunned Texas when they came back for a thrilling 76-71 victory.
"We showed great character. Texas was like, 'We got this'. But we didn't die. We didn't go away. They expected us to lay down... I knew we could do it, but we needed a sparkplug."
Jaclyn Johnson -- Freshman Forward who added a spark with 14 points
Don't Miss Out Again!! Next action is Wednesday night at 7:00 p.m. against Oklahoma State. KU Students FREE with KU ID
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For more information contact Rachel Lee at 864-3552.
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Section B·Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 21, 1998
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Men's basketball team standings
| TEAM STANDINGS as of today |
|---|
| Team | Conf. | Overall | Next game | Date |
|---|
| 1. Baylor | 5-0 | 10-5 | at Colorado | Tonight |
| 2. Kansas | 5-1 | 21-3 | vs. Texas Tech | Jan. 24 |
| 3. Oklahoma | 4-1 | 13-5 | vs. Iowa State | Tonight |
| 4. Nebraska | 3-1 | 12-5 | at Texas | Tonight |
| 5. Missouri | 3-3 | 10-7 | vs. Iowa | Jan. 24 |
| tie Iowa St. | 2-2 | 9-8 | at Oklahoma | Tonight |
| 7. Oklahoma St. | 2-3 | 12-3 | vs. Texas A&M | Jan. 24 |
| 8. Kansas St. | 1-2 | 10-3 | vs. Iowa St. | Tonight |
| 9. Texas Tech | 1-3 | 7-7 | vs. Kansas State | Tonight |
| tie Colorado | 1-3 | 7-7 | vs. Baylor | Tonight |
| 11. Texas | 1-4 | 7-9 | vs. Nebraska | Tonight |
| 12. Texas A&M | 0-5 | 6-9 | at Oklahoma State | Jan. 24 |
Tyson nibbles on wrestling idea
LAS VEGAS — One thing is certain about Mike Tyson's appearance in Wrestlemania: He will play a bad guy.
Tyson doesn't figure to play a wrestler, however, despite World Wrestling Federation owner Vince McMahon's attempts to sell him as one during a WWF show Monday night in Fresno, Calif.
"The chances of him wrestling are very slim," said a source familiar with Tyson. "These guys are professional wrestlers and they take falls for a living. Why would he risk a broken neck or something by doing that?"
Tyson was supposed to be only a guest referee at Wrestlemania on March 29 in Boston. But in the world of professional wrestling, things can turn as quickly as a good figure four move.
Just as McMahon was to announce Tyson's appearance, wrestler Steve Austin appeared
from nowhere Monday night to enter the ring and question Tyson's manhood. An obscene gesture here and a push there, and suddenly bad blood had developed.
With a straight face, McMahon suggested later that Tyson would wrestle Austin, the WWF's most popular wrestler, at Wrestlemania.
Tyson will be the bad guy, as evidenced by the booing he got Monday night and the "Tyson Bites" signs held aloft by several fans.
"Mike is refusing to guest referee. Austin embarrassed Mike Tyson and the WWF with his remarks. It was uncalled for and very unprofessional," McMahon said. "Mike is now saying he wants Stone Cold Steve Austin."
PARKS
Nevada boxing regulators say they have no control over what Tyson does outside the boxing ring as long as he doesn't box while his license is still revoked for biting Evander Holyfield's ears.
Tyson is banned from boxing until at least July, when he is expected to ask Nevada boxing regulators to give him back his boxing license.
"If he wants to make a living outside boxing, it's all right with us," said Dr. Elias
Ghanem, chairman of the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
Earlier, though, Tyson adviser Sig Rogich said the former heavyweight champion would only referee and would not wrestle because he "does not want to do anything to jeopardize his relationship with the Nevada boxing commission."
SCORING
Men's basketball statistics leaders
1.Cory Carr, Texas Tech 23.5
2.Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 21.3
**3.Paul Pierce, Kansas** **20.2**
4.Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 19.4
5.Brian Skinner, Baylor 18.9
6.Adrian Peterson, Okla. State 17.6
7.Rayford Young, Texas Tech 16.4
8.Manny Dies, Kansas State 16.3
8.Shanne Jones, Texas A&M 16.3
10.Kris Clack, Texas 16.0
11.Desmond Mason, Okla. State 15.9
12.Kelly Thames, Missouri 14.9
**13.Billy Thomas, Kansas** **14.8**
14.Patrick Hunter, Baylor 14.6
15.Marcus Fizer, Iowa State 14.5
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
As of Monday, Jan. 19
FIELD GOAL PCT
(Min. 5.O made per game)
1.Brian Skinner, Baylor 58.2
2.Manny Dies, Kansas State 57.7
3.Desmond Mason, Okla. State 53.5
4.Brett Robisch, Okla. State 51.0
5.Marcus Fizer, Iowa State 50.3
6.Shanne Jones, Texas A&M 49.3
7.Paul Pierce, Kansas 47.8
8.Billy Thomas, Kansas 44.9
9.Adrian Peterson, Okla. State 44.9
10.Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 44.4
3-POINT FG PCT
(Min. 1.5 made per game)
1. Kenny Price, Colorado 43.9
2. Billy Thomas, Kansas 43.9
3. Roddrick Miller, Baylor 42.1
4. Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech 42.0
5. Luke Axtel, Texas 41.8
6. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 41.7
7. Duane Davis, Kansas State 41.4
8. Patrick Hunter, Baylor 38.7
9. Jerry Curry, Iowa State 36.7
10. Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 35.5
BLOCKED SHOTS
1.Brian Skinner, Baylor 4.1
2.Venson Hamilton, Nebraska 2.4
3.Cris Mihm, Texas 2.3
4.Calvin Davis, Texas A&M 2.3
5.Manny Dies, Kansas State 1.9
6.Ronnie DeGray, Colorado 1.9
7.Eric Chenowith, Kansas 1.8
8.Ryan Humphrey, Oklahoma 1.7
9.Paul Pierce, Kansas 1.4
10.Shawn Rhodes, Kansas State 1.3
REBOUNDING
1.Venson Hamilton, Nebraska 10.5
2.Brian Skinner, Baylor 10.5
3.Klay Edwards, Iowa State 8.7
4.Brett Robisch, Oklahoma State 8.6
5.Cliff Owens, Texas Tech 8.5
6.Ronnie DeGray, Colorado 8.1
7.Manny Dies, Kansas State 7.9
8.Desmond Mason, Oklahoma State 7.9
9.Andy Markowski, Nebraska 7.6
10.Adrian Peterson, Oklahoma State 7.4
ASSISTS
1.Doug Gottlieb Okla, State 7.2
2.Ryan Robertson, Kansas 6.5
3.Michael Johnson, Oklahoma 4.8
4.Steve Houston, Texas A&M 4.7
5.Brian Barone, Texas A&M 4.7
6.Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 4.6
7.Rayford Young, Texas Tech 4.5
8.Patrick Hunter, Baylor 4.4
9.Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech 4.1
10.Cookie Belchir, Nebraska 4.1
STEALS
1. Steve Houston, Texas A&M 2.8
2. Kris Clack, Texas 2.2
3. Cookie Belcher, Nebraska 2.1
4. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 2.1
5. Brian Barone, Texas A&M 2.1
3-POINT FG MADE
1.Billy Thomas, Kansas 3.4
2.Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech. 3.0
3.Rodrick Miller, Baylor 2.7
4.Kenny Price, Colorado 2.6
5.Luke Axell, Texas 2.5
6.Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 2.3
7.Cory Garr, Texas Tech 2.3
8.Patrick Hunter, Baylor 2.2
9.Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 2.2
10.Jerry Curry, Iowa State 2.1
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The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 5
Kansan Classified
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358
100s
Associates
1.308 Personales
1.308 Associates personales
1.308 On Campus
1.308 Announcements
1.308 Breve
1.308 Interattention
1.308 Universidad
Classified Policy
303a Hardware
303b For Sale
304a Computers
305a Fitness & Health
306a Sports Goods
307a Merchandise
308a Tickets
309a Memorabilia
310a Motors
312a Motores
314 Motorcycles for Sale
316 Miscellaneous
317 Women's Bare
400s Real Estate
Real Estate
403 Real Estate
430 Condos for Rent
420 Real Estate
420 Real Estate for Sale
420 Rooms Wanted
The healthcare will not however accept any admission for housing or employment that discriminates against any person group of persons based on race, sex, age, colour, religion, sexual orientation, disability, gender identity and other protected characteristics. High acceptable admission is the isolation of university of Queensland students.
New estate attorney asks this newspaper is subject to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which govern all real estate pursuits. Any person, permission, utilization or documentation based on such an agreement, like family, handicap, state or national origin, or any other information given in writing, is not considered consent. The homeowners are likely hearing from all aliens and housing issues as well.
110 - Business Personals
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14
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AFFOUL
Bethlehem & Ivy Beach Real Estate
ROAD TRIP!
$98
as low as
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PARTY'S
South Padre Island
140 - Lost & Found
CD case found on Campus Hill Sunday, Jan. 11th. Call 843-0125 evenings to identify.
200s Employment
男 女
205 - Help Wanted
Assistant wanted MWF 8-1 for busy child care.
Experience preferred. Please call 865-967-978.
Hard working, energetic persons to teach
hard behavioral program to 7 year old with Autism.
MWF or TTH, 1:30-5:30 PM, 832-1598, evenings.
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PT. NEW
Btpn/Twn 789.1828 inquire at 203 Wakarua Akasai
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB Experience Wait staff openings, all staff shifts (appl. per shift) and hours (appl. per shift).
Kennel help need. Must be reliable & hardwired. Inpatient Parkway Ani-Hospital, 450 Clinton Street, Kansas City, MO 64107.
Waisted needed day and evening. Apply in person at Scott's Brass Arm. 3300 W. 15th.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for Safe Ride drivers. Must be 8 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 p.m.
Apt. Leasing Position. Strong sales skills required. Compensation, 1BR Apt. 20-25 hours. Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000 Clinton Pkwy.
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
with 6 positions and in 6 months $5.00 plus profit sharing.
Silverhawk Security-1 full time (3 pm-11 pm) and part-time (varied) her job. *special officer security*
Raintree Montessori School is interviewing for late afternoon position (1:30-5:30) and sub-unit position (6:30-8:30).
CLASSROOM ASSISTANT NEEDED HOURS
8:30 OR 9:30 AM TO 12:30 PM old classroom.
Contact Hilltop Child Development Center 1314
Jayhawk Bldg. 844-4940. EOE
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wakeds. Need experience, ref, own transportation. Work may extend in summer & fall. Call Judy of Call 842-381-381.
Christian Daycare has 2 part-time openings for morning or afternoon. Must be highly reliable and available to work long time. For interview call 842-2088.
Collection Asst. making courtesy calls PT/flexible hours. 845./hr 841-6153 ext 4400 or in person. Microtech Computers 4921 Legends Drive.
Looking for a job? Tutoring positions available Tuesday & Wednesday 9:11:30am. Tutor Lawrence High School students. Call Dr. Todd Martin at martin@649-9622.
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for pro-band.
High-strong voice and personality. All styles.
Also, DRUMMER/PERCUSSIONI/Vox w/ ex.
& exp. bun 794.3694
Onsite manager for small apt. complex near campus, full time, upperclassman or graduate student, salary and free apartment, send resume to: P. Box 628 Lawrence, KS 60044
Recycle the Kansan
205 - Help Wanted
PROFESSIONALSERVICES: Openings for 1/2-5 yrs. Educational activities, clean, new facility. Montessori teacher. Please call 865-0678 for more info.
Adams Alumni Center《The Learned Club ad-
cademic to campus, has openings for part time dishwas-
ners for all shifts. Above minimum wage,
Above minimum wage, Above Dawn Rung at
884-4673 for more information.
Babystaff needed Tues, 12-15-19 for 4pm old boy, must have car for noon pickup at Lawrence Nursery school Reference needed.
749-1526 after 5pm or 864-1243 during daytime.
COMPUTER SERVICE TECH/PHONE SUPPORT TECH in shop/or sight PT. Must be able to troubleshoot. Must be able to work independently with patrons. 4921 Legends Dr. 841-9531 e200 EOE
is seeking part time help; mostly mornings & some afternoons. Computer, cash register and customer service experience helpful. Apply in person only. 311W S 8th, Suite C
Adams Alumni Center/The Learned Club ada-
tions to campus, has openings for banquet servi-
ces, bar tenders and hosts. Flexible hours, day-
time and weekend availability preferred. Above
the aisle, the club is in a professional
upscale dining facility. Shifts average 6
hours. Applicat at 1260 Oread Ave.
HELP WANTED: THE MAIL BOX
CNA/CHIHA Our busy not for profit health home agency is recruiting caring, team oriented CNA/s CHIHA's to work in our Private Home Care Aina Program. Day and Even hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Missouri County Visiting Nurses Association, 365 Missouri. Lower Level or call 814-4634 for PEEO.
Growing 1 Residential Home Improvement Co seeks motivated, dependable people to take
$$$ RON!S! RON!S! $$$
inbound calls. Nice phone voice. FC skills in
maint. sign on签 on after working 30 conti-
tues. speak English proficiency.
KanTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this
app with id to qualify for bonus.
must $1,50 per on-bon after working 30 continues 8-hr. minimum shifts. $65.50 to start, an raises based on your performance. Flex schedules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Annivat.
500 SUMMER CAMP JOBS/50 CAMPS/YOU CHOOSE! NYA, PA, NEW ENGLAND, TENNIS,BASEBALL, BASKETHOCKY, SOCCER,LACROSS, BASKETBELL, GYMNASTICS,RIDING, SWIMMING, WS, MT, BIKING, PIORG, ROCKLIKING, ROPES,DANCE, DANCING,CERAMICS, JEWELRY,WOODSHOP,PHOTOGRAPHY, RADIO, NATURE,NURSES,CHEFS, PE MAJORS, ETC, ARLene STREISAND 1-800-443-6286; FAX: 516-933-794
Dining Services
* start at $5.50/hr *
* Flexible Schedules
* New Friends
* Scholarships
* Scholarships
Call or stop by any
DH Dining Center:
GSP 864-3120
HASHINGTON 864-1047
Hashington 864-1048
Oliver 864-1087
KU's Theatre is hiring 3 student hourly
professors. The Theatre Director will be
Professor Asst. and Inge Technical Director,
and will teach all technical courses.
- Box Office Ass. Mngr. completes office & service duties related to ticket sales. Takes as ass. to Box Office Mngr. Works both daytime & evening hours. Some weekend required.
- Sound Production Assist. ascertains the sound requirements for all productions. Records, videos, and CDs of each production show tapes. Should have some familiarity with the technical listening skills. Some evening hours required.
- Ingen Director coordinate technical evening and weekend hours are required.
students must be enrolled in at least six credit hours of application and job description in 317 Murphy
AN ARIZONA TRADITION FOR 58 YEARS!
TOPCOUNSELORSI
resident Camp the boys and girls Camp the kids Diving Rock Climbing Water and Skiing and Much More
1998 Season May 31 to August 2
Well be at the Summer Job Fairs on Wed. February 4th
If you have any question or want you to help me
33. Friendly Piñones Road = Prescott, AZ 86030
Call (525) 445-1218 or email: fpm@amug.org
We will be at the Summer Junction Fall meet on Friday, 4th.
If you have any question we would like to ask you on
the day. Please contact us by email or phone.
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m.
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Cottonwood Inc., is currently looking for enthusiastic individuals interested in providing supports to develop developmental disabilities in their Residential District. The candidate must be able with a variety of schedules that include evening, night and weekend hours. Some schedules may include organization and daily management skills and group living site, implementation of a person centered approach to consumer services, assisting in management skills and providing for and transmitting leisure time opportunities. Minimum of a High School diploma/GED and driving record acceptable. Prior experience with an avant experience or college coursework and related experience helpful. Starting hourly pay of $6.00 to $6.75, depending on position. Apply at Cottonwood Inc. at 842-6500 x 681, or visit us in the lobby of the Kansas Union 9am-1pm, Jules E. O.E.
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly.
225 - Professional Services
Juicers Shounigirls
Now hire managers, DJs,
attractive dancers and waitresses 18+. Apply in person.
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
By donating your life saving plasma!
up to$50 This Week
$360 This Month
EARN CASH
816 W. 24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9 a.m.
6:30 p.m.
(Nabi
---
SPEEEDING? DU? SUSPENDED DL? Call Richer, Wichaer. Attorney Located in KCMO. HOME, 201 N. 8TH ST.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL IN JURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donalld G. Strole Sally K Gelsey 16 East 13th 814-5116 Free Initial Consultation
X
305 - For Sale
300s Merchandise
---
s
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Entertainment Center for sale! **1100 Call 841-9115**
315 - Home Furnishings
LOFTSIDE CHAIRS
twin beds,frame box,box springs,and mattress,$25
each. call $43 @ 843-1085.
325 - Stereo Equipment
340 - Auto Sales
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your audio equipment, amps, tape decks, etc. (785) 293-9639
TOWING
192 mdaa mx3, 80,000 ml manual v/l/m
flock. teal ex black in powerbank 190
w/0000 w/o0000 w/0000 w/
1955 jeep Cherokee, 35,000 miles, 4 wheel drive,
4 wheel drive, 85,500 miles, 81,500 mile in
callop to Inpeka at (013) 283 1688.
9 Mustang LX Convertible, 76 K, auto, tinted windows, new brakes, AC & heat, custom wheels,
370 - Want to Buy
$$
$$$$
$$$
Want to buy queen size soft-sided waterbed, in good condition. 842-7596.
WANTED :
Your used computer (PC or Mac)
$1,000 Reward
Home
UNI Computers
841-4611
for your good used computer.
400s Real Estate
PACIFIC COAST HOME SCHOOL
405 - Apartments for Rent
Sublease BDRM in 3 BDM townhouse on Monterey
Wedge. Great price call Ryan at 819-438-6386
3 bdm, 2 apartment on bus route. W/D, brand new
apartment. #775/mo, ASAP! Call 319-3892
2 Bedroom apt. acct st. from mem. stadium
Bathroom with shower & gloom
Free cable and water. Available
1 BDM unfurished apt, at 703 Arizona. Near KU bus route, DW share, wihool, shop,杯.
2 BDM unfurished apt, at 703 Arizona. Near KU bus route, DW share, wihool, shop,杯.
1B Downtown Sublease (816 1/2 Mass). Central
1/2 Heat, 1/Bath. $500. Call 749-3853 for appointment
BR2/3BA/WD, close to KU, great view,
brightness, great view, + dep. Call Brian
804-006-1987 Ermid Rd. 804a-806-1987
Heatherwood Valley Apartments new startling short term apartment bedroom apartments 1-4pm 1-6pm
2 bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a s.a.p.
call 749-7261
2 BR special rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt. located close to campus, on bus route. $350 include basic cable. Call Now. University Tellace 841-6783
Unfurnished Room
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
2 Bedroom apt. across st. from meu. stadium.
$475/month. Great location, only pay electric &
phone. Free cable and water. Available immediately.
842-8796
Kansan Ads Pay
405 - Apartments for Rent
STOCKHOLM
Hey! Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the lap, of your choice this week? We have a free lap in town to the money. Call or stop by to get details. Call # 842.1555. Park 2 Aptures, 2400 W. 25th
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt. located close to campus. $305 includes cable, secure and ample parking, on the bus route, 9th & 10th floor. Call: 864-297-8393 during 8pm Mori-Fri.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE
Cooperate with alternates to provide private
experience. Experience sharing with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere.
Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by
GREAT LOCATION!!!
2 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE JAN. 1
3 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE MAR. 1
LOCATION 84-85 VERMONT @ CALL 911-8115
13$^{1/2}$ / E. $8^{\mathrm{th}}$ St., Lawrence
841-5454
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
WauserDryer
Dishwaher
Microwave
Back Patio
Walk-in Chosen
Leanna Mar Townhomes
- Bedroom 3/Bath
* **Early Sign Up Special**
* For Fall 1998
* ($40 off per month)
Trash Compactor
Gas Fireplace
Cable Paid
Ceiling Fans
Command Parking
For More Info: (785) 841-7849
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
WALK TO CAMPUS
M
mastercraft
management
WALK TO CAMPUS
Completely Furnished
and Unfurnished
Apartment Homes
designed with von in mind.
Visit the following locations
Orchard f
campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasid • 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
7th & Florida • 841-5255
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
MASTERCRAFT 842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
Swan
EAGLE APARTMENTS
1-bedroom $345
2-bedroom $420
NEWER!
ABERDEEN APTS
1,2 & 3 bedroom Starting at $495 NEW!
OVERLANDTOWNHOMES
3&4 bedroom
Starting at $780
NEWER!
SUMMERTREE WEST TOWNHOMES
2-bedroom/2-level
Starting at $550
NEWER!
OPEN HOUSE
M-F 1-5
Sat 10-4
749-1288
2300 Wakarusa Dr.
SE Corner of Clinton Pkwy.
and Wakarusa Dr.
405 - Apartments for Rent
MARKET STREET CENTER
Sublease. Roommate will share to a 4 bdrm apartment at Surville Hills $300/mo + 4 /aul rent.
Lorimar Townhomes
1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes
Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you.
For More Info: (785) 841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
1 & 2 Bedrooms
3 Hot Tubs
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
410 - Condos For Rent
On KU Bus Route
Avail. Feb. 1, share 2 bed/2 bath condo. Fireplace, dishwasher, washer/dryer, room/1/3 utilities. $194/mo., on bus route. Please call 888-3226.
כפי שנאמר.
415 - Homes For Rent
30 Days Free
bublase 2, BBR 1, 18H, W-D wook up. deck and
table. with plt deposit call 351-8628 or (913)
862-820
3 bedroom, 1/2 bath, brand new, C/A, W/D,
microwave, refrigerator, secure, security
off, street parking, close to campus,
935 Mission Bay, 841-3966, $590-6200/mo.
420 - Real Estate For Sale
Ranch home on basement located on Stratford Rd. 3+ bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office entry. Walk to Class. Price at $199.90. Call LaTea White, CB/McGrew R.E. 843-2055 for information.
---
430 - Roommate Wanted
2
4 bdmr, 3 bath, WD, nice location on Clinton Parkway, move in anytime. Call Julie 1-800-889-2755
RM needed immediately to2 kdr.1 bait apf.
Close to campus. Rent is $186/mo+ 7% Jan.
Annual fee is $390/mo.
D desperately need female roommate to share new
adhram tow house. Jan恳请我为新住屋做
dodding
Female RM needed to share 3 RBM apt. $23/mo & 8/shelf. January rent call Pd.880-462-7591
Female roommate wanted immediately to share
the room with walk to campground 8910 + 1/2 u/tilf call
823-9948
Female Roommate Needled ASPA. Share Town Home. Welcome to FEMALE ROOM! $262 mo. please call 822-1981
Male roommate needs N/ S/ 10111 Illinois 3dbrm
horse mat 27/3 mo. + 1/ utilities. For spring ses-
sions.
Non-smoking female to share 2 bdm, 2 bath
w/professional female Call 838-4483. Now or
check in at www.skyscanner.com
Non-smoking male wanted to share 2 bdm at
close to campus month+1 / 7 utilities. apt
Open-minded, responsible, n/s, female roommate
Open-minded, responsible, n/a, bedroom and bath
Roommate plus 1/2 utilities
RM wanted for three bedroom house, on campus-great parking, across from Jaywalker Bookstore.
roommate needed to need 3 bdmr, 2 bduplex duplex, 1 bdpr, 1 bdpr new installment, new home, 1/3 utilities + 6E0. Move to new house.
Roommate needed for a 3 bedroom apt., has 2 bathrooms, washer/dryer, great campus location.
Roommate needed $190 a month +/+ 4 utilities 4 bedrooms. 2 bath. Big garage bus route! Call 714-789-5267. Call 714-789-5267. Call 714-789-5267.
Wanted: Quit roommate to share bottom floor farmhouse. Sacres, in city, Daly. ww/dryr.
SPACIUS Sr/Grad folks need 2 NE/N Fam. Avail no Bright vault skilt dpk.tn, nr. campus Quiet clean airway from traffic, on park (birds, trees, 80 w) to $20 Utls #84-76 leave 8am; 10am.
A P H. Student needs to share a quiet and roomy two bedroom apartment. $250 for rent + washer and dryer + fully furnished. Contact Yoghurt at 838-9455
N/S female roommate wanted to share beautiful furnished townhouse. On Bus route, 18 min. walk from campus. $275+share utilities. No Pets. 842-6734
1 male roommate wanted, 3 berm, house off 8th and 1st. Fully furnished in walking distance to campus. Park, grocery, and more across the street. No contract. $200/mo. + 1/3 utilities. 865-503 or
Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 21, 1998
PETER SMITH
A satisfied customer has purchased the recording from your neighborhood music
Missouri claws onto momentum
LOVE GARDEN SOUNDS
936 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. St. (upstairs)
Lawrence, KS (785)843-1551
"...the first name in sound!"
pay CA$H for CDs, LPs and tapes everyday!!
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Having upset Kansas for the third straight season, Missouri's next assignment is to avoid the blahs that always seem to follow.
Tigers try to avoid history of relapse
The Associated Press
The challenge for the Tigers is to channel the euphoria created by Monday night's 74-73 victory against the No. 3-ranked Jayhawks to the rest of their schedule.
"This is the biggest win we've had," center Monte Hardge said. "Hopefully, we can get some more that are bigger than this one.
"That's our goal. We don't want this to be the crowning point of our season, we want this to be a steppingstone."
it would be impossible for a player not to get excited about the game. Though the team has had 121 consecutive sellouts at the Hearnes
The pandemonium that followed John Woods' last-second steal from Kansas star Paul Pierce certainly confirmed that this was far from another opponent on the schedule.
Center, there are often hundreds of no-shows. At this one, there were no empty seats and much of the time the fans were on their feet.
"It doesn't matter who we have, Missouri is going to play its best game of the year," Kansas guard Rvan Robertson said.
But what happens after the screaming dies down? Missouri players and coaches have learned from bitter experience not to place too much emphasis on this game.
After handing the nation's No. 1 team its first loss after a 22-0 start with a 96-94 double-overtime victory last year, the Tigers couldn't stay pumped up. They lost six of the next seven games before making a belated run to the championship game of the Big 12 conference tournament, where they lost by 27 to the Jayhawks and finished a dismal 16-17.
M
Now the team is back at the crossroads, at 10-7 overall and 3-3 in the Big 12, and hoping to avoid a similar relapse. There's no break
on the schedule with No. 10 Iowa coming to town on Saturday and Missouri trying to end a 17-game road losing streak at Wake Forest on Sunday.
Missouri forward Jeff Hafer said the Kansas game could be a springboard to success.
"Emotionally this is big because we need to find ourselves after losing a couple of road games we feel we should have won." Hafer said. "To come out and beat a big team like this is really a big emotional lift."
For Kansas (21-3, 5-1), this is probably just a bump in the road. The Jayhawks expect center Raef LaFrentz back from a broken right hand for Saturday's game against Texas Tech.
Kansas' downfalls were 33.3 per
cent second-half shooting and some ill-timed failures. Center Eric Chenowith, starting in place of LaFrentz, missed all eight shots and clanked two free throws with 24.2 seconds to go with a chance to stretch a Kansas lead to three.
Robertson missed both ends of a technical foul on Missouri coach Norm Stewart for leaving the coaching box in the second half. For the caper, after Tyron Lee hit two free throws with 11.4 seconds to go, Kansas couldn't get off a shot. Pierce dribbled into traffic near the free throw line and bumped into Hardge before Woods knocked the ball away.
"Everybody on our bench is up and yelling foul," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "If you're on the other bench, you always think it was a great defensive play."
Last season Kansas also failed to get off a shot after Corey Tate hit a 15-foot jumper with 5.6 seconds to go for the game-winner.
Victorian Art 1868
"That just seems like kind of a Kansas jinx," Hafer said.
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
Brighton Leather Goods
The Etc. Shop
Accessories for Men & Women
Belts, Hand Bags, Shoes
Wallets & Billfolds
928 Mass.
Downtown Lawrence
spring break fever
Need a break!
Cheap tickets
Great advice
Nice people
Need a break!
Cheap tickets
Great advice
Nice people
Cancun $399
London $652
Puerto Vallarta $599
Jamaica $429
includes airfare, 7 nights hotel
based on quad share
FAMILY AND BUSINESS TERMS. IN LETTING HOME, WE MAY NOT PROVIDE FINANCE ON ANY OF THESE THINGS OR SERVICES FOR YOU. PERFORMANCE AT AN OUTSTANDING ECONOMIC LEVEL IS A REAL REQUIREMENT FOR US. WE DO NOT PROVIDE FINANCE ON ANY OF THESE THINGS OR SERVICES FOR YOU. PERFORMANCE AT AN OUTSTANDING ECONOMIC LEVEL IS A REAL REQUIREMENT FOR US.
Connel Travel
CITY: Council on International
Educational Exchange
622 West 12th Street
Lawrence
(913)-749-3900
BOEING 737 JETS FROM KANSAS CITY
Fly To Any Destination $25 From per segment
These 7-day advance fares must be purchased by January 23, and travel completed by March 11,1998. Good for travel on TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY.
CHICAGO $25*
-MIDWAY
4 non-stops daily
MINN./ST PAUL $25
4 non-stops daily
DALLAS/
FT WORTH $25*
4 non-stops daily
DENVER $25
4 non-stops daily
NEW YORK $25*
CITY - JFK
1 non-stop daily
ATLANTA $25*
2 non-stops daily
PITTSBURGH 1 flight daily
VANGUARD AIRLINES
1-800-VANGUARD or your travel agent
Assigned Seating • Extra Legroom
Ski Colorado!
*P T Air fare + 2 nights Hotel + Lift Passes + Car rental
FROM $359 COMPLETE
BEST DATE UPDATE
VANGUARD VACATIONS
1-800-809-5957
Other Great
Packages Available
- Restrictions apply. Fares are each way based on round trip travel. Prices include $1 per sequest FET 7-day, advance purchase required. Round trip and one night stay required Fares are non-reundable. Blackout dates may apply Seats are limited and may not be available on All nights. Prices are subject to change and do not include PFCs of up to $12 round trip. More circumsult routings may require additional per segment charges;
Today
Mary Duncan presents
"How to Increase your chances of getting into Medical School"
Wednesday, Jan. 21st, 6:30pm 1001 Mallot
M. BURTON
Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D.
Board Certified
Welcome Back
Call 842-7001 for a consultation today!
Member of Blue Shield & Health Net
Wednesday Evening Appointments Available
Students!
We offer treatment for all conditions of the skin, hair and nails including:
- Acne
- . Tattoo Removal
- Mole & Wart Removal
- Hair Transplants
- Glycolic Acid Peels for Acne or Pigmentation Problems
- Spider Vein & Collagen Injections
1930 Iowa St. • Hillcrest Professional Building
Lawrence, KS 68044 (·) (813) 842-7001
Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D.
泌
Dermatology Center of Lawrence Since 1978
Lawrence's Furnished Apartments
M mastercraft management
Now accepting applications for fall move-ins!
REGENTS COURT 19th & Massachusetts 749-0445
ORCHARD CORNERS
15th & Kasold 749-4226
HANOVER PLACE 14th & Massachusetts 841-1212
TANGLEWOOD 10th & Arkansas 749-2415
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida 841-5255
CAMPUS PLACE
12th & Louisiana 841-1429
842-4455
Professional Management and Maintenance Company Equal Housing Opportunity
FATSO'S LAWRENCE,KS
WE JUST GOT FATTA!
NEW POOL TABLES - NEW PAINT - MORE SEATS - BIG TV
MONDAY - $2 ANY DRAW / $2 WELLS / FREE POOL
TUESDAY - $2 CAPTAIN & COKE / $2 CUERVO SHOTS
WEDNESDAY - $1.50 HONEY BROWN & BUD LIGHT DRAWS
THURSDAY - $2 ANY DRAW & WELLS / $1 KAMI & SLIPPERY NIPPLE SHOTS
FRIDAY - $2 ANY BOTTLE / $2 MOST SHOTS
SATURDAY - $ 2 DOMESTIC BOTTLES / $3 LONG ISLANDS
SHOOT POOL - WATCH THE BIG SCREEN - THROW DARTS - EAT PIZZA
1016 MASSACHUSETTS / 865-4055 / OPEN MON-SAT 6PM-2AM
4
Tomorrow's weather
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
COLD
ansan
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PD BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 6601-3585
The weather continues to be cold and windy with partly cloudy skies.
Thursday
January 22, 1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 • No. 84
HIGH LOW 35 23
Online today
Sports today
Learning to create your own Internet resources? Open up Kira's Web Toolbox to learn CGI, passwords, and other online essentials.
http://www.lightsphere.com/dev
Section:
A
Vol. 108 • No. 84
Section: A
http://www.lightsphere.com/dev
---
Continuing coverage of Louisiana State's alleged NCAA violations during the recruitment of Kansas forward Lester Earl.
SEE PAGE 1B
Contact the Kansan
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WWW.KANSAN.COM
News: (785) 864-4810
Advertising: (785) 864-4358
Fax: (785) 864-5261
Opinion e-mail: opinion@kansan.com
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Advertising e-mail: onlineads@kansan.com
Clinton denies affair accusation
(USPS 650-640)
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In dozens of taped conversations now in the hands of Whitewater prosecutors, a former White House intern says that she had an affair with President Clinton and that he tried to get her to lie about it, lawyers said yesterday. An outraged president denied the allegations.
"There is not a sexual relationship," Clinton said firmly in a White House interview. "I did not ask anyone to tell anything other than the truth."
Prosecutors immediately subpoenaed the White House for documents about the young woman
while new evidence surfaced that Clinton's United Nations ambassador, Bill Richardson, and another confidant, Vernon Jordan, arranged jobs for 24-year-old intern Monica S. Lewinsky.
Whitewater prosecutors already were investigating job-for-silence allegations that Jordan and other Clinton friends arranged work for Whitewater figure Webster Hubbell, a former associate attorney general
Attorney General Janet Reno and a federal appeals court panel approved Whitewater Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr's request to expand his inquiry into the events surrounding Lewinsky.
The young intern's attorney,
protection," Ginsburg said on ABC
William Ginsburg, said yesterday that at this time she stood by her affidavit denying the affair. Later, however, Ginsburg suggested in a television interview that her account could change, noting that Starr had
"Mr. Starr's office could give her
Clinton; Denies he had an affair with a White House intern
the authority to grant immunity to Lewinsky in exchange for her cooperation in the investigation.
Two lawyers familiar with the tapes, who demanded anonymity, said Lewinsky described, in no uncertain terms, an affair in conver
Word of the new investigation gripped the White House and had political figures talking of possible impeachment if the allegations were borne out.
The investigation was prompted when one of Lewinsky's friends, former White House staffer Linda Tripp, provided Starr with tapes in which Lewinsky alleged an affair with Clinton and recounted conversations she allegedly had with Clinton and Jordan, who asked her to deny the relationship, lawyers said.
sations that Tripp secretly recorded. The lawyers said that in these conversations, Lewinsky said Jordan assisted her in getting a new job in New York during recent months, around the time she was subpoenaed in the Paula Jones case
P
Lewinsky: Claims she was asked to lie about the affair
Cosmetic company Revlon disclosed yesterday that Jordan, who is on the company's board, referred
Lewinsky for a public affairs job at an affiliate. Lewinsky was interviewed during the last two months and offered a job.
"In light of today's events, the company is informing Ms. Lewinsky that it will take no further action at this time on her employment application," the company said.
Jordan was not the only one to help Lewinsky with a job. Officials confirmed that Ambassador Richardson, responding to a request from someone at the White House, interviewed Lewinsky at her Watergate apartment and offered her a junior job in public affairs at the U.S. mission at the United Nations in New York.
Under construction
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON
NEW HOUSE
COMING SOON
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
GAME FRITZEL CONSTRUCTION
ARCHITECT
MICHAEL TREANDR ARCHITECTS
Construction on the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house, 1301 West Campus Road, is scheduled to be completed in August. Workers have to finish framing the walls and pouring the concrete before work on the interior can begin. Photo by Cary Weters/KANSAN
Student Senate closes polling-site debate
By Marc Sheforgen and Melissa Ngo
mnao@ka
msheforgen@kansan.com
Kansan staff writers
Student Senate met last night in a marathon meeting that may lead to closure in the residence hall polling-sites debate and money to bring speaker Al Franken to the University of Kansas.
After a lengthy debate, Senate voted to place the Daisy Hill petition and the GSP-Corbin-Oliver Halls bill on the ballot in April to be decided upon by voters. Student Senate Elections Commission still may establish polling sites at the residence halls for the spring elections.
Before the issue was decided, Brad Finkeldei, Elections Commission chairman, said the commission would place polling sites at residence halls regardless of
Senate's vote and pending funds. At press time, attempts to reach Finkeldei were unsuccessful.
In other action, a bill to fund Saferide with $30,000 from the Student Senate Reserve Account was tabled and will be brought before Senate in no more than one month.
Senate voted to table the bill after questions were raised about receiving corporate funding for Saferide. Senate will explore options of getting money from sponsors that traditionally oppose driving drunk, such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
Comedian Al Franken, who recently wrote the best-selling book, *Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot*, has been selected by Senate and Student Union Activities to be this year's KU Student Lecture Series speaker. Senate passed a bill to pay $9,000 of Franken's $21,000 fee.
"The fee is not an unusual fee
The most debated code change proposed by the Student Senate Elections Commission was 1998 campaign spending limits, which are $2,210 for each coalition and independent president/vice-president pair. Spending limits for independent senators will be $200.
for a national speaker of his caliber," said Jason Thompson, Nunemaker senator and sponsor of the bill to fund Franken's speech. "The reason we picked him is because out of the surveys students turned back in, he is the one we got the most response about."
Finkeldei said, "We decided to give the same amount to independent president/vice-president candidates as to the coalitions because when you are running for those positions you need to reach the student body equally."
Much of the meeting's time was spent in an open forum discussing elections codes.
Roe vs. Wade
The U.S. Supreme Court 25 years ago rendered its verdict in favor of abortion, but KU students along with the rest of the country still struggle with the controversial issue.
By Gerry Doyle and Marcelo Vilela
gdoyle@kansan.com
gobye @kansan.com
mvilea @kansan.com
Kansas staff writers
Twenty-five years ago, Norma McCorvey assumed the identity of Jane Roe.
In March 1970, the Texas woman decided her rights were in jeopardy. She was pregnant, and she wanted an abortion.
In Texas, however, abortions were illegal except in cases when the mother's life was in jeopardy. She was told she could go to another state to have an abortion, an option she rejected because she could not afford it.
The decision issued 25 years ago today by the U.S. Supreme Court said Jane Roe had the legal right to an abortion.
"In view of all this, we do not agree that, by adopting one view of life, Texas may override the rights of the pregnant woman that are at stake," wrote Justice Harry Blackmun in the opinion of the court.
With these words, the Supreme Court ignited an inferno of discord between those who supported a woman's right to choose and those who were against abortion.
The Roe vs. Wade decision did not cause much stir when it was first issued, but in 1983, abortion-rights and anti-abortion activists marched along Massachusetts Street in opposite directions to
Lawrence was not immune to the maelstrom.
protest the decision's 10th anniversary.
In 1986, a march took place on the north sidewalk of Jayhawk Boulevard. Abortion-rights activists marched behind anti-abortion protesters, who asked
passers-by to sign a petition in support of President Ronald Reagan's anti-abortion policy.
In 1989, aborti-
rights activists anticipated the possibility that the justices could overturn Roe vs. Wade, wich
"The decision made promises about less child abuse and fewer teen mothers. But it hasn't done that."
Andrea Van Dyke
co-chair person for KU Students for Life
would give states more power.
give states more power. KU students prepared to march in support of legalized abortion in Washington, D.C.
In 1990, about 280 anti-abortion activists marched downtown in silence and rallied on the steps of the Topeka Capitol.
The most recent protest march was in 1994, when about 150 people marched on Massachusetts Street with empty baby strollers to protest the 21st anniversary.
On the 25th anniversary of the decision, Lawrence still is entangled in the melee.
"The decision made promises about less child abuse and fewer teen mothers," said Andrea VanDyke, Atchison sophomore and co-chairperson for KU Students for Life. "But it hasn't done that. People thought it would be rare to have an abortion -- that it would be the last resort."
In Washington, Norma McCorvey will participate in the anti-abortion movement's annual March for Life. She said she changed her mind about abortion in 1995 when she was working at an abortion clinic.
"Norma McCorvey is still here," McCorvey told the Reuters news agency. "Jane Roe died in order for Norma McCorvey to live."
Although McCorvey has reached equilibrium about how she feels, few people - from the Supreme Court Justices who ruled on the case in 1973 to KU students - can deny the challenge and scope of the issue.
"We forthwith acknowledge our awareness of the sensitive and emotional nature of the abortion controversy, or the vigorous opposing views," Justice Blackmun wrote in 1973.
See pg. 2A
More information about campus reaction concerning the 25th anniversary of this historic decision.
Local Internet provider to link with Kansas network
By Aaron Knopf
aknopf@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Direct network access will speed connections
Lawrence Internet service provider Sunflower Dataavion soon will have a direct connection into a high-speed data network.
Datavission will have a direct plug into the Kansas Research and Education Network, a consortium of educational statewide institutions including the University of Kansas.
nology involved allows for connection speeds that are hundreds - possibly millions - of times faster than the speeds achieved using traditional phone-line modems.
Datavisa, a branch of Sunflower Cablevision, provides Internet access through cable television lines using a cable modem. The tech
- An average phone-line modem can transfer about 28,000 bits of information per second.
Datavision's cable modem system can transfer more than 500,000 bits of information per second.
The new, direct link to the KANREN network ensures that Datavision customers, who could include KU students and faculty, will not experience a slowdown when accessing KU Web sites.
"Without the direct connection, you actually have to go out into the Internet and then back in again, and sometimes that's pretty slow," said Dave Nordlund, KANREN network administrator.
Nordlund said he estimated the network between Datavision and KANREN would be operational in about three weeks.
Dan Simons, head of new ventures for World Co., Datavision's parent company, said that the link to KANREN was the first step in offering important services to KU Datavision users.
"I want to offer KU staff the ability to be at their home computers ... where they can access their KU files, their computers in the office, on a closed, secure net." Simons said. "It just seems like something we should move toward."
Datavision is the first service provider to form a partnership with KANREN. Nordlund said other Internet service providers in Manhattan, Kan., and Topeka were considering linking to the KANREN network.
KANREN charges Internet service providers like Datavision a one time fee of $1,000 along
with $50 per month to make the connection.
"Since we're a non-profit, we can't make money. So that's just to cover expenses," Nordlund said.
Simons said he was looking forward to establishing the link with KANREN.
"Hopefully it will benefit a lot of people," Simons said.
Sunflower Datavision is a relatively new commercial venture. It was established two years ago but has been available to customers for only a year.
Simons said Datavison had only 500 to 600 subscribers, with about 1,200 connected computers. The network has the capacity to hold 9,000 simultaneous connections."Really we have not marketed it all because we want to learn and make sure we know how to walk before we run." Simons said.
The KANREN Network
THE HANKEN NETWORK
University of Kansas
Kansas State University
NJ Medical Center
Indiana Universtity
Wichita State University
Kansas Research and Education Network features a cable modem Internet connection, which is faster than traditional phone-line modems. The various universities provide access to the KANREN network. The connection provides Dataxation customers with direct access to the KANREN network.
Kristi Elliott / KAMSAN
Section A · Page 2
The University Daily Kansan
Thursday, January 22, 1998
KJHK gets green light to boost power
New equipment will send signal in 40-mile radius
by Chris Horton
Kansan staff writer
chorton@kansan.com
- With the final bureaucratic obstacle out of the way, KJKH is ready for a bigger broadcast area and a larger listenership.
After waiting four months for FCC approval, KJHK will increase the power of its broadcast signal from 100 to 3500 watts by mid-March, said Gary Hawke, KJHK general manager. The range of the broadcast signal will increase from a 10- to
a 40-mile radius. Hawke said.
KJHK's signal primarily serves Lawrence, but with the power increase it will reach Topeka, Leavenworth and the western portion of the Kansas City Metropolitan area, Hawke said.
"You should be able to hear it at least out to the state line," he said.
Hawke recently received verbal notification from the FCC that the station could proceed with the installation of the new antenna, coaxial cable and transmitter needed for the power increase, he said.
The antenna and cable could cost a total of $15,000, and the transmitter could cost up to $40,000, with the total cost being paid during a four- to five-year period, he said.
The money used to pay for the new equipment will come from the University's Student Media Assessment Fee fund. The fund is supplied by student campus fees, he said.
Hawke said the antenna, cable and transmitter could not be ordered until the contractors returned their bids Feb. 3.
The contractor will have 45 days to complete the installation. he said.
The station had hoped to upgrade its wattage early last semester, but technical and bureaucratic obstacles pushed the expected time of completion back several times. Hawke said.
"The biggest holdup was with the FCC," he said. "We couldn't order the equipment until they said it was okay."
Kelly Corcoran, KJHK music
director and Topeka senior, said the station's potential listenership will increase significantly.
"Our potential audience will go from 80,000 people to a million and a half, which should mean more of an audience response." Corcoran said.
"People who have grown weary of commercial radio will find that KJ is more personable and progressive — it's about music, not ratings," he said.
Corcoran said that with a larger audience, he anticipates changes in KJHK's listener demographics, particularly in younger listeners looking for an alternative to format-oriented commercial radio.
Corcoran said KJHK was in a category of its own because of the diverse programming it
New Broadcast Range for KJHK
MISSOURI
Atkinson
Leavenworth
Kansas City
Topeka
Lecompton
Lawrence
Olathe
Ottawa
KANSAS
Kristi Elliott / KANSAN
offered, such as hip-hop, polka, heavy metal and ska in addition to college rock and jazz.
"We've created a niche for the station by going places commercial radio won't go," he said, "We try to provide the community with music that isn't available anywhere else."
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Vanilla Ice to play second show in town
Two is the magic number for Vanilla ice.
The Vanilla Ice show scheduled for Feb. 21 sold out so quickly that a second show was scheduled for Feb. 22, said Jeff Fortier, president of Avalanche Productions.
"This is the first act to ever sell out the Granada on the first day," Fortier said.
Tickets for the first show sold out in less than eight hours.
Tickets for the second show went on sale yesterday for $10. Tickets can be purchased at the Granada box office or through Ticketmaster.
"I think the second show will sell out, too." Fortier said.
The show will be held at the Granada. Doors will open at 8 p.m. Fortier told Two Skinny J's would open for Vanilla Ice.
Suspects enter not-guilty pleas in liquor-store robbery charges
The five Lawrence men charged with aggravated robbery in connection with two liquor store holdups entered not guilty pleas in Douglas County Court yesterday. Their trials will begin Monday.
Matthew Wayne Headley, 21, Anthony Travon Vann, 20, Andre Deshawn Newman, 19, Chaz Marquis Green, 18, and Willie D. Paul, 18, also pleaded not guilty to counts of conspiracy to commit aggravated robbery.
A Douglas County Court judge set bond for Newman at $40,000, and set Vann's, Green's and Headley's bonds at $50,000 each. Paul's bond was not set.
Newman and Green were charged in connection with both the Monday night holdup of Spirit
Retail Liquor, 600 Lawrence Ave. and the Jan.15 holdup of Koleber Retail Liquor, 1805 W. Second St.
Vann and Headley were charged in connection with the Spirit Retail Liquor robbery, and Paul in connection with the Koleber Retail Liquor robbery.
Sgt. Susan Hadi said that in both incidents, the men used handguns to hold up store clerks while stealing money from the stores' registers. The men also stole liquor and other property, she said.
Vann and Newman were arrested while driving away from the Spirit Retail Liquor store. Green, owner of the getaway vehicle, was interviewed and arrested Tuesday. Police arrested Headley and Paul less than four hours later.
Hadi said she was proud of the police department's work.
Kansan staff report
ET CETERA
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com - these requests will appear on the UDKI as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
Professors unearth $12,400 donation for anthropology
recycle
recycle
By Emily C. Forsyth
Kansan staff writer
It bears repeating!
Nancy Dahl never took an anthropology course in college, but her lifelong interest and enthusiasm for the subject has inspired her to make a contribution that may enable others to pursue a career in the field.
Dahl, professor of physiology and cell biology, her husband, Dennis Dahl, a retired Watkins Memorial Health Center physician, and their family have donated $12,400 to establish a fund for undergraduate studies in anthropology.
Sally Frost-Mason, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, announced the gift earlier this month.
Nancy Dahl said she and her husband were fascinated by anthropology at an early age. They have explored other cultures through reading and traveling to locations including Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado, England, Germany and the Czech Republic.
"Learning new things has always enriched our lives," she said. "It's our hope that this gift will help many students grow in their field and develop a similar passion for learning."
Although Nancy and Dennis Dahl each have degrees in physiology and biochemistry, Nancy said they wanted to apply the money to a field that lacked a wide range of financing.
John Scarfe, director of communications for the Kansas University Endowment Association, said the fund was one of two at the University that have been designated specifically for anthropology studies.
Nancy Dahl said the money would be more useful if applied to undergraduate studies in the field, rather than graduate studies.
"We don't have enough money in the fund to send somebody to Kenya, or something like that, but there is money for encouraging students." Dahl said. "We'd like to just augment the undergraduate experience."
Scarffe said the principle $12, 400 had been invested to provide a continuous gift. The fund may be dispersed as awards for books, library or field research or financial aid for students who are the first in their family to attend college.
this gift will be greatly appreciated by students of anthropology." Frost-Mason said. "That Nancy and Dennis would choose to find ways to support student activities also comes as no surprise, given the long-term career commitments that each of them has made to KU students for many years."
The Dahls made the donation in memory of Nancy's mother, Bernice DeSelms Fort.
Roe vs. Wade supporters and opponents want to educate today
By Sara Anderson
Kansan staff writer
Two opposing groups have a common goal for the 25th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade — education.
"Education of the KU campus is the main goal of our group," said Andrea VanDyke, Atchison sophomore and cochair for KU Students for Life.
"We decided we wanted to educate, and if we could get people together to talk, we could get the message across," she said.
Sarah Page, Prairie Village senior and co-coordinator of the KU Pro-Choice Coalition, said she also thought that education was one of the most important aspects of the day.
The KU Pro-Choice Coalition and KU Students for Life are focusing on educating the public about abortion and the controversies that surround the issue.
The Pro-Choice Coalition sponsored a free film and discussion last night at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. The group showed When Abortion Was Illegal and discussed topics such as current legislation, the history of Roe vs. Wade and how people could get involved locally.
"We're hoping that people will want to focus on what Roe vs. Wade means and how it has affected women," said Sarah Deer, Wichita law student and co-coordinator of the coalition. "Most students were born after Roe vs. Wade so they take it for granted. We want to show you can't take it for granted."
Deer said some members would be traveling to Topeka today to participate in the activities sponsored by the Kansas Choice Alliance.
Activities in Topeka include an informal gathering to discuss reproductive health-care issues, a conference and a briefing highlighting the book Wrath of Angels by Judith Thomas and James Risen, an interfaith service, a box lunch with legislators and a showing of the film If These Walls Could Talk.
Deer said the coalition would like to be represented on campus today but nothing was definate.
KU Students for Life will have a booth today at the Information Fair in lobby of the Kansas Union. They will distribute information about abortion and show a video called After the Choice.
VanDyke said that women's safety was one of the group's main concerns.
"We're really concerned about the effects on women," she said. "Abortion hurts the baby but is also damaging to women emotionally and physically."
VanDyke said the group originally had planned a display of 44 tombstones, each symbolizing 100 babies killed by abortion. The tombstones would represent the 4,400 fetuses that VanDyke said were aborted each day in the United States.
recycle
The display, which would have appeared on the lawn outside Stauffer-Flint Hall, had been approved by the University Events Committee, but KU Students for Life decided against it.
"The display was going to be part of the Cemetery of Innocence that is done all around the country," she said. "But we decided against it because it doesn't educate enough, it's just an awareness type thing. The info fair will give us a chance to educate the campus better."
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Today is the 25th Anniversary of
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Thursday, Januarv 22. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 3
Physician criticizes health care
By Lisa Stevens John
john@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
The medical system in the United States is failing, a renowned physician/author told a University of Kansas Medical Center audience yesterday morning.
JOHN W. SMITH
Linda Graves, Kansas first lady, visits with Donald Hagen, executive vice chancellor, and T. Berry Brazelton following Brazelton's presentation at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Photo by Lisa Stevens John/KANSAN
"It stinks," said T. Berry Brazelton, as he lectured about 350 medical caregivers. "Forty percent of our kids are not getting their health-care needs met. And 40 percent of our kids are not getting immunized."
Brazelton pointed to the growth of agencies providing managed health care. He said it was difficult to build a relationship when patients saw a different caregiver each time they brought their child to a clinic.
Brazelton said health-care providers needed to connect on an emotional, as well as a cognitive level, with children's parents. The best way to do this is through the children. Brazelton said.
The lecture was part of a two-day seminar sponsored by the KU Children's Center/KU Hospital, Wyandotte County Health Department
and Mid America Immunization Coalition.
Brazelton has written more than 200 scientific articles and 26 books about pediatrics and child develop-
ment. He is a clinical professor emeritus of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School and a professor of psychiatry and human development at Brown University.
Regents to create ownership standards
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University of Kansas Provost David Shulenburger, who addressed the board, said a completed policy was within reach.
Faculty and administrators agreed that works-for-hire, the legal doctrine that gives employers ownership of property produced by employees within the scope of their employment, would be included in the policy.
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Property produced by students employed by a university likely will be owned by the university, accordtrine that gives employers ownership of property produced by employees within the scope of their employment, would be included in the policy.
A Kansas Board of Regents task force will formulate a system-wide policy for intellectual property rights.
STUDENT
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
SENATE
By Gerry Doyle and Brandon Copple
gdoyle@kansan.com
bcapple@kansan.com
Kansas staff writers
The board created the task force after hearing reports from students, faculty and administrators from Regents schools during a policy discussion yesterday.
Task force will decide student, faculty rights
For more information contact Recreation Services at 864-3546 or stop by 208 Robinson.
"I think it could be written in one afternoon," said Larry Draper, president of University Senate. "We are in agreement on most of the issues."
"The university gets ownership of faculty products because it pays the faculty member and has an investment in the faculty," she said. "So if a student invests time and money in the university, the student should own the product."
The task force will present a draft policy to the board in May. The board plans to adopt a policy in June.
Unlike teachers or other employees, students actually pay to study at universities, said Jessica Greis, student body president at Wichita State University and president of the Regents Student Advisory Committee. Students should retain ownership of their works, she said.
Students, whose work may be more closely scrutinized by universities as copyright issues continue to evolve, also contributed to the discussion.
ing to reports.
Professors' rights likely will not change, said Joseph Aistrup, professor of political science at Fort Hays State University. Teachers' intellectual property rights historically have received special protection, he said.
"We need to keep the primary purpose of the university in focus," Aistrup said. "The policy should focus on nurturing creative environment and the free exchange of ideas."
Aistrup said that in general the creator should own intellectual property but that several exceptions could be made, including fair use of a scholarship by the university and works produced under a contract or grant.
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Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Kansan
Published daily since 1912
4A
Lindsay Henry, *Editor*
Marc Harrell, *Business manager*
Dave Morantz, *Managing editor*
Kristie Blasi, *Managing editor*
Dan Simon, *Sales and marketing adviser*
Tom Eblen, *General manager*, news adviser
Justin Knupp, *Technology coordinator*
Thursday, Jan. 22, 1998
WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL ABOUT CLONING?
SIGNE WILKINSON 02197
Sighe/ PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS
Editorials
Students should be aware of what government is doing at all levels
Will the Lawrence City Commission create a public bus system? Will Student Senate help create a University-wide recycling program? Will the Legislature dole out money for technology?
These are questions that affect most students at the University of Kansas. However, at times it seems that students do not care about the issues that affect them at campus, city, or state levels.
Last spring a KU professor and a KU graduate student ran for City Commission. This did not seem to interest many students in the campaign. Although statistics are not available, city elections have traditionally had a low turnout of KU students. Allen Field House has often been used as a polling site because of its proximity to the Daisy Hill residence halls and other student housing, both on-campus and off. However, last year the city stopped using it for local elections because of the low number of voters that used the polling site. It was simply a waste of the workers' time.
More political involvement is needed in Student Senate, City Commission, the Legislature
As a state-funded institution the University is affected by our state legislature as well. Students should make an effort to learn what is happening there. The Student Legislative Awareness Board is a campus organization that dedicates its time to looking out for students' interests and to keep students aware of what is happening in our capital.
Despite this group, many students don't seem to know what important
legislation may be coming up, or how it may effect them. SLAB has a web page and a listserv that students may sign up for through the office.
KU students seem to care most about campus politics. Involved students are not only in Student Senate, but may be members of one of the five Senate committees. More than 150 students are on these committees.
However, other students often are not nearly as interested in what Senate is doing. During a typical meeting, there may be about 10 non-senator students attending the meeting. There may be 25 to 30 students when that night's legislation effects a particular group or organization.
Considering that the University has 25,108 students, few get involved. Students need to be aware of what their elected representatives are doing at all levels of government.
Plug in to the Jayhawk Connection
Paul Eakins for the editorial board
College is an exciting time in our lives. We are given the freedom and independence to do just about anything we desire. Many opportunities surround us.
Yet students do not always take advantage of these opportunities. The University of Kansas has many social, political, academic and athletic organizations that foster a variety of interests. Students should explore these opportunities.
In the real world, employers and graduate schools will be looking for students
These organizations allow students to interact with others who have similar interests and give students good experience.
There are many organizations and opportunities available at the University.
who have excelled both inside and outside of the classroom. Your university experience must prepare you for the next level.
University.
One organization that helps students get involved is the Jayhawk Connection. Its volunteers represent a wide variety of majors, interests and backgrounds. The organization works by using more experienced students to help those new to the
The volunteers may help students by advising them about classes to take, helping them get involved in campus organizations, helping them discover internship and career-related opportunities, and helping them to adjust to the University.
Information about the organization is available at most KU living organizations, such as residence halls, scholarship halls, sororities and fraternities.
Students should use all resources available at the University to get as much from their college experience as possible.
Kansan staff
Aroop Pal for the editorial board
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“Being a politician is like being a football coach. You have to be smart enough to understand the game but dumb enough to think it's important.”
Eugene McCarthy
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 home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
Guest columnms Should be double-
spaced typed with fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
All letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 11 Staufer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermueller (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff [opinion@kansan.com] or call 864-4810.
Perspective
Proposal would give students a needed break
B y now, you've probably read at least one of the news stories or columns about fall break.
It may be surprising that this talk is not new. Other schools work on this.
Other Schools such as Oklahoma State University, the University of North Carolina and even the University of Kansas Medical Center already have fall breaks. Wichita State University and Kansas State University are investigating the possibility of such a break.
Even at the University of Kansas, the possibility has been discussed but never completed. As a member of this year's Calendar Committee, I've been pursuing
---
Jason Fizell opinion@kansan.com
the idea and will not allow the complexity of the task deter me from helping to create a workable plan.
Altering the University calendar is not a simple task. Every sector of the University is interrelated. Many areas ultimately could be affected—student housing, enrollment and athletics, to name three. But the effects are not necessarily negative. For example, many other schools with fall breaks have begun scheduling football games away from home during the break to enable students to take road trips to see the games.
There also is the ever-present aversion to change that many people express when new ideas are suggested. Too often people already have made up their minds about an issue before they are familiar with the specifics. It's easier to be a cynic and dismiss something because of perceived difficulties than it is to work hard to overcome these same difficulties.
We are lucky that we have encountered relatively little cynicism so far.
It's not surprising that most KU students desire a fall break. There are many reasons for it. The stretch from Labor Day to Thanksgiving is the longest period of classes without a break.
And in the middle of this stretch is the mother of all stress-causers: midterms. But we don't get time to prepare for or recuperate from these
brain-benders.
Immediately after midterms, we're hit with what psychologists call the winter blahs, a sort of Midwestern, college-kid equivalent of the midlife crisis. Students seem to get crankier as the days get shorter and term papers and finals begin to loom on the horizon.
In short, we just can't seem to win when it comes to the dog days of October — that is, until now.
Here is a draft of the proposal:
Shorten finals to five days (from six), Monday through Friday.
Create a two-day fall break that would be tacked on the end of a two-day weekend (meaning Monday and Tuesday) in mid- to late-October.
Stop Day would fall on a Friday, giving students both this traditional day and the weekend to prepare for finals.
Also, I think the proposal would be positive for students in ways other than creating a fall break. By altering finals week, we are not only falling in step with what most of our peer institutions do, but also we are making it rational. This will cut down on situations in which students have finals on the first and last day of finals with nothing to do in between. In addition, by creating a three-day study block before the beginning of finals, students can study more.
Changes also would have to be made to spring break in order to create parity between the semesters.
The Calendar Committee has taken other concerns into account as well. For instance, we are working with the Department of Student Housing to keep all on-campus residences open during the break.
This proposal is far from a done deal. The University Calendar committee wants to hear from you. Please direct input to me at ifizell@ukans.edu.
I want to create a plan that almost everybody can agree on and benefit from. With your help we can.
Jason Fixell is an Olathe senior in history and a member of the University Calendar Committee.
Math instructors need more than high test scores
I've often wondered exactly how many college students endure the torture of semester- long intermediate math courses each year instructed by overly apprehensive, under-
trained students labeled as "undergraduate teaching assistants." How many unfortunate students such as me have watched their instructor burn up 20 minutes of a 50-minute course anxiously trying to put one student's confusion to rest?
YVANNE BROWN
How many students listen in disbelief as their baffled instructor murmurs to the class, "Did I do that right?" How many students shortly afterward think, "How the hell am I supposed to know?"
Tina
Terry
opinion@kansan.com
I would guess that more than a few students have experienced such torment, considering that more than 20 percent of last semester's Math 101 students and 25 percent of Math 002 students failed or dropped out of the classes according to the department of math.
Usually, a student's success in a course depends on how hard the student works. However, some of the weight leans on the instructor. At the University of Kansas, a student who wants to be a math teaching assistant must have high grades through Calculus II. He or she must also go through a rigorous interviewing process with the math department. Undergraduate teaching assistants must also receive recommendations from professors. The math department'
does a great job of making sure that only the best math students become teaching assistants.
However, what they fail to do is effectively teach these top math students how to teach. It's a simple concept: A teacher actually needs teaching skills.
The fact is it takes more than just great math skills to make a math teacher. Teachers must have presence and composure. They must be aware of the students that surround them each day, and they must be expert communicators. It is wonderful if you have the ability to solve an equation in your head, but only a true teacher has the ability to communicate this process to the student.
Now, don't get me wrong. I applaud all ambitious students who take on the challenge of becoming student teaching assistants. The University needs these assistants and it's great practice for those who aspire to become teachers. It's also no secret that math is not the easiest subject to teach or to learn. The Bureau of the Census reports that the average American student, before entering college, attains his or her lowest scores in the English and math sections of the ACT.
The department of math does train its undergraduate instructors in a 2/1/2 day teaching seminar which lasts for several hours each day. However, the department would do well to require its teaching assistants to take a longer course that teaches more instructing skills. It would certainly be worthwhile to the students who find themselves retaking Math 002 and Math 101 each semester.
Terry is a Topeka senior in journalism.
Overheard
The following comments are excerpts of the posting from the Student Senate listserv. To subscribe to the listserv call Senate at 864-3710
Last year the Unite Coalition promised to "establish a thorough and helpful Senate web page. Of course, those of you that have visited Senate's current site realize this is still far from a reality. I would like to point out ...that every single student government from our Regents, peer, and Big 12 institutions has its own institution, and most of them are incredible... I am sure most would rather delegate this task down the line and worry instead about their law school applications or what they would have for lunch that day.
Actually, Matt Bachand and I discussed hiring someone to be
posted by Jason Fizell, calendar committee member
posted by Scott Sullivan Student Body President
the webmaster and help Comms.
Board come up with the ideas behind the page with the webmaster as the executor of those ideas. Comms. has been supposed to be doing this all along.
What on earth? Liar liar pants on fire. Scott has never told me what comms was "supposed to do." Scott is ultimately the one who was supposed to come through with the web page...The fact is that the image of student senate is ultimately Scott's responsibility. Harry Truman had a sign that said "The Buck Stops Here." Scott's sign...might as well say "S---rolls downhill."
posted by Matt Bachand student senator
under our responsibilities of reaching out to students about Senate... But Scott Sullivan decided to take over the project... The Communications Board is now being left out of the project...
At the beginning of the semester, the Comms Board discussed revamping the web page since that seemed to fall
posted by Holly Krebs student senator
The original plan was to have a redesigned webpage running by the first day of the second semester. I have set aside a portion of my discretionary funds to pay for this webpage redesign... In [creating this listserv] we took a bold step that would allow free discussion by anyone with an interest in Senate. However, I believe this listserv has not fulfilled its original purpose and has simply been used to further some individuals political goals and to launch personal attacks which are unfounded.
posted by Scott Sullivan
1
Thursday, January 22, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Retired University professor maintains busybee schedule
Michener gets 'sweet' reward for life of study
By Susie Gura
Kansan staff writer
For a lifetime of work in the fields of insect systematics, morphology and evolution, the Entomological Society of America gave Charles Michener an award
Michener, distinguished professor emeritus of entomology and systematics and ecology, received the Thomas Say Award in November at the society's annual meeting in Nashville, Tenn.
"It was nice," Michener said. "I got to see a lot of people, and I received a plaque, plus there was a monetary aspect."
Michener became interested in nature and bees as a child painting plants and drawing insects.
His first paper about bees was published in 1935. He received his bachelor's degree and doctorate from the University of California,
Berkeley. His research at Berkeley was dedicated to the study of bees.
In 1948, Michener came to the University of Kansas to continue his bee research. Although he retired 10 years ago, he continues to spend as much time at the University as he did when he was a full-time professor.
"I'm busy with research and writing a book on bees." Michener said. "It's nice because the University has provided me with office space, I have a good library on bees and am close to the Entomological Museum."
The museum is in Snow Hall.
The museum is in Snow Ark Chip Taylor, professor of entology, and systematics and ecology, said Michener's work in the field of entomology was admirable.
"He is a most extraordinary man with a lifetime of achievements." Taylor said.
Taylor said professors seldom had a colleague as willing to share knowledge as Michener.
During his time at the University, Michener helped the Entomological Museum assemble its large collection of bee specimens.
working on an illustrated guide to the bees of the world. He no longer teaches classes but does advise a graduate student.
He has written five books and is
"My last graduate student is finishing up his thesis and is turning it in this month," he said. "This will probably be my last one."
Michener served as president for the Central States Entomological Society, American Society of Naturalists, the Society of the Study of Evolution, the Society of Systematic Zoology and the International Union for the Study of Social Insects.
He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the Brazilian Academy of Sciences.
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Why: Lifetime of achievement in insect systematics, morphology and evolution
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Section A·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
300
Thursday, January 22, 1998
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SENATE
No lie: Police update polygraph
KU department gets new tool to perform test for truthfulness
By Laura Roddy
lroddy@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
Lt. Vie Strnad of the KU police department does not take kindly to lies.
Stradr, the only certified polygrapher in Douglas County, performs about 40 polygraph tests each year to determine if his subjects are telling the truth — and he has a new machine to help him.
The police department's month-old computerized polygraph machine replaced the machine the department had owned since 1985.
Strnad said he had not performed a test using the new polygraph machine but had done several practice rounds.
"I'm still trying to get the fundamentals down," he said.
Strad performs the polygraph examinations for the Douglas County Sheriff's Office, the Lawrence Police Department, the Lawrence Fire Department, the district attorney's office and occasionally for other counties.
Strad said that, if used properly, the polygraph could be a valuable instrument.
"You can lie to anybody you want to, but you can't lie to yourself." Strmad said. "You can't beat the polygraph instrument. You can only beat the examiner."
Strad, who has worked for the University since 1969, became certified as a polygrapher in 1985 after completing a seven-week course at the Backster School of Lie Detection in San Diego.
Strnad said polygraph testing was not admissible as evidence in Kansas unless both attorneys agreed to it.
Sgt. Susan Hadl of the Lawrence Police Department said the polygraph was a tool that helped her department, although it was not used frequently.
A polygraph test records a subject's breathing, movement patterns, blood pressure and perspiration in response to yes or no questions. Strnad said the average test lasted anywhere from one and a half to two hours.
A subject spends only 15 minutes hooked up to the
"It is a wonderful asset to the community to have Lt. Strad available," Hadl said.
MARY SCHNEIDER
University of Kansas Police Lt. Vic Stradl talks to a subject before administering a sample polygraph test. Stradl is the only person in Douglas County certified to administer a polygraph test. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
polygraph machine, Strnad said. The rest of the examination involves a pretest and question formulation.
Subjects are advised of their rights at the beginning of the test and must sign a waiver. Strnad said taking a polygraph was voluntary.
All the questions are gone over word for word in advance. There are no tricks or surprises here" he said. "We're here to find the truth."
Stradn is a member of numerous polygraph associations and serves as the president of the Kansas Polygraph Association. He said he tried to attend a national seminar annually to keep up-to-date.
"My agency, the University of Kansas police department, is very good about it," Strnad said. "It increases my credibility and the credibility of my department."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Basketball
Should Earl face punishment?
If the NCAA's allegations against Lousiana State are true, Lester Earl is just as guilty as the school, writes Mike Vaccaro of The Kansas City Star. SEE PAGE 3B
Yesterday's game - Kansas vs. Oklahoma State
KU
KANSAS
12-3,4-2
UNRANKED
oSu
56
OKLA. STATE 11-5, 4-2 UNRANKED
WWW.JHAWKBBALL.COM
SECTION B, PAGE 1
51
THURSDAY, JANUARY 22.1998
Women extend home win streak
HAWKS
15
Robbins' late three-pointer preserves win for Jayhawks
Kansas guard Jennifer Jackson looks to set up the offense and slow the pace of the game. Jackson had three points and led the team with three steals. The next women's game is against Texas Tech on Saturday in Lubbock, Texas. Photo by Dan Elavsky/KANSAN
By Kevin C. Wilson Kansan sportswriter
Shandy Robbins drove a stake into the heart of the Oklahoma State Cowgirls last night in Allen Field House.
The guard's three-pointer with 31 seconds left in the game lifted the Kansas women's basketball team to a 56-51 victory, preserving the team's perfect home record this season.
Both teams had difficulty shooting the ball. Kansas shot 37 percent from the field, and Oklahoma State hit only 31 percent for the game after hitting a palty 27 percent in the second half.
Kansas women's coach Marian Washington said her players were frustrated by their woeful shooting.
"When we struggle shooting- wise, it seems to spread throughout the team," Washington said. "Since we weren't shooting the ball as well, we needed to get the ball inside ... and at least get ourselves on the line."
In the second half, the Jayhawks did just that. After hitting just two of four from the line in the first half, the Jayhawks connected on 11 of 14 free throws
after intermission.
Kansas also was successful in getting the ball down low to its post players late in the game, as Nakia Sanford scored eight of her 12 points in the second half.
"I think Nakia had a very fine game for us tonight, both scoring and on the boards," Washington said.
Sanford said that she usually was not looked at to score, but tonight was different.
"I'm not that much of an offensive player, but this game that came out of me," Sanford said.
Forward Lynn Pride struggled offensively with three of 14 shooting from the field and five turnovers but did have a strong night on defensive. Pride held Cowgirls forward Renee Roberts to one of 11 shooting.
"A great player finds a way to contribute," Washington said. "If it's not scoring, then they're going to help us on defense."
Guard Jennifer Crow led Oklahoma State with 14 points despite shooting four of 11 from the field.
The Jayhawks improved to 12-3 overall and 4-2 in the Big 12.
They will play the Lady Raiders on Saturday in Lubbock, Texas.
Reserve guard seals victory
By Erin Thompson
Kansan sportswriter
Shandy Robbins did not think, she just shot the ball.
Last night, Robbins led the Kansas women's basketball team to a 56-51 victory against Oklahoma State. The reserve guard secured the win for the Jayhawks when she hit a three-point shot with 34 seconds left to expand the lead from one to four points at 55-51.
After a missed shot by guard
"I'm usually thinking too much about my shooting," she said. "Tonight, I didn't think about it. I just squared up and shot."
Jennifer Jackson, Robbins grabbed the rebound, passed the ball to Lynn Pride, got it back and shot the three-pointer.
Kansas women's coach Marian Washington said Robbins gave the team a boost.
"We have different players at different times who step off the bench and give us that
spark," Washington said. "Tonight, it was Shandy. Her shot at the end was really key, absolutely key, to our win."
Robbins came off the bench to score 11 points in only 24 minutes. Guard Suzi Raymant, who had been averaging 15.1 points a game, had only nine points, and forward Lynn Pride, who had been averaging 16.4 points a game, had only eight points.
Robbins said, "When the others aren't making shots, someone has to step up."
Robbins was three for three on three-point shot attempts and made two key three-point shots during the last minute of the first half.
Before last night, she had been struggling with her three-point shooting, hitting just 27 percent from outside this season.
"I've not had a good shooting season so far, so I've been real down on myself," Robbins said. "Tonight, I was just shooting."
WOMENS' BOX SCORES
Kansas 56, Oklahoma State 51
Oklahoma State (11-5. 4-2)
Roberts 1-11 2-1 2, Edwards 4-13 0-9,
Magnness 2-7 2-2 6, Jackson 2-5 2-4
Crow 4-13 3-1 54, Boyd 3-7 0-18, Gregg 2-4
0-4. Totals 18-58 9-14 51.
Kansas (12-3,4-2)
Pride 3-14 2-2 8. Johnson 3-6 2-2 8. San
Halftime — Oklahoma State 27
Kansas 3-5. Three-Point goals — Oklahoma State 6-16 (Crow 3-7, Boyd 2-3,
Edwards 1-5, Jackson 0-1), Kansas 5-8 (Robbins 3-3, Raymont 1-3, Pruitt 1-1)
Assists— Oklahoma State 10 (Roberts, Jackson, Boyd, Gregg 2), Kansas 11 (Pride 6).
ford 4-8 4-7 12, Raymont 3-9 2-2 9, Jackson
son 0-4 3-14, Pruitt 1-1 0-0 3, Scott 0-1 0-0
, Robbins 4-6 0-1 11, White 1-2 0-0 2.
Totals 19-51 13-18 56.
Rebounds — Oklahoma State 40 (Edwards 10). Kansas 38 (Sanford 8).
Fouled out—none.
Technical foul—none.
Attendance—1,100.
MONTANA
Attendance—1.100.
Forward Lynn Pride drives past an Oklahoma State player and shoots, Prince, who had eight points and two blocks, helped the Jayhawks beat the Cowboys 56-51 last night at Allen Field House. Photo by Dan Elvarsky/KANSAN
Earl's recruitment at LSU still under scrutiny
NCAA directs inquiry toward former coaches
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansan sportswriter
The NCAA's key witness in the investigation behind Louisiana State's recruitment of Lester Earl appears to have been Earl himself.
Bob Frederick, Kansas director of athletics, said during his weekly radio talk show Tuesday night that Earl and Kansas cooperated with the NCAA during its investigation of the LSU basketball program.
"Lester was granted limited immunity (for his) cooperation with the NCAA." Frederick said. "He cooperated with the Fredrick. The University of Kansas cooperated with the NCAA. And Lester's eligibility at Kansas will never be in question."
Earl, a native of Baton Rouge, La., and Kansas coach Roy Williams declined to
Many of the allegations are directed toward former LSU assistant Johnny Jones, now the associate head coach at the University of Memphis. Jones received a copy of the official inquiry from the NCAA on Tuesday. The inquiry addressed Earl's recruitment when Jones coached at LSU from fall 1995 to December 1996.
comment.
Jones allegedly paid Earl $6,600 during the time that he was a senior at Glen Oaks High School and a freshman at LSU.
The Crawford Law Firm in Des Moines, Iowa, which represents Jones, denied Tuesday that Jones was involved in any
Some of the money allegedly went toward car and insurance payments.
Earl: Granted limited immunity for his cooperation
improper actions at LSU
Iowa lawyer Jerry Crawford said he was skeptical of Earl's version of the story.
"Earl told the NCAA that Coach Jones gave him $500 per month to make his truck and insurance payments in August, September, October and November of 1996," Crawford said. "This is pretty amusing considering that Earl did not make all of those payments and the truck was repossessed in December."
The Baton Rouge Advocate reported yesterday that Jones also arranged a meeting between former recruit Earl and Redfield Brvan, a local physician.
Bryan's lawyer, Gordon Pugh, said in a written statement that Bryan admitted giving Earl between $2,800 and $4,000.
Bryan said he gave Earl about $2,000 at that meeting and offered additional cash payments if he agreed to attend LSU. After Earl signed a letter-of-intent with LSU, Bryan provided him with cash on at least four other occasions, according to Pugh.
"Redfield Bryan acknowledges that
Lester Earl came to his office on several occasions and expressed the dire need o his family for financial assistance and that he did on these occasions give Lester Ear money," Pugh said.
The NCAA said that Jones and Bryan, with the encouragement of former LSU coach Dale Brown, helped Earl's sister, LaWanda, and Earl's mother, Carol Earl Sanders, obtain jobs. Earl's mother said Tuesday that the Earl family did receive improper benefits from the LSU program.
But Earl's testimony for the NCAA ultimately may have saved his basketball eligibility.
"The more difficult issue for us typically is how to prove whether there are such violations or not," Berst said. "More often, when we are investigating particular institutions, we seek information from student athletes and transfers without jeopardizing their eligibility."
Steve Berst, the NCAA director of enforcement, said the NCAA tried to protect student-athletes.
Fans must weigh Earl's conduct, not cheer blindly
Lester Earl is a sleazy, corrupt moneygrubber who has tarnished Kansas' basketball reputation by allegedly accepting payment from Louisiana State.
Or, is he a confused kid — baffled by the NCAA's many rules and regulations, torn by the conflict between hometown pressures and his own desires — who is trying to do the right thine?
Or, is he above all a Kansas men's basketball player, someone who deserves our admiration and respect simply because he is a Jayhawk?
The view you take directly is related to where you live, where you go to school and where your allegiances lie.
Eric Weslander sports@kansan.com
In other words, if you are a Kansas State or
Missouri fan, you are pretty happy right about now. Imagine, a faint blemish on the Kansas program. Kansas is the bully of the Big 12 Conference, yet a bully that is seen across the country as respectable, morally upright and straightforward.
But one of the pristine program's star players is smack dab in the middle of a serious NCAA scandal. That is a fact.
I know, I know. It is LSU that is being investigated, not Kansas. Kansas acted in good faith through out Earl's recruitment and ensuing transfer. The program has done nothing wrong.
Isn't that what we want in college athletics: to have something we can use against our rival teams?
Kansas State's Manny Dies down the door of a student journalist. Former Nebraska running back Lawrence Phillips forcefully assisted his girlfriend down a flight of stairs.
Well, here you go Kansas State and Mizzo fouz. Here is your fodder.
If you are a Kansas fan, the matter becomes a little more difficult. Earl is cleared of any wrongdoing according to NCAA standards, but what about moral standards?
And think about it this way: If Earl had transferred to, say, Kansas State instead of Kansas, what would we be saying about him right now? We probably would be calling him a crook.
While you are sitting on your rumps in late March, you can watch Kansas advance in the NCAA tournament and whine about how the only reason we do well is that we have a scandal-ridden program. Enjoy the NIT.
As a rule, Kansas basketball fans do not want to admit that their favorite players can do anything wrong. Jason Sutherland was a "dirty" player; Jerod Haase was a "scrapy" player. Any Missouri fan would say exactly the opposite.
First, no 18-year-old high school student can be expected to know all of the ins and outs of the NCAA's recruiting regulations. Then again, a player should realize something is wrong if someone hands him a wad of bills.
So, can we justify Earl's alleged acceptance of the money and favors without being blinded by our school loyalty?
Second, Earl has complied fully with the NCAA's requests for information about his recruitment.
We sure as hell can try.
Does that excuse his alleged acceptance of money in the first place? Of course not. His compliance with the NCAA only ensures that he will not be touched by the LSU investigation.
The justifications seem to fall flat when you think about it.
But, we will never understand the kind of pressures, confusion and inner turmil that Earl experienced during his high school years and his one ill-fated semester at LSU.
"It was like everything was on me," he said. "I had to do this, and I had to do that, and I can't do it... I couldn't carry the whole program by myself."
Everyone around him wanted him to stay in Louisiana and be a basketball messiah. He wanted to leave.
He gave into their pressures and look what has happened.
No wonder there was such a hassle when Earl tried to officially leave LSU last spring. No wonder he's glad to be at Kansas.
Westland is an Louisville, Ky., junior in journalism.
2B
Quick Looks
Thursday January 22,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 22)
Making some phone calls today may solve a problem that you have been encountering. It is important to get this problem solved. Then, you can move on and enjoy your day.
Aries: Today is a 5.
Taurus: Today is a 4.
The last few days may have Aries feeling like crawling into a closet and hiding. There is no reason why you should not when you have a bit of free time. If you are peaceful with your partner, pull them right inside with you and spend some quiet time calming down.
You are feeling particularly sensitive. Try not to get bent out
of shape about small issues. Someone close to you may have been spreading your secrets. You should keep some things to yourself.
Gemini: Today is a 5.
You are feeling a bit under the weather today. This feeling gives you a good excuse to withdraw and examine what is happening around you. You can better direct your life if you understand what is at stake. Find out what is at stake today.
Cancer: Today is an 8.
You are feeling exceptionally playful and loose. Take hold of this carefree mood while you can. Grab one who is not afraid to play with you. Find a younger friend, maybe, and go fly a kite.
Leo: Today is a 6.
Celestial signs point to secrets that are deceptive. Is someone around you on a different page? Leo carefully should examine their interactions with close friends and loved ones. Something big could be happening, and you definitely are not prepared.
Virgo: Today is a 9.
Libra: Todav is a 6.
You are particularly lively today, Virgo, and that
makes you fun to
Scorpio: Today is a 7.
Sagittarius: Today is a 7.
makes you fun to be around. Go out for coffee and spark conversations with people you usually do not see. Someone you least expect may have something fascinating to say.
Occasionally, loyalies are tested by a friend who competes for attention with your romantic partner. Remember where you sleep at night and choose accordingly. You may need time alone with your beloved one to work out those dreaded intimacy issue.
Capricorn: Today is a 6.
C
Social scenes that call for fake kisses and light chatter are not your best environments right now. The moon's visit in your own sign brings out a your best qualities.
Be true to yourself.
C
2
Pisces: Today is an 8.
Aquarius: Today is a 6.
Look into your dreams for explanations of why you have been feeling strange lately. We see things in our nighttime movies that otherwise escape us. Your imagination also is powerful today.
LION
Partnered Capricorns may notice a bit of enniu towards their beloved today. Do not fret. It is merely a passing mood. Putting on a touch of charming resistance to a partner's advances will make your partner want you more.
It is a day to withdraw and do a little brooding. Have you been seeing too much with a variety of people? Aquarius could use some private time to get perspective of current events.
BALLET
SUPERVISION
You have been having vivid dreams about traveling through foreign lands. You may be feeling restless and passionate these days with the Scorpio moon tweaking your subconscious. Exploration is the key to discovery.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Brian Skinner led Baylor (10-6, 5-1) with 12 points. Jamie Kendrick had 15, while Roddick Miller and Kish Lewis finished with 12 points each.
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Kenny Price sparked two key runs and scored 23 points in leading Colorado to an 84'71 Big 12 victory against Baylor Wednesday night.
Midway through the first half,
with CU (8-7, 2-3) trailing 18-14, Price
hit two 3-pointers to key a 16-3 run
that put the Bucks ahead 30-21 with
7:12 remaining.
Colorado 84. Bavlor 71
Ronnie DeGray finished with 16 points. Other Buffs in double figures were Marlon Hughes with 20, while Will Smith and Charlie Melvin each scored 10 points.
Texas Tech 79, Kansas State 76
The victory was the first since Jan. 3 for Tech (8-7 overall, 2-3 Big 12 Conference). Kansas State (11-5, 2-4) suffered its fourth loss in five games.
TEXAS TECH 79, KANSAS STATE 70
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — Cory Carr scored 31 points and Rayford Young hit four clutch free throws down the stretch as Texas Tech ended a three-game losing streak with a 79-76 victory Wednesday night over Kansas State.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
Aaron Swartzendruber led four Wildcats in double figures with 21 points. Shawn Rhodes added 15 points and Davis and Manny Dies added 13 points apiece.
Stan Bonewitz scored 14 points, including four 3-pointers, and Cliff Owens added 12 points, all in the second half.
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Corey Brewer's driving shot in the lane with 3.8 seconds remaining capped a furious rally and gave Oklahoma a 64-63 victory against Iowa State on Wednesday night.
Oklahoma 64 Iowa St. 63
Scorpion
The Sooners (14-5, 5-1 Big 12) trailed 60-53 with 1:49 left and were behind 63-60 after Robert Allison made a 3-pointer from the right corner with 59 seconds remaining.
Iowa State (9-9, 2-3), which scored on 14 of 15 possessions during one stretch of the second half, wasn't able to hang on after Allison's basket.
Freshman Marcus Fizer, who tied his career high with 27 points, missed from in close with 52 seconds left after the Cyclones broke Oklahoma's press.
Mihm, a highly touted 7-foot freshman center, had been averaging just nine points per game for Texas (8-9, 2-4 Big 12), which snapped a three-game winning streak by Nebraska (12-6,3-2).
Brewer finished with 21 and freshman Ryan Humphrey had 15. Love, also a freshman, had a career-best 13 points.
The Longhorns, who have struggled to click on offense all season, shot 55 percent from the floor as Luke Axtell scored 25 points and Kris Clack added 22 points, including two key 3-pointers in the second half.
鱼
AUSTIN (AP) — Chris Mihm scored 29 points on 12-of-16 shooting and helped ignite a decisive second-half run with dominating inside play as Texas broke open a close game and rolled to a 105-9 victory over Nebraska Wednesday night.
Texas 105 Nebraska 91
Texas was able to shut down the Huskers' explosive guard Tyronn Lue in the second half after Lue scored 16 of his 23 points in the first half. Nebraska shot 47 percent from the floor.
Toronto 99, Sacramento 98
New York 97, Indiana 89
New Jersey 117, Houston 112
Wilmawuckie 91, Orlando 84
Miami 92, Philadelphia 87
Minnesota 104, Boston 95.
L.A. Lakers 119, Phoenix 105
Chicago 110, Charlotte 79.
San Antonio 90, Atlanta 76
Detroit 87, Denver 67
Utah 98, Golden State 85
COLLEGE TOP 25
Men
No. 2 North Carolina 74, North Carolina State 60
V
No. 7 Kentucky 70, Alabama 67
No. 9 UCLA vs. Southern California,
Michigan State 78, No. 10 Iowa 57
No. 12 Purdue 82, Ohio State 71
No. 13 Mississippi 80, LSU 58
No. 14 South Carolina 81, Tennessee
51
箭
Oklahoma 64, Iowa State 63
Texas 105, Nebraska 91
Colorado 84, Baylor 71
Texa Tech 76, Kansas State 76
Notre Dame 63. No.15 Syracuse 63
No.18 Arkansas 79, Auburn 62
Big 12:
No 4. Louisiana Tech 88, Penn St. 58.
No 10. Florida Tech 69, Florida State 57.
No 18. Georgia 81, Arkansas 51
Baylor 76, No 21. Nebraska 71
Women
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
National Hockey League
Buffalo 2, Carolina 1
Montreal 4, Boston 2
Washington 3, Tampa Bay 2 (OT)
Toronto 3, Detroit 0
Dallas 3, Colorado 2
Phoenix at Vancouver
Calgary at San Jose
Florida at Anaheim
YESTERDAY'S SCORES
BASKETBALL
NBA
3 p.m.
SPORTS ON TV:
Portland 100, Washington 87
Ch.18—Golf, Phoenix Open
6 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
Ch. 45 — College basketball, Stanford vs. Washington State.
Ch. 18 - Tennis, Australian Open highlights.
Ch. 37 — Tennis, Australian Open replay
Midnight
Ch. 37 — College basketball, Wake Forest vs. Florida State.
Ch. 18 — College basketball, Northwestern vs. Penn State.
Noon
SPORTS, ETC.
Ch. 18 — College basketball,
Alabama-Birmingham vs. Memphis.
9:30 p.m.
Today in sports
1973 — George Foreman knocks out Joe Frazier in the second round in Kingston, Jamaica, to win the world heavyweight title.
1984 - Marcus Allen rushes for 191 yards and scores two touchdowns as the Los Angeles Raiders trounce the Washington Redskins 38-9 in the Super Bowl.
1968 The NBA awards expansion franchises to Milwaukee and Phoenix.
1994 - The New York Islanders' Pierre Turgeon has four assists to help the Eastern Conference beat the Western Conference 9-8 in the NHL All-Star game. The game produces a record 102 shots and New York Rangers goalie Mike Richter wins the MVP award for his second-period performance of 19 saves on 21 shots.
1988 — Mike Tyson knocks out Larry Holmes during the fourth round at Atlantic City to retain his world heavyweight title.
Saturday:
SPORTS CALENDAR
TV: Big 12 Network: Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM
3 p. m. in Allen Field House — Men's Basketball vs. Texas Tech
7 p. m., at Lubbock, Texas — Women's Basketball vs. Texas Tech
Tuesday:
All day at Columbia, Mo. — Track and Field at MissouriInvitational.
7 p.m. in Allen Field House — Women's basketball vs. Texas &M
Wednesday:
7:05 p. m. in Allen Field House — Men's
Basketball vs. Baylor
TV: Jayhawk TV Network. Radio:
KLZR 105.9 FM
TV TONIGHT
THURSDAY 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 "Death Warrant" ★★ (1990, Drama) Jean-Claude Van Damme Nightman Mad Abo. You Designing Hard Copy Cops
WOAF 4 Ask Harriet ♂ (R) News ■ News Real TV H Patrol KNeen Ivory
KCTV 5 Promised Land (in Stereo) Diagnosis Murder (in Stereo) True or False: Teen-agers News ■ Late Show (R) in Stereo】 Seinfeld
KCPT 7 Ruckus This Old Hase. Mystery! "Cadafel" (in Stereo) Keeping Up Business Rpt. Ruckus (R) Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
KSNTE 8 Friends (R) Union Square Veronica's CL "Er The Long Way Around" Er The Long Way Around News ■ Toni Show (R) Late Night
KMBC 9 Prey Discovery (in Stereo) "Billy Madison" ☆½ (1995, Comedy) Adam Sandler ■ News Roseanne Grace Under M'A'SH H
KTWU 10 Sunflower Travels Mystery! "Cadafel" (in Stereo) Keeping Up All Aboard Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (in Stereo)
WIBW 11 Promised Land (in Stereo) Diagnosis Murder (in Stereo) True or False: Teen-agers News ■ Late Show (R) in Stereo】 Late Late
KTKA 12 Prey "Discovery" (in Stereo) "Billy Madison" ☆½ (1995, Comedy) Adam Sandler ■ News Seinfield Married Nightlife
CABLE STATIONS
A&E Biography: Tom Hanks New Explorers (R) Unexplained Law & Volunteers■ Biography: Tom Hanks
NCBC 1 Equal Time Hardball Rivers Live News With Brian Williams Charles Gradin Rivera Live CNN 2 World Today Larry King Live World Today Sports Illus Moneyline Newswright Showbiz
CMON 2 "John BeGood" ★½ (1988) Anthony Hall Maitl Offside (R) Make-Laugh Daily Show $'ne Money Saturday Night Live
COURT 5 Prime Time Justice Cochran & Company Trial Story "Prozac on Trial" Prime Time Justice (R) Cochran & Company (R)
CSPAN 1 Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs
DISC 2 Wild Discovery: Forest Strange-True Movie Magic Wings "Flying Coffins" (R) Justice Files Have Faith■ Wild Discovery: Forest
ESPN 1 College basketball College Basketball: Alabama-Birmingham at Memphis. (Live) Sportscenter Strongman
HIST 1 In search of History (R) Most Decorated (R) History Undercover (R) World at War "Morning" In search of History (R)
LIFE 3 Unsolved Mysteries If "These Walls Could Talk" ★½ (1996, Drama) Dami Moire Almost Golden Girls Mysteries
MITV 3 Spice Girls Spice Girl Power A-Z (R) Spice Girls Loveine (R) Singled Out Viewers
SCIFI 3 Sightings (in Stereo) Forever Knight "Crazy Love" Robocop: The Series ■ Sequestration DSV (in Stereo) Sightings (R) in Stereo)
TLC 3 Medical Warning U.F.O. (R) Aliens Invade Hollywood Medical Warning U.F.O. (R)
TNT 1 The Undefeated ★★★ (1969, Western) John Wayne, Rock Hudson The Macahana ★★★ (1976, Western) James Amess, Eva Marie Saint.
USA 2 Walker Texas Ranger ★ Figure Skating Skating Kicks Back Silk Stalking "Mad Service" Highlander: The Series ★
VH1 Hollywood-van Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video INKS "Rocks the Rockies" ★
WGN 2 Sister, Sister Smart Guy Waysans Bros. Steve Harvey News (in Stereo) Beergy Hills, 90210 In the Heart of the Night ★
WTBS 10 Thunder ★ Bad Boys ★ (1982, Drama) Sean Penn, Ally Sheedy. Thunder (R)
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO 2 (6:30) "Spill" ★½ (1996) "Shelter" (John Allen Nelson, NR') Pervisions inside the
MAX 4 "Eye for an Eye" ★ (1996, Drama) Salty Field, R' ■ "Amityville Doilouse"
HBO 10 (6:30) "Spill" *½* (1996) "Shelter" (1998) John Allen Nelson. NR' RI Perservisions inside the NFL (In stereo) "Vegas Vacation" *½* (1997)
MAX 12 "Eye for an Eye" *½* (1996, Drama) Sally Field. R' RI "Amityville Dollisher" *½* (1997, Horror) "Sleepers" *** (1996 Kevin Bacon. R' RI
SHOW 20 "Cop and a Hall" *¹⁰* Burry Turtles. "Midnight Blue" (1997) Stargate SG-1 "Bloodlines" *** (Tricks) (In stereo)
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
WELCOMES
INTERSTRING'S CD RELEASE PARTY!!
1031 Massachusetts Street, Lawrence, Ks 841-1960
tursday January 22,1998.
8. 11 pm
WILL WORK FOR FOOD?
Bring three friends for breakfast and you eat for free!
Monday-Thursday
Good Real Food
Breakfast 6:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Lunch 1:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Dinner 6:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m.
728 Mass.
842-5199
To receive this discount, either mention that you saw
Paradise Cafe
receive this discount, either mention that you saw this ad in the Kansan or prevent your KIDD
FREE INTERNET TRAINING Academic Computing Services January 26-29
Academic Computing Services can give you the skills to confidently navigate the information superhighway. Best of all, our Internet training is FREE and doesn't require registration! Classes are open to everyone. Just show up at the Computer Center at classtime.
Photoshop: Demonstration—Get an overview of this powerful program
Mon Jan 26 3:30-5 p.m) / Computer Center Auditorium
E-mail: Introduction—Learn basic Eudora e-mail commands
Tues, Jan 27 8-6 p.m / Computer Center Mac Lab
Dial in to a Netware LAN—Access your office computer on a Netware LAN from your home Windows 95 computer using your KU dial-in account
Wed, Jan 28 1-2 p.m / Computer Center Auditorium
Become a list owner—Establish and manage an e-mail discussion list
Prerequisites: E mail intro & Jon an e-mail discussion list or equivalent skills
Wed Jan 28 4 - 5 p.m. Computer Center Auditorium
E-mail: Introduction—Learn basic Pine e-mail commands:
Tues. jan 21 1 - 3 p.m / Computer Center Mac Lab
Web browsing>Surf the Web using Internet Explorer
Thurs, Jan 29 3:30 -5 pm / Computer Mac Lab
All classes are held in the Computer Center located across from the Dale College at Sunnyvale and Illinois. Class schedule: Pick up a Driver's Ed. at the Computer Center on go online at http://www.cc.ukans.edu/~acs/training/internet_dec.html
Thursday, January 22, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 3
NCAA deal for Earl not so sweet
Recovering lost playing time not admirable option
By MIKE VACCARO The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas' Lester Earl is as good as he was advertised to be. He is strong. He is athletic. He has wonderful basketball instincts that belle his age. Against Kansas State on Saturday, he hammered home a two-fisted dunk that nearly drilled a hole in James Naismith Court. You cannot teach that. You either have the goods to do that, or you do not.
Lester Earl has the goods In more ways than one.
Tuesday, the NCAA alleged that during Earl's brief stay at Louisiana State University, where he played during the first semester of the 1996-97 season, he received money and other improper benefits from the LSU coaching staff.
Earl apparently has cooperated with the NCAA. In return for providing information about his old school and his old coach, Dale
Commentary
Brown, Earl could regain the year of eligibility he forfeited when LSU would not release him from his scholarship last winter.
If the NCAA proves its allegations, Earl's LSU scholarship would be invalidated. So would LSU's ability to prevent him from seeking release from that agreement. In a flash, he becomes a sophomore instead of a junior.
He will have discovered the Fountain of Youth through the fine art of deal making. Perfect.
"If we can prove a case, we're expected to process it," said David Berst, the NCAA's assistant executive director for enforcement. "But when we don't think we can, we try to seek assistance from people who would be in jeopardy if we could figure out the truth. If those individuals are willing to give us the information, we agree not to pursue."
So, in essence, Earl will be rewarded prominently for dropping dimes on LSU, Brown and Brown's staff, for taking part in a variety of past transgressions. And these were beauties.
Earl reportedly received $6,600
the school.
In essence, Earl was a partner in a bold and blatant flouting of NCAA rules. What kind of message does this send? If this is all true ... he is just as culpable as
from an LSU assistant. His family is said to have gotten jobs through Brown's staff, in addition to free meals in Baton Rouge, La. Earl's mother allegedly received free legal services.
In essence, Earl was a partner in a bold and blatant flouting of NCAA rules.
What kind of message does this send?
If this is all true, and if Earl dio indeed tell NCAA investigators of LSU's ruse, he is just as culpable as the school. More so, in fact. Spare me the naive, wide-eyed, innocent 18-year-old kid routine. Any athlete with the high school reputation Earl enjoyed has heard the same speeches a hundred times at summer camps, has been warned a hundred times by coaches and counselors of what is allowed and what is not.
If Earl got paid, he had to know, in his heart if nowhere else, that he was doing something wrong. Period.
If the NCAA wants to reward Earl for his assistance, wants to give him what the organization calls limited immunity, then this is what his reward should be. He keeps whatever eligibility he has left. If that is only three semesters, then it is only three semesters. But first, he repays whatever money he was given. And he is put on notice that another hint of wrong-doing the rest of his career, he goes. For good.
That is fair. You know what is not fair? Jacque Vaughn could not get a refund for the games he lost to wrist surgery last year. Nobody is going to restore the nine games Raef LaFrentz forfeited to the broken bone in his right hand this winter. No amount of deal making can make up for their fractured senior years.
If Lester Earl said what he is supposed to have said, if he did what he is supposed to have done, he should feel lucky to still have what remains of his career.
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Wide range of G-R-E-A-T studios, 1, 2, and 3 bdrm. apts. & townhomes in our country atmosphere
A few available NOW!
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Laundry facilities Carports/ garages Water paid in apt. Basic cable paid On bus route and within Walking distance to campus Experienced professional Maintenance and management Outdoor recreation facilities
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---
Section B·Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Thursday, January 22, 1998
EVERYTHING BUT ICE Beds Desks Bookcases 936 Mass.
Buy Sell Trade
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
841-PLAY 1029 Mass
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIYE
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
FRI. JAN. 23
18 & Over
The Schwag
SAT. JAN. 24
18 & Over
Danger Bob
TV Fifty
lackey
Sundays
SWING SET
BIG BAND SWING
SPECIALTY COCKTAILS
MON. JAN. 26
18 & Over
OPEN MIC
featuring
the other woman • sacred wolf • ted connelly
TUES. JAN. 27
18 & Over
The Bent Scepters
The Budinskys
Kansan Classified
厂
100s Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
115 On Campus
120 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
X
305 For Sale
305 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
315 Applying Goods
325 Stereo Equipment
330 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
354 Motorcycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
A
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, age, color, gender, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertise content that is offensive to minority groups in all real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act 1968.
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
410 Condos for Sale
420 Real Estate for Sale
420 Roommate Wanted
which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference' on discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Any person who files all jobs and housing advertisised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
110 - Business Personals
---
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
HEALTH
Watkins
Since 1906
Caring For KU
CENTER
864-9500
I
100s Announcements
120 - Announcements
Are you interested in helping battered women and/or their children. TWTC advocate training, informational sessions Jan. 2nd 7 p.m. or Jan. 15th 8:30 a.m. on Ridge Court B. Questions call 843-3333.
120 - Announcements
F
Don't miss on the HOTTEST destination in Mexico. Airfare, 7 nights hotel, transfers, FREE drinks, 15 FREE meals, parties. For FREE brochure 1800-395 meals .www.collegetours.com
Spring Break Mazatlan
F
BEST HOTELS, LOWEST PRICES, ALL
SPRINGBREAK locations. Cancun, Jamaica,
Bahamas, Yucatan, Texas, Mazatlan,
Bahamas. Register your group or use our
Campus. Rep. 808-327-6013 www.iept.com
Spring Career and Employment Fair: Wed. Feb. 4, 1998, at 10 a.m to 3 pm, KSU Union Ballroom. Over 120 employees, FT, PT, internships, summer jobs, volunteer opportunities. All majors welcomes. Career & Employment Services at 864-3824 or Employment Services at ukans.edu / upc/cef.html
1998 SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA CAMP Buckskin has various positions available to work with youth who have acad. degrees in education or LD). A unique program with opportunity to earn school credit. Salary + room & board. Camp is located on a lake in the Superior National Forest and at the BWCW. Contact: Time Edmunds, 300-3344. email: buckskin@apstar.net.
REAA
Is what you get when you place your ad in the Kansan
120- Announcements
F
Instructoral & Educational video's & CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited internet
access for only $15.95/mo, tell your parents.
shopping http://www.intelint.com/edi
NEED GLASSES?
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON EVERY FRAME, ANY PRESCRIPTION. I love that the library has a Mass, downtown Lawrence. 843-628-8. We carry Giorgio Armani, Alfred Sung. Next, Dakota Ellis, Matthew McGraw. Ellis, Nautica. We proudly use the highest quality optics lab in the midwest. Langley of K.C. No cheap "backroom grinding." We also supply compasses, telescopes and other instruments! JUST FOLLOW OUR GOLDEN ANGELS!!
Camp Takako for Boys, on Long Lake, Naple. Mail Noted for picturequesture location, exceptional facilities, and outstanding programs June 22-31. Coach, basketball, soccer, baseball, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, golf, street hockey, roller hockey, swimming sailing, canoeing, waterskiing, scuba archery, riffle, weight training, journalism, photography, video, woodworking, media, radio studios, study, radio & electronics, dramatics, piano accompanist, music instrumentalist/band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater kayaking, volleyball, w/youngest boy (w/youngest girl) secretarial, kitchen staff Call Mike Sherbun at b1-800-250-8252
125 - Travel
CANKUN' BAHAMAS
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CLOSE VIEW
Tiger Woods tees off at the PGA Tour Championship in Houston. The November event sealed Woods as the PGA leader in prize money for 1997, which gave his fans another achievement to cheer. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Thailand's Tiger Fever cools during recession
The Associated Press
When Woods made his professional Thai debut last year and won the Asian Honda Classic, Thailand treated him as a conquering hero returning home since his mother, Kultida, is a Thailand native.
A television crew rushed aboard Wood's arriving plane at Bangkok's airport to film him unbuckling his seat belt live. He was showered with flowers, the prime minister gave him a medal, and a campaign began to make him an honorary Thai citizen until legal problems arose.
PHUKET, Thailand — Thailand still loves Tiger Woods, but Tiger Fever has cooled down along with the Southeast Asian country's economy.
Back then, Thailand still was considered an Asian miracle economy. Now, the country is one of the worst hit in Asia's financial collapse. The government has changed, and the national mood is no longer one of celebration
"The bad has gone," said Kavi Chongkittavorn, executive editor of The Nation, a newspaper that has relegated Woods from the front page to the sports page. "Like many other fads, it cannot stay on forever."
Larger crowds are expected during the tournament, but they are unlikely to rival the 4,000 who packed the galleries daily last February.
Only two dozen spectators trailed Woods as he played yesterday's proam in preparation for the Johnnie Walker Classic, the first tournament on the 1998 European tour.
Somechai Sahachiroongruang,
deputy government representative.
said he thought Tiger Fever was a victim of the recession.
"Golf is a sport and also a business," he said. "There may be fewer sponsors this year."
Woods, noting the quieter reception, agreed.
Woods also attributed the relaxen reception to the tournament's location, the resort island of Phuket, which is more than 400 miles southwest of Bangkok, the home to most of the country's golf fans.
BOEING 737 JETS FROM KANSAS CITY
"Last year was in Bangkok, and the Thai media was pretty large." Woods said. "Plus, last year, it was a big deal because it was my first time coming to Thailand as a professional."
"It's a big part of it," Woods said.
Slumping exports and a financial and currency crisis sent Thailand's economic fortunes plunging in mid-1997, requiring a $17.2 billion bail out led by the International Monetary Fund.
Thailand's troubles triggered a regional economic downfall, and the country is not out of the woods yet.
"Today, he is still good, but the situation is different," said Kiatchai Pongpanish, newspaper publisher of Khao Sod. "I mean, it doesn't matter who is coming. People here are not going to care. They have other problems on their mind."
BUY 841- PLAY SELL 1029 MASS TRADE
The government has no plans this year to honor the world's highest-ranked golfer, Sahachiroongruang said.
Last year, Wood's arrival was heavily promoted and nationalism was fanned by the notion that a person with Thai origins could reach such heights.
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COMPUTER ENGINEERING • COMPUTER SCIENCE • PHYSICS • CHEMICAL ENGINEERING MATH • ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING • MECHANICAL ENGINEERING • BUSINESS ANALYSIS
n
TAKE TECHNOLOGY TO THE NTH POWER.
When something is too extreme for words, it's to the Nth degree. And that's the level of technology you'll experience at Raytheon.
Raytheon has formed a new technological superpower - Raytheon Systems Company, composed of four major technological giants: Raytheon Electronic Systems, Raytheon E-Systems, Raytheon T1 Systems and Hughes Aircraft. The new Raytheon Systems Company is driving technology to the limit. And we're looking for engineers who want to push the envelope. Break new ground. Make their mark.
At Raytheon, you'll take technology-and your career-to the highest possible level. You'll take it to the Nth.
Internet: www.rayjobs.com • E-mail: resume@rayjobs.com U.S. citizenship may be required. We are an equal opportunity employer.
We have a lot to tell you about the new Raytheon Systems Company and the exciting opportunities we have available. Plan on visiting our booth at your college career fair. If you are unable to attend the fair then check out our website at www.rayjobs.com and please send your resume to: Raytheon Staffing, P.O. Box 655 474, MS-201, Dallas, TX 75265.
Raytheon
EXPECT GREAT THINGS
1
Thursday, January 22, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 5
---
125 - Travel
125 - Travel
Spring Break '98. South Padre Island.
www.pirentals.com 1-800-292-7520
**"Spring Break '98 Get Going!" Cancun,
Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida. Group discounts
& Free Drives to Miami so you free! Book
online from MC/Disc/Aim/ArcMt
`http://www.ldemmertmortuors.com`
SPRING BREAK
Cancun 2 NIGHTS/WAIR FROM $399
Jamaica 2 NIGHTS/WAIR FROM $399
Bahamas 2 NIGHTS/WAIR FROM $429
Florida 7 NIGHTS FROM $129
CAMPUS REPS: BELL 8 AND GO FREE!
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Year!
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SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
STEAMBOAT
KEY WEST
FOR PERSON EXPERIENCING OR DISTURBATION, BRILLIANT GAME! LOCAL OF 57TH
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
www.sunchase.com
男 女
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
---
Assistant wanted MWF 8-1 for busy child care
Experience preferred. Please call 865-0678.
Hard working, energetic persons to teach behavioral program to 7 year old with Autism MWF or TTH, 1:30-5:30 PM, 832-1598, evenings.
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PT. NEW
Apt./Twn. 749-1288 inquire at Wakarusa Dr.
03160572039
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disabled woman stay active & involved. Routine easy to learn, some lifelong involved. Call 842-1794
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB Experience Wait for openings, all shirts included. App in person or online. Call 212-539-4200.
Part time clerical help. Accounting office, hrs 8, 5, split shifts possible. Some saturdays. 913-842-8578
Waits needed day and evening shifts. Apply in person at Scott's Brass Apple, 3300 W.19th St.
Kennel help needed. Must be reliable & hardworking. Apply in person at Clinton Parkway Kailua Hospital, 430 Clinton Parkway.
Part time delivery driver. Some heavy lifting required. Apply in person at Lawrence Printing
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
$6.00 and at 6 months $6.50 plus profit sharing.
Apply at 719 Mass. (upstairs).
Raintree Montessori School is interviewing for late afternoon positions (3.15-5:00 M-F) and substitute positions, 7% up fee. Call 843-8800.
Silverhawk Security-iflux time (3 pm) 11 pm and
call Skype 8657-1200 position officer
Call Skype 8657-1200
SUB OR LUNCH AIDE
Lunch help 11:30:10: 5-day or TR; subs as needed Sunshine B42-8223
Apt. Leasing Position Strong sales skills
Compensation. 1BR Apt. 20-25hrs.
Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000
Clinton Pkwy.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for safe Ride drivers. Must be 2 years of age & have a clean driving record if interested contact Bob: 842-0544 after 4 p.m.
CLASSROOM ASSISTANT NEEDED HOURS
8:30 OR 9:30 AM TO 12:30 PM year old classroom.
Contact Hilpit Child Development Center 1314
Jayhawk玻夫 864-9490 EOE
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wknds. Need reference, ref., own transportation. Work may extend in summer & fall. Call Judy or John 842-3381.
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for pro-band.
High-strong voice and personality. All styles.
Also, DRUMMER/PERCUSSIONIST/vox w/
exp.$ and fund. 749-3649
Looking for a job? Tutoring positions available Tuesday & Wednesday 9:11-10:30. Tutor Lawrence High School students. Call Dr. Todd Martin at 846-922 97
Onsight manager for small apt. complex near campus, full time, upperclassman or graduate student, salary and free apartment, send resume to: P.O. Box 629 freeware KS 80440
PROFESSIONALSERVICES; Openings for 1/2-
5 yrs. Educational activities, clean, new facility.
Montessori teacher. Please call 865-0678 for more info.
205 - Help Wanted
---
Brady Chiropractic Clinic Part time help needed. 3-7pm, Monday-Friday. Call 749-0130
Reliable college woman needed to care for our 9 year old son, provide transportation, and do light housework. Monday-Friday; 3:5-3 p.m. call Jane or Steve at 841-3746 and give a message.
Collection Ast, making courtesy calls. PT/flexible hours, $7.00/hr. 841-9513. ext200 or apply in person. Microtech Computers 4921 Legends Drive.
Babysitter needed Tueses.Thurs.12:55:1pm for 4yr old boy, must have ear for noon pick up at Lawrence Nursery school. References needed. 749-138 for 5pm or 844-4245 during daytime.
CNA/CHIAI Our busy not for profit home health agency is recruiting care, team oriented CNA's/chIAI to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Even hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Alabama County Visiting Nurses Association, 336 Maryland Lower Level or call 841-4683 for PAT. EOE.
Do you love KU? Love to talk on the phone? If you are involved on campus and want to share your enthusiasm with potential KU students, then a position as an Admissions Telecon counselor may be for you. We are looking for students who possess strong communication skills; have attended KU for at least 1 year; and are available to work at least 2 years. Robert at 844-8484 to arrange an interview ASAP
EARN
8750.81500/WE/E7
478-1360 WEEK
Raises $1 million your student group need you to fund a VISA Fundraiser on your campus
No investment & very little time needed. No obsolete, so please contact today.
Call: 1-800-2324-945 x 8
SUMMER CAMP JOBNAS in the Pocono Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in the community. Athletics Specialists and more!! GREAT SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to "the finest summer you will ever have." On campus interviews Wed, Feb. 4th at Kansas University Ballroom 800-923-CAMP. staff escampotonda.com
$$$ BONUS! BONUS!$$$
Growing a Residential Business
Growing 1 Residential Home Improvement Co. motivated, dependable people to take
inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PC skills a little more on board. Suitably equipped for all-day use. bur. hire $ 60,000 per start, and raises based on your performance. Flies schedules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at us. Email info@ninephone.com.
TELEMARKETERS!
,2801 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this ad with you to qualify for bonus.
843-124-9010/
180 Objective training (at 60 days)
* Please schedule a Causal Dress
* Pleasant work environment
843-904-9
Ask for Lisa
Phone answered 24 hours
500 SUMMER CAMP JOBS/50 CAMPS/YO
500 SUMMER NY, PA. NEW ENGLAND, TEN-
LAND, LACROSSE, BASKETBALL, GYMNASTICS,
RIDING, SWIMMING, WS. MT BIKI, PIO-
NOR, DANCE, PIANO ACCOMPANY, THEATER,
CERAMICS, JEWELRY, WOODSHOP, PHO-
CHEFS, PE MAJORS, ETC ARLENE
STREISAND 1-800-443-6248; FAX: 519-733-9498
KU's Unit Theatre is hiring 3 student hourly employees. Assist with Production of Sound Producers (Technical Director)
- Box Office Asst. Mngr. completes tasks & office duties related to ticket sales. Takes as ast. to Box Office Mngr. Works both daytime & evening hours. Some weekend hours required.
- Sound Production Assist. ascertains the sound requirements for all productions. Records, audio and video from show tapes. Should have some familiarity with sound equipment and critical listening skills.
- Inge Technical Directx coordinates technical theatre aspects at the Theatre productions Eve.
To be eligible, KU students must be enrolled in at least six credit hours or one thesis hour. Pick up application and job description in 317 Murphy Hall at KU.
EnYo
AN ARIZONA TRADITION FOR 58 YEARS!
FRIENDLY PINES CAMP
WE NEED A FEW TOP COLINSECORS
Resident Camp for boys and Girls ages 6 & 13
Residents include Horseshoe Riding, Ballet and Driving
Classes at the Fair Grounds
We will be at the Summer J2 Path Fall on Friday, February 4th.
If you have any questions or requests we will to talk to you in room 3106.
1988 Season May 31 in August 2
We'll be at the Summer Jubilee on Week, February 4th.
933 Friendly Pines Road = Precott, AZ 86303
Call (520) 454-2128 or email fpc@mugwai.com
Juicers
Schneider's
TELEMARKETERS!
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly,
or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
*EARN UP TO $12 WHR WITH BONUSES
*$10 SIGN ON BONUS (PAID AT 60 DAYS)
*ATTENDANCE BONUS
*CASUAL DRESS, UPBEAT ENVIRONMENT
Now hire managers, DJs,
attractive dancers and waitresses 18+. Apply in person.
Now hiring managers, DJs,
resses 18+. Apply in person,
*Saturday hours included on both shifts.
Call Lori @ 843-9094
*CASUAL DRESS, UPBEAT ENVIRONMENT*
*TWO PART TIME SHIPS AVAILABLE!*
12:00-4:00.p.m. Monday-Friday
4:30-8:30.p.m. Monday-Friday
10:00-2:00.p.m. Saturdays
Cottonwood inc. is currently looking for enthusiastic individuals interested in providing supports to adults with developmental disabilities in their home, and capable of a variety of schedules that include evening, night and weekend hours. Some schedules may include sleep overs. Responsibilities may vary depending on the group living site, implementation of a person-centered approach to consumer services, assisting in the development of house management skills, and facilitating leisure time opportunities. Minimum of a High School diploma/GED and driving record acceptable to our insurance carrier is required. Relevant education is needed for related experience helpful. Starting hourly pay of $6.00 to $7.65, depending on position. Apply at Cottonwood Inc., 123 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL 32801, or visit us on john.laoum@cottonwood.com, 9:48am-1pm, January 23, E.O.E.
205 - Help Wanted
COMPUTER SERVICE TECH/PHONE SUPPORT TEACH in shop/on sight PT. Must be able to do troubleshooting. Must person. Microchip 4928. Legends Dr. 841-9531 ext. 300 EOE
---
- Start at $5.00/hr.
* Flexible Schedules
* New Friends
* Companion Courses
* Scholarships
Call or stop by any
DSH Dining Center:
Ekdahl #86-2260
Hashinger #86-1041
Oliver #86-4087
Student Housing
up to$50 This Week
$360 This Month
By donating your life saving plasma!
EARN CASH
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750
225 - Professional Services
Nabi
Hours:
M-F 9 a.m.-
6:30 p.m.
AP Specialist over 2 yrs working experience in bookkeeping, LB, AP, taxes. Apply in person / resume at 4921 Quail Crest Pl or call 841-9613 ext. 3200.
SPEEDING? DUIT! SUSPENDED DL? Call
SERVICING KM.010 745-2639 Toll Free
SERVICING KM.010 745-2639 Toll Free
---
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civili matters
cases of DONALD J. BROWN
X
Free Initial Consultation
305 - For Sale
300s Merchandise
S
---
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Plymouth Church Thrift Shop
HOUSE
842-1408
945 Vermont
Tuesdays 9-4
Thursdays 9-12-30
Saturdays 9-12-30
100%
2 twin bds,frame,box springs,and mattress,$25
each,$45 call. Call 843-1085.
315 - Home Furnishings
---
$$
370 - Want to Buv
1992 mazda m3x. 16,800 km manual power w/i/m
1992 Mazda m3x. 16,800 km manual power w/i/m
in great cond. call Monica g61a (470) 47941241.
In great cond. call Monica g61a (470) 47941241.
340 - Auto Sales
9 Mustang LX Convertible, 76 K, auto, tinted wind-
wheel, AC & acer, custom wheels, w/ tires,
814-833, 814-835
325 - Stereo Equipment
360 - Miscellaneous
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your home audio
equipment. Old? New (785) 232-9639
$
$ $ $ $ $ $
图示结构
Sizes 24'-28' any length.
Don't be fooled by price ads.
Call now for huge savings
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400s Real Estate
Want to buy queen size soft-sided waterbed, in good condition. 842-7996
World Wide Building Sales, Inc.
1-800-825-0316
405 - Apartments for Rent
3 bdm, 2 bath on bus route, W/D, brand new
apartment. $775/mo. ASAP! Call 313-392 392
1 BR Downtown Sublease (616 1/2 Mass.) Central Air/Heat, Skirtlight, Rock walls, Washer/Dryer, Security doors. $550. Call 749-3033 for appointment
Furished Room Available Now! Very private
Room at ROOM 74 with close house to RW/D,
/A/B/202, 850-197-988
Sublease. Roommate wants to share a 4bmd
apartment with me for $1,200/month. I call
their call 911-631-7841 or 911-631-7871.
Sublease 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, Jan and deposit
Cover. Call Suzy at 843-475, 425/month.
2 Bedroom apt. across st. from mem. stadium
474/75% Great location, only pay electric & phone.
Free cable and water. Available immediately. 824 9786
2 bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a.s. a.p.
call 749-7261
2 BR special rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt, located close to campus, on bus route. $350 include basic cable. Call Now. University Terrace 841-6783
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
2 Bedroom apt. across st. from mem. stadium.
$475/month. Great location, only pay electric &
phone. Free cable and water. Available immediately.
842-9786
Unfurnished Room
1 Rm w/ bath in cooperative living arrangement 5 / other students - $236/mo including uillities, laundry, telephone-living room, kitchen-1 bed, kitchen-2 bed, available-available interview required-telephone 843-4833.
Hey! You have heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the laptop of your choice this fall? We have some of the biggest afters, in town for 1455. Park 25 Apartments, 2401 W. 23th
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt. located close to campus. $205 includes cable, secure and ample parking on the bus route, 8th & 9th floors. Call: Petal 618-8393 during office hours Mon-Fri.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE Coed student housing alternative to private landors. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by 1406 Tennessee st. 841-0484
2 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE JAN 1
3 FURNISHINGS AVAILABLE
LOCATED ON VERMONT 7 CALL 841-1851
WIN A COLOR TV
& 1ST MQ. FREE!
SignLEASE for 1 BR ap, before Jan. 31st and be-
cause of absence to the US for delivery on KU bursar rte. 1 BR, ap. wt. water pd. 89
for KU bursar rte. 1 BR, ap. wt. water pd. 89
Now Call 841-7250 2100 Heatherwood A#2
Hurry... Don't miss this great opportunity!
Equal Housing On opportunity
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
13$^{1/2}$ E. 8$^{\mathrm{th}}$ St., Lawrence
841-5454
Leanna Mar Townhomes
4 Bedroom/3 Bath
**Early Sign Up Special**
For Fall 1998
($40 off per month)
Washier/Dryer Trash Compactor
Dishwasher Gas Fireplace
Microwave Cable Paid!
Cabin Pooper Covered
Walk-in Closets Covered
For More Info: (785) 841-7849
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Lorimar Townhomes
1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes
For More Info:(785) 841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway
Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you.
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
1&2Bedrooms
405 - Apartments for Rent
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
On KU Bus Route
Exercise Room
3 Hot Tubs
Sublease BDRM in 3 in RM in townhouse on Monterey BDRM. Great price call RRm 11-438-6536.
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
M mastercraft management
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Visit the following locations
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Hanover Place 14th & Mass 841-1212
Campus Place
7th & Florida 841-5255
Sundance
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasoid • 749-4226
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
Equal Housing Opportunity
410 - Condos For Rent
Brand New Duplex? Available June 1. 4BmRm.
כיוון שבמקרה הזה
Avail. Feb. 1, share 2 bed/2 bath condo.
Fireplace, dishwasher, washer/dryer, sun room, 1/3
utilities, $194/mo., on bus route. Please call 838-
3326
415 - Homes For Rent
30 Days Free
Subleane 2 BBR, 1 BTH, W-D hook up, deck and patio $450 plus deposit call 331-8628 or (913)
827-2324
Houses with Trees
420 - Real Estate For Sale
3 bedroom, 1-2 bath, brand new, C/A, W/D,
microphone, refrigerator, range, security sys-
tem, off-street park, to campus,
933 Mississippi, 841-3866, $590-$600. mo.
Ranch house on basement located on Stratford Rd 3 + bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office entry. Walk to Class. Priced at $199.90. Calls LaTea KB, CB/McGrew R.E. 843-2055 for information.
430 - Roommate Wanted
4 bdmr, 3 bath, WD, nice location on Clinton Parkway, move in anytime. Call Julie 1-800-896-2537
3BR/2BA/WD, close to KU, great view,
n/smoker $250/m + 1/3 usl + dep. Call Brian
840-0961. 927 Emery Rd. #8204
Female Roommate Needed ASAP, Share Town Home. Washer/Dryer, On Bus Route. $362 mo. plus utilities, please call 822-1651
RM needed immediately to share 2 bdr, 1 bath apt.
Close to campus. Rent is $195/mo + 1/2 utility. Jans
rental already paid. Call 313-1287 to view the apt.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Desperately need female roommate to share new 3 bdm town house. Jan rent Free. 260/mo. +1/3 utl. avail. Immediately. Call Lindsay 838-9321
Non-smoking female to share 2 bdmr, 2 bath
professional female. Call 838-4483 Now or
email info@femalehealth.com
Male roommate needed. N/S. 10111 Illinois 3bdrm house. $175/mo +1/3 utilities. For spring semester. 853-2296.
RM wanted for three bedroom house, on campus,
great parking, across from Jaynes College.
Available AS IS.
Non-smoking male wanted to share 2 bdm app
for month/month +1/2 months. Call Bdm
Leave message.
Sublease now through July 31st. 1 female to share 3 bdrm 8 or 2 paediatric students $420/mo. No deposit all months.
How to schedule an ad:
Roommate needed. $190 a month +/4 utilities. 4
rooms. 250 square feet! route:
FREED JAN RENT. | Call 719-7494.
Wanted: Quit roommate to share bottom floor
room. Please provide your own dryer, wry-
drum, air con. $250. Uplift bid: $44. 1-800-367-6962.
SPACIUCIS S / Grad folks seek 2 N / Fem. Avail now Bright wavled skilt dkpl n. camp. Clean quiet air away yawy on park (birds, trees, grass) W/D. 800 Utlt Plu 941-2746 leave word 10-mm.
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. at 1128 Ohio. Between campus & downtown. Close to GSP-Corbin. Your share $250 +/2 utilities. No GPS 841-1207.
roommate needed to share 3 bdm, 2 bath duplex in W. Lawrence, Garage, W/D, basement, newer home, 1/3 utilities +$250. Move in immediately. Call 81-9031
Wanted. 1 Roommate M/F for a 3 bdrm. townhome. $280 per month + 1/3 utilities. Included washer/dryer, bathroom, 2 car garage, & lots of space. Call 449-3566.
1 male roommate wanted. 3 bdm. house off th & 8th. Iowa. Fully furnished in distance to campground, grocery, and more across the street.
No contraband. $200/m + 1/3 utilities. 865-5033 819-843-6053
- By Mail: 119 Stuffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68445
Ads phone in may be filled to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**serion:** 119 *Staffer 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 cheque 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 Kanan office. Or you may choose to have it filled to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again times 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.
Rebound:
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Reminders can be disabled when ads were pre-paid or with check or an not available balance. For more information, call 800-741-3690.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Packages
Num. of Insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$2.10 (4 lines X $1.05 per line X 5 days).
Cost per ther per day
1X 1-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.50 2.00 1.40 1.20 1.00 0.80
2.30 1.65 1.05 0.95 0.80 0.70
2.25 1.40 1.00 0.85 0.80 0.80
2.15 1.25 0.95 0.85 0.80 0.80
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classifications
160 Personnel 140 Lost & Found
161 Business Personals 205 Help Wanted
161 Gle Campus 225 Professional Services
162 Announcements 232 Typing Services
125 Travel 305 For Sale
130 Entertainment 310 Computers
- 2101ns
- 3405ns
- Perforated Furniture
- 3208 ns
- Sterile Equipment
- 3208 ns
- Tickets
- 480 Auto Sales
- Microscope Laser
Classified Mail Order Form · Please Print:
Please print your ad one word per box:
370 Wanted to Buy
405 For Rent
418 Condos for Rent
415 Homes for Rent
290 Real Estate for Sale
230 Roommate Wanted
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper ___
Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name: P
Address:
VISA
Account number:
Signature:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dal Kanaan)
Furnish the following if you are changing your ac:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
1
Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Thursday, January 22, 1998
THE ORIGINAL
JIMMY JOHNS
WORLD'S GREATEST ORIGENE
SAVINGS KIPS
WE DELIVER!!!
FROM 11AM TO 3AM!
838-3737 Store Hours
1447 West 23rd St. 11am-3am Mon.-Sat.
(5 doors west of Copy Co.) 11am-2am Sun.
THE ORIGINAL JIMMY JOHNS WORLD'S GREATEST COURTSTER BOWLERS 838-3737 Store Hours 1447 West 23rd St. 11am-3am Mon.-Sat. (5 doors west of Copy Co.) 11am-2am Sun.
WE DELIVER!!! FROM 11AM TO 3AM!
Spicy Red Wine Sauce !!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
RUDY'S PIZZERIA
749-0055
704 Mass.
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONLY $999 plus tax
Open 7 days a week
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING?
Spicy Red Wine Sauce !!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
ONLY
$9.99
plus tax
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
Open 7 days a week
REDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
704 Mass.
Check the Kansan Classifieds!
春
Chinese New Year Party
7:00 pm - Midnight, Jan. 23, 1998
Ecumenical Christian Ministers
(ECM Center, 1204 Oread Ave.)
$ 2.00 Admission
Contact: Xiaoping Song (832-1179)
Contact: Xiaoping Song (832-1179) Chinese Students and Scholars Friendship Association
Huskies plagued by injury, arrest
UConn without Klaiber, Freeman for game Saturday
HARTFORD, Conn. — Connecticut reserve forward Antric Klaiber was arrested on drunken-driving charges
The Associated Press
WOLF
early yesterday after crashing his car into a highway barrier. He was immediately suspended from the team
starting forward Kevin Freeman had a broken right wrist.
A day earlier, X-rays showed
The loss of Klaiber and Freeman could undermine the Huskies down the road. More immediately, it leaves No. 8 UConn even weaker in the low post heading into Saturday's game at No. 15 Swacruc.
The Huskies (16.3, 6.2 Big East) do not know when either player will be back. Freeman's return will depend on how quickly he heals. The coaching staff has not determined how long Klaiber will be punished.
UConn also does not know whether
point guard Khalid El-Amin will be back in top shape for the Orangemen. He has a bruised left leg and could play only 11 minutes in Monday's loss at St. John's.
Klaiber, who lives off-campus in Coventry, was charged with driving while intoxicated and driving too fast. He also received a seat-belt violation. He was released on $500 bond and is scheduled to appear in court Feb. 2.
In Connecticut, a person is considered legally drunk when his blood-alcohol level is .10 percent or more. On the DWI charge, Klaiber faces a license suspension of up to six months and criminal penalties of up to six months in jail and a maximum fine of $1,000.
At about 4 a.m. Klaiber drove into a barrier on the right side of the highway, a few miles east of Hartford, state police said. He was not hurt, and there were no other passengers.
The scene of the crash is about 25 miles from UConn's campus.
Coach Jim Calhoun said he and his staff were disappointed in Antric. The coach said the veteran player should have been aware of his responsibilities, on and off the court.
The 6-foot-7 Freeman, who hurt his wrist against St. John's, is UConn's leading rebounder (7.6 per game) and is third in scoring (10.9 per game). He has started 38 games since his freshman season.
Pressure not driving two-time champion
The Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Love him or hate him, a lot is expected of Jeff Gordon.
The 26-year-old racer has 27 victories and two championships in the last three Winston Cup seasons.
For a lot of people, the pressure to repeat such incredible performances would lead to ulcers but not for Gordon.
"I'm more relaxed going into this season than I've ever been," he said with a smile.
Gordon said that winning the championship last year was important because it showed that the first one was not a fluke.
"I've been able to enjoy this more than the first because I knew what to expect and what was expected of me." Gordon said.
Gordon and his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet have won a series-leading 10 races each of the past two seasons, but he is not counting on a number like that in 1998.
NASCAR
"We know what we have to do, and
what we want to do," he said. "We don't have to win 10 races, but we just want to get that first one early and get that out of the way."
He said crew chief Ray Evernham pointed out that despite last year's victories, they were starting the season with a seven-race losing streak.
"So we still have something to prove to ourselves and everybody else." Gordon said.
Darrell Waltrip, a three-time Winston Cup champion, said he feared Gordon might burn out early from the pressure.
"If I was to burn out, it wouldn't be in the race car," Gordon said. "Getting in the race car is the easiest part and the best part of my job. But there's a lot of other things that I have to do, and my schedule is really tough sometimes. People say to me, 'You don't have to do all those things.' Well, I do. It's in the contracts with my team and my sponsors."
Green Bay's Brown puckers at questions about eating habits
SAN DIEGO- About the sixth time somebody asked Gilbert Brown about the haute cuisine Gilbertburger, a Wisconsin delicacy, the mammoth Green Bay nose tackle began to lose his patience.
This is not something you want to see in a man his size.
Rolling his eyes, Brown recited the recipe again.
93
Brown was reminded that he left out an important fast-food burger ingredient, the pickle.
"There's no pickle on a Gilbert-burger," he said sternly. And why is that?
Then he added a caveat. "If you don't cut it in half," he said, "you're on your own."
"My burger," he began. "You take a double Whopper, put on extra cheese, a whole tomato, extra onion, extra mayonnaise. Cut it in half, and there you go."
"Because," Brown explained, becoming a tad annoyed, "I don't like pickles on my burger."
Considering Brown's considerable size — 6-foot-2 and something in excess of 350 pounds that was a perfectly acceptable answer.
Nobody pointed out that one of Brown's other endorsement deals is for a brand of pickles. And nobody asked about Gilbert's peanut butter, once described by teammate Antonio Freeman as being packed saturated fat.
This, of course, does not disturb Brown. Asked—delicately, of course—whether he ever had his cholesterol checked, Brown bristled. No, he said, he never bothered with that stuff. His arteries and the rest of him are working just fine thank you.
Another asked, "So, uhh,
Gilbert, how many Gilbertburg-
ces can you eat at one time?"
Brown's eyes narrowed.
G got a question for Green Bay nose tackle Gilbert Brown? Make sure it isn't about his namesake, the Gilbert burger.
"How many can you eat?" he enquired.
"Uh, I don't know," the man stammered. "Maybe two."
"Then I can eat two, too" Brown said.
That is fine by us.
Now, somebody asked about exactly when Brown consumed his two Gilbertburgers. "I get up and have a Gilbertburger every morning," he deadpanned, making it sound like nothing less than the breakfast of champions.
"I'm not lying to you," he said.
Brown's diet favorites extends to other dishes.
C'mon, Gilbert.
"I'm not lying to you" he said.
"Fried chicken," he said. "That goes down real well. My mom's a
great cook. She made me eat everything on my plate. That's why I'm so bigright now."
It has always been thus. Once, when he was in the second grade, young Gilbert sat down on a chair and shattered it. "Everybody laughed at me," he said. "It was the only time I wished I was smaller."
Except for that moment, a wardrobe full of XXXL labels always has been just fine with Brown. "Sometimes," he confessed, "there's not enough X's, though."
Then there is the matter of his nickname, Gravedigger.
Why is he called that, someone asked. "Because I dig graves," Brownlied. "Want to see one?"
Media day for the Super Bowl found of' Gravedigger far more forthcoming than usual. Around the Packers, he is viewed as the strong, silent type, with the emphasis on silent.
"I don't run my mouth much," he said. "If I don't talk to you, I'd be in trouble, so I guess I've got to talk to you."
Waiting in the tunnel to come out for the first swarm of reporters, Brown confessed to thinking unpleasant thoughts about the invasion.
"I thought, what wonderful questions are these guys going to ask me today," he said. "I wish it was raining so I could see all you guys running inside."
Just then, a new customer arrived with an old question. "Gilbert," the man began brightly, "what do you weigh?"
"Next question," he said.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
RECREATION SERVICES SPORT CLUB PROGRAM
Looking for something FUN and EXCITING to do??
Soccer
Badminton
Crew
Cycling
Fencing
Kempo
KI-Aikido
Kuk Sool Won
Lacrosse-Men's
Lacrosse-Women's
Racquetball
Rock Climbing
Roller Hockey
Rugby-Men's
Rugby-Women's
Sailing
Soccer-Men's
Soccer-Women's
Tae Kwon Do
Ultimate-Men's
Ultimate-Women's
Volleyball-Men's
Volleyball-Women's
Water Polo
Water Ski
Wrestling
C
足球
篮球
网球
拳击
骑自行车
武术
I am not sure if it is a playground or a flooded room. It looks like a flooded room with a table and four people.
1
HABA
The Sport Club Program at the University of Kansas consists of student organizations sponsored by the Office of Recreation Services. The Clubs are designed to serve student interests in different sports and recreational activities.Sports and/or activities within the Sport Club Program can be competitive, recreational or instructional in nature. Sport Clubs may represent the University of Kansas in intercollegiate competition or conduct club activities such as practice, instruction, and social play
For more information concerning:
**The above Sport Clubs**
**Starting a New Sport Club**
STUDENT
SENATI
Please call 864-3546, or stop by the Office of Recreation Services, 208 Robinson
Have you got Saturday Night Fever?
ALL NEW!
THE HOTTEST SATURDAY
NIGHT IN THE AREA!
Ultra
A Funk-Soul & Disco Party
Groove
Featuring $1 bottles • Every Saturday
THURS. • $1 PITCHERS OPEN TIL 4AM • FRIDAY
RETRO DANCE PARTY REVOLUTION FEATURING DJ ROLAND AND TIM JOHNSTON
Tues. Feb. 24 on sale this Saturday! Sister Hazel with Freddy Jones, Band
ads; it; available all ticketmaster outlets (816) 931-3330 and the Granada
1020 MASS GRANADA 842-1390
The weekend's weather
HIG 44
Tomorrow: Hazy sunny
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
Sunday: Periods of clouds and sunshine.
HIGH 48
LOW 29
LOW 29
kansan Weekend Edition
Friday
January 23,1998
Section:
A
Vol.108 No.84 Saturday & Sunday
WWW.KANSAN.COM
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wandering the Web
If you still haven't heard enough about the Clinton investigations, check out these sites. If you have heard enough, don't go near your radio, television, or computer.
http://www.cnn.com
CNN has lots of info in an easy to use format. There are audio and video files, and you can even view Monica Lewinsky's resume online.
http://www.msnbc.com MSNBC's site is equally saturated with information. You can opt to take the poll that asks if you believe the president.
http://www.washingtonpost.com
The Washington Post was the first print publication to break the Clinton story. The site includes some excerpts from the tapes.
http://www.nytimes.com
As always, *The New York Times*
has extensive coverage from all angles.
(USPS 650-640)
http://www.chicago.tribune.com
This site has the latest on the indefinite delay of Monica Lewinsky's deposition.
CONCERTCALENDAR
Toniaht
Lawrence Concert Calendar for today and tomorrow:
Bambino's Italian Cafe: Bill Thompson, Kathy Forest
The Bottleneck: The Schway
Hi linx: Swing 39
The Jazzhaus: The Band that Saved the World
Milton's: Bill Crahan and John Lomis
Tomorrow
Bambino's Italian Cafe: Scott Goodman
The Bottleneck: Danger Bob & TV50
Hi-Jinx: Key West Jazz Quartet
Correction
Because of a graphic artist's error, yesterday's Kansan reported the Kansas Research and Education Network has a cable modem Internet connection. Sunflower Datavation is the connection provider.
...
Index
News ...2A
Feature ...8A
Sports ...1B
Television ...2B
Coupons ...3A
Horoscopes ...2B
Classifieds ...7B
Movie Listings ...5A
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.
Above right: Scott Wallish, St. Louis sophomore, and Katie Ramsey, Leavenworth sophomore, run the KU Students for life table at the Kansas Union. The table was part of the Information Fair and offered students a chance to get involved in the organization. Photo by Roger Nomer/KANSAN
Hangers found in trees next to Jayhawk Boulevard may have been hung in response to a protest planned by KU Students for Life. A member of KU Pro-Choice Coalition denied that the coalition was responsible for the hangers. Photo by Roar Nomer/KANSAN
Students For
Abortion display goes unclaimed by campus group
By Sara Anderson and Gerry Doyle
gdayle@kansan.com
sanderson@kansan.com
Kansan staff writers
A collection of wire clothes hangers strewn in the trees greeted students walking to class yesterday morning.
Pieces of paper with "Never Again" and "Pro-Choice" accompanied the hangers, which were spread across campus sometime before 6:30 a.m., said Wayne Reusch, assistant director of facilities operations.
Jenni Curry, Lenexa sophomore and a member of the KU Pro- Choice Coalition, said the coalition was not involved.
"It was in no way part of the coalition or a coalition activity," Curry said. "It was an individual act."
Sarah Page, Prairie Village senior and co-coordinator of the KU Pro-Choice Coalition, said the hangers represented times when women had to resort to extreme measures to have an abortion and often died because of it.
See PRO-CHOICE on page 2A
Armed men steal car, hold hostages
Kansan staff writer
Bv Ronnie Wachter
One of the largest hostage situations in Kansas history developed yesterday morning in southeast Douglas County.
POLICE
Law enforcement officers from several departments surrounded a farmhouse at the intersection of 1100 North Highway and 1500 East Highway, where two suspects held a husband and wife hostage.
Although the names had not been confirmed by police, the husband and wife were held hostage were believed to be Ralph and Leila Leary.
Officiers from Kansas law enforcement agencies secure the area surrounding a hostage situation in southeast Douglas County. The standoff began about 8a.m. yesterday at a residence near 1500 East and 1100 North highways. Photo by Geoff Krager/KANSAN
The female hostage was released at 8:27 p.m. appearing to be unharmed. Shortly after, one of the suspects surrendered to authorities. That suspect was taken into custody. At press time, the second man, still believed to be armed with a handgun, remained in the house with the male hostage.
Lella Leary is a licensed practical nurse and a member of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission.
Douglas County Sheriff Loren C. Anderson said the situation began at approximately 7:50 a.m. yesterday at an undisclosed house just south of Lawrence. A high-school-aged girl went outside to warm up her car when two men, one said to be 20-25 years old, attacked her. The two men
tied her wrists together with duct tape and taped her mouth shut, Anderson said.
One of the suspects knocked on the door. When the girl's father opened the door the suspect pointed a handgun at his head. The man slammed the door shut and had his wife call 911, Anderson said.
The call was received at 7:58 a.m. and Douglas County deputies were dispatched to the scene. When the man looked outside his window, he saw the two suspects knock his daughter to the ground and drive south in her blue Chevy Cavalier.
The man pursued the suspects in his car, but lost sight of them, Anderson said.
As he passed by the farmhouse about a mile southeast of his house, he saw his daughter's car parked in the driveway. He called the sheriff's department again and told them of the location of the stolen car.
By 10.15 a.m., a perimeter one mile in diameter had been established by several cooperating law enforcement agencies, including the KU police department.
A control center was established in the 1100 block of Leary Road, where about 40 officers from the Lawrence and University police departments as well as the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Kansas Bureau Of Investigation patrolled the scene.
In the late afternoon, law enforcement officials began evacuating homes within 250 yards of the house, but residents were allowed to stay if they wished.
"It became suspicious to us that the residents may have been in danger." Anderson said.
Negotiators from several departments made contact with the suspects early in the morning, and maintained contact regularly throughout the day.
He credited the negotiation team with the successful capture of the first suspect and the safe return of the female hostage. Family members of at least one of the suspects aided in the negotiations, he said, but their identities were not released.
"This is just about as close to volatile as you want to be," Anderson said.
The condition of the male hostage could not be confirmed.
Police moved lights to the hostage scene to make sure the remaining suspect didn't escape in the dark.
"We can wait forever," Anderson said.
Power of Spice
See page 8A
Spice World, which opens at theaters today, is dicey, but lacks intellectual spice. Don't tell us you're surprised.
SUNDAY AUGUST 20TH
A $ ^{B} C $
What's in a grade?
The SenEx Committee proposes a change in the definition of letter grades. A's now mean outstanding, and C's are now acceptable. Just try that one on your parents.
No Chiefs for you!
The Denver Broncos will try to dethrone the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XXXII. The game will begin at 5 p.m. Sunday in San Diego. The game will be televised by NBC (Channel 8).
See page 5A
See page 8B
G
KU students, professors shocked by sex scandal
By Brandon Coppie and Aaron Knopf
bcoppe@kansan.com
aknopf@kansan.com
Kansan staff writers
Kansan staff writers
University of Kansas senior Julie King worked as an intern for Vice President Al Gore, and all she got was a pen.
Former White House intern Monica Lewinsky possibly received much more.
According to conversations on tapes revealed Wednesday by Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr, Lewinsky had an affair with President Bill Clinton. Starr also asserts Clinton urged Lewinsky to lie to prosecutors about the affair.
King, a Lansing senior and University Daily Kanson news editor, said it would be unusual for an intern to have a close relationship with the president. As an intern in the vice president's press office last spring, she said she rarely saw Gore.
"Occasionally we'd see him walking in the hall," she said. "We'd stick our heads out the door and say 'Oh, there's Al.'"
Two University students are interning at the White House this semester. One of these interns, Jennifer Pechar, Overland Park senior, said the White House press office instructed her not to speak publicly about the Lewinsky matter.
King worked as an intern in the spring of 1997 as a part of the political science department's Washington internship program, which places students in government offices for college credit. King was one of 30 interns working for Gore, and one of about 200 working at the White House.
Burdett Loomis, professor of political science and director of the internship program, said the situation was disturbing because it potentially involved an abuse of power by the president.
"Whenever you're an intern, whoever your boss is, you're in a power situation," he said. "I'm not aware of a situation like this with one of our interns, but it's something we're conscious of because it's a very delicate power balance."
Loomis said the allegations against Clinton were the most serious leveled against any president since Watergate.
"If Paula Jones is a six on the Clinton Richter scale, and Whitewater is a four, then this a nine or a nine and a half," he said. "And if you look at the evidence that's coming out, there's some flesh on these bones — this is not some arcane land deal in Arkansas, this is tampering with a federal witness."
KU law professor Roscoe Howard is in Washington working as an associate independent counsel prosecuting a former member of Clinton's Cabinet.
Howard said a prosecutor, such as Starr, working as an independent counsel frequently encountered people in power who attempt to influence the testimony of witnesses.
"We prosecute Cabinet-level officials," he said. "These are people who are used to getting their way."
Howard also said he was not surprised special prosecutor Starr would bring these allegations against the president. Starr was appointed to investigate the Whitewater land deal.
"As you look into these things, the investigation will take you outside of your mandate," he said. "But as a prosecutor, your job is to ferret out criminal activity."
Howard said he thought Starr proceeded properly by taking the Lewinsky information to the Department of Justice, which authorized his further inquiry into the affair.
Supporters of President Clinton are more skeptical of Star's motives.
"I think a lot of this is Ken Starr trying to keep his name in the paper," said Chris Gallaway, president of KU Democrats.
Gallaway acknowledged the accusations, if true, would create serious problems for the president. Gallaway also said the members of KU Democrats are not ready to give up on the president.
"The news is shocking, but I think they hope that these latest allegations are just a publicity stunt." he said.
.
The weekend's weather
HIG 44
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Sunday: Periods of clouds and sunshine.
HIGH 48
LOW 29
kansan Weekend Edition
Friday
January 23,1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 • No. 84
Saturday & Sunday
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WWW.KANSAN.COM
(USPS 650-640)
Wandering the Web
If you still haven't heard enough about the Clinton investigations, check out these sites. If you have heard enough, don't go near your radio, television, or computer.
http://www.cnn.com
CNN has lots of info in an easy to use format. There are audio and video files, and you can even view Monica Lewinsky's resume online.
http://www.msnbc.com MSNBC's site is equally saturated with information. You can opt to take the poll that asks if you believe the president.
http://www.washingtonpost.com
The Washington Post was the first print publication to break the Clinton story. The site includes some excerpts from the tapes.
http://www.nytimes.com
As always, The New York Times
has extensive coverage from all
angles.
http://www.chicago.tribune.
com
This site has the latest on the indefinite delay of Monica Lewinsky's deposition.
CONCERT CALENDAR
Lawrence Concert Calendar for today and tomorrow:
Tonight
Hi-Jinx: Swing 39
Bambino's Italian Cafe: Bill Thompson, Kathy Forste
The Bottleneck: The Schwag
The Jazzhaus: The Band that Saved the World
Milton's: Bill Crahan and John Lomis
Bambino's Italian Cafe: Scott Goodman
The Bottleneck: Danger Bob & TV50
Hi-Jinx: Key West Jazz Quartet
Correction
Because of a graphic artist's error, yesterday the Kansan reported the Kansas Research and Education Network has a cable modem Internet connection. Sunflower Datavision is the connection provider.
...
Index
News ...2A
Feature ...8A
Sports ...1B
Television ...2B
Coupons ...3A
Horoscopes ...2B
Classifieds ...7B
Movie Listings ...5A
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.
1950年代的南京市中医院
Hangers found in trees next to Jayhawk Boulevard may have been hung in response to a protest planned by KU Students for Life. A member of KU Pro-Choice Coalition denied that the coalition was responsible for the hangers. Photo by Roamer Names/KANSAN
Above right: Scott Wallish, St. Louis sophomore, and Katie Ramsey, Leavenworth sophomore, run the KU Students for Life table at the Kansas Union. The table was part of the Information Fair and offered students a chance to get involved in the organization. Photo by Roger Nerom/KANSAN
Students For K
Abortion display goes unclaimed by campus group
By Sara Anderson and Gerry Doyle
gdoyle@kansan.com
sanderson@kansan.com
A collection of wire clothes hangers strewn in the trees greeted students walking to class yesterday morning.
Pieces of paper with "Never Again" and "Pro-Choice" accompanied the hangers, which were spread across campus sometime before 6:30 a.m., said Wayne Reusch, assistant director of facilities operations.
Jenni Curry, Lenexa sophomore and a member of the KU ProChoice Coalition, said the coalition was not involved.
"It was in no way part of the coalition or a coalition activity," Curry said. "It was an individual act."
Sarah Page, Prairie Village senior and co-coordinator of the KU Pro-Choice Coalition, said the hangers represented times when women had to resort to extreme measures to have an abortion and often died because of it.
See PRO-CHOICE on page 2A
Armed men steal car, hold hostages
By Ronnie Wachter
Kansan staff writer
One of the largest hostage situations in Kansas history developed yesterday morning in southeast Douglas County.
POLICE
Law enforcement officers from several departments surrounded a farmhouse at the intersection of 1100 North Highway and 1500 East Highway, where two suspects held a husband and wife hostage.
Officers from Kansas law enforcement agencies secure the area surrounding a hostage situation in southeast Douglas County. The standoff began about 8a.m. yesterday at a residence near 1500 East and 1100 North highways. Photo by Geoff Krieger / KANSAN
Although the names had not been confirmed by police, the husband and wife being held hostage were believed to be Ralph and Leila Leary.
The female hostage was released at 8:27 p.m. appearing to be unharmed. Shortly after, one of the suspects surrendered to authorities. That suspect was taken into custody. At press time, the second man, still believed to be armed with a handgun, remained in the house with the male hostage.
Leila Leary is a licensed practical nurse and a member of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission.
Douglas County Sheriff Loren C. Anderson said the situation began at approximately 7:50 a.m. yesterday at an undisclosed house just south of Lawrence. A high-school-aged girl went outside to warm up her car when two men, one said to be 20-25 years old, attacked her. The two men
tied her wrists together with duct tape and taped her mouth shut, Anderson said.
One of the suspects knocked on the door. When the girl's father opened the door the suspect pointed a handgun at his head. The man slammed the door shut and had his wife call 911, Anderson said.
The call was received at 7:58 a.m. and Douglas County deputies were dispatched to the scene. When the man looked outside his window, he saw the two suspects knock his daughter to the ground and drive south in her blue Chevy Cavalier.
The man pursued the suspects in his car, but lost sight of them, Anderson said.
As he passed by the farmhouse about a mile southeast of his house, he saw his daughter's car parked in the driveway. He called the sheriff's department again and told them of the location of the stolen car.
By 10.15 a.m., a perimeter one mile in diameter had been established by several cooperating law enforcement agencies, including the KU police department.
A control center was established in the 1100 block of Leary Road, where about 40 officers from the Lawrence and University police departments as well as the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Kansas Bureau Of Investigation patrolled the scene.
In the late afternoon, law enforcement officials began evacuating homes within 250 yards of the house, but residents were allowed to stay if they wished.
Negotiators from several departments made contact with the suspects early in the morning, and maintained contact regularly throughout the day.
He credited the negotiation team with the successful capture of the first suspect and the safe return of the female hostage. Family members of at least one of the suspects aided in the negotiations, he said, but their identities were not released.
"This is just about as close to volatile as you want to be," Anderson said."
The condition of the male hostage could not be confirmed.
Police moved lights to the hostage scene to make sure the remaining suspect didn't escape in the dark.
"We can wait forever," Anderson said.
Power of Spice
Spice World, which opens at theaters today, is dicey, but lacks intellectual spice. Don't tell us you're surprised.
See page 8A
A
A $ ^{B} C $
What's in a grade?
The SenEx Committee proposes a change in the definition of letter grades. A's now mean outstanding, and C's are now acceptable. Just try that one on your parents.
No Chiefs for you!
The Denver Broncos will try to dethrone the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XXXII. The game will begin at 5 p.m. Sunday in San Diego. The game will be televised by NBC (Channel 8).
See page 5A
See page 8B
G
KU students, professors shocked by sex scandal
By Brandon Capple and Aaron Knopf
bcopple@kansan.com
akknopf@kansan.com
Kansan staff writers
Former White House intern Monica Lewinsky possibly received much more.
According to conversations on tapes revealed Wednesday by Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr, Lewinsky had an affair with President Bill Clinton. Starr also asserts Clinton urged Lewinsky to lie to prosecutors about the affair.
King, a Lansing senior and University Daily Kansan news editor, said it would be unusual for an intern to have a close relationship with the president. As an intern in the vice president's press office last spring, she said she rarely saw Gore.
"Occasionally we'd see him walking in the hall," she said. "We'd stick our heads out the door and say 'Oh, there's Al.'"
Two University students are interning at the White House this semester. One of these interns, Jennifer Pechar, Overland Park senior, said the White House press office instructed her not to speak publicly about the Lewinsky matter.
King worked as an intern in the spring of 1997 as a part of the political science department's Washington internship program, which places students in government offices for college credit. King was one of 30 interns working for Gore, and one of about 200 working at the White House.
"Whenever you're an intern, whoever your boss is, you're in a power situation," he said. "I'm not aware of a situation like this with one of our interns, but it's something we're conscious of because it's a very delicate power balance."
Burdett Loomis, professor of political science and director of the internship program, said the situation was disturbing because it potentially involved an abuse of power by the president.
Loomis said the allegations against Clinton were the most serious leveled against any president since Watergate.
"If Paula Jones is a six on the Clinton Richter scale, and Whitewater is a four, then this a nine or a nine and a half," he said. "And if you look at the evidence that's coming out, there's some flesh on these bones — this is not some arcane land deal in Arkansas, this is tampering with a federal witness."
KU law professor Roscoe Howard is in Washington working as an associate independent counsel prosecuting a former member of Clinton's Cabinet.
Howard said a prosecutor, such as Starr, working as an independent counsel frequently encountered people in power who attempt to influence the testimony of witnesses.
"We prosecute Cabinet-level officials," he said. "These are people who are used to getting their way."
Howard also said he was not surprised special prosecutor Starr would bring these allegations against the president. Starr was appointed to investigate the Whitewater land deal.
"As you look into these things, the investigation will take you outside of your mandate," he said. "But as a prosecutor, your job is to ferret out criminal activity."
Howard said he thought Starr proceeded properly by taking the Lewinsky information to the Department of Justice, which authorized his further inquiry into the affair.
Supporters of President Clinton are more skeptical of Starr's motives.
"I think a lot of this is Ken Starr trying to keep his name in the paper," said Chris Gallaway, president of KU Democrats.
Gallaway acknowledged the accusations, if true, would create serious problems for the president. Gallaway also said the members of KU Democrats are not ready to give up on the president.
"The news is shocking, but I think they hope that these latest allegations are just a publicity stunt," he said.
---
1
2
2A
The Inside Front
Friday January 23,1998
Ex-intern deposition put off indefinitely
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—The White House intern who has said both that she did and did not have an affair with President Clinton was given a reprieve late yesterday from having to tell her story under oath. Clinton, meanwhile, got a boost from a key witness.
Long-time Clinton confidant and power broker Vernon Jordan said he helped Monica Lewinsky seek a job and then set her up with an attorney, and that she had told him that she had not had a sexual relationship with the president.
Jordan's dramatic statement came as Clinton, firmly denying all accusations, sought to calm the firestorm about allegations that he had an affair with Lewinsky, 24, and then urged her to lie about it
As Clinton promised a more full account and his advisers waited anxiously to see what Lewinsky would say when deposed in the Paula Jones lawsuit against Clinton, a judge intervened.
U. S. District Judge Susan Webber Wright in Little Rock, Ark., granted an indefinite delay for Lewinsky's deposition, which had been scheduled for today. Whitewater prosecutors are trying to secure Lewinsky's cooperation and speculation abounded that she would take the Fifth Amendment. Lewinsky remained out of sight yesterday but told CBS News she had no comment.
With Yasser Arafat on his side in a surreal moment of White House diplomacy, Clinton made his firmest denial yet to Lewinsky's claims in taped conversations with a friend that she had an affair with Clinton and that he and Jordan asked her to deny it to Jones' attorneys.
"The allegations are false, and I would
]
Clinton: Continues to deny sexual relationship
never ask anybody to do anything other than tell the truth." Clinton said. Lewinsky has denied the claims she made in tape-recorded conversations with her friend, Linda Tripp. Jordan added to the denials at a press conference yesterday afternoon in remarks the White House hoped would dampen political
speculation in Washington.
"I want to say to you absolutely and unequivocally that Ms. Lewinsky told me in no uncertain terms that she did not have a sexual relationship with the president," Jordan told reporters. He
PRESIDENT
Lewinsky: Judge postpones her deposition
would not answer any questions.
issued by Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr a day earlier, officials said.
Jones' attorneys had a wide-ranging subpoena served on the White House yesterday seeking all documents and evidence concerning Lewinsky's employment there, her contacts with the president and others and other information sought in a similar subpoena.
The fresh denials from Clinton and Jordan came as details emerged about Lewinsky's entries to the White House and gifts she got from the president.
Kaczynski pleads guilty, gets life term
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Unabomber suspect Theodore Kaczynski has agreed to plead guilty in return for a sentence of life in prison without parole, federal officials said yesterday.
The agreement, which was presented in court in Sacramento, Calif., would avoid the possibility of a death sentence for the 55-year-old mathematics professor turned hermit if he was convicted in four bombings that killed two men and maimed two scientists.
Kaczynski agreed to drop conditions he had set on a previous plea the Justice Department rejected in December, an official who spoke on condition of anonymity said.
The key development that changed the course of the case last week was the finding that Kaczynski, while competent to stand trial, suffered from paranoid schizophrenia, a Bureau of Prisons psychistrut said.
Justice Department officials had looked for the finding as a basis for altering Attorney General Janet Reno's decision last spring to seek the death penalty.
Kaczynski's family, who turned Kaczynski in to the FBI since he told of killing three and injuring 29 during 18 years of bombings, has long argued that he was a paranoid schizophrenia.
Kaczynski had resisted examination by government psychiatrists until last week. He also reversed course in a bid to prove he was competent to defend himself and dumped two court-appointed lawyers who planned to base his defense on mental illness.
planned to book Quin Denvir confirmed that a plea agreement was reached, but he declined to provide further details. Bert Brandenburg of the Justice Department also said an agreement was reached with-
CARL S. MAYNES
Kaczynski: Avoids possibility of death with plea
offering an elaboration.
out offering an elaboration.
In December, Kaczynski had offered a plea to avoid the death penalty, but he wanted to reserve the right to appeal whether the government could use the evidence, a completed bomb and a journal describing the Unabomber's attacks, which was seized in his Montana cabin.
He also had sought federal help to persuade local prosecutors to not seek his execution or incarceration in a federal mental hospital prison.
Those conditions were dropped during bargaining that took place this week, the federal official said.
Yesterday's agreement will resolve all federal charges against Kaczynski. They include those in other states such as New Jersey where a 50-year-old advertising executive was killed by a mail bomb at his home in 1994.
11 Kaczynski had been allowed to condition his plea on an appeal and an appeals court had decided that evidence was not admissible, he would have been allowed to withdraw his plea and go to trial.
Federal officials called Kaczynski's earlier demand unacceptable, although it is not unheard of in drug trafficking cases. There is no instance of the government ever agreeing to it in a potential death penalty case.
In court yesterday, a federal judge ruled Kaczynski could not represent himself, but U.S. District Judge Garland Burrell Jr. did not immediately say whether he would insist Kaczynski accept representation by his court-appointed lawyers, Denvir and Judy Clarke.
On your toes
Ballet Classes
A young dancer performs a ballet pose in the studio, demonstrating flexibility and grace. The background shows other students practicing at the same level.
Linsay Wacholz, Quincy, Ill., freshman, practices her pase' on the barre during a Ballet II class. Photo by Lizx Weber / KANSAN
Pro-Choice Coalition denies part in display
Continued from page 1A
Sarah Deer, Wichita law student and co-coordinator of the coalition said the group couldn't influence individual decisions.
Curry said she had heard discussion among some members of the coalition about using hangers to respond to the KU Students for Life's plan to display crosses on the lawn outside of Stauffer-Flint Hall. She said the coalition decided against the idea.
Scott Wallisch, St. Louis sophomore and member of KU Students for Life, said he didn't think the display focused on the issue.
"I didn't know if we should do it because it might hurt the credibility of the group," she said. "I didn't try to stop it because I did not have the power to stop it. Individual people do things we don't have control over."
Yesterday's 25th anniversary of the Roe vs. Wade decision was bound to carry with it some sort of demonstration, said Cody Simms, Wichita junior.
"I think it is missing the point," Wallisch said. "Regardless of how the procedure is done, a child dies. It is a dangerous procedure, legal or illegal, and has serious psychological and physical repercussions for women."
Bok Suk, Schaumburg, Ill., junior,
said the display was appropriate in
terms of freedom of speech, but could
have been better presented.
"People have the right to an opinion," Suk said. "But I don't think putting stuff in trees helps your purpose."
Reusch, assistant director of facilities operations, said six to eight staff members worked to remove the hangers. He said the job would take most of the day.
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive.
ET CETERA
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
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LIVE ON THE
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http://www.kansan.com/news/nation/
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The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com - these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
Today IN HISTORY
1933
- The Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution was ratified, fixing the date of the Presidential Inauguration at the current January 20 instead of the previous March 4, shortening the lame-duck period. It also specified that were the presidentelect to die before taking office, the vice presidentelect would succeed to the presidency. In addition, it set January 3 as the official opening date of Congress each year.
1964
The Twenty-fourth Amendment to the Constitution was ratified, eliminating poll taxes and other taxes as prerequisites for voting in all federal elections.
ON THE RECORD
A KU staff member's fancy pack, containing cash, keys and a wallet, was taken from the second-floor men's restroom in Strong Hall Tuesday. KU police said. The items were valued at $05.
A KU staff member reported the theft of candy from 210 Watson Library between 5:30 p.m. Jan. 15 and 7:15 a.m. Jan. 16, KU police said. The candy was valued at $7.60.
A KU student's bicycle and lock were taken from the west bicycle rack in front of McColm Hall between 2:30 p.m. Dec. 19 and 3 p.m. Jan. 11, KU police said. The items were valued at $825.
The department of student housing reported tampering with fire equipment at Battenfeld Scholarship Hall Saturday. KU police said.
A KU student lost $605 in a residential burglary in the 1100 block of Kentucky. A pearl ring with a gold band and a jewelry box were taken from her apartment between 6:50 a.m. and 10:10 p.m. on Jan. 20.
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Friday, January 23, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Student Senate dissection resolution passes, polling site debate concludes
By Melissa Ngo and Marc Sheforgen mngo@kansan.com msheforgen@kansan.com Kansan staff writers
After concluding a long debate about Daisy Hill polling sites, a resolution supporting dissection alternatives was passed at Wednesday's Student Senate meeting.
Senate passed the resolution in favor of adopting a University of Kansas policy to provide alternative learning methods for students opposed to dissecting animals.
The resolution states students have a right to education that does not violate their moral or religious beliefs.
Kevin Yoder, Interfraternity Council Senator and head of the Senate ethical task force, said it was not necessary to perform dissections to understand biology.
"In the religion department, you could learn the religion, but you wouldn't actually have to practice it." he said.
Michael Schmitt, spokesman for Proponents of Animal Liberation and member of the task force, said alternatives to dissection, such as computer programs and plastic models, could be effective and inexpensive.
Such practices are used by many top medical schools such as Yale, Harvard and Stanford.
Dean Stetler, chairman of undergraduate biology at the University, said a model was not an effective substitute for actual dissection.
"You're not going to learn how to appreciate the details by looking at a piece of plastic or a computer screen," he said.
The biology department does allow for some students to choose an assignment other than dissection, but the initiative must be taken by the student.
The resolution passed in Wednesday's meeting calls for the biology department to inform students of alternatives at the beginning of each semester.
Stetler said a policy giving all students the choice of alternate assignments might be abused by students who do not actually have moral or religious objections.
"Is it a moral belief, or is it the 'ick' factor?" he said.
Although the resolution will not force the biology department to adopt a new policy, Schmitt said it would send a message saying students wanted a policy guarantee. He said it would give him and others clout when they go before the administration to get a policy enforced.
Also concluded at the meeting was the debate about proposed residence hall polling sites.
Senators decided to send the issue to a student vote after a 33-20 decision that the legislation violated Senate rule 6.5.2. The rule states the Elections Commission is responsible for establishing and enforcing all rules and regulations relating to Student Senate elections and campaigns.
Brad Finkeldel, elections commission member, said the commission's decision to set up the three new sites at Ekdahl Dining Commons, Oliver Hall and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall, will not be changed by Student Senate's failure to pass the pollting site bills.
Students can vote during the April 1998 Student Senate elections to mandate that the Elections Commission permanently activate the new polling sites.
Seth Hoffman, All Scholarship Hall Council senator and author of the original Daisy Hill bill, said he was disappointed the legislation did not pass. He said he was happy the debate generated by the legislation led to new sites this year.
A breakdown of Wednesday's Student Senate agenda:
SENATE BUSINESS
Bill to fund Saferide tabled
Bill to fund speaker
Al Franken
passed
Pettition to add a Daisy Hill polling site and a bill to add polling sites at GSP-Corbin and Oliver Halls sent to referendum
Resolution supporting a University Policy protecting student ethical choice in the dissection of animals passed
In addition to the polling site issues, Finkeldei also discussed changes to the elections code. These changes included lower spending limits for candidates.
The preliminary draft of this year's elections code will be available Monday.
Students can file complaints about the code and discuss their concerns at a commission meeting on Feb. 2, Finkeldei said.
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"There has been a lot of division and personal agendas in Senate, and I feel that this has skewed us
By Melissa Ngo
mngo@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
Cook: Resigned as College of Liberal Arts and Sciences senator.
Cook said he resigned because he thought he and the Senate were ineffective in representing student this year.
she thought the division in Senate sometimes led to good things, she could understand how Cook could be frustrated.
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Whitney Black, off-campus senator, said, though
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Ward Cook, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, resigned from Student Senate yesterday after three years as a senator.
Cites ineffectiveness division as reasons for leaving position
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"I think that when the spotlight shifts from issues pertaining to elections back to issues that really matter for students, there will be improvement," Walden said.
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Mike Walden, student body vicepresident, said Sullivan most likely would, accept the resignation. Walden said he appreciated and identified with some of Cook's concerns but thought Senate could improve.
CAGUSN
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away from the important issues," Cook said.
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Walden said he was disappointed Cook had resigned.
Veteran senator Ward Cook resigns from seat
Cook addressed his letter of resignation to Scott Sullivan, student body president. Sullivan would be the one to accept Cook's resignation but was unavailable for comment yesterday. The resignation will not be official until Sullivan accepts it.
"Personally and professionally, it's difficult to see him go," he said. "Ward's been a great asset to Senate for over three years."
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"Last night, I felt that everybody wanted the site, but instead of coming up with the solution of how to get it, we started arguing about semantics," Cook said, referring to the Daisy Hill polling site.
Cook said he wanted to continue to work on the Campus Lighting and Safety Board and on the Parking Board but it would be Sullivan's decision.
this would lead to more resignations.
The Etc. Shop
orbs
"I'm not hoping to try to create a big revolution," Cook said. "I just felt that right now was the best time for me."
Cook said he did not resign primarily because of last night's decision concerning Daisy Hill legislation but it was the final straw in a pile of problems he saw in Senate this year.
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1998
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Attend any of our GO+ weekly aerobics and strength classes at any time.
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Office of Study Abroad 108 Lippincott864-3742 www.ukans.edu/~osa
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor Marc Harrell, Business manager
Dave Morantz, Managing editor Colleen Eager, Retail sales manager
Kristen Biasi, Managing editor Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser
Tom Eblen, General manager, news adviser Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
Friday. Jan. 23, 1998
THE FIELDHOUSE
BROUGHT ME HERE TO
MAKE SURE WE GET
QUALITY LABOR. FRANKLY,
I'VE SEEN BETTER
WORK FROM PEOPLE
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KATHIE
LEE
Tom McCabe
Editorial
The schoolchildren who cleaned Allen Field House deserve full wage
The University of Kansas Athletic Department managed to save $750 this month by refusing to fully pay a group of elementary school students hired to clean Allen Field House. The Athletic Department, which regularly lets local groups clean the field house as a fundraiser, gave the group of students the cleaning job after the Kansas vs. Colorado men's basketball game on Jan 7.
Anyone who has ever cheered on the Jayhawk men at a home basketball game knows what a tremendous effort it would take to clean up afterward. The thousands of half-filled cups, nacho containers and shredded newspapers make it a job that most college students would be reluctant to tackle. The Athletics Department decided to give the task to a handful of elementary school students.
The 15 children from Prairie Park Elementary School were promised $1,450 for cleaning the field house. The
Miscommunication occurred between both parties,but c'mon — give the kids a break
students, who were trying to raise money for a class trip to Washington, D.C., arrived at the field house shortly after the Jan. 7 game. Although they received no formal instructions about how to do the job, the small group of children and a few parents worked well past midnight. Realizing that they had not completed the cleanup, the group returned Jan. 8 and 9 to finish.
After hours of hard labor on the part of the young students, the department said the cleanup was not done satisfactorily. Ron Penny, facilities maintenance supervisor, decided that the Prairie Park group should receive only half of the $1,450.
1n1s job never should have been given to a group of small children. The task requires the use of gas-powered backpack blowers that are almost impossible for small children to handle. The exhaust fumes from these blowers, not to mention the tobacco spit cups and half-eaten food, combine to make working conditions that are less than ideal for elementary school students. Penry, who said that he had similar problems in the past with other young groups, had the responsibility to grant the job to a group that could handle it. The actions of Penry and the department were irresponsible and inappropriate. Their dealings with the Prairie Park students make the phrase "stealing candy from a baby" come to mind. The department is in no dire need of the $750 it is holding. It should, as one anonymous field house janitor said, "Grow up and pay the full amount."
Susan Dunavan for the editorial board
City wrong in limiting center use
A venue used by nonprofit organizations has new policies that could restrict the use of the building.
The South Park Recreation Center implemented new policies in January that limit the number of bands that could play.
There also have been complaints about a violation of the noise ordinance when the facility was used, said Janet Murphy, the center supervisor.
These rules are too stringent and the noise complaints are exaggerated.
The one-band-per-rental policy is a city-wide policy implemented because of the wear and tear on the buildings that
may be caused by bands and their equipment.
This is absurd. Perhaps in other, newer recreation centers this could be a problem, but there is very little to damage at the South Park Center. The room in which the bands play has one door through which bands bring their equipment. All they have to do is set up on the tile floor, play and leave.
If groups want to have more than one band, they must ask Murphy. She should not pick and choose which groups are allowed to have multiple bands play.
nity. It allows Lawrence children to enjoy a show in a town where most events are geared toward college students.
Finally, the center has had problems with bands breaking noise ordinances. It seems unlikely that this could be a problem as the nearest building is hundreds of yards away and most concerts are during the day or evening. Anyone who has been in the building knows that the cinder block walls do a painfully good job of keeping the music inside.
These shows not only benefit the groups involved, but also the commu-
The city should work to increase the options for its organizations, not limit them.
Kansan staff
Paul Eakins for the editorial board
News editors
Paul Eakins ... Editorial
Andy Obermuereller ... Editorial
Andrea Albright ... News
Jodie Chester ... News
Julie King ... News
Charity Jeffries ... Online
Eric Weslander ... Sports
Harley Rattiff ... Associate sports
Ryan Koerner ... Campus
Mike Perryman ... Campus
Bryan Volk ... Features
Tim Harrington ... Associate features
Steve Puppe ... Photo
Angle Kuhn ... Design, graphics
Mitch Lucas ... Illustrations
Corrie Moore ... Wire
Gwen Olson ... Special sections
Lachelle Rhoades ... News clerk
Advertising managers
Kristie Bisel ... Assistant retail, PR
Leigh Bottiger ... Campus
Brett Clifton ... Regional
Nicole Lauderdale ... National
Matt Fisher ... Marketing
Chris Haghirian ... Internet
Brian Allers ... Production
Ashley Bonner ... Production
Andee Tomlin ... Promotions
Dan Kim ... Creative
Rachel O'Neill ... Classified
Tyler Cook ... Zone
Steve Grant ... Zone
Jamie Holman ... Zone
Brian LeFevre ... Zone
Matt York ... Matt
"Democrats are...the party of government activism, the party that says government can make you smarter, richer, taller and get the chickweed out of your lawn. Republicans are the party that says government doesn't work and then got elected and prove it." —P.J. O'Rourke
Lefters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify 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 letters 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 Paul Eakins (eakin@kansan.com) or Andy Obermuller (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the staff point (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Perspective
First step toward harmony is to ban intolerant people
've always hated intolerant people.
Honestly, what's the matter with people who don't understand that the rights and actions of others should be respected? It seems
pretty basic concept, ye many just don't get it. And don't like those people.
Tolerance is in the news again because of the anniversary of Roe vs. Wade
that annual excuse for people to hurl epithets at each other and feel morally superior. I'm not going to write about Roe vs. Wade because 1) I'm not stupid and 2) I want to keep my friends.
SUNY NYU
Clay McCuistion
oininge@tansan.com
However, one symptom of the anniversary is the huge amount of intolerance and intolerant people —which, as stated before, I can't stand.
I guess this prejudice of mine goes back to childhood, as most prejudices do. I lived in a neighborhood that was mainly comprised of tolerant individuals. Our schools had "Winter Breaks" instead of "Christmas Breaks," our local church performed "friendship ceremonies" between persons of the same gender, and everybody just got along. My third grade year, though, the "intolerants" moved in. They were ugly people with the Neanderthal features generally associated with antiquated ideas. They started campaigns to make English the official language of town, formed prayer clubs in the schools and suggested that single motherhood wasn't a good idea.
Needless to say, the arrival of these deviant sent the tolerant people of my town into an uproar. No one knew course to take, until an older, respected lady suggested the formation of the TOD (Tolerant or Die) organization at a city meeting. The idea was that people from around the community would wear plaid robes and caps and pay midnight visits to the intolerant people. These visits would consist of the TOD members burning a stick of wood (a burning cross would be offensive) in the intolerant's
yard and chanting "equal rights for all" in soft voices.
Unfortunately, the TOD group was a resounding failure. Not enough plaid robes and caps could be found and most of the members were worried about waking people in the middle of the night.
I'm sure that some readers are smirking to themselves. "Surely," they say, "McCuistion isn't serious. Isn't it intolerant to hate intolerant people?"
Sadly, the area in which I was born and raised became a haven for small-minded, conservative, Republican-type people. Thankfully my family moved away before I could be tainted by the corruption. But since then my prejudice against such people has been unshakable.
My answer: of course not. How could you possibly accuse me of being an intolerant? I believe in getting along and in general harmony. But if anyone doesn't like those ideals, then they're obviously worthy of my scorn and derision.
The same readers then might say: "Isn't this whole column a juvenile put-on? We bet you made up all that stuff about your childhood."
To which I would reply: Part of tolerance is putting up with others' handicaps. Sometimes people are handicapped in their ability to tell the truth. In order to show them respect, you must act like you believe them. If you say you doubt them you are acting intolerant, and I must hate you.
Suffice to say that intolerant people don't have a place in our society. We've moved beyond those primitive days when people could hold onto whatever moth-eaten ideals they wanted. The notion that some humans are good and some bad is silly and outdated. We should respect and support everyone in the fast-approaching new millennium. If any person is not prepared to take this leap into tolerance and understanding, they should be shunned and discriminated against at every opportunity.
Intolerant people, move along. There's no place for your kind here.
Clay McCuistion is an El Dorado freshman in journalism.
Nothing brings us together like a good pile driving
Call it corny, call it fake, call it what you will, but the World Wrestling Federation is the great unifier. Few things bring people together the way a beautifully executed pile driver does
Admittedly more entertainment than sport—maybe even a soap opera for men—the WWF is back on the rise. Whether you like it or not, you can't help but be captivated by the sub-plots which unfold every week. All it takes to get hooked is one two-hour episode of Monday Night Raw, and you're addicted. I succeeded to this temptation over Christmas Break.
R. J.
Wooding
spinion@kansan.com
My family is one of rabid wrestling fans. My father
attended high school with "Macho Man" Randy Savage. My brother Chris and I grew up as "Hulkamaniacs," saying our prayers and taking our vitamins just like the Hulkster instructed. As I grew older, though, I began to lose interest and ultimately stopped watching. Not until this year did I take an interest again.
Every Monday Night, the guys on my floor in McCollum Hall gather in the lobby to watch Raw. There used to be a lot of animosity on my floor, but that all ended when we began to watch together. Many of us became friends. We even tried to purchase Royal Rumble on pay-per-view. Every week when I watch Raw, I look through the crowd and see all types of people. Men in business suits cheering in unison with construction workers. Grandchildren and grandparents sharing popcorn while Dude Love struts his stuff. Women swooning for "Heartbreak Kid" Shawn Michaels. And the entire audience erupted when "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, the most popular and charismatic wrestler since Hulk Hogan, entered the ring. The W.W.F. simply brings people together.
Of the catch phrases on campus today, "com
My challenge to you is this: Let's work together to bring Monday Night Raw to Allen Field House.
mon ground" is my favorite. People have been talking about diversity requirements as a way to help soothe racial and cultural tension. That's a nice idea, but I have found that nothing brings people together better than a common goal. Using that goal as common ground, KU students of all walks of life can unite and work together.
Imagine if all of the University worked to make this vision a reality. The benefits would be incredible. Barriers would be broken, stereotypes shattered and friendships made. Campus pride would be at an all-time high. The university would be showcased for two hours on national television to an audience other than basketball fans.
How do we bring them here? Since the WWF travels to Kansas City each year, we need to convince them that Allen Field House is better than Kemper Arena. To do that we can fly out WWF owner Vince McMahon for a basketball game. After that experience how could he say no. Then we persuade SUA to sponsor *Monday Night Raw* rather than AI Franken. The WWF will sell-out a lot faster and would be more exciting.
How do we pay for this? We ask SuperTarget to sponsor the event, which unty advertise in the Kansan with those ugly inserts. We would reimburse any money the Kansan would lose by giv them a cut of the event's revenue. If any unexpected costs should arise, we could cover them by dipping into the Student Senate reserve account. After all, that's what it's there for.
As you can see, this would have to be a campuswide project, it will be a lot of work, but also a lot of fun. This is something that could unite us all, and isn't that what we all want?
As for campus unity, we pair up student organizations who are interested in working at Raw. For example, members of the Delta Force would be selling concessions with the Army ROTC.
R. J. Woodring is a Lisle, Ill., freshman in journalism.
Buzz on the Boulevard
What is your opinion about residence hall polling sites for Student Senate elections?
Vanessa Sincock, Springfield, Mo. freshman in fine arts
Sarah McPartlin, Chicago senior in interpersonal communications
"I think we should have them. It should be more available to the whole campus population. The easier it is to vote the more likely you are to get diverse voting."
Jesse Oberkisch, St. Louis sophomore in business
"It's a good idea. It makes it so much easier. When they had the blood drive they signed up a lot of people at the dorms. It's more convenient."
---
"I think it was probably working out just the way they had it. They shouldn't complicate it by putting it at the dorms."
PETER L. KARUMBERG
Jerome Wilhort, Salina junior in journalism
"I don't have a problem at all with the polling sites. I think it's a good idea because it will get students more involved in voting."
Friday, January 23, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Student health care proposal approved
By Susie Gura
Kansan staff writer
The Kansas State Employees Health Care Commission unanimously approved a proposed regulation for student health care benefits, which includes benefits for graduate teaching assistants and graduate research assistants.
The proposal for a student health care regulation, which would make students at all Regents institutions eligible for a student health care benefits component of the state health care benefits program, was approved in December. But the commission decided to vote again on the regulation yesterday because of an added proposal.
"The vote was just a formality," said Jeannette Johnson, assistant
to the vice chancellor.
The commission's attorney said it was best to vote with the added companion proposal in the regulation, Johnson said.
The addition states that certain students who are state employees and who enroll in the proposed student health care benefits program are eligible for an employer contribution if employed at least part time as a graduate teaching assistant or graduate research assistant.
The University's contribution will be determined after a new health care plan is adopted.
STUDENT HEALTH CARE BENEFITS PLAN
"We are pleased that the HCC has moved further and is following through in an attempt for a statewide plan," said Mark Horowitz, Graduate Teaching Assistants' Coalition organizer.
Each student at the University will be eligible for the student health care benefits component of the state health care benefits program. Eligibility and participation will be subject to provisions established by the Kansas Health Care Commission.
All state institutions' participation in the student health care benefit component will be voluntary.
All students' participation in the student health care benefit component will be voluntary.
- **Yesterday's approved regulation should go into effect July 1, 1998.**
- **Health care plan specifics should be determined by the commission during**
Rich Givens, assistant provost, Karen Dutcher, associate general counsel, and Johnson represented the University administration at the meeting. Members of the coalition and Scott Sullivan, student body president, were present along with
Terri Bernatis, director of communications of the commission.
"It is definitely a good thing because we were ready for negotiations to begin," said Stephen Mathis, chairman of the GTA negotiations committee.
University Senate to alter literal value of A's and C's
A proposal by the University Senate Executive Committee could change the definitions of two letter grades.
The committee proposed that an A be changed from "... work of marked excellence, indicating high honor" to "outstanding quality." The letter grade C would be changed from "work ... of average quality" to "achievement of acceptable quality."
The move is designed to make grading less ambiguous for faculty, said Lawrence Draper, president of
By Gerry Doyle
University Senate and professor of microbiology.
gdoyle@kansan.con
Kansan staff writer
"No one knows what average is," Draper said. "The new grades are a more direct statement of what the grade is."
Faculty could adjust their grading policies based on the difficulty of their course, said Steve Shaw, professor of physics and astronomy and a member of the Academic Policies and Procedures committee.
The new grade definitions wouldn't change the difficulty of a course, but they would make grading more equitable for the students, he said.
The value of the policy would make students more
aware of their expectations, too, said Nhan Nguyen, Wichita junior.
"It think it's good because you don't know what the average is until the end," Nguyen said. "In a math class, 'acceptable' is lower than say an anthropology class. The old system is not useful."
The policy has been in discussion for about two years, Shawl said. It passed the Academic Policies and Procedures committee last year and was amended Tuesday by the Senate Executive Committee.
Draper said the policy could go into effect as early as next semester.
Cracked water line leaves buildings dry
Watson Library and Twente Hall were without water yesterday afternoon as workers replaced a cracked portion of a water line outside the northeast corner of the campus power plant.
Rex Hays, facilities operations assistant director,
said workers replaced a six-foot section of pipe.
The problem was more serious than Hays initially expected, but was not unusual. He said about 20 water-line breaks occur in a year.
When workers began digging up the pipe to find the problem on Tuesday, Hays thought they would find a leaking joint.
However, on Wednesday morning they found a crack in the older of the two water lines that serve the area. The crack was in such a position that workers could not cover it.
Facilities operations workers initially noticed water leaking into the power plant near the location of the water lines last Friday.
-Kansan staff report
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Qualified candidates will have a degree emphasis and/or interest in the educational field. This is a four month appointment beginning immediately and extending to May 15, 1998.
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Section A·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Friday, January 23, 1998
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AUDITIONS!
For Singers & Dancers
Worlds of Fun is searching for the Midwest's most talented entertainers to fill openings for our spectacular 1998 season of shows. From our 60's & 70's rock review, "Stax of Wax", to our all new big band show, "Singin, Swingin, & Rockin the House", you could be in the spotlight entertaining thousands of Worlds of Fun guests. Performing at Worlds of Fun is FUN, and it can be that important First Step toward a professional career. If you work the entire season (six days per week in the summer & weekends in the spring and fall), you could earn over $8000!
AUDITION INSTRUCTIONS
Dancers, please prepare a 240-second (no longer than two minutes) and one song to sing YOU MUST PROVIDE YOUR OWN ACCOMPANIENT WHEAT it be a pianist or a cassette tape. We will provide a cassette deck and a piano. A capella auditions will not be accepted. We are not auditioning bands, solo instrumentalists or dramatic actors.
**Singers**, please sing one verse and the chorus of two contrasting styles of song; one up-tempo and one ballad. Sing any type of music you enjoy, such as rock, gospel, show tunes, etc. (No Run.) Please limit your addition to no more than two minutes.
KANSAS CITY, MO
Saturday, January 31
Park Place Hotel
(Off Front St. at L-43)
Registration: 9-15
KANSAS CITY, MO
Monday, February 8
Park Place Hotel
(Off Front St. at 1-3)
Registration: 10-2
AUDITION LOCATIONS
LAWRENCE KS
Tuesday, February 17
Kansas University
Kansas Union - Kansas
Room (Level 6)
Registration: 3-5
Drafty windows blow money away
LINCOLN, NE
Monday, February 2
University of Nebraska
Nebraska Union -
Centennial Room
Registration: 3-5
MANHATTAN, KS
Tuesday, February 3
Kansas State University
K-State Union - K., S. & U.
Rooms - Registration: 3-5
Spider infestation, mouse noises and drafty windows plague James Rose's house.
Winter windchill may heat up bills
Rose, Lawrence sophomore, rents a house with two other people in Lawrence. According to the Office of Institutional Research and Planning's latest figures, just more than 57 percent of KU students rent apartments or rooms in the Lawrence area.
By Carl Kaminski Kanson staff writer
Worlds of Fun
4545 Worlds of Fun Ave.
Kansas City, MO 64161
(816) 454-545, ext. 1354
worldsoffun.com
When winter's harsh weather hits Lawrence, times can get tough for students renting houses off campus.
He said preparing some homes for winter could be difficult because of poor insulation and windows that do not fit tightly.
"Our utility bills are really high," said James Dix, Arlington Heights, Ill., junior. Dix rents a house with five other KU students.
COLUMBIA, MO
Wednesday, February 18
University of Missouri
North Memorial Union -
Walt Disney Room
Registration: 3-5
For more information, contact the Live Entertainment Dent. at:
Dix said his thermostat did not work and keeping the house warm was nearly impossible because of insulation problems.
Even without window problems, many renters have trouble paying their bills.
"A lot of landlords understand that their houses are not worth fixing up," he said. "They might as well just patch up the problem. These houses are not going to be around much longer."
"We've got big holes in our walls," he said. Problems do not often get the attention they deserve. Rose said.
World of Fun
To understand why landlords just patch up problems, Rose said people needed to look at the situation from a landlord's perspective.
"You could put new tile in the kitchen, but you can't ask for more rent. So why do it?" Rose said. "They'll fix plumbing, but the looks can all go to hell."
James Dunn, president of the Lawrence Landlords Association, said renters should realize there are tradeoffs to paying cheaper rent. Sometimes they come in the form of drafty windows.
Rose said his house has a mouse problem and that there were spiders everywhere. He said he could hear the mice scratching and digging into the walls at night.
Even though roughing it off campus may sound harsh, Rose said he would not have it any other way.
"I really enjoy the social life," he said. "I like to throw big parties, and my landlord is cool with that."
Dix said he also thought off-campus living was worth the hassle.
"We can live how we want to live," he said.
"It's a lot of fun."
Many KU students who rent houses or rooms off campus are forced to deal with problems associated with living in older homes. Some problems include light switches held together with tape, doors that allow cold air in unless towels are placed at the bottom of the door, and porches patched together with nails and wood. Photos by Augustus Anthony Piazza/KANSAN
A
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OFFICE HOURS
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The University of Kansas
Theatre for Young People
Presents the
U.S. Premiere of
Little Monster
by Jasmine Dubé
translated by Mawreen LaBonté
Directed and Designed
by Jeanne Klein
Public Performances
7:00 p.m. Saturday, January 31, 1998
1:30 p.m. Sunday, February 1, 1998
100 Smith Hall, KU Campus
General admission tickets are now on sale in the kill box offices
Vice President B64-4215, Thursday Hall F64-4212, SOIA Office F64-4277;
RK public $3 students $5 senior citizens Wild and masterCard
e
Friday, January 23, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 7
Gala to feature mock debutantes
Costumes and bands to color benefit event
By Tamara Miller
tmiller@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
A quirky fund-raiser with outrageous style will be held tomorrow at the Varsity Theatre, 1015 Massachusetts St.
The Second Annual Oz Ball, a mock debutante ball and costume party, will begin at 7 p.m. and last until 1:30 a.m.
Tickets will be sold at the door. Tickets cost $10 per person, and the proceeds will finance the 1998 Kansas State Fiddling & Picking Championships.
The championships will occur Aug. 23 in South Park.
Mike Rundle, director of the championships and coordinator for the ball, said he got the idea for the ball after attending the Zircon Ball in Kansas City, Mo. The Zircon
Ball is a mock debutante ball that raises money for women's shelter.
"I knew if Kansas had one, it had to be the "Or Ball." he said.
The Oz Ball is supposed to be anything but an actual, classy debutante ball, Rundle said. Instead, the event encourages participants to make fun of high-class society by wearing funny costumes and bringing creative food for party snacks.
"Last year, some people brought Spam and bean dip," Rundle said.
About 125 people attended last year. Rundle said he hoped attendance would increase this year. He scheduled the ball close to Kansas day, Jan. 29, to emphasize The Wizard of Oz theme.
"I've tried to plant some seeds," he said. "Maybe we'll get a group of munchkins this year."
Lawrence resident Twila Bogaard said she attended the ball last year and she enjoyed dressing up for the event.
"This year I have a wonderfully awful bridesmaid dress," she said.
"The operative word here is tacky."
Participants can also pay $2.99,
submit a description of less than
100 words, and be formally presented to the audience at 9 p.m.
Last year, most people used the opportunity to make fun of the city, friends or themselves. Rundle said.
Laurel Matthews, Lawrence junior, said she and her friends planned to dress in pink nun outfits.
"We're going to be presented as 'the sisters of perpetual indulgence.'" she said.
The ball also will be open to revelers without creative costumes. Rundle said the main attractions would be music and dancing. Two bands, BCR and Swing 39, are scheduled to perform. BCR performed at the ball last year.
"BCR is a great band with really different dance' music," said Matthews.
Bogaard said she hoped the ball would become a popular Lawrence tradition.
"Until you go once, you can't realize how funny it is," she said.
Ball brings money for KU scholars
By Emily C. Forsyth Kansan staff writer
Guests at the Rock Chalk Ball, a black-tie gala, will feast on a fullcourse meal, bid on a variety of items for auction and mingle with local leaders tonight.
The guest list includes Gov. Bill Graves, Sen. Sam Brownback and Chancellor Robert Hemenway.
Almost 1,000 people are expected to attend the third annual ball tonight at the Hyatt Regency-Crown Center in Kansas City, Mo., said Michon Quick, director of Rock Chalk Society.
National Merit Scholars.
Tickets for the ball cost between $100 and $250 for individuals, and from $1,500 to $5,000 for tables of 10.
"It's a chance to celebrate KU involving alumni, administration, students and friends of the University." Quick said.
The ball is sponsored by the Greater Kansas City Chapter of the University of Kansas Alumni Association, and funds raised are used to aid the University in recruitment and retention of
"When the Chancellor arrived at KU, he set a goal to reach 100 freshman National Merit Scholars to be enrolled at KU by the year 2000," Quick said. "When he arrived, we had 57, and this year we have 90 freshman National Merit Scholars, so we're well on the way to reaching that goal."
Quick said proceeds from the last two years totaled more than $200,000.
The evening will begin with cocktails and a silent auction of items including trips, KU memorabilia, tickets to college and professional sporting events and shows.
After dinner, a live auction will feature five items including lunches with Gov. Graves and Chancellor Hemenway, two trips and an opportunity to play basketball with a team of former KU players, valued at $1500. A dance will conclude the evening.
Members of the Student Alumni Association have assisted with the event. About 50 volunteers from the SAA will attend the ball.
Rock Chalk Ball
What: Rock Chalk Ball
When: 5:30 p.m.
Where: Hyatt Regency-Crown Center
Why: To raise money for National Merit Scholars.
of the University of Kansas
Alumni Association
Cost: From $100 to $250 for
individuals and $1,500 to
$5,000 for tables of 10
"Most of what student volunteers do is at the ball," said Dawn Wormington, Garden City junior and SAA member. "We greet people, help with the silent auction and visit with alumni at the ball."
Quick said alumni members enjoyed visiting with students and discussing their experiences at the University.
"The interaction between the students and the alumni is really an asset to the event," said Quick.
CANTERBURY HOUSE 1116 LOUISIANA (Between 11th and 12th)
Poetry Reading Tonight
7:30 PM Friday, January 23
POETRY BY:
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Kenneth Irby
Stanley Lombardo
Monica Peck
James Thomas Stevens
ART BY:
Colette Bangert
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---
一
▶ entertainment
▶ events
▶ issues
▶ music
▶ art
hilltopics
the university
daily kansan
friday ◄
1.23.98 ◄
eight.a ◄
GIRL buying POWER
little
story by tim harrington associate features editor
The Spice Girls. For some reason, the group has a movie coming out today.
This weekend, millions of people across the country will venture out of their homes, dole out their hard-earned money, and with their feet securely cemented in corn syrup saliva goo, they will watch Spice World.
Anyone older than 10 years old will be sorry they did.
The University Daily Kansan features page editors are sorry they did.
We were invited to the Spice World premier at Kansas City's Ward Parkway theater.
We were excited. It was a premiere. This is where the stars come out in full force to recognize their fellow thepians. Bryan wore a tie.
The features page editors were sadly mistaken.
The closest thing to a celebrity was Scott from The Mix 93.3 FM KMXV radio. Before the movie began, Scott came out and told the 100 or so 8-to-12 year old girls, their 10 parents and three or four members of the press about upcoming contests through which we could win a trip to the Grammys or a tropical vacation for two.
The children were not impressed.
Scott then reminded the squirming throng of sugar and popcorn-stuffed children that the station needs support from the community and that their donations would be appreciated.
Give what you can. kids.
The movie was awful. We'll go into more detail about exactly why in a bit.
but a less predictable aspect of the Spice Girl phenomena, which was revealed at the premiere, was exactly who buys
Spice Girls CD's.
rinding someone who has made the purchase is like asking people if they have 900 numbers on their speed dialer.
The group has sold 19 million copies of its album in its 18-month gallop to fame. The debut album, *Spice*, went triple platinum in only three weeks.
"Girl Power" must be short for "little girl buying power," and the Spice Girls know this. In the movie, it's no coincidence that the two fans that win a day with Spice Girls happen to be two sweet little girls.
Though "Girl Power" may be some code phrase for their market share, *Spice World* never reveals exactly what the phrase means.
Marta Vicente, assistant professor of history and instructor of the History of Feminist Theory course, said she's not sure what "Girl Power" is, but she knows what the Spice Girls' look like.
"The body is a powerful tool sexually," Vicente said. "Women use it more than men do. I just wish there could be more options for role models for young girls."
Stephanie Bishop, Lawrence sophomore and member of the women's rugby team, said the team used a different brand of girl power.
"We listen to mostly heavy metal or rap before games," she said. As for the Spice Girls: "I just wish they weren't so obnoxiously stupid."
Though the Spice Girls are big on "Girl Power," they are definitely not girls themselves. It becomes evident during the opening scene of the movie, where the scantily clad quintet sings a silky rendition of "Too Much," that these
are women fully grown. fully developed women
a silicon touch, we do not know. We have guess though.
It's a proven formula for success (e.g. Charlie's Angels, Baywatch and the majority of USA Network programming). Seemingly mindless, yet admittedly beautiful, bimbos parade about in a variety of tight, short and apparently waterproof outfits.
It's not that the Spice Girls are completely devoid of charm. Ginger Spice, a.k.a. Geri, a.k.a. Geraldine Halliwell, a.k.a. the redhead, emerges as the smart one, always spouting off some useless piece of trivia. Sometimes she's wrong — the largest fish in the world is not the manta ray (it's the whale shark) — but that's OK. I doubt Ginger's looking to get that biology degree.
Despite all the skin, the movie still lacks in a number of other categories. Actually, it lacks in all the other categories.
The most blatant of the movie's offenses is that it is cheaply made. Any scene not filmed either on location in London or in their cavernous, ultra-British peace, love and goodwill spreading double-decker tour bus looked like it had the budget of a Saturday Night Live skit.
advice for the Spice Girls' man
The villain of the movie, a sleazy muckraking newspaper mogul, plots the eventual downfall of the blissfully ignorant Spice Girls from what appears to be a cubicle on the fifteenth floor of an apartment building.
The unfunny Roger Moore plays a big-shot record producer recluse, known only as "Chief," who checks in throughout the movie with meaningless cryptic
ager, played by Richard Grant of L.A. Story, Twelfth Knight and Bram Stoker's
Dracula fame.
Supposedly, when the time came to cast the movie, the Spice Girls had a list of movie stars and celebrities as long as the Spice Bus. Writer Kim Fuller, who happens to be the brother of the band's recently canned manager, Simon, said the response from actors in both the United States and the U.K. was overwhelming.
Fuller lied.
The alleged string of celebrity guest appearances begins and ends with Elton John.
The cast had a few memorable faces that have been known to get a laugh or two. However, 10 seasons on the most beloved sitcom in the nation's history, Cheers, could not make George Wendt funny in Spice World. And between his experiences with Saturday Night Live and The Kid's in the Hall, comedian Mark McKinney could do only so much with his role as an idiot writer.
There is no plot outside of "Oh no, those zany and indomitably spontaneous Spice Girls are going to be late for their own show again!"
Even by eight-year-old standards the writing wasn't that funny. The kids didn't even wait around to watch the postmovie Spice Girl action during the credits.
There is probably nothing wrong with having a little sister or brother that enjoys the Spice Girls.
But beware: However long a kid is involved with hardcore pop music, there will be an equally long backlash period of black concert T-shirts, big hair, and bands that use vernin in their names.
Harrington can be reached by e-mail at: tharrington@kansan.com
Elton John is the first—and last—celebrity in an alleged string of guests to join the Spice Girls (from left, Posh, Sporty, Scary, Baby and Ginger spices) in their whirlwind musical, Spice World.
Katie Divalbiss,
iowa City, Iowa,
freshman:
"I would be 'lazy
Spice."
SPICE ON THE STREET
Katie Doden, Tulsa,
Okla., freshman:
"would be
Drafting Spice,
because that's what
they call me in
design studio."
COLLEGE
TREVOR PARKER
PETER BERTS
CERTATIO COLLEGIORUM
OCCUS UNIVERSALIS MENTIS
BOWL
If you were a Spice Girl, what would your nickname be?
sponsored by the Rec & Travel Committee and Lambda Sigma honors society
CANADA
COME BE A PART OF OUR TRIVIA WORLD SATURDAY. FEB. 7
SIGN UP IN SUA OFFICE FIVE PERSON TEAMS/$25 PER TEAM HTTP:WWW.UKANS.EDU/~SUACALL 864-3477 FOR MORE INFO:
60th Anniversary
STATION WIDE ANTENNA
1930 - 1980
KU Women's Rugby practices Wednesdays at 9 p.m. and Fridays at 8:30 p.m.at the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
For more information, call Liz or Julie at 749-5768.
Come meet the team at a
CHILI FEED
Saturday, Jan. 24 at 1 p.m. at Johnny's Tavern.
EVERYONE'S WELCOME!
---
▶ entertainment
▶ events
▶ issues
▶ music
▶ art
hilltopics
the university
daily kansan
friday ◀
1.23.98 ◀
eight.a ◀
GIRL buying POWER
little
story by tim harrington associate features editor
The Spice Girls. For some reason, the group has a movie coming out today.
This weekend, millions of people across the country will venture out of their homes, dole out their hard-earned money, and with their feet securely cemented in corn syrup saliva goo, they will watch Spice World.
Anyone older than 10 years old will be sorry they did.
The University Dally Kansan features page editors are sorry they did.
We were invited to the Spice World premier at Kansas City's Ward Parkway theater.
The features page editors were sadly mistaken.
We were excited. It was a premiere. This is where the stars come out in full force to recognize their fellow thespians. Bryan wore a tie.
The children were not impressed.
Give what you can, kids.
The closest thing to a celebrity was Scott from The Mix 93.3 FM KMXV radio. Before the movie began, Scott came out and told the 100 or so 8-to-12 year old girls, their 10 parents and three or four members of the press about upcoming contests through which we could win a trip to the Grammys or a tropical vacation for two.
Scott then reminded the squirming throng of sugar and popcorn-stuffed children that the station needs support from the community and that their donations would be appreciated.
The movie was awful. We'll go into more detail about exactly why in a bit,
but a less predictable aspect of the Spice Girl phenomena, which was revealed at the premiere, was exactly who buys
Spice Girls CD's.
rinding someone who has made the purchase is like asking people if they have 900 numbers on their speed dialer.
The group has sold 19 million copies of its album in its 18-month gallop to fame. The debut album, *Spice*, went triple platinum in only three weeks.
"Girl Power" must be short for "little girl buying power," and the Spice Girls know this. In the movie, it's no coincidence that the two fans that win a day with Spice Girls happen to be two sweet little girls.
Though "Girl Power" may be some code phrase for their market share, *Spice World* never reveals exactly what the phrase means.
Marta Vicente, assistant professor of history and instructor of the History of Feminist Theory course, said she's not sure what "Girl Power" is, but she knows what the Snice Girl's look like.
"The body is a powerful tool sexually," Vicente said. "Women use it more than men do. I just wish there could be more options for role models for young girls."
Stephanie Bishop, Lawrence sophomore and member of the women's rugby team, said the team used a different brand of girl power.
"We listen to mostly heavy metal or rap before games," she said. As for the Spice Girls: "I just wish they weren't so obnoxiously stupid."
Though the Spice Girls are big on "Girl Power," they are definitely not girls themselves. It becomes evident during the opening scene of the movie, where the scantily clad quintet sings a silky rendition of "Too Much," that these
are women - fully grown, fully developed women
a silicon touch, we do not know. We have guess though.
It's a proven formula for success (e.g. Charlie's Angels, Baywatch and the majority of USA Network programming). Seemingly mindless, yet admittedly beautiful, bimbs parade about in a variety of tight, short and apparently waterproof outfits.
It's not that the Spice Girls are completely devoid of charm. Ginger Spice, a.k.a. Geri, a.k.a. Geraldine Halliwell, a.k.a. the redhead, emerges as the smart one, always spouting off some useless piece of trivia. Sometimes she's wrong — the largest fish in the world is not the manta ray (it's the whale shark) — but that's OK. I doubt Ginger's looking to get that biology degree.
Despite all the skin, the movie still lacks in a number of other categories. Actually, it lacks in all the other categories.
advice for the Spice Girls' man-
The most blantat of the movie's offenses is that it is cheaply made. Any scene not filmed either on location in London or in their cavernous, ultra-British peace, love and goodwill spreading double-decker tour bus looked like it had the budget of a Saturday Night Live skit.
The unfunny Roger Moore plays a big-shot record producer recluse, known only as "Chief," who checks in throughout the movie with meaningful cryptic
The villain of the movie, a sleazy muckraking newspaper mogul, plots the eventual downfall of the blissfully ignorant Spice Girls from what appears to be a cubicle on the fifteenth floor of an apartment building.
ager, played by Richard Grant of L.A. Story, Twelfth Knight and Bram Stoker's
Dracula fame.
Supposedly, when the time came to cast the movie, the Spice Girls had a list of movie stars and celebrities as long as the Spice Bus. Writer Kim Fuller, who happens to be the brother of the band's recently canned manager, Simon, said the response from actors in both the United States and the U.K. was overwhelming.
The alleged string of celebrity guest appearances begins and ends with Elton John.
Fuller lied.
The cast had a few memorable faces that have been known to get a laugh or two. However, 10 seasons on the most beloved sitcom in the nation's history, Cheers, could not make George Wendt funny in Spice World. And between his experiences with Saturday Night Live and The Kid's in the Hall, comedian Mark McKinney could do only so much with his role as an idiot writer.
There is no plot outside of "Oh no, those zany and indomitably spontaneous Spice Girls are going to be late for their own show again!"
Even by eight-year-old standards the writing wasn't that funny. The kids didn't even wait around to watch the postmovie Spice Girl action during the credits.
There is probably nothing wrong with having a little sister or brother that enjoys the Spice Girls.
But beware: However long a kid is involved with hardcore pop music, there will be an equally long backlash period of black concert T-shirts, big hair, and bands that use vermil in their names.
Harrington can be reached by e-mail at: tharrington@kansan.com
phenomena, which was revealed at the premiere, was exactly who buys Whether that development was helped by a skillful surgeon with
Elton John is the first—and last—celebrity in an alleged string of guests to join the Spice Girls (from left, Posh, Sporty, Scary, Baby and Ginger spices) in their whirlwind musical, Spice World.
SPICE ON THE STREET
Katie Divebiss,
Iowa City, Iowa,
freshman:
"I would be 'Lazy
Spice.'
If you were a Spice Girl, what would your nickname be?
Katie Doden, Tulsa,
Okla., freshman:
"I would be
Drafting Spice,
because that's what
they call me in
design studio."
ALEXANDRA WILSON
Diana Foster
TOMMY HALL
COLLEGE
CERTATIO COLLEGIORUM
JOCUS UNIVERSALIS MENTIS
BOWL
sponsored by the Rec & Travel Committee and Lambda Sigma honors society
COME BE A PART OF OUR TRIVIA WORLD SATURDAY. FEB. 7
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60th Anniversary
STUDENT BUILD AUTOGRAPHY
ZUA
1936 - 1996
KU Women's Rugby practices Wednesdays at 9 p.m. and Fridays at 8:30 p.m.at the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
For more information, call Liz or Julie at 749-5768.
Come meet the team at a
CHILI FEED
Saturday, Jan. 24 at 1 p.m. at Johnny's Tavern.
EVERYONE'S WELCOME!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TALK BACK
Sports
Kansas forward Lester Earl has created quite a stir in the sports world. The NCAA's investigation of Earl's recruitment at Louisiana State University has sparked questions about that program's practices. If you have questions or comments concerning the Earl situation, e-mail the University Daily Kansan staff.
SWIMMING
sports@kansan.com
sports staff at
In the pool
Kansas swimmer Tyler Painter returns from Australia with his eyes on the 2000 Olympics.
CAROLINA BREWERS
SEE PAGE 8B
Pro Football
Friday
January 23,1997
Section:
B
Page 1
Denver's Shannon Sharpe looks to pick up a win for his brother on Super Bowl Sunday.
SEE PAGE 8B
WWW.KANSAN.COM/NEWS/SPORTS
Contact the Kansan
Sports Desk: (785) 864-4810
Sports Fax: (785) 864-5261
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Sports Forum: sptforum@kansan.com
'Hawks aim at history
Red Raiders threaten winning-streak record
Jy Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher @kanans.com
Kansas sportswriter
The return of forward Raef LaFrentz and a chance to streak past a school record will be in the spotlight when No. 3 Kansas plays host to Texas Tech tomorrow afternoon.
For the first time this season, Kansas coach Roy Williams will have an entire roster healthy and ready to play. LaFrentz will start against the Raid Raiders, assuming he is cleared by doctors this morning.
Kansas guard Ryan Robertson said he was eager to see LaFrentz return to the starting lineup.
"He hates to lose more than anyone else on this team, and you just cannot replace that," Robertson said. "Without Raef, that's 21 points and 11 rebounds that we've missed the last nine games. That's a lot to miss, but we're glad to have him back."
The Jayhawk aim to extend their 55 game homecourt winning streak, which ties the longest in school history. Kansas also owns the nation's longest current homecourt winning streak.
Williams said breaking this record would be special.
See SOLE on page 2B
The Starting Lineup
KU
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
5-1 Big 12, 21-3 overall
G RYAN RObertSON 6-5 JR.
G BILLY THOMAS 6-4 SR.
F PAUL PERCE 6-7 JR.
F RAFF LAFRENZT 6-1.1 Sr.
C LESTER EARL 6-8 So.
T
G CORY CARR 6-4 Sr.
STAN BONEVITZ 6-3 Jr.
F RAYDON YOUNG 5-11 So.
F CLIFF OWENS 6-8 So.
C JOHNNY PHILLIPS 6-8 Fr.
21 CATS
Radio: KLWN. 1320 AM
Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz dunks the ball over an Arizona defender. LaFrentz is expected to return tomorrow for the Jayhawks game against Texas Tech in Allen Field House. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
$1.6 million in improvements to Hoglund-Maupin Stadium will begin this summer. The improvements, sponsored by the stadium's name-sake, Forrest Hoglund, include a new press box and expanded seating, as well as a plaza entrance to the park.
$1.6 million in renovations funded by stadium namesake
By John Wilson
Kansan sportswriter
Hoglund-Maupin Stadium will rocket into the future this summer with more than $1.6 million in renovations planned.
The renovations will be made possible by private donations, led by 1956 Kansas graduate and three-year baseball letter winner Forrest Hogland, who donated more than $1 million. The stadium will be renamed Hoglund Ballpark in his honor and will be ready for the 1999 season.
"An elite school like KU should have a first-rate ballpark." Hoglund said, "I've always been interested in KU baseball, and this will help improve the program."
Coach Bobby Randall said the gift would enhance both the exterior and interior look and the functionality of the ballpark for years to come.
"We are getting exactly what we want and need," Randall said. "To recruit and be successful on the national level, we must have top-notch facilities."
Plans have been in the works for years, and construction began officially in October with a groundbreaking ceremony.
Improvements include increasing seating capacity from 1,300 to 2,000, adding more than 200 chair-back seats, building a plaza entrance highlighting former players and financial donors, and constructing additional rest room and locker room facilities and a press box.
Randall said the stadium helped the team's attitude and also helped recruit skilled players to the university.
"When this is done, the guys on the team will be able to take pride in stepping on the field at home," Randall said. "Even in recruiting students today, I can see faces light up when I show them the sketches of the new ballpark."
The firm of Glenn, Livingood, and Penzler Architects designed the improvement plan. Craig Penzler of this group was directly involved in the design and construction of Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore.
"It's going to be a park that intertwines Kansas's baseball tradition with the history of the game in America," Randall said. "It will be a centerpiece in building a winning tradition in baseball at the University."
Williams: Earl treated unfairly
Kanson sportswriter
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansas coach Roy Williams spoke about forward Lester Earl's case for the last time yesterday at a press conference.
Williams said Earl had been treated unfairly by the media, partly because not enough blame for the alleged NCAA violations had been placed on the Louisiana State University basketball program, where Earl had played before coming to Kansas.
"He has, in some circles, been criticized for telling the truth," Williams said. "I just wish that we wouldn't be so quick to judge him. I have a great deal of confidence in the way we run our program, and we're going to do things the right way here at Kansas."
Before leaving, Williams said he had ordered his players and coaches not to talk any more about the Earl case.
Kansas guard Ryan Robertson said he was not sure whether Earl knew how publicized the issue has been.
"He has not read the newspapers or watched TV since all this happened," Robertson said. "It's disappointing to see him have to go through this because he's one of the more popular players in the locker room. He's a great guy."
Earl will not have to repay any of the money, allegedly between $9,400 and $10,600, that he is suspected to have received from people associated with the LSU program when he attended the school, said Steve Mallonee, NCAA director of membership services.
Reading rally
2018
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington speaks to New York Elementary School students about Kansas Read Week. The winners of a reading contest will be honored at the women's Feb. 7, game. Photo by Holly Groshong/KANSAN.
Jayhawks to wrangle with Raiders
Women to face No.5 Texas Tech
By Kevin C. Wilson
Korean poet writer
Kansan sportswriter
After dropping their first two Big 12 Conference games, the resurgent Jayhawks are looking forward to taking on Texas Tech at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Lubbock.
Four straight is great, but to win its fifth consecutive game the Kansas women's basketball team must trophy the fifth-ranked team in the nation this weekend.
The Jayhawks, 12-3 overall and 4-2 in the conference, are looking to tie for second place in the Big 12 conference. To achieve that feat, they will have to beat a talented team. Washington said.
"It's exciting for me and my ball club to go there,"said coach Marian Washington.
"I think they have all the pieces," she said. "Whether they can keep it together only time can tell."
Texas Tech, 12-3 overall and 5-1 in
the conference is led by preseason All-American Alicia Thompson, who averages 22.0 points and 8.6 rebounds per game. Washington said Thompson was a tremendous candidate for the Big 12 Player of the Year.
D. A. BABA
Johnson: Will guard Texas Tech's All-American
"She's just explosive," Washington said. "She can step out to the 3 point line and hurt you, and she can certainly post-up and explode through you."
Forward Jaclyn Johnson, who will be one of the Jayhawks charged with guarding Thompson in the post, said she loved playing defense and she was excited to face such an accomplished player.
"It's a challenge for me because she's such an excellent player." Johnson said. "She's a very physical player, but I don't mind it. I'll just have to step up and play the game."
The Lady Raiders are not a one woman team — they have three other starters who average in double digits.
"Our defense has been pretty effective all season long," Washington said. "We're really going to need to call on it this weekend."
Center Angie Braziel, with 12.9 points per game, guard Julie Lake, with 10.9 points per game, and guard Rene Hanebutt, with 10.7 points per game, round out a well-balanced scoring attack.
"Next we've got Texas Tech," she said. "We've got to go out and play hard for the full 40 minutes."
Kansas is coming off a lackluster performance on Wednesday night in which they narrowly defeated Oklahoma State 56-51.
Guard Shandy Robbins said the Jayhawks didn't come out ready to play and they lacked intensity throughout the game. Robbins said she hoped her team had learned a lesson.
The Starting Lineup
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
4-2 Big 12, 12-3 overall
KU
G **JENNIFER JACKSON** 5-10 FR.
G **SUZI RAWANT** 5-11 JR.
F **Jaclyn Johnson** 6-1 FR.
F **LYNN PRIDE** 6-2 So.
NANA SANFORD 6-3 FR.
TEXAS TECH
RAIDERS
5-1 Big 12, 12-3 over
G MEILINA SCHUMUCKER 5-9 So.
G JULIE LAKE 5-9 Jr.
G RENE HANEBUTT 5-8 Sr.
G AURICIA THOMPSON 6-1 Sr.
C ANGIE BRAZIEL 6-3 Jr.
Lubbock Municipal Coliseum •
Lubbock Texas
1
2B
Quick Looks
Friday January 23,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday
You have encountered some tough times this week. Forgot about all of those problems and get ready for an exciting weekend.
Aries: Today is a 7.
You're as restless as a cat leaping at birds from an apartment window, so why torture yourself by staying in? Get out, explore new avenues for fun and don't be shy - speak up and you're sure to meet fascinating people.
Taurus: Today is a 7.
It's not that you don't love your friends and/or partner, it's just that they can be so irritatingly familiar. A clandestine flirtation with a mysterious stranger will lend spice to your day, be sure and dress appropriately.
Gemini: Today is a 5.
Who's been giving you advice lately? You'd be better off not listening; the person who currently has your ear is substituting gossip for facts. Trust in the ones who have proven themselves by their actions.
Cancer: Today is a 6.
Cancer is in a particularly teenaged mood - you just want to lounge around selfishly thinking of your own needs and doing something alone. But your partner or friends won't get off your back. If you don't give in, you may give out.
Leo: Today is a 9.
Leo is the center of the hive and there are some very enchanted bees buzzing around. You're having a blast and so is everyone around you as you charm your way through the crowd like a hot knife cutting butter. Enjoy, Leo, not many days are this ripe for fun.
Scorpio: Today is a 5.
Libra: Today is an 8.
Virao; Today is a 6.
Saaittarius: Today is a 7.
男 女
Family obligations call even as a romance heats up, leaving you confused and torn. Listen to your mind rather than your traitorous heart, Virgo, and you'll make the correct decision.
Capricorn: Today is a 6.
Level-headed Libra is happiest when life is in balance, and you're very happy today. Work goes smoothly, and partnered Libras can expect a positive evening with potential for meandering but fascinating conversation.
You run ahead of the pack today and everyone' panting to catch up with you. You only wished to be this cool in junior high so bask while you can. Egorich Sags should watch their selfish leanings today or there will be apologies to make tomorrow.
A joke can go too far today unless you're sensitive to the joke-ee's feelings. Smooth over any spats with genuine apologies or you'll just make the situation worse. If you find yourself in an ethical dilemma don't ignore your principles for a moment of pleasure.
2
Aauarius: Today is an 8.
LION
O
The quicksilver brilliant brain of an Aquarian is an amazing thing to behold, especially when it's revved up like it is today. Paint a picture, write a song, or just play with words and allow yourself to fall into conversation wherever it starts.
Dancing Girl
Principles are wonderful things but you've been a bit rigid lately; it's time to unbend and make nice. It may seem as if you and your partner are approaching a situation from two different planets but some calm talking will show your common goals.
Pisces: Today is a 9.
M
It's a lucky Friday for Pisces, though it's up in the air where the good fortune will hit. Should you ask someone for a date? I'm betting Pisces will find a way to use that luck to get exactly what the Fish most desires.
TRACK AND FIELD
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
Vaulters to show skills during Reno competition
"The overall goal of this meet is to decide who goes to the Kansas State triangular," said coach Gary Schwartz. The Jayhawks can only take a limited number of people to the triangular meet, which will be held Jan. 31 in Manhattan.
Scorpion
Kansan staff report
Tomorrow, four pole-vaulters will be competing at the Reno Pole Vault Summit in Reno, Nev.
The rest of the team will head to Columbia, Mo., for the Missouri Invitational.
The pole-vaulters going to Reno are junior Candy Mason, freshman Ashley Feinberg, freshman Garrett Attig and senior Marc Romito. Mason holds the school record for pole vault, with a vault of 12-1/2.
The Kansas track and field team will compete in two cities this weekend.
Both the men's and women's teams look strong heading into this weekend's competition at Missouri, Schwartz said.
V
"If both sides step up and have good performances, we'll do really well," he said.
Other schools participating are Missouri, the University of Missouri-Kansas City, Southeast Missouri State, Lyndenwood College, Missouri Valley College, Lincoln University (Jefferson City, Mo.) and the Illinois men's team.
射
P
Field events start at 9 a.m. and the running events start at 11 a.m.
No.20 Florida St 83, Wake Forest 59
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Randell Jackson scored 19 points and Terrell Baker added 16 Thursday night to lead No. 20 Florida State to an 83-59 victory over cold-shooting Wake Forest.
The Seminoles (14-5, 3-4 Atlantic Coast Conference) took command late in the first half and were never challenged afterward on the way to their first conference win at home this season.
Wake Forest (9-7, 2-4) tried to offset a height disadvantage by shooting a lot of 3-pointers, but managed to hit only 4 of 25 tries from long distance while shooting 33.3 percent overall.
Corey Louis added 14 points for Florida State, which shot 54.7 percent and controlled the boards 40-31.
Freshmen Robert O'Kelley with 15 points. Another freshman, Niki Arinze, had 14 and Steven Goolsby scored 11, all in the first half.
Baker scored all seven of his first-half points in a span of 71 seconds, sparking a 17-4 run that gave Florida State a 40-29 halftime lead.
Goolsby came off the bench and kept Wake Forest close early in the game. His 3-pointer with 6:26 left in the half gave the Demon Deacons their last lead at 20-19.
COLLEGE TOP 25 MEN
tomorrow.
No. 1 Duke at Virginia. 11 a.m.
No. 2 North Carolina vs. No. 20 Florida State. 7 p.m.
No. 3 Kansas vs. Texas Tech, 3
No. 8 Connecticut at No. 15 Syracuse, 3.p.m.
No. 5 Stanford at Washington, 5 p.m.
No.4 Utah at UNLV, 1 p.m.
No. 7 Kentucky at Tennessee, 6:30 p.m.
No. 17 New Mexico at Texas-El Paso. 8 p.m.
No. 12 Purdue vs. Northwestern, 7 p.m.
No. 10 Iowa at Missouri, 11 a.m.
No. 14 South Carolina at Auburn,
2 p.m.
No. 13 Mississippi vs. Mississippi State, 2.p.m.
No. 18 Arkansas vs. Alabama, 2
p.m.
No. 19 Xavier at Dayton, 11 a.m.
No. 24 Hawaii at Tulsa, 7 p.m.
Sunday:
No. 25 Clemson at Maryland, 3 p.m.
No. 23 West Virginia vs. Providence, 11 a.m.
No. 6 Arizona vs. Oregon State, 3 p.m.
No. 9 UCLA vs. Louisville, 2:30 p.m.
No. 16 Michigan at Illinois, 1 p.m.
No. 21 Cincinnati vs. No. 22 Rhode Island, 3 p.m.
SPORTS ETC.
1979 — Willie Mays is named on 409 of 432 ballots and elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility.
Todav in sports:
1944 — The Detroit Red Wings defeat the New York Rangers 15-0 to set an NHL record for consecutive goals.
1988 — Steffi Graf wins women's title at the Australian Open with a 6-1, 7-6 victory over Chris Evert.
1993 — Mike Gartner of the New York Rangers sets an NHL record when he reaches the 30-goal mark for the 14th consecutive season. Gartner, with three goals in the Rangers' 8-3 victory over Los Angeles, surpasses Phil Esposito, Bobby Hull and Wayne Gretzky.
Sole claim to record at stake
Continued from page 1B
The Red Raiders lack a dominant post player this season. Last season they had Tony Battie, a first-team All-Big 12 selection who was the No.5 selection in the NBA Draft last spring.
"The pressure is off us now because this team is already in the record books," Williams said. "I have nothing against seeing two teams in the record book, but I would really like to see one team have it by itself. This record means something to me because of the tradition that has been established here."
But against Texas Tech, the Jayhawks will have to stop a three-guard attack that features quickness and perimeter shooting.
Texas Tech is led by point guard Cory Carr, who leads the Big 12 Conference in scoring with 24 points per game. Williams said Kansas forward Paul Pierce probably will defend Carr because of Pierce's athletic ability.
The backcourt of Carr, Stan Bonewitz and Rayford Young account for more than 66 percent of the Red Raiders' offense and more than 37 percent of their rebounding. But the frontcourt is far from the depth or talent featured on last season's 19-9 team.
This season, forward Cliff Owens averages 10.9 points and 8.5 rebounds for Texas Tech and center Johnny Phillips averages four points and 1.9 rebounds. Reserve center Ross Charmichael averages 4.6 points and 4.8 rebounds.
SPORTS
CALENDAR
Tomorrow:
7 p.m. at Lubbock, Texas — Women's basketball vs. Texas Tech
3 p.m., in Allen Field House — Men's basketball vs. Texas Tech TV: Big 12 Network. Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM
All day at Columbia, Mo. — Track and field at Missouri Invitational.
Tuesday:
7 p.m. in Allen Field House
Women's basketball vs. Texas A&M
Wednesday:
7:05 p.m. in Allen Field House — Men's basketball vs. Baylor TV: Jayhawk TV Network. Radio: KLZR 10.5 FM
TV TONIGHT
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The Jayhawks upset another conference opponent Wednesday night and are still undefeated at home this season.
See if they can keep the streak alive when they take on Texas A&M Tuesday night at 7:00.
KU Students FREE with KU ID
31
Friday, January 23, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 3
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The Jayhawks will seek a school victory tomorrow against Texas never won in Allen Field Hou
STREAK FACTS
No player on the Kansas roster has lost in Allen Field House
The current streak is 55 games, which ties the longest in Kansas history
The streak is the longest current streak in Division I men's basketball
A victory tomorrow will break the Kansas and old Big Eight records. The Kansas record was set in 1984-88.
- The NCAA record of 129 straight homecourt victories belongs to Kentucky.
The last loss in Allen Field House was against Missouri 74-81 on Feb. 20, 1994
Colorado was the first victim of the streak 106-62 on Feb. 26, 1994
33
2
Saturday, January 24,1998
KU vs. T
A.J.
KE HOME
ol-record 56th consecutive home Tech. The Red Raiders, who have use,stand in the way of history.
DURHAM
STREAK VICTIMS
Thirty-three teams have lost at Allen Field House during the streak:
- Colorado (5)
- Iowa State (4)
- Kansas State (4)
- Nebraska (4)
- Missouri (3)
- Oklahoma State (3)
- East Tennessee State (2)
- Oklahoma (2)
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Kansan
Section B · Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Friday, January 23, 1998
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
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DREBS CODE ENFORCED
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EXCLUDES SPECIAL EVENTS
ask for!
INCLUDES SPECIAL EVENTS
"We've Played for the Best now We Live at the Best!"
THE FATHER
HIGHPOINTE Apartment Homes
2001 West 6th Street Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (785)841-8468
Now Leasing for Fall and Spring Semesters
at ku dining services...
join our team!
- Meet new friends The Department of Student Housing
- Starting pay 5.50 per hour Dining Services employs part of
- Flexible schedules
the largest student work
- 50% off food purchases
force on campus.
- Locations convenient to campus housing
- Gain valuable work experience
- Scholarship opportunities
Bring this poster in with you to register for prizes.
fun&cash! apply now
Call or stop by any of our Dining Centers for an application.
Ekdahl Dining 864-2260 • Oliver Dining 864-4087 • GSP Dining 864-3120 • Hashinger Office 864-1014
JAYHAWK SPIRIT Jayhawk Spirit
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
The Largest Selection of Jayhawk Sportswear and Souvenirs anywhere!
ALL Starter Jackets and Pullovers 25% OFF!
Call For Free KU Gift Catalog 1-800-749-5857
Look for Jayhawk Spirit merchandise on the Web at: WWW.LOGOSPIRIT.COM
Jayhawk Spirit
935 Massachusetts
(913) 7-925-194
Open Late on Game Days!!
Hours Mon - Sat 9:30 to 5:30
Home W Sirt Suv 12:00 to 5:00
BREAKING RECORDS?
How to break a record:
- Use it as a Frisbee, and watch it hit the sidewalk and shatter into a thousand tiny pieces.
- Drop it on a tile floor, and watch it shatter into a thousand tiny pieces.
- Let your little brother play with
- Give it to the Kansas men's basketball team, and let them shatter it into 56 tiny pieces in front of 16,000 fans.
it, and watch him shatter it into a thousand tiny pieces.
The Jayhawks tied the longest homecourt winning streak Saturday with victory number 55-in-a-row over Kansas State.
a thousand tiny pieces.
This Saturday, they will try to break the record in what could be win number 56 against Texas Tech.
Collectable
Not K-State. Not Missouri. Not Nebraska although they came close last year. Not anybody. Not many college basketball teams can boast that a 55-game home winning streak has happened once in their history. The Jayhawks have done it twice and are going on for more.
to win in Lawrence for 55 basketball games.
In roughly a four-year period, teams such as UCLA, Santa Clara and Oklahoma State have come into Allen Field House with high expectations and have gone out disappointed. No team has been able
So why all the fuss? What's the big deal? So they've won a few games at Allen Field House.
Think about it.
So how do you break a record? By bringing back All- American Raef LaFrentz to dominate under the basket.
By giving the ball to three-point genius Billy Thomas to shoot from the perimeter.
By passing the ball to preseason All-American Paul Pierce to drive in to the basket time and time again.
By giving control of the floor to Ryan Robertson and C.B. McGrath. By Kenny Gregory and Lester Earl dunking;
by Eric Chenowith rebounding; by Nick Bradford and T.J. Pugh shooting; by Jelani Janisse, Terry Nooner and Chris Martin picking up where the others leave off.
With this combination, the homecourt winning record is sure to be shattered. Texas Tech will then be left to pick up the pieces.
Poster Design—Bryan Volk Photography—Steve Puppe Story-Amy Slotemaker Ad Layout—Matt Fisher
Every day,
every woman
merica
Every day,
every woman
in America
goes to her closet
and contemplates
what to wear?
Spectator's
January Clearance Sale
is NOW!
Congratulations Hawks on the First 100 Years!
Jayhawk Gifts and Clothing make great holiday gifts. Check out our online offerings and tell your family and friends to order your gift today!
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
785-864-4640
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions
www.jayhawks.com • jayhawks@ukans.edu
KU
OFFICIAL KU ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT
HAWKS WEAR
MERCHANDISE
Online Offerings at www.jayhawks.com! Textbook Preorder for Spring Semester Alumni Gift Catalog HawksWear Mt Oread Bookshop Books
Friday, January 23, 1998
The University Daily Kans'an
Section B • Page 7
Kansan Classified
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358
personals
13.0 Browse Personals
13.0 On Campus
13.0 Entertainment
13.0 Entertainment
13.0 Entertainment
13.0 Entertainment
100s
Announcements
200s Help Wanted
Employment 225 Professional Services
225 Typing Services
300s
Motorway
Sales
308 For Sale
314 Compares
320 Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
320 Harve Envelopment
320 Tickets
326 Share Shares
348 Metcones for Sale
348 Miscellaneous
350 Hints
---
Classified Policy
The Karani will not be unwilling to accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, color, nationality, religion, nationality, or disability. Further, the Karani will not have right to accept advertisement in a location of University of Kansas.
All real estate advertisers in the newspaper is subject to the Fidelity Real Estate Commission's rules and requirements, performance, identification or discrimination on color, taste or appearance. The commission reserves the right to make any such preference, invitation or discrimination. Real estate advertisers are not required to be available in this报纸 are available in an opportunity to appear.
-
110 - Business Personals
---
HEALTH Watkins Since 1906 Caring For KU CENTER
HEALTH
Watkins
Since 1906
Caring For KU CENTER
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
A
100s Announcements
120 - Announcements
P
- $ Cash for College * Grants & scholarships available from sponsor. Great opportunities! Call
Are you interested in helping battered women and/or their children. WTCS advocate training, informational sessions Jan. 2nd 9 p.m. on JAN. 30th Jan. 28th 11:50 p.m. on RIDGE-court RoB. B. Questions call 943-333-3.
BEST HOTELS, LOWEST PRICES. ALL SPRINGBREAK locations. Cancun, Jamaica, from $399, Florida, from $80, Texas, Mazatlan, from $249. Use our Campus Repair. BSP 82-307-6133 www.lcept.com
Instructional & Educational videos & CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited Internet
access for only $15.90/mo, tell your parents,
shoping from us. http://www.inetinfo.com/.edl
**Spring Career and Employment Fair:** Wed. Feb. 4, 1986, 10 am to 3 pm, KS Union Ballroom. Over 120 employees. FT, PT, internships, summer jobs, volunteer opportunities. All majors welcome. Job site: **DEMployment Services at 684-3244 or virtual career site:** www.ukans.org / uc@cef.html
1908 SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN NORTHERN 1908 MISSION Camp Buckinck has various positions available to work with youth who have academic and social skill difficulties (ADHD, ADD, ASD), as well as those with special school credit. Salary + room & board. Camp is located on a lake in the Superior National Forest near Ely and the BWCAW. Contact: Time buckinck@aucasetest.com, 354-3544; email buckinck@aucasetest.com
NEED GLASSES?
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON EVERY FRAME, ANY PRESCRIPTION,
SANITIZER, OR BODY MASS, downtown Lawrence. 843-6282. We carry Giorgio Armanni, Alfred Sung, Next, Dakota Smith, Santa Fe Eyewears, Nicole Miller, Perry Ellis, Nautica. We proudly use the highest quality lenses. We offer no cheap "backroom grinding." We also supply contact lenses at GREAT PRICES.
!!!JUST FOLLOW OUR GOLDEN ANGELS!!!!!
205 - Help Wanted
125 - Travel
SPRING BREAK TRIES to Mexico, Jamaica,
Florida. From $9 & $99 Call Jason at 864-919
***Spring Break '88 Get Going!** Cancun,
Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida. Group discounts
to get the cheapest deals go free! Book
Now!! Visi/MC/Disease/Amex
http://www.endlessmortuartions.com/
SPRING BREAK '98
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
BEST RATES ON SOUTH PADRE'S
HOTTEST CONDOS AND HOTELS
$196 for a week!*
$196 for a week!*
IF YOU FIND A BETTER AVAILABLE RATE ON THE
SAME PROPERTY WE'LL MATCH OR BEIT, or
TELL YOU WHY YOU SHOULDn't TAKE ITI!
FOR INFO AND RESERVE CALL: 1-800-292-752
VISIT Our WEB site: www.pirentals.com
"Arrival March 21 only. Choose 2 of schmooze
party, party card, Mexico shopping tour, or Aprt
shuttle transfers. Tax and cleaning费 included.
Nobody Does Spring Break Better!
SPRING
BREAK '98
IN SEEK ON CBS NEWS 11 HOURS!
DRIVE YOURSELF & SAVE
AFFORDABLE
FOR ALL AGE & PRIORITY
ROAD TRIP!
$98
as low as $75
17th
Sellout
Year!
PARTY
shindiggs
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
---
1-800-PERSONAL INFORMATION JUNIPERS LINES 1200
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
www.sunchase.com
--inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PDU must $10 sign-on签 on benefit after 30 continuing business hours. Welcome and raises based on your performance. FLEX schedules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at: ncps@ncp.com
130 - Entertainment
Entertainment
Monday thru Saturday 3-8pm free at the Bototten
719 New Hampshire. 841-LIVE
717 New Hampshire.
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
Men and Women
205 - Help Wanted
Assistant wanted MWF 8-1 for baby child care.
Experience preferred. Call help 865-067-8.
Brady Chirnacrophytic Clinic. Part time help needed. 3-tm, Monday-Friday. Call 749-0130
Hard working, energetic性格 to make
hallucinations, sometimes a form of
MOTW or MTF, 10:35-5:30 PM, 832-1356, eighteen nights.
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant P.T. NEW
Apt./Twn. T49 1282 inquire at 303 Wakaran Dr.
DUBAI
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disabled woman stay active & involved. Routine easy to learn, some lifting involved. Call 842-1794
Part time work experience. Accounting office, hrs 8,5. Split shifts possible. Some saturdays, 913-842-6577.
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB Experience Wait
at 10:45pm in 1987 Crossgrain or call 842-8685. EOE
at 10:45pm in 1987 Crossgrain or call 842-8685.
BAMBING'O. 1801 Mass. across from Dillon's. BambingO. apply in person or call at 823-8900. Apply in person or call at 823-8900.
Earn Extra Cash.. gain experience in the music
market. Apply to a fresh Frecats Traits
Representative, Code 888-593-1234
205 - Help Wanted
205 - Help Wanted
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
Tired of flipping burgers?
bpi
BUILDING SERVICES
A Division of Buckingham Palace, Inc.
We Employ Students!
- Part Time Evenings (Sun-Thurs 2 QR 3 hrs nightly)
* Part Time Days (Mon-Fri 8am-12pm OR 1pm-5pm)
- We provide on-job transportation once you get here (house cleaning jobs only)
- $6-7 Potential
* Friendly Environment
Call 842-6264 or apply in person at 939 Iowa.
PROFESSIONAL JANITORIAL SERVICES
205 - Help Wanted
---
Kernel help needed. Must be reliable & hardworking. Apply in person at Clinton Park Avenue Kernels.
Part time delivery driver. Some heavy lifting
apply. Apply in person at Lawrence Printing
Waits needed day and evening events. Apply in person at Scotts a Brass Arts, 3300 W.15th.
Heln Wanted.
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
with a 759 Mast (umpaints) plus profit sharing.
Apply to a 719 Mast (umpaints).
Rainforest Montessori School is interviewing for lab assistant position, 85.71 per hour. Call 843-6090.
Silverhawk Security - full time (3 pm-11 pm) and
Security Officer - security office Call
Shane 865-100-1200
Lunch help 11:30:10, 5-day or TR; subs as needed. Sunshine Acres 842-2233
SUB OR LUNCH AIDE
Apt. Leasing Position. Strong sales skills
required. Compensation, 1 BR Apt. 20-25 hrs.
Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000
Clinton Pkwy.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for Safe Ride drivers. Must be 21 years of age & have a clean drive record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 p.m.
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS Avail from noon (at least) any wkdays. Need experience, ref, own transportation. May extend into summer & fail. Call Judy or John #824-3581.
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for pre-band.
High-strong voice and personality. All styles.
Also, DRUMMER/PERCUSSIONIST/vox w/ ex
$exp. $and fwd. 749-3649
Oracle manager for small apt. complex near campus, full time, upperclassman or graduate student, salary and free apartment, send resume to: P.O. Box 628 Lawrence, KS 66044
Looking for a job? Tutoring positions available Tuesday & Wednesday 9:11:30am. Tutor Lawrence High School students. Call Dr. Todd Martin at martin@642-9622.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES: Openings for 1/2-1
5 yrs. Educational activities, clean, new facility.
Montessori teacher. Please call 865-0678 for more
info.
Reliable college women needed to care for our 9 year old son, provide transportation, and do some light housework. Monday-Friday 3:5-3:08 p.m. Call Jane or Steve at 841-3746 and a message.
**Exponlation** 9¹ **Natl. co.-immediate PT/FT**
openings in Lawrence/JOCO & KC. Entry levels are Flexible schedules around 11 a.m.
Flexible schedules around 11 a.m.
No exper. nec, cond. call *Call 193-813-9675* 10-5
Collection Asst. making calls calls. PT/flexible hours. 7:00/hr. 841951-617 ext. 3200 or in person. Microtech Computers 4921 Legends Drive.
Babysitter needed Tues,Thurs,12-13:50pm for old boy, must have car for noon pick up at Lawrence Nursery School References needed. 749+158 after 5pm or 864+424 during daytime.
COMPUTER SERVICE TECH/PHONE SUPP-
LORED in shop on site. Must be able to
do computer work. Must identify
8-9%/hr. Apply in person. Microtech Computers
4921 Legends Dr. 841-953 1010 3200 EOE
The Division of Continuing Education Publication Services is looking for a Student Mail Assistant to work in the School Center/Binder located at an office suite on campus. Students must be A current enrolled student, and be able to work 120 hrs per week M-F. Hours are flexible. Continuing Education is an EOAA employer.
CNA/CHIHA Our busy not for profit health health agency is recruiting caring, team oriented CNA's/CHIA's to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Even hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, 386 Lower Level or call 41-6436 for PATIEE.
Do you love KU? Love to talk on the phone? If you are involved on campus and want to share your enthusiasm with potential KU students, then a position as an Admissions Teleconcounsel may be for you. We are looking for students who: possess strong communication skills; have attended KU for at least 1 year; and are available to work at least 2 years away. Please contact Robert at 864-549-0784 to arrange an interview ASAP.
SUMMER CAMP JOBS: Mr. the Pocono Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in fantastic camp setting. Counselors, WIJS. Arts, Music. Teachers. Students in SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to "the finest summer you'll ever have." On campus interviews Wed. Feb. 4th at Kansas Union Ballroom. 090-923-CAMP staff@camptowanda.com
$$$ BONUS! BONUS! $$$
Growing #1 Residential Home Improvement Co seeks motivated, dependable people to take
1, 2801 Lakeview ID., 2nd floor. Bring this ad with you to qualify for bonus.
Student Housing
Dining Services
* Start at $5.50 / hr *
* Flexible Schedules
* Convenient Locations
* Scholarships
Call or stop by any
DSH Dining Center:
DSH * 864-1329
Hashing * 864-1014
Hashing * 864-1087
- Sound Production Asst. ascertains the sound mixes, and edits necessary sounds to produce show tapes. Should have some familiarity with listening skills. Some evening hours required.
- Inge Technical Director coordinates technical theatre aspects in theatre productions. Event planning, production scheduling.
- Box Office Asst. Mngr. complete tasks & office duties related to ticket sales. Takes as ast, to Box Office Mngr. Works both daytime & evening hours. Some weekend hours required.
KU's Univ. Theatre is hiring 3 student hourly employees: Asst. Box Office Mgrn, Sound Prog
To be eligible, KU students must be enrolled in at least six credit hours or one thesis hour. Pick up application and job description in 317 Murphy Hall at KU.
FOR 58 YEARS:
FRIENDLY PINES CAMP
In the Pine Mountains Near Precout, AZ
WE NEED A FEW
Resident Camp for Braya and Girl Agas to M33
Avocates include Hossein Zahra, M19 Divy
Divya Patel, Sangeet Singh, M24
205 - Help Wanted
Rock Climbing, Water skiing and Much, Much More.
1998 Reason: May 31 in August 2
Together
1998 Season: May 31 to August 2
We'll be at the Summer Job Fair on Wed. February 4th.
We will be at the Summer Job Fair on Wednesday. February 14 if you have any question or would like to mail an email to us.
$725 @ 10:50/WEEK
Raise all the money your student group needs by sponsoring a VISA Fundraiser on your campus or at a library where you need. There’s no obligation, why not call for information today?
application and schedule an interview, glance call Mark or Kris
933 Friendly Pines Road • Prescott, AZ 86303
TELEMARKETERS!
*EARN UP TO $12/HR WITH BONUSES*
*$100 SIGN ON BONUS (PAID AT 60 DAYS)*
*ATTENDAÑÉ BONUS*
If you have any questions or you would like to mail you an application and schedule an interview, please call Mark or Kris
up to$50 This Week $360 This Month
Cottonwood inc. is currently looking for enthusiastic individuals interested in providing supports to adults with developmental disabilities in their own home, or with a variety of schedules that include evening, night and weekend hours. Some schedules may include sleep overs. Responsibilities may vary. Applicants must have a group living site, implement a person-centered approach to consumer services, assisting in the development of house management skills, providing leadership and teamwork, leading leisure time opportunities. Minimum of a High School diploma/GED and driving record acceptable to our insurance carrier is required. Prior experience is necessary work, and related experience helpful. Starting hourly pay of $6.00 to $7.50, depending on position. Apply at Cottonwood inc. on Joan at 943-6584 or 681, or visit us in the lobby, the Kansas Union 9am-1pm, January 23, E.O.E.
*CASUAL DRESS, UPBEAT ENVIRONMENT*
*TWO PART TIME SHIPS AVAILABLE!*
EARN CASH
933 Friendly Pines Road * Precisco, AZ 86303
Call (525) 421-2128 or fce@mug.org
12:00-4:00 a.m. Monday-Friday
4:30-8:30 p.m. Monday-Friday
10:00-2:00 p.m. Saturdays
By donating your life saving plasma!
*Saturday hours included on both shifts.
Call Lori @ 843-9094
Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
816 W.24th
Hours:
M-F 9 a.m.
6:30 p.m.
A NEWYEAR-
A NEW CAREER!
(Nabi
Many Schedule Options Up to $8.50/hr
Upbeat, Professional Work Environment
These positions offer paid training for qualified individuals possessing outstanding customer service and sales skills. Permanent placement with great benefits and advancement opportunities are guaranteed to those exhibiting excellent performance and attendance after only 90 days!
Ask up about our $50 referral bonus! Call now to request a confidential interview!
ENCORE
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
STAFFING SERVICES
7:30 am - 5:30 pm M-F (785) 331-0044 24 hour staffing and information (785) 887-7635 13 East 8th Street EOE
---
AP Specialist over 2 yrs. working experience in bookkeeping, GL, AP, taxes. Apply in person /w resume at 4921 Quail Crest PI, or call 841-9513 ext. 3200.
225 - Professional Services
SPEEDING D? DU! SUPPENDED DL? Call?
Serving KS/MO. 1-480-502-0222 Toll Free
Serving KS/MO. 1-480-502-0222 Toll Free
TRAFFIC-DUFS PERSONAL INJURY Fake ID's a alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-5116
The law offices of
X
st 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation
300s Merchandise
305 - For Sale
---
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
$
305 - For Sale
$
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-0115
325 - Stereo Equipment
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your home audio equipment. Old New (785) 223-9639
330 - Tickets for Sale
ADMIT ONE ADMIT ONE ADMIT ONE
Need two tickets for KU-Baylor game. Call Reverend connect (785) 30-5018 daytime or
nighttime. Call 312-497-6000.
340 - Auto Sales
Need two tickets for KU-Baylor game. Call Rev-
175-786-3518 daytime or
775-786-3524 evening.
92 Mustang LX Convertible, 76K, auto, tinted windows, new brakes, AC & heat, custom wheels,
$7999, 841-4387.
1923 Mada mx3, 86,000 mi manual manual v/o /l/m
firmware to get on board in great cond. call Monica 891-4289
in great cond. call Monica 891-4289
370 - Want to Buv
Want to buy queen size soft-sided waterbed, in good condition. 842 7595.
$$$$$
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
2 Bedroom apt across at st from mem stadium
¾/5month. Great location, only pay electric & glo
charge! Free Wifi. Parking available.
RJ Downtown Associates (616) 1/2 Mass.) Central
University doors. $50; Call 749-3033 for appointment.
Juniors doors. $69; Call 749-3033 for appointment.
Nice npcacious 2 bdmr lt. located at 18th &
19th Floor, Bldg. 306, 12247 N. 12th Ave.
mo. free. available now. Call 841.1998 for details
2 bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$90 per month, move in a s.a.p.
call 748-7261
Furnished Room Available Now! Very private room with bath in large large in house KU W/D.
2 BR special rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt. located close to campus, on bus route. $350 includes basic cable. Call Now. University Terrace 841-6783
Unfurnished Room
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
2 Bedroom apt. across st. from mem. stadium.
$475/month. Great location, only pay electric & phone. Free cable and water. Available immediately.
842-9786
1 rm w/ bath in cooperative living arrangement
1 w/ 2 other students + $296/m including utilities,
laundry, telephone-lab living room, Kitchen-1 br
Kitchen-2 br, bathroom, available interview required equipment 843-4853.
Hey! Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the apt. of your choice this fall? We have some of the biggest apts. in town for the move. Call 812-760-4455. Park 24 Apartments, 2401. W. 25th
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt. located close to campus. $305 includes cable, secure and parking on the bus route, 9th & 10th floor. Call: Cat. 691-8939 during office hours Mon-Fri.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE
lords. Experience democratic control combined
with a safe and enjoyable atmosphere.
Open and divers membership. Call or drop by
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
A&S
RENTAL SERVICES
131/2 E. 8th St., Lawrence
841-5454
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
405 - Apartments for Rent
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
On KU Bus Route
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
housemate, roommate to share with 4 bdmms
department at Sunrise Village $800/mo / 1/4 mo
This will be sent via text message.
M mastercraft management
Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Mon - Fri 0am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
Equal Housing Opportunity
410 - Condos For Rent
Brand New Duplex! Available June 1. 48dmR.
Brand New Duplex! Available June 1. 02am OW.
Route, off street parking. 850/360-6960.
כדי להשתמש בהם
Avail. Feb. 1, share 2 bed/2 bath condo. Fireplace, dishwasher, washer/dryer, sun room, 1/3 utilities, $194/mo., on bus route. Please call 838-3226.
415 - Homes For Rent
420 - Real Estate For Sale
家园
Meadowview
arch home on basement set up on Stratford Rd. 3+ bedroom, b3 area, outside office entry. Walk to Class. Priced at $199.900. Call Leta White. CB/McGrew R.E. 845-203 for information.
430 - Roommate Wanted
Female Roommate needed ASAP, Share Town House. Washer/Byzer, On Hus Route. $260 mo
$480 mo
RM needed immediately to share a bib. 1 bath ap.
Close to carapace Item is $185.00 to app. Jan.
AMT for baby item is $27.00.
3 BR/2 BA/WD, close to KU, great view.
3 BR/2 BA/WD, close to Dail. Call Bryan
804-961-827 Eriw Rd. #804-961-827
Eriw Rd. #804-961-827
Male roommate needed. N/1 10111 Illinois
bdm roommate. $175 +/- 3/1 meals. For spring
spring semester.
Non-smoking male wanted to leave 2 berm apt
close to campus $30/month + 1/7 calls. Call
(844) 565-9800.
RM wanted for three bedroom house, on campu-
gard parking, across from Jayhawk Booksar-
ture.
Sublease will come through July 31st: 1 female to share
applicants, call Tricia 865-292-4070 or no deposit all
applicants. Call Tricia 865-292-4070 or no deposit all
Wanted: Quit roommate to bottom floor farmhouse. 5 acres, in city. Dishwash. wds/dry.
SPACIOUS Rs/Grad skibs seek 2 N/S Fem. Avail now Bright vaulted skis dkp. nr. campus. Quit clean air away from traffic, or park (bird trees, road). D $07 Ulpida Pd. $247-2146 word 8am-10am.
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. at 1218 Ohio. Between campus & downstreet. Close to GSF-Corbin. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No妈贝 841-1207.
N/S female roommate wanted to share beautifully furnished townhouse. On Bus route, 15 min. walk from campus. $275+share utils. No Pets. 842-6734
roommate needed to share a b3rm. 2 bath duplex in W. Lawrence, Garage, W/D, basement, new home, 1/3 utilities +$250. Move in immediately. Call 641-9031
Wanted. 1 Roommate M/P for a 3 bdm. room,
$280 per month + 1/3 utilities. Included
washer/dryer, bathroom, 2 car garage, & lots of
space. Call 749-3566.
.
1 roommate wanted
4 bedroom townhouse
3 bath
$250 a month plus utilities Please call 843-7050
Section B·Page 8
The' Uniwersity Daily Kansan
Friday, January 23, 1998
Recycle your Daily Kansan
"Unwarranted since 1993
Barefoot Iguana
749-1666
9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.832-8228
REFOUND SOUND
1-913-842-2555
BUY-SELL TRADE
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
Kansan
Classifieds
Barefoot Iguana
749-1666
9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
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Swimmer races down under
Freshman Painter finishes eighth in the 1,500-meter freestyle
By Erin Thompson sports@kansan.com Kansan sportwriter
Kansas freshman swimmer Tyler Painter returned to Lawrence from Perth, Australia, as the eighth fastest 1,500 meter swimmer in the world.
off his personal-best 15:17.01. He also qualified for the finals of the 400-meter freestyle and finished 166 h, with s.
He had hoped to do better.
He had hoped to do better. Painter competed at the FINA World Swimming Championships last weekend. Although he was the top American finisher in the 1,500-meter freestyle, he said he was not pleased with his performance.
"I didn't feel well in the water. It wasn't anything I can pinpoint," he said. "I just didn't swim very well." Painter's time of 15:23:40 was well
16th with a time of 3:57.30.
time of 5.37.50.
The Australian race was not the first time Painter swam as a member of a U.S. team.
Last summer, he represented the United States at the Pan-Pacific Games in
1025
Painter: Placed
eighth at the World
Championships
Fukuoka, Japan. The strong pro- Australian crowd gave the World Championships a different feel, Painter said.
"This was a little different than before. It was a lot bigger meet," he said. "It was hard to swim. There
was a large Australian crowd that was really behind their swimmers."
Painter said he hoped to continue to improve his swimming and make the 2000 Olympic team.
"Tyler has as good as opportunity as anyone to make the team." Kansas coach Gary Kempf said. "And all you really want is a good opportunity."
College swimming is at the forefront of Painter's mind at the moment. He has set individual goals to win the 500-meter freestyle and the 1,500-meter freestyle at the NCAA championships in March. He already has qualified for the NCAA championships in the 500-meter freestyle, the 1,500-meter freestyle and the 400-meter individual medley.
The team's next meet is Jan. 30 at Robinson Natatorium against Nebraska.
Two Sharpe strategies to face Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — Shannon Sharpe is playing Sunday's Super Bowl for himself and his older brother Sterling, who is Sharpe's idol, best friend and confidant.
Shannon Sharpe's Denver Broncos are playing the Green Bay Packers, the team Sterling departed on bitter terms in 1995.
G
"I realize that Sterling can't play the game anymore, and he basically plays the game through me," Shannon Sharpe said.
Sterling Sharpe's career with the Packers ended prematurely near the end of his seventh season in 1994 because of a neck injury that briefly paralyzed him. He wanted to go on injured reserve the next year at a higher salary than the Packers were willing to pay, and they released him with reluctance on Feb. 28, 1994.
leader in receptions with 595 and set a club record for receptions in a season with 112.
Sterling Sharpe, who was selected to play in five straight Pro Bowls, retired as the Packers' career
The parting left scars, and Sterling Sharpe, now an ESPN commentator, is supporting the Broncos.
"That's one of the dumbest questions I've heard this week: Who am I going to pull for?" he said. "I have a lot of friends who play for the Packers, but my brother's my brother, and he was my brother before I had Green Bay, and he's my brother now that I have ESPN. We're still the best of friends, and that's all that matters."
Shannon Sharpe, the Broncos' tight end, is headed to his sixth straight Pro Bowl. He regrets this game will not feature Sharpe vs.
Sharpe, but Sterling Sharpe said he does not wish he was still playing.
"It wasn't meant for me to be in uniform," Sterling Sharpe said. "I asked God for one year in this league, I got seven. I stole six more years. I got a chance to fulfill my dream, which was to play in the NFL."
The younger Sharpe is playing in the Super Bowl, and Sterling Sharpe has exhibited no envy.
In fact, Shannon Sharpe said he is envious of his brother.
"You look at almost 600 catches,
almost 70 touchdowns, 8,000 yards
— that speaks volumes," he said.
"We're each other's biggest fans,
biggest supporters, and biggest critics. In a sense, he's going to be in the game plan with me."
It will be two Sharps putting moves and throwing blocks on the Packers' Pro Bowl strong safety, LeRoy Butler.
Shannon, who led all NFL tight ends this year with 72 catches for 1,107 yards.
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Tomorrow's weather
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PO BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
Kansan
Monday
January 26,1998
Section:
A
A
Warm and partly sunny.
HIGH 51
HIGH LOW 51 32
Vol.108·No.86
Online today
P
For those who missed the Super Bowl or those interested in reliving the moment, check out the official Super Bowl site.
http://www.nfl.com
Sports today
The Kansas basketball team won its 56th consecutive home game, a new team record.
SEE PAGE 1B
WWW.KANSAN.COM
Contact the Kansan
News: (785) 864-4810
Advertising: (785) 864-4358
Fax: (785) 864-5261
Opinion e-mail: opinion@kansan.com
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Advertising e-mail: onlineads@kansan.com
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Take a bow
KANSAS
20
4
KANSAS
21
KANSAS
45
KANSAS
12
Members of the Kansas men's basketball team bow to the Allen Field House crowd after their 88-49 victory against Texas Tech. Saturday's win was Kansas' 56th in a row at home and broke the school record for consecutive home victories. The Jayhawks have not lost a home game since Feb. 20, 1994, and none of the players on the roster has lost a game in Allen Field House. "The field house is a remendous place to play, and the fans are a large part of it," said Kansas coach Roy Williams after the game. "It's not the building, the seats, the banners or the team that makes the field house what it is. It's the fans. And we just wanted to say, 'Thank you.'" See stories on page 1B. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
Tax law gives students break
Interest on loans earns deductions
By Brandon Coplep
bcopple@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
Like more than 7,000 University of Kansas students, the time he graduates, O'Donnell, Wichita junior, will be up to his mortarboard in debt.
Tim O'Donnell has borrowed his way through two and a half years of college, and he's got at least two more to go.
To help O'Donnell and other student borrowers deal with that debt, last year's Congress created a tax deduction up to $1,000 for interest paid on student loans.
Problem is, nobody told O'Donnell.
"I heard something about some tax breaks," he said. "It sounds like a good deal, but I wish they would've said a little more about it on campus."
The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 contains several tax breaks for college students.
The Hope Scholarship tax credit became available January 1, offering some freshmen and sophomores a $1,500 tax credit for college tuition. About 1,000 KU students took advantage of that policy, according to the provost's office.
(USPS 650-640)
The Lifetime Learning tax credit,
good for up to $5,000, will be available
to all qualified students after
July 1. Both credits are limited by
certain tax criteria, such as income
Mike Hickman, certified public accountant at Hickman & McFadden in Lawrence, said tax breaks were worthless unless students knew they existed.
"Everybody needs to look carefully to see how these provisions apply to them," he said. "The first thing you should do is contact your parents and find out if they claim you as a dependent."
Hickman said his office had received a barrage of calls last semester after students received a flier enclosed with tuition bills explaining the Hope tax credit.
The flier, prepared by the provost's office, notified freshmen and sophomores that they could defer tuition payment until Jan. 9, so that eligible students might receive the credit, which became available in 1998.
Lindy Eakin, associate provost,
said the deferral was designed
CONTACTING THE I.R.S.
www.irs.ustreas.gov
mainly to accommodate sophomores.
The tax credit is available only to freshmen and sophomores and applies to tuition paid after Jan. 1, 1998. For students who will be juniors in the fall, this semester is the only opportunity to receive the credit.
The provost's office said it will try to notify students of potential tax breaks, but Eakin advises students to contact an accountant or Legal Services for Students.
Congress also created a tax deduction for interest paid on student loans. Students paying back education loans may deduct up to $1,000 of interest for 1998. The deduction is available only to students whose single tax return shows less than $55,000 in income, and to married students filing jointly who make less than $75,000.
Tax credits come straight out of total taxable income, so the full credit goes in the student's pocket.
"As a public university, we're always concerned with making ourselves more affordable." Eakin said.
Sears to open new store in Lawrence
By Jeremy M. Doherty
By Jeremy M. Doherty
jdoherty@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
A full-line Sears store will open in Lawrence this fall.
The 84,000 square-foot store will be located at 2727 Iowa St. in the space vacated by The Half Price Store.
The store, one of 24 Sears plans to open nationwide, will provide 100 to 125 jobs, said David Rich, Sears district general manager.
In a prepared statement, Rich said the new location would bring a softer, more feminine side to the world of shopping in Lawrence.
Steve Wyss, manager of J.C. Penney Co., 1801 W. 23rd St., said he felt the new arrival would solidify the city as a regional shopping center.
"Lawrence is a trade area," Wyss said. "We lose enough business to trade areas outside of town because we don't offer enough stores for them."
Area business managers were enthusiastic about the addition of another store to Lawrence's retail market.
Gary Toebben, Lawrence Chamber of Commerce president, agreed. In a recent survey, the chamber asked citizens what they would like
N Iowa St. 24th St. Ousain Rd. 25th St. Greerwood Ave. New Sears Store Ridge Ct. 26th St. 27th St. Crestline Ct. 28th St.
to see more of in Lawrence.
"The top thing which people said they left town for were department stores," Toebben said.
Managers said the biggest benefi-
ciaries would be the consumers.
Sears now operates a locally owned dealer店 at 2108 W. 27th St. It will close when the new store opens.
"The main thing is that this will give people a variety of places, whether it's appliances or whatever, to choose from," said Paul Weingart, owner of Appliance Plus, 939 Iowa St.
The planned location in Lawrence is part of a five-year, $4 billion building and remodeling program by Sears, Roebuck and Co.
Beta Theta Pi, Chi Omega top GPA rankings
Greek GPAs
| House | Members | GPA | House | Members | GPA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chi Omega | 150 | 3.228 | Pi Beta Phi | 149 | 2.987 |
| Alpha Delta Pi | 142 | 3.190 |Gamma Phi Beta | 140 | 2.957 |
| Kappa Kappa Theta | 142 | 3.190 |Gamma Delta Delta | 139 | 2.997 |
| Kappa Kappa Gamma | 156 | 3.146 |Kappa Kappa | 149 | 2.987 |
| Delta Gamma | 151 | 3.146 |Sigma Delta Tau | 63 | 2.743 |
| Sigma Lambda Gamma | 9 | 3.062 |Sigma Kappa | 124 | 2.717 |
| Delta Sigma Theta | 6 | 3.060 |Alpha Xi Delta | 31 | 2.687 |
| Alpha Gamma Delta | 132 | 3.033 |Alpha Kappa Alpha | 15 | 2.499 |
| Alpha Chi Omega | 134 | 3.006 | | | |
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Deta Theta Pi | 81 | 3.264 | Deta Tau Delta | 2.812 |
| Lambda Chi Alpha | 60 | 3.025 | Phi Kappa Epilion | 126 |
| Sigma Nu | 100 | 3.009 | Phi Kappa Psi | 107 | 2.792 |
| Delta Chi | 102 | 2.988 | Pi Kappa Alpha | 25 | 2.700 |
| Trangle | 24 | 2.937 | Phi Gamma Delta | 86 | 2.658 |
| Kappa Sigma | 69 | 2.911 | Alpha Tau Omega | 64 | 2.640 |
| Alpha KappaLambda | 78 | 2.902 | Phi Kappa Theta | 46 | 2.611 |
| Phi Delta Chi | 117 | 2.985 | Alpha Epilion Pi | 48 | 2.606 |
| Zeta Apollo | 107 | 2.985 | Alpha Epilion Pi | 48 | 2.606 |
| Theta Chi | 11 | 2.824 | Zeta Betelene | 22 | 2.492 |
| Sigma Chi | 124 | 2.813 | Alpha Epilion Pi | 44 | 2.426 |
| Kappa Sigma | 124 | 2.813 | Phi Kappa Tau | 43 | 2.264 |
| All Fraternity Men | | 2.828 | All University Men | 2.760 |
By Carl Kaminski
ckaminski@kansan.com
Kansas stuff writer
They are on top of the gradepoint-average rankings among fraternities and sororities at the University of Kansas for the Fall 1997 semester.
Academic success is a tradition at Beta Theta Pi fraternity and Chi Omega sorority.
The Beta Theta Pi fraternity posted a chapter GPA of 3.264 and the Chi Omega sorority posted a chapter GPA of 3.228.
hours per week at the fraternity but active members are not, Win ters said.
Beta Theta Pi has had the highest GPA among fraternities at the University for all but four semesters since 1936 and Chi Omega has been at or near the top since at least 1975.
"It's just because we we've been that way for so long," he said. "Nobody wants to be the one to lose it."
Cody Winter, Beta Theta Pi president and Liberty, Mao, senior, said there was some pressure at Beta Theta Pi to stay on top.
Chi Omega also has a long-running tradition of academic success.
Winter said that grades were important to the fraternity during rush.
"It's not the only thing we look for, but we don't want any dummies," he said.
Dykstra said that there were mandatory study hours for members whose GPA fall two grade points and that study tips are always available for everyone. Usually there are not a lot of members who need the study hours, Dykstra said.
Winter said that the members of Beta Theta Pi put pressure on themselves to succeed in academics.
"We make grades part of our culture," he said.
Pledges are required to study 15
"We have some really motivated women." she said.
"Nationally, Chi Omega has always been focused on scholastics," said Jean Dykstra, Chi Omega vice president and Leawood sophomore.
M. D. Bradshaw/KANSAN
23rd St.
U.S. 59 Hwy/iowa St.
Standoff location
Haskell Ave.
1100 Hwy
Hostage standoff resolves in peace
By Ronnie Wachter Kansan staff writer
After holding a man hostage for about 45 hours, Kipling L. Johnson surrendered to authorities just after 5 a.m. Saturday in southeast Douglas County.
The standoff, which Douglas County Sheriff Loren C. Anderson called an attempted burglary that went awry, was defused when Johnson, 32, walked unarmed out of the farmhouse belonging to his hostage, Ralph Leary, near the intersection of 1500 East and 1100 North highways.
Johnson's partner, David J. Cox, 35, surrendered at 8:27 p.m. Thursday and released Leary's wife, Leila. Johnson remained in the house, armed with a .357-caliber Magnum and a .25-caliber handgun. No shots were fired, and no one was injured during the standoff.
"We are grateful we were not harmed in any way by David and Kip," said Leila Leary in a prepared statement. "They simply made a wrong decision in their life. We know this is a difficult time for their family, and we hope all of us will eventually put this behind us."
Negotiators from several local law enforcement departments maintained regular contact with Johnson throughout the standoff.
Anderson said that Johnson made no threats or demands, only a few requests. Johnson's brother and lawyer, who were not identified, assisted in the negotiations.
The Douglas County Sheriff's Department, which coordinated the operation, was forced to make drastic adjustments to its officers' schedules and called in officers from Eudora, Baldwin City and Johnson County to help with day-to-day affairs. Anderson said the KU police helped maintain the one-mile security perimeter around the Learys' house.
One of Johnson's requests was for immunity from prosecution, but Anderson said that was not considered.
Anderson said his officers trained for hostage situations regularly, and they had several plans for forced entry.
Anderson said that Johnson's and Cox's motives still were unclear. He said it appeared that after attempting to rob a house at 1727 N. 1062 Dd., the suspects allegedly stole a car from that location and stopped at the Learys' farmhouse. Anderson said he believed that taking the hostages was unplanned and that the Learys were picked at random.
Cox was arraigned at noon Friday. His bond was set at $250,000. Formal charges were filed against Johnson and Cox this afternoon. Both have served time in prison for previous offenses.
2A
The Inside Front
Monday January 26,1998
News
from the nation and the world
WASHINGTON CUBA THAILAND
In the NATION:
Clinton: Lewinsky's attorney said the former White house intern would tell all she knows to Whitewater prosecutors in exchange for immunity
Cuba: Pope John Paul II ended his five-day visit to Cuba yesterday.
The dollar: The Asian crisis has increased the value of the U.S. dollar.
ABC reports that eyewitness saw Clinton with Lewinsky
WASHINGTON — Anxious to cut a deal for immunity, the lawyer for Monica Lewinsky said yesterday that his 24-year-
old client would tell al that she knew to Whitewater prosecutors.
"The chips will fall as they may," he said.
Attorney William Ginsburg said that he had verbally indicated to investigators what Lewinsky would tell them in exchange for immunity from prosecution.
PINNAMENTAL
Lewinsky
"I will remain in Washington as long as it takes to see that the truth in every detail, wherever it may fall, comes out," Ginsburg said. Negotiations of such a sensitive nature could take weeks.
President Clinton talked this weekend with heavyweight advisers brought back to
Washington to help him through the crisis incited by the allegations of a sexual relationship with Lewinsky and attempts at a cover-up. One of them, one-time Commerce Secretary Mickey Kantor, said his help was lawyerly in nature. "I have my legal hat on, not my political hat," he said.
In the first hint of an eyewitness, ABC reported the president and Lewinsky were caught in an intimate encounter in a private area of the White House in the spring of 1996, shortly before the White House intern was moved to a job at the Pentagon.
Pope condemnns capitalism in final Mass of Cuban trek
HAVANA — Pope John Paul II, ending a historic spiritual journey to a dispirited land, called Cubans to new paths of reconciliation Sunday, but warned them against embracing the blind market forces of global capitalism.
"The wealthy grow ever weatlier, while the poor grow ever poorer," the pope declared to explosive applause from hundreds of thousands in the grand Plaza of the
Revolution.
It was the climax of a five-day pilgrimage by the aliling 77-year-old pope, a difficult mission on which he had to balance criticism of Cuba's communist system with the need to foster the Cuban church.
Front and center in yesterday's throng
Ivan Zelgorodin
Pope John Paul II
hearing the pope's sharp attack on capitalist neoliberalism, was the fervent anti-capitalist Fidel Castro, who had urged his people to pack the open-air Mass.
Poor Asian economy boosts dollar in global trade market
NEW YORK — In Thailand, hotels are quoting room rates in dollars, and foreign airlines want to do the same with airfares. In Singapore, businesses are turning local bank accounts into dollars. And in Russia, even maids and mechanics hoard dollars as
informal savings accounts.
The turbulence in Asia that has rocked financial markets around the globe has boosted the dollar, giving it more prestige than it has had in many years and making it the currency of choice.
"The dollar is king," said Allen Sinai, chief global economist at Primark Decision Economics.
That's a big change from the late 1980s and early 1990s when the Japanese yen and German mark were higher than dollar. Americans traveling overseas found that their dollars bought little, and imported goods were often priced out of reach. It was less than three years ago that the dollar fell to a post-World War II low against the Japanese yen.
Now, with the U.S. economy winding up its seventh year of expansion, inflation running at a slow pace and unemployment at a 24-year low, the buck is riding high.
The Associated Press
ON CAMPUS
KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in Burge Union. Contact Beng Beh: 864-7754
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Contact Fr. Vince Krische. 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 Monday, Wednesday and Friday at Danforth Chapel. Contact Fr. Ray May: 843-0357.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Monday and Wednesday and from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. on Friday at 207 Robinson. Contact Adam Capron: 842-912-81.
The Office of International Programs
KU Environs will meet for vegetarian lunches from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thursday.
Contact Shannon Martin: 842-7170.
will hold and International Seminar for Faculty: "Reconstructing the Nation State: Ethnicity, Identity and State Formation in the British Isles" from 3:30 to 5 tonight in the Western Seminar Room. Art History Library, Spencer Museum of Art. Contact Terry Weidner: 864-4141.
■ KU Habitat for Humanity has a spring break opportunity. Travel with other KU students to Denver during spring break for a building collegiate challenge. Contact Jeff. 832-1307.
Delta Force will hold brown bag lunch discussion of fall break at 12:30 Wednesday in the fourth lobby of the Kansas Union. Contact Seth Hoffman: 864-1701.
OAKS will have brown bag lunches
from 11:30 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. Tuesday at
Alcove E and Wednesday at Alcove A in
the Kansas Union. The business meeting
will be at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the Wheat Room in the Kansas Union. Contact Susan Randall: 864-7317.
The Feminist Union will meet at 5 p.m. Sunday at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. Contact Joan Benefiel: 840-9739.
ECM will hold an alternative spring break informational meeting at 7:15 p.m. Sunday at ECM Center, Contact Thad Holcombe; 843-493-1.
University "orum" Graduate Teaching Assistants Organizing at KU: Local and National Implications." will meet from noon to 1 p.m. Wednesday at the ECM Center. Contact Thad Holcombe: 843-4933.
- KU Democrats will meet for an Executive Board Meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
Contact Robert Choromanski: 864-1719.
Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:30 Wednesday at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Contact Wendy Brown: 838-3984.
St. Lawrence Orthodox Christian Fellowship will hold a prayer service at 1 p.m. and Discussion on "Finding time for God in a busy world" at 7:30 p.m. tonight at the ECM. Contact Victoria Foth: 749-5478.
HALO will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Contact Cipriano Medina: 864-1020.
■ Free Job Search Workshops will be offered again this week about:
Resume/Cover Letter Writing at 1:30 p.m.
in 428 Summerfield Hall and Interviewing Skills at 1:30 p.m. in 2009 Learned Hall.
Contact Ben Kruse: 864-5591.
Online patrol: KU police join superhighway
By Laura Roddy
loddy@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas Police Department patrols the information superhighway as well as campus streets.
Internet surfers can check on the police department at its Web site, http://www.ukans.edu/~kucops.
COPS ONLINE University of Kansas Police: http://www.ukans.edu/ukops
"The origina-
reason it was
there was the
same reason
we do community
presentations," Sgt.
Chris Kearay
said. "It's
another opportunity to get information out."
University of Kansas
Medical Center Police:
http://www.kumc.edu/
service/police
Keary set up the site in November 1995 after taking an HTML workshop with several other officers through the University's Academic Computing Services. Keary serves as the Webmaster. Another sergeant, Troy Mailen, has agreed to help him run the Website.
Lesley Simmons, Norman, Okla., sophomore, said she wasn't aware the KU police operated a site, but she thought it was a good idea.
Keary said the site's police activity log was updated weekly and allowed visitors to find out what had happened on campus. Each entry is logged according to date and time.
"That is the one thing we have kept up on," he said. "It shows the things the KUPD does on a daily basis."
The site also features a crime map. A user can click on a particular building or parking lot and learn what criminal activity occurred there between Aug. 18, 1996 and June 28, 1997.
Kearay said "Ask A Cop," another feature of the site, provided students with the opportunity to ask officers questions. The questions can be submitted anonymously, he said.
The frequently asked questions posted on the site deal with topics ranging from parking to rape and marijuana use.
Keary said crime alerts were periodically posted on the site and campus crime statistics also were available.
ET CETERA
The University of Kansas Medical Center Police Department operates its Web site located at www.kumc.edu/service/police.
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stouffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan, 66045, 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, 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student suffered domestic battery between 11 and 11:15 p.m. Thursday night in the 1800 block of Naismith Drive.
The right window of a KU employee's car was smashed about 9 p.m. Wednesday night in the 3100 block of West 19th Street, and an AM/FM radio, a CD player and a crossover equalizer were stolen from the car, totaling $800 damage.
A KU student suffered a criminal threat at 500 block of West 14th Street at 1:30 a.m. Saturday.
The side mirrors and sunroof wind deflector of a
KU student's car were destroyed between 10 p.m. Thursday and 10 a.m. Friday in the 100 block of Gower Place, causing $450 damage.
The rear window of a University of Kansas Athletic Corporation employee's car was shattered between 5 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. Saturday in the 600 block of Connecticut Street, and an AM/FM stereo CD player and cellular phone car adapter were taken from it, causing $420 total damage.
A KU student's down coat was stolen between 11 p.m. Thursday and 1 a.m. Friday in the 900 block of West 23rd Street The jacket was valued at $200.
Kansan staff report
City to offer artists money
Art grants worth up to $500 will be offered to local artists and organizations by the Lawrence Arts Commission beginning in March.
"We want to encourage new programs and artists," said Dorothy Stites, a commission liaison for the Lawrence Percent for Art Program.
"The focus is to help someone do something artistic that is related to the community." she said.
In the past, grants have been awarded to groups such as the Lawrence Chamber Players and the Lawrence Children's Choir, Stites said.
Applications are available at the following locations:
Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.; Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St.; Lawrence Art Guild and Riverfront Gallery and the City Management Office on the fourth floor of City Hall, 6E. Sixth St.
Applications P. uay also be obtained by sending a self- addressed, stamped envelope to Dorothy Stites, City of Lawrence, P.O. Box 708, Lawrence, KS 66044. The submission deadline is Monday, March 2.
Grant money may be used for materials, equipment, rent, travel or publications.
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To schedule an interview call:
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Questions? Call Pres. Chris Lovvorn@ 838-9293.
Visit our website @ http://www.ukans.edu/~goldkey
Monday, January 26, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
GTAC recruits new members, promotes union
By Susie Gura
Kansan staff writer
A union is only as strong as its members, said Mark Horowitz. Graduate Teaching Assistants Coalition organizer.
GTAC members recruited new members at a table during the Kansas Union's Spring Information Fair last week. GTAC is trying to build membership and inform current members about the coalition's general meeting Thursday and the University Forum.
An open letter to graduate teaching assistants who were not members was handed out at the table. The letter described the healthcare issue and the benefits of GTAC, said Helen Sheumaker, Western Civilization GTA.
"There are people that don't know about our contract and we are still trying to get a more active membership," Horowitz said.
GTAC has more than 200 members and is trying to recruit as many members as possible.
"It's hard to get people to join because they still get the benefits even if they aren't members." Horowitz said.
"A solid membership is the reason that our contract is not stronger because we don't have
All GTAs benefit from a grievance policy and a yearly pay raise equal to the average percentage salary increase of faculty. Full-time GTAs also benefit from a guaranteed full-tuition waiver and a three-credit-hour fee waiver.
Mark
"If we try to march Strong Hall and don't have many members active and present, the University won't take us seriously."
Horowitz Graduate Teaching Assistants Coalition organizer
the support to fight for a contract," Horowitz said.
Members who aren't always active or don't participate in rallies weaken the coalition's impact.
"If we try to march Strong Hall and don't have many members active and present, the University won't take us seriously," Horowitz said.
GTAC is part of a national movement toward collective representation for graduate student employees. The coalition was formed in April 1995 when GTAS voted for collective bargaining to protect and improve wages and working conditions. GTAC is an affiliate of the Kansas Association of Public Employees and the American Federation of Teachers.
"A strong membership is vitally important to insure that GTAs gain the health care and other benefits we deserve." Horowitz said.
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Opinion
Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor
Dave Morantz, Managing editor
Kristie Blasi, Managing editor
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Monday, Jan. 26, 1998
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Editorial
Senate has lost a valuable asset because of infighting, entropy
Something is rotten in 410 Kansas Union.
Ward Cook, a three-year veteran of Student Senate, resigned on Thursday in the wake of Wednesday's six-hour whine-a-thon and political fracas.
Cook, who was once the most popularly elected senator, simply thinks that he can't make a difference anymore in senate because of pervasive infighting and politicking.
Cook was never a spotlight seeker. He worked on things like parking board and lighting board — not very exciting but which he found rewarding. He was a familiar sight at the Senate office, always willing to put together senator notebooks, answer the phone and generally do the grunt work. No one ever thanked him, and no one ever needed to. He did what he did because he thought he made a difference. And he did.
In a letter explaining his resignation to Student Body President Scott Sullivan, Cook made a telling analogy about people in a boat trying to get back on shore. A strong rain
Losing a hard worker like Ward Cook should make other senators wonder what's wrong
began to waterlog the boat, which began to sink. As the people on the boat continued to fight about how to get back to shore rather than bail out the boat, it sank.
Let there be no room for misinterpretation: Student Senate is the boat and the people on board are student senators.
We printed an excerpt from the Student Senate listserv to exhibit the infantile bickering about the senate web page. The bickering is constant, and you can hear it live if you go to senate. Resist the temptation.
Student senators should be able to work together better than this, where the point is to work out a compromise where everyone wins despite the campaign buttons that still linger on some senators' backpacks.
You often hear the term "agenda"
in reference to political persuasion.
But senators—please—forget your agenda and get out a to-do list. Stop doing things for yourself, your cause and your defunct coalition. Start doing things for the students for a change.
Cook, who always has stayed above political posturing, got sick of what senate has become and quit in protest. Cook blamed himself. Just as Cook's tendency to eschew politics is rare, so is hearing a student senator utter the phrase, 'I blame myself.'
If Cook's resignation doesn't serve as a wake-up call to senate, then nothing will. To those student senators — and not all of you are guilty — who have promulgated the foulness that prompted Ward Cook to quit, shame on you. Your behavior is disgraceful, puerile and petty.
Seeing Cook give up senate is like watching the pope denounce Catholicism. His seat should remain empty as a testament to the infighting and division that is dragging senate down.
Andy Obermueller for the editorial board
Letter
Cook: 'Senate might actually be doing more harm than good'
(From Wendy Cook's letter of resignation to Student Body President Scott Sullivan)
Throughout my tenure in Student Senate, I can honestly say that I have tried to strive for the good of all the students at this University, always keeping in mind what was the right decision to make for them. I can sincerely proclaim that never have any of my decisions been politically motivated. I have always seemed to look for the good
in every issue, and maybe this is one of my faults. No matter the final outcome,
I have always felt like progress had been made and that I had done the best I could for the student body, even if I did not agree with the outcome.
This year, I strongly feel that not only have I been incapable to do the right thing for the sudents, but so has Senate. It is hard for me to accept that Student Senate might actually be doing more harm than good. We have simply been spinning our wheels.
as Liberal Arts and Sciences Senator in hopes that someone may replace me that can begin to make a difference in [the face of] the continuing decline of the end-product that Student Senate delivers to students.
I hope that it would still be possible to remain as a representative of the student body to the appointed boards on which I serve.
With this, I regretfully resign my seat
Ward Cook Mission Hills senior
Kansan staff
Paul Eakins ... Editorial
Andy Obermuelmer ... Editorial
Andrea Albright ... News
Jodie Chester ... News
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"Seduction is a sweet story, and if the listener wants to hear it, then it's no lie." —Garrison Kellor
**Letters:** Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify 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 letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stuaffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermueller (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the staff foil (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Perspective
The college experience is different for everyone
Why are you in college? This is not a rhetorical question. Some people at the University never have thought about it. Some go to school because we
I am not a lawyer. I cannot provide legal advice. If you have any questions about the case, please contact the authorities or the law firm.
about it. Some or us go
have to. Our parents have
pressed us, or we have
been taught that college is
the next step after high
school. Maybe we have
heard somewhere that college is the ticket to making money, and we all want to make lots of money, right?
Every once in a while, this idea of the college experience pops up. What does this mean, and why does it matter?
Nick
Zaller
To some, the college experience entails getting a few grades, having some fun.
opinion@kansan.com
and getting the hell out of Dodge (no pun intended for Dodge City residents). Here is an example: In a class I had last semester, everyone would ask about their grades. At the beginning of the semester, the instructor said the grades would be based on participation, a paper, quizzes and a final. However, we only had two grades—the paper and the final. One of these grades, the paper, was not returned to us until the final day of class. Everyone in the class was freaked out. No one seemed to care that all semester our teacher had engaged us in intellectually stimulating debate. What people really cared about was the letter that was going to be printed on their transcript.
Enter the panacea to letter worshipers. On the last day of class, before he handed back our papers, the professor ripped a piece of paper into 35 pieces, wrote letters on them and put the pieces in a hat. He told us to draw a piece and whatever letter we drew was our final grade. The papers that we had laboriously agonized about and the final we had dreaded taking were both meaningless. Thus, everyone was happy and drew their fate without any hesitation. Obviously, some fared better than others. But think of it — a letter
grade, quite possibly the ever-elusive A, without any work and no payoffs.
It turned out that our professor was pulling our strings, and he managed to yank some students' strings so hard that they fell on their faces when they drew a D.
How many people do you know that would have drawn their college experience from a hat? Perhaps you don't have to look further than a mirror.
How do most of us view the college experience? Perhaps there is no experience. Perhaps many of us are here to complete the application process for our license to make money—our degree. This is an admirable goal in a capitalistic society, but aren't we missing something when we speed through a dark tunnel with nothing more than an illuminated dollar sign to lead us along?
Being a college student means different things. Is it all about going to class? All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. Is it all about socializing? Someone told me the other day that they were intoxicated nearly every minute of every day. Is that the real meaning of carpe diem?
As college students, we all have a tremendous opportunity to open our eyes to new things. Whether it is meeting someone with a different cultural background, playing a sport, participating in the theater, doing research or writing for the paper, we can broaden ourselves both intellectually and socially. And who knows, we may even learn something.
So what is the college experience? I don't know. It's different for each of us. I do know that it is more than classes and beer and that I want more out of it than letters and hangovers.
Albert Camus once said, "Do not wait for the last judgment, it takes place everyday." This is your chance to do whatever you want. Don't wait until the last judgment to reflect whether you should have taken better advantage of opportunities—by then it will be too late.
Zaller is a Tulsa, Okla., senior in Chinese and microbiology.
Feedback
Allen Field House's decision to shortchange children is reprehensible but correctable
What is wrong with our Athletic Department? They make millions of dollars a year, so why can't they keep up their end of the deal with these children?
I have been at the University of Kansas for three years now and have seen many things that have angered me. However, nothing angered me as much as reading about the Athletic Department shorting a group of fifth graders their pay for cleaning up Allen Field House.
Besides the issue of money, what kind of principles are you trying to teach these children?
Allen Field House is a big place, especially for 15 kids to try to clean up.
My four-year-old gets overwhelmed trying to clean up her toys at the end of the day and I never expect her to do as good of a job as an adult could do.
They should be paid the amount that was agreed upon in the first place. These are children, not trained adults.
I would urge all those who donate money to the Atheletic Department to take a second look at what kind of organization they are donating to. What kind of principles are you teaching your children?
Andrea Lewis Denver junior
State employee questions structure of raises, insurance rates and living adjustments
In my 11 years as a classified employee at the University, I have been given about a 2.5 percent pay increase each year, excluding raises due to job promotions, for a grand total of a 27.5 percent increase in 11 years.
In that same 11 years, my group health-insurance rates have gone up between 15 and 20 percent. Using the 15 percent conservative figure for the increase in insurance, my actual
It would appear that in 11 years of employment for the State of Kansas, it has cost me 27 percent of my salary to continue working here. Something is wrong with this picture.
increase for 11 years has dwindled to about 12.5 percent. I have received a total of 4 percent in cost-of-living raises in 11 years, which now adjusts my total raise to 50 percent in 11 years. The actual cost of living has increased at least 7 percent for each of these same 11 years, for a total cost of living adjustment of 77 percent.
New radio show brings leaders together to discuss campus issues, student concerns
Scott Getter classified employee
Bring the Noise is a new KJHK talk show dedicated to voices and action; basically highlight-ing those who *do* something about the problems they perceive. It will feature live guests weekly, callers, and music which is of a political, socially conscious, etc. theme.
Dissention and disagreement is expected, even encouraged, both from those who call in and those who would like to be on the show.
Members of the listening audience who disagree with a statement should call 864-4747, and either comment on the show itself, or leave their number with the show's producer, Rich Ridlen, and I will contact them about a future booking.
Future guests include members of the activist community (Action Alliance, Feminist Union, etc.), and two members of the National Guard who will discuss the life of a soldier/student, and the status of today's military.
Whitnev Black
Whitney Black Lawrence senior
Note: Bring the Noise can be heard Thursdays at 4 p.m. on KJHK, 90.7 FM. You can reach Black, the show's host, at elmo@almo.com.ukans.edu.
Online Opinion
The editorial page recommends the following web sites. You can send your comments about these sites or recommend others to opinion@kansan.com.
Yahoo lists nearly every conceivable political party web site. Find out what you really are.
www.yahoo.com/government/politics/parties
The State of Kansas web site contains daily updates about pending legislation and capitol news, including speeches made by Gov. Bill Graves.
www.ink.org
www.cato.org
The Cato Institute is a public policy institute based on individual liberty, limited government free markets and peace.
www.dsausa.org/dsa/index.html
Democratic Socialists of America can be found at
www.concordcoalition.org
Find out how much you owe on the national debt. The Concord Coalition site was started by Paul Tsongas, a former Democratic presidential candidate, and former Sen. Warren Rudman, R-N.H.
See what's happening on both sides of the aisle. Visit The Republican Party at www.rnc.org. The Democratic Party can be found at
www.democrats.org.
The Environmentally conscious Green Party lists Green links at its clearinghouse web site. The official mission is to create and conserve a rich and diverse environment characterized by a sense of community.
www.greens.org
www.whitehouse.gov
Get inside the White House with intern-like access to read Mr. Clinton's speeches, press releases and schedule.
State and local governance issues are discussed in the virtual pages of Governing Magazine.
www.governing.com
With the anniversary of the Roe vs. Wade, it's worthwhile to take a look at the actual opinion that has caused such a stir. Roe in a nutshell has edited selections from six justices.
http://members.aol.com/abtrb ng/roeins.htm
And as always, we recommend today's sponsor. Catch the Kansan online at www.kansan.com
---
Monday, January 26.1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Med Center cures from a distance
Pam Whitten, director of telemedicine services at the University of Kansas Medical Center, views a co-worker through telemedicine equipment. The Med Center is spearheading the nation's first school-based telemedicine program in four Kansas City, Kan., schools. The system is expected to be in operation by early February. Photo by Lisa Stevens John/KANSAN
Telemedicine allows doctors to see patients via modern house calls
By Lisa Stevens John
jlohn@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
If Johnny complains of an earache at school, a physician at the University of Kansas Medical Center can examine the inside of his ear — from several miles away.
Under a pilot program at four elementary schools in USD 500 in Kansas City, Kan., the Med Center will open the nation's first school-based telemedicine program in February.
"It's very exciting," said Pam Shaw, assistant professor of ambulatory pediatrics at the Med Center.
Shaw said the program began as a way to provide immunizations and health-care access to children in Wyandotte County.
The child sits in front of a personal computer that has a video camera attached to it. Using this telemedicine equipment, the child can see the physician at the Med Center, and the physician can see the child in the school nurse's office.
The nurse uses a stethoscope to transmit the child's heart and breathing sounds to the physician. The physician can view the child's throat as the nurse uses a light with a camera attached to the end. The physician can observe the child's inner ear as the nurse carries out the hands-on exam
ination using
otoscope/camera unit.
"This is an opportunity for us to do something that no one has done before, and it will help the children." Shaw said.
Pam Whitten, director of telemedicine services at the Med Center, has been working on this project for almost a year.
Whitted said when a child complained of illness, the school nurses would decide if physician care was needed. If
so, the parent would be called for consent to have a pediatrician examine the child through the telemedicine system.
When the school day ended, the child already would have been "seen" by the physician and may even have a prescription that had been faxed to the school nurse. Whitten said.
Whiten said the visits would be billed to the child's family or insurance company, just as if the patients had come to the
Med Center. But she noted that no students would be turned away because of a family's inability to pay.
The Med Center pioneered its first telemedicine programs in the rural areas of Kansas in 1991, Whitten said. The Med Center has 25 telemedicine sites in Kansas.
Shaw estimated that close to 50 percent of children in the Wyandotte County school district lacked access to medical care.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Fine Arts
"We are the bad boys of abridgement."
Matt Croke, Reduced Shakespeare Company
Lied Center Broadway and Beyond Series and SUA present
The Reduced Shakespeare Company performing
The Complete History of America [abridged]
Saturday, January 31, 1998, 8:00pm
ALL TICKETS 1/2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box
Office [864-ARTS]; Murphy Hall Box Office
[864-3982]; SUA Box Office [864-3477] or
Ticketmaster [?85]234-4545.
Visit our website
www.ukans.edu/~lied
60 Anniversary
STADIUM ACADEMY
SUA
1998 - 1999
K ENGINEERING
STUDENT
SENATE
The Complete History of America [abridged]
Saturday, January 31, 1998, 8:00pm
ALL TICKETS 1/2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box
Office [864-ARTS]; Murphy Hall Box Office
[864-3982]; SUA Box Office [864-3477] or
Ticketmaster [785]234-4545.
Visit our website
www.ukans.edu/~lied
60th Anniversary
2000 - 1990
K
STUDENT
SENATE
Honormaster (789)654-1949
Visit our website
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50 Anniversary
STANDING FOR AMERICA
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A K RY
STUDENT
IN THE PRESIDENTIAL SENATE
Section A · Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 26, 1998
New customers run for Borders
Grand opening brings music, book signings to shoppers of all ages
Kansan staff writer
By Emily C. Forsyth
Kansan staff writer
Members of the New Dawn Native Dancers paraded through Borders bookstore yesterday in a flash of intricate moves, native chants and bright costumes.
The dancers, ages three to 13, performed during the store's grand opening, which took place Friday through Sunday. Other events included live music, book signings, theater performances and storytelling.
Susan DePrenger, communications relations coordinator, said the store had about 15 special events over the weekend that were well attended. She said the grand opening had drawn many first-time customers.
175
Desiree Hernandez, Lakewood, Colo., junior, shopping at Borders for the first time yesterday.
"I like it a lot," Hernandez said. "They have a good selection, and I was surprised to see that they also had the dancers here. Now that I know that, I'll probably be back more often on the weekends to see what kinds of events they have."
Kevin Dyck, Newton graduate student, also shopped at Borders for the first time yesterday. Dyck said he would return to Borders to buy books that were hard to locate elsewhere.
"I prefer to go to smaller bookstores, because I generally like to support local business," Dyck said. "However, I needed a philosophy book and Borders does provide that service to get books that are harder to get at other places, so you have to appreciate them for that."
DePrenger said the store tried to provide a selection of activities that would interest people from preschoolers to senior citizens.
"What we're trying to do is let the community know that there will be lots of events going on here, dozens of events each month," DePrenger said. "The best way to get the word out is to have all kinds of events in one weekend for the grand opening."
Borders first opened in Lawrence on Dec. 6, 1997, but DePrenger said the official grand opening was moved back so it would not conflict with the holiday season.
Danielle Kirlin, Quincy, Ill., junior, checks out some music at one of Borders' listening stamens. The bookstore held its official grand opening this weekend. Photo by Hally Grashgrong/KANSAN
Alpha Epsilon Pi member dismissed from hazing lawsuit
Senior wasn't there when alleged action happened, he says
By Carl Kaminski
kaminski@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
After months of trying to explain that he was not present during a hazing incident at the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity house last year, Adam Wolinetz had his name dropped from a lawsuit stemming from the incident.
Wolinetz, Columbus Ohio,
senior and Alpha Epsilon Pi
the lawsuit.
filed by former Alpha
Epsilon P
member, had been named as one of five defendants in a lawsuit filed last September against the University of Kansas and Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity
nity's international office is handling the lawsuit, the KU chapter is standing behind all of the members named.
"We hope and we expect that in the future the other four men will be dropped as Adam was," Litt said.
The lawsuit, which asks for more than $50,000 in damages, states that Endick received medical treatment for his injuries. It also states that the incident restricted his movement and forced him to leave the University.
Endick's lawyer, Bonita Yoder, said she could not comment on Endick's injuries without his permission.
"We hope and expect that in the future the other four men will be dropped as Adam was."
Litt said that while the frater
pledge, Adam Endick, had stated that Wolinetz was present during a hazing incident at the fraternity on Oct. 1, 1995 where Endick was allegedly forced to stand on a chair while fraternity members smashed raw eggs in his pants.
Rob Litt
Alpha Epsilon Pi president and Plymouth, Minn., sophomore
The fraternity was placed on a two-year probation by the University. Since then, the fraternity has fulfilled all the terms of its probation said Rob Litt, president of Alpha Epsilon Pi and Plymouth, Minn., sophomore.
Barry H.
Wolinetz,
A d a m
Wolinetz's
father and
lawyer, said he
planned to pursue
legal action against
Endick and
Yoder for naming his son as a participant.
"We told them
"We told them they had made
a mistake, and they ignored us," he said.
Yoder said that Adam Wolinetz's name was withdrawn voluntarily, which did not necessarily mean that he was not there.
"No judicial decision was made," Yoder said.
Yoder also said that names voluntarily withdrawn from lawsuits can be added on again later. Yoder would not comment on the status of the lawsuit and said only that the lawsuit is still pending.
Groups spread environmental word
Kansan staff writer
By Graham K. Johnson
gjohnson@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
A variety of campus groups will offer students new avenues for being active in environmental issues this semester.
Four campus groups—KU Environs, the Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals, the Environmental Studies Student Association and the Environmental Law Society—plan to educate students about caring for the environment.
KU Environs is an activist group that seeks to inform students on environmental issues.
Jerry Griffith
"We're not so much into political advocacy. Our group really tries to inform people about careers in environmental studies."
"Environs is a forum that allows people to develop activist skills," said Andrea Repinsky, student co-coordinator for KU Environns.
Repinsky said that the group was open to anyone free of cost.
Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals adviser
She said KU Environs held many structured events such as weekly vegetarian lunches on Thursdays.
The Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals is another group open to all students and is oriented toward promoting interest and providing information about careers in environmental fields, said Jerry Griffith,
staff adviser for the group.
"We're not so much into political advocacy," Griffith said. "Our group really tries to inform people about careers in environmental studies."
He said that the group usually invited speakers to come and talk to students about environmental careers and issues. This semester, the group plans to hold its first job fair, Griffith said.
The Environmental Law Society is also open to everyone, and the group is geared toward keeping law students informed and involved in environmental issues, said Jenna Wiebel, Environmental Law Society representative.
The group usually presents speakers once a month, and it plans to conduct an educational program with local elementary
kids sometime this semester to teach them about recycling and why it's a good idea, Wiebel said.
"We're going to try to do a little program with kids and do a cleanup around a neighborhood," Wiebel said.
The Environmental Studies Student Association is open exclusively to environmental studies majors. The group focuses on networking and support for its members, but it is involved in other public-awareness efforts, such as recycling.
Todd Simmons, the group's representative, said that the group intended to work closely with other groups to plan activities, specifically for Earth Day.
"We work well with Environs." Simmons said. "We plan on talking with them on just about everything we're going to do this semester."
GROUP EVENTS
KU Environics - Weekly vegetarian lunch, Thursdays 11 a.m.
1.p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building. Weekly Tuesday meetings at Kansas Union, 6 p.m. Call 864-7325 for more information.
- Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals - Charles Benjamin, KU adjunct professor and environmental lobbyist will speak on Jan. 27 from 7:8:30 p.m. in the English Room of the Kansas Union. Call Clark Langmeier, 841-2290, for more information.
Environmental Law Society - Social gathering at Johnny's Tavern, Feb. 3, 5 p.m. Contact Jenna Wiebel, 838-1659, or the Law School for more information.
Environmental Studies Student Association - first meeting of the semester, Kansas Union, Jan. 26, 8 p.m. Contact Todd Simmons, 842-2059, for more information.
Playin' with fire
1.
Steven Davis, Olathe senior, adjusts the air flow on his homemade kiln behind the Art and Design Building. Davis was testing his kiln Friday afternoon to see how well it would melt metal. Photo by Dan Elvasky/KANSAN.
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Contact: Dept. of Psychology & Research & Education 864-3941 The University of Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, color, sex, disability, and as covered by law veteran status. In addition University policies prohibit discrimination on the basis of religion, national origin, ancestry, age, sexual orientation, marital status and parental status.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Basketball
Inside Sports today
The Denver Broncos were crowned Super Bowl XXXII champions yesterday in San Diego after beating the Green Bay Packers 31-24. See page 3B SEE PAGE 3B
Saturday's game - Kansas vs. Texas Tech
KU
KANSAS
22-3, 6-1
RANKED NO.3
88
F
TEXAS TECH 8-8,2-4 UNRANKED 49
SECTION B, PAGE 1
WWW.JHAWKBBALL.COM
MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1998
56
Road to a record
FARMING ESTATE
IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
FLORIDA
Dec. 7, 1994
Jerod Haase and the 'Hawks top the Gators 69-63 in win No. 5 of the streak.
In the books
IOWA ST.
Feb. 4, 1995
The Cyclones later beat the 'Hawks in the Big Eight Tournament finals.
10
COLORADO Feb.15,1997
56 CONSECUTIVE WINS
Calvin Rayford helps the 'Hawks top the Tigers 87-65.
Jacque Vaughn and the Jayhawks hurt the Buffaloes, 114-74.
MISSOURI
Feb. 26, 1996
61 4.924
WESTERN KENTUCKY
Nov. 19, 1997
Paul Pierce leads the
'Hawks to victory in
the Pre-season NIT.
1984
The old record
1984
1. Oklahoma St. 91-70
2. Oklahoma St. 75-58
3. Detroit 86-64
4. South Dakota St. 85-72
5. Abilene Christian 84-72
6. South Carolina St. 81-54
7. Houston 87-75
1985
8. Texas Southern 78-74
9. Western Carolina 79-62
10. Iowa St. 76-72
11. Missouri 70-68
12. Colorado 88-69
13. Oklahoma St. 84-72
14. Memphis St. 75-71
15. Kansas St. 75-64
16. Oklahoma 82-76
17. Nebraska 70-65
18. Nebraska 74-69
19. SIU-Edwardsville 86-71
20. Western Carolina 101-79
21. South Alabama 72-48
22. Kentucky 83-66
23. Arkansas 89-78
24. George Washington 94-71
1986
25. Southern Methodist St. 72-56
26. Oklahoma St. 95-72
27. Oklahoma 98-92
28. Louisville 71-69
29. Colorado 85-69
30. Missouri 100-66
31. Nebraska 79-61
32. Kansas St. 84-69
33. Iowa St. 90-70
34. Tennessee-Martin 88-69
35. Southern 87-69
36. Washington 82-68
37. Colorado 59-56
38. Texas Tech 82-52
39. The Citadel 74-71
1985
1987
40. Temple 67-64
41. Miami 82-47
42. Missouri 71-70
43. Nebraska 86-65
44. Iowa St. 72-48
45. Oklahoma St. 88-63
46. Notre Dame 70-60
47. Oklahoma 86-84
48. Kansas St. 84-67
49. Pomona-Pitzer 94-38
50. St. John's 63-54
51. Appalachian St. 73-62
52. Rider 110-72
1988
53. American 90-69
54. Missouri 78-74
55. Hampton 95-69
Lost—Kansas St. 61-72
kaet LaFrenz holds the ball in celebration of Kansas' 56th consecutive home win Saturday. The win over Texas Tech broke the school record for consecutive home wins. Photo by Dan Elasawy/KANSAN
The new record
1994
1995
1. Colorado 106-62
2. Iowa St. 97-79
3. San Diego 83-65
4. Coppin St. 91-69
5. Florida 69-63
6. Santa Clara 80-75
7. Rice 71-57
8. Fort Hays St. 93-55
9. East Tennessee St. 106-73
10. Kansas St. 78-74
11. Nebraska 84-67
12. Colorado 99-77
13. Iowa St. 91-71
14. Oklahoma 93-76
15. Missouri 88-69
16. Oklahoma St. 78-62
17. UCLA 85-70
18. Pittsburg St. 103-48
1996
1997
19.50
19. Cornell 100-46
20. East Tennessee St. 108-73
21. Southern Methodist 83-61
22. St. Peter's 85-71
23. Oklahoma 72-66
24. Oklahoma St. 84-66
25. Kansas St. 72-62
26. Iowa St. 89-70
27. Colorado 85-70
28. Nebraska 81-71
29. Missouri 87-65
30. San Diego 79-72
31. George Washington 85-56
32. N.C.-Asheville 105-73
33. North Carolina St. 84-56
34. Washburn 90-65
35. Brown 107-49
36. Texas 86-61
37. Niagara 134-73
38. Iowa St 80-67
39. Texas A&M 89-60
40. Nebraska 82-77
41. Oklahoma St. 104-72
42. Colorado 114-74
43. Missouri 79-67
44. Kansas St. 78-58
45. Santa Clara 99-73
46. Rice 88-61
47. Western Kentucky 75-62
48. UNLV 92-68
49. Emporia St. 102-50
50. Massachusetts 73-71
51. Middle Tennessee St. 103-68
52. Pepperdine 96-83
1998
53. Nebraska 96-76
54. Colorado 111-62
55. Kansas St. 69-62
56. Texas Tech 88-49
LaFrentz returns, leads team to record win
Kansas surpasses 55-home-game winning streak
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallogher@kansan.com
Kansas sportwriter
The No. 3 Jayhawks defeated Texas Tech 84-9 Saturday afternoon, breaking the record for the most consecutive homecourt victories with 56. The old mark had been 55, held by Kansas teams in 1984-88.
Take a bow, Kansas. You just made history.
Coach Roy Williams said of all the records, he never thought this one would be approached when he first came to Kansas in 1989.
"I remember 10 years ago, looking through the record books, I thought that record was one that wouldn't be touched." Williams said. "
Bob Frederick, athletics director, gave the game ball to the team's seniors, forward RaeFlaFrentz and
guards Billy Thomas and C.B. McGrath, after the game. LaFrentz held the ball high, and then the Jayhaws lined up and bowed to each of the four sides of Allen Field House.
"It was our way of thanking the fans." Williams said. "The field house is a tremendous place to play, and the fans are a large part of it. It's not the building, the seats, the banners or the team that makes the field house what it is. It's the fans. And we just wanted to say, 'Thank you.'"
Williams said he and the team wanted to show how much they appreciated the fans' support during the streak.
Forward Raef LaFrentz said that he hoped to end his career at Kansas without a loss at the field house.
The last loss for Kansas at the field house was to Missouri on Feb. 20, 1994.
"The record was something that, when I got here, I didn't really understand," LaFrentz said. "Only last year did I realize that we haven't lost here, and I don't want to lose here. And now that we got the record, hopefully we will stay on top and continue the streak."
"It's not the building, the seats, the banners or the team that makes the field house what it is. It's the fans. And we just wanted to say, 'Thank you."
Roy Williams Kansas men's basketball coach
Nine games off don't leave rust on All-American
tgallagher@kansan.com
By Tommy Gallagher
Kansan sportswriter
Pity Texas Tech, which lost 88-49 as Kansas set a new homecourt winning streak at 56 consecutive games.
Forwards Reaf LaFrentz and T.J. Pugh returned to the starting lineup Saturday, as No. 3 Kansas played with a complete roster for the first time this season
LaFrentz, who had missed nine games with a stress fracture, had not played since Dec. 23, 1997, said he was eager to play on he prove a point.
"I felt this was a big game for me," LaFrentz said. "I felt that I needed to come out and play well to try and make a statement that I'm here, I'm strong and I'll be able to go 40 minutes."
LaFrentz had 31 points in a 13-for-18
shooting performance, including the Jayhawks' only two three-point goals. He added 15 rebounds and three steals desite playing just 24 minutes.
Pugh was 4-for-5 from the floor and finished with 10 points and six rebounds. He had missed one month before playing against Texas A&M on Jan. 14, but this was his first start since breaking a bone in his foot Dec. 13.
Coach Roy Williams said after the game that Pugh was the most consistent defensive player that he has ever coached at Kansas.
"He's not going to score 30 points every night, but T.J. allows Raef and Paul to have more freedom on offense," Williams said. "He does things that might not show in the box score, but do on the scoreboard when the game is over."
The Jayhawks stormed to an early 16-0 lead. The Red Raiders missed their first 10 shots and were held scoreless until more than seven minutes had elapsed.
Texas Tech pulled to within 20-7,but
See LAFRENTZ on page 4B
2B
At the game
Monday January 26,1998
KU CARR 11
Above: Forward Paul Pierce grabs one of his eight rebounds over Texas Tech guard Cory Carr. Pierce was 10 of 17 from the field and had 20 points as Kansas defeated the Red Raiders 88-49.Photo by Dan Elavsky/KANSAN
Above right Nick Bradford drives hard to the basket against a Texas Tech defender. Bradford had six points and two blocks against the Red Raiders, who have never defeated Kansas. Photo by Dan Elvsky/KANSAN
KU vs. T
KANSAS
21
KANSAS
22
TECH
15
XAS TECH
3
Above Forward T.J. Pugh plays defense while towering over Texas Tech's 5-foot-11-inch guard Rayford Young. The Jayhawks kept Texas Tech scoreless for the first seven minutes of the game and held the Red Raiders to 14 points during the first half. Photo by Dan Elvasky/KANSAN
Kansan Classifieds Get the Results You want
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Find Out what YOU can do...
THE CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENT CARE
UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII LANCASTER CAUSE
Monday, January 26 6:30
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The $C_{center}$ for $C_{community}$ $O_{outreach}$ Programs
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Monday, January 26,1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 3
Broncos, Elway rope rings after three failed attempts
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — The old dude finally did it.
Sure, he had help.
John Elway and the Denver Broncos won a Super Bowl by beating the Green Bay Packers 31-24 Sunday in one of the most exciting games ever. It gave the 37-year-old Elway his first win in four tries and the AFC its first in 14.
He got it from MVP Terrell Davis, who gained 157 yards in 30 carries and scored on three 1-yard runs, including the winner with 145 left in the game.
And he got it from the defending-champion Packers, who committed three critical penalties late in the game. They included a holding call and a false start on rookie left tackle Ross Verba and a face mask on Darius Holland that gave the Broncos 15 key yards on their game-winning 49-yard drive.
Still, the game wasn't decided until John Mobley knocked down Brett Favre's pass from the Denver 31 yard line with 28 seconds left.
Elway, the oldest quarterback to win a Super Bowl, did a few things right, too.
He scrambled 8 yards to set up a touchdown and scored on a 1 yard run — a lot like the young Elway. He finished 12-of-22 for 122 yards and threw one end zone interception.
If this wasn't the best Super Bowl
BENNY M. GREENS
Elway: The Broncos were victorious in Super Bowl.
ever, it was close to it,
despite a lot of
shoppiness - 15
penalties and
five turnovers
by the two
teams. Elway's
mistake came
at the Green
Bay 22 yard line
when the Broncos
had a chance to go
ahead by more
than a touchdown late in the third quarter.
But otherwise, it was two heavyweights throw for punch for punk — Favre throw for three TDs, two to Antonio Freeman. Terrell Davis ran for three TDs for the Broncos.
Each team scored a touchdown on its first possession, the first time that's ever happened in a Super Bowl.
Then Denver jumped to a 17-7 lead before at 17-play, 95-yard drive by the Packers, the second longest in Super Bowl history. That cut it to 17-14 at halftime, and Green Bay seemed to have momentum.
But Elway engineered a 92 yard drive of his own to give the Broncos a 24-17 lead. Then, after Elway threw the interception, the Packers went 85 yards in just four plays to tie it.
The win meant vindication for the AFC, which hadn't won since the
Raiders, then in Los Angeles, beat Washington 38-9 in 1984, Elway's first season.
And finally, it was the first win for the quarterback class of 1983 that included Elway, Jim Kelly and Dan Marino.
"For all the Broncos fans who never had this feeling, we finally got it done." Elwav said.
"You wonder if you're going to win or
if you're going to run out of years."
Terrell Davis, who missed most of the second quarter with a migraine headache, fumbled on his first carry of the second half, and Brian Williams recovered at the Denver 26.
That led to Ryan Longwell's 27-yard field goal that tied it at 17. An offsides penalty on a successful 39-yard kick had given the Packers a second chance at a TD, but they couldn't take advantage.
Late in the third quarter, the Broncos drove 92 yards on 13 plays for a touchdown on Davis' 1-yard run.
Then came a bizarre sequence.
Freeman fumbled the kickoff, and Denver's Tim McKeyer recovered at the Green Bay 22. But on the next play, Elway's pass into the end zone was intercepted by Eugene Robinson and returned to his own 15.
The Packers then tied it two minutes later on Favre's 13-yard pass to Freeman at the end of another long drive — 85 yards on four plays, helped by a 25-yard pass interference call on Gordon.
Credit Within Reach
Available
Earn University of Kansas college credit through independent Study
KU
Independent Study
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ENGL362c Technical Writing (3)
GEOL 105c. History of the Earth (3) E-mail H.A.52K
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Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, just north of the Kansas Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for information.
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1
Section B · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 26, 1998
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1998 SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA CAMP Buckskin has various positions available to work with youth who have acadia degrees (BAC or higher LD). A unique program with opportunity to earn school credit. Salary + room & board: Camp is located on a lake in the Superior National Forest near Ely and the BWCWA. Contact: Time buckskin @apckesstar.net.
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON
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LaFrentz scores 31 in return
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansan sportwriter
WE DELIVER!!! FROM 11AM TO 3AM!
Continued from page 1A
1447 West 23rd St.
doors west of Copy Co.
838-3737
Pugh was 4-for-5 from the floor and finished with 10 points and six rebounds. He had missed one month before playing against Texas A&M on Jan. 14, but this was his first start since breaking a bone in his foot Dec. 13.
LaFrentz had 31 points in a 13-for-18 shooting performance, including the Jayhawks' only two three-point goals. He added 15 rebounds and three steals despite playing just 24 minutes.
THE ORIGINAL
JIMMY JOHN'S
UNIT TWO
WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET
Forwards Raef LaFrentz and T.J. Pugh returned to the startling lineup Saturday, as No. 3 Kansas played with a complete roster for the first time this season.
"He's not going to score 30 points every night, but T.J. allows Raef and Paul to have more freedom on offense," Williams said. "He does things that might not show in the box score, but do on the scoreboard when the game is over."
Coach Roy Williams said after the game that Pugh was the most consistent defensive player that he has ever coached at Kansas.
Store Hours
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11am-3am Sun.
"I felt this was a big game for me," LaFrentz said. "I felt that I needed to come out and play well to try and make a statement that I'm here, I'm strong and I'll be able to go 40 minutes."
Pity Texas Tech, which lost 88-49 as Kansas set a new homecourt winning streak at 56 consecutive games.
LaFrentz, who had missed nine games with a stress fracture, had not played since Dec. 23, 1997, said he was eager to play so he could prove a point.
The Jayhawks stormed to an early 16-0 lead. The Red Raiders missed their first 10 shots and were held scoreless until more than seven minutes had elapsed.
Texas Tech pulled to within 20-7, but Kansas countered with a 21-0 run that included 13 combined points from LaFrentz and forward Paul Pierce. The Jayhawks went into halftime with a 44-14 lead. Kansas cruised to victory in the second half.
To make room for LaFrentz and Pugh in the starting lineup, center Eric Chenowith and forward Lester Earl returned to the bench. Each player had averaged close to a double-double while LaFrentz and Pugh were sidelined.
11am-2am Sun.
"Eric and Lester did a great job while I was out," LaFrentz said. "Their roles
SAVE TIME & MONEY ON PHOTO & DEVELOPING NEEDS
36 40
EKO
Jayhawks rally, but can't erase early Tech lead
By Kevin C. Wilson
Kansas sportswriter
Down 40-18 early in the second half, the Jayhawks rallied to an 18-4 run that reduced Texas Tech's lead to eight points. Suzi Raymont, who was held scoreless in the first half, scored seven points in 40 seconds during the Jayhawks' run.
For the first 20 minutes, the Kansas women's basketball team forgot how good it really was.
Washington: Her women's team lost to Texas Tech.
Kansas fell behind early 19-4 and trailed by as many as 24 points late in the first half, but a second-half surge by the Jayhawks was not enough to overcome No. 5 Texas Tech. 72-56.
Kansas' defensive effort in the second half held the Lady Raiders (13-3, 6-1 Big 12) to 33 percent shooting after they had hit 48 percent in the first half.
P. BARRISON
The Jayhawks' offense also improved during the second half. Kansas hit 50 percent of its field goals, 17-of-34 shots. The Jayhawks outscored Texas Tech in the second half 38-34.
12 Conference) missed 14 of its first 17 shots and didn't make consecutive baskets until reserve guard Shandy Robbins hit her second-straight basket with 1:33 left in the first half.
36 40
DATA
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No. 5 TEXAS TECH 72, KANSAS 56
I think that was the key, our start, and then we just hung in there in the second half," said Texas Tech coach Marsha Sharp.
WOMEN'S BOXSCORE
Halftime — Texas Tech 38,
Kansas 18, Three-point
goals — Kansas 2-10 (Raymant
2-6, Jackson 0-2, Robbins 0-
2), Texas Tech 6-13 (Hanebutt
4-4, Lake 1-2, Schmucker 1-4,
O'Neal 1-1, Thompson 0-2).
Fouled out—None.
Rebounds — Kansas 35 (Pride
10), Texas Tech 39 (Thompson
12). Assists — Kansas 12
(Jackson 6), Texas Tech 18
(Schmucker 6). Total fouls—
Kansas 19, Texas Tech 9. A —
8,174.
Kansas (12-4, 4-3 Big
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KANSAS (12-4, 4-3)
Pride 5-14-1-11, Johnson 2-6-
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0-08, Scott 0-00-0-0, Robbins 3-5-1-17, White 5-16-0-10.
Totals 26-59 2-5-56.
Your academic developing & film source at the top of Naismith Hill 1420 Crescent Road·843-3826
TEXAS TECH (13-3, 6-1)
Hanebutt 5-6 1-215, Thompson 6-20 2-5 14, Brazil 2-11 7-10 11, Schmucker 3-7 0-07, Lake 6-8 4-6 17, O'Neal 1-3 24, Gibbs 0-2 0-0, Dickerson 1-2 2-4, Totals 24-58 18-29 72
ayhawk Bookstore
Texas Tech missed nine of 18 free throws down the stretch, but the Lady Raiders scored the last six points of the game to squelch any chance of a Kansas comeback victory.
"Nobody expected us to win. We hurt ourselves," said Kansas coach Marian Washington. "We found that we can play with them, but we have to play for 40 minutes instead of 20."
Raymant led the Jayhawks with 14 points, and forward Lynn Pride recorded a double-double with 11 points and 10 rebounds. The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
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Students Tutoring for Literacy would like to welcome you to our training sessions:
Thursday, January 29 6:30 p.m. The International Room
Tuesday, February 3 6:30 p.m. The Oread Room
THE LIGHT OF CURRENCY JOURNAL
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1
Monday, January 26.1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 5
120 - Announcements
*Cash for College $ Grants & scholarships avail*
*Great opportunities! 900-580-3647*
*900-580-3648*
Camp Takajo for boys, on Long Lake, Napole. Mail noted for picturesQLocation, exceptional facilities, and outstanding programs. June 22- August 23. Over 100 counselor positions in tennis, baseball, golf, soccer, basketball, hockey, roller hooper, swimming sailing, canoeing, waterskating, scuba archery, rifle; weight training, journalism, photography, video, woodworking, photography, study, radio & electronics, dramatics, piano accompanist, music instrumentalist/band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater kayaking, water skiing, general w/youngest kids, secretarial, kitchen staff. Call Mike Sherbun at 1-800-259-8252
125 - Travel
---
SPRING BREAK TIPS to Mexico, Jamaica, and Florida. Ft. $39 & $139 Call Jason at 840-9147
Spring Break '98 South Padre Island.
www.pirentals.com 1-800-292-7520
***Spring Break '88 Go Getting!** Cancun,
Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida. Group discounts
& Drink Party Displays! Sell $ 6 & go free! Book
a room at www.drinksandparties.com/225-793-1289.
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SPRING BREAK
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---
I
130 - Entertainment
200s Employment
Men and Women
Monday thru Saturday 3-8pm free pool at the Botten
Lodge and 2-4pm the Bottleneck at the New
725 New Hampshire. 841-LIV
---
205 - Help Wanted
---
Omieda Factory Store-Now filling several Positions. MWF Late Morning or Afternoons. No nights or weekends. Set your own hours. Flexible to schedule. Apply Downtown Outlet Mall #319
Assistant wanted MWF 8-1 for busy child care.
Experience preferred. Please call 885-0678
Brady Chiropractic Assistant Part time help
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PF NEW
Apt./Twn. 749-1288 inquire at 230 Wakaraus Dr.,
1-5.
205 - Help Wanted
205 - Help Wanted
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disabled woman stay active & involved. Easy routine. Safe environment.
Part time clerical help. Accounting office. hrs.8-5.
Split shifts possible. Some saturdays. 913-842
PART-TIME EVENINGS
Telephone suerview $£50 per call in association
Telephonemonework $£35 per call in contract
Taiwan telephone $£19 per call in contract
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB Experience Wait
at 10am in Cromsgate or call 842-6940. BOE
at 10am in Cromsgate or call 842-6940. BOE
BAMBINO'S 1801. Mast, across from Dillon's
hosthouse. Apply in person or call Andy at
hhost.com.
Earn Extra Cash. . . gain experience in the music industry. Get free CDs. Become a Fresh Treesrapper
Waits needed day and evening shifts. Apply in person at Scrub a Brass Apple, 3300 W. 15th.
Kennel help needed. Must be reliable & hard-working. Parkway Animal Hospital, 4340 Clinton Parkway
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
up with 179 Mass. upsalts; profit share
applied at 179 Mass. upsalts.
Mother and daughter carrying shopping bags
Part time delivery driver. Some heavy lifting
Apply in person at Lawrence Printing
Services, 518-723-6000.
Raintree Montessori School is interviewing for late afternoon positions (3:15-5:30 M-F) and substitute positions, 68.7 per hour. Call 843-6800.
Silverhawk security 1 full time (3 pm-11 pm) and 1 part-time (varied hered). position security officer
SUB OR LUNCH AIDE
Lunch help 11:30:10:0, 5-day or TR; subs as needed. Sunshine Acres 842-2233
Apt. Leasing Position. Strong sales skills required. Compensation. 1 BR Apt. 20-25 hrs. Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000 Clinton Pkwy.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for Safe Ride drivers. Must be 21 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 pm.
Brookcreek Learning Center hiring PT teaching assistance A.M. and P M hours. Valuable experience in an early intervention program. Apply at 200 Mt. Hope Court. 865-0029
CLASSROOM ASSISTANT NEEDED HOURS
8:30 OR 9:30 AM TO 12:30 PM year old classroom.
Contact Hilltop Child Development Center 1314
Jayhawk Bd. 864-4904. EOE
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wkdies. Need experience, ref., own transportation. May extend into summer & fall. Call Jody or John B42-3381.
Looking for a job? Tutoring positions available Tuesday & Wednesday 9:11:30am. Tutor Lawrence High School students. Call Dr. Todd Martin at 846-9822.
Male personal care attendants needed to work with a young man with head injury in Lawrence. Starting pay is $7.50. If interested, please call Michelle at 913-341-8867 ext 400.
Collection Ast. making contact calls. PT/flexible hours. 7.hour./81.841-9513 ext.2300 or in person. Microtech Computers 4921 Legends Drive.
Hard working, energetic persons to teach behavioral program to 7 year old with Autism. Will provide training MWF 1:30-5:30pm or Sat 8:30am, Sun 1:50am 832-158, evenings.
Hard working, energetic persons to teach
Expansion 98 # Nnl.械 co.-immediate PT/FT
in开来 in Lawrence/JOCO & KC.Entry level
Up to 110.45
No exper. nec. cond. call. Appl. v131-838-9675 10-5
Up to 110.45
COMPUTER SERVICE TECH/PHONE SUPPORT TECH in shop on sight PT. Must be able to carry equipment personally and accurately. 7-9$/hr. In apply in person. Microtech Computers. 4921 Llegends Dr. 841-913-6510. 3200 EOE
Jayhawk smiles needed! The Kansas University Endowment Association is hiring students for 30-40 part-time positions calling alumni to raise funds for a new student life, a great working environment, and a bonus program. Must be positive, enthusiastic, and have a college degree (250 or more information or to leave a voice mail).
The Division of Continuing Education Publication Services is looking for a Student Mail Assistant to work in their Mail Center/Birdery located at an office on Cedar Ave. Students must be a currently enrolled student, and be able to work 15-20 hr m-F M-Lures are flexible. Call 841-1778 for more information. Continuing education classes
$$**Earn Cash**$$$$
The Kansas and Burge Union
Catering Company
$6.00/year
February 1, 1998
CNA/CHIHA Our busy not for profit health health agency is recruiting care, team oriented CNA's/SCHIA's to work in our Private Home Care Aide Program. Day and Evening hours are available. Must have reliable transportation. Excellent benefits and competitive wages. Apply at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, 386 Eldon Road, Lower Level or call 641-4636 for PAEEO.
Will pay in cash day following employment. Must be 18 years old or longer, up to 20 pounds (allowing dress)
Do you love KU? Love to talk on the phone? If you are involved on campus and want to share your enthusiasm with potential KU students, then a position as an Admissions Telecounselor may be for you. We are looking for students who possess strong communication skills; have attended KU for at least two years; have completed nursing per week; Sunday-Thursday. Call Robert at 864-369 or arrange an interview ASAP.
205 - Help Wanted
Bathroom
Tired of flipping burgers? bpi BUILDING SERVICES
We Employ Students!
Mon/Wed/Fri or Tues/Thurs day schedules also available.
* We provide on job transportation once you get
acquainted with the company.
- Part Time Evening (Sun-Thurs 2 QR 3 hrs nightly)
* Part Time Days (Mon-Fri 8am-12am OR 1pm-5pm)
Call 42-6264 or apply in person at 939 Iowa.
TIME TO LEARN
205 - Help Wanted
Mgmt. Co. leasing agent. PT during school, FT this summer previous experience a plus. Must have reliable transportation. Send resume w/ 3 letters of recommendation to Lawrence KS 60441 or stop by W88. 044, EOE
SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Poco Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in fantastic camp setting. Counselors, WSPs, PA's, staff and volunteers. SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to "the finest summer you'll ever have." On campus interviews Wed, Feb. 4th at Kansas Union Ballroom 809-623-938. staff@camptowanda.com
Raise all the money your student
group needs by sponsoring a
VISA Fundraiser on your campus.
No investment & very little time
needed. There is no obsolete, no
need to spend any money today.
Call 1-800-743-9295 www.visa.org
PROFESSIONAL JANITORIAL SERVICES
inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PC skills a must. $100 sign-on bonus after working 30 continuously. Complete training and raises based on your performance. Flex schedules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at: info@microsoft.com.
Growing #1 Residential Home Improvement Co. seeks motivated, dependable people to take
KanTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this
ad with you to qualify for bonus.
EARLY CHILDHOOD AUTISM PROGRAM CLO is seeking part-time employees to teach children with autism in the Lawrence area. ECAP teachers help autistic children to communicate, establish and maintain meaningful social relationships, attend to their own personal care and education, and develop skills are part-time-afterfections, evenings, and/or weekends. If you have coursework in psychology, social work, education, or related experience, apply at CLO, 2113 Delaware, Lawrence, FOE.
lining services
* start at 5/50-hr.
* Flexible Schedules
* New Friends
* Convenient Locations
* Call or stop by any
DHS Dining Center:
GSP * 864-3120
Hashing * 864-1014
Hashing * 864-1097
Oilwerth * 864-4087
Cheley Colorado Camps in the Rocky Mountains near Estes Park, Colorado, is hiring caring and enthusiastic individuals as Director, Cook, Kitchen Assistants, Drivers, Office Personnel, RNs, Wranglers, and Counselors with skills in horseback riding, mountain biking, climbing, skiing, skiing lessons, song-leading, archery or rifley. Room/board, salary, travel allowance. Must be at least a Sophomore and able to work June 8-18 September. On-campus interview. For information, please contact Cheley colorado.com; or visit our Web Site www.chley.com.
We'll be at the Summer Job Party on Friday. Weekdays:
If you have any questions or you would like to talk to you on
Monday, please call 817-520-3633.
633 Friendly Pines Road • Prescott, AZ 86363
Call (512) 445-2189 or email: fcmag@prescott.com
Student Housing
Graduate Student Research Assistant needed Dept. Human Development, KU, up to 2028/rwk Saturday plus weekdays late afternoon/eve. Conduct visits & phone calls with families & children in the department, observations, interviews. Must have current enrollment in KU graduate program; reliable transportation; experience with family and young children; prefer degree in social science or psychology; call 0528 for full job description. Send resume, KU transcript, application letter, & names addresses & phone numbers for three references to Anabella Puhl, Univ. of Kansas, HADSF, 409-613-0878, email: puhl@ku.edu; phone received by 2/0/98. EO/AA employer, minor applications espece usple.
Great Permanent Job Opportunity
Laboratory Residency
TELEMARKETERS!
Part-Time Laboratory Technician Position At Local Manufacturer for QA Lab. This position requires Laboratory Experience in Chemistry of Biology (May be Classroom Experience) Requires a minimum commitment. Great Pay, $10,000 per work Work Flexible Hours Monday-Friday Part-Time, 20 hours per week Evenings, 6:10 pm or Daytime hours, 8:00 am If interested, Please call: ADECOCO 102 Wb Street Lawrence, NS 60044 842-1513
12:00-4:00 p.m. Monday-Friday
4:30-8:30 p.m. Monday-Friday
10:00-2:00 p.m. Saturdays
FRIENDLY PINES CAMP
Resident Camp for Boys and Girls Age 6+
Resident Includes Boots Hating Rack, Molly/Pen Drain Pans
and Tote Bag
- EARN UP TO $12/HR WITH BONUSES
* $10 SIGN ON BONUS (PAID AT 60 DAYS)
* ATTENDANCE BONUS
AN ARIZONA TRADITION FOR 58 YEARS!
*CASUAL DRESS, UPBEAT ENVIRONMENT
*TWOP PART TIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE!
WE NEED A FEW TOP COUNSECRS!
*Saturday hours included on both shifts.
Call Lori @ 843-9094
Girl Scouts®
Live and work in the mountains S.W. of Denver with girls ages 9-17. Teach them the basics of horseback riding and supervise trail rides.
Summer Camp Positions are available June-August, 1998
Horseback Riding Staff needed
Must be able to saddle, bridle, ride well and work with children.
Call (303) 778-8774, ext 247 for an application and a job description.
DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AFFAIRS
Women of color, formerly battered women,
lesbian, bisexual, and disabled are encouraged to apply. For an application contact WTCS.
For an email address go to O. Box 633, Lawrence, KS 60044.
Returned applications must be postmarked by February 2.
205 - Help Wanted
By donating your life saving plasma!
EARN CASH
up to$50 This Week $360 This Month
Behind Laird
Noller Ford
749-5750
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
816 W.24th
Hours:
M-F 9 a.m.-
6:30 p.m.
(Nabi
225 - Professional Services
AP Specialist over 2 yrs, working experience in bookkeeping, GL, AP, taxes. Apply in person / resume at 4921 Quail Crest Pl, or call 841-9513 ext. 3200.
SPEEDING D? DU! SUSPENDED DL? Call
Serving KS/MO; Call MK/900-2922 Toll Free
Serving KS/MO; Call MK/900-2922 Toll Free
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally K. Gelsey
16 East 13th 842-5116
Financial Consultant
X
305 - For Sale
300s Merchandise
---
39
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases. Everything But Ice. 936 Mass.
For Sale. 1 Ericsson AH630 cellular phone. Calligor at 864-8224 or (913) 515-0777.
tool Table For Sale.
$250 x 4" includes sticks, balls, chalk, and dust brush.
Plymouth Church Thrift Shop
Historic District
842-1408
945 Veomont
Tuesdays 9-4
Thursdays 9-12-30
Saturdays 9-12-30
325 - Stereo Equipment
340 - Auto Sales
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your home audio
environment. Old (785) 233-9639
- -
1992 Mada mx3, $8,000 mi manual v/1/m
flip-top rosette in clear; bank $8,000
flip-top rosette in clear; bank $8,000
+
9 Mustang LX Convertible, 76 K, auto, tinied window
wheel, AC & heat, custom wheel
wheels, B41-845, B41-845
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
BIRD'S NEST
1 Bedroom Sublease $370 a month. Water, trash,
cable paid. No pets. nets 864-3924
3 bdmr, 2 bath on bus route. W/D, brand new
appliance $775/mo. ASAP! AISl 133-3932
Nice spacious 2 bdmpt. located at 18th & Ohio (Chamberlin C) walk to KU. $450/mo. 1/2 mo. free, available now. Call 814-1986 for details.
1 BID Downstairs Sublease (B1D 1/2 Maa). Central Security Door #4500. Call 749 3653 for appointment. Security doors #4500. Call 749 3653 for appointment.
405 - Apartments for Rent
Furnished Room Available Now: Very private
room close to KU W/D,
cable, C/A, $221.60 /mi²
2 bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a.s.a.p.
call 748-7961
2 BR special rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt. located close to campus, on bus route. $330 include basic cable. Call Now. University Terrace 841-6783
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
1 Rm w/ bath in cooperative living arrangement
5 other students / $236/mo including utilities,
Cash, and other fees.
N. of Kansas Union in EMC Center: Applications
available interview required-telephone 843-4853
Unfurnished Room
Hey! Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the apt. of your choice this fall? We have some of the biggest apts. in town for $49,000 to $79,000. Call # 642-1455. Park 25 Apartments, 2401 W. 25th
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt. located close to campus. $305 includes cable, secure and ample parking on the bus route, 8th & 9th floor. Call 691-8839 during office hours Mon-Fri.
GREAT LOCATION!!!
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE Coed student housing alternative to private landrids. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by 1406 Tennessee st. 841-0484
GREAT LOCATION!!!!
2 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE JAN. 1
1st Month Free! $360/mo. + utilities
LOCATED ON 1345 VERMONT # CALL 841-9115
Looking for a place to rent? FREE RENT REFERRAL!
13$^{1/2}$ E, 8$^{th}$ St., Lawrence
841-5454
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
Leanna Mar Townhomes
4 Bedroom/3 Bath
**Early Sign Up Special**
For Fall 1998
($40 off per month)
Washers/Dryer Trash Compactor
Dishwashers Gas Pipelaine
Machines Garage Closets
Back Patio Ceiling Fans
Walk-in Closets Covered Parking
Or More Info: (785) 841-784501 Wimbledon Dr.
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
* Studios
* Duplexes
* Air Conditioning
Cedarwood Apartments
- Close to shopping & restaurants
* 1 block from KU Bus route
* REASONABLE PRICES!
Ask about our specials 843-1116
Call Karin Now!
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
1 & 2 Bedrooms
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
M
mastercraft management
designed with you in mind.
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Orchard Corners
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Regents Court
19th & Mass • 749-0445
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Equal Housing Opportunity
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
405 - Apartments for Rent
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
meadowbrook
The Perfect Apartment!
15th & Crestline
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio or a spacious one, two, or three bedroom apt. with your choice of a patio or balcony CALL US, 842-4200. Renting for NOW, and for FALL walking distance to campus & on bus route
410 - Condos For Rent
Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
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שלדים
Avail. Feb. 1, share 2 bed/2 bath condo.
Fireplace, dishwasher, washer (dryer, sun room,
1/3 utilities, $194/mo., on bus route). Please call 838-
8226.
415 - Homes For Rent
30 Davs Free
4 BR Furnished House, $238? mo + utilities.
Call 331-0515.
Midview
3 bedroom, 1/2 bath, brand new, C/A, W/D,
microwave, refrigerator, range, security sys-
tem, off-street parking, close to campus,
933 Mississippi; 841-3966, $590-620/mo.
420 - Real Estate For Sale
Ranch home on basement set on Stratford Rd. 3 + bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office entry Walk to Class. Priced at i.r. 990, Call Leta White CB/McGRE. R.E. 845-2054 for information.
FARMING VILLAGE
430 - Roommate Wanted
40drm. 3 bath, townhouse, W/D, $250/mo. 2rms
avail. now 794.330
Non-smoking room to share 3 bdm brpx
w/professional female $250 per mo. utilities paid w/d.access to pool call 842-8397. After 6pm
RM needed immediately to share a bib 1. bait appt
2. labs, labs, labs, labs, labs, labs, labs, labs, labs, labs, labs, labs,
rn are rent almbed 1. cnr 331 2857 in the view a
3 BR/2 BA/WD, close to KU, great view,
6 DP call Bean 1972. 1872 Eremy Rd #b204
Female Roommate Needed ASAP. Shop T228
Route $2mo plus utilities, please call 823-1851
Male roommate needed. N/S /1011 Illinois 3bdm
house 175/mo + 1/3 utilities. Spring ses-
mes.
Need roommate who does not mind smokers.
Roommate one block to school. 208 per month-
ly.
RM wanted for three bedroom house, on campus
great parking, across from Jayhawk Bookstore.
Sublease not in line by July 31st. female to share
1bwr m/2 grad students $4260/mo No deposit all
months
Wanted: Quit roommate to bottom floor
fairness. Screw. Remove wiper. dryer.
(Will not sell) UH-130. UH-140. UH-240.
SPACIOS Sr/Grad folks seek 2 N/N Fem. Avail now Bright wavtured skylps dtkn. ncr. campus. Clean quiet air, from traffic, on park birds, trees, and grass. $29 Ulytt Pd- K4/274 leaf womd 8 am/1pm.
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. at 1128 Ohio. Between campus & downstreet. Close to GSP-Corbin. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No seats 841-1870.
N/S female roommate wants to share beautifully furnished townhouse. On Bus route 15, min. walk from campus. $275 + share utils. No Pets. 86-6734
room ate needed to share 3 bdmr; 2 bd duplex in
W. Lawrence. Garage, W/D, basement, newer
home, 1/7 utilities + $250. Move in immediately.
Call 841-9031
Wanted 1 Roomate M/F for a 3dm. broom,
honey $20 per month + 3/4 utilities. Included
washer/dryer, bathroom, 2 car garage, & lots of
space. Call 749-3566.
1 roommate wanted
4 bedroom townhouse
with $250 a month plus utilities
Please call 843-7050
Section B · Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 26 1998
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Tomorrow's weather
太阳
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PO BOX 3505
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3505
...
kansan
The weather is warming with a partly sunny sky and light breeze
HIGH 52
HIGH LOW 52 32
Tuesday
January 27, 1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 • No. 87
Online today
Check out the exclusive by the Dallas Morning News about a new witness in the investigation of President Clinton.
Sports today
A
Tetrazole
MANSA
http://www.dallasnews.com
After record-breaking college careers at Kansas, Jacque Vaughn and Greg Ostertag are trying to make names for themselves in the NBA.
SEE PAGE 1B
Contact the Kansan
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
News: (785) 864-4810
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Opinion e-mail: opinion@kansan.com
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PEACE
NOW!
University of Kansas students stage an on-campus protest of the Vietnam War. KU students marched with flags and banners during 1971. Protesters also held teach-ins and other demonstrations. The Kansas Union was burned. The computer center in Summerfield Hall and the ROTC building were bombed. The signing of the Paris Accords peace agreement during 1973 ended U.S. involvement and released American prisoners of war. Contributed art
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
Nanoi CHINA
MYANMAR LAOS VIETNAM
THAILAND South China Sea
KAMPUCHEA
MALAYSIA
(USPS 650-640)
War & Peace
Mixed feelings greet 25th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War
By Susie Gura
Kansan staff writer
University of Kansas students and professors have not forgotten the war that formally ended 25 years ago today.
Today is the 25th anniversary of the signing of the Paris Accords peace agreement that ended the United States involvement in the Vietnam War and released American prisoners of war.
"This was not the actual end of the war, but somewhat of an end to the U.S. part of the war," said Philip Schrodt, professor of political science and government.
Some Vietnamese students do not consider this the anniversary of the war's end.
"I didn't think much of it because for the Vietnamese people, the war didn't end until 1975 with the fall of Saigon," Binh Thai, Larned freshman, said.
Although conflicts in Vietnam still continued, University of Kansas students have mixed feelings about today's anniversary.
Trang Duong, Liberal junior, has neutral feelings about the war issue.
"I'm in the new generation and wasn't affected by the war, but I'm happy that it is over for my family's sake." Duong said.
As he retraces the steps of Vietnamese culture, the Vietnam War is more understandable to John Nguyen, president of the Vietnamese American Student Association.
Nguyen, Wichita junior, said his father was in the South Vietnamese army and has many memories about the war, many of which he would like to forget.
"My parents speak of the sense of hopelessness they felt at the end of the war, but they had better hope when they came to the United
States." Nguyen said.
"I'm really lucky that I did not have to go through the suffering that my parents or their generation went through," Nguyen said.
The longest war in American history affected the University of Kansas with protests, teach-ins and demonstrations. The Kansas Union was burned, the computer center in Summerfield Hall and the ROTC building were bombed.
"There was a protest at the ROTC review in the football stadium. Many students were expelled, and there was an anti-war protest down Jayhawk Boulevard," said Bill Tuttle, professor of American Studies.
The Vietnam War and the ramifications that America felt were reflected at the University of Kansas, said Felix Moos, professor of anthropology.
"The Vietnam War divided the American public, and it divided students, faculty and the administration at KU," Moa said.
Moos teaches Vietnam: Identity and Conflict, a course that explains how Vietnam developed as a culture and a nation developed. The course also covers the effect of the Vietnam War on both Vietnam and the United States.
"I felt because I've been to Vietnam a few times that somebody at KU should make an effort towards teaching about the Vietnam culture," Moos said.
"A lot of students are interested and it's a way to expand our knowledge." Nguyen said.
Thai said that he hoped to learn a different perspective than his parents had told him.
Bar patrons over the line in greek lots
By Carl Kaminski
Kansan staff writer
Bar patrons who park in greek house parking lots may not find their cars where they leave them.
Beta Theta Pi and Sigma Chi fraternities have taken a stand against people who park in the house lots when frequenting three local bars, the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340-1342 Ohio St., Bullwinkles Bar, 1344 Tennessee St., or the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 1401 Ohio St.
University of Kansas scholarship halls located near the three bars also have complained about nonresidents parking in the hall's lot. The halls have succeeded in getting the KU Parking Department to issue tickets and tow illegally parked cars. The greek houses,
meanwhile, have been fighting the trespassers on their own.
Beta Theta Pi, 1425 Louisiana St., has had the most problems, said Cody Winter, chapter president.
Despite having a clearly posted sign warning that the parking lot is for members of the fraternity only, Winter said that fraternity members often found unfamiliar cars taking parking spaces.
"Our house seems to be the one that's most convenient for those three bars," said Winter, Liberty, Mo, senior.
Winter said that the fraternity has a fairly lenient policy toward towing cars out of the lot.
"It's worst on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturday," he said.
Cars parked in the Beta Theta Pi lot first receive a notice on the windshield and are towed if the lot gets too full. Winter said when members see someone who is not a member of the fraternity pull into the lot, they try to catch them and tell them that they cannot park there.
He said that most of the frater
nity members do not think that it is much of a problem but that they don't like it.
Winter said that his biggest concern was that members' cars may get damaged. He said that he did not want people who were not members of the fraternity in the lot because they were not as careful around the cars parked there.
"A lot of times they will just walk away," Winter said. "That makes us want to tow them even more."
fid a round the car's pal near me. Sigma Chi president Greg O'Brien, Troy, Mich., sophomore, said that his fraternity, 1439 Tennessee St., used to have a problem but that it has not been too bad this year. He said that a sign posted at the entrance of the parking lot and actively towing trespassers had helped.
"The word got out that we were towing more often," O'Brien said. He said people decided that it was not worth the hassle to risk parking in the lot and started walking instead.
O'Brien said that a new light in the parking lot has helped keep unwanted cars out and that people were more aware that they could not park there.
Ohio St.
Tennessee St.
The Hawk
14th St.
13th St.
Bullwinkle's
Massachusetts St.
Beta Theta Pi
Sigma Chi
Kentucky St.
15th St.
Andrew Rohrback / KANSAN
Winter said that it was still too early to tell, but the problem did not seem to be as bad since the Jayhawk Cafe and Bullwinkles Bar were forced to reduce hours and close at midnight.
Medical Center bill up in air
By Brandon Copley
bcopple@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
A legislative conference committee could meet within the next two weeks to discuss the possible reorganization of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
republican Sen. Dave Kerr, chairman of the Hospital Governance Conference Committee and Senate Ways and Means Committee, discussed the reorganization bill yesterday at the Ways and Means Committee meeting. He said he wanted the conference committee to meet within the next two weeks.
The reorganization legislation, Senate Bill 373, was proposed during the 1997 legislative session. The bill could enable the Med Center to survive in a competitive health-care market.
The bill would create an independent board of directors to govern the Med Center and would allow the hospital to avoid state purchasing procedures and other bureaucatal processes.
"The reorganization bill is the overarching legislation right now," he said. "Everything you do relates to that bill somehow."
Marlin Rein, University of Kansas director of governmental relations, said any legislative action regarding the Med Center was related to the reorganization bill.
The bill passed both houses last year. The conference committee received the bill after the House of Representatives amended the Senate version. Both houses must pass identical versions before it is submitted to the governor.
The House amendments included a provision banning certain abortions at the Med Center and a provision that would require a legislative presence on the hospital's governing board.
the conference committee was unable to compromise about those amendments before the legislature adjourned for the year, and the bill was held for the 1998 session. It remains in the conference committee.
On Friday, Kerr said he would call a meeting of the conference committee when House members proposed new language to address the controversial amendments. He said he preferred to reach an agreement on some of the issues before the committee convenes. The issue of legislative board members is the main sticking point, Kerr said.
Republican Rep. Michael Farmer, the conference committee's ranking House member, said he wanted to act on the bill as soon as possible. Speaker of the House Tim Shallenburger also said he wanted the bill pass early in the session.
Marlin Rein and Chancellor Robert Hemenway are working with conference committee members and the Med Center in an attempt to foster an agreement on the issues.
Online trivia game quizzes diners
Players challenge others nationwide
By Tamara Miller
tmiller@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
Cody Simms, Wichita junior, is a trivia addict.
There is nothing wrong with spending a few hours at the Old Chicago restaurant on a Friday afternoon playing online trivia with friends, he said.
Old Chicago, 2329 Iowa St., is challenging patrons with an online trivia game called the National Trivia Network, said Craig Miller, manager at the restaurant. There is no charge to participate.
"After I was there for two hours,
I started feeling like a loser."
Simms said. "But I always come
The restaurant started the game in September. Miller said the idea to start the game came from other Old Chicago restaurants.
back "
Players check out keyboard boxes and sign into the game. The game is displayed on televisions. The boxes have antennas that allow the player to select answers received by the televisions.
A new trivia game begins every half hour, said Michael Regnier, manager of Old Chicago. The topics range from sports and entertainment to more specific categories such as real-estate trivia.
"People can compete against each other in the bar and against other players online across the nation," he said.
The answers are posted on the televisions, Miller said.
"Obviously, we have to ask the rest of the bar if it's OK to turn on real-estate trivia," Regnier said.
Regnier said the trivia game attracted a wide variety of people, including businessmen and college students.
"We have people in here every day," he said. "There are certain
people who no matter what grades they get, or what they do, they like to know dumb things."
Although the game is popular in the bar, it can be played anywhere in the establishment. Miller said.
"Bar sales have gone up around 5 percent." he said.
Regnier said that the competition always remained friendly.
The game can be played anytime during restaurant hours, but the most competition is during lunch time and late at night.
"There are two kinds of people in the world: those who share and those who don't," he said. "We get the kind who like to share answers."
100
Jamie Neijm, Wichita senior, NTR code name "Bonnie," and Samantha Bowman, Wichita senior, "Red," play NTN at Old Chicago. They played last night, one of several times they said they would play during the week. Photo by Holly Groshong/KANSAN
2.
2A
The Inside Front
Tuesday January 27,1998
News
from campus, the state. the nation and the world
ST. PAUL
WASHINGTON
BAGHDAD
SAO JOSE
DOS CAMPOS
President Clinton today angrily denies having sex with an intern or engaging in a cover-up.
In the NATION
Minnesota has documents to prove that tobacco companies deceived the public.
A federal judge says the Navy went against policy by ordering the dismissal of a sailor thought to be homosexual.
ously and is mobilizing to face it.
The destruction of the Amazon forest has decreased
In the WORLD:
Iraq takes American threats of a military strike seriously and is mobilizing to face it.
The destruction of the Amazon forest has decreased since 1995.
NATION
Clinton vehemently denies relations with Lewinsky
WASHINGTON — Shaking his finger at the TV cameras, President Clinton today angrily denied having sex with an intern or engaging in a cover-up, as investigators pressed plans to seek grand jury testimony from his aides and friends about the
First lady Hilary Rodham Clinton stood at his side, nodding, her lips pursed.
Again, Clinton did not go into detail, and the question of when he fully would confront the swirl of allegations imperiling his presidency continued to hang over Washington.
1897-1997
Clinton raised and quickly dropped the subject of the alleged
Clinton: Still denies having an affair with an intern.
affair with Monica Lewinsky at the end of a White House event about new child-care proposals.
"I want to say one thing to the American people," he said, wagging his finger at almost every word.
"I'm going to say this again. I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky. I never told anybody to tie Not a single time. Never. These allegations are false, and I need to go back to work for the American people," he said.
Throughout the program, the president and the first lady stood nearer to each other than their assigned places on place cards taped to the floor.
Underscoring the intense scrutiny focused on their relationship, a clatter of camera shutters drowned out the speaker at the podium as the first lady leaned over to whisper in her husband's ear.
Minnesota compiles case against tobacco industry
ST, PAUL, Minn. — Tobacco companies deceived the public for decades about the dangers of smoking, and Minnesota has documents to prove it, an attorney for the state said yesterday.
"This case is about the conduct of the industry and how this industry chose — intentionally chose — to violate the laws of the state of Minnesota," attorney Michael Ciressi said.
"To this day, all of the defendants, save one, Liggett, publicly deny that smoking is addictive and causes disease," Ciresi said, as opening statements began in what could be a four-month trial.
"Except for Liggett, which has admitted the addictive nature of nicotine, not one of these defendants has disclosed all that they know," Ciresi said.
The state will introduce evidence from millions of secret industry documents to prove its case, Ciresi said.
The state and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota are seeking reimbursement for the costs of treating smoking-related illnesses, estimated at $1.75 billion. The plaintiffs also seek punitive damages.
Judge thinks Navy sought to violate gay guideline
WASHINGTON — A federal judge said yesterday that the Navy embarked on a search and outing mission by ordering the dismissal of a sailor thought to be homosexual based on information obtained from an online service.
In ruling that Timothy R. McVeigh, who is not related to the Oklahoma City bomber, should remain on active duty pending the final outcome of the case, U.S. District Judge Stanley Sporkin said that McVeigh
was likely to prevail in his contention that the Navy violated the don't ask, don't tell policy about gays in the military and a federal electronic-privacy law.
“This court finds that the Navy has gone too far,” Sporkin wrote in his 15-page decision. “Although Officer McVeigh did not publicly announce his sexual orientation, the Navy nonetheless impermissibly embarked on a search and ‘outing’ mission.”
Though not the final word in the case, yesterday's decision represents a sharp rebuke of the Navy, both for its enforcement of the military policy about homosexuality and for the intrusiveness of its investigation.
It promises to reverberate beyond the military to all government that might want to bolster investigations by demanding information from online computer services.
United States considering military force against Iraq
WORLD
BAGHDAD, Iraq — Iraq takes American threats of a military strike seriously and is mobilizing to face those threats, the ruling party newspaper said today.
The Baath Party paper, Al.Thawra, which reflects government thinking of issues of national interest, said that Iraq would not give in to U.S. pressure.
President Clinton met Saturday with his security advisers, and aides later said the administration was considering military action to try to force Iraq to stop interfering with U.N. weapons inspectors.
Iraq has been sparring with the inspectors since October,barring them from so-called sensitive sites,including presidential compounds, on grounds of environment.
It also has blocked some teams from
working, accusing American inspectors of being spies.
The Security Council has demanded that the inspectors be given full access. The council has said that punishing trade sanctions, imposed after Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait, will not be lifted until the inspectors certify that Iraq has eliminated its weapons of mass destruction.
Rain forest disappearing less rapidly in Amazon
SAO JOSE DOS CAMPOS, Brazil — Burning and logging still are devastating huge tracts of the Amazon forest, but the pace has slowed dramatically because of abnormally heavy rain, figures released yesterday show.
The rate of destruction has slowed by more than half in the past two years, according to a five-month study by the National Space Research Institute that was based on satellite images of the forest.
An estimated 5,200 square miles of Brazil's Amazon rain forest were burned or cut down in 1997,a drop from 7,200 square miles in 1996 and down from a record 11,600 square miles in 1995,the study said.
"These numbers are no reason to celebrate," Brazilian Environment Minister Gustavo Krause said at the long-awaited presentation of the study.
Krause noted that much of the slowdown was due to unusually heavy rainfall in Amazonia — a region of 2 million square miles, 1.6 million square miles of which are forest.
More than 200,000 square miles, or 12.5 percent, of the Amazonia forest disappeared between 1978 and 1996.
The Associated Press
Flu sufferers may not need antibiotic help
By Lisa Stevens John
By Lisa Stevens Johr
jlohn@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
About 80 percent of influenza patients will get well without antibiotics, he said.
Influenza is a viral infection, which antibiotics will not help, said Randall Rock, physician and chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
A prescription for antibiotics may be necessary for the 20 percent who develop secondary bacterial infections, he said.
The flu season rolls around every year, and every year students ask physicians to prescribe antibiotics. But what students may not know is that antibiotics won't stop influenza.
Whether to prescribe antibiotics is a decision based on the patient's symptoms and the physician's evaluation and experience, Rock said.
Students not only ask to be put on antibiotics when they have influenza, but also their parents often to call and question the physician's decision. Rock said.
He said he could not talk to a parent about a student's health without first obtaining the student's permission.
"We highly value confidentiality," he said. "We want the students to feel free to come on in and ask us anything they want."
If a student gives the physician permission to talk to a parent, the parent is told that antibiotics usually will not be prescribed unless the student has a secondary bacterial infection.
Candyce Waitley, coordinator of health promotion and education, said students could help avoid the flu by taking good care of themselves.
"No all-nighters, no smoking and if you choose to use alcohol, don't overindulge," Waitley said.
She said fatigue, smoking and alcohol all lower the body's resistance.
Watkins tallied 29 cases of influenza through Wednesday.
Rock said more students were coming in with the influenza.
Certain types of influenza may respond to medicines that limit the intensity and duration of the symptoms within the first 48 to72 hours after onset. Rock said.
"If you think it's the flu, it may be appropriate to come in early for an evaluation." Rock said. "This is with the understanding that antibiotics would be indicated only if there is evidence that a secondary bacterial infection may be developing."
ET CETERA
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650.640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
KANSAN
WILLOW TREE
HUNTING
CENTRE
Nation/World stories
http://www.kansan.com/news/nation/
Top Stories http://www.kansan.com
The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Fint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
1606- The Gun Powder Plot trial ends, leading to the conviction of four conspirators who plotted to kill the King and blow up Parliament.
Today:IN HISTORY
1756 - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzberg, Austria.
1967 - Apollo I caught on fire during a launching simulation test, killing three astronauts.
1910 - Thomas Crapper, the inventor of the flush toilet, died.
1973 - The end of the Vietnam War.
1976 'The premiere of the television show Laverne and Shirley.
A KU student lost a black Esprit wallet, credit card and other property totaling $270 between 11 p.m. Friday and 1:45 a.m. Saturday in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police said.
- An algebra book belonging to Anschutz Science Library was taken from 308 Snow Hall Sept. 8, KU police said. The item was valued at $50.
- Seven cookie sheets were taken from the kitchen pantry of Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall between 6 p.m. Jan. 20 and 5 p.m. Thursday, KU police said. The items were valued at $210.
- Lawrence police said the tires of a KU student's car were slapped between 9 p.m. Saturday and noon Sunday in the 1200 block of Louisiana Street. Damage was estimated at $300.
A KU student's cell phone and bag were taken from the second-floor lobby of Dole Human Development Center Wednesday evening,KU police said. The items were valued at $160.
ON THE RECORD
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TUES. JAN. 27 18 & Over
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Smoking Popes
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FRI. JAN. 30 18 & Over
Kristi & the Starlit Rounders
The Wilders
SAT. JAN. 24
Danger Bob
TV FIFTY
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"We are the bad boys of abridgement."
--Matt Croke,
Reduced Shakespeare Company
Lied Center Broadway and Beyond
Series and SUA present
The Reduced Shakespeare Company performing
The Complete History of America [abridged]
Saturday, January 31, 1998, 8:00pm
ALL TICKETS 1/2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office [864-ARTS]; Murphy Hall Box Office [864-3982]; SUR Box Office [864-3477] or Ticketmaster [?85]234-4545.
Visit our website
www.ukans.edu/~lied
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
90 ANNIVERSARY
CLASSIC CONCERTS
JULY 1980 - JULY 1990
STUDENT EXHIBITIONS
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Tuesday, January 27, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Senators turn listserv into forum for bickering
Supporters say talk is less destructive more constructive
By Melissa Ngq
mngo@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
The Student Senate listserv was created last semester as a forum for discussing issues, but lately it has become a forum for bickering among senators.
The 121 member listserv began as a part of the Senate Online Outreach Program. Anyone can join
STUDENT
THE I UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
the listserv by contacting Mike Walden, student body vice-president. at walden@ukans.edu
The listserv's mission was to get students involved in Senate and to give them a venue to speak freely, Walden said.
Students and senators were encouraged to use the listserv to discuss issues such as the Daisy Hill polling site, Saferide funding and increased library hours. The server also posts Senate and committee meeting times and agendas.
However, the listserv has gone beyond that mission to become an arena for airing dirty laundry.
Kelly Huffman, student executive committee chair, said the reason for the personal attacks was the general divisiveness in Senate this year.
"It hasn't created any conflict," Huffman said. "It has shed some light on conflict already there."
Huffman said that he occasionally had lost his temper when using the listserv but that, generally, he tried to keep the criticism constructive.
Huffman said the destructive,
"Away to improve the listserv would be if people would try to build off of each other's ideas and not try to tear each other down."
Kelly
Huffman
Student Executive
Committee chairman
negative criticism had led to people not posting on the list server because they were afraid their ideas would get ridiculed.
"A way to improve the listserv would be if people would try to build off of each other's ideas and not try to tear each other down." Huffman said.
Matt Bachand, Liberal Arts & Sciences senator, said he thought most of the "personal attacks" were constructive criticisms of the issues taken personally.
"Although there have been some real personal attacks, I think that 'personal attack' has been used as a label to discredit critics of bad decisions," Bach said.
Even with these problems, Bachand said he thought the listserv had been a positive tool for Student Senate because it created a form for public debate.
Bachand said the only way to make the listserv better was to include more members who would generate more discussion.
Sarah Blackwell, Overland Park freshman, agreed that the listserv had been a positive tool.
"I think it's good because it lets you be a part of what's going on at the University. It lets you be a part of changing things," said Blackwell, who is on the listserv but is not a senator.
SENATE EXCHANGES
"Why you have chosen Scott (Sullivan) as the scapegoat for every failing of Student Senate is beyond me, and although I take what is said with a grain of salt, this is really getting old. As to your accusation that we will or will not hire someone because of their political or campus group membership, go to hell. We'll hire the best person for the job."
Kelly Huffman, Student Executive Committee chairman, in response to a posting by Jason Fizell, Student Rights Committee member
"Liar liar, pants on fire. Scott has never told me what comms (the communications board) was 'supposed to do.' Never have I received more than a 'that depends on how much money it costs,' as far as guidance goes. Remember, during his campaign violations hearings last year, this man did say that he was not creative, so I guess I'll let him off the hook a little."
Matt Bachand, Liberal Arts & Sciences senator, in response to a posting by Scott Sullivan, student body president.
"As for emotion, we can't all do that wonderful Borg impression that you do. Years of policy debate may have fine-tuned that side of you as well as your debating skills, but I, for one, believe that feeling has a delicate place alaside logic."
Sam Pierron, Liberal Arts & Sciences senator, in response to a posting by Ben Walker, Nunakor senator
"Correction: A Borg is an unfeeling哭, incapable of emotion. I am capable of emotion; I just don't let it get in the way of rational thinking. If you knew what you were talking about, you would know that what I am doing has nothing to do with my experiences in policy debate. I am simply defending a logical and correct position. It doesn't take skill to do that."
Ben Walker in response to Pierron.
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Opinion
Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor
Dave Morantz, Managing editor
Kritte Blast, Managing editor
Tom Eblen, General manager, news adviser
Marc Harrell, Business manager
Colleen Earl, Retail sales manager
Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser
Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
Tuesday, Jan. 27, 1998
DR.CALLIDRYAS? I CAN'T DISSECT THIS HUMAN BECAUSE IT'S, UH...
AGAINST MY ETHICAL BELIEFS...
Tina Connolly / KANSAN
Editorials
The biology department's policy cuts to the heart of effective instruction
Last Wednesday, Student Senate passed a resolution which, while good intentioned, is unnecessary. It would only serve to decrease the value of the class.
The resolution calls for a University of Kansas policy guaranteeing students the right to avoid animal dissection or vivisection (cutting into or operating on live animals). The resolution is intended to protect a student's right to an education that does not violate moral or religious beliefs.
Unfortunately, it will affect the quality of biology instruction at the University.
The resolution suggests alternative dissection labs in which computer programs and plastic models are used in place of dissection.
Dean Stetler, undergraduate biology chairman, thinks that these learning tools are ineffective and can't replace dissection. Dissection is vital to receiving a quality education in biology, he said.
Student Senate may mean well, but the biology department has the right idea about dissection
This proposed policy would grant biology degrees to students whose only experience with an animal's physiology comes from a point-and-click computer program. This will reflect poorly on the University's biology department and KU graduates.
The current undergraduate biology policy allows students alternatives to dissection if a student takes the initiative to explain a moral conflict. This way, the biology department can be assured that the student is really faced with an ethical dilemma and not just looking for a way out of anicky situation.
In the past, only one or two students a year have objected to dissection. Stetler said he tried to accommodate the needs of each student. But a Senate's blanket policy would most likely be abused.
When the policy was proposed last spring, Stetler explained that students could object to a mirid of things.
"One of my students even objected to dissecting flowers. It would be awfully hard for me to design a course that would satisfy everyone." Stetler said.
It is necessary for the University to be sensitive to students' moral and ethical codes. But the department's policy already allows alternatives for the few biology students whose morals do not permit them to dissect.
Creating a University wide policy and alternative labs would only make it easier for biology student to graduate unprepared and with a lower quality of education.
Susan Dunavan for the editorial board
Poor advising made worse by apathy
The University of Kansas' advising system is a wreck that deserves the criticism it receives. However, the university does offer some help that students can't ignore. Advising is an imperfect system made worse by apathetic students who shouldn't expect to have their hand held every step of the way.
Many students are frustrated by the lack of assistance that they are offered when they arrive. Others are frustrated by seemingly bad advice.
It isn't that the University is not willing to help, it's just that sometimes that help comes in bad forms. It *is* the student's responsibility to take care of
University system is flawed, but blame should be shared
his enrollment, and help does exist
For undergraduates, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Services, 109 Strong Hall, is open for advisement.
The flip side is that the University does a poor job of making available services known. An incoming freshman or transfer student knows almost nothing about where to go for advising. The University should more strongly publicize—if not require—that students use offices like the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Office. This would make it easier for students to get good advice early.
For students who have chosen a major, individual schools are willing to help. Pre-math majors should rely on math professors and the math department to advise them, but it is the responsibility of the student to seek that help on their own.
Advising is not rocket science. The University claims it's working on the problem but little has happened. The result has been frustration.
Things shouldn't be this muddled.
Kansan staff
Spencer Duncan for the editorial board
Paul Eakins . *Editorial*
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"Reliving our ancestry, the frightful lack of harmony; our forefathers who led the way, their victims are still here today." —Bad Religion, from the album and song Recipe for Hate
Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify 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 letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy O博mueller (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Feedback
First, the authors and publishers determine when and what constitute need for a new edition. The instructor then determines whether the new edition is justified in his or her class. I will admit that a new revised edition of The Complete Works of Shakespeare seems ludicrous, but the editor or publisher thinks the changes are justified. On the other hand, a revised edition of World History is essential every four or five years as politics, economics and computers affect life on this planet.
Tina Connolly's recent column is a blight to intelligent writing as well as editorial decision making.
One should never buy textbooks as an investment. They supplement learning. They were selected by the instructor to be part of the class. They are not a stock-market commodity. Connolly's economic lesson—the more you pay, the less you get, so don't pay for anything and keep 100 percent of the purchase price—is like saying don't buy clothes or food. Bank the money instead and become a rich, tattered-clothed corpse.
Connolly's column defies logic, editorial decision-making
Her statements associating textbooks as a planned obsolescence with the value of propping up a bed, and that a better investment would be to buy cinder blocks defies logic.
Bookstores do not have to buy back textbooks, but most will be the used book industry saves paper resources, costs stores less in capital outlay and saves students money. What other costs of your education can you cash in after a semester? Skipped classes? Boring instructors? Lousy meals? Hangover mornings?
Bookstores do not prey on student's poor feeble minds or run profitable little scams. We run competitive businesses to provide academic and product needs to students, faculty and the community.
If you can get a degree without buying books, more power to you. But books, lectures and discussion get you more of an education.
If Connolly wants to be a Carrie Nation against books, fine/ But like booze, books and bookstores will not disappear. As for those not wanting to buy books, we will learn the needs —be it decorative cinder blocks, soda, espresso, bar room darts, tattoos, body piercing or Millennium souvenirs [and we'll carry them].
And for what it's worth,
speech textbooks are among
the most popular text books to
be sold back by students.
In reply to the article on the Opinion page on Jan. 20 by Tina Connolly, I submit the following:
Bill Muggy Lawrence resident owner of Javahawk Bookstore
information turned in by professors, department, or GTA.
In the real world, bookstores help students, not scam them
Life Cycle of a Textbook in an Ideal World
4. Bookstores buy used books from students for up to 50 percent of new cost.
6. Students choose to buy used textbooks at 75 percent of cost of new books, or buys new books at publisher list prices.
1. Publishers sway professors to adopt book. 2. Professors notify bookstores which book to use and how many are needed 12 weeks before classes. 3. Bookstores contact wholesalers for any used copies and publishers for balance of order.
5 Class starts
7. Students ace classes
7. Students are classmates.
8. Professors tell bookstores they'll use the same book next semester.
9. Bockstores buy books during finals for up to 50 percent of new book price.
1. Publishers sway professors to adopt book or pitches bundles to kill used-book availability.
How it Really Works
2. Professors usually advise bookstores of books needed, when it's convenient...some times even after classes start.
3. Bookstores buy from students during finals based on
4. Bookstores pay competitive prices for books being reused and sells off titles not indicated as being needed.
6. Classes start: Students choose which store to patronize and whether or not to even buy a book.
5. Publishers determine price, edition changes, inventory levels and order-processing time. Bookstore managers control only how many books they think they will sell or are willing to gamble on.
7. Often new sections are opened, professors change mind, or remember to finally notify bookstores.
8. Bookstores scramble to find books needed.
9. Students finish class.
11. Bookstores begin cycle over again as professors submit book requests for next term.
10. Bookstores return or sell off overstock, if possible at the publisher's dictates or wholesale prices, midway through the term.
Incidentally, the Pepsi machine is in front of the Jayhawk Bookstore because the University of Kansas signed an exclusive contract with Coke and some students prefer Pepsi products. Students should have a choice.
Where is the scam?
Jenny Soukup
Jayhawk Bookstore employee
spoken with are fairly conservative, by no means financially troubled, and have never had to experience an unplanned pregnancy. Ironically, most of these same God-fearing people also admitted to supporting the death penalty. And, let us not forget doctors with families of their own who have been killed under the rallying cry of life.
Students should show they care by attending Lobby Day
Students in the past have not cared about their government. Whether it is campus, local, state or national, students have been too apathetic to stand up for what they believe in. There is an opportunity, though, for students to break that tradition. The University of Kansas Student Lobby Day will take place at the state capitol March 18. This event, sponsored by the Student Legislative Awareness Board, is the perfect opportunity for students to not only learn more about their government's relationship to the University of Kansas, but also to play an active role in shaping policy.
By spending just one day at the State Capitol on Lobby Day, you can send a message to the legislators in Topeka that fund our University.
If you are interested in learning about Lobby Day, or our other advocacy efforts at the State Capitol and elsewhere, please contact the Student Legislative Awareness Board office at 864-7337.
This message should be that students do care about what happens in government, that we are a viable constituency, and that we are paying attention to legislators' decisions.
The time that you volunteer could eventually lead to lowering tuition and improving technology. You can make a difference if you take advantage of this opportunity.
Samantha Bowman Wichita Senior Legislative Director
Korb Maxwell
Leawood sophomore
Lobvb Coordinator
spoken with are fairly conservative, by no means financially troubled, and have never had to experience an unplanned pregnancy. Ironically, most of these same God-fearing people also admitted to supporting the death penalty. And, let us not forget doctors with families of their own who have been killed under the rallying cry of life.
Clothes hangers in trees appropriate for anniversary
It's all a matter of perspective The Roe vs. Wade decision was not about a life being taken away, although it indirectly leads to such an event. Roe vs. Wade is about a choice and the right for a woman to decide what is going to happen to her body. I believe that putting coat hangers in trees is not an inappropriate display. At least, no more unbecoming to the campus than a yard full of white crosses, which is what the KU Students for Life were planning. Consequently, a graveyard would be just as pertinent for all of the women who have died during times when abortion was illegal. Some have said that the hanger act was "sick and twisted." For me, I find that the possibility of a government (made up of mostly middle-aged, upper class, white men) telling me what I can and can't do with my body also extremely sick and twisted.
Most pro-lifers that I have
Deidre Backs
Lenexa senior
-
Terry's column missed facts Math Department does well
I was very disappointed with Tina Terry's article, "Math instructors need more than high test scores." I found it to be lacking proper facts, full of biased opinions and far from the actual goals of the Kansas Algebra Program.
As an employee of the Kansas Algebra Program, I think that I can accurately represent the facts regarding the math program. Not only have I tutored Math 002 and 101, but I have taught as well. I am, as Terry would like to call me, one of those overly apprehensive, undertrained students labeled as an undergraduate teaching assistant. Terry complains that there should be trained teachers instead of undergraduates like me. This idea holds some merit, but in our program it just won't work. Let's consider the money issue. A first-year math professor makes about $40,000. A first-year GTA makes about $10,500, and I make $5.50 per hour. I challenge Terry to find a person with a doctorate in math to come and teach Math 002 or 101. Even if you could find one person, there are 861 students enrolled in 002 and 1,100 enrolled in 101. I don't think anyone could learn math in a class so big, which means we need more fully trained professors to teach smaller classes in order to aid the students. This option is just not possible because of high costs. We need teaching assistants.
I also would like to challenge Terry to look at other Big XII school's math programs to see how they compare. Of the few schools that offer classed like 002, I bet our success rate is far superior. Most colleges do not even offer a class equivalent to Math 002 because they expect students to already know the material. The University of Kansas, however, offers students this class to better prepare them for college-level mathematics. Contrary to what Terry leads you to believe, our math program tries very hard to help students succeed. We offer free tutoring and the option to retake tests.
Terry failed to present the facts regarding fully trained teachers. I was trained as she said, in a two and one half day teaching seminar, but even full professors don't have to do this. To be a professor you only have to have a doctorate, and not even in the subject you are going to teach. These professors need no training in teaching, no education classes, no personal skills, just a degree. These professors are no different from me when it comes to the training they have received to be a teacher. This torment of not having a good teacher is what causes, as Terry states, 20 to 25 percent of all 002 and 101 students to fail. She failed to give you the rest of the facts from the student surveys. In those surveys, 72 percent of students thought that attending class was helpful in preparing for exams, 64 percent thought that the teacher effectively communicate the concepts of the course, and 89 percent thought that the retake test option helped them to score better on exams. The 20 percent that Terry states are failing are the 20 percent who didn't attend class, didn't like the teachers, and didn't put forth much effort to improve their grade.
Our failing students do not understand that this is college and no longer high school, and to succeed you must work hard outside of class. A student's success in our course depends on how hard the student works and not on how we can make it easier for them to pass the course.
Adam Seitz Manhattan junior
Tuesday, January 27, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 5
New cola caffeinates Kansas
Z
ADEKOLI
12 FL. OZ. (355mL)
Zydacala is sold at five acre businesses. The new drink, which tastes like cola and coffee, has the maximum level of caffeine allowed. Photo by Geoff Krieger
By Emily C. Forsyth
Kansan staff writer
A new contender in the burgeoning market of coffee-cola hybrids is being marketed and sold exclusively in the Lawrence and Kansas City area.
Zydekola, a caffeine-laden beverage, is being test-marketed locally and targeted at 16 to 25year-olds, said Nathan Bieck, University of Kansas advertising graduate and Zydekola national sales manager.
Zydekola now is sold at about five businesses in Lawrence, including Alvin's IGA, Mojo's restaurant and the Jayhawk Bookstore.
"It like having a shot and a half of coffee in one can. It has the maximum amount of caffeine the FDA allows in a beverage," Bieck said. "It's well above Mountain Dew and Jolt."
It sells for between 80 cents and $1.00 for one can and $4.99 for a six-pack.
"We've really been focusing on Lawrence right now," Bieck said. "It's an up-all-night, go-go town. We find college kids really enjoy it."
Will Friend, operations manager at the Jayhawk Bookstore, said Zydekola sales were high.
"It's taken a little bit to catch on, but sales are increasing," he said.
Yzdekola also is sold at about 60 retailers in the Kansas City area, Bieck said. Once the product has established a good sales record in the current market, it will expand to a national scale.
"Our future plans are to absolutely saturate the Kansas City-Lawrence area with Yedekola to get it really solid here." Bieck said. "From there, it's endless."
The product recently has drawn attention from the television show "Inside Edition," which was in Lawrence and on campus to film a segment for a show scheduled to air in late January or early February.
The "Inside Edition" crew visited the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house and the Granada on Jan. 15 to videotape students testing the drink.
"'Inside Edition' came over
and set up a jazz band," said Bob Bishop, president of Phi Delta Theta. "We had about 20 or so guys, and some ladies from the Pi Beta Phi house came over. They had us try the cola, and everyone was talking to each other and seeing how they felt about it."
Bishop said that Zydekola tasted like a combination of coffee and cola and that it had received mixed reviews.
"The opinions varied," Bishop said. "It depended on whether you liked coffee or cola."
Bieck said that the idea for the coffee-cola blend originated in New Orleans when the drink's creator, Ernie Copabianco, heard that people were pouring cola into their coffee. He asked
"It's like having a shot and a half of espresso in one can. It has the maximum amount of caffeine the FDA allows in a beverage."
THE STERLING REPUBLIC
Nathan Bieck
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.
832-8228
Zydekola national sales manager
609
a waitress to bring him a mixture of the two and instantly loved it.
"He thought he was on to something," Bieck said. "Caffeine is the drug of the millennium, so he decided to market it."
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9am to 3pm
surf the WEB
We'll have computers ready for WWW
access so you can check out web sites of
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Office of Study Abroad 108 Lippincott 864-3742 www.ukans.edu/~osa
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Section A·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 27, 1998
1804 Born in Cardiff, died in London
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
Audition in Manhattan
For Paid Positions With Musical Drama "TEXAS"
SATURDAY, JANUARY 31 - 9:30 AM TO 1 PM
McCain Building, Choral Room 204
Kansas State University
Register 9:30 AM
33rd "TEXAS" SEASON
Palo Duro Canyon Near Amarillo
Nightly Except Sundays - June 10 - August 22, 1998
Rehearsals begin May 17.
"TEXAS" - 806-655-2181
--potential for moving the University forward in its research and instructional mission," Givens said.
Over 40 toppings to choose from!!!
Rudy Tuesday
2 10” Pizzas
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plus tax
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PIZZERIA
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RUDY'S PIZZERIA
749-0055
704 Mass.
Home of the Pocket Pizza
The University of Kansas
Theatre for Young People
Presents the U.S. Premiere of
Little Monster
by Jasmine Dubé
translated by Maureen LaBoute
Directed and Designed
by Jeanne Klein
Public Performances
7:00 p.m. Saturday, January 31, 1998
1:30 p.m. Sunday, February 1, 1998
100 Smith Hall, KU Campus
General admission tickets are now on sale in the Kuow officer's UniCafeteria, 864-4875; University Hall, 644-9922; QUA office #24477;
$2 public; $2 students; $2 senior citizens; WLD and MasterCard are accepted for home orders.
C
By Aaron Knopf
aknopf@kanson.com
Kansan staff writer
Students may benefit from technology fee
The University of Kansas would receive $1.45 million in a one-time disbursement from the state for instructional equipment if the Kansas Legislature approves Gov. Bill Graves' 1999 budget.
The $1.45 million would be a share of the $-5 million allocation to Board of Regents institutions, which Graves proposed during his State of the State address this month.
The University would receive another $1.9 million through a new program where KU students would pay a $1-per-credit-hour technology fee that the state would match with an additional $2-per-credit-hour.
Assistant Provost Richard Givens was optimistic about the potential long-term benefits of the new technology-fee plan.
"One advantage of having a fee is that it becomes a budget item, a line item, for instructional equipment, and it's there every year," Givens said. "By putting a line item that's dedicated to instructional equipment and technology, it gives some permanency to replenish those areas," he said. Givens said the money could be used for a variety of purposes. The University could create more classrooms with multimedia instructional technology similar to what is used in Hoch Auditoria, but on a smaller scale, he said. There are now 10 such classrooms on campus.
Other possibilities include creating additional computer network connections on campus, updating old lab equipment and funding projects that use highly technical equipment such as global positioning systems in geological research.
The University could use the new funds for technology that affects the most members of the community or helps multiple academic units to collaborate in research, Givens said.
"That would have the greatest
Student Senate legislative director Samantha Bowman, Wichita senior, said she was estatic the governor included the technology fee plan in the 1999 budget. She said it was important students had a voice in determining how funds were used.
"I am concerned that we make sure the students are involved in deciding what this money goes for, since they're paying for a large chunk of it," she said.
Vice Chancellor William Crowe stressed the need to keep university resources competitive with those at other institutions.
"If we don't have the latest journals, books and technology, students won't be prepared and employers and graduate schools will know this." Crowe said.
Keeping its students competitive was the driving force behind the School of Engineering's decision to independently institute its own technology fee.
"We were falling behind and became an inferior School of Engineering. Technology is changing so rapidly that you have to have a constant source of funding," said Tom Mulinazzi, associate dean of the School of Engineering.
For the last five years, the school has charged a $15-per-credit hour fee for all engineering classes that has brought $500,000 back to the school for technology on a yearly basis. The money is used to keep hardware and soft ware up to date.
One-third of the money supports the school's four computer labs. The other two-thirds is proportionally distributed to the departments within the school based on credit-hour enrollments.
Mulinazzi said the technology fee had improved the school's quality and reputation. Mulinazzi was skeptical the University would see the same type of benefits from its proposed technoloqy fee
"The $3-per-credit-hour will help. But it's still not enough to keep up with changes in technology."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports Poll
With the 100 year anniversary of Kansas basketball just around the corner, the Kansan is curious about what
Sports
1988
LOS ALTAS DE KARMA PACIFICIA
KU
Tuesday January 27,1998
fans think.
Section:
Compile your list of the Top 5 players, teams and games in Jayhawk
College Baseball
Believe it or not, baseball season is almost here. Find out how the Jayhawks are preparing.
SEE PAGE 4B
B
history and e-mail us with the results at sports@kansan.com
Baseball
Women's basketball
Page 1
The Jayhawks will be in action against Texas A&M at 7 tonight in Allen Field House.
SEE PAGE 3B
WWW.KANSAN.COM/NEWS/SPORTS
Contact the Kansan
Sports Desk:
Sports Fax:
Sports e-mail:
Sports Forum:
(785) 864-4810
(785) 864-5261
sports@kansan.com
optforum@kansan.com
MEN'S AP TOP 25
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' men's basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through yesterday, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
rank team rec pts pvs
1. Duke (4) 18-1 1,724 1
2. N. Carolina (18) 20-1 1,686 2
3. Utah (2) 17-0 1,527 4
4. Stanford (2) 18-0 1,511 5
5. Kansas (1) 22-3 1,474 3
6. Arizona 17-3 1,450 6
7. Kentucky 18-2 1,389 7
8. UCLA 15-3 1,169 9
9. Connecticut 17-3 1,128 8
10. Purdue 17-4 1,084 12
11. Princeton 13-1 1,050 11
12. Mississippi 14-2 965 13
13. South Carolina 13-3 832 14
14. New Mexico 14-3 772 17
15. Arkansas 16-3 739 18
16. Iowa 15-4 637 10
17. West Virginia 17-3 528 23
18. Cincinnati 15-5 502 21
19. Michigan 15-5 483 16
20. Syracuse 15-4 341 15
21. Rhode Island 13-4 284 22
22. Michigan State 13-4 266 NR
23. Maryland 12-6 250 NR
24. Xavier 12-5 173 19
25. Indiana 14-5 153 NR
USA TODAY/ESPN POLL
The top 25 teams in the USA Today/ESPN men's basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through yesterday, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
rank team rec pts pvs
1. Duke (19) 18-1 763 1
2. N. Carolina (6) 20-1 722 2
3. Utah (3) 17-0 675 4
4. Kansas **22-3** **647** 3
5. Stanford 18-0 640 6
6. Arizona 17-3 617 5
7. Kentucky 18-2 578 7
8. Connecticut 17-3 512 8
9. UCLA 15-3 492 10
10. Purdue 17-4 466 9
11. Princeton 17-1 463 11
12. Mississippi 14-2 401 14
13. New Mexico 14-3 384 13
14. South Carolina 13-3 327 17
15. Arkansas 16-3 292 19
16. Iowa 15-4 270 12
17. Michigan 15-5 241 16
18. Syracuse 15-4 225 15
19. West Virginia 17-3 207 21
20. Cincinnati 15-3 159 25
21. Rhode Island 13-4 117 22
22. Xavier 12-5 92 18
23. Florida State 14-6 79 20
24. Maryland 12-6 71 NR
25. Michigan State 13-4 69 NR
WOMEN'S AP TOP 25
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' women's basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through yesterday, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
rank team rec pta pvs
1. Tennessee (39) 21-0 975 1
2. Connecticut 19-1 933 3
3. Old Dominion 16-1 900 2
4. Louisiana Tech 15-3 832 4
5. Texas Tech 13-3 832 5
6. North Carolina 15-4 679 11
7. Vanderbilt 14-3 679 9
8. Illinois 14-5 656 6
9. Stanford 10-5 633 13
10. Arizona 12-4 621 7
11. Utah 12-4 653 14
12. N. Carolina St. 16-3 525 8
13. Duke 14-5 452 24
14. Florida 14-5 442 10
15. W. Kentucky 16-5 386 16
16. Virginia 13-4 384 11
17. Georgia 13-5 340 18
18. Washington 12-4 273 15
19. Fla. Intern. 16-1 248 22
20. Wisconsin 16-5 245 17
21. Clemson 15-4 191 19
22. Stephen Austin 15-2 161 25
23. Hawaii 16-1 137 NR
24. Iowa State 16-3 100 NR
25. SW Missouri St. 13-3 98 20
UTAH
Former Kansas players Jacque Vaughn and Greg Oostergt share a laugh during pre-game practice. The Jazz defeated the Bulls 101-19 4Sunday in Chicago. Photo by Steve Puppen/KANSAN
1983
Utah Jazz guards John Stockton and Jacque Vaughn watch the game from the bench. Although Vaughn was a starter at the University of Kansas, he now spends most of his time on the bench. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
All that Jazz
Vaughn, Ostertag vie for stardom in NBA
By John Wilson
By John Wilson Kansan sportswriter
his man and glides down the lane.
Arguably the greatest basketball
CHICAGO — Michael Jordan jukes his man and glides down the lane.
Arguably the greatest player who has ever lived, Jordan launches toward the rim and embarrasses Kansas alumnus and Utah Jazz center Greg Ostertag with a jack-hammer thunder dunk that riccots off Ostertag's crew cut into the first row after exploding through the hoop.
"You'll see that one on Sportscenter," a loud fan bellows from the stands. As Ostertag shakes his head in disgust, fellow Jayhawk and Jazz teammate Jacque Vaughn waits out
all season long for Ostertag and Vaughn as role-players in the NBA.
Air Jordan danced for 32 points during the game while a sea of photo flashes from the stands captured his every vvetch. Bulls forward Dennis
"This is a test of our abilities to succeed at the highest level."
his rookie season at the end of the bench behind John Stockton, arguably the greatest passer in the history of the game, and Howard Isley.
This was life at the United Center Sunday for Ostertag and Vaughn, as the Jazz beat the World Champion Chicago Bulls 101-94. This has been life
Jacque Vaughn
Utah guard
Rodman caused a stir after he missed a game earlier in the week while recuperating from the flu. The flu was not a problem, but it was a problem that he was spotted gambling later that night.
Rodman apologized and said that at least he had had a better week than President Clinton.
"I wish I could have sex with all those girls and get away with it," Rodman said.
The Bulls cheerleaders resembled the cast of Baywatch. A Gilbert Brown-sized blimp called Benny the Bull floated around the upper reaches of the arena like a rabid floating elephant. All of this was in the name of entertainment.
See VAUGHN on page 6B
LaFrentz earns player of the week
Missed games don't hurt playing style or plans for April's NBA draft
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansas turfsurfer
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz was named the Big 12 Conference Player of the Week yesterday, not bad considering that he played just one game last week.
Although he missed nine games because of a stress fracture in his right hand, LaFrentz said he still considered himself a candidate for NCAA Player of the Year and All-America honors.
LaFrentz made an impressive return against Texas Tech on Saturday. He had 31 points, 15 rebounds and three steals in just 24 minutes of Kansas' 88-49 rout.
"I don't think (missing games) hurt me that much because I'll play as hard as did before," LaFrentz said. "I think the player of the year should go to the best player. And whoever that is, they should be deserving of it if they play 20 games, 30 games or 40 games. The person should show that they deserve the award in the games he played."
LaFrentz was averaging 21.2 points and
14.2 rebounds when he broke his hand Dec.
28 during practice in Honolulu, where the team was preparing for the Rainbow Classic. He had been expected to miss six to eight weeks because of the injury, but a bone stimulator helped him recover quicker.
Small electrical currents were sent through LaFrentz's hand using the bone stimulator, speeding the regrowth of the broken bone. LaFrentz said team physicians thought the bone was as strong, if not stronger, than what it was before the injury.
"That's probably the reason I came back so early, and I didn't sit out out six weeks like they had originally thought," LaFrentz said. "It's got a beeping light on it, and I would just study the pattern of the beeping light for hours. Does that sound like fun?"
The treatment might not have been all that stimulating to undergo, but LaFrentz said he had more fun on the court Saturday than he had in a long time.
Although LaFrentz bypassed the NBA last spring, many scouts, coaches and analysts still think LaFrentz will be a high lottery pick in April's NBA Draft.
Texas Tech coach James Dickey said the recent injury would not hamper LaFrentz's value to NBA franchises.
"Rae will be the first player taken in the draft," Dickey said. "He made great plays and great shots. That is tough to do when you have been out for nine games, to come back like that."
10
LaFentz Has had an up-and-down season because of an injury.
RAEF'S STATS
Career Statistics
Career Statistics
Games played: 117
Games Started: 117
Shooting percentage:
55.00
Assists: 74
Steals: 88
Blocks: 120
Rebounds:1,020
Points per game: 15.5
Rebounds per game:
8.8
By Erin Thompson
Healthy team, strong defense assist in Texas Tech victory
Kansan sportswriter
After defeating Texas Tech 88-49 Saturday in Allen Field House, Kansas showed the rest of the Big 12 Conference what it is capable of with a healthy team.
The Jayhawks showed defensive dominance against the Red Raiders and continued to separate themselves from the rest of the conference.
"There is Kansas, and then there is the rest." Texas Tech coach James Dickey said. "They have been unlucky with a rash of injuries over the last two years, with Pollard and Vaughn last year and then Pugh and LaFrentz this year.
"But when it comes time for the Big 12 tournament, every win goes through Kansas."
Two years ago, the school celebrated when Jacque Vaughn announced his plans to return to Kansas for his senior year. That season, Vaughn missed 10 games with a broken wrist. Senior Scot Pollard missed eight games with a foot injury. The team lost only one of 18 games that it played with an injured senior starter.
Fast forward to the 1997-38 season: The school celebrates when Raef LaFrentz announces his plans to return for his senior year. But he misses nine games with an injured wrist. Lester Earl is not eligible for the first 13 games of the season. T.J. Pugh also misses nine games with an injury.
Saturday LaFrentz returned, and the Jayhawks finally had all of their players eligible. With a full roster, Kansas showed its capabilities.
See JAYHAWKS on page 2B
2B
Quick Looks
Tuesday January 27,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 26):
This may be a stressful week for you. You will encounter some problems with friends and family. Talk everything through, be calm and handle the matter at hand.
Aries: Today is a 9.
Taurus: Today is an 8.
It's a fabulous time to get out and shake your thing. You're feeling extra bubbly today, so get your gregarious self out on the dance floor. You will entice a host of dazzling partners.
What more could you ask for in life than time to do whatever you please? Make that dream a reality today and please yourself. You'll be glad you did, and you might even meet a special someone.
Indulge your airy nature today by perusing foreign arts. Take your pick: From belly dancing to expressionist paintings, a world of sheer delights awaits you. Be wary of conflict with family members this evening.
Cancer: Today is a 7.
You are ready to roll with the punches. You will overcome adversaries and have a terrific time doing it. Just try not to step on too many toes along the way.
What have you been up to lately, naughty Leo? It looks like you've been sticking your fingers in the cookie jar again; fortunately for you, it's nothing too serious. Just stop cheating at card games.
Virgo: Today is a 7.
Scorpio: Today is a 5.
Libra: Today is a 6.
Feeling a little weary. Libra? You don't have to run around like a chicken without a head to get things done. Take time to breathe, and smile, and others will respond much more positively to you.
+
Capricorn: Todav is a 7.
Sagittarius: Today is a 5.
2
Aquarius: Today is a 9.
P
There's something wrong with you that an oversized lollipop and some good tunes wouldn't fix. It's not the best time to go out, so make the most of your misery and stay home with videos.
Pisces: Today is an 8.
What not spoil yourself today Capricorn? After all, it's been a long, hard haul really. Take your sweetie out for a night on the town. Remember, a little romance can go a long, long way.
LION
G got a case of the Monday blues, Sagittarius? Try not to freak out. Remember that friends are there to lend a hand. Believe it or not, you'll achieve more than you ever thought possible today.
There's no one but you to hold you back today. Aquarius. So take on the world, and the world will laugh with you. Today is a great time for meeting cool friends and influencing famous people.
A
Invitational shows team is on track
After a hard day of work, make yourself a martini and prepare for an adventurous evening. Be sure to dress especially sharp; an unexpected turn of events will take you on an exciting journey.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Kansan staff report
Three University of Kansas track team athletes won first place in two events Saturday at the Missouri Invitational track meet.
Junior Lester Smith captured first place in the long jump and triple jump. He jumped 231/2 in the long jump and 48-11 in the triple jump.
Sophomores Tamra Montgomery and April Kockrow also swept both of their events. Montgomery won the 55-meter dash (6.99 seconds) and 200-meter dash (25.36). Kockrow placed first in the shot put (49-5 3/4) and the weight throw (53-1 3/4).
"Tamra is running much more confidently this year, especially in the 200," said coach Gary Schwartz. "Last year, she struggled at times with that race, and today she proved that she could compete well."
M
Two other athletes also had first-place finishes. Freshman Andrea Branson won the pole vault (12-1 1/4), and senior David Cooksey won the 55 meter (6.47).
Schwartz said the team was eager for the meet because it thought the rivalry among the three schools would raise the level of competition.
The Jayhawks next will compete in a triangular meet with Missouri and Kansas State Saturday in Manhattan.
At the triangular meet, each athlete will try to earn team points. The meet will be the first of its kind in which the Jayhawks will compete this year. Schwartz said he would
"We'll get some people in a couple events that they don't usually do," he said. "Hopefully, they'll beat someone out and get some points."
try to schedule someone in every event to gain points.
The Kansas women are ranked 17th in the nation. Schwartz said that the ranking was encouraging but that he did not want to look too far into the season.
"We're proud that they recognize what we've done, but there's still a lot to be accomplished," Schwartz said. "But the leadership is there. The whole feel of the team this year is more positive, more competitive. They're a good group to be around."
Sophomore Garrett Attig and senior Marc Romito both vaulted 16-7 Saturday at the Reno Pole Vault Summit in Reno, Nev. Freshman Ashley Feinberg vaulted 12-3 1/2, and senior Candy Mason vaulted 12.
No. 20 Syracuse 84,
Georgetown 66
WASHINGTON — Etan Thomas surpassed his career high in the first half, scoring 17 of his 23 points before the break as No. 20 Syracuse routed Georgetown 84-66 last night.
Working against an undermanned Hoyas front court, sophomore center Thomas was 8-for-11 from the field and defied his 53 percent free throw percentage by making 7 of 10 from the line as the Orangemen (16-4, 6-3 Big East) broke a two-game losing streak.
Thomas scored the Orangemen's first six points, and all but 14 of the team's 45 first-half points came on inside baskets or free throws.
The loss snapped a two-game winning streak for Georgetown (11-7, 4-6), which is in danger of finishing with a losing record in Big East play for only the second time in the John Thompson era.
there was no hiding Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim's offensive strategy: attack the middle early and often against a Hoyas team missing injured centers Jahidi White and Ruben Boumjtje Boumjtje.
Syracuse held a 24-13 rebounding edge by halftime, and Hoyas point guard Kenny Brunner, the Big East assists leader, had neither an assist nor a point.
Todd Burgan finished with 21 points for Syracuse, while Boubacar Aw led Georgetown with 15 before fouling out with 4:32 to play.
A 12-2 run, during which Georgetown missed several inside shots trying to negotiate Thomas, gave Syracuse an 18-9 lead near the midway point of the first half.
With Aw — who had eight straight points during six-plus minutes for the Hoyas — providing Georgetown's only scoring threat, the lead grew to 20 at 43-3 just before halftime.
Brunner scored 10 points with two assists before getting his fifth foul with 4:51 remaining.
Georgetown twice the lead to 12 in the second half and got Burgan and Maruis Janulis into foul trouble.
From the first possession.
But Syracuse kept responding with baskets to prevent a big run — Janulis made two big jumpers just before fouling out with 7:56 to play — and the Hoyas made only 19 of 33 second-half free throws.
Syracuse, a 63 percent free-throw shooting team coming in, made 34 of 46 (74 percent) from the line.
The Associated Press
Jayhawks playing more consistently
Continued from page 1B
tournament," Texas Tech guard Cory Carr said.
"If they play the way they did tonight (Saturday), they will definitely be in the race at the NCAA
F
Paul Pierce continued to put up big numbers, with 30
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
"He helped
"Paul may have had the best game, defensively, since he's been here," coach Roy Williams said.
20 points. Pierce helped defensively and held Carr to 16 points, well below Carr's 24 point average.
SCorpion
shut down Cory Carr, who is a tremendous shooter, and he still produced at the offensive end," Williams said.
Pugh, who Williams has called the most consistent defensive player he has coached at Kansas, continued to play well. He had six rebounds and scored in double figures for the second time this season.
Kansas, who dropped to fourth in the national polls yesterday, looks to expand its lead in the Big 12 tomorrow against Baylor at home.
Kansas will have to continue to play tough defense against Baylor center Brian Skinner.
"Brian Skinner is the most consistent player in the conference," Baylor coach Harry Miller said yesterday. "He's the most dominant player in the conference right now in Raef's absence."
ARCHERY
SPORTS CALENDAR
P
Noon
Sports on TV Today
6 p.m.
replay
S
6:30 p.m.
Ch. 45—NHL, St. Louis vs. Buffalo
Ch. 18—College Basketball, Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
Ch. 37—College Basketball, Connecticut vs. Providence
7 p.m.
Ch.2—NBA, Detroit vs. Milwaukee
8. p.m.
Ch. 13—College Basketball, Texas vs. Iowa State
Ch. 45—NBA, New Jersey vs. Denver
8:30 p.m.
Ch. 18—College Basketball, Kentucky vs. Vanderbilt
Ch. 37—College Basketball, LaSalle
vs. Virginia Tech
Ch.37—Tennis, Australian Open
11:30 p.m.
TV TONIGHT
TUESDAY PRIMETIME
TUESDAY PRIMETIME JANUARY 27, 1998
© TVdata 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO ★ "Burglar" ★** (1987, Comedy) Whoopi Goldberg ★ Xenex: Warrior Princess ★ Mad Abo. You ★ Designing ★ Success ★ Cops ★
WDAF ★ E-Flies "Lazars" (In stereo) College篮球: Texas at Iowa State (Live) ★ News ★ Real TV ★ H Patrol ★ Kenewy Ivory
KCTV ★ JAG "The King of the Flies" ★ State of the Union Address (Live) ★ News ★ Late Show (In stereo) ★ Seinfeld ★
KCPT ★ Nova "Suprenimp Spies" ★ Irish in America: Long Journey Home (In stereo) (Part 2 of 3) ★ Business Rpt. ★ Spilled Milk ★ Charlie Rose (In stereo)
KSNT ★ Mad Abo. You Just Shoot ★ State of the Union Address (Dateline in stereo) ★ News ★ T tonight Show (In stereo) ★ L late Night ★
KMBC ★ Home Imp. Soul Man ★ State of the Union Address (Live) ★ Politically Inc. ★ News ★ Rosanne ★ Grace Under ★ M"A'SH" ★
KTUW ★ Nova "Suprenimp Spies" ★ Irish in America: Long Journey Home (In stereo) (Part 2 of 3) ★ Business Rpt. ★ Hockey: United League All-Star Game.
WIBW ★ Billy Graham ★ College basketball: Texas at Iowa State (Live) ★ News ★ Late Show (In stereo) ★ Late Late
KTKA ★ Home Imp. Souls Man ★ State of the Union Address (Live) ★ Politically Inc. ★ News ★ Seinfeld ★ Married...
CABLE STATIONS
AAE ★ Biography: Kellogg Brothers ★ "Datzel and Pascoe: Ruling Passion" (1997) Warrant Clarka. ★ Law & Order "Censure" ★ Biography: Kellogg Brothers
NCBC ★ Eimeal Hardball ★ Railway Live ★ News With Brian Williams ★ Charles Grodn ★ Rivera Live (R)
CNN ★ World Today ★ Address ★ State of the Union Address (Live) ★ Sports Illus. ★ Moneyline ★ Newnight ★ Showbiz
COM ★ Paula Poundstone ★ Dana Carvey: Critic's Choice ★ Viva Variety ★ Make-Laugh ★ Daily Show ★ St Saturday Night Live
COURT ★ Prime Time Justice ★ Cochran & Company ★ Trial Story ★ Prime Time Justice (R) ★ Cochran & Company (R)
CSPAN ★ Prime Time Public Affairs ★ New Detectives: Case Studies ★ Shipwreck! ★ Justice Files "Co Job's" ★ Wild Discovery (R)
DISC ★ Wild Discovery ★ New Detectives: Case Studies ★ Shipwreck! ★ Justice Files "Co Job's" ★ Wild Discovery (R)
ESPN ★ College basketball: Wisconsin at Minnesota ★ College篮球: Kentucky at Vanderbilt (Live) ★ Sportscenter ★ Snowbrd.
HIST ★ In search of History (R) ★ Big House ★ Great Ships (R) ★ Civil War Journal (R) ★ In search of History (R)
LIFE ★ Unsolved Mysteries ★ "The Burning Bed" ★ *** (1984) Drama) Farah Fawcett. ★ Almost ★ Golden Girls ★ Golden Girls ★ Mysteries
MTIV ★ Music Videos ★ Beavis-Butt. ★ Virtual Bill (in stereo) ★ Beavis-Butt. ★ Beavis-Butt. ★ Loveliest (In stereo) ★ Singled Out ★ Viewers
SCIFI ★ Sightings: In Depth and Beyond UFOs: Cover-up ★ Teekwar "Deep War" (R.) ★ Sequester DSV (In stereo) ★ Sightings-Beyond UFOs
TLC ★ Trauma II: Life in the ER (R) ★ Mythical Beasts ★ Put to the Test (Part 2 of 2) ☁ Trauma II: Life in the ER (R) ☃ Mythical Beasts
NTBA ★ NBA篮球: Detroit Pistons at Milwaukee Buckets (In stereo) Live ★ Inside-NBA ★ "Double Impact" ★*** (1991) Jean-Claudie Van Damme.
USA ★ Walker, Texas Ranger ★ "Baby Monitor: Sound of Fear" (1998) Jose Bissett. ★ Silk Stalkings (In stereo) ★ Highlander: The Series ★
WH1 ★ Hollywood-Vinyl ★ Pop-Up Video ★ Women First (R) ★ Behind the music: "Lilfair" ★ Behind the music ★ Pop-Up Video ★ Pop-Up Video
WGN ★ Buffy the Vampire Slayer ★ Daewoo's Creek (in stereo) ★ News (in stereo) ★ Beverly Hills, 90210 ★ In the Heat of the Night
WTBS ★ "Mermelin; Johnson" ★*** (1972, Adventure) Robert Redford, Will Geer. ★ "The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes" ★**(1969, Adventure) "Mr. Mistyk"
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO ★ Reflections on ice: A Diary ★ "The People vs. Larry Flytt" ★ *** (1996) Woody Hammelson. ★ Tracey takes ★ "Just Another Girl on the LRT." ★ ***(1992)
MAX ★ The Truth about Cats and Dogs ★ *** (1996) PG-13 ★ "The Relic" ★ *** (1996) Horror John Penelope Ann Miller. R' ★ Hot Line (R) ★ "Streetgun"
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GAME 16
SEC. ROW SEAT
5 1 15
KANSAS vs.
Missouri
VS.
MISSOURI
Sunday, Feb. 8, 1998 • 12:05 pm
Lawrence, Kansas
5 1 15
SEC. ROW SEAT
GAMES
Date Not Tug
Sports Page
Brewery
CLINTON PARKWAY & KASOLD • 832-9600
OPEN DAILY FROM 11 A.M. - 2 A.M.
Tuesday, January 27, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 3
'Hawks may redraw game plan
Different starters could lead team against Aggies
By Kevin C. Wilson
Kansan sportswriter
Texas A&M will be a welcome visitor tonight for the Kansas women's basketball team.
The Aggies have lost seven of their last eight games and have yet to win a Big 12 Conference game on the road this year. On the other side, Kansas is 6-0 this year in Allen Field House.
Kansas wants to bounce back from a 72-56 defeat Saturday to No.5 Texas Tech. The loss broke a four-game winning streak for the Jayhawks that began Jan. 10. Coach Marian Washington said she wanted her team to view the loss as a learning experience.
"Our team is looking to take another step," Washington said. "Hopefully, we can benefit from this and look ahead to playing another hard team."
Washington said she was going to mix things up to see if the
team could be more productive at the beginning of the game.
MARCUS JONES
Lynn Pride: Leads Kansas with an average of 15.6 points per game.
"We may see a change in the starting lineup," Washington said. "We are looking to try and be more effective in the first five."
minutes of the game."
Kansas, 12-4 overall and 4-3 in Big 12 play, continues to be led by forwards Lynn Pride and Suzi Raymont.
Pride leads the team in scoring with an average of 15.6 points per game and is tied for the lead in rebounding with center Nakia Sanford with averages of 6.5 rebounds per game.
Raymant contributes an average of 14.7 points and 6 rebounds per game. Together, this duo has led Kansas in scoring in 12 of its 16 games.
A. A. C.
Texas A&M, 5-11 overall and 1-5 in the Big 12, is led by forward
P r i s s y
Sharpe, who leads
the Aggies with averages of 15.1 points and 10.7 rebounds per game.
She has recorded double-doubles in 12 of 16 games.
Suzi Raymont:
Grabs an average of six rebounds per game.
Washington said the team would focus on defense
"They have a very athletic front court," Washington said. "If we play our defense, we can create some problems for them."
The Aggies have three other players who average in double-figures for the season, including starting forward Amy Yates, who contributes 13.4 points per game.
Texas A&M also receives a scoring boost from its bench. Reserve forward Kera Alexander averages 11.3 points per game, and back-up guard Brandy Jones averages 10.6 points per game for the Aggies.
The Starting Lineup
KU
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
4-3 Big 12, 12-4 overall
4 Suzi RAYMANT 5-11 JR.
G JENNIFER JACKSON 5-10 FR.
F JACLYN JHONSON 6-1 FR.
F LYNN PRIDE 6-2 So.
C NAKIA SANFORD 6-3 JR.
ATM Texas A&M AGGIES 1-5 Big 12, 5-11 overall
G KIM TARKINGTON 5-6 JR.
G KEBRIE PATTERSON 5-8 JR.
F AMY YATES 5-9 So.
F PRISSY SHARP 6-1 So.
F KIM LINDER 6-0 SR.
Allen Field House • Lawrence
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Radio: KJHK, 90.7 PM
Regional, Lawrence & KU Books
20% Off
Jan. 26 - Feb. 1, 1998
In Honor of Kansas Day
(admission to statehood 1861)
enter a drawing for free copies of selected regional titles!
Mt. Oread Bookshop
Kansas Union, Level 2 • 864-4431
www.jayhawks.com
enter a drawing
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selected regional titles!
Graduate Research Assistants Needed Evaluation Study in Kansas City, Kansas School District.
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Job Description: Classroom observation & teacher interviews in Kansas City, Kansas Public Schools. Training in classroom observation and interview will be included. The hours per week will vary with data collection effort and grant activities. At anytime, no more than 20 hours per week will be required and fewer can be negotiated. Reimbursement will be provided to included: $10/hr, mileage, tolls and other related expenses. Qualifications would include degree in an educational field.
Qualified candidates will have a degree emphasis and/or interest in the educational field. This is a four month appointment beginning immediately and extending to May 15, 1998.
Contact: Dept. of Psychology & Research & Education 864-3931 The University of Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, color, sex, disability, and as covered by law veteran status. In addition University policies prohibit discrimination on the basis of religion, national origin, ancestry, age, sexual orientation, marital status and parental status.
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JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE GOING ON NOW!
THE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE and the Department of
Music & Dance
Present
DIE FLEDERMAUS
BY JOHANN STRAUSS
8:00 pm
Thursday-Sunday
February 5-8, 1998
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in the KU box offices, Murphy Hall,
664-3982. Lel Center, 664-ARTS
SUA Office, 664-3477 public $16
all students $9 senior citizens $15
both VISA and MatterCard are accepted for phone orders
accepted for phone orders
Die Flede
Stage Direction by John Stantunas
Musical Direction by Mark Ferrell
Scenic Design by Ann Hockenberry
Costume Design by Delores Ringer
Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Marat
featuring the KU Symphony Orchestra
Brian Priestman, Conductor
Parade
Included by the
KU Student Senate
Activity Center
SUNXII
English
Translation
by
Ruth and
Thomas
Martin
Telefile worksheet available at www.ink.org/public/kdor
Section B · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday. January 27. 1998
Buy Sell Trade
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SPORTS
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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All application materials are due to the Department of Student Housing, Corbin Hall by 5:00pm Friday, January 30,1998.
For more information, contact Scott Strawn @ 785.864.3794
EO/AA Employer
Baseball team takes to the practice field
By John Wilson sports@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter
Coach emphasizes defensive strategy
The Kansas baseball team started full-squad practices inside Anschutz Sports Pavilion last week.
Head coach Bobby Randall said he was stressing conditioning and defensive fundamentals early during the season.
"The bulk of our time is spent going over specific fundamentals like throwing form and picking up ground balls," Randall said. "It's best to make the game small and then relate those skills to the big picture."
Anschutz is a 40,000-square foot, arc-like indoor practice area with an AstroTurf field nearly the size of a football field in the middle, surrounded by a rubber, dirt-colored track. Intermittent lighting spits a hazy glow from a cream-colored ceiling, making fly ball drills impossible.
Randall said that position players were working on ground balls on the AstroTurf and with swinging fundamentals in the batting cages. He said pitchers were conditioning their arms and bodies for the 56-game regular-season schedule.
"We have 13 pitchers who have to be ready by Feb. 13," Randall said. "This team should be able to score runs, but to win, we'll need pitchers to throw strikes."
"You have to watch out for balls, or they'll catch you not paying attention," catcher Josh Dimmck said. "You can really only work on files outside."
"Our defense has to get better,and we've spent more time this year learning how to react in the field."
Pitcher Mark Corson said veteran players like Dimmick, relief pitcher Casey Barrett and second baseman Andy Juday
Bobby Randall
Kansas baseball coach
KU
"We've got a bunch of guys back who played last year all over the field," Corson said. "That depth of experience could help us jump out of the middle of the pack in our conference."
Randall said fielding hurt the team last year during key situations. Despite having spent four seasons as a second baseman for the Minnesota Twins, Randall said he had not translated this knowledge well to his team.
Corson said that speed and hitting were the strengths of this squad, but that keeping runs off the board would decide the team's fate.
would make the team better during clutch situations.
"We'll only win the tough games against the traditional powers like Oklahoma State and Wichita State if we slow them down with our pitching and fielding." Corson said.
"I haven't done my job," Randall said. "Our defense has to get better, and we've spent more time this year learning how to react in the field."
About 115 Special Olympics athletes attended the Jayhawks' annual basketball clinic, now in its 10th year, which allows children and adults with developmental disabilities to play with Kansas players.
"In college baseball, everybody can hit. The team that makes it to the NCAA tournament can defend too," he said.
The clinic featured basketball drills, five-on-five scrimmages with the Jayhawks and a half-hour autograph session.
BASKETBALL NOTES
Kansas coach Roy Williams said everyone involved walked away with some good memories.
Two "100 Years of Kansas Basketball" banners, and the banners of Danny Manning and Lynette Woodard, were anonymously shipped to Kansas Friday, said Darren Cook, Kansas director of facilities.
"I think the best thing is that our kids feel like they're doing something for the community." Williams said. "I think that they get as much out of it as the Special Olympians."
The return address was Champaign, Ill., home of the University of Illinois. Police there told Cook that some fraternity members came to Lawrence and stole the banners as a prank. Police said there were rumors the thefts could have been retaliation against some Kansas students who store items from the Illinois Athletic Department.
Kansas reordered the banners at $600 each, and the banners were hung in time for Wilt Chamberlain's jersey retirement ceremony at the Kansas State game Jan. 17.
Doug Moreau, Baton Rouge, La., district attorney, said last week that Kansas forward Lester Earl may have broken the law by signing documents at Louisiana State that said there were no violations during his recruitment to the school.
Filing any false document could amount to filing a false public record, which is a violation of state law. Any coach at LSU that may have signed those papers also could have violated the law.
No public action has been taken, but Kansas officials are upset that LSU made the details of Earl's case public. They claim LSU is trying to deflect blame for alleged NCAA rules violations onto Earl.
Kansan Classified
100s Announcements
Trombone
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
115 On Campus
118 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
(
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
305 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
325 Sporting Goods
335 Stereo Equipment
Ticket
340 Auto Sales
365 Motorcycles for Sale
365 Miscellaneous
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
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 will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of National Kansas regulation or law.
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
410 Conds for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Roommate Wanted
430 Roommate Wanted
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
which makes it illegal to advertise a 'very preference' or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, an intention to make any such difference.
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
HEALTH
Since 1906
Watkins
Caring For KU
GREETING
110 - Business Personals
---
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
$ Cash for College $ Grants & scholarships available from sponsors. Great opportunity!! $
864-9500
Fr
100s Announcements
120- Announcements
---
115 - On Campus
Asian American Student Union. First meeting
the American student union. Contact the
Resource Center.
I
120 - Announcements
F
BEST HOTELS, LOWEST PRICES. ALL
SPRINGBREAK locations. Cancun, Jamaica,
Laguna Beach, extras. Mauzlan,
Bahamas. Register your group or use our
Campus Rep. 80-327-6013 www.icpct.org
Spring Break Mazatlan
Instructional & Educational video's & CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited internet
access for only $15.95/mo, tell your parents.
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Don't miss out on the HOTTEST destination in
Miami Airfare. 7 nights hotel, transfers, FREE
drinks, 15 FREE meals, parties. For FREE
brochure 1-306-395-4896 (www.collegefriends.com)
Spring Career and Employment Fair: Wed. Feb.
4, 1988, 10 am to 3 pm, KS Union Ballroom. Over
120 employees. FT, PT, intermissions, summer
jobs, volunteer opportunities. All majors wel-
loved. Contact Career & Employment Services at 864-324 or
site web: www.ukans.edu ~/up/cef.html
1998 SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA Camp Bucksin has various positions available to work with youth who have académic experience and wish to earn LD. A unique program with opportunity to earn school credit. Salary + room & board. Camp is located on a lake in the Superior National Forest near the BWCAW. Contact: Time, Phone: 309-354-3544; email: bucksin@capecast.net.
NEED GLASSES?
!!JUST FOLLOW OUR GOLDEN ANGELS!!!
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON every FRAME, ANY PRESCRIPTION,
Gregory Alarmi, Alfred Sung, Next, Dakota Mass, downlaw Lawrence. 843-6828. We carry Giorgio Armali, Armeni, Alfred Sung, Next, Dakota Smith, Santa Fe Eyeworks, Nicole Miller, Perry Ellis, Nautica. We proudly use the highest quality materials available at KU. We offer "backroom grinding" We also supply contact lenses at GREAT PRICES
Camp Takike for boys, on Long Lake, Naple.
Mail Noted for pictures location, exceptional facilities, and outstanding programs. June 22-August 23. Over 100 counselor positions in tennis, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, hockey, roller hooper, swimming canoeing, waterskiing, scuba archery, rifley, weight training, journalism, photography, video, woodworking, dance, radio & electronics, dramas, piano accompanist, music instrumental/band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater canoeing, ropes course instructor, general instructor, golf staff, kids' staff.
Call Mike Sherburn at 1-800-250-6232.
120 - Announcements
Native American Student Association meeting at 6 p.m. in the MRC. Everyone welcome and encouraged to participate. Any questions? *All Elyse Towey 824-2996.*
F
图
125 - Travel
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Tuesday, January 27, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 5
125 - Travel
---
SPRING BREAK trip to Mexico, Jamaica, & Florida. From $99 & $100 Call Jason at 84-914.
Spring Break '98. South Padre Island.
www.nirentals.com 1-800-292-7520
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130 - Entertainment
Monday thru Saturday. 3-8pm free pool at the Bottle
757 New Hampton, NJ 841-5235. Bottle
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男
女
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
---
Omienda Factory Store-Now filling several Positions.
MWF Late Mornings or Afternoons. No nights or weekends. Set your own hours. Flexible to schedule.
Apply Downtown Outlet Mall #1919
Brady Chiropractic Clinic Part time help needed 3-7pm, Monday-Friday. Call 749-0130
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PT. NEW
Apt./Twn. 749-1289 inquire at 800 Wakasu Ave.
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disa-
plex person with a need to learn, some lifelong involved. Call Caller #3548690.
Part time clerical help. Accounting office. hrs. 8, 15. Split skills possible. Some Saturdays. 913-842-8500.
PART-TIME EVENINGS
PART-TIME EVENINGS
Telephone evenings £5 or plus i12cent per 12 hr/sk
Voyager person max £8 per day to v14
Voyager person max £10 per day
Help Wanted.
Waits needed day and evening shifts. Apply in person at Scott's Brass Apple, W300. 15th H
Kennel help needed. Must be reliable & hardworking. Apply in person at Parkview Animal Hospital.
Part time delivery driver with heavy lifting
time. Apply to person at Lawrence Printing
Service.
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position: Starts
Upgrade of 719 Mass. Street plus profit sharing
Apply at 719 Mass. Street (upstairs)
Lunch help 11:30 1:00, 5-day or TR; subs as needed. Sunshine Ares 842-2233
Apt. Leasing Position. Strong sales skills required. Compensation, 1 BR Apt. 20-25 hrs. Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000 Clinton Pkwy.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for Safe Ride drivers. Must be 2 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 pm.
Brookcreek Learning Center hiring PT teaching assistants A M and P M hours. Valueable experience in an early intervention program. Apply at 200 Mt. Hope Court. 855-022
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wkdies. Need experience, ref., own transportation. May extend into summer & fall. Call Judy or John 842-3381.
Male personal care attendants needed to work with a young man with head injury in Lawrence. Starting pay is $7.50. If interested, please call Michelle at 913-3841-8867 ext 400.
SUMMER IN CHICAGO
child care & light housekeeping for suburban
Ontario family. Maint be responsible non-smoking
area. Residents must abide by the rules.
Teleservice/Apt. setting for TruGreen Lawn,
the leading lawncare company. Part time positions with opportunities for advancement. Call Kerry or John today at (913) 492-8780
205 - Help Wanted
The Granda is featured featured for dancers for Ift and Ist. nights. Call Paige between on 8 pm and 10am.
Collection Aast, making courtesy calls. PT/flexible hours: 17.00/hr. 841-9831 ext.2309 or apply in person. Microtech Computers 4921 Legends Drive.
Hard working, hardy persons to teach behavior program to 1-year old with Autism. Will provide training MWF 1:5:3-5:30 or Sat 8:30am, Sun 1:5pm 823-1588, evenings.
$$\text{Exponiation } \text{Natl.} \text{Natl. co.-immediate FT/PT} \text{openings in Lawrence / KOE & KC. Entry-level areas. Flexible schedules around classroom time.}$$
$No exper. occ. cond. Call: 913-851-3687, 913-850-3687$
COMPUTER SERVICE TECH/PHONE SUPPORT TECH in shop on site PT. Must be able to troubleshoot. Must be able to work independently. Pursues 492. Lengserts PT-841-9313 - 2000 EOE
Mgmt. Co. leasing agent. PT during school, FT this summer previous experience a plus. Must have reliable transport service. Send resume w/ 3 letters to Lawrence KS 60544 or by stop 88, 24th, EOE
DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AFFAIRS
Women of color, formerly battered women, lesbian, bisexual, and disabled are encouraged to apply. For an application contact WTUS 603. Lawson KS. 60044.
Returned applications may be postmarked by February 2.
**layawk smiles needed:** The Kagasa University Endowment Association is hiring students for 30-40 part-time positions calling alumni to raise funds in their area. Possible roles include busy life, a great working environment, and a bonus program. Must be positive, enthusiastic, and capable of providing for more information or to leave a voice mail.
The Division of Continuing Education Publication Services is looking for a Student Mail Assistant to work in their Mail Center or Birchway located at an office on campus. You must be a currently enrolled student, and be able to work 15-20 hours per M-F. Hours are Flexible. Must be a current EOAA employer. Continuing Education is an EOAA employer.
$$Earn Cash$$$
The Kansas and Burial Union
Catering Company
$6.00/day
February 3, 1988
Will pay in cash day after employment. Must
inquire before booking. Lift up to 20
pounds, follow dress code. AVERO
Do you love KU? Love to talk on the phone? If you are involved on campus and want to share your enthusiasm with potential KU students, then a position as an Admissions Teleconference may be for you. We are looking for students who: possess strong communication skills; have attended KU for at least one semester or two weeks in evenings per week; Sunday Thursday. Call Robert at 864-3494 to arrange an interview ASAP.
COLORADO SUMMER JOBS: RAFTING: RAPELLING: In the Rockies near Vail, ANGERSON CAMPS seeks caring, enthusiastic, dedicated, patient individuals who enjoy working with children and adults. Wranglers, Maintenance and Nurses. Interviews on February 4. Stop by Career Planning and Placement Office to get an application and sign up for an interview? Questions? Call us at (800) 263-7500.
Mechanical Engineers -- Engineering Air is a leading manufacturer of made to order包装 HVA&R products. Rapid Sales growth has created outstanding career opportunities for recent Engineer Air employees in the Manufacturing Engineers. Engineering Air offers training leading to careers in equipment design, manufacturing or sales. Apply in confidence to Engineering Air. NURSAL CAREER GUIDE 60813. 913-583-1318 Fax 913-583-1406
$$$ BONUS! BONUS! $$$
Growing #1 Residential Home Improvement Co
seeks motivated, dependable people to take
inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PC skills a
must. $100 sign-on bonus after working 30 con-
tinuous 6-hr. minimum shifts. $6.50/hr to start,
and raises based on your performance. Flex sched-
ings, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at:
KantTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd, 2nd floor. Bring this
AnTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd. 2nd floor. Bring this ad with you to qualify for bonus.
500 SUMMER CAMP JOBS/JOBS 500 CAMPYOU CHOOSE!! NY, PA, NEW ENGLAND. TENNIS, BASELEM, ROLLER HOCKEY, SOCGER, LACROSSE, BASKETBALL, GYMNASICS, RIDING, SWIMMING, WS, MT, BIKING, PIONEERING, ROCKCLIMBING, ROPES, DANCE, PE, ACCOMPANIED, THEMATOGRAPHY, BADU, NATURE, NURSES, CHEFS, PE MAJORS, ETC. ARLNE STREAMLAND 1-834-463-6249, FAX 516-393-9439
CLO is seeking part-time employees to teach children with autism in the Lawrence area. ECAP teachers help assist children to communicate, establish and maintain meaningful social relationships, and develop safety and develop leisure activities. Positions are part-time-afterfections, evenings, and/or weekends. If you have coursework in psychology, please apply at CLO 2113 Delaware, experience, apply at CLO 2113 Delaware, EOE.
Student Hourly. Duties include packing shipments, data entry and analysis; filing; copying, scanning and copying files; required qualifications: ability to lift 45 pounds, the ability to work independently, accuracy in data entry, ability to work 10-15 brs/wk, organization and filing skills; ability to work independently and efficiently. Must be proficient in English and US/UK. 01/30/89 Beginning salary $5.50/h. Pick up materials at 3681 Dolle Center EOE/AA ammover
Student Hourly. Spring and Summer position with potential for Fall. Duties include library research, writing research summaries, filing &org. of data; copying, collating, errands; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Familiarity w/ Macintosh computers (Word, hw); ability to work independently and efficiently; organizational and filing skills. Deadline 01/30/88. Salary $5.50/hr. Pick up application at 3061 Dole Center. EOE/AA employer.
RECYCLE your Daily Kansan
SUB or LUNCH ADEF
Lunch help needed 11:30 to 13:00 Mon. thru Fr.
sub hours as needed; preferred child care experience and training, Sunshine Acres School 842-2233
205 - Help Wanted
Student Housing
Dining Services
• Fixtures Schedules
• Flipper Schedules
• New Friends
• Convenient Locations
Scholarships
Societies
DH S dining Center
DH S dining Center:
GSP * 864-1320
Hausingen * 864-1414
Hausingen * 864-1414
Oliver * 864-1897
Cheley Colorado Camp in the Rocky Mountains near Estes Park, Colorado, is hiring caring and enthusiastic individuals as Directorors, Cook, Kitchen Assistants, Drivers, Office Personnel, RNs, Wranglers, and Counselors with skills in child care, health care, wall challenge, camping, sports, crafts, song-leading, archery, or rifling. Room/board, salary, travel allowance. Must be at least a Sophomore and able to work June 8-11th, 1998. On-campus interview. For information, visit www.cheley ColoradoCamp. 1,800-2786, e-mail, office@cheley.com, or visit our Web Site, www.cheley.com.
Graduate Student Research Assistant needed,
Dept. Human Development, KU, up to 20 Wk/hr,
Saturday plus weekdays late afternoon/evening.
Conduct visits & phone calls with families & children
age 6-7 to collect data using standard assessment
procedures. Req. postsecondary enrolment in KU graduate program; reliable transportation; experience with families and young children; prefer degree in social scienc
ery; or Master's deg. req. 0528 for full job description. Send resume, KU
transcript, application letter, & names,
addresses & phone numbers for three references:
To: Anabella Pavon, Univ. of Kansas, KSD41, 4083
地址: 4083 North Kansas Avenue, Kansas City, MO
received by 2/04/98. EE/AA employer; priority
applications espee welcome.
WE NEED A FEW
TOP COOL TECHNOLOGY
We'll be at a Summer Job Fair on June ... If you have any questions or would like to send you an email, please contact us. 633 Friendly Firns Road, Preston, AZ 86331 Call (520) 445-1218 or email: omfamug.org
Resident Camp for Boys and Girls Ages 6 to 15
Accessible for bushwalkers, Bali Multi-Perry Diving
Camp and Surf School
AN ARIZONA TRADITION
FOR 59 YEARS!
FRIENDLY PINES CAMP
In the Pine Mountains Near Prescott, A'
1998 Season. May 31 to August 2
We'll be on the Summer Job fax on Wed, February 4th.
EARN CASH
up to$50 This Week
$360 This Month
By donating your life saving plasma!
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
816 W.24th
(Nabi
340-Auto Sales
Hours:
M-F9 a.m.-
6:30 p.m.
**08 Mustang LX Convertible**, 76 K, auto, tinted windows, new brakes, AC & heat, custom wheels,
400s Real Estate
BROOKLYN HIGH SCHOOL
405 - Apartments for Rent
1 Bedroom Sublease $370 month, Water, trash, cable
paint. No pets. Beds 84-3924
MARKETING FACILITY
3 bdm, 2 bathroom on bus route. W/D, brand new apartment, $775/mo. ASAP! ACAI 311-3932
Nice spacious 2 bdrm apt. located at 18th and Oblier(ChamberlainiaI walk) to KU $455.1/2 mo. free, available now. Call 841-1998 for details.
Furished Room Available Now! Very private room with bimbi furniture house close to KU/W/D. 681-425-3900, 681-425-3900
2 bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$600 per month, move in a.s. a.p.
call 744-7261
2 BR special rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt, located close to campus, on bus route. $350 includes basic cable. Call Now. University Terrace 941-6783
Hey? You have heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the app. of your choice this fall! You have some of the biggest apcs. in town for you to enter. We'll be with you at 8:45 a.m. Call 682-1455. 35 Park Apartments, 4021 W.梁堡 St.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE Co-eed student housing alternative to private landors. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by 1406 Tennessee St. 841-0484
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt. located close to campus. $205 includes cable, secure and simple parking, on the bus route, 8th & 9th floors. Call. 613-8939 during office hours Mon-Fri.
A&S
RENTAL SERVICES
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
13'/ E. 8th St., Lawrence
841-5454
Leanna Mar Townhomes
4 Bedroom/3 Bath
**Early Sign Up Special**
For Fall 1998
($40 off per month)
Includes
Washer/Dryer Trash Compactor Dishwasher Gan Fireplace Microwave Oak Paid Covered Park In-Walks Covered Parking
For More Info: (785) 841-7849
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
GREAT LOCATION !!!
2 BEDROOM APET. AVAILABLE JAN 1
1st month Free $600 + utilities
LOCATED ON 138 VERMONT #CALL 841-9115
---
BANK OF MARYLAND
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
The Perfect Apartment!
Unfurnished Room
meadowbrook
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio or a spacious one, two, or three bedroom apt. with your choice of a patio or balcony CALL US, 842-4200 Renting for NOW and for FALL walking distance to campus & on bus route
405-Apartments for Rent
15th & Crestline
Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
410 - Condos For Rent
לא יש בין
Brand New Duplex: Available June 1 4 Berm 1. full bus lift in all Kitchen 2 on bus lift across street parking 3 on bus lift
415 - Homes For Rent
4 BR Furnished House, $238?mo + utilities.
Call 331-0515.
---
4 bdmr, 3 bath, townhouse, W/D, $250/mo. 2 rms avail.
now. 749-3230.
RM need immediately to share 2 beds! a bath apt
Close to campus. Rent is $185/month + 1/2 season.
Bathroom: 23 ft x 24 ft (6.9 m x 7.2 m).
Non-smokers roommate to share 3 brpm duplex
w/professional females $25 per month, utility paid
for 4 months. Roommates will be charged $600 per
Ranch house on basement located on Stratford Rd. 3 + bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office entry.
Walk to Class. Priced at $1990, Call Leta Whi. CR/McRE GREE, B. 843-2055 for information.
VILLAGE
Female share large home near campus, washer dryer, air cond. 1' utilities call 8232 or 838
3 BR/2 BA/WD, close to KU, great view.
10 BR/2 BA/WD, close to Dell Cabana 1927 Entery Rd #8404
Female Roommate Needed ASAP, Share Town Home. Washer/Dryer, On Bus Route $262 mo plus utilities, please call 832-1851
AP Specialist over 2 yrs working experience in bookkeeping, GL, HP, taxes. Apply in person /w resume at 4921 Quail Crest PL or call 841-9513 ext. 3200.
Female Roommate needed ASAP. 3 Bedroom
Roommate needs a flat, pat non-
Smoker Waer and Dryer. Call 839-2400.
Sublease now through July 31st 1. female to share
1bwr 2 wm or 1cmm 0 no deposit all
Trims TRISTA 8615 Trims TRISTA 8615
RM wanted for three bedroom house, on campus-great parking, across from Jyawakh Bookstore, $285/mo + 1/3 util Call 638-9441 asAP ASAP
Male roommate needed. N/ 1011 Illinois 3
roommate +/- 3/13 for. Spring
semester. 822-2529
420 - Real Estate For Sale
30 Days Free
BUSINED INK?
SPEEDING? DU! SUPPENDED DL? Call Randy Kitchens, Attorney, located in KCMO. Serving KS/MO; Call 1-888-290-9222 Toll Free.
Roommate who does not mind smokers
Need roommate who does not matter per month +
814-635-9242
BMI 18.5+ (BMI 18.5+)
---
S
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. at 1128 Ohio. Between campus & downtown. Close to GSBP-Corpil. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No pets 841-1207.
SPACIUCIS Sr/Grad folks seek 2 N/S Fem. Avail now Bright wavlared skydigital skylight nr. campus. Quit clean air away from traffic, on park (birds, horses). Leave at D $071 Upland Pd. 841-2746 leave word 8am -10m.
N/F female roommate wanted to share beautifully furnished townhouse. On Bus route, 15 min walk from campus. $275+share utils. No Pets. 842-6734
Wanted 1 Roommate M/F for a 3 bdm. townroom. $280 per month + 1/3 utilities. Utilized washer/dryer, bathroom, 2 car garage, & lot of space Call 749-3566
Need two tickets for KU-Baylor game. Call Rev:
(783) 752-1460 or (783) 752-0518 daytime or
(783) 752-0519 in the event.
300s
Merchandise
1 male roommate wanted. 3 bdrm. house off 9th and 1 Iowa. Full furnished in walking distance to campus. Park, grocery, and more across the street. $250/room + 1/3 utilities. 865-363 or 843-645-836.
330 - Tickets for Sale
MDMIT ONL MDMIT ONL MDMIT ONL
TRAFFIC-DUPS
PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
TWO WEEKS AWAY
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
1 roommate wanted
4 bedroom townhouse
3 bath
$250 a month plus utilities Please call 843-7050
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your home audio
Device. OldNed (785) 725-9639.
X
30 Hays Free
become 2 bath, brand new, C/A, W11,
refrigerator, refrigerant, range, security
off, street park, close to campus.
635 Missionport, 814-3965, $99-$120/mo.
I will not provide the text content. If you have any questions about it, please let me know.
Complete Mac system. Centrix 610: Monitor,
primer, modem, iots of software, $550.00.
MacBook Air, Pro, iPad, iPhone, iPod.
For Sale. 1 Ericsson AH630 cell phone. Call
or a 864 8228 or (913) 515-0777.
---
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases. Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Pool Table For Sale.
Pool Tables, baskets, balls, claws, and chalk
brush # 614-906 and for Bill.
305 - For Sale
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-9115
325 - Stereo Equipment
99
1 & 2 Bedrooms
3 Hot Tubs
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
Exercise Room
On KU Bus Route
mastercraft management
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind
M
designed with you in mind.
415 - Homes For Rent
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana * 841-1429
Hanover Place 14th & Mass *841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Renal Hospital Opportunity
Equal Housing Opportunity
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
By Mail: 119 Stairfer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
How to schedule an ad:
a. Bu phone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Stop by the Kansas offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, 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
to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unusu-
days when cancelled before their expiration date.
comment rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions, the size of the ad and the (number of agile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
men can canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the missed days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Blind box numbers.
The advertisement may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Rates
ast per Line per day
| Num. of insertions: | 1X | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 3 lines | 2.50 | 2.00 | 1.40 | 1.20 | 1.00 | 0.80 |
| 4 lines | 2.30 | 1.55 | 1.05 | 0.95 | 0.90 | 0.70 |
| 5-7 lines | 2.25 | 1.48 | 1.00 | 0.95 | 0.80 | 0.60 |
| 8+ lines | 2.15 | 1.25 | 0.95 | 0.85 | 0.80 | 0.60 |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
| Classification | Description |
| :--- | :--- |
| 165 Personal | 165 Land & Found | 313 Home Furnishings | 405 Rest |
| 181 Business Personals | 265 Help Used | 313 Supplies Goods | 405 Host |
| 119 School Campus | 225 Professional Services | 323 Stairs Equipment | 418 Candles for Rent |
| 120 Announcements | 225 Typing Services | 328 Tickets | 415 Names for Rent |
| 125 Travel | 305 For Sale | 340 Auto Sales | 420 Real Estate for Ware |
| 125 Entertainment | 310 Computers | 306 Miscellaneous | 420 Recommendate Ware |
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Please print your ad one word per box:
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper ___
Address:_
VISA
Name: ___ Phone: ___-
Account number:
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Signature:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68645
Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, January 27, 1998
Vaughn, Ostertag working together to make it in the NBA
Continued from page 1B
In this circus that Air Jordan built, Ostertag and Vaughn handle the janitorial duties. Ostertag starts but amounts to little in the flow of the game, and Vaughn spends his time on the bench as the third-string point guard.
These days seem worlds apart from college days when they
were the kings of Alle Field House. Both work daily to adjust to the athleticism of the league to achieve success down the road.
"This is a test of our abilities to succeed at
the highest level," Vaughn said.
"It's mostly a test of your mental abilities, and I think Greg and I can both win that test in the end."
JAZZ
The jazz selected Vaughn as the second-to-last pick in the first round of last spring's draft, and he put in consistent minutes earlier in the season when Stockton was injured.
He did not play Sunday and has had trouble shooting thus far, hitting only 37 percent of his field goal attempts while playing in 26 of 42 games. Despite these problems, the
coaching staff has long range plans for his skills.
"Jacque can really push the ball up the court in a hurry." Jazz coach Jerry Sloan said. "He works really hard and should be a key to our future as his jump shot progresses."
Vaughn said that he was frustrated sitting on the bench but that learning from players
third season in the league. He signed a six-year, $39 million contract this summer after an impressive run last spring that helped vault the Jazz into the NBA finals.
such as Stockton and Jeff Hornacek would help in the long run.
"I watch how those guys act and react every day," Vaughn said. "Watching their professionalism and skill level can only help my game."
Vaughn said that having Ostertag around had helped his ascension into the professional game.
After signing the contract, Ostertag arrived at training camp out-of-shape and was roasted publicly by teammate Karl Malone for his lack of work
ethic. Ostertag said he had
"It's nice having somebody you've known forever to talk to," Vaughn said. "Greg and I have helped each other through the tough times."
While Vaughn struggles through his rookie season, Ostertag labors through his
worked hard in the months since training camp to regain his form.
"At the beginning of the season, that wasn't Greg Ostertag out there." Ostertag said jokingly. "That was my evil twin. I was kidnapped by aliens, and they ran a whole bunch of crazy tests on me. Now, I'm back."
But Ostertag's new form failed him Sunday. He played most of the game but spent it strolling up and down the court when not being dunked on by Jordan on three separate occasions.
He managed just three field goal attempts, two free-throw attempts and seven rebounds during 39 minutes but collected four personal fouls.
"I have improved, but I still have a long way to go." Ostergay
"At the beginning of the season, that wasn't Greg Ostertag out there."
Greg Ostertag
Utah center
said after the game:
“There are still tough days for me,
but I know I'll reach my goal,
which is to be considered one of the best players in the league.”
Both Ostertag and Vaughn agree there is a great deal of work to be done, but Vaughn said that in the end, their desire to succeed would vault
them to victory.
"I had a goal in college to graduate and win as many games as possible," he said. "I accomplished a great deal at KU, but now I have set a goal to start at point guard for a championship team, and I think Greg could be the center on that team. It's just going to take patience and work."
Jacque Vaughn, Ulmus Jazz guard, stands as the national anthem is played. Photo by Steve Pupke / KANSAN
BULLS
91
Ostertag and Vaughn are starting at the bottom, but they plan to work their way up to center stage in Michael Jordan's circus. Until then, the Jayhawk pair will dream about the day that Ostertag and Vaughn are mentioned in the same breath as Jordan and Pippen or Stockton and Malone.
JAZZ
Top: Greg Ostertag, Utah Jazz center, fights to position himself for a rebound against Dennis Rodman, Chicago Bulls forward. Ostertag grabbed seven rebounds during Sunday's 101-94 victory in the United Center.
Bottom: Utah Jazz center Greg Ostertag races Chicago Bulls center Luc Longley for a loose ball. Photos by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
MILLS
MILLS
H
Jacque Vaughn and Greg Ostertag stretch out. Ostertag is finishing his third season in the league while Vaughn is working on his rookie season. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
Barefoot Iguana
749-1666
9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Kansan Classifieds get great readership
spring break fever
Need a break!
Cheap tickets
Great advice
Mice people
Cancun $399
London $652
Puerto Vallarta $599
Jamaica $429
includes airfare, 7 nights hotel
based on quad share
Fees and prices are subject to change. No refunds on airfare or hotel unless agreed in writing.
All fees and charges are not responsible for any problems.
Council Travel
CIEE: Council on International Educational Exchange
622 West 12th Street
Lawrence
(913)-749-3900
ENGINEERING COMPUTER SCIENCE PHYSICS CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
COMPUTER ENGINEERING • COMPUTER SCIENCE • PHYSICS • CHEMICAL ENGINEERING MATH • ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING • MECHANICAL ENGINEERING • BUSINESS ANALYSIS
TAKE TECHNOLOGY TO THE NTH POWER.
n
When something is too extreme for words, it's to the Nth degree. And that's the level of technology you'll experience at Raytheon.
Raytheon has formed a new technological superpower - Raytheon Systems Company, composed of four major technological giants: Raytheon Electronic Systems, Raytheon E-Systems, Raytheon TI Systems and Hughes Aircraft. The new Raytheon Systems Company is driving technology to the limit. And we're looking for engineers who want to push the envelope. Break new ground. Make their mark.
Internet www.rayojobs.com • E-mail resume@rayojobs.com
U.S. citizenship may be required. We are an equal opportunity employer.
At Raytheon, you'll take technology—and your career—to the highest possible level. You'll take it to the Nth. We'll be visiting your campus soon. Contact your career placement office now to schedule an interview, or check out our website at www.jayrobs.com. If you are unable to meet with us, please send your resume to: Raytheon Staffing, P.O. Box 654 745, MS-201, Dallas, TX 75245. We have many exciting opportunities available and we would like to talk to you.
Raytheon
EXPECT GREAT THINGS
Tuesday, January 27, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
I
Section B · Page 5
125 - Travel
H
SPRING BREAK trip to Mexico, Jamaica,
Florida. From $99 & $39 Call Jason at 804-914-
Spring Break '98. South Padre Island.
www.pirentals.com 1-800-292-7520
**"Spring Break '98 Get Going!!"** Cancun,
Jamaica, Bahamas, & Bahrain. Group discounts
& Free Drink Parties! Sell 5 & go free! Book
www.endlesssummertours.org/3243-7097
http://www.endlesssummertours.org/
SPRING BREAK!
CANCUN * BANHAM*
24 HOURS OF
FREE DRINKS!
Z nights from $299!
Includes Ticket to: 1 hotel and 1 night of Wednesdays and weekends of 5 nights and weekends of a spring break Organ in SOUTH BOUND and SOUTH SHORE *TRIP*
BRO COMMONWEALTH AVE BOUTIQUE, BOSTON MA 82121
800-534-1277
Spice is limited call now!
1-800-833-6411
or email to SALE24.CASTLASTVAX.COM
CLASS travel
130 - Entertainment
Monday thursday 3-8pm free pool at the Battieens. Don't miss free pool at the Battieens.
男厕所
女厕所
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
---
Oasis Factory Store now filling several Positions.
MWF Late Morning & or Afternoons. No nights or weekends. Set your own hours. Flexible to schedule.
Apply Downstown Outlet Mall #319
Brady Chiropractic Clinic. Part time help needed. 3:00, Monday-Friday. Call 749-0130
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PT NEW Apt. T/wn. 7198 1289 inquire at 2003 Wakaraunr. (u)
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disabled woman stay active & involved. Routine easy to learn, some lifting involved. Call 842-1794
Part time clerical help. Accounting office, hrs 81,
5. Spit shift possible. Some Saturdays, 913-842-
608.
PART-TIME EVENINGS
Telephone calls 15/hr or
Vax person calls $75/kw, Caf. Frank 749-3243
Vax person calls $75/kw, Caf. Frank 749-3243
PART-TIME EVENINGS
Help Wanted.
Waits needed day and evening shifts. Apply in person at Scott's Brass Arm, 3300 W. 19th.
Kenuel help needed. Must be reliable & hardworking. Apply in person at Clinton Park Animal Hospital.
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
up on Tuesday and provides plus profit sharing.
Apply at 719 Mass (upsetat) 836-425-5000.
Part time delivery driver. Some heavy lifting required. Apply in person at Lawrence Printing
SUB OR LUCHN ACHIE
Lunch help 11, 30:18, 5:04 or TR, subs as needed. Schedules
Apt. Leasing Position. Strong sales skills required. Compensation. 1 BR Apt. 20-25 hrs. Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000 Clinton Pkwy.
Attention, Lawrence Bus Co. is currently taking app, for Safe Ride drivers. Must be 21 years of age & have a clean driving record. If interested contact Bob. 842-0544 after 4 pm.
Brookcreek Learning Center hiring PT teaching assistants A.M. and P.m hours. Valuable experience in an early intervention program. Apply at 200 Mt. Hope Court. 865-0229
DESPERATELY SEEKING SITTERS. Avail from noon (at least) any wknds. Need experience, ref., own transportation. Work may extend in summer & fall. Call Judy. Call or John#4-381.
Male personal care attendants needed to work with a young man with head injury in Lawrence. Starting pay is $7.50. If interested, please call Michelle at 913-341-867 ext 400.
SUMMER IN CHICAGO
child care & light housekeeping for suburban Chicago family. Must be responsible non-smoking adult.
Teleservice/Appt. setting for TruGreen Lawn,
the leading lawncare company. Part time
positions with opportunities for advancement. Call Kenyon or John today at (913) 493-8790
205 - Help Wanted
The Granada is featured dances for Fri and Sat. nights. Call Piage between 0am and 8pm on Saturday.
+ + + + +
Collection Anst. making courtly calls. PT/flexible hours. 870/hr. 841-9613 ext.2300 or apply in person. Microtech Computers 4921 Legends Drive.
Hard working, energetic persons to teach behavior program to 7 year old with Autism. Will provide training MWF 1:50-3:50pm or Sat 8:30am, Sun 1:5p@ 825,198.com
**Expansion** **Natl. co. immediate PT/FT**
All areas. Flexible aircraft around classes.
All areas. Flexible aircraft around classes.
Up to 101.45 $
No specimen, nec, cond. apply Call 913-813-9675-10
COMPUTER SERVICE TECH/PHONE SUPPORT TECH in shop/or site PT. Must be able to do troubleshooting. Must be able to work independently. 7-9/hr. Apply in person. Microtech Computers. 4921 Ledges Dr. 841-963-1052 eOE
Mgmt. Co. leasing agent. PT during school, FT this summer previous experience a plus. Must have reliable transportation. Send resume w/ 3 journals. Lawrence. KS 60544 or stop by W89. 8048, EOE
DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AFFAIRS
Women of color, formerly battered women, lesbian, bisexual, and disabled are encouraged to apply. Please visit www.skidmore.org/5777 or P.O. Box 633, Lawrence, KS. 6044. Returned applications must be postmarked by February 2.
Jayhawk amites needed! The Kansas University Endowment Association is hiring students for 30-40 part-time positions calling alumni to raise funds for KU. We offer a schedule that fits your busy life, a great working environment, and a bonus program. Must be positive, enthusiastic, and love KU. Paid training provided. Call 832-7423 for more information or to leave a voice mail.
The Division of Continuing Education Publication Services is looking for a Student Mail Assistant to work in their Mail Center/Binder located at an office on the East Side. You must be a current enrolled student, and be able to work 15-20 hrs m-F. Hours are flexi-
ble, but must be more information. Continuing education is an annual job.
$$$Earn Cash$$$
The Kansas and Burial Uniones
Caterpillar Company
$6.00/earth
February 1, 1986
Will pay in cash day following employment. Must
have 25 years of experience (AEP) up to
20 pounds, follow dress code AEP/UFT
Do you love KU? Love to talk on the phone? If you are involved on campus and want to share your enthusiasm with potential KU students, then a position as an Admissions Teleconcolor may be for you. We are looking for students who: possess strong communication skills; have attended KU for at least three years; have taken five perings per week; Sunday-Thursday. Call Robert at 864-5449 to arrange an interview ASAP.
COLORADO SUMMER JOBS: RAFTING! RAP-PELLING! In the Rockies near Vail, NANDERSON CAMPS seeks caring, enthusiastic, dedication individuals who enjoy working with students in grades K-12. Wranglers, Maintenance and Nurses. Interviews on February 4th. Stop by Career Planning and Placement Office to get an application? Questions? Call us at (970) 524-7766
Mechanical Engineers . - Engineered Air is a leading manufacturer of made to order packaged HVAC&R products. Rapid Sales growth has created outstanding career opportunities for recent graduates from our training leaders. Engineered Air offers training leading to careers in equipment design, manufacturing or sales. In confidence in Engineered Air, we are located at 915-383-5181 Kansas 60108 915-383-5181 Clarence, Missouri
$$$ BONUS! BONUS! $$$
Growing 1$ Residential Home Improvement Co. seeks motivated, dependable people to take
circulate. dispense people to take inbound car keys, must $100 on bonus after working 30 continuous 6-hr. minimum shifts. $6.50/hr to start, and raises based on your performance. Flex schedules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at KanTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this
500 SUMMER CAMP JOBS/ 500 CAMPS/VY
CHOOSE! !NY, PA, NEW ENGLAND, TENI-
NS,BASEBALL, BASKET HOCKY, SOCCER,
LACROSSE, BASKETBELL, GYMNASTICS,
RIDING, SWIMMING, WMS, MT, BIKING, PIONEERING, ROCKCLIMBING, ROPES,
ACCOMPANIST, THEATER,
CERAMICS, JACKETS, TOGRAPHY, RADIO, NATURE, NURSES,
CHEFS, PE MAJORS, ETC, ARLENE
STREISAND 1-800-443-6428, FAX: 519-933-7949
EARLY CHILDHOOD ADVENTURES
CIS: teach part-time intervention to teach children an expedition area. ECAP teachers help assist children to communicate, establish and maintain meaningful social relationships, develop safety, and develop leisure activities. Positions are part-time-afterfeeps, evenings, and/or weekends. If you have coursework in psychology, visit www.cis.edu/careers or apply at CLO, 2113 Davis, Lawrence, EOE.
Student Hourly. Duties include packing shipments, data entry and analysis; filing; copying; and documenting required qualifications; ability to lift 45 pounds; Required qualifications: ability to lift 45 pounds; Excel); accuracy in data entry; ability to work 10-15 hrs/wk; organizational and skills filling position requirements; Must be able to work in summer. Deadline 01/30/98 Beginning salary $5.30/hr. Pick up documents at 3641 Jole Center. EOE/AA employer
Student Hourly. Spring and Summer position with potential for Fall. Duties include library support, curriculum creation, org. of data; copying, collating, errands; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Familiarity w/macintosh computers (Word, Excel, MS Office) and hrs/wk independently and efficiently; organizational and filing skills. Dendline 01/30/98 $/ salary EE/OE/A employer.
RECYCLE your Daily Kansan
205 - Help Wanted
SUB or LUNCH AIDE
Lunch help needed 11:30 to 1:00 Mon. thru Fri.
sub hours as needed; preferred child care experience and training, Sunshine Acre School 842-2233
Student Housing
Dining Services
Tailored Chairs
* Flexible Schedules
* New Friends
* Convenient Locations
Call or stop by any
DH S dining Center
GSP * 864-3120
HASHINGTON * 864-1014
Hashington * 864-1087
Oliver * 864-1087
Cheley Colorado Campa in the Rocky Mountains near Estes Park, Colorado, is hiring caring and enthusiastic individuals as Unit Directors, Cook, Kitchen Assistants, Drivers, Office Personnel, RNs, Wranglers, and Counselors with skills in child care, home health, wall challenge, camping, sports, crafts, song-leading, archery, or riffler. Room/board, salary, travel allowance. Must be at least a Sophomore and able to work June 8-18, 1998. On-campus interview. For information, please contact Cheley Colorado Campa, 1-800-283-6567, cheley.com, or visit our Web Site, www.cheley.com.
Graduate Student Research Assistant needed,
Dept. Human Development, KU, up to 20 hr w/ 5/h;
Saturday plus weekdays late afternoon/even.
Conduct visits & phone calls with families & children age 6-7 to collect data using standard assessments for enrollment in KU graduate program; reliable transportation; experience with families and young children; prefer degree in social science or human sciences; complete 0038 for full job description. Send resume, KU transcript, application letter, & names, addresses & phone numbers for three references to: Anabella Pavon, Univ. of Kansas, HADF, 40032 received by 2/04/98. EO/A employer, minority applications apply welcome.
AN ARIZONA TRADITION FOR 58 YEARS!
We be at the Summer Job Fair on Wed. February 4th.
If you have any questions or you would like to talk to us on
phone, call (855) 212-7900 or visit www.fair.org.
535 Friendly Pines Road • Prescott, AZ 86303
Call (525) 445-2128 or email fparagus@gmail.com
WE NEED A FEW
TOP COURSE CORPS
FRIENDLY PINES CAMP
In the Pine Mountains New Prescott, AZ
FRIENDLY
Activities Camp for Boys and Girls Age 6 to 13
Residents include Horton Riding, Rolling, Moldy Pony Dancing,
and more!
EARN CASH
up to$50 This Week $360 This Month
By donating your life saving plasma!
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
816 W.24th
Bernhard Laird
Noller Ford
749-5750
(Nabi
Hours:
M-F 9 a.m.-
6:30 p.m.
---
9 Mustang LX Convertible, 70 K, aut, limited tires,
new brakes, AC & heat, custom wheels,
225 - Professional Services
340-Auto Sales
AP Specialist over 2 yrs. working experience in bookkeeping, GL, AP. taxes. apply in person /w resume at 4921 Quail Crest Pl. or call 841-9613 ext. 3200.
1 Bedroom Sublease $370 a month. Water, trash,
cable paid. No pets 864-3924
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
Bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a s.a.p.
caul 748-761
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt located close to campus. $355 includes cable, easy parking on the bus route, 9th & Emery Perfession. Portrait Call. Call 691-8399 during office hours M-Fri.
Furished Room Available Now! Very private
Room close to WK/D, WK/D,
cable, C/A: 691-579-8108
---
3 bdm, apartment 2; $775/mo. ASAP! *Call* 133-3932
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE
Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diversely managed. Call or drop by
Hey! Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting that puts you on the list for the laptop, of your choice this fall? We have some of the big apts in town for free. Please see www.busybusiness.com # 842-1455. Park 32 Apartments, 2601 W. 25th
Nice nspecies 2 bhrm pt located at 18th &
8th floor, 4630 Amsterdam Avenue.
mo. free, available now. Call 841-1988 for detail
A&S RENTAL SCHOOLING
SPEEDING X? DU1 SUSPENDED DL1 CALL
SERVING KS/MO. 289-400-2922 Toll Free
SERVING KS/MO. 289-400-2922 Toll Free
2 BR special rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt. located close to campus, on bus route. $350 includes basic cable. Call Now. University Terrace 841-6783
Looking for a place to rent? FREE RENT REFERRAL!
Leanna Mar Townhomes
13$^{1/2}$ / E. $8^{\text{th}}$ St., Lawrence
841-5454
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters TREATMENT DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases,
Everything But Ice. 938 Mass.
For Sale 1 Ericsson AH630 cellular phone. Call
igor at 864-8238 or (913)-515-0777
X
Complete Mac system Centrix 610: Monitor,
printer, modem, lots of software, $500.00.
www.macpublisher.com
300s Merchandise
4 Bedroom/3 Bath
**Early Sign Up Special**
For Fall 1998
($40 off per month)
305 - For Sale
Fool Table For Sale. Foil
stick, 100 sticks, balla, chalk, and dust
brush. 841-695, ask for BK.
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-9115
($40 off per month)
Need cash? I'll pay cash for home audio equipment. Old/Wed (785) 232-9639
Need two tickets for KU-Baylor game. Call PrepMtCannon at (785)357-0518 daytime or (785)357-0619 nighttime.
ANO ADVIL ANO ADVIL ANO ADVIL
Washer/Dryer Trash Compactor
Dishwasher Gas Fireplace
Microwave Cable Plate
Bathtub Covered Patch
Walk-in Closets Covered Parking
For More Info: (785) 841-7849 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
330 - Tickets for Sale
---
S
325 - Stereo Equipment
405 - Apartments for Rent
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
Unfurnished Room
GREAT LOCATION!!!
Pool Table For Sale.
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
meadowbrook
2 HEDROAM APT, AVAILABLE JAN 1
3 HEDROAM APT, AVAILABLE JAN 1
LOCATION: 5814 VERMIDY RD # CALL 891-455-7101
15th & Crestline
---
410 - Condos For Rent
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
On KU Bus Route
The Perfect Apartment!
1 & 2 Bedrooms
3 Hot Tubs
Brand New Duplex! Available June 1. Bdmr. 2.
Bmrf. 3. All-around everry Kitchen! Bmf. 4.
Bmf. 5. Bmf. 6. Bmf. 7. Bmf. 8. Bmf. 9.
Bmf. 10. Bmf. 11. Bmf. 12. Bmf. 13. Bmf. 14.
Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio or a spacious one, two, or three bedroom apt. with your choice of a patio or balcony CALL US,842-4200 Renting for NOW and for FALL walking distance to campus & on bus route
בטווח
415 - Homes For Rent
WALK TO CAMPUS
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind
mastercraft management
Exercise Room
1145 Louisiana 841-1429
M
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226
Hanover Place
14th & Mass • 841-1212
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
visit the following location Campus Place
4 bdmr, 3 bath, townhouse, W/D, $250/mo. 2 rms
avail. now 794.3230
4 BR Furnished House, $238?mo + utilities.
Call 331-0515.
...
430 - Roommate Wanted
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Non-smoking room to share 3 brd duplex
*professional female $250 per my utilities paid*
*non-smoking room to share 1 brd duplex*
RM needed immediately to share 3 lbf. 1 bath kit
Close to campaise. Rent is $195/month. New Jan.
The cabin was on the right. View Jan.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Female share large home near campus, water dryer, air cond, 4/7 utilities for 842-228 or 838-
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Rural Housing Opportunities
franch home on basement on Stratford Rd 3 + bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office entry. Walk to Class. Priced at $199.00. Call Leta White. CB/McGRE R.E. 843-205 for information.
3 BR/2 BA/WD, close to KU, great view.
nSmoke2 $500 / 1 v3/dl + call Dev Callian
nSmoke4 $600 / 1 v3/dl + call Dev Callian
Mon - Fri 8am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
At some locations
415 - Homes For Rent
30 Days Free
3 bedroom
2 bedroom, brand new, C/A, W/D,
refrigerator, refrigerator, range, security system,
off-street park, close to campus,
933 Mississippi, 814-3966, $590-$620/mo.
420 - Real Estate For Sale
The image shows a simplistic illustration of a house with a yard. The houses are represented as rectangular shapes, and the yard is depicted as a horizontal strip below them. There are no other details or text present in the image.
1 male roommate wanted. 3 bdrm. house off 9th & iowa. Lily furnished in walking distance to campus Park, grocery, and more across the street. $200/mo + 1/3 unitles. 865-603 or 818-645-603.
Wanted. 1 Roommate M/F for a b3rm. townhouse. $280 per month +1/3 utilities. Included washer/dryer, bathroom, 2 car garage, & lots of space Call 749-3566.
Female Roommate neededs ASAP. 2 Bedroom
Roommate neededs ASAP. 1 Non-Smoker, Night-
dress, Drink, Call.
1 roommate wanted
4 bedroom townhouse
$250 a month plus utilities
Please call 843-7065
Female Roommate Needles ASAP. Share Town
phone: (212) 623-1401. $20 more.
plus utilities, please call 623-1401
Male roommate needed. N/ S. 10111 Illinois 3bdm屋. $17/mo + 1/3 meals. F. spring semester.
Need roommate who does not mind smokers.
Call 841-6254; 208 per month +
Attach Bk 841-6254
RM wanted for three bedroom house, on campus great parking, across from Jayman's bookstore.
Roommate needed to share 3 dbm, 2 bath duplex in W. Lawrence. Garage, W/D, basement, newer home, 1/3 utilities +$250. Move in immediately. Call 81-9031
Sublease now through July 31st. I female to share
3drm / 8 grad students. $40/mo. No deposit all.
Payment via credit card.
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. at 1128 Ohio. Between campus & downtown. Close to GSP-Corbian. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No nets 841-1207.
N/S female roommate wanted to share beautifully furnished townhouse. On Bus route, 15 min walk from campus. $275+share utils. No Pets. #84-6734
SPACIOUS Sr/Grad folks seek 2 N/S Fem. Avail now Bright wavestable skylight dpk. nr. campus. Quit clean air away from traffic, on park (birds, boat) or parking. D/$07 Ulp Dis Pld: 841-2746 leave word 8am :10pm.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Tomorrow's weather
Z
COMFORT TABLE
Mostly sunny and warm today with the temperatures continuing to rise.
S STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
D BOX 3585
OPEKA, KS 66601-3585
HIGH 54
HIGH 54
Wednesday
January 28,1998
Section:
A
Sports today
Vol.108·No.88
Online today
Check out this hot site of the day. Personally previewed by Mike Perryman, the Kansan jazz expert.
JAYRAY
GANSA
http://www.kcjazz.com
The Kansas Jayhawks women's basketball team moved to 13-4 overall with last nights 63-58 victory against Texas A&M at Allen Field House.
SEE PAGE 1B
Contact the Kansan
News: (785) 864-4810
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WWW.KANSAN.COM
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NO SALE
Jazz
Where's the music?
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas City Jazz flourished in clubs during the '20s, '30s and'40s. Today,the sophisticated style of music still exists, but is not always as easy to find.
Story by Mike J.Perryman • Art by Mike G.Perryman
Q
Jazzman
door Garner pushes open the
door of Jardine's Restaurant by
door of Jardine's Restaurant in Kansas City, Mo. The familiar sound of chattering voices accompanies the sound of clinking ice and glasses. Inside, the powerful, vet smooth sound of a tenor saxophone joins the low tones of a bass, then a rhythm guitar. Finally, a set of drums toms in.
Four of the hottest jazz musicians in Kansas City have only just begun to entertain Garner, along with Jardine's regular crowd of jazz enthusiasts.
"There really are a lot of places you can routinely find jazz," he said. "If there were more clubs here in KC, this place would definitely be a more happenin' town."
Garner, Olathe sophomore, full-time music education student and a trumpet player at the University of Kansas, can figure out why Jardine s. 1536 Main St., near the Country Club Plaza, is one of only a few clubs in town where he can jazz night after night.
During the 1920s, '30s and '40s, Kansas Citians could find jazz at almost every street corner, and jazz club owners made good money. Today, clubs and venues are not as willing to feature jazz because it doesn't bring in the business it once did, said Dick Wright, University of Kansas music historian, jazz authority and host of KANU's Saturday morning jazz show.
"Jazz audiences today just sit and listen and don't buy anything." Wright said. "A jazz listener may buy one drink the whole
evening. Clubs can't make much money." Wright said the clubs that were able to afford to offer jazz consistently were the clubs that had been around for years.
Some clubs, like the Phoenix, have stuck it out and have been around long enough to offer jazz on a regular basis, even if they are not making money all the time, he still.
"With jazz, it takes awhile to catch on," he said. "Most clubs are in it to make money right now."
Sixty years ago, Kansas City was the city; the epitome of the good life and jazz was its trademark.
city, the epitome of the good jazz was its trademark.
Today, the pulse of jazz in Kansas City is still strong, but it is a well-hept secret even to many Kansas Citians. Wright said.
During the Great Depression, Tom Pendergast's political machine offered a degree of prosperity unknown to the rest of the nation. Nightclubs flourished, providing a haven for great musicians from all over the country as well as from Kansas City, including famous names such as William "Count" Basie, Duke Ellington, Berny Moten, native Kansas City, Mo., saxophonist Ben Webster, native Kansas City, Kan., saxophonist Charlie Parker and native Kansas City, Kan., trumpeter Carmell Jones. Each club had its own clientele. A night out on the town meant a night with jazz, and the music appealed to the young and old. Jazz was complex and intellectual, but it also was basic and
See PULSE on page 6A
Clinton delivers policy, not apology
By Brandon Copple
Kansan staff writer
President Bill Clinton, speaking amid the usual ovations and formalities, delivered his annual State of the Union address last night without mentioning the scandal surrounding his presidency.
Clinton managed to keep the focus on matters of state, but reactions on and around the University of Kansas campus quickly turned to the allegations that the president had an affair with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky.
"It was in everybody's mind," said Allison Bernard, Lawrence junior, who watched the speech with KU Young Democrats in the television lounge at the Kansas Union. "As a Democrat, I was thinking about it. Looking at his eyes, you could see how tired he is."
Most media speculation prior to the speech focused on whether Clinton could shift attention away from the scandal.
"The speech was brilliantly put together," said Ellen Gold, associate professor of communication studies. "In the first ten minutes he was able to focus on issues that everyone cares about."
At least one local expert thinks Clinton was successful.
KU LOU Democritus gather to watch President Clinton's state to the Union address in the T Lounge of the Kansas University. The students were encouraged by last night's speech. Photo by Corie Waters / KANSAN-
Clinton opened the speech by paying his
respects to Sonny Bono and Walter Capps, former Congressmen who died in the past year. He also addressed the Social Security system in the first 10 minutes and proposed that any surplus revenue collected in the future be dedicated to preserving Social Security.
Clinton's policy proposals included numerous educational initiatives. One of the most ambitious was a plan to reduce the average number of pupils from 25 to 18 in first- through third-grade classrooms.
"He avoided speaking of ethics and justice," she said. "There was a little reaction when he talked about individual responsibility, but mostly he stuck to policy."
Karen Gallagher, dean of education, said she was encouraged by the attention Clinton paid to education, but she remained skeptical about some federal initiatives.
Gold said Clinton sidestepped issues that could touch on his alleged sexual misconduct.
"That's a pretty significant drop," she said. "It will cost a lot of money, and if the teachers aren't prepared and properly trained, you won't get your money's worth no matter what the ratio."
Gallagher said the president's plan would be difficult to achieve in the nation's 105,000 schools.
Although most of the questions surrounding the Lewinsky affair remain unanswered, some viewers agreed that Clinton skillfully avoided the issue.
Park senior and member of KU College Republics. "He knows how to manipulate the system, and he did a good job of accomplishing what he meant to do."
"He said 'lot of things that are hard to disagree with,' said Ryan Kaufman, Overland
On-campus displays OK; organizations need approval
By Laura Roddy
roddy@kenson.com
Kansas staff writer
Spray painting "KSU" on the base of the Uncle Jimmy Green statue is not a legal form of expression. However, hanging pieces of paper in trees on campus is legal — if the group hanging the message has permission from the University Events Committee.
An unidentified individual or group attached pieces of paper inscribed with the words "Never Again" and "ProChoice" were attached to wire clothes hangers and placed in the trees along Jayhawk Boulevard Thursday.
The University took no action regarding the display, which was a commentary on the 25th anniversary of the Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court decision. But facilities operations employees had to remove the hangers.
The committee would have required the individuals to take the hangers down at the end of the day, Kaiser said.
"Technically, it is against the law," he said.
Other types of expression, like posters and sidewalk chalk, are generally not a problem. KU police do not consider most displays vandalism unless they are permanent.
Students who decorate Wescoe Beach with chalk or post signs on bulletin boards without permission shouldn't fear, said KU Police Sgt. Chris Keary.
But, police response to campus expression depends on the situation and whether a display is permanent or obscene, Keary said. Most of the time — as with the hangers— KU police take no action.
"If we see them doing it, it's another thing." Kearv said.
Keary said putting handbills on vehicles was illegal.
Lawrence ordinances, which apply to University property, prohibit some forms of advertisement and expression.
"People aren't aware that the city of Lawrence has an ordinance against it," he said.
When police catch handbill distributors, they ask them to remove the papers, Keary said. If the police do not catch the distributor, they contact the companies advertised on the handbills, and no further action is usually necessary.
Keary said KU police were unconcerned about chalk on campus sidewalks because it was not permanent.
Jodie Pogge, Lawrence freshman, said sidewalk chalk was not a problem.
"I think it gets noticed, but I don't think students really pay attention to it." Pogge said.
She said she thought writing on University property such as desks and restroom walls crossed the line of vandalism more than sidewalk chalk.
Students and members of organizations who want to have a campus display should contact the committee.
Kaiser said the committee worked with individuals to ensure regulations were not violated.
Event request forms, available in 400 Kansas Union, must be turned in by noon on Tuesday. The committee meets at 3:30 p.m. Wednesdays to consider the requests.
CITY ORDINANCES
14-314 Painting and Staining
No person, without proper authority,
shall mark by painting or staining on
any fence, wall, window, building, post
or place which is not his own.
14-316 Posting Signs Without Permission
No person shall put up any handbills, advertisements, posters, show bills or other signs on any building, pole or property not his own without permission from the owner thereof.
1
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1
+
2A
The Inside Front
Wednesday January 28,1998
News
from campus, the state, the nation and the world
CHICAGO
LAWRENCE • NEW YORK
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Applications for the University Women's Club are available in the Scholarship Center, 135 Strong Hall.
On CAMPUS
Madeleine Albright will visit with the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Russia to gain support for a possible attack on Iraq.
Hillary Rodham Clinton blamed the sex scandal surrounding her husband on a "vast right-wing conspiracy."
More than a dozen types of Hostess snacks that were sold in 21 states are being recalled because of possible asbestos contamination.
Scholarship applications available in Strong Hall
The University of Kansas University Women's Club is offering scholarships for the 1998-99 school year. Applications are available in the University Scholarship Center, 135 Strong Hall, and are due by Feb. 11, 1998.
Selection criteria includes grade point average, major, future plans, activities at the University and a 500-word essay. Interviews for the candidates will be held during the last two weeks of February and recipients will be announced March 1. 1998.
Any questions should be directed to Karen Hagen, club president-elect and scholarship chairwoman, at 782-2781 or call the University Scholarship Center.
-Kansan staff report
U.S. to confer with allies about situation in Iraq
WASHINGTON — Seeking to drum up support for a possible attack on Iraq, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright will confer in Europe with the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Russia. Defense Secretary William Cohen weighed a trip to the
Albright: Looking for support of allies
A
Gulf "to consult with our friends and allies."
"The train is leaving the station here," said Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon, pointing out that there appeared to be little room left for diplomacy. He said Cohen could leave as early as next week.
here, we will have to look at different options," Bacon said. He said Cohen's talks would be "to consult with our friends and allies in the Gulf about possible military action."
"If diplomacy fails
Albright leaves today to meet with Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine of France in Paris, Foreign Secretary Robin Cook of Britain in London and Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov probably in Madrid, Spain, a senior U.S. official said today.
Britain is lined up with the United States in favoring strong action against Iraq to try to gain unfettered access by U.N. inspectors to suspected weapons sites. But France and Russia have hedged, and Primakov is sending a deputy to Iraq to try to forestall a American-British attack through diplomacy.
So far, all diplomatic overtures have failed to persuade Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein to admit inspectors to all sites, including those under presidential control.
Hillary Clinton defends husband on 'Today' show
NEW YORK — Hillary Rodham Clinton today blamed the sex scandal surrounding her husband on a "vast right-wing conspiracy" that has dogged them for years and said "we've been accused of everything, including murder."
"The best thing to do in these cases is to be patient, take a deep breath, and the truth will come out," she said on NBC's "Today" show. She described the allegations as "an effort to undo the results of two elections" and said when all the facts were known "some folks are going to have a lot to answer for."
---
Clinton spoke calmly but firmly as she gave her most detailed response since allegations emerged explosively last week that the president had an affair with former White House interm Monica Lewinsky and that there was an attempt to cover it up.
Clinton: Blames scandal on conspirators
She declined to offer details of the relationship between the president and Lewinsky.
President Clinton has flatly denied having sexual relations with Lewinsky or urging her to lie.
A lawyer for Paula Jones, who has accused Clinton of sexual harassment in a case that dates back to Clinton's
days as governor of Arkansas, dismissed the talk of a right-wing conspiracy when asked about it today.
Hostess recalls snacks following asbestos scare
CHICAGO — More than a dozen types of Hostess snacks, including HoHo's and Twinkies, sold in 21 states are being recalled because of possible asbestos contamination.
Kansas City, Mo.-based Interstate Brands Corp. said yesterday it believed the products were safe, but its Hostess cake division was recalling them voluntarily. There were concerns that the products may have been affected by asbestos fibers in insulation removed from a boiler at the company's suburban Schiller Park, III., plant Jan. 11.
Asbestos is a fibrous substance known to cause cancer and other health problems.
The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency had planned to close the plant Monday night, but the company voluntarily closed the plant.
The products were sold in the central United States and have a "57" code as part of the expiration date on the package, the company said. Only products with the "57" code are subject to the recall.
The recall includes 13 Hostess products plus Dolly Madison cupcakes, almost all of which have expiration dates ranging from Jan. 22 to Feb. 6. HoHo's included have expiration dates ranging from Jan. 29 to Feb. 13. The products can be returned to the place they were purchased for a complete refund.
The incident is being investigated by state and federal officials, including the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Clinton address makes Congress perform too
NEW YORK — When President Clinton delivered his State of the Union address, the joint session of Congress also had to perform for television.
I AM THE LOVE OF MAN
"Republicans and Democrats are very aware that the country will be watching them carefully," Peter Jennings said earlier on ABC's "World News Tonight."
Clinton: Lewinsky issue ignored in address
"The political overlay here was a scandal," said NBC's Tom Brokaw when Clinton had concluded.
chamber.
"A burst of warm, sustained and standing applause," said CBS' Dan Rather as Clinton entered the
"It's as if it went away for 24 hours," said CNN's Jeff Greenfield. "Neither the president nor the Republicans are even touching it — at least not tonight."
Maybe so, but it was as if Washington had forgotten the administration's troubles.
-The Associated Press
University acquires new budget leader
By Gerry Doyle
gdoyle@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
A new budget director will take charge of finances at the University of Kansas in late February.
The KU budget director is responsible for arranging and distributing funds within the University and for coordinating the University's finances with the state legislature.
The University hired Jan Ferguson, who has been the assistant vice president for financial affairs at Pacific University in Sheridan, Ore., since 1992. Ferguson will start at the University Feb. 23.
Ferguson was chosen from about 70 applicants, said Diane Goddard, purchasing office director and head of the search committee. The applicant pool was narrowed to about eight applicants, and only three were interviewed.
"Jan played a very large role at Pacific," Goddard said. "She has a global breadth of experience. She has an intimate knowledge of issues at a high level. I don't think the switch will throw her at all."
Ferguson received her bachelor's degree from Southern Illinois University in 1981 and became a certified public accountant in 1988
She has been responsible for evaluating, recommending and implementing financial policies at Pacific University. The scale of the University of Kansas will be new to her, she said, and the guidelines for procuring money will be a change because Pacific is a private school.
Although the job will differ from her role at Pacific, Ferguson said she had no doubts about beginning work for the University.
"I've been at Pacific for eight years, and I was ready for a change career-wise," Ferguson said. "I'm very excited to come to a place like KU. The people I met when I came to interview impressed me and made me feel very comfortable."
The search began in June 1996, after the former budget director, Richard McKinney, took a job as assistant vice chancellor for information services and libraries within the Unive*sity.
McKinney, who had been budget director since October 1991, said that though he enjoyed his work, the situation of his new job was too much to pass up.
"It was a really neat opportunity," McKinney said. "It wasn't that I was bored, I was just ready for a new opportunity. I'm looking forward to working with Jan."
ET CETERA
The University Daily Kansas 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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650.640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
MANSAN
JEWELER
Nation/World stories
http://www.kansan.com/news/nation/
Top Stories http://www.kansan.com
The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
Today IN HISTORY
1807 - London's Pall Mall is the first street lit by gaslight.
1878 - Yale Daily News published, first college daily newspaper.
1915 - US Coast Guard established.
1956 - Elvis Presley's first TV appearance (Dorsey Bros. Stage Show).
1960- First photograph bounced off moon, Washington, DC.
1986- 25th Space Shuttle Mission (Challenger 10) explodes. All seven crew members, including school teacher Christa McAuliffe, die.
A KU student was the victim of a criminal threat at 9:28 p.m. Monday in the 900 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police said.
The hood and driver's side frame of a KU employee's car were scratched between 9:30 p.m. Monday and 2 a.m. yesterday in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police said.
A window and two ceiling tiles in the fourth-floor south wing of McColum Hall were damaged shortly before 2 a.m. Sunday, KU police said. The damage was estimated at $65.
A KU staff member's parking permit was taken from Lot 220 by the Motor Pool Jan. 20, KU police said. The permit was valued at $75.
Samuel Ramey
When the world's beloved
bass-baritone performs a
selection of evil arias,
Kansas has
A Date
with the
Devil
Thursday,
January 29, 1998
8:00 p.m. Lied Center
of Kansas
performing with the
Kansas City Symphony
William McGlaughlin,
Music Director and Conductor
All tickets 1/2 price for students
THE LIED CENTER
STUDENT
MUSEUM OF ARTS
SENATE
ON THE RECORD
THE LINE CENTER
Tickets on sale at ti.: Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS);
Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); SUA Box Office (864-3477) or
Ticketmaster (785) 234-4545. Visit our website www.ukans.edu/-lied
Stand Out.
Become an RA.
All application materials
are due to the
Department of
Student Housing,
Corbin Hall, by
5:00pm Tuesday,
January 30, 1998.
For more information,
contact Scott Strawn
at 786-864-3794.
EO/AA Employer
Stand Out. Become an RA.
All application materials are due to the Department of Student Housing, Corbin Hall, by 5:00pm Tuesday, January 30, 1998.
For more information, contact Scott Strawn at 785-884-8794.
EO/AA Employer DSH
"We are the bad way of abridgement."
—Matt Croke, Reduced Shakespeare Company
Lied Center Broadway and Beyond Series and SUA present
The Reduced Shakespeare Company performing
The Complete History of America [abridged] Saturday, January 31, 1998, 8:00pm
ALL TICKETS 1/2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office [864-ARTS]; Murphy Hall Box Office [864-3982]; SUR Box Office [864-3477] or Ticketmaster [785]234-4545.
Visit our website www.ukans.edu/~lied
"We are the bad boys of abridgement."
Lied Center Broadway and Beyond Series and SHA present
The Reduced Shakespeare Company performing
The Complete History of America [abridged] Saturday, January 31, 1998, 8:00pm
ALL TICKETS 1/2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office [864-ARTS]; Murphy Hall Box Office [864-3982]; SUA Box Office [864-3477] or Ticketmaster [?85]234-6545.
Visit our website www.ukans.edu/~lied
The Antiquary
CARTE DE VIVRE
1908 - 1998
STUDENT
SENATI
The University School of
50th Anniversary
SUNY New York University
1968 - 1988
K
STUDENT
IN ADMINISTRATION
SUNY AT
60th Anniversary
STANFORD UNIVERSITY OF SUSC
1988 - 1998
A K KYT
STUDENT
IN INVESTMENT HUNTER
SENATL
Wednesday, January 28, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Students modify cross-listed class
944 Mass.
832-8228
Graduates and undergraduates revise syllabus
By Julie Eberle
When Johanna Harrow,
Lawrence senior, showed up for
her first day of Anthropology 400,
she was in for a shock.
图示
Special to the Kansan
What Harrow thought was a mistake in the Spring 1998 timetable turned out to be a cross-listing of Anthropology 400 and Anthropology 785.
"When I walked into the classroom, I saw some graduate students that I knew, and then Professor Janzen said the course layout was going to be difficult because he had to appeal to the grad students, as well as to the undergrads," Harrow said. "I figured that there was a mistake in the timetable because it was a 700-level seminar."
Harrow said the class was labeled in the timetable as Current Issues, a 400-level class which dealt with medical anthropology. It was also Anthropology 785, Advanced Medical Anthropology Seminar.
John M. Janzen, professor of anthropology, said he purposefully had opened the course to graduates and undergraduates to attract a variety of students.
"When you cross-list a class, upper level and lower level, you have to work it so all can understand the material. If you steer right down the middle, you leave some people out," Janzen said.
Harrow said Janzen had planned on assigning the graduate students papers, which they would research and explain to the class in individual presentations. After each presentation, the class would form two groups. One group would consist of students who did not fully understand the material in the presentation, so Janzen could fill in background information. In the other group, students would continue to discuss the material further.
Red Lyon Tavern
"The more he talked about the diversity in students, the more I started to feel like I was intruding on the grad students and impairing their learning because of my lack of knowledge." Harrow said.
"When you cross-list a class, upper level and lower level, you have to work it so all can understand the material. If you steer right down the middle, you leave some people out."
John M. Janzen
Janzen said the students suggested a different proposal."They didn't want to separate into two different interest groups. They wanted to stay together as one group," he said.
"It was nice to know that people wouldn't just give up. We worked together to find an answer. I
A graduate student suggested out-of-class study sessions, and an undergraduate asked if Janzen could guide them with readings that explained the basics of medical anthropology. These were solutions that would help undergraduates keep up with the material, while preventing the graduate students from slowing down. Harrow said.
The solution seemed satisfactory for the students in the class, Harrow said.
professor of anthropology
think Professor Janzen was excited about it too." Harrow said.
"We were trying to get the best of both worlds for everyone. By coming together, staying and learning together, even outside of class, we could get the most out of Janzen's attention and expertise." Shaw said.
Jennifer Shaw, Lawrence graduate student, said the change in the class structure would benefit graduate students as well.
Janzen said he was going to rewrite the syllabus, taking into consideration the different levels in the class. The undergraduates will write short papers and have study sessions with the graduate students. The undergraduates also will have an opportunity to give presentations.
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES
Jubilee Cafe
Old and New Volunteers
Second Semester Sign-up
between 1:00 - 4:00
Sunday, February 1, 1998
in the International Room
of the Kansas Union
Call the CCO for Questions
at 864-4073
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO
SENATE
Dividing lines between courses erased
Cross-listing classes gives students credit outside their majors
By Emily C. Forsyth Kansan staff writer
to offer a course.
Students enrolled in "Ecological Consequences of the City" can receive credit in history, biology, environmental studies or geology because the course is cross-listed under each of those departments.
Brenda Selman, associate registrar, said that the option of cross-listing is considered by each academic department when deciding
"As long as the course has gone through the appropriate steps for approval to be offered — and through that process, cross-listing is usually discussed — then we list it as cross-listed," Selman said.
For example, Houston said that
Cross-listing allows students to count courses toward their major that otherwise would not qualify, said Pam Houston, director of undergraduate services for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
"I think it helps students to realize that the lines between departments are not rigid lines," she said.
a West African history course could be taken for credit in either history or African studies. This class also could fulfill the requirement for a non-western culture course.
"I certainly see several advantages to cross-listing," Houston said. "If a student is looking under history, they may see that African studies class they would not normally see."
Houston said that cross-listed courses also bridged gaps between different departments in the college. Sometimes a two instructors take turns teaching the course or co-teach the class with one instructor from each department.
"Cross-listings get faculty from different departments working together, and so that brings a richer curriculum to the students." Houston said.
Chester Sullivan, associate chairman of the English department, agreed that cross-listing courses was advantageous to students.
"Cross-listing occurs if a course has an obvious appeal to the clientele of two different departments." Sullivan said. "For instance, a course offered by the English department with the word 'women' in the title would be an obvious candidate to be cross-listed in the women's studies program."
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Opinion
Kansan
Published daily since 1912
4A
Lindsey Henry, Editor
Dave Morantz, Managing editor
Kristie Blasi, Managing editor
Tom Eblen, General manager, news adviser
Marc Harrell, Business manager
Colleen Eager, Retail sales manager
Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser
Justin Knapp, Technology coordinator
Wednesday, Jan. 28, 1998
Crud! I needed a book!
BOOK STORE
CLOSED
Oh Well! Taco time!
ALL NIGHT TACOS
WHY IN A COLLEGE
TOWN, DO THE
TACO AND PIZZA
PLACES STAY
OPEN LATER
THAN THE BOOK STORES
THE DAILY KANSAN DARES TO ASK THE QUESTION...
Crud! I needed a book!
BOOK STORE
Oh Well! Tacotime!
ALL NIGHT TACOS
WHY IN A COLLEGE TOWN, DO THE TACO AND PIZZA PLACES STAY OPEN LATER THAN THE BOOK STORIES?
USE YOU!
OH MY SPARK!
Yippee!
Weee!
WHY DID THEY PUT ISU ON TOP OF A HILL WHEN IT WOULD BE EASIER ON EVERYONES LEGS IF IT WERE ON THE BOTTOM?
WHY?
HAHAHAHAHA
WHY?
HAH HAH HAH
We are aliens.
But we look human.
Radical, Dude,
Her
HAH HAH HAH
WHY DO PEOPLE
THINK '3RD ROCK FROM
THE SUN' IS FUNNY?
PERHAPS THE WORLD
WILL NEVER KNOW,
W. David Keith / KANSAN
Editorials
Proposed escort program would add to the safety measures now in place
The University of Kansas is committed to a safe campus, and through programs such as Saferide, Crime Stoppers and the blue-light emergency phones it has come close to accomplishing this.
But for both the safety of students and their peace of mind, more needs to be done. A University-wide escort program is the answer.
Seth Hoffman, ASHC senator, said he wanted the University to establish an escort program that would provide students walking to and from campus buildings late at night with two security escorts. These paid student escorts, a man and a woman, would help deter crimes that sometimes happen when students travel alone: after all, there's safety in numbers.
A similar program is used at Kansas State University. The service there uses
Despite the cost and trouble of creating a new system, students should feel safe
paid student employees to escort students from one campus location to another, 24 hours a day.
The University of Kansas program would probably not run 24 hours a day, but at night when students feel the least safe. The program would ease the minds of students who may be worried about walking in the dark late at night.
The escorts, who would walk regular routes until needed, would carry radios that keep them in contact with a dispatcher. Students needing an escort could call from a campus phone. Hoffman said he hoped the blue-light emergency phones could one day be used to call the escort program.
The program could be paid for by a $1 per semester increase in student fees, which is a minor cost for creating a feeling of safety.
Another benefit of the program would be the deterrence of thefts and vandalism. The constant presence of escorts on campus may make would-be criminals think twice.
There are of course many details to iron out, such as how to coordinate the system and with whom—perhaps Saferide or the KU Police—and doing background checks of the escort program employees. But it would be worth the time, money and effort. KU students need to feel safe on their campus at all times, no matter how late it may be.
Paul Eakins for the editorial board
Escort program unneeded, infeasible
The escort program is a bad plan.
The students who are promoting it have good intentions: they want to ensure that students walking home from the library or other campus locations can get to their destination safely.
But a campus escort service is not the solution.
One argument against the program is simply that campus is a safe place. Crimes occur, of course, and sometimes students may feel unsafe, but we are fortunate to live in an area where crime is low. Most campus crimes are theft or vandalism. This is not an urban campus like Boston College or Depaul in Chicago where students come into contact with more unsavory elements on campus. A 24-hour, campus-wide program in Lawrence—and on the Hill at that—is overkill.
Lighting, blue phones,the bus system and a little common sense make campus safe
There has been only one report of oncampus violence this semester, and that was a fight after a party, not an ambush of an unsuspecting student walking between Blake Hall and Watson Library.
sible. Training could help esclarts learn how to avoid unsafe situations. But real risk-management measures—like arming the escort or self defense training—to combat potential violence directly is another matter altogether.
But a second argument against the program is stronger. The campus escort program raises serious liability issues for the University. If a student was the victim of a crime while under the protection of the service, the University could be held responsible. If an escort was injured in an attempt to thwart a crime, the University could also be held respon-
If escorts were confined to campus, then the University conceivably might be willing to accept the liability. But it is too much to ask that the University underwrite the risk of safety for the outlaying community. A campus-to-campus escort program would only be able to serve the residence and scholarship halls.
The University has good lighting, emergency phones, Saferide, and even a bus system that runs free at night. These things, combined with student's good judgment, lowers the risk of a crime to a near improbability.
Kansan staff
Paul Eakins . *Editorial*
Andy Obermuller . *Editorial*
Andrea Albright . *News*
Jodie Chester . *News*
Julie King . *Nees*
Charity Jeffries . *Online*
Eric Weslander . *Sports*
Harley Rattliff . *Associate sports*
Ryan Koerner . *Campus*
Mike Perryman . *Campus*
Brynn Volk . *Features*
Tim Harrington . *Associate features*
Steve Puppe . *Photo*
Angie Kuhn . *Design, graphics*
Mitch Lucas . *Illustrations*
Corrie Moore . *Wire*
Gwen Olson . *Special sections*
Lachelle Rhoades . *Nees clerk*
Andy Obermueller, dissenting
News editors
Kristie Bisel . . . . Assistant retail, PR
Leigh Bottiger . . . . Campus
Brett Clifton . . . . Regional
Nicole Lauderdale . . . National
Matt Fisher . . . Marketing
Chris Haghian . . . Internet
Brian Allers . . . Production
Ashley Bonner . . Production
Andee Tomlin . . Promotions
Dan Kim . . . Creative
Rachel O'Neill . Classified
Tyler Cook . . Zone
Steve Grant. . Zone
Jamie Holman . Zone
Brian LeFevre . Zone
Matt York . Zone
Advertising managers
"Show me a good loser, and I'll show you a loser."
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 home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
Adm. James "Bud" Nance, US Navy (ret.)
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 letters 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 Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermuerhell (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the staff group (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Perspective
Legislature should stop coiffing up for barbarism
A after my column last week, a few of my guy friends told me that I had come hither eyes in the photo that accompanied my column.
Come-hither eyes? No comment about the depth of my column or the inspiration behind the writing? You're commenting on something superficial and two-dimensional! You wouldn't know high-quality literature if it ran over you like the Joad's jalopy.
PETER SCHNEIDER
Erin Rooney
opinion@kansan.com
I think one of them uttered, "Uh, your hair looked nice, too," but that was said somewhere in the awkward silence that follows a good outburst.
At this point, I knew all
hope was lost for my friends. They were with out the yearn to learn, and I'm making a large assumption that they have brains in the first place. There are puddles with more depth — or so I thought.
A few days later, my friend Bryan called and asked about where I get my hair done and what I think of the woman who does it. My beautician would be thrilled to know that people are talking about her creation, but these worthless conversations had to stop.
As I started to belittle Bryan, he interrupted and said he was calling my attention to issues being discussed in the Kansas Legislature. The hair of everyone in the state was discussed, not just mine specifically.
I was dumbfounded. He wasn't talking about my column. I expected state leaders to care more about crime and lowering taxes than hair. Unfortunately, I was incorrect.
I discovered the Legislature voted to impose continuing-education requirements on the state's cosmetologists last year. However, the Kansas attorney general's office found that virtually every beautician in the state soon would be out of work because of the way the legislation was worded.
Of course, the legislation passed into law before any of the legislators realized that they would no longer be able to have their hair legally cut. Within days, the legislation was recalled and reworked. It will come to a vote again this year.
A senator has written the legislation to kill the continuing-education requirements and getting a haircut has become one of the most
controversial issues in the state. The details of the legislation are not that exciting, and a play-by-play of what the legislators are saying is about as interesting as the chemical compound of salt.
However, it is the heart of this issue that begs attention.
To get paid for styling someone's hair, a person must have a cosmetology license issued by the state. To get a cosmetology license, a person must graduate from a state-licensed cosmetology school, pass an exam that costs a fee to take, pay for relicensing every few years and jump through a number of other hoops. All of this is supposed to protect health and safety.
It all sounds simple, but it's not. What the licensing board fails to mention is that cosmetology school costs between $700 and $1,200. A student is required to go through 1,500 hours of education, but only 150 of those hours have anything to do with health or safety. Ninety percent of a cosmetology student's time in class has nothing to do with the reason they are required to get a license.
A haircut from a licensed beautician is not guaranteed by the state. In fact, the attorney general probably would laugh you right out of the office if you came in complaining about your new coiffure.
Beauticians want to make money. If they don't give you a good haircut or if they make your hair fall out, then after a while they will not have any customers. No customers means no income.
A few years ago, Monique Landers, then 15, opened her after-school hair-braiding business. When she won an award from the National Foundation for Teaching Entrepreneurship for her ingenuity, the state quickly ended her business in the grounds that she was practicing without a cosmetology license.
If the state was trying to secure health and safety, Landers could have stayed in business. Braiding hair does not necessarily require the use of scissors, dyes or chemicals.
I'm glad that the state is there to protect me from the beauticians. How could I have ever get along without them?
All in all, the state is wasting money, time and effort—all in the name of hair. They need to turn over the state board to a privately financed organization.
I have better things to do with my time and so should the legislature.
Erin Rooney is a Topeka senior in journalism. The formula for salt, incidentally, is NaCl.
Legislation before Senate Committees
The following bills will be debated by Student Senate Committees tonight. For more information, call Student Senate at 864-3710.
Sponsor: Partha Mazumdar, SenEx
A Bill to Amend Rules and Regulations
Calls for any representative who misses more than two University Committee or Board meetings in one semester to be immediately suspended from that group.
Referred to University Affairs and Student Rights Committees
Sponsor: John Colbert, Engineering Senator Referred to University Affairs and Finance Committees
A Bill to Fund the KU Chapter of the Kansas Trial Lawyers Association
Calls for allocation of $135.
A Bill to Co-Sponsor and Fund the Spring 1998 American Red Cross Blood Drive Calls for allocation of $670.20 to help fund blood drive.
Sponsor: Julie Numrich, Panhellenic Senator
Sponsor: Brian Goodman, Law Senator Referred to University Affairs and Finance Committees
A Bill to Fund the KU Water Slide Complex
Calls for a new student fee of $7 per semester
to finance a water slide on campus
Referred to University Affairs and Finance Committees
A Bill to Fund Spiritual Human Yoga
for allocation of $200
A Bill to Fund Jayhawk Communications
Sponsor: Sarah Schreck, LA&S Senator Referred to University Affairs and Finance Committees
Sponsor: Sarah Schreck, LA&S Senator Referred to University Affairs and Finance Committees
A Bill to Fund the Malaysian Student Association
Calls for allocation of $2,130 for Malaysian Night.
Referred to Multicultural Affairs and Finance Committees
Sponsor: Michael Young, Nunemaker Senator.
A Bill to Fund the Asian American Student Union Festival and Leadership Conference Calls for allocation of $5333.30 to sponsor a High School Leadership Conference and an Asian American Festival.
Sponsor: Michael Young, Nunemaker Senator Referred to Multicultural Affairs and Finance Committees
Feedback
Field house officials correct in not paying children full wage
As much as the masses delight in raging against the machine that is the establishment and cheer in glorious delight as our heroes vanquish their foes, real life seldom accommodates itself to such a pattern. The athletic department, alas, is not an evil monolith, looming above the hopes and dreams of those poor, sweatshopped children.
Ron Penny is not an evil man, destroying their muted struggle for learning and travel. I react with curiosity that you believe the biased, sensational pleas put forth like a docu-rama by the Kansan, publishing anonymous statements of brave informants. Hard Copy would be proud.
The fact remains that the job was not done to any degree of adequacy, and Ron Penry, in doing his duties by correcting their failure, was demonized by the media who could find nothing of merit to report on.
Nathanael Hevelone Manhattan senior
Coat hangers prompts a new consideration of 'Never again'
To Deidre Black, the Lenexa
Murder by coat hanger is no different than murder by a surgical tool. Let's not trick ourselves into thinking that surgical murder is somehow better because it at least saves the life and happiness of the mother.
Having rights gives us the liberty to to put our individual interests first. However, I submit that our responsibilities are more important. Having responsibilities grants us the opportunity to put someone else first, like giving an unborn child a chance to live out his or her purpose and place in he world in spite of the inconvenience to our own lives by pregnancy and motherhood.
senior who responded Jan. 27, I am a non-caucasian woman with financial troubles of my own. I may some day have to experience an unpleasant pregnancy but never an abortion. This is because I fear God, not middle-aged, upper class white men. There are plenty of such men who are pro-choice as well. What are you basing your judgment on whether the advocate is a rich white man?
To those of you who hung the ornaments in our campus trees, thank you. You have inspired me to contemplate the slogan, "Never again." Never again will I think a fetus in the womb is less than a whole child. Never again will I question when life begins I have the confidence of knowing that abortion is murder. I don't have to conceal my identity like the coat hanger propagandists.
Jacqueline Nugent Lawrence resident
Wednesdav. Januarv 28. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Year of the Tiger striped with tradition
TINA
By Sara Anderson
Kansan staff writer
Members of the Chinese Student Association demonstrate a guessing game during the group's Chinese New Year celebration. The association sponsored the event Saturday night at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Photo by Rooper Nomer/KANSAN
For many Asian students at the University of Kansas, the new year should start off with a bang—or a roar.
The Year of the Tiger begins today and marks the start of the Chinese New Year.
Nguyen said that each of the animals had its own unique characteristics.
The new year is based on the lunar calendar and the Chinese zodiac. There are 12 animals in the Chinese zodiac, and the calendar repeats every 12 years, said John Nguyen, Wichita junior and president of the Vietnamese Student Association.
"The Year of the Tiger symbolizes leadership, power and a lot of fortune. The characteristics are associated with the animal itself," Nguyen said. "The most important aspect is to get together with family, making sure that the new year starts off right. Everyone wishes each other good fortune."
Re Yang Lee, Taipei, Taiwan, graduate student and president of the Chinese Student Association, agreed.
"The big aspect is about family," he said. "The Chinese New Year is like Thanksgiving in the United States. It's a time for all the family members to get together."
Nguyen said traditional new year's festivities included fireworks, traditional foods and dances. He said that
although different cultures had unique ways to celebrate, most of the celebrations were uniform.
Nguyen said the major distinctions were cultural. The way food was prepared and offered, the style of dress and songs varied between groups, but basically were consistent, he said.
Nguyen said the Dragon Dance was one of the traditional dances during the new year.
"The Dragon Dance is used to ward off evil spirits of the new year," he said. "The dragon is initially wild and is then tamed by a tamer. It's symbolic of getting things in control for the new year."
YEAR OF THE TIGER:
Years: 1914, 1926, 1938, 1950, 1962, 1974, 1986, 1998, 2010
Characteristics: sensitive, emotional, capable of great love, have a tendency to get carried away, stubborn, often seen as a "hothead" or rebel
Good Occupations: boss, explorer, race car driver, or matador
Famous Tigers: Marilyn Monroe, Marco Polo, Dwight D. Eisenhower
Nguyen said the tradition of lucky money also was popular. He said red envelopes containing crisp new dollar bills were given to young people. Keeping the money would bring good luck during the new year.
"But it doesn't usually work out that way," he said. "People spend it."
Shengli Feng, assistant professor of East Asian languages and culture, said that the new year celebrations began shortly before the spring season. Feng said that originally the new year meant starting a new season for farmers or peasants.
"Its an agricultural country," he said. "The word for year, nian, means harvest, according to the ancient characters. The new year's celebration is looking forward to the new harvest and getting everything ready for the jobs and work of next year."
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Music
729 Mass Street
331-4338
Section A·
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 28, 1998
Pulse of jazz beating strongly in Kansas City
Jazz
Continued from page 1A
Continued from page 14 exciting, the popular music of the time.
Wright said that although they weren't abundant today, a few clubs still featured the music from the great jazz era.
Still swingin'
Noori Jones runs the Boulevard Cafe, 703 Southwest Blvd., and she hires the restaurant's live entertainment.
"From the first day we opened the place, jazz was as important to us as the food," Jones said. "I know that there are not a lot of places in KC that house jazz today, and I don't understand why. We have sincerely good musicians."
Jones said she could see how some clubs might lose money to audiences that just sat and listened without buying much. However, she said she felt that her cafe had found a niche.
"We are successful because we consistently have the music here," she said. "And that is what clubs and restaurants need. People need to know where to find the music at all times."
The Boulevard Cafe features a Brazilian jazz group called the "Sons of Brazil," every Tuesday night, and it also features jazz trios and quartets on Sundays, Wednesdays and Thursdays.
The Phoenix Bar and Grill, at 8th and Central streets in downtown Kansas City, Mo., is another of the city's hottest jazz venues.
Hugh Chandler, restaurant manager, hires jazz bands to play at the Phoenix. He said that the club booked live jazz successfully every night of the week except Sunday.
"I think there are quite a few jazz clubs coming up," he said. "There are a lot of little clubs popping' up north."
Chandler said that although his club had been successful and had profited from booking jazz performers, he understood how some clubs or restaurants might avoid jazz because it could be expensive. He said that some clubs actually might chase business away by booking seven or eight-piece bands that were too big for the venue.
"Some places hire bigger bands and people can't stand to listen to them in a small, closed-in environment," he said. "Not only does it result in a smaller crowd and less people coming to listen, but it can kill the club because a band that big can be expensive."
Milt Abel, one of Kansas City's most-loved jazz bass players, said club owners who initially frowned on jazz had started to loosen up.
"More clubs are playin' jazz," Abel said. "And the clubs are where the people can come listen to the music."
Abel said that there still was only a select group of people in Kansas City that understood and enjoyed jazz.
"People are blinded by the fact that KC jazz was great in the '30s and '40s. They don't realize that it's building back up again."
- Dick Wright, University of Kansas music historian
"They called it crazy music back then, during the beebop era," Abel said. "But they're still playin' it, and it will always be big in KC."
Captivating a grand audience
The problem in Kansas City right now, musicians and club owners say, is that without an audience, clubs will not give jazz musicians exposure. Ironically, without exposure, audiences won't learn to appreciate jazz, and there won't be the critical mass necessary to support the clubs.
Rod Fleeman, one of Kansas City's hottest jazz-guitar players, said that jazz would be difficult to bring to the public unless a lot of clubs consistently hired jazz bands and people knew where to look.
"Radio is so controlled today," he said. "So people are not exposed to jazz on a large scale. You have to present it to them."
Wright said that a constant battle among jazz institutions within Kansas City was not helping the scene.
The opening of the Kansas City Jazz Museum and the newly renovated Gem theater in the 18th and Vine district did not succeed entirely in getting Kansas City involved in jazz again, he said.
"The theater is a wonderful thing, and a lot of people made it down for the grand opening, but I'm not sure if people will continue to go down there and experience it," Fleeman said. "I think it will be good for drawing tourists, but I just wish it would draw Kansas Citians as well."
The museum, Wright said, lost some of its appeal when certain Kansas City jazz legends were played down.
"Count Basis was a huge part of Kansas City jazz, and for some reason, from what I hear, he wasn't very well represented in the museum," Wright said. "When people go down to the museum, they want to see everything about Kansas City jazz. They need to see everything."
Wright said that opening the museum and the theater was just a beginning step in increasing public awareness of Kansas City jazz.
Well-known Kansas City jazz-piano player Pete Eye said that more clubs needed to act as a consistent forum for jazz, but that musicians had to do their part and try to sell the music to the crowd.
Preserving the tradition
"If you're just playing a lot of complicated lines and notes, people won't stick around," he said. "You've got to get people excited and you've got to get them involved."
Herman Bell came to Kansas City in the 1940s to play tenor saxophone.
Bell said that most of the music back then came out of jam sessions, but that today, the musicians union frowned on jamming.
"Back then they just hired a rhythm section, and by the end of the night, the place was full of players who just came in to play and showcase their stuff," he said. "People would come in to listen and spend the night and most of their money in the club."
"People were involved in it back then," Bell said. "It was free jazz all night. People came in and bought drinks and stuff and just had a good time."
Bell said other forms of popular music, as well as football and baseball, had pushed jazz as a form of entertainment into the back seat.
"Back then (the 1930s and '40s), jazz was it," he said.
Wright said Kansas City tried to expose jazz through the International Jazz Festival in September, but ticket sales were so poor that he had to hand out a couple hundred tickets for free just so the seats were filled.
"It was somewhat embarrassing and disappointing," he said. "Here you have KC, the home of blues and jazz, and not many people came to listen."
Wright said that although there were not as many jazz places today as there were in the '30s and '40s, they did exist.
"People are blinded by the fact that KC jazz was great in the '30s and '40s," Wright said. "They don't realize that it's building back unagain."
Abel said he didn't understand why Kansas City jazz was popular in Europe but not in Kansas City.
When a Kansas City jazz musician plays in Europe and tells the people over there that he is from Kansas City, they are excited and immediately want to talk to him, Abel said.
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"They recognize the greatness of Kansas City jazz," he said. "It is starting to be fun again, and it would be great if we could make it feel good all over in KC again." he said.
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The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Date: February 3, 1998
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Place: Pine Room, Kansas Union
Facilitator: Barbara W. Ballard
Associate Dean of Students and Director, Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
---
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, University of Kansas.
For more information, contact Jennifer Joseph at 864-3552.
- An opportunity to see what sororities have to offer in an informal setting
- An informal way to meet women in the Greek community.
- A chance to learn more about the Greek community
If interested, please call the Panhellenic office at: 864--4643
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I will provide a comprehensive answer to this question based on the information provided in the image.
The text in the image is:
"1985. A man in a suit poses for a photo."
From this, we can infer that the man is posing for a photograph, and he is wearing a suit. The year 1985 is also mentioned in the text.
Since the image only contains a single line of text, there are no other details or contextual information available to construct a more complete question and answer.
However, if I were to attempt to answer questions based on the image, I would provide:
1. What is the man doing?
- He is posing for a photo.
2. Where is the man standing?
- He is standing in front of a wall or background.
3. What is the man wearing?
- He is wearing a suit.
4. Is there any additional information or context in the image?
- No, there is no additional information or context in the image.
In conclusion, the image provides a single line of text with information about a man posing for a photo. There are no further details or contextual information available to construct a more complete question and answer.
EASTON'S E LIMITED
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Wednesdav. Januarv 28.1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A • Page 7
City commissioners reject tougher environmental code
By Jeremy M. Doherty
jidoherty@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
A report that would have toughened up enforcement of Lawrence's environmental code failed to capture support at last night's city commission meeting.
Changing the code would require University of Kansas students, Lawrence residents and corporations who own or rent property to pay steeper fines for environmental violations.
The code outlines the expected quality of maintenance for structures within the community, particularly those structures affecting
residential neighborhoods.
Among the measures called for were increases in fines for environmental infractions, such as overgrown lawns. Under the code changes, minimum fines would have risen from $50 to $100, and maximum fines would have risen from $100 to $1,000.
Commissioners and citizens voiced their dissatisfaction with the eight-point environmental report.
David Dunfield, a spokesman for the Lawrence Association of Neighborhoods, said the fines were unfair.
"How can people be expected to pay $1,000?" Dunfield said. "That's very onerous."
chose to back away from the report. Commissioner Bob Moody said revisions were in order.
The commission unanimously
"I don't think there's consensus among the neighborhood groups," Moody said. "Maybe these groups need to come together as an entity and tell us what they want to do."
Moody said he would like to see the code enforced through a system that did not cater to individual complaints.
"I think that creates more problems," Moody said. "I've heard of neighbors nearly coming to blows because one person turned the one adjacent to them in to the city. We ought to enforce the code on a uniform basis."
TOUCHING THE WEST EAST WALL
Recruiting crusade
Johnny Schwaller, Omaha, Neb., senior, and Chris Willits, Leawood senior, take advantage of the warm temperatures to promote KU Crew Club. Schwaller and Willits walked across campus yesterday to bring attention to the club and to recruit members. Photo by Roger Nomer/KANSAN
Caller-paid cellular bills on horizon
NEW YORK — European callers pay. So do Asians. But in the United States, the person receiving a mobile-phone call — not the caller — fools the bill.
As a result, many Americans switch off their phones to avoid unwanted calls.
Now, the U.S. mobile-phone industry is pushing to reverse this trend, which has stunted the spread of go-anywhere communications in the world's leading high-tech society.
The Associated Press
If AT&T Corp., Bell Atlantic Corp. and others have their way, most cellular callers within a few years will pay just like they do for regular land-based phone service.
Volunteer Opportunities
Find Out what IOU can do...
AT&T, by far the nation's largest wireless company, put the issue in the spotlight by announcing Monday that it would test the option this summer and roll it out for its wireless customers by the end of the year.
Wednesday, January 28
7:30
Oread Roomof Kansas Union
The Center for Community Outreach Programs
Campus Volunteer Program College Bound Program Community Drop-in Center Community Internship Program Concerned, Aware & Active Students Iubilee Cafe
Students On Board
Students Tutoring for Literacy
Peer Mentoring Program
Youth Action Coalition
Youth Student Council
For More Information, Call 864-3710
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SIGN UP IN SUA OFFICE FIVE PERSON TEAMS/$25 PER TEAM HTTP:WWW.UKANS.EDU/~SUACALL 864-3477 FOR MORE INFO.
60th Anniversary
STUDENT WORK ACTIVITIES
ZUA
1938 - 1998
Sprint Delivers Finance Opportunities!
We're delivering opportunity...
are you ready to accept?
Sprint, the global leader in delivering advanced telecommunications solutions also delivers a world of opportunities for talented individuals majoring in Finance and Accounting.
We'll be on campus looking for interns in these disciplines. If you'll be a junior or senior by the fall of 1998, with a 3.0 GPA (4.0 scale) and solid P.C. skills as well as leadership capabilities, we might be looking for you. And by the way, three-fourths of last summer's eligible interns received full-time offers from Sprint after graduation.
Your college placement office has information on specific opportunities, or you may want to fax your resume to us at (913) 624-2231 or visit our website at http://www.sprint.com.
It's not too soon to get serious about your career. Get going ... get with Sprint.
Sprint Delivers Finance Opportunities!
Event: On-campus Interviews Date: February 11 and 13, 1998 Location: College Placement Office
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Description
**Description** Retail **Sale**
Canon A50 w/1 (8.8u) 499.00 189.90
Canon EA-1 w/1 (9.8u) 349.00 169.99
Canon EOS 85 uf 599.00 169.99
Canon EOS 75 uf 599.00 169.99
Canon Pelissner 259.95 59.99
Canon T50 w/5 (8.8u) 269.95 59.99
Maxxum Prowow w/35.00 (200ml) 429.95 189.99
Maxxum Prowow w/30.00 (200ml) 399.95 189.99
Minolta SRT-101 w/50u(used) 259.00 109.99
Minolta X700 w/50u(used) 249.00 109.99
Minolta Xg-4 w/24mm(uve) 199.95 59.99
Nikon Kamera NF 1199.00 149.99
Nikon F(used) 699.95 339.99
Nikon N8000 (used) 789.95 349.99
Nikon N9000(used) 1095.95 399.99
Olympus OM-2 (used) 489.95 519.99
Olympus OM-2c (used) 519.99 259.99
Olympus OM-PC (used) w/2.87mm (300ml) 419.95 119.99
Olympus OM-PC (used) w/2.87mm (300ml) 489.95 519.99
Pentax P30 (used) 299.95 119.99
Pentax Program Plossl 529.95 109.99
SeaRy N/Supersport 129.99 149.99
Vivitar C-30 (used) 299.95 119.99
Yachira 2004F (used) 299.95 119.99
Carlon Elan HE-28.80 pro 859.95 549.99
Carlon Elan HG-ebody 529.95 549.99
Maxxum 400 w/3.50d (dem) 479.95 299.99
Maxxum 400 w/3.50d (dem) 519.95 299.99
Minolta Promaster body 749.00 499.99
Minolta FM-2.1 body 749.00 499.99
Nikon FM-10 w/35.00d 499.95 339.99
Nikon FM-10 w/35.00d 519.95 349.99
Contax RX-80 pro 749.95 549.99
Olympus 2000 iw/30 w/1.80d (200ml) 469.95 299.99
Olympus 2000 iw/2.87mm (300ml) 599.95 329.99
Olympus 2000 iw/1.80d (200ml) 1095.95 329.99
Contax RX-80 pro 1095.95 329.99
Pentax Z2s V-8.5 design 519.95 349.99
Prattman Promaster body 849.95 329.99
Prattman Promaster body 1095.95 329.99
AUTOFOCUS SLR
Nikon
with 35-80mm Zoom
New
Value
$179 99
$395.00
MAXXUM 3000i (used) itih 35-80 mZ
- Compact autoeose 35mm SLR
* Auto Multi-program selection
* Fully automatic film handling
70-210mm $8999
Zoom Lens(used)
New Value $199.95
maximum $229 99
7000(used)
w/35-30mm New Value $85
FACTORY DEMO
MINOLTA MAXXUM
LENS SALE
DESCRIPTION New DEMO SALE
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
16mm 2.8 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 14 AF Mirrored
10mm 15 AF APO
Point & Shoot
QTY (units) Retail
Argus C-Nused) 69.95 11.99
Canon OM-18 (used) 169.95 49.99
Canon FD-135 MA (used) 169.95 49.99
China Blind AI (used) 159.45 49.99
Fuji 3000 access flash (used) 449.15 119.99
Kodak K84 (used) 119.95 119.99
Kodak K74 (used) 119.95 119.99
Miplen 35AF w/flash (used) 380.95 39.99
Nikon 35T1 (used) 1199.00 49.99
Nikon Zoom Touch 400u (used) 129.95 69.99
Nikon M50 (used) 755.00 349.99
Olympus M10 (used) 850.00 349.99
Pentax 60Niued) 149.95 39.99
Pentax IQ Zoon (used) 259.95 39.99
Pentax IQ Zoon 928 date (used) 389.95 169.99
Pentax IQ Zoon 1158 date (used) 389.95 169.99
Ricoh FCF AF-AM (used) 119.95 49.99
Yashibe AFD Motor HIU (used) 149.95 19.99
Yashibe TA-FA (used) 249.95 19.99
Canon Surreutel Digma TM (used) 59.99
Fujifilm Miurozon 26:60m date (used) 495.00 29.99
Leica Mini M4 date 299.95 199.99
Tiwan Titanium MI-104 1295.00 879.99
Tiwan Titanium MI-204 1295.00 879.99
Canon Surreutel Digma TM 420 329.99
Canon Zoom CD70 date 299.95 329.99
Olympus 2000 room 249.95 319.99
Olympus 3000 remote 349.95 219.99
Panasonic P664k weatherproof 329.95 219.99
Panasonic P664k weatherproof 329.95 219.99
Panasonic P15M date/pampe 449.95 239.99
Premier Mini 35 59.95 239.99
Bisch GR-1 date 695.00 449.95
Bisch GR-1 date 695.00 449.95
Canon A-1 camera 249.00 329.99
Minolta Vidiar dual kit 395.00 249.99
Vidiar AF 400 panorama 99.95 249.99
Vidiar FS40 date 99.95 249.99
Vidiar FS40 date 99.95 249.99
Vidiar Zoom Z150000 99.95 249.99
Sold for $1199 this January at other stores
HEWLETT PACKARD
Authorized
Reseller
Only
$29/
Mo.*
COMPUTER
APS CAMERAS
Description Retail Sale
Canon Elph Jr Kit 299.95 199.95
Canon EOS IX, 24-85mm 1295.00 199.99
Fuji 400M II, 250 mm 549.95 199.99
Konica Minolta Zoom X50 129.95 78.99
Konica Zoom Nikkor Zoom X50 kit after $15 măin in € 169.95
Nikon Veraft 23, 2.58 cm 495.95 139.99
Nikon Veraft 23, 2.58 cm 495.95 139.99
Nikon Zoom 75 129.95 199.99
Epson Elfina Zoom kit 395.00 149.99
Venus II 30 x 0.58 mm 99.95 149.99
JUNK 'N STUFF
Come browse, rummage and dig through all kinds of photographic gems, camera supplies, cases, accessories and darkroom gems. Cheap!
29C AND UP
LOWEST PRICE EVER
**Description** When New Retail **SALE**
Alfon 166 (Rice Use) 19.99
Canon 244T (Use) 79.95 19.99
Crown 175A (Use) 49.95 19.99
Focal 320RS (Use) 24.95 1.99
Kako 928 (Use) 34.95 1.99
Kako 928 (Use) 34.95 1.99
Maxium 10314 (Use) 69.95 19.99
Mindia 200YX (Use) 129.95 19.99
Nikon NU-1E (Use) 49.95 9.99
Nikon NU-103 (Use) 79.95 9.99
Nikon NU-103 (Use) 495.00 109.99
Olympus T2 (Use) 109.95 49.99
Pentax A130P (Use) 79.95 9.99
Neopix A130P (Use) 24.95 19.99
Neopix A211D (Use) 69.95 19.99
Vivitar 102 (Use) 29.95 4.99
Vivitar 215 (Use) 49.95 9.99
Vivitar 283 (Use) 119.95 9.99
Maxium 4000 ID TD for orig
Maxium 149.95 59.99
Promaster 5500 w/out module 99.95 59.99
Promaster 5900 w/o out module 99.95 79.99
Promaster TLF tilt module 99.95 79.99
Promaster 1441T 99.95 99.99
Sumpak 544 299.95 109.99
Sumpak DX-R4导弹 399.95 129.99
Vivitar 280A w/ Nikon AF 179.95 99.99
Vivitar 280A w/ Nikon AF 179.95 99.99
Vivitar 3000 179.95 99.99
FLASH
For Kodak Camera with 3X Zoom Lens
STOCK PHOTO
Orig.
Retail
$329.95 $159 99
KODAK ZOOM 105
- Autofocus 55mm camera
* Powerful 38-105nm zoom lens
* Fully automatic SENSALITE™ flash
* Red-eye reduction flash mode
Description Which New Sale
Gossen Luna Pro (used) 199.99 $99.99
Minolta IV (used) 459.95 $199.99
Pentax Spintronix V (used) 385.00 $149.99
Capital F-4 CBs 69.95 $49.99
Capital 79 CBs 69.95 $49.99
Capital IV F 99.95 $39.99
Minolta flash meter V 795.00 $299.99
Polaris digital meter V 795.00 $299.99
TELECONVERTERS
LIGHT METERS
18mm F3.5 DC HSM
Pentium 166 with 16MB Ram.
2GB hard drive, includes fast modem. Special purchase, 90 day on site factory warranty from HP on this factory remanufactured model.
Optional three year warranty available from Wolfe's
79999
HEWLETT
PACKARD 7270
WITH MONITOR
COLOR PRINTER
1.4X Autofocus $29^{99}$
for Maxxum
2X Tamron $99^{99}$
Autofocus
Used 2X Manual Focus
$1^{99}$ TO $39^{99}$
Orig.
New
Retail
$599
$199^{99}
Canon
CANON BJC-610
Factory Demo with factory warranty
- Factory Demo with factory warranty*
* Individual ink cartridges for each color save you money*
* Near photographic color output at 720/X720 dpi*
* Fast color printing with Microsoft® Windows® printing system*
* Print on plain paper, transparency, even fabric*
--very compact and light weight [ * 3 frequencies. Model RT200
*Packard Bell is a trademark of Packard Bell Electronics, Inc.
$9999
14" SUPER VGA MONITOR
Factory Remanufactured
Special purchase of 14" Super VGA .39 color monitors. Original retail $199.95
CAMCORDERS
Parkinson's Disease
Cancer
Treatment
CASES & BAGS
| Description | Weight New Price | Sale Price |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Canon E640 8mm (used) | 959.99 | 199.99 |
| GE 9/900 HS VIS (used) | 595.00 | 149.99 |
| CEG680 HS VIS (used) | 495.00 | 149.99 |
| Olympus N70 camera (used) | 349.00 | 159.99 |
| Panasonic 4200 HS VIS (used) | 795.99 | 169.99 |
| Panoasonic PC-750 camera (used) | 795.99 | 169.99 |
| Riichi RD-80 10mm (used) | 795.99 | 149.99 |
| Sears 94 VIS (used) | 599.99 | 179.99 |
| Lsharp 50R VIS (used) | 790.99 | 149.99 |
| Riichi RD-80 10mm (used) | 795.99 | 149.99 |
| Minolta 852 8mm | 1532.00 | 149.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD 806.0 | 695.00 | 149.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD RD-12 8mm | 805.00 | 149.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD RD-12 8mm | 2095.00 | 149.99 |
| JVC GR-DVII MDC | 429.00 | 149.99 |
| JVC GR-DVII MDC | 295.00 | 149.99 |
| JVC GR-DVII DVC | 275.00 | 199.99 |
| JVC GR-DVII DVC | 190.99 | 199.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD H5S | 190.99 | 199.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD H5S | 190.99 | 199.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD H101 H5S | 190.99 | 199.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD H282 H5S | 165.00 | 134.00 |
| Sony CD-GZ201 S-VAC | 165.00 | 134.00 |
| Parascan P-S41 VIS-C | 165.00 | 134.00 |
| Parascan P-S41 VIS-C | 165.00 | 134.00 |
| JVC GR-V201 VIS-C | 749.99 | 699.99 |
| JVC GR-V201 VIS-C | 649.99 | 699.99 |
| Mindora M30a VIS-C | 693.00 | 699.99 |
| Parascan P-D47 VIS-C | 795.00 | 649.99 |
| Parascan P-L792 VIS-C | 955.00 | 649.99 |
| Quarax V415 VIS-C | 693.00 | 649.99 |
| Fujian XF450 VIS-C | 693.00 | 649.99 |
| Fujian XF450 VIS-C | 693.00 | 649.99 |
| Canon TN909 8mm | 595.00 | 499.99 |
| Canon TN909 8mm | 549.99 | 499.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD 806.0 | 699.99 | 499.99 |
| Sony CD-TCD 806.0 | 699.99 | 499.99 |
| JVC GR-X201 8mm | 595.99 | 399.99 |
| JVC GR-X201 8mm | 595.99 | 399.99 |
Pencil
UPDATE YOUR SYSTEM!
2 way VHS tape rewinder. Save wear on your VCR and camerole motors
DATE $299 99
BACK
CANON REBEL G
Body Only
BUHL 90 EDUCATOR
- Automatic 35mm SLR
* 3-point autofocus system
* 11 exposure modes
* Retractable built-in flash
* Manual override to /12000
* Silent film advance
Original $599
Retail $39.95
VHS REWINDER
- Balanced lens system for bright even image and sharpness
* Exclusive Buhl cooling system
99¢
UP
MEDIUM FORMAT
Canon
Lens 35mm F1.4 ASPH.
ISO 100
Big selection of new and used cases for cameras, computers, camcorders, and more.
Hundreds of choices from 996
OVERHEAD PROJECTOR
| Description | When New Item | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Grafter LN 90mm (Retail) | 1999.99 | |
| Hasson 2X KRnuckel (used) | 450.00 | 1999.99 |
| Hasson 5x 2KRnuckel (used) | 450.00 | 1999.99 |
| Hasson 5x 2KRnuckel (digitroned) | 4495.00 | 1999.99 |
| Hasson 10x 20kRnuckel | 399.99 | 169.99 |
| Hasson A-12 magazine (used) | 699.99 | 169.99 |
| Hasson A-12 magazine (digitroned) | 6495.00 | 169.99 |
| Pent 67 20kmil (14 | 1999.99 | 249.99 |
| Kaumarkt (used) | 799.99 | 499.99 |
| Pent River RL Riused | 89.95 | 499.99 |
| Pent River RL Riused (digitroned) | 899.95 | 499.99 |
| Holdold W100 W 80 mm (18 | 4950.00 | 2999.99 |
| Holdold EXL Ex16 | 450.00 | 239.99 |
| Holdold EXL Ex16 (digitroned) | 525.00 | 239.99 |
| Holdour 860 Scollar HI | 350.00 | 269.99 |
| Holdour 860 Scollar HI (digitroned) | 300.00 | 2299.99 |
| Holdour 120 MHarucmicro | 4500.00 | 2299.99 |
| Holdour 150 MHarucmicro | 4260.00 | 2399.99 |
| Holdour 500 MHarucmicro digram | 4995.00 | 2399.99 |
| Holdour 500 MHarucmicro digram (digitroned) | 1895.00 | 799.99 |
| Matsa a 645 XW x Swab, | 2795.00 | 800.99,
@mmg & prism
WE TRADE-IN OLD CANON CAMERAS
BOOKS
Deluxe $23999
Version
Buhl 121 SAVE $70
SAVE $50
1/2 PRICE LARGE SELECTION SAVE 20% to 70%
WIRELESS VIDEO MICROPHONE
- Ideal for situations with distracting noise or where distance limit is high.
* Transmitter and receiver are very compact and light weight
PENTAX-K LENSES
$39.99
SALE
Original
Retail
$99.99
When New
| Description | Retail | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 28-80mm (15.5-5.9 Nautarus) | 189.95 | 199.95 |
| 28-80mm (5.5-15.9 Takumarusd) | 249.95 | 199.95 |
| 80-20mm (15.5 Nautarus) | 299.95 | 199.95 |
| 80-20mm (5.5 Nautarus) | 349.95 | 199.95 |
| 85-210mm (14.5 Quanatarusd) | 179.95 | 169.99 |
| 100-340mm (15.6 Sigma AF) | 195.90 | 169.99 |
| 80-200mm (15.6 Sigma AF) | 462.90 | 199.99 |
| 100-340mm (15.6 Sigma AF) | 490.90 | 199.99 |
| 200-210mm (15.6 Sigma AF) | 451.90 | 199.99 |
| 200-210mm (5.6 Sigma AF) | 259.90 | 199.99 |
| 210-210mm Promaster | 349.95 | 199.99 |
| 70-210mm (15.6 Sigma AF) | 299.95 | 199.99 |
| 400-560mm (5.6 Sigma KPO) | 299.95 | 199.99 |
| 500-728mm Macro | 449.90 | 199.99 |
| 500-728mm Macro | 449.90 | 199.99 |
| 800-1540mm Takima | 119.95 | 119.95 |
LOWEST PRICE EVER
$^{104}$ x2 Technology is capable of 56 Kbps downloads. However, due to FCC rules which restrict power output of the service provider's modem, current download speeds are limited to approximately 53 Kbps. Actual speed may vary depending on line conditions. An x2-compatible analog phone line and an x2 capable service provider are required for these high speed下载s.
Other products and brand names may be registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective owners.
* Monitor may not match illustration
Packard Bell
INCLUDES COLOR PRINTER
PULL
Password:
Email:
Login
Only $58/Mo.
$15999
PACKARD
BELL
S616
With .28 SVGA color monitor; and Canon
Nikon .380A color display.
BJC-210 color bubble jet printer
intel inside
- *23MHZ Pentium™ MXIM™ technology processor*
* *4.3GB hard drive*
* *24X CD ROM*
* *64MB of RAM*
* *8MB video ram*
* *65 KB capable modem modulator U.S. Robotics X2™ technology*
* *common features of popular models*
DARKROOM
Description When New Rates SALE
45 Angle D2 In2 199.00 499.99
Boiler 238 D1 Dehumidifier 199.00 399.99
45 Chrome Hanging 199.00 799.99
16mm (4.5公分) compactor 139.95 69.99
16mm (4.5公分) Lumber & Boiler 139.95 69.99
75mm (5.5V vise) 199.00 9.99
75mm (5.5V vise) 49.95 9.99
75mm (5.5W vise) 99.95 14.99
75mm (5.5E Oligoaggrate) 89.95 29.99
75mm (5.5E Oligoaggrate) 109.95 29.99
75mm (5.5K Kommergerad) 109.95 29.99
P54H4L amd retracts 795.00 299.99
Gratan 300 retractor 129.95 39.99
Gratan 300 retractor 129.95 39.99
23C III Cond 729.95 839.99
23C III Cond 895.00 699.99
67XI D II Refrigerator 729.95 599.99
Ca倍 H Entrager kf 219.95 149.99
Ca倍 H Entrager kf 219.95 149.99
U FIX IT
As usual, we have a collection of 35mm SLR cameras, point & shoots, lenses, projects and such at crazy prices. Find out what makes a camera tick or not.
Buy an $999 SLR for only
DVD PLAYERS
10.5
$100 OFF
Every JVC & Panasonic model in stock reduced $100. Get the hot technology at the lowest price
VCR/TV/TVCR
**Description** **Price** **Recommendation** **Sale**
DVC SCSI DLK1000 1999.99 $159.99
HBS Sony EV200 799.99 $109.99
HBS Sony HV638 799.99 $109.99
HVSIS VC HV638 799.99 $109.99
VHSIS Nintendo Go Video C9020 450.99 $159.99
* 1“Panasonic TCL310R” 450.99 $159.99
* 2“Panasonic CT20G12” 449.99 $159.99
* 3“Fankuar LDK480” 449.99 $159.99
* 4“Fankuar LDK480” 449.99 $159.99
* 5“Fankuar KW510” 299.9 $159.99
* 6“Fankuar KW510” 299.9 $159.99
* 7“Fankuar KW510” 299.9 $159.99
TX-Tektronix MKMAD10 1999.99 $159.99
Sharp XPV40 pro (mini) 1999.99 $159.99
Pacific Panasonic MK50 (mini) 1999.99 $159.99
CELLULAR PHONE BATTERIES
$9'99
Values to $100
OBJECTIVE
100%
Batteries for Fujiisu, Mitsubishi
Batteries for Fujitsu, Mitsubishi,
Okisata, Uniden. Assorted sizes
Chargers &
Car Cords
$9.99
Values to $39.99
- 30-bit flatbed scanner
PAPER
Description When New Retail SALE
AFTER $50 $9999
MAIL-IN
REBATE
FLATBED SCANNER
Value $24.99
REBATE ENDS SAT.
NIKON LENSES
EasyPhoto ImageWave
30-bit mapped scanner
* Scans photos, text and graphics
* 600x300 dpi optical resolution
* Reads wallet size to 8.5x11.7"
TELESCOPES & SPOTTING SCOPES
50 sheets of Agla 8X10 glossy variable contrast enlarging paper
105mm I2.8 Nikon (used) 289.00 169.99
105mm I2.8 Sigma (used) 149.85 169.99
15.70mm I2.8 Sigma (used) 149.85 169.99
15.70mm I2.8 Solgioner(AI) 39.39
50mm I2.8 Nikon as (used) 95.98 169.99
50mm I2.8 Nikon AF (used) 95.98 169.99
50mm I2.8 Solgioner(AI) 95.98 169.99
28.20mm Nikon AF (used) 89.95 9.99
28.20mm Nikon AF (used) 795.00 795.00
50mm I2.8 Nikon AF Mirror (used) 149.85 389.99
100mm I2.8 Nikon AF 1400.00 1099.99
100mm I2.8 I6.6.7 Promaster AF 639.99
100mm I2.8 Promaster AF 639.99
100mm I2.8 Promaster AF 499.00 179.99
100mm I2.8 I6.6.7 Promaster AF 495.00 179.99
28.70mm I2.8 I5.4 Promaster AF 299.95 119.99
350mm I2.8 I5.4 Promaster AF 249.95 119.99
700mm I2.8 I4.6 Promaster AF 349.95 249.99
700mm I2.8 I4.6 Promaster AF 349.95 249.99
28.70mm I2.8 Sigma AF 582.00 349.99
28.70mm I2.8 Sigma AF 582.00 349.99
28.70mm I2.8 Sigma Macro AF 499.00 279.99
210mm I2.8 I4.6 Promaster AF 499.00 279.99
210mm I2.8 I4.6 Promaster AF 499.00 279.99
**Description** **World Wide Retail** **Sale**
Celestron C45olar 1200.00 **699.99**
Bushnell N50 "3 reflector" 129.95 **149.99**
Bushnell 150 demo 129.95 **149.99**
Bushnell 250 demo 129.95 **149.99**
Brass 255 spindle 69.95 **29.99**
Bushnell Spin 260-60 demo 142.95 **49.99**
Bushnell Spiniew 12-56N 142.95 **99.99**
Bushnell Spiniew 12-56N 149.95 **99.99**
Bushnell C-90 adapter 795.00 **49.99**
Jason 344-154 199.95 **69.99**
Jason 12-56N 199.95 **69.99**
Jason 12-56N 825.00 **199.95**
PLUS Clearance Savings on Other Paper
$ 1 1^{9 9} $
100%
8X10 POLY RC
MINOLTA LENS
MANUAL FOCUS
Description When New
Retail SALE
Description Retail SALE
12mm (1.2 Sensor) - 15 $9
20mm (2.0 Sensor) - 15 $9
25mm (2.5 Sensor) - 169 $9
35-165 ILS Sensor 179 $9
35-175 ILS Sensor 179 $9
35-175 ILS Sensor 179 $9
35-175 ILS Sensor 179 $9
75-200 ILS PC Coupler 149 $9
200-245 ILS Adhesive 169 $9
200-245 ILS Adhesive 169 $9
200-245 ILS Adhesive 169 $9
60-300 ILS 5.6 Sensor 199 $50
60-300 ILS 5.6 Sensor 199 $50
70-210 ILS 5.8 Promarker 119 $9
100-500 ILS 6 Sensor 295 $9
100-500 ILS 6 Sensor 295 $9
90 DAYS NO INTEREST
KODAK ROYAL COLD
$ 3^{99} $
LOWEST PRICE EVER
200 24... 200
Kodak royal Gold
new Kodak Royal Gold
200
200
35mm 24 exposure Kodak
Royal Gold ISO 200
Kodak's premium quality
35mm photo lens
PROJECTOR CARTS
$29^{99}
A
Retail $79.95
22" CART W/
CASTERS
42" CART
Retail $109.95
$49^{99}
48"X25"X34"
CART W/AC
Retail $219.95
$79^99
100 m. long, 120 ft. wide, and 50 m. deep.
The walls are made of concrete.
The floor is covered with tiles.
SCREWDRIVER
Reg.
$5.99 $1 99
Set of six jeweler's screwdrivers in storage box
DESCRIPTION Widest New Release SALE
10x50 BRL Legacy 119.99
10x50 Bushnell arm/camio 59.99
10x50 Miami EZ 199.99
12x63 Camon Stabilized 899.99
12x64 Jason Mercer II 1099.99
17x35 Jason 10' Installee 79.95
17x35 Miami EZ 9.9*3 137.00
17x42 Simmons Mower 299.95
17x42 Simmons Mower 899.95
17x54 Swift Armored 795.00
18x30 Miami EZ 144.00
18x40 Lucer Armored 129.95
18x54 Swift Armored 795.00
18x42 Simmons President 499.50
18x22 Miami Autofocus 299.95
18x21 Nikon Spirit compact 153.00
18x21 Nikon Gold compact 153.00
18x24 Ponta UCG-V 389.00
18x18 CM Sculptor 600.00
18x21 Bushnell gold compact 129.95
18x21 Simmons widecompass 149.95
18x21 Bushnell pocket domes 149.95
18x21 Bushnell Spectra 149.95
Bushnell V拉杆 Pro-400 349.95
Bushnell V拉杆 Pro-800 559.95
17x53 Persimmon views camo 129.95
17x53 Persimmon views camo 129.95
VARTA
10 Alkaline
Energiensparender Batterie
10 PACK
AA BATTERIES
STOCK $299
UP NOW
Get 10 batteries for the price of
4. World's best AA alkaline
batteries made in Germany by
Varta, Reg. $5.99
LOWEST PRICE EVER
MULTI
200
CASH
BACK
ACE
After S3 Mail-in Rebate
84
EXIT
3
PACK
$ 4^{99}
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Wednesday, January 28, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 9
Senate members lacking in attendance at meetings
New policy would punish absences at board meetings
By Melissa Ngo
mngo@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
University of Kansas students are not showing up to University committee and board meetings, and Pat Mazumdar wants to change that.
Mazumdar, graduate senator,
will introduce legislation in Student Senate committees tonight that would change punishment procedures when student members fail to attend committee and board meetings. Mazumdar is sponsoring the same bill in Senate.
University committees and boards, such as the Academic Policy and Procedures Committee and the Parking Board, consist of faculty, staff and students.
Any student can apply for a seat on a committee or board, but many don't show up once they get the appointment. Mazmund said.
"The No. 1 complaint that the committee chairs have is poor student attendance," Mazumdar said. "Right now, it's very easy to miss and not be punished. The committee chairs have no mechanism to complain."
As the rules stand, there are two ways to remove a student from a committee: a two-thirds vote of Student Senate, or the recommendation of the student body president or the chair of the Student Senate Executive Committee with the approval of Senate.
Mazumdar said he didn't see the difference between excused and unexcused absences.
"If you're not there, you've missed the meeting," he said. "If you've got a good excuse, tell it to StudEx."
The bill would allow committee chairpersons to report members who had missed more than two meetings to the StudEx chair. The member immediately would be suspended from the committee.
At the next StudEx meeting, the member would have to explain why the committee meetings were missed.
If the answers are not satisfactory, then the member is removed from the committee and the student body president could appoint a replacement that day.
Robert Hohn, chairman of the Academic Policies and Procedures Committee, said good attendance from the student members was not a problem.
"Our student attendance has been really good, and they give good input," Hohn said. "We have an advantage because the things we discuss, such as grades and
SENATE REGULATIONS
Student members who do not serve as ex-officio members may be removed upon a two-thirds vote of the Student Senate, present and voting, or upon the recommendation of the President of the Student Body or the Chairperson of the Student Executive Committee with the approval of a majority of the Senate, present and voting, provided notice that a vote is to be taken is given in the agenda of the meeting.
graduation requirements, are things students feel they have a stake in."
But Anita Herzfeld, chairwoman of the International Affairs Committee, said none of her committee's student members had attended the committee's three meetings. The four students make up half the committee.
"I think it's very detrimental to our work because we don't know what the student perspective is on the issues we're discussing," Herzfeld said.
She said that this year's lack of student attendance surprised her because she had great attendance and input in past years.
"In the past we've chosen a student representative to co-chair the committee," she said. "We haven't been able to do that this year because none of them have shown up."
Waterslide plan makes waves
Senators to debate proposal for campus recreation complex
By Marc Sheforgen msheforgen@kansan.com Kansan staff writer
John Colbert, engineering senator, and Sam Pierrom, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, hope to give students the chance to cool down and improve their suntans at a West Campus waterside complex.
Spring is on the way, and two student senators think that University of Kansas students deserve a chance to enjoy fun in the sun on campus.
According to Colbert and Pierron's legislation, KU students ranked 118th nationally in the tanning category of the *Princeton*
Colbert and Pierron will slide into tonight's Finance and University Affairs committee meetings to propose a bill to fund the complex with a $7 per semester fee to be paid by all students enrolled in six or more credit hours.
Review, below nine of the Big 12 schools. Colbert said a waterslide complex could be something that would brighten the University's status and break away from the norm.
"Let's go 'em all one better," Colbert said. "Why always just keep up with the Joneses?"
Colbert said the complex also would be open to non-students and would generate enough revenue to allow other features to be added in the future.
"Over the years, we could expand. Maybe we could get a wave pool," he said.
Aaron Justus, Prairie Village senior, said that a waterside complex would be nice, but that it was not practical.
"Nothing like that would ever happen because of the liability, but it would be fun," he said.
"The voters showed they wanted it by electing me, so they can't completely dismiss it," he said. "If they vote against it, they aren't doing their job."
In last year's Senate elections, Colbert's campaign included a promise of a waterside complex, and he said that student support was high. He said that he was apprehensive about how committee members would view the bill, but it was their job to vote to pass it
WATER WORKS
The proposed waterslide would be located on West Campus
■ The bill would increase the student activity fee $7 for students enrolled in six or more hours
The bill will be brought in front of Student Senate Finance and University Affairs committees tonight
Scott Sullivan, student body president, said he would be surprised if the bill was passed by the finance committee.
Jordan Edwards, finance committee chairman, said he realized the waterside complex was one of Colbert's campaign promises but said that the committee probably would look at the bill with a critical eve.
Edwards said that he had never seen a request like this.
"In my opinion, a West Campus waterslide probably isn't the most pressing need," he said.
Keep It Clean
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daily kansan
wednesday
1.28.98
ten.a
kičingg cafFθiné
story by anna attkisson illustration by micah laaker
y. g
Anna takes a first-hand look at the difficulty and consequences surrounding trying to go cold-turkey off caffeine
SODA & SNACK
SODA & SNACK
Caffeine content per 12 oz.
serving:
Soda
■ Zydekola: 144 mg
■ Jolt: 71.5 mg
■ Mountain Dew: 54 mg
■ Surge: 52.5 mg
■ Mr. Pibb: 50 mg
■ Coke: 45 mg
■ Pepsi: 34 mg
Snack
■ Chocolate: 240 mg
couldn't imagine a day without caffeine. It was
crazy. The thought of it gave me the shakes, I imagined I would become a walking zombie. My grades would fall, and I would have to drop out of school.
None of that happened. I quit caffeine and my worst fears were exaggerated, but dark clouds and dull pain followed me for days.
Legend has it that a priest drank the first cup of coffee in an Arabian monastery so he could stay awake and pray all night. Not unlike many college students. I can remember
many a night that it came down to me,
God, my homework and caffeine, and a prayer to get everything done before dawn.
Now, I am caffeine-free and I worry about what soda can do to my body. Also, I am left wondering why I ever agreed to experiment on myself.
Nearly 80 percent of the world's population ingests caffeine in coffee, tea, soda, deserts and some headache and sinus medication according to the lava.net health web site.
I have been one of that 80 percent since I was very young. I started drinking caffeine as a child, and I began a regular schedule at 14. I drank a can of pop in the morning for breakfast, and another mid-morning. I would drink a can for lunch, for an afternoon snack and with dinner. For dessert, I would go out and have a cup of coffee or two. Each day was followed by a headache the next morning because it had been seven hours or more since I had ingested any caffeine.
I felt it would make a neat story, if I would be able to kick the habit. I might get rid of my head aches, and I thought it would be interesting and compelling to discover what caffeine really does. I discovered kicking caffeine sucks.
One can of Diet Pepsi, my drink of choice, has 35 mg of caffeine; a strong cup of coffee has about 100 mg. I ingested from 250 to 300 mg of caffeine a day.
Ann Chapman, registered dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center says caffeine is so popular because it stimulates the central nervous system and raises people's alertness.
"It is a drug and has a drug like effect as a stimulant," Chapman said. "Small amounts increase alertness, but it is still a drug."
Caffeine can cause decreases in blood sugar levels and other problems depending on a person's sensitivity levels, said Tim Brownlee, physician at Watkins. Heavy use can generally cause anxiety, nervousness and insomnia.
"Two hundred to 500 mg may produce headache, loss of coordination, nervousness, sleep disturbance, heart palpitations, nausea and diarrhea," Brownlee said. "If someone is sensitive to caffeine, one cup of coffee may bring on such symptoms. Tolerance (a craving for it in order to 'get going') may develop with daily use over 500 mg."
I am not particularly sensitive to caffeine, but I was a heavy caffeine user, meaning I drank more than 250 mg a day. Sometimes I drank as much as 500 mg a day. This means that the caffeine began to have a reverse affect. Heavy use is often associated with fatigue and is found in people who drink two to three cups of coffee a day.
Also, caffeine drinkers can develop caffeine-induced organic mental disorder, which can be very painful, or even kill. The American Psychiatric Association reported caffeine-induced organic mental disorder to be caused by the recent consumption of an excess of 250 mg and a number of other symptoms including restlessness, nervousness, insomnia, muscle twitching and rambling flow of thought and speech.
When I decided to stop drinking caffeine, my family and friends were behind me 100 percent. One friend asked me if I was crazy, but thought I would be fun to watch.
Caffeine withdrawal symptoms can be very unpleasant, but they are different for each person. I decided to make things easy on myself by cutting back
gradually.
Brownlee said gradual weaning can decrease effects of headache, irritability and nervousness associated with stopping the consumption of caffeine.
I cut out a pop a day, but I couldn't have iced tea, coffee-flavored ice cream, coffee-flavored yogurt or even Excedrin for my headaches. All have caffeine. A Hershey's Milk Chocolate bar contains 10 mg of caffeine. Even Midol, Dristan and Anacin have caffeine. I was very sad.
I found food labels do not generally list caffeine content, and the FDA does not regulate caffeine in foods. Often, the only way to tell something has caffeine is to call a product's 1-800 number and ask the public service department.
Caffeine kicked me around and made me pretty tired for a couple of weeks.
By the 12th day, I felt pretty clear. I was awake. Things were better, but still missed my old habit.
Just in time for finals, the caffeine was long gone from my system. Now it is time to find a new way to stay up and pray.
Diary
Day 1
Today was a pretty normal day.
I cut out one cola and everything is pretty much the same. I had one Diet Pepsi at 8 a.m. with breakfast, as usual. I had a Coke at 11 a.m. and a Diet Coke at lunch at 1 p.m. I had one at 8:30 with dinner. I am awake and motivated to quit, eventually.
There are no significant changes to report.
Day $ ^{2} $
Halloween is one of my favorite holidays, even if I did wake up with a killer headache. I had a Diet Pepsi this morning for breakfast, a Pepsi mid-morning, a Coke with lunch and a Coke with dinner. It is a slow process of cutting back that I am in no hurry to rush. I have had no real side effects except the headache. But, before my mid-morning drink I had a headache and was incredibly sluggish.
Day $ ^{3} $
I had a huge fight with my boyfriend last night. I felt overly agitated and sensitive. I woke up with a headache and had to drive home to see my parents. Family stress sucks. I had a Diet Pepsi on the way and another at lunch. I also had a Coke at dinner. My head hurts and I can't wait to go home. Dad wanted to take me to a party, but I just stayed home so that I could sleep. I am so tired.
Day $ ^{5} $
Today I allowed myself three doses, but I only drank two. Go figure. I had one with breakfast on the way home. Dad came to Lawrence with me to visit some people. I love my Dad, but I just wanted to be alone. When I got home my boyfriend was waiting at my apartment, but he didn't want to talk about our fight. When everyone left I lit a de-stressing candle and sat in the dark. I have no motivation to do anything. I went to my campus job until midnight and took a Diet Pepsi with me. I am so tired and stressed out. I have a project due next week, and I hate my job. People are stupid. When my boyfriend called me at work he said I sounded like the meanest librarian ever. We couldn't remember what we were fighting about.
Day $ ^{4} $
It's Monday and it feels like a Monday. My throat hurts and I can barely talk. I don't want to do my homework, but I will. I had the same speaker in two classes today. How boring, I was so agitated I could hardly keep still and at the same time I kept yawning. I am not only grumpy, but bored. I had a Diet Pepsi
with breakfast, and I needed some kind of carbonation mid-day. I bought a Sprite. I felt cheap. I wanted a Pepsi. I did have one at dinner. I need to clean my house and do my laundry, but I don't want to, so I probably won't.
Day $ ^{6} $
I think I could get to like Sprite. I had one mid-morning, but because I broke my schedule by leaving the house without having a Diet Pepsi, I forgot to eat breakfast. I am hungry, but I feel like I am losing weight. Everything seems so dreary. I had a Pepsi at lunch, and boy, did I have a headache around 9 p.m. I woke up with an hour early and couldn't go back to sleep. It might have been the headache. It sucked.
Day 7
Withdrawal seems to be clouded with sickness. I am very tired and stressed out, but I would feel silly attributing that strictly to caffeine. My co-workers tell me I am better today. It seems I have been a little short-tempered recently. Things are getting easier.
Dav $ ^{8} $
Still drinking Sprite. I have taken to carrying a bottle with me. Headache persists, but the cold seems all but gone. I am still a bit shakty. I just stayed home and watched TV all day long. It was nice. I kind of let everything go. But, I don't have class again until Monday. I keep falling asleep.
Dav 9
I turn 21 at midnight and I plan to go drink a lot of non-caffeinated beverages. I didn't leave the house all day. I laid on the couch and took Motrin for my head. My boyfriend asked me what I wanted to do tonight and I started to cry because I didn't know. I am moody and tired.
Dav $ ^{1 0} $
My boyfriend kept trying to give me Rum and Coke's last night, but I couldn't have them. It is great to be 21. I am happy, even with my hangover. I hate that I have to work today, but I am going to Westport tonight. I am awake and raring to go. Maybe I am over the withdrawal. Now I must decide how much longer this whole thing wi
Dav $ ^{1 1} $
Chocolate has caffeine in it! I learned that last night after having four Ho-Ho's and a chocolate bar yesterday afternoon. It is a minor setback, but now I have a box of Ho-Ho's in the cabinet. I wonder if I was drawn to them because of the sweetness or the caffeine. I miss coffee on cold days.
Day $ ^{1 2} $
I am swamped with work. I can't sleep. I keep waking up before my alarm goes off. I think it must be stress. The caffeine front seems pretty clear. It wasn't as bad as I had feared, but I do want some chocolate.
Postscript
Life without caffeine is different. My eating regimen is changed forever. I drink orange juice with breakfast, and have an apple for a snack. I am even thinking of joining a gym. Going off caffeine has allowed me to include water and various other liquids that are not as bad for me as coffee or soda in my dietary plan. I want to stay mostly caffeine-free for the rest of my life. Although I have suffered a couple of lapses, primarily with chocolate, I am no longer an addict. I have the freedom to have a rum and Coke, but I deal with caffeine one day at a time.
Killer caffeine: Tim Brownlee, physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said caffeine packs a kick. "Two hundred to 500 mg may produce headache, loss of coordination, nervousness, sleep disturbance, heart palpitations, nausea and diarrhea," he said. "If someone is sensitive to caffeine, one cup of coffee may bring on such symptoms. Tolerance (a craving for it in order to 'get going') may develop with daily use over 500 mg."
COFFEE
Caffeine content per 7 oz.
cup of coffee:
Brewed: 80-130 mg
Drip-brewed: 115-175
Espresso (1.5-2 oz serving): 100 mg
JAYHAWK
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Basketball
Inside Sports today
The Hutchinson and Johnson County Community Colleges' men's basketball teams have a combined total of five players on their benches this season. SEE PAGE 7B
Yesterday's game - Kansas vs. Texas A&M
KU
KANSAS
13-4, 5-3
UNRANKED
ATM
TEXAS A&M
5-12, 1-6
UNRANKED
WWW.JHAWKBBALL.COM
SECTION B, PAGE 1
58
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1998
Free throws help boost women
JAYRAM
11
TULAS ACM
30
TULAS ACM
33
Kansas guard Susie Raymant goes up for a shot while Texas A&M forward Kero Alexander positions for the rebound. Raymant scored nine points in last night's game. The Jayhawks defeated the Aaies 63-58. Photo by Roger Nomer/KANSAN
Forward Lynn Pride's second-half intensity leads team to victory
By Kevin C. Wilson Kansan sportswriter
Lynn Pride's second-half transformation and an abundance of free-throw opportunities helped the Kansas women's basketball team hold off Texas A&M 63-58 last night in Allen Field House.
After failing to score a point in the first half, Pride poured in 16 secondhalf points and hit four crucial free throws in the last 30 seconds to secure
the Jayhawks victory.
Twice the Aggies cut the Jayhawks' lead to three points, and Pride answered both times at the free-throw line. Pride said she didn't feel any pressure when she stepped to the line with the game in her hands.
Pride: Scored all 16 of her points in the second half.
"I wasn't nervous or anything." Pride
said. "I knew I could hit them."
The Jayhawks, 13-4 overall and 5-3 in Big 12 play, pounded the ball inside in the second half, which resulted in 29 free-throw attempts. The team connected on 17 of the 29 free throws, compared with the first half, in which they had no free-throw attempts.
"I think one thing we did well was getting into an offense that let us get the ball inside," Coach Marian Washington said. "Nikki(White) did a nice job, Nakia did a nice job, and we stayed with that offensive set and I think that hurt them a lot."
Nakia Sanford had another strong game, both offensively and on the boards, as she recorded her third double-double of the season with 14 points
WOMEN'S BOXSCORE
Kansas (13-4, 5-3)
Pride 5-16 6-9 16, Johnson 3-9 0-0 6, Sanford 4-10 6-10 14, Raymont 4-14 0-0 9,
Jackson 2-7 0-2 4, Prutton 0-0 0 0, Scott 1-0 0 0, Robbins 3-7 1-2 8, White 1-1 2-6
Totals 22 65 17 29 63
Texas A&M (5-12, 1-6)
Athens 10-4 12-8
Sharpe 5-10 4-14, Yates 3-15 0-1 8, Burrows 0-0 0-0, Tarkington 4-7 2-12, Paterson 2-6 2-2 6, Jones 2-6 0-4, Alexander 6-10 2-4, Linder 1-4 0-0. Totals 23-58 10-13 58.
Halftime — Texas A&M 35, Kansas 32.
Three-point goals — Kansas 2.7 (Raymant 1-3, Robbins 1-2, Pride 0-2), Texas A&M 2-15 (Yates 2-10, Sharpe 0-2, Tarkington 0-1, Patterson 0-1, Jones 0-1) Fouled out — Tarkington. Rebounds — Kansas 43 (Sanford 11). Texas A&M 45 (Sharpe 14). Assists — Texas A&M 10 (Jackson 4), Texas A&M 14 (Tarkington 7). Total fouls — Texas A&M 16, Texas A&M 22. A — 1300.
and 11 rebounds. Sanford said that her scoring was something that just happened, and her double-double performance was expected.
"That's just what was open for us inside," Sanford said. "I feel like that's what I'm supposed to be getting."
After trailing 35-32 at the half, Washington decided to implement a full-court press. The press worked as the Jayhawks forced the Aggies into 15 second-half turnovers and held them to 26 percent shooting.
"In the second half we were ready to be more effective," Washington said. "And it helped us in getting the ball back."
Forward Jaclyn Johnson, who finished with six points, tied her career high by grabbing 10 rebounds. Guard Suzi Raymant had a well-balanced game with nine points, seven rebounds and five steals.
Texas A&M, 5-12 overall and 1-6 in Big 12 play, was led by two players who recorded double-doubles. Forward Prissy Sharse had 14 points and
pulled down 14 rebounds, and guard Kim Tarkington added 10 points, 10 rebounds and dished out seven assists.
Washington said that the game was not the Jayhawks' best performance of the year, and she was happy to escape with a victory.
"It's a good win," Washington said.
"Like I told the team, we still have a lot of work to do, but we did get the win and that's going to be important going into this Pac 10/ Big 12 shootout."
Kansas will face No. 10 Arizona at
3:00 p.m. Saturday in Lubbock, Texas.
'Hawks to brawl with Baylor Bears
KINGSTONS 25 KANSAS 45
Raaf LaFrentz pushes Texas Tech defender Johnny Phillips' arm out of the way to grab two of his 31 points. LaFrentz had 15 rebounds against Texas Tech on Saturday. Photo by Dan Elvasky/KANSAN
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansas.com
Kansan sportswriter
Two preseason All-Big 12 Conference selections could battle each other tonight when No.5 Kansas plays host to Baylor in Allen Field House.
Kansas forward Raef LaFrentz and Baylor center Brian Skinner are expected to take center stage in the paint, but it is unknown whether the two will go head-to-head.
"The whole Kansas front line will have to play well against him," LaFrentz said. "I might guard him. But maybe T.J. (Pugh) might guard him. Whatever we do, we have to be ready because Brian Skinner is a tremendous player inside."
LaFrentz said stopping Skinner was crucial if the Javhawks were to succeed.
Skinner leads the Big 12 with a 58.7 shooting percentage and 3.8 blocked shots per game. He leads the Bears with 19.1 points and 10.2 rebounds per game.
LaFrentz, who averages 21.8 points and 11.6 rebounds per game, played strongly against Texas Tech after missing play because of a broken hand. He scored 31 points, 15 rebounds and three steals against the Red Raiders, and he appeared ready to campaign for such honors as All-America and NCAA Player of the Year.
"Raef has a much better supporting cast than Brian does," Miller said. "Now that's not a knock on our players, but it's true. I don't view this game as matchup between Brian and Raef since the people who surround them will have a lot to do with the outcome."
Baylor coach Harry Miller said watching LaPrentz and Skinner would be intriguing, but that the game featured more than just two people.
Baylor likely will be without starting point guard Patrick Hunter, who has a serious hip injury. Miller said that Hunter had not practiced this week, and that he was listed as doubtful for the game.
Hunter averages 13.7 points, 3.3 rebounds and 36.7 minutes per game. His backup, B.J. Sellers, has started two of the 10 games he has played in this season. Sellers averages 2.3 points and 0.6 rebounds in 14.5 minutes.
While Baylor struggled early in the season,the
The Starting Lineup
KU
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
5-1 Big 12, 22-3 overall
G RYAN ROBERTSON 6-5 Jr.
G BILLY HOMAS 6-4 Sr.
F PAUL PIERCE 6-7 Jr.
F RAEF LAFRENTZ 6-11 Sr.
C T.J. PUGH 6-8 Jr.
BAYLOR
BEARS
5-2 Big 12, 10-7 overall
G B.J. SELLERS 6-3 So.
G RODDRICK MILLER 6-3 Sr.
F LEON MORRIS 6-6 So.
F JAIME KENDRICK 6-8 So.
C BRAN SHINNER 6-10 Sr.
Tonight at 7:05 p.m.
Allen Field House • Lawrence
TV: Ch. 3, 13 and 29
Radio: KLWN, 1320 AM
BU
RYAN ROENTESON 6-5 JR.
G BILLY THOMAS 6-4 SR.
F PAUL PRIENCE 6-7 JR.
F RAEF LAFRENTE 6-11 SR.
C T.J. PUGH 6-8 JR.
BAYLOR BEARS
5-2 Big 12, 10-7 overall
LION SILVERS 6-3 So.
G RODDRICK MILLER 6-3 Sr.
F LEON WORRS 6-6 So.
F JAIME KENDRICK 6-8 So.
C BRAM SUNNER 6-10 Sr.
G B.J. SELLERS 6-3 So.
G RODDRICK MILLER 6-3 Sr.
F LEON MOIRS 6-6 So.
F JAMIE KENDRICK 6-8 So.
C BRAN SKNNER 6-10 Sr.
Tonight at 7:05 p.m.
Allen Field House • Lawrence
TV: Ch. 3, 13 and 29
Radio: KLWN, 1320 AM
team since has shown steady improvement.
The Bears started 5-0 in Big 12 play after startling non-conference losses to Lamar, Northwestern State and Nevada. Baylor since has lost consecutive games to Colorado and Oklahoma, but the Bears remain a tough team.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said Baylor had to learn to play at a high level with some consistency, which the Bears failed to do last season when they went 18-12.
"It's obvious that they have more maturity this season," Williams said. "Last year, they saw what it takes to compete in this league and they worked hard during the offseason to make themselves a better team."
NBA drops dunk fest, ends custom
Testing one, two, three...
Jayhawks, sports fans and those of you reading the paper in class right now, I welcome all of you to my State of the Sports World Address.
So I immediately will get to the serious issues surrounding the sports world today.
Unlike President Clinton's State of the Union Address last night, I won't avoid the affairs and issues that everyone wants to know about.
The first issue is very tough to put into words because I get so emotional.
I can't believe that there will not be a dunk contest this year before the NBA All-Star game. (Columnist quivers.)
Give me a second... (Columnist takes a deep breath and regains composure.)
At the age of eight, I watched a crafty Larry Nance defeat an aging Julius "Dr. J" Erving in the first NBA Dunk Contest. Of course I was rooting for the Doctor, but Nance with his two-ball jam was too much.
Columnist
Like many basketball fans, the dunk contest was the highlight of every All-Star weekend. Do you remember imitating your favorite player after watching the contest?
In high school, I imitated 1991 slam dunk champ Dee Brown's no look dunk on a seven-foot hoop.
Oh, I used to have major ups, baby. That was before my shuffleboard accident.
CUSTOMER
Adam Herschman
ports.kansan.com
No one, except the NBA offices.
And who can forget the memorable 1988 showdown between Air Jordan and Dominique "The Human Highlight Film" Wilkins?
Teen-age All-Star starter Kobe Bryant was bummed when he heard there would be no dunk contest this year. I'm with you, Kobe
Taking away the dunk contest is like calling traveling on Michael Jordan — you just shouldn't do it.
The next issue on my agenda involves you, the sports fan.
While watching the player introductions for the Super Bowl, I hoped that the trendiest of all sports celebrations would be avoided.
But with a few starters left to be announced, a Denver Bronco did it.
He raised the roof.
He repeatedly pumped his hands in the air with his palms facing upward.
I've raised the roof several times at sporting events, and it felt good. I looked around and got nods of approval from fellow roof raisers.
Athletes and fans raise the roof all of the time. I'm embarrassed to admit that I too get caught up in the excitement that comes with a new cheer.
But after analyzing my actions, I wasn't sure what I was doing.
Questions rang in my mind, like "Whose roof is this?" and "Why isn't this roof heavier?"
What about outdoor sporting events, where there isn't even a roof to raise?
I had no answers. Consequently, I made a New Year's resolution to stop.
Once I understand what raising the roof means, I may change my opinion. Until then, I'm leaving the roof alone and sticking with my favorite cheer—the Ickey Shuffle. Left foot forward, repeat. Right foot forward, repeat. Repeat sequence and spike the ball.
Next on the list is the escalation of baseball, basketball and football salaries. This issue has sparked debate and criticism ...
Oh great.
That's just skippy.
Right as I get down to the heart of the real important topics in the sports world in my address, my space runs out.
Unfortunately, I won't tackle other important issues such as players' salaries, sports ticket prices, new stadiums and Wrestlemania XIV.
But there's always next year
E-mail information
With the 100 year anniversary of Kansas basketball just around the corner, the Kansan is curious about what fans think. Compile your list of the top five players, teams and games in Jayhawk history and email us at sports@kansas.com
)
2B
Quick Looks
Wednesday January 28,1997
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday (Jan. 28)
The year will bring you an equal mix of happiness and joy, so try to keep that in mind if your cat gets run over or if a loved one makes a miraculous recovery from cancer.
Aries: Today is a 6
Friends and acquaintances come out of the woodwork today with offers for help. You are in the unique position of being able to work with whom you want instead of whoever is available.
Taurus: Today is a 4
Unless you are in a service profession, work is mostly about getting the job done. Today you may have to hold someone's hand and reassure him that he really does matter. Try to sound sincere.
Gemini: Today is a 5
Prepare yourself for a day of intellectual stimulation. You meet someone whose opinions set you on an entirely new train of thought. You actually might learn something new today.
Cancer: Today is a 7
When it comes to sharing with others, you may be in for a hard time. Personal values and the value of resources will be two of the issues on the table today. Try not to ruin any friendships because of this.
Leo: Today is a 3
If you can't be on your best behavior today, perhaps you should consider staying home. Your lack of consideration might offend someone. Remove your teeth from a problem instead of shaking it around.
Virgo: Today is a 9
If something old has become useless, toss it out and start something new. Whether it's a system, a relationship or food spoiling in the refrigerator, this is your day to get rid of dead weight and faulty merchandise.
Libra: Today is an 8
This is a day to expect the unexpected. Romance and art could find a way into your life. Whatever you do today feels remarkably creative and original.
Sagittarius: Today is a 7
Scorpio: Today is a 5
Capricorn: Today is a 4
Be open-minded and fair when it comes to a family dispute. The easiest solution may not be the right one. A radical approach might not work, but at least it gets everyone thinking.
Your crazy ideas may be amusing, but you would be wise not to act on them. Shop only for your immediate or foreseeable needs. Be suspicious of any question that requires a long answer.
You are a clearinghouse for good ideas. People in planning and marketing are worth their weight in gold today. Conversations and electronic communication are your strong suits for the next few days.
Aquarius: Today is a 6
Act on your behalf today. Play with self-transformation until your look matches how you feel. This is a day to let your inner wildness show. Don't concern yourself too much with the reactions of others.
Pisces: Today is a 5
Your unconscious mind is making a lot of noise. Perhaps you have too many unsolved problems in your head. Remembering your dreams provides you with a key to what is really happening.
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Richard Hamilton couldn't shoot, and Jim Calhoun couldn't coach after drawing three technical fouls, but somehow No. 9 Connecticut could win.
LAURENCE ROBINSON
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
UConn 63, Providence 56
The Huskies, leading by just three points with three minutes left, averted a Big East upset with a 63-56 victory against Providence last night.
Hamilton, who led Connecticut with a 22.5 average, was held to just four points on 2-for-13 shooting. Calhoun were charged with three technical fouls in the second half—the last two leading to four free throws by Jamel Thomas, which tied the score 47-47 with 8:47.
But the Friars scored just one field跑 the rest of the way.
Kevin Freeman, who sat out Saturday's win at Syracuse with a sprained right wrist, scored 17 for Connecticut (18-3, 8-2), and Jake Voskhuh added 10.
Only five players scored for Providence (8-10, 3-6). Thomas had 26 and Erron Maxey added 16, combining for 42 of the team's 56 points.
Connecticut led 28-24 at halftime, and Calhoun got his first technical 3:13 into the second half. Thomas made both shots, cutting the lead to 34-32.
Calhoun picked up his second technical and an automatic ejection with 8:47 left after a foul call against Providence. As he was leaving the bench, he was charged with his third technical.
After Thomas' four free throws tied the game, the Huskies turned up the defense and went ahead to stay on Voskuhl's two free throws with 5.52.
Khalid El-Amin made it 52-47 with a 3-pointer before a three-point play by Maxey cut the lead to two. Then Freeman made a dunk before Llewellyn Cole's free throw, which put Connecticut ahead 54-51.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
But Providence coach Pete Gillen had taken his last timeout with 6:05 left and could stop the clock only by fouling. The Huskies made seven of eight free throws during the last three minutes.
The only field goal was Hamilton's with 2:06 to give UConn a 58-51 lead. The first half was a series of spurs.
Iowa State (10-10 overall, 3-4 Big 12) opened the second half with a 15-4 run to take the lead and held it even though season scoring leader Marcus Fizer was on the bench with four fouls. Fizer made enough free throws at the end to secure the victory.
Connecticut went out to a 15-6 lead in the first 10 minutes before a 9-0 Providence run tied the score 15-15 on Justin Farley's 3-pointer with 7:50 left in the half.
AMES, Iowa — Klay Edwards broke out of a scoring slump with 19 points, all in the second half, and Stevie Johnson added a career-high 17 as Iowa State shot 63 percent in beating Texas 85-82 last night.
Texas (8-11, 2-5), down by eight with 1:45 left, drew to 84-82 on Bernard Smith's leaning three-point shot with 11.5 seconds left. Iowa State then beat the Longhorns' press. Brad Johnson sank one of two throws, and Smith badly missed a hurried three-point attempt from the left wing at the buzzer.
The Huskies followed with a 10-0 surge, then Providence got the next six points to close to 25-21 with 2.01.
SCORPIO
Jerry Curry, starting for the first time since Dec. 24, hit four three-point shots and finished with 14 points for Iowa State. Fizer scored 12 and Lee Love 10. It was the first time five Iowa State players scored in double figures since a 96-47 victory against Chicago State on Dec. 27, 1994.
Iowa State 85. Texas 82
鱼
with a stomach virus. Kris Clack lked the Longhorns with 17 points, Dejuan Vazquez scored 16 and Smith14.
Trailing 40-37 at halftime, Iowa State got a three-pointer from Curry to start the second half and built a 52-44 lead. The Cyclones led by as many as nine and didn't falter when Fizer, who averages 15.1 points, left the game with 10:47 remaining after getting his fourth foul.
The 6-foot 6 freshman returned with 4:22 left and Iowa State leading 73-70. He sank two free throws at the 3:52 mark. Love hit two more for a 77-70 lead and the Cyclones held on.
Texas played without No. 2 score
Luke Axtell, who had back spasms
and had missed the previous game
The Associated Press
YESTERDAY'S SCORES
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
COLLEGE BASKETBALL Men's Top 25:
Iowa State 85, Texas 82
No. 7 Kentucky 63, Vanderbilt 61
No. 9 Connecticut 63, Providence 56
No. 24 Xavier 93, Duquesne 71
Big 12
Women's Top 25
No. 3 Old Dominion 80, No. 16 Virginia 51
Big 12
Kansas 63, Texas A&M 58
NBA
P
Sports
Indiana 85, Washington 84
Charlotte 120, Phoenix 113
Milwaukee 83, Detroit 81
Minnesota 113, Atlanta 96
Dallas 84, Cleveland 77
Houston 115, L.A. Clippers 109
New Jersey 120, Denver 87
Golden State at Portland, 10 p.m.
Chicago at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
NHL
St. Louis 3, Buffalo 3
Boston 6, Ottawa 1
Florida 3, Carolina 0
Anaheim at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
SPORTS ON TV:
Noon
Ch. 18—Tennis, Australian Open replay
6 p.m
6:30 D.m
Ch. 18—College Basketball, West Virginia v. Pittsburgh
Ch. 37 — NHL, Phoenix v. Detroit
■ 7 p.m.
Ch. 18.. College Basketball, Clemson v. North Carolina
Ch. 10.- NBA, New York v. Miami 8 p.m.
Ch. 13—College Basketball,
Kansas v. Baylor
Ch. 45- NHL, Vancouver v.
Detroit
11:30 p.m.
Ch. 37 - Tennis, Australian Open replay.
Ch. 6 - College Basketball, Kansas
v. Baylor play rej
SPORTS, ETC.
Today in sports:
1943 — Max Bentley of the Chicago Blackhawks scored four goals and three assists in a 10-1 rout of the New York Rangers. Bentley scored all four goals and added an assist in the third period. Max's brother, Doug, registered four assists in the third period.
1972 — Eddie Woods of Oral Roberts, for the second consecutive game, grabbed 30 rebounds in a 109-104 victory over Louisiana Tech.
1990 — The San Francisco 49ers beat the Denver Broncos 55-10 in the most lopsided Super Bowl victory ever. The 49ers became the first repeat NFL champion in a decade and tied the Pittsburgh Steelers with four Super Bowl wins.
SPORTS CALENDAR
Tonight:
Friday:
7:05 p.m. in Allen Field House
Men's basketball vs. Baylor
TV: Jayhawk TV Network.
Radio: KLZR 10.5 FM
Saturday:
7 p.m. at Robinson Center— Swimming and Diving vs. Nebraska
3 p.m. in Lubbock, Texas— Women's basketball vs. Arizona TV: ESPN
All day in Manhattan, Kan. Track and Field vs. Kansas State and Missouri
6 p.m. at Alvamar Racquet Club—Women's Tennis vs. Wichita State
6:30 p.m. at Alvamar Racquet Club—Men's Tennis vs.
Arkansas
WEDNESDAY PRIMETIME
TV TONIGHT
AFTERIME
© TVDate 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
| | | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| KSMO | College Basketball: Baylor at Kansas. (Live) | Earth: Final Conflict (R) | Mad Abo. You | Designing | Hard Copy ✓ Success |
| WDAF | Beverly Hills, 90210 ✓ | Party of Five "Here and Now" | News ✓ | Real TV ✓ H Patrol | Keenen ivenn |
| KCTV | Nanny ✓ Murphy | Public Eye (in Stereo) ✓ Chicago Hope (in Stereo) ✓ News ✓ Late Show (in Stereo) ✓ Seinfeld ✓ |
| KCVT | Mark Russell Home Page | Irish in America: Long Journey Home (in Stereo) (Part 3 of 3) ✓ Business Rpt. Trailside | Charlie Rose ✓ |
| KSNT | 3rd Rock-Sun Seinfeld ✓ 3rd Rock-Sun Working ✓ Law & Order "Cashoff" ✓ News ✓ ToniShow (in Stereo) ✓ Late Night ✓ |
| KMBC | Spin City ✓ Dharma-Greg ✓ Drew Carey ✓ Ellen ✓ Primetime Live ✓ News ✓ Roseanne ✓ Grace Under ✓ M"A'SH✓ |
| KTUW | Mark Russell Kennedy ✓ Irish in America: Long Journey Home (in Stereo) (Part 3 of 3) ✓ Business Rpt. Charlie Rose ✓ Late Night ✓ |
| WIBW | College Basketball: Baylor at Kansas. (Live) | Chicago Hope (in Stereo) ✓ News ✓ Late Show (in Stereo) ✓ Late Night ✓ |
| KTAK | Spin City ✓ Dharma-Greg ✓ Drew Carey ✓ Ellen ✓ Primetime Live ✓ News ✓ Seinfield ✓ Married. ✓ Nightlife |
CABLE STATIONS
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| AAE | Biography: The Coors-Brew | American Justice | Foot Soldier "The Barbarians" | Law & Order "Black Tie" ✓ Biography: The Coors-Brew |
| CNBC | Time Hardball | Rivera Live | News With Brian Williams ✓ Charleston Grod ✓ Riversia Live ✓ |
| CNN | World Today ✓ Larry King Live ✓ World Today ✓ Sports Illus. ✓ Moneyline ✓ NewsNight ✓ Snowbiz |
| COM | "Three Amigos" ✓ 1986, Comedy) Chevie Chase. South Park ✓ Make-Laugh Daily Show, Stein's Money Saturday Night Live ✓ |
| COURT | Prime Time Justice Cochran & Company Trial Story: Murder of Michelle Prime Time Justice Cochran & Company |
| CSPAN | Prime Time Public Affairs | True Action Adventures (R) Weapons at War (R) In Search of History (R) |
| DISC | Wild Discovery: World-Bats Discover Magazine "Survival" Shipwreck! "Floating Intermo" Justice Files (R) Wild Discovery: World-Bats |
| ESPN | (6:00) College Basketball College Basketball Clermont at North Carolina. (Live) Sportscenter ✓ Snowboarding |
| HIST | In search of History (R) Big House ✓ True Action Adventures (R) Weapons at War (R) In Search of History (R) |
| LIFE | Unsolved Mysteries "Fifteen and Pregnant" (1998, Drama) Kristen Dunst. ✓ Almost ✓ Golden Girls ✓ Mysteries |
| MTV | Music Videos Beavis-Butt All-Time Top 10 (In Stereo) Real World ✓ AustinStins Loveline (in Stereo) Singled Out Viewers |
| SCIFI | Sightings (in Stereo) Forever Knight Close Call M.A.N.T.I.S. The Sea Wasp Seaquest DSV "Bhindside" Sightings (in Stereo) |
| TLC | Ultrascience Sea Tek Hauntings Across America Secrets-Pachys-Ultrascience Sea Tek Hauntings Across America |
| TNT | "Double Impact" ✓ 1991) Jean-Claud Van Damme Babylon 5 (in Stereo) Rough Cut ✓ Two "for Texas" ✓ 1998) Joe Kisselforston.
| USA | Walker, Texas Ranger "My Stepson, My Lover" (1997, Drama) Rachel Ward. ✓ Silk Stalking "Red Flag" ✓ Highlander: The Series ✓ |
| VHI | Hollow-D Vinyl Pop-Up Video Pop-Up Video H1 to One Storytellers (R) Legends (R) Midnight Hollow-D Vinyl |
| WGN | Sister, Smart Guy Wayans Bros. Steve Harvey News (in Stereo) Beaver Hills, 90210 ✓ in the heat of the night ✓ |
| WTBS | NBA Basketball: New York Knicks at Miami Heat. (Live) NBA ✓ I Come in Peace" ✓ % (1990) Dolph Lundgren.
PREMIUM STATIONS
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| HBO | "Boomerang" ✓ 1992, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, R ™ Waiting to Exhale ✓ Whitney Houston, R ™ "Shatter" (1998) NR ™ |
| MAX | roe vs. Roe: Baptism by Fire "The Crucible" ✓ 1996, Drama) Daniel Day-Leville, PG-13 "The Secret Agent" ✓ Bob Hockins. ✓ Angel Heart |
| SHOW | "Extreme Measures" ✓ 1996, Suspense Hugh Grant, R ™ Dead Man's Fast Track "Kat's Cradle" ✓ Fast Money ✓ Bob Hockins. ✓ Angel Heart. |
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I'll wait, no. It's a picture of a woman lying on her back with her arms and legs crossed. Let me re-read the text.
The image shows a woman lying on her back with her arms and legs crossed. The text says "I'm not sure what you're asking for." I will use the text to output the answer.
Wait, looking at the image again, the woman is lying on her back with her arms and legs crossed. The text says "I'm not sure what you're asking for."
Let's look at the word after "I'm not sure" in the image. It says "what you're asking for."
Yes, that's correct.
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Wednesday, January 28, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
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Named Big 12 Conference player of the week after scoring 31 points and grabbing 15 rebounds vs. Texas Tech on Saturday
Leads Kansas in scoring with 21.8 points per game
Leads Kansas in rebounding with 11.6 rebounds per game
Ranks third in scoring and rebounding on Kansas’ all-time lists
Named 1996-97 All-American
Named 1996-97 AllBig 12 Conference and Big 12 player of the year
Has started all 117 of games at Kansas
Named 1995-96 AllBig Eight Conference
Named 1994-95 Big Eight Conference freshman of the year
BU KU
Wednesd
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Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 28, 1998
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
Monday
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Friday
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Wednesday
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Last month, when starting senior Raef LaFrentz injured his right hand, a collective gasp was heard from fans in Kansas.
What would happen now that the Jayhawks' leading scorer was going to be on the sidelines for 13 games?
Would he still be able to play when he finally did return, or would his game be as rusty as an old nail.
Only nine games later, all the questions were answered and fans let out a collective sigh of relief.
Saturday against Texas Tech, Raef left his seat on the bench and returned to his usual spot on the court. And to his usual actions.
He ran up and down the court, shooting, blocking and rebounding along the way. He brought the fans to their feet when he drilled two three-point baskets in a row.
Raef was back, looking like he hadn't missed a beat. In fact, he looked like he was the one keeping the beat going.
He looked like he could have beaten the Red Raiders single-handedly, with one hand tied behind his back.
And he looked good enough doing it to be chosen as the Big 12 Player of the Week.
Raef was happy to be back and fans were happy to have him back. And a collective cheer went up when he sat back down on the bench, this time after scoring 31 points.
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Wednesday, January 28, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 7
Sprewell tries to reduce punishment from NBA
Hearings attempt to speed return, lessen NBA fine
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore.— Behind a curtain of secrecy, an arbitrator began hearing testimony yesterday about whether the NBA and the Golden State Warriors excessively punished Latrell Sprewell for choking and threatening to kill coach P.J. Carlesimo.
"I'm happy to be here." Sprewell said as he arrived at the downtown office building for the start of the hearing. "Hopefully, this will get over with."
Arbitrator John Feerkirch, dean of the Fordham Law School, has issued a gag order barring those involved from revealing testimony.
Sprewell was thrown out of the league for a year, the longest nondrug suspension in NBA history, and the remaining three years of his contract with Golden State, valued at $25 million, were terminated.
Billy Hunter, the head of the NBA players' union, expressed optimism that the punishment would be reduced.
"There will be some modification, I'm convinced," he said before going into the hearing. "The best outcome would be Sprewell's return and let us sort of end things where they are."
"There will be some modification, I'm convinced. The best outcome would be Sprewell's return and let us sort of end things where they are."
Billy Hunter
Hunter said the case was
extremely important for players' contractual rights.
head of the NBA players' union
"If this becomes a precedent, it means that basically no one has a guaranteed contract," he said. "Everybody becomes vulnerable."
Hunter said the best outcome from the union's perspective would be to have Sprewell reinstated immediately with a $3-million to $4-million setback.
The hearing takes the form of a
trial, with Sprewell and the union serving as plaintiffs and the Warriors and NBA as defendants. After opening statements, each side calls witnesses, who are subject to cross-examination. The hearing is closed.
At the Rose Garden arena, across the Willamette River from the hearing site, Carlesimo yesterday took Warriors players through a morning shootout as preparation for last night's game against Portland.
Carlesimo and some Warrior players are expected to testify on Wednesday. Carlesimo refused to comment on the hearing and said he was concentrating on trying to end his team's 14-game losing streak.
Many of those who testify will relive the Golden State practice of Dec. 1, when Sprewell choked Carlesimo and threatened to kill him. According to some witnesses, Sprewell left the gym after the attack, but returned 20 minutes later and assaulted the coach again.
The Portland sessions are expected to run through Friday, with the hearing reopening next Tuesday and Wednesday in New
York, where NBA commissioner David Stern likely will testify.
Sprewell should know his fate by March 16.
The NBA was represented by NBA chief counsel Jeffrey Mishkin, league attorney Rick Buchanan and outside counsel Shep Goldfinch. The Warriors' attorney is Bob Schiebelstein.
The league said it would not comment on the hearing until a ruling is made.
Sprewell was quoted in yesterday's New York Post as saying, "I wasn't trying to kill P.J."
Last week he also told the newspaper, "Death threats! That's not the person I am. I was angry, but I didn't mean what I said. You know how people say things they don't mean when they're angry."
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Men's basketball statistics leaders
As of Monday, Jan. 26
SCORING
SCORING
1. Cory Carr, Texas Tech 23.5
2. Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 21.5
3. Paul Pierce, Kansas 20.2
4. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 19.9
5. Brian Skinner, Baylor 19.1
6. Adrian Peterson, Okla. St. 17.1
7. Manny Dies, Kansas St. 16.8
8. Kris Clack, Texas 16.1
9. Shanne Jones, Texas A&M 16.1
10. Desmond Mason, Okla. St. 15.8
11. Marcus Fizer, Iowa St. 15.1
12. Rayford Young, Texas Tech 14.9
13. Kelly Thames, Missouri 14.8
14. Luke Axell, Texas 14.6
15. Billy Thomas, Kansas 14.3
FIELD GOAL PCT
3-POINT FG PCT
(Min. Stats per game)
1. Brian Skinner, Baylor 58.7
2. Manny Dies, Kansas St. 57.0
3. Desmond Mason, Oklahoma. St. 56.5
4. Brett Robisch, Okla. St. 54.5
5. Marcus Fizer, Iowa St. 50.9
6. Shanne Jones, Texas A&M 49.8
7. Paul Pierce, Kansas 49.7
8. Billy Thomas, Kansas 47.2
9. Adrian Peterson, Oklahoma. St. 46.1
10. Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 44.4
BLOCKED SHOTS
REBOUNDING
1. Brian Skinner, *Baylor* 3.8
2. Venson Hamilton, *Nebraska* 2.5
3. Chris Mihm, *Texas* 2.4
4. Calvin Davis, *Texas A&M* 2.3
5. Ryan Humphrey, Oklahoma 2.0
6. Manny Dies, Kansas St. 2.0
7. Eric Chenowith, Kansas 1.9
8. Ronnie DeGray, Colorado 1.9
9. Shawn Rhodes, Kansas St. 1.4
10. Paul Pierce, Kansas 1.4
1. Kenny Price, Colorado 44.7
2. Luke Axtell, Texas 44.4
3. Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech 43.0
4. Roddrick Miller, Baylor 42.9
5. Billy Thomas, Kansas 42.5
6. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 40.3
7. Duane Davis, Kansas St. 39.4
8. Patrick Hunter, Baylor 39.3
9. Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 38.1
10. Jerry Curry, Iowa St. 35.6
1. Brian Skinner, *Baylor* 10.2
2. Venson Hamilton, *Nebraska* 10.2
3. Robbie Bisch, *Okla. St.* 8.6
4. Klay Edwards, *Iowa St.* 8.5
5. Cliff Owens, *Texas Tech* 8.2
6. Manny Dies, *Kansas St.* 7.9
7. Andy Markowski, *Nebraska* 7.7
8. Chris Mihm, *Texas* 7.7
9. Ronnie DeGray, *Colorado* 7.4
10. Paul Pierce, *Kansas* 7.4
ASSISTS
STEALS
1. Doug Gottlieb, Okla. St. 7.1
2. Ryan Robertson, Kansas 6.4
3. Tyrone Lue, Nebraska 4.7
4. Michael Johnson, Oklahoma 4.5
5. Steve Houston, Texas A&M 4.5
6. Brian Barone, Texas A&M 4.5
7. Patrick Hunter, Baylor 4.4
8. Rayford Young, Texas Tech 4.4
9. Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech 4.1
10. Cookie Belcher, Nebraska 4.1
TEAM STANDINGS as of yesterday
3-POINT FG MADE
1. Steve Houston, Texas A&M 2.8
2. Kris Clack, Texas 2.3
3. Brian Barone, Texas A&M 2.1
4. Cookie Belcher, Nebraska 2.1
5. Joe Adkins, Oklahoma, St. 2.0
1. Billy Thomas, Kansas 3.3
2. Stan Bonewitz, Texas Tech 3.1
3. Kenny Price, Colorado 2.9
4. Roddrick Miller, Baylor 2.8
5. Luke Axtell, Texas 2.8
6. Tyronn Lue, Nebraska 2.5
7. Cory Carr, Texas Tech 2.3
8. Corey Brewer, Oklahoma 2.3
9. Patrick Hunter, Baylor 2.2
10. Jerry Curry, Iowa St. 1.9
Team Conf. Overall
1. Oklahoma 6-2 15-6
2. Baylor 5-2 10-7
3. Kansas 6-1 22-3
4. Oklahoma St. 4-3 14-3
5. Nebraska 4-2 13-6
6. Iowa St. 2-4 9-10
7. Texas Tech 2-4 8-8
8. Kansas St. 3-4 12-5
9. Missouri 3-3 11-8
10. Colorado 2-4 8-8
11. Texas A&M 0-6 6-10
12. Texas 2-4 8-10
Next game Date
vs. Texas A&M Jan. 31
at Kansas Tonight
vs. Baylor Tonight
at Texas Jan. 31
at Kansas St. Tonight
at Missouri Jan. 31
vs. Missouri Tonight
vs. Nebraska Tonight
at Texas Tech Tonight
at Texas A&M Tonight
vs. Colorado Tonight
vs. Oklahoma St. Jan. 31
Community college hoops teams try to survive season with fewer reserve players
The Associated Press
HUTCHINSON — When basketball coach Tim Jankovich looks down his bench for help in a game, he doesn't see much help any more.
The Hutchinson Community College coach has just three reserves.
lege coach has just three reserves. It could be worse. Johnson County coach Mike Jeffers sees only two players in uniform on his bench when the game starts.
It's not a pretty picture, but Jankovich and Jeffers are trying to survive the rest of the season in the rugged Jayhawk Community College Conference.
Plagued by injuries and a couple of player dismissals for disciplinary reasons. Hutchinson may have to finish the season with eight players.
After freshman reserve Stan Dohm severely injured his wrist and lower left arm last week against Barton County, the Blue
Dragons didn't panic.
Instead, they looked at the quality rather than the number of players left.
"We have eight talented players, and we can win with them," said freshman Laverne Smith. "If they weren't talented players, I'd be worried."
Jankovich said Hutchinson, which has won 17 of 20 games, needed a solid effort from everyone.
"We are still coming every day with a good attitude, and I take my hat off to this team for that," said Jankovich. "I appreciate their effort so much. Some players could use this adversity as an excuse to try less, but our guys haven't done that."
Athletic Director Randy Stange, who coached the team last year, said the one ray of sunshine in the Hutchinson situation was that everybody could play.
"The bad news is if someone gets hurt or you have any foul problems, you're in trouble," Stange said.
At Johnson County, Jeffers has the same problem as Jankovich and has one less player on the bench.
"As long as you have five to start, you're OK. ... What can you do but just try to survive?" said Jeffers.
Jeffers has altered his team's style of play a couple of times, but his Cavaliers are 8-11.
When his roster was reduced to eight at the semester break, Jeffers said, his phone was constantly ringing with players wanting to join the team.
He has 13 players—walk-ons or transfers—who are sitting out but practicing, including Patrick Nee, the son of Nebraska coach Danny Nee. The younger Nee transferred to Johnson County from Monmouth University.
Broncos fans cling to telephone poles, calling 'Elway!' at rally
The Associated Press
DENVER — Thousands of cheering Denver Broncos fans, including some clinging to traffic lights and others on rooftops, paid homage to the Super Bowl champions yesterday during a parade and rally that nearly brought downtown to a standstill.
The fans, estimated by city officials at 400,000, stood five deep along the mile-plus parade route, waving homemade signs and pennants or tossing confetti and rolls of toilet paper high into the air as the Broncos slowly traveled past in fire trucks and buses with open windows.
City officials stopped the entourage at times when fans swarmed the buses. The players leaned out the bus windows to high-five fans and sign autographs, delaying the start of the rally for more than an hour.
Quarterback John Elway raised his arms with forefingers pointing skyward before holding up the Vince Lombardi trophy and gesturing to his teammates to join him at the front of the stage.
By the time the players reachee Civic Center Park, the orange-and-blue crowd began cheering "Elway! Elway! Elway!"
"How 'bout them Broncos?" Elway asked the crowd, drawing a raucous cheer. "There's only so many times
Broncos coach Mike Shanahan said to Elway. "This trophy is as much for you as it is for us."
NBA
you can get hit right in the forehead with a fist, but this time we did the punching."
Shanahan also said he believed this was the first time that Elwav
had a chance to win the Super Bowl because of the strength of the other players.
"I've been very fortunate in the NFL in my career to be around a lot of great players. John Elway, in my opinion, is the best quarterback to ever play the game." Shanahan said.
Mayor Wellington Webb presented two new street signs — "John Elway Boulevard" and "Terrell Davis Boulevard."
"Now, all we need to do is build a new stadium to put these signs in front of," Webb said.
The rally had the atmosphere of a street dance, with fans starting impromptu cheers and songs. Music, including some with lyrics altered to reflect the game, blared from loudspeakers set up by radio stations.
Loveland, Colo. "I'm just happy for John Elway and his family and the organization."
"This is great," said Pat Welan of
To glimpse the events, some fans climbed light poles, barren trees, statues and traffic lights. Office workers peered out of skyscraper windows, while groups of construction workers perched on the ledge of a second-story window in one building.
Children, given the day off from school by the city as long as they had parental permission, dotted the crowd.
The parade and rally marked the second public appearance since the team returned from San Diego. About 25,000 fans flocked to Mile High Stadium for a "welcome home rally" Monday night. The celebrating crowd was rowdy immediately after Sunday's game, and police made about 20 arrests and used tear gas to control the crowds. There were no serious incidents during the rallies.
"This is insanity, and it's so cool," said Wendy Polechule of Greeley, Colo., who took time off work to attend the rally. "We're part of the insane and the cool."
Polulech said it was hard to describe the emotions that welled up after the team defeated Green Bay to win the championship.
"What do you say about something you've waited your whole life to see?" she said.
Racism directed at Blacks. . . How it began, and what that means Today. Black History Celebration
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Dr. John Janzen of the University of Kansas
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Wednesday-Saturday 12:30-8pm
Section B · Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 28, 1998
Tennessee women on mission to win third NCAA title
The Associated Press
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Want to know how well the Tennessee Lady Vols are playing? Don't look at their ranking (No. 1), record (21-0) or average margin of victory (31 points).
Take a look at the bench.
Chamique Holdscraw, probably the nation's best college player and the team's leading scorer, likes to spend her breaks sitting in coach Pat Summitt's seat between assistant coaches Mickie DeMoss and Holly Warlick.
She says she likes to talk to DeMoss and Warlick. "They're really funny," Holdswclaw says.
If the Lady Vols are playing poorly.
Summit doesn't want any chuckles and orders Holdscw out of her chair. But the defending national champions, energized by four freshen, are playing so well that only once this season has Summit told Holdscw to beat it.
"In the Georgia game, she got mad at me for something," Holdsclaw said. "I came and sat in her seat. She was stooping on the floor and said 'No, you're not sitting there.'"
Holdsclaw was back in Summitt's seat again Sunday when the Lady Vols routed No. 6 Vanderbilt 86-54.
They have been No. 1 all season. They are 9-0 against ranked teams, and their margin of victory is greater than any of the Lady Vols' five national championship squads. Their closest game was a 10-point victory against No. 8 Illinois.
Tennessee, which has four starters 6-foot-1 or taller, is being compared with the 1995 Connecticut team that went undefeated and Southern California's 1982-83 national championship teams with Pam and Paula McGee.
Summitt will say only that this team
could be as good as her 1989 national champions, who went 35-2. She does acknowledge this year's squad is fun to watch.
"If I wasn't on the bench, I'd be in the stands," she said. "I'd pay money to see these kids play. They're exciting. You don't really find a group like this that play so well together."
What has made Tennessee so intimidating are four freshmen who account for half the team's points.
The team is on a mission toward winning three straight NCAA titles — something no team has ever done.
Tamika Catchings starts and averages 18 points. Semeka Randall (15.5 points) and guard Kristen "Ace" Clement (6.2 points) bring a spark off the bench, while 6-foot-3 Teresa Geter (6.9 points, 5.1 rebounds) has worked her way into the starting rotation.
The Lady Vols had a jetdown in Sunday's first half against Vanderbilt but opened the second half with a 20-0 run in which they turned up the speed, the emotion and the volume of the 19,208 fans.
Golf tourney links Tiger and dad
The Associated Press
Twice in Tiger Woods' 17-month pro career the cold shadow of death sent shivers across his dreams. Twice it seemed as if Earl Woods — the man who made the Tiger — would die before seeing his son achieve golfing greatness.
But not only did Earl Woods live to see his son win the Masters in a manner that pushed golf from the sports pages to the front pages, this week he will play with Tiger in a pro tournament for the first time — the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.
So many times with Tiger Woods there seems to be something magical going on—the way he won at Pumpkin Ridge, the way he won at Augusta. This is another one of those times.
Playing together at Pebble was something that a year ago neither of them thought would happen. Just when Tiger was about to fulfill the 20-year destiny Earl had mapped for him, it looked as if Earl might die.
The first shudder of fear came on an October night in Tulsa, Okla., in 1996
when Earl was rushed from a hotel room shortly before 3 a.m. gasping for breath.
Heart attack,
although no one
would admit it at the
time.
I
The following morning, playing on just a few hours of sleep in the second round of the Tour Championship, Tiger Woods had the worst round of his brief pro career.
Woods: He and his dad share golfing fears and triumphs
"I didn't want to be here today," Woods said at the time. "I love my dad to death. I just want to go see him."
That choice of words captured the intense emotion between father and son, a relationship forged by those early golf lessons in a California garage when Tiger was barely a toddler.
What might have captured the bond between the two even more that day was the fact that Tiger Woods never considered withdrawing from the tournament.
The closer brush with death came nearly a year ago when Earl Woods had quadruple heart bypass surgery. The operation went well, but several weeks later complications almost killed him.
Last year, Tiger Woods played in the Pebble Beach tournament with film star Kevin Costner in a pairing that had more of a rock-concert frenzy to it than the feel of a golf tournament.
"Mark O'Meara won with his dad a few years ago and told me it was probably the biggest thrill he's ever had." Woods said after coming from eight strokes back on Sunday to win in Thailand.
This year, Tiger's pairing will have the sentiment that can exist only between father and son.
"If I can do the same it would be pretty special," Woods said. "When I was 13, my dad was a 1-handicapper, but he had heart surgery last year and now plays off 12."
And is Earl Woods a proud Pop?
"He's touched people in a way that is unbelievable." Earl Woods said last fall about his son. "That little crumb snatcher of mine did so much in the last year he was the tail wagging the dog."
Penguins' rising star skates into sweet deal
PITTSBURGH — Jaromir Jagr always wanted to play like Mario Lemieux. Now he'll be paid like him.
Jagr, the Pittsburgh Penguins' brightest star now that Lemieux has retired, agreed yesterday to a four-year contract extension worth $38 million that will make him the National Hockey League's highest-paid player.
The Associated Press
The total value of what now becomes a six-year contract is $48 million. Jagr will make $5.1 million this season and $4.75 million next season under his old contract before his salary climbs to $9.5 million in the 1999-2000 season.
The NHL scoring leader would become the league's first $10-million-a-year player when he makes $10.4 million in 2003-04, though another player probably will have eclipsed that figure by then.
The NHL's top contracts belong to Philadelphia's Eric Lindros and Anaheim's Paul Kariya, who will make $8.5
million each next season. Both could be making $10 million each even before Jagr's extension kicks in.
"You never know where the dollars are going to go," said Jagr, who was joined at a short news conference by his mother and girlfriend. "But I want to play here, and I want to stay here. I want to finish my career here."
One reason why the Penguins didn't want to rework the remaining two years of Jagr's contract was the deferred money owed Lemieux, who made $11 million last year and reportedly is making $8 million this season.
Jagr's deal surpasses the $42 million, seven-year deal reached by Lemieux in October 1992. However, that contract was reworked several times before Lemieux retired last spring, and the Penguins still owe him money.
The two sides were close to agreeing to a $53 million, seven-year contract last month before Jagr, after seeing how much Kariya and Lindros will make, decided he wanted a shorter contract.
New high-tech drug test to be used at Olympics
The Associated Press
Performance-enhancing drugs aren't used only by runners, swimmers, weightlifters and other summer sports athletes.
Doping also is prevalent in winter sports such as cross-country skiing, speedskating, biathlon and bobsledding.
For that reason, new high-tech equipment will be used to catch drug users at the Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.
There have been only four positive tests ever recorded at the Winter Olympics — two at Innsbruck in 1976, one in Sarajevo in 1984 and one in Calgary in 1988. The last two winter games, 1992 Albertville and 1994 Lillehammer passed without any drug cases.
In the game of cat and mouse between testers and cheaters, competitors have found ways to beat the system by timing their dosages to avoid testing positive, using masking agents and taking drugs that can't be detected.
That doesn't necessarily mean that all ath leses were clean.
But getting away with it could be more difficult in Nagano, where some 800 athletes — including all medal winners — will undergo doing controls during the Feb. 7-22 games.
For the first time at the winter games, the doping lab will be equipped with high resolution mass spectrometers. Experts say these $500,000, state-of-the-art machines can detect minuscule amounts of drugs in the system, including substances taken months earlier.
Spectrometers first were used during the 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympics. The machines recorded five positive tests, but the results were thrown out for technical reasons.
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Include NT hotel, 24 hours of drinks and weekly party schedules of free drinks and party schedules of spring break events! Organ in 19 hours and Earn a FREE TICKET!
CLASS TRAVEL
INNOVATION
Space is limited Call now!
1-800-653-6711
www.sales@BAHAMASAVAILABLE.COM
SN COMMUNITY AT AUSTRALIA BOSTON, MA 02127
SN COMMUNITY AT NEW YORK CITY, NY 10021
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on color, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference,
**SPRING BREAK '98**
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
BEST RATES ON SOUTH PADRE'S
HOTTEST CONDOS AND HOTELS
$196 for a week!*
IF YOU FIND A BETTER AVAILABLE RATE ON THE
SAME PROPERTY WE'LL MATCH OR BEAT IT, OR
TELL YOU WHY YOU SHOULD NOT TAKE IT!!!
FOR INFO AND RESULTS CALL 1-800-292-7520
VISIT our WEB site: www.pirentals.com
*Arrival March 21 only. Choose 2 of schmoozie
party, party card, Mexico shopping tool or Aprt
shuttle transfers. Tax and cleaning fee included.
125 - Travel
travel
Nobody Does Spring Break Better!
SPRING
BREAK '98
AS SEED ON CBS NEWS "14 HOURS"
DRIVE YOURSELF & SAVE!
AFFORDABLE
ROAD TRIP!
$98
as low as
17th
Sellout
Year!
PARTY
SOUTH PAPRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
STEAMBOAT
KEY WEST
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
www.sunchase.com
130 - Entertainment
Monday then Saturday. 3-8pm free pool at the Hottener
Hacken. Don't miss free pool at the Hottener
Hacken.
200s Employment
男 女
---
Odyssey Factory Store-Now filling several Positions.
MWF Late Mornings or Afternoons. No nights or weekends. Set your own hours. Flexible to schedule
Apply Downstream Outlet Mall #319
Brady Chiropractic Clinic. Part time help needed. 3-hour. Monday-Friday.Call 749-0130
BAMNOS'H. 1803. Mass, aerosol from Dillon's Now hiring P/T kitchen delivery. App in periodicals.
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PT. NEW
Alp. Twew. 789-1898 inquire at 203 Wakarahur.
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a disabled woman stay active & involved. Routine easy to learn, some living involved. Call 842-1794.
Part time clerical help. Accounting office, hrs 8-15.
Split shifts possible. Some Saturdays, 913-424-7600
Telephone surveyors 45 hr plus incentives 13 hr/wh
Avg person must be $75/wk. Call Frank 734-291
PART-TIME EVENINGS
Earn Extra Cash. gain experience in the music
Department. Become a Fremont Tracks
Representative Call.
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
$6.00 and at 6 months $6.50 plus profit sharing.
Apply at 7/9 Mass (upstairs).
Lunch help 11:30-11:00, 5-day or TR, subs as needed. Sunshine Acres 842-2232
The Granada is seeking featured dancers for Fri and sat night. Call Paige between now and April 10th.
Apt. Leasing Position Strong sales skills required, Compensation, 1 BR Apt. 20-25 hrs. In apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000 Clinton Pkwy.
Brockiecreek Learning Center hiring PTE teaching assistants A.M. and P.M. hours. Valuable experience in an early intervention program. Apply at 200 Mt. Hope Court. 865-0022
Teleservice/Apt. setting for TrueGreen Lawn,
the leading lawncare company. Part time positions with opportunities for advancement. Call Kenny or John today at (913) 429-8780
Male personal care attendants need to work with a young man with head injury in Lawrence. Starting pay is $7.90. If interested, please call Michelle at 913-341-8887 ext 400.
205 - Help Wanted
Hard working, hardy persons to teach behavioral program to 7 year old with Autism. Will provide training MWF 1:50-3:50 or Sat 8:30am, Sun 1:50am 823-1598, evenings.
$Expansion 98 $Natl. co-immediate PT/FT
$awning laws 98 $level one
$event level 1 $round around classes
$$$$$$$$$$$ Up to $10.45
$no exper. need. cond. apply $113 918-9675 10-5
MmG. Co. leasing agent PT. during school, FT this summer previous experience a plus. Must have relational transportation. Send resume w/ 5 copies of resumes to KEWL EA, KS 80443 or stop by 808 W. Blowen, EOE.
Lunch help needed 11:30 to 1:00 Mon. tbru Fr. ;
sunhours as needed, preferred care experience and training, Sunshine Acres School 842-
2223
Music Industry Internship Hi Frequency, a national music promotions company, seeks local promotions interns. knowledge of new music and Lawrence market essential. College credit available. Fax resume to Kelly at 800-375-691 or call 819-932-6532
DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AFFAIRS
Women of color, formerly battered women lessian, bisexual, and disabled are encouraged to apply. For an application contact WCS 66441 or returned applications will be postmarked.
Jayhawk smiles needed: The Kansas University Endowment Association is hiring students for 30-40 part-time positions calling alumni to raise funds to help a busy life, a great working environment, and a bonus program. Must be positive, enthusiastic, and detail-oriented. Please contact Jayhawk for more information or to leave a voice mail.
COLORADO SUMMER JOBS: RAFTING: RAPELLING: In the Rockies near瓦尔,ANDERSON CAMPS seeks caring, enthusiastic, dedicated, patient individuals who enjoy working with children. Interviews Wranglers, Maintenance and Nurses. Interviews on February 4th. Stop by Career Planning and Placement Office to get an application and sign for interview. Questions? Call us at (802) 754-8766.
Mechanical Engineers -- Engineered Air is a leading manufacturer of made to order packaged HVAC&R products. Rapid Sales growth has created outstanding career opportunities for recent graduates in mechanical engineering engineers. Engineered Air offers training leading to careers in equipment design, manufacturing or sales. Apply in confidence to Engineered Air, 32850 S.Wrld Street, DeSoto, Kansas 60108. Ph: (877) 254-9555.
Section B · Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 28, 1998
Freshmen lead No.1 Vols
Tennessee women on mission to win third NCAA title
The Associated Press
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Want to know how well the Tennessee Lady Vols are playing? Don't look at their ranking (No 1), record (21-0) or average margin of victory (31 points).
Chamique Holdswclaw, probably the nation's best college player and the team's leading scorer, likes to spend her breaks sitting in coach Pat Summitt's seat between assistant coaches Mickie DeMoss and Holly Warlick.
Take a look at the bench.
She says she likes to talk to DeMoss and Warlick. "They're really funny," Holdscaw says.
If the Lady Vols are playing poorly,
Summitt doesn't want any chuckles and orders Holdscwl out of her chair. But the defending national champions, energized by four freshmen, are playing so well that only once this season has Summitt told Holdscwl to beat it.
"In the Georgia game, she got mad at me for something," Holdschlaw said. "I came and sat in her seat. She was stepping on the floor and say 'No, you're not sitting there.'"
Holdsclaw was back in Summitt's seat again Sunday when the Lady Vols routed No. 6 Vanderbilt 86-54.
They have been No. 1 all season. They are 9-0 against ranked teams, and their margin of victory is greater than any of the Lady Vols' five national championship squads. Their closest game was a 10-point victory against No. 8 Illinois.
Tennessee, which has four starters 6-foot-1 or taller, is being compared with the 1995 Connecticut team that went undefeated and Southern California's 1982-83 national championship teams with Pam and Paula McGee.
Summitt will say only that this team
could be as good as her 1999 national champions, who went 35-2. She does acknowledge this year's squad is fun to watch.
"I ifwn't on the bench, I'd be in the stands," she said. "I'd pay money to see these kids play. They're exciting. You don't really find a group like this that play so well together."
What has made Tennessee so intimidating are four freshmen who account for half the team's points.
The team is on a mission toward winning three straight NCAA titles — something no team has ever done.
Tamika Catchings starts and averages 18 points, Semeka Kristen (15.5 points) and guard Kristen "Ace" Clement (6.2 points) bring a spark off the bench, while 6-foot-3 Teresa Geter (6.9 points, 5.1 rebounds) has worked her way into the starting rotation.
The Lady Vols had a jetdown in Sunday's first half against Vanderbilt but opened the second half with a 20-0 run in which they turned up the speed, the emotion and the volume of the 19,208 fans.
Golf tourney links Tiger and dad
The Associated Press
Twice in Tiger Woods' 17-month pro career the cold shadow of death sent shivers across his dreams. Twice it seemed as if Earl Woods — the man who made the Tiger — would die before seeing his son achieve golfing greatness.
But not only did Earl Woods live to see his son win the Masters in a manner that pushed golf from the sports pages to the front pages, this week he will play with Tiger in a pro tournament for the first time — the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.
So many times with Tiger Woods there seems to be something magical going on
— the way he won at Pumpkin Ridge, the way he won at Augusta. This is another one of those times.
Playing together at Pebble was something that a year ago neither of them thought would happen. Just when Tiger was about to fulfill the 20-year destiny Earl had mapped for him, it looked as if Earl might die.
The first shudder of fear came on an October night in Tulsa, Oklaw., in 1996
when Earl! was rushed from a hotel room shortly before 3 a.m., gasping for breath.
Heart attack,
although no one
would admit it at the
time.
The following morning, playing on just a few hours of sleep in the second round of the Tour Championship, Tiger Woods had the worst round of his brief pro career.
JEREMY GREGORIAN
"I didn't want to be here today," Woods said at the time. "I love my dad to death. I just want to go see him."
That choice of words captured the intense emotion between father and son, a relationship forged by those early golf lessons in a California garage when Tiger was barely a toddler.
What might have captured the bond between the two even more that day was the fact that Tiger Woods never considered withdrawing from the tournament.
The closer brush with death came nearly a year ago when Earl Woods had quadruple heart bypass surgery. The operation went well, but several weeks later complications almost killed him.
Last year, Tiger Woods played in the Pebble Beach tournament with film star Kevin Costner in a pairing that had more of a rock-concert frenzy to it than the feel of a golf tournament.
This year, Tiger's pairing will have the sentiment that can exist only between father and son.
"Mark O'Meara won with his dad a few years ago and told me it was probably the biggest thrill he's ever had." Woods said after coming from eight strokes back on Sunday to win in Thailand.
"If I can do the same it would be pretty special," Woods said. "When I was 13, my dad was a 1-handicapper, but he had heart surgery last year and now plays off 12."
And is Earl Woods a proud Pop?
Penguins' rising star skates into sweet deal
PITTSBURGH — Jaromir Jagr always wanted to play like Mario Lemieux. Now he'll be paid like him.
The Associated Press
Jagr, the Pittsburgh Penguins' brightest star now that Lemieux has retired, agreed yesterday to a four-year contract extension worth $38 million that will make him the National Hockey League's highest-paid player.
The total value of what now becomes a six-year contract is $48 million. Jagr will make $5.1 million this season and $4.75 million next season under his old contract before his salary climbs to $9.5 million in the 1999-2000 season.
The NHL scoring leader would become the league's first $10-million-a year player when he makes $10.4 million in 2003-04, though another player probably will have eclipsed that figure by then.
The NHL's top contracts belong to Philadelphia's Eric Lindros and Anaheim's Paul Kariya, who will make $8.5
million each next season. Both could be making $10 million each even before Jagr's extension kicks in.
"You never know where the dollars are going to go," said Jagr, who was joined at a short news conference by his mother and girlfriend. "But I want to play here, and I want to stay here. I want to finish my career here."
Jagr's deal surpasses the $42 million, seven-year deal reached by Lomieux in October 1992. However, that contract was reworked several times before Lemieux retired last spring, and the Penguins still owe him money.
One reason why the Penguins didn't want to rework the remaining two years of Jagr's contract was the deferred money owed Lemieux, who made $11 million last year and reportedly is making $8 million this season.
The two sides were close to agreeing to a $53 million, seven-year contract last month before Jagr, after seeing how much Kariya and Lindros will make, decided he wanted a shorter contract.
New high-tech drug test to be used at Olympics
The Associated Press
Performance enhancing drugs aren't used only by runners, swimmers, weightlifters and other summer sports athletes.
Doping also is prevalent in winter sports such as cross-country skiing, speedskating, biathlon and bobsledding.
For that reason, new high-tech equipment will be used to catch drug users at the Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.
There have been only four positive tests ever recorded at the Winter Olympics — two at Innsbruck in 1976, one in Sarajevo in 1984 and one in Calgary in 1988. The last two winter games, 1992 Albertville and 1994 Lillehammer, passed without any drug cases.
In the game of cat and mouse between testers and cheaters, competitors have found ways to beat the system by timing their dosages to avoid testing positive, using masking agents and taking drugs that can't be detected.
That doesn't necessarily mean that all athletes were clean.
But getting away with it could be more difficult in Nagano, where some 800 athletes — including all medal winners — will undergo doing controls during the Feb. 7-22 games.
For the first time at the winter games, the doping lab will be equipped with high-resolution mass spectrometers. Experts say these $500,000, state-of-the-art machines can detect minuscule amounts of drugs in the system, including substances taken months earlier.
Spectrometers first were used during the 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympics. The machines recorded five positive tests, but the results were thrown out for technical reasons.
Kansan Classified
100s
Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
115 On Campus
115 Announcements
140 Entertainment
130 Lost and Found
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
225 Typing Services
X
305 For Sale
310 Computers
312 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
300s
Merchandise
3250 Stereo Equipment
3300 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
345 Motorcycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
370 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
410 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansas was not knowingly advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
In violation of University of Maryland regulations or law
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
110 - Business Personals
---
Gay, Lesbian, Bisequal, Transgendered, Unsure
Call RK in or out of 2014-2015 for a local
call
1.
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
CENTER
1
HEALTH Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU CENTER
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
100s Announcements
120 - Announcements
limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in the newspaper on an equal opportunity basis.
120 - Announcements
$ Cash for College $ Grants & great opportunities! Call
sponsor. 502-694-8320. Great opportunities! Call
Snring Break Mazatlan
Spring Career and Employment Fair: Wed. Feb. 4, 1988 to 3 am to 3pm, KSU Union Ballroom. Over 120 employers. FT, PT, internships, summer jobs, volunteer opportunities. All majors wel- lled. Employer services at Vickers or Glencore Employment Services at 684-3624 or a web site: www.ukans.edu / upe/cef.html
Don't miss out on the HOTTEST destination in Airplane, 7 nights hotel, transfers, FREE drinks, 15 FREE meals, parties. For Free brochure i 890-395 4985 (www.collegetours.com)
1998 SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA CAMP Buckskin has various positions available to work with youth who haveAcademic and Career Goals (e.g. LD). A unique program with opportunity to earn school credit. Salary + room & board. Camp is located on a lake in the Superior National Forest near Mendon, CA. Contact. Time Edmonds (612) 930-3544. email: buckskin@spacestar.net.
NEED GLASSES?
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY FOR EVERY DAY AT SANTA FE OPTIONAL, 327 Mass, downtown Lawrence. 843-6828. We carry Giorgio Armani, Alfred Surg, North Dakota Santa Fe眼works, Nicobar Perry Ellison Santa Fe眼works, Nicaragua optics lab in the midwest, Langley of K.C. no cheap "backroom grindering." We also supply contact lenses at GREAT PRICES. For more information, go to ANGELS!
Camp Takaje for boys, on Long Lake, Nake. Mail not for picturesque location, exceptional facilities, and outstanding programs. June 22-August 23. Over 100 counselor positions in tennis, golf, basketball, gymnastics, hockey, roller hooper, swimming sailoring, waterkensing, scuba archery, rifley, weight training, journalism, photography, video, woodwork, history, first aid, study, research & elective courses, piano accompanist, music instrumental/band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater canoeing, ropes course instructor, general instructor, kitchen staff. Call Mike Sherburn at 1-800-250-8252.
Recycle the Kansan
120 - Announcements
JUST FOLLOW OUR GOLDEN ANGELS!!!
F
Instructional & Educational video's & CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited internet
access for only $15.95/mo. tell your parents,
shopping or www.internetgpm.com/
www.internetgpm.com/
125 - Travel
**"Spring Break 98 Go Getting!"** Cancun,
Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida. GroupID free
book free book free book
Now! ViaMIC/DiC/Amex A/M
www://endlesssummercounters.com
Travel
SPRING BREAK!
SPRING BREAK TRACK to Mexico, Jamaica,
Florida. From $99 & $59 Call Jason at 800-949-949
CANKUN * BANAMAS
24 HOURS OF FREE DRINKS!
Z-noise from 3:29I
Includes NT ac lift, Number of free drinks and weekend party schedules of free drinks and weekly party schedules of spring break events. Organized by 15 friends and BANAMAS FREE TIME!
CLASS travel
TMCN
Space is limited Call now!
1-800-858-6411
www.banamastravel.com
IS COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT MADE IN MARYLAND 02177
$196 for a week!*
**SPRING BREAK'98**
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
BEST RATES ON SOUTH PADRE'S
HOTTEST CONDOS AND HOTELS
Housing Act of 1938 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status" (see House Bill 25).
IF YOU FIND A BETTER AVAILABLE RATE ON THE SAME PROPERTY WE LLL MATCH OR BEAT IT, OR TELL YOU WHY YOU SHOULDn't TAKE IT!FU FOR INFO AND RESERVE CALL 1-800-292-7526 VISIT our WEB site: www.pirentals.com "Arrival March 21 only. Choose 2 of schmooze cruise, party card, Microsoft shopping tour, or Arpt shuttle transfers. Tax and cleaning fee included.
125 - Travel
Nobody Does Spring Break Better
SPRING
BREAK'98
SUNS ON GREEN MAINS AND HILLS
DRIVE YOURSELF & SAVE
Nobody Does Spring Break Better!
SPRING
BREAK
SHEN ON CINEMA NIGHT 4 HOURS
DRIVE YOURSELF & SAVE!
AFORDABLE
PLEASE GIVE A FIRST TIME TO "ROAD TRIP!"
$98
we have a
17TH
Sellout
Year!
PARTY
SOUTH PAPRE ISLAND.
PANAMA CITY BEACH.
DAYTONA BEACH.
STEAMBOAT.
NEW WEST.
PER REASON DURING OVERNIGHT, BREAK DAY 2, LENGTH OF STAFF
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
www.sunchase.com
AYTONA BEACH
STEAMBOAT
MERCET
NEW PERSONS OPENING OR RETURNING. BAD GRADE, LIBRARY OF TEN
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
www.sunchase.com
Monday thru Saturday 3-8pm free pool at the Bot
town club and The Rottleneck 717 New Hampshire 401-LIV
Entertainment
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
Factory Store-Now filling several Positions.
MWF L Late Morning or Afternoons. No nights or weekends. Set your own hours. Flexible to schedule. Apply Downstream Outlet Mall #139
**Jill Chiropractic Clinic.** Part time help needed 3-7pmn, Monday Friday Call 749-0130 BAMBINGH $101. Mass, across from Dillon's. Apply on Andy at A82-8300. Apply in person or call Andy at A82-8300.
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PT. NEW Apt/Twn 749 1858 inquire at 920 Wakarusa Kwai
Looking for a fun & rewarding job? Help a驻留 woman stay active & involve! Romely easy任务。帮助一位驻留女性保持活跃和参与感!
Part time clerical work. Accounting office, hrs 8-5. Split shifts possible. Some Saturdays. 913-842-7600.
Telephone surveyors 85 hr plus incentives 15 hr/wk
Avg person makes $73/wk. Frank F. Caldwell 34-734-343
Earn Extra Cash...gain experience in the music
Frauds...get a free trunk Tracks
Free Shots @ $99.95 per hour
Mass Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position, Starts
Apply at 719 Mass (upstairs)
Apply at 719 Mass (upstairs)
Lunch help 11:30:10:05 5-day or TR; subs as needed. Sunshine Acres 842-2232.
rne Granada is seeking featured dancers for Fri and Sat. nights. Call Paige between noon and 8pm for more information. 749-3487
Apt Lening Position. Strong sales skills required. Compensation, 1 BR Apt. 20-25 hrs. Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000 Clinton Pkwy.
Brookcreek Learning Center hiring PT teaching assistants A.M. M and P. mours. Valuable experience in an early intervention program. Apply at 200 Mt. Hope Court. 865-0022
Teleservice/Appt, setting for Truesteen Lawn,
The leading lawncare company. Part time positions with opportunities for advancement. Call Kenyon or Josh today at (913) 492-8750
nate personal care attendants need to work with a young man with head injury in Lawrence. Starting pay is $7.50. If interested, please call Michell at 913.432.8876 ext 400.
205 - Help Wanted
Hard working, energetic persons to teach behavior program to 7-year-old with Autism. Will provide training MWF 1:50-3:50pm or Sat 8:30am, Sun 1:50pm, 623-1598, evenings.
$E\expansion $8 $B$阵法 $N$阵法 $J$阵法 $K$阵法 $L$阵法 $M
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ Up to $10.45
No exper. cond. apply. Call 913-3813-967-105
Mgmt. Co. leasing agent PT during school, FT this summer previous experience a plus. Must have reliable transportation. Send resume w/ 3 letters to BW8 W 204, Lawrence KS 60544 or stop by 808 W 24, EOE
Lunch help needed 11:30 to 1:00 Mon. fru Fri,
sub nights as needed; preferred child care experience
and training. Sunshine Acres School
842
2223
Music Industry Internship. Hi Frequency, a national music promotion company, seeks local promotions interns. knowledge of new music and Lawrence market essential. College credit available. Fax resume to Kelly at 800-375-691 or call 819-932-6532
DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AFFAIRS
Woman of color formerly battled woman
DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AFPAH5
Women of color, formerly battered women, lessian, biseau, and disabled are encouraged to attend the meeting. 765-884-7777 or P.O. Box 633, Lawrence, KS 60044.
Returned applications must be postmarked by February 2.
Jayhawk smiles needs: The Kansas University Endowment Association is hiring students for 30-40 part-time positions calling alumni to raise funds. The position requires a bachelor's business life, a great working environment, and a bonus program. Must be positive, enthusiastic, and teamwork oriented. Send resume to KU for more information or to a leave a voice mail.
COLORADO SUMMER JOBS: RAFTING! RAP-PELLING! In the Rockies near Vail, NAND-SON CAMPS sees caring, enthusiastic, dedicated campers in an indoor setting. Counselors, Cooks, Wranglers, Maintenance and Nurses. Interviews on February 4th. Stop by Career Planning and Placement Office to get an application and sign up for Questions? Call us at (707) 524-7766
Mechanical Engineers -- Engineering Air is a leading manufacturer of made to order packaged HVAC&R products. Sales growth has created outstanding career opportunities for recent graduates. Specialized engineers. Engineered Air offers training leading to careers in equipment design, manufacturing or sales. Apply in confidence to Engineering Air. Phone: 913-838-1401. www.engineeringair.com. 913-838-1381 Fax: 913-838-1406
Tuesday. January 28. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 9
205 - Help Wanted
$$$ BONUS! BONUS!$$$
Growing #1 Residential Home Improvement Co. seeks motivated, dependable people to take inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PC skills on a monitor on bonus after working 30 continuous hours & 6+ minutes and raises based on your performance. Flax schedules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Ability at:
KanTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this ad with you to qualify for bonus.
500 SUMMER JOBBS JOBS/CAMPS/YOU
CHOOSE!! NY, PA, NE ENGLAND, TEN-
LAND, NEW YORK, LOS ANGELES,
LACROSSE, BASKETBALL, GYMNASICS,
RIDING, SWIMMING, WS, MT BIKING, PIO-
CHERES, WORLD COACH, DANCE,
CARIMIS, PIECY WOODSHOP, PHO-
CERIES, JEWELRY, WOODSHOP, PHO-
CERIES, RADIO, NATURE, NURSES,
CHEFS, KIDS, EDUCATION, STREI-
NDISH 1-800-433-6483; FAX. 518-933-7483
EARLY CHILDHOOD ALTSMIS PROGRAM CLO is seeking part-time employees to teach children with autism in the Lawrence area. EACP establishes a program to establish and maintain meaningful social relationships, attend to own personal care and education, participate in part-time afternoons, evenings, and/or weekends, course knowledge, psychology, social work, educed related, related apply at CL0, 2113 Delaware, Lawrence. EOE.
Student Hourly. Duties include packing ship-
ling materials, copying files, copying,
collaring, errands; other duties required.
Required qualifications: ability to lift 45 pounds,
operate machinery, and work in Excel;
accuracy in data entry; ability to work
10-15 hrs/wk; organizational and filing skills;
ability to organize materials; Must be able to work in summer. Deadline
2024. Beginning salary $5.50/hr. Pick up application at 3061 Dol Center. EOE/AA employer.
Student Hourly: Spring and Summer position with potential for Fall. Duties include library management, data archiving, copying, collating errands; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Internet, multimedia; ability to work 15-20 hrs/wk independently and efficiently; organization and filing skills. Deadline 07/30/98. Salary: $46,000. Applicant must be at 363 Dole Center. EOE/AA employer.
Student Housing
Dining Services
• Starts at 50/hr
• Free Tableware
• New Friends
• Convenient Locations
Scholarships
Call for Info
DH Sending Center:
GSP * 644-3120
GSP * 844-2500
Haskell
Oliver * 644-4087
Oliver * 644-4087
Cheley Colorado Campus in the Rocky Mountains near Estes Park, Colorado, is hiring caring and enthusiastic individuals as Unit Directors, Cook, Kitchen Administrators, Drivers, Office Personnel, RW Dramatists, and Counselors with skills in cooking, serving, catering, wall challenge-course, camping, sports, crafts, song-leading, rifleance, or riflery, Room/board, salary, travel allowance. Must be at least a Sophomore and able to work June 8-August 11, attend school. For information, please contact Cheley Colorado Campus, s629-7386; e-mail office@cheley.com; or visit our Web site, www.cheleyWeb.com.
Graduate Student Research Assistant needed.
Dept. Human Development, KU, up to 20 hr 2/wk,
Saturday plus weekdays late afternoon/even.
Conduct visits & phone calls with families & children
in school, community observations, observations, interviews. Must have current enrollment in KU graduate program; reliable transportation; experience with families and young children; prefer degree in social scienc
5028 for full job description. Send resume, KU
for transcript, application letter, & names,
addresses & phone numbers for three references
in Kansas, KAU, HOLL, 4003 Dole, Lawrence, KS 66045. The reference must be received by 2/04/98. EO/AA employer, city applications espec
PART-TIME JOBS
CITY OF LAWRENCE
The following part-time jobs are currently available with the City of Lawrence. Complete application at Admin. Serv. 2nd, Floor, City Hall, 6 East,thk. Lawrence KS 66044 E/M/F/D/
Lifeguard. $6/50 hr, evenings, weekends, school
masks. Must be 17 and have red Cross Red
lifeguard Training Certification.
Jerks Park & Recreation. 20 hr/wk; $5/50 hr, 1HR
breaks. Must be 17 and have current Red Cross Lifeguard Training Certification.
Must be 18 wk & Recreation, 20 wk/hr, $5.25/hr. HS Grad. Course in word processing/data retrieval.
School Crossing Guard,10.15 hrs/wk,$5.80/hr,
responsible for directing children on foot and
foot traffic. Must be in good phys. condition
with no loss of sight or hearing.
Recreation Center Leader,资$5m-10pm
week nights and weekends,$1.5/hr, supervising recreational programs and use of facilities. HS
Grad/GED required.
205 - Help Wanted
Hands and Feet
$$$$Earn Cash$$$
The Kansas and Burge Uniones
Catering Department
$6.00/hour
February 3, 1998
9:45 a.m., 3:00 p.m.
Will pay in cash day following employment. Must be able to stand for long periods; lift up to 20 pounds, follow dress code. AA/EE
AN ARIZONA TRADITION
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In the North Pacific Ocean near New Guinea.
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JOBS, JOBS, JOBS!
We are bursting at the seams with great positions for people willing to make LONG-TERM or PERMANENT COMMITMENTS!
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205 - Help Wanted
- Office Management
- Customer Service
- Assembly
- Warehouse
- Machine Operator
- Warehouse
Ask us about our $50 referral bonus!
Call now to explore your new career options!
ENCORE
STAFFING SERVICES
7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.M-F
(785) 331-0044
24 hour information
on jobs
13 East 8th Street EOE
205 - Help Wanted
As a leading teleservices provider, ITI understands that to be the best in the business you have to offer the best. And, when you add up the things that are important to you in a career, nobody does it better than ITI Marketing Services.
BETTER PAY.
BETTER SCHEDULES.
BETTER OPPORTUNITIES.
BETTER HURRY.
$8.50 Per Hour
- Bonuses * Paid Professional Training * Paid Vacations/Holidays
AP Specialist over 2 yrs. working experience in bookkeeping, GL, AP taxes. apply in person /w resume at 4821 Qulch Crest Pl or call 841-951 ext. 3200.
SPEEDING DUIT SUSPENDED DL7 Call
SERVICED KSM, OTW 209-822-3021 Toll Free
Plus these and other terrific benefits:
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225 - Professional Services
PROFESSIONALSERVICES: Openings for 1/2-5 yrs. Educational activities, clean, new facility. Montessori teacher. Please call 865-0978 for more info.
- Bonuses • Paid Professional Training • Paid Vacations/Holidays
• Insurance & 401(k) • Immediate evening & limited daytime schedules
Or Apply In Person: Mon. - Fri.
9 a.m. - 6 p.m.
1601 SW 23rd Street
BUSTED IN KC?
ITI Marketing Services
RESUMES
Based on full-time time exposure status following training. Restricted work schedule affect brief rate. Through background investigations conducted on staff.
POSITIVELY PROFESSIONAL
8
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fuse ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of G. STROBE
Donald G. Strobe Stuart Street
16 East 13th 842-511-16
Free Initial Consultation
TRANSCRIPTIONS Linda Morton
X
235 - Typing Services
Certified Professional Resume Writer
300s Merchandise
305 - For Sale
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
Professional writing offering services.
Papers/monographs, English or Spanish. £2 00 a
month.
S
Call 865-0612
For Sale 1. Ericsson AH630 cell phone. Call
igor at 864-2812 or (913) 515-0777.
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-9115
---
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases. Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Complete Mac system Centris 610: Monitor,
printer, modem, lots of software. $550.00.
Pool Table For Sale.
Pool Tables. Stacks, balls, chalk, and dust brush 841-906, ask for Bill.
Pool Table For Sale
17 Wak 18 Wak
24 Final 25
10:00-2:00
31 Wak
325 - Stereo Equipment
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your home audio equipment. Old. New (785) 232-9639.
---
360 - Miscellaneous
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt. located close to campus. $305 includes cable, furniture, outdoor parking, on the bus route, 9th & Excuse Avenue. Perfect for students. Call 618-8393 during office hours M-F or Fri.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE Co-ed student housing alternative to private landlords. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by 1406 Tennessee St. 841-0484
MIRACLE VIDEO SPRING SALY ALL
MIRACLE HOSTED AT EPSON
AT 1910 HASKELL AVENUE OR CALL 841-7944
$ $ $ $ $ $ $
400s Real Estate
A house
405 - Apartments for Rent
Leanna Mar Townhomes
A&S
RENTAL SOLUTIONS
Lorimar Townhomes
1 BDRM unfurished apt. at 703 Arizona. Near KU bus route, W/D shared, whirlpool, garage. $450 per/mo. Call 838-9622.
For More Info: (785) 841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway
Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you.
Nice spacious 39 bpm lapped at 18th & 6th
Chamberlain Ct w. 180-257-4188
Chamberlain Bldg. 184-1096-4888
405 - Apartments for Rent
1 Bedroom Sublease $370 month. Water, trash, cabilec. paid no.付金 842-3924
Hey! Have you heard about our deposit-in-waiting to the list for the app, of your choice this fall? You have some of the biggest apts. in town for $425,000. Park 381, 400, 416, Call 844-1655, Park 205, Apartments 201, W 245.
Looking for a place to rent? FREE RENT REFERRAL!
$ 13^{1 / 2} \mathrm{E}. 8^{\mathrm{th}} \mathrm{St}., $ Lawrence
3 bdm, 2 bath on bus route. W/D, brand new
apartment. $775/mo. ASAP) Call 313-3932
2 bedroom apartment
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a.s.a.p.
call 748-7281
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
Washer/Dryer Trash Compactor
Dishwashers Gas Fireplace
Microwave Cable Paid
Comforters Comforters
Walk-in Closets Covered Parking
841-5454
4 Bedroom/3 Bath
**Early Sign Up Special**
For Fall 1998
($40 off per month)
Sublease 2, BR 1, BTH 9, WD hook-up, deck and padles 450 mm. plus deposit 313-6826 or (913) 738-3760.
2 BRSpecial rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt. located close to campus, on bus route. $350 includes basic cable. Calf Now. University Terrace 941-6783
Unfurnished Room
1,2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes
For More Info: (785) 841-7849
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Cedarwood Apartments
2 Bdrm, W/D hookup, D/W, fully equipped
3 Cdram, W/D hookup, D/W, fully equipped
4 Avail, onCall, B. call 18, Call 841 or 843-3097,
843-3126, 843-3226, 843-3326
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
* Studios
* Duplexes
* Air Conditioning
* Close to shopping & restaurants
* 1 block from KU Bus route
* REASONABLE
Call Karin Now!
Ask about our specials
843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
405 - Apartments for Rent
GREAT LOCATION...
2 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE JAN. 1
1st Month Free $500/mo + utilities
LOCATED ON 1345 VERMONT C2 BALLAU-9115
GREAT LOCATION!!!
---
meadowbrook
The Perfect Apartment!
15th & Crestline
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio or a spacious one, two, or three bedroom apt. with your choice of a patio or balcony CALL US, 842-4200. Renting for NOW, and for FALL walking distance to campus & on bus route
Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
410 - Condos For Rent
אבל כך
Brand New Duplex! Available June 1. 4 Bdmr. a full bath, washbasin/Dryer all Kitchen Bdmr. a full bath, washbasin/Dryer A
415 - Homes For Rent
Female share large home new campus, washer dryer, air cond. 1/4 utilities base 842-2383 or 838-
30 Days Free
3 bedroom, 1-bath, brand new, C/A, W/D,
microwave, refrigerator, range, security
system, off-street parking, close to campus,
93 Mississippi; 841-3966, $290-6200/mp.
Non-smoking roommate to share 3 bdm duplex
/w/professional fees $25 per mo, utilities paid,
w/d, access to pool, call 842-8397. After 6pm
4 bdm, 3 bath, townhouse, W/D, $250/mo. 2 rms
avail, now 749. 7230
RM needed immediately to share 2 bdr, 1 bath apt
Close to campus. Rent is $195/mo + 1/2 tubs. Jan
rent already paid. Call 331-2837 to view the apt
Roommate wanted. Call for info. 843-1103. Goon location. $250 plus utilities.
male roommate wanted. 3 bdrm. house off 8th & oma. Fully furnished in walking distance to campfire, greedy, and more across the street. 6 cont' rooms. $200 mo. + 1/3 utilities. 865-503 or 164-645-603.
4 BR Furnished House, $238?mo + utilities
Call 331-0615.
Female Roommate neededs ASAP 2 Bedroom
Roommate needs Water & Cable paid. No
Smoker, Washer and Dryer needed.
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
On KU Bus Route
3 Hot Tubs
FEMALE ROOMMADE NEEDED
Spacious tri-level apartment, with great location
$230 month plus utilities. Call Michele at 832-8992
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
---
M mastercraft management
Exercise Room
Wanted. 1 Roommate M/F for a 3 brm. townhouse, $280 per month + 3/4 utilities. Included washer/dryer, bathroom, 2 car garage, & lot of space. Call 749-3569.
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
Male roommate needed. N/S. 1011 Illinois 3 bdmroom $175/mo + 1/3 utilities. For spring house. 832-2295.
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Need roommate who does not mind smokers
Roomy, one block to campus. $208 per month +
nilifies 841-8254.
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Female Roommate Needed ASAP, Share Town Home. Washier/Dryer. On Bus Route. $262 plus utilities, please call 823-1651
Visit the following locations
1 roommate wanted
4 bedroom townhouse
birth + $250 a month plus utilities
Please call 475-7056
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana 841-1429
Female RM needed to share brand new 3 btmr townhome, WD, fireplace, garage 600 sq ft. All equipped.
Hanover Place
14th & Mass 841-1212
Sublease now through July 31st. 1 female to share
3 bdmr or 2 grad students $240/mo. No deposit all
appliances. Call Trista 965-1629
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. at 1128 Ohio. Between campus & downcount. Close to GSP-Corin. Your share $250 +1/2 utilities. No妈贝 841-1207.
430 - Roommate Wanted
Rd. home on basement on baseboard on Straford R3. 1 + bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office walk. Walk to Class. Price at $199.00. Call Esther, GB/CM GREW E. R43-8095 for information.
Roommate needed to share 3 barm, 2 bath duplex in W. Lawrence, Garage, W/D, basement, new home, 1/3 utilities + $250. Move in immediately.
*Call 841-9031
SPACIOUS Sr/Grad folks seek 2 N/S Fem. Avail now Bright wavled skilt glipi n. campus. Clean air ar away from traffic, on park (birds, trees, quiet room) D. $207 Utl Pd. P41-2146 leave word 8m-10m.
Homes for Rent
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold · 749-4226
420 - Real Estate For Sale
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
N/S female roommate wanted to be beautifully furnished townhouse. On Bus route, 15 min. walk from campus. $275+share utils. No Pets. 842-6734
Sundance
& Florida 841.5
Tanglewood
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Pri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
Af some locations
Equal Housing Opportunity
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
- Dy Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60445
Stip by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and S p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Ads phone in may be issued to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 119 Stairwater Flint
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 shipped 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.
*Correction*
Classified Information and order form
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad the number of agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a cleanliness ad that was charged on MasterCard or Vix, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. For information on refunds for cancelled ads, please call 800-277-3911.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Readline:
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=21.00 (4 lines X $1.05 per line X 5 days).
Rates
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
| 1X cost per mile per day | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2.50 | 2.00 | 1.40 | 1.20 | 1.00 | 0.80 |
| 2.30 | 1.55 | 1.05 | 0.95 | 0.90 | 0.70 |
| 2.25 | 1.48 | 1.00 | 0.85 | 0.80 | 0.60 |
| 2.15 | 1.25 | 0.95 | 0.85 | 0.80 | 0.60 |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classifications
| Classifications | |
| :--- | :--- |
| 105 Persons | 140 Land & Found |
| 110 Business Personals | 207 Help wasted |
| 110 On Campus | 232 Professional Services |
| 120 Announcements | 233 Typing Services |
| 123 Travel | 305 For Sale |
| 130 Entertainment | 316 Computers |
| | 318 Home Furnishings |
| | 329 Sporting Goods |
| | 339 Maintenance |
| | 339 Tickets |
| | 340 Auto Sales |
| | 348 Microservices |
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 Wanted to Buy
405 For Rent
410 Candles for Rent
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
420 Restore Wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ad begins:
Address:
Total days in paper
Date ad begins: Total days in paper:
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name:___ Phone:___
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Signature
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
]
Section B·Page 10
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 28, 1998
UDKI
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
interactive
Check Us Out!
www.kansan.com
Newstand
The Playhouse
The Gallery
The Soap Box
The Visitor Center
Explore Your World
---
Tomo
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PD BOX 3585
TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
FANTASTIC
FANTASTIC
kansan Happy Kansas Day!
Thursday January 29,1998
The weather will continue to be warm with partly sunny skies and light winds.
HIGH LOW 55 36
Section:
A
Sports today
Vol.108·No.89
Online today
Information about Kansas history will be featured today at the web site for the Library of Congress.
MANSA
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/today/
jan29.html
图12-36
Guard Kenny Gregory scored 18 points as the Kansas men's basketball team destroyed Baylor 94-47 last night in Allen Field House.
SEE PAGE 1B
Contact the Kansan
WWW.KANSAN.COM
News: (785) 864-4810
Advertising: (785) 864-4358
Fax: (785) 864-5261
Opinion e-mail: opinionekansan.com
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Advertising e-mail: onlineads@kansan.com
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
"I'm going to quit smoking when I graduate,when I have a house and kids,when I'm respectable."
- Nathan Allen, Santa Cruz, Calif., senior
(USPS 650-640)
Mat Shumate (left), Des Moines, Iowa, junior, and Dominic O'Donnell (right), Quincy, Illinois, junior, smoke outside of Wesco Hall. They were getting a quick puff before a class yesterday. Said he had been smoking for one year, and O'Donnell said he had been smoking for six years. Photo by Jizw Weber/KANSAN
Plan burns to snuff out smoking
By Lisa Stevens John
john@Kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
To quit or not to quit — when it comes to smoking, that is the question.
Visitors to the University of Kansas Student Health Services may see signs advertising a "No-Nag" stop-smoking plan. The "No-Nag" program is geared toward students who have made the decision to stop smoking, said Julie Francis, a health educator at student health.
Francis teaches "No-Nag" strategies that help ease the transition from smoking to nonsmoking.
"The more strategies somebody learns, the more likely it is that he or she will be able to quit," Francis said.
Nathan Allen, Santa Cruz, Calif., senior, said he smoked a pack of cigarettes a day for three years and took his first puff when he was 10 or 11.
Allen said that he had not heard of the "No-Nag"
program but that he planned to quit smoking eventually.
"I'm going to quit smoking when I graduate, when I have a house and kids, when I'm respectable," Allen said.
Francis said the quitting process was sometimes more difficult than expected. Her first strategy was to encourage students to begin an exercise program.
"I tell them to find something they enjoy doing. If they enjoy it, then hopefully that's going to be something they will want to continue," Francis said.
"Exercise is addictive," she said. "If somebody came to me and asked what the best thing they can do to try to stop smoking, to replace the loss someone feels when he or she stops smoking, I'd say begin an exercise program."
Francis said the exercise could be as simple as walking, roller blading or bicycling.
Other tips include switching to a lower nicotine
and tar cigarette, smoking only half of a cigarette,
or simply cutting back. Quitters-to-be also can
use over-the-counter nicotine patches or take a
physician-prescribed medicine called Zyban.
Nolan McWilliams, Prairie Village junior, has been cutting back on cigarettes. During the last month, McWilliams has moved from smoking one pack a day to smoking half of a pack, he said.
The "No-Nag" program may not be for everyone. Nurer Rahman is a graduate student in physics from Dhaka, Bangledesh. Rahman, 27, said he has smoked a half of a pack of cigarettes a day for eight years. He said he had no plans to quit.
"I like to smoke," Rahman said. "When I have to think it helps me concentrate."
"I'm in the process of trying to cut down week by week," McWilliams said. "It works for the most part."
Students who want to quit smoking can contact Francis at Student Health Services or call 864-9570 to make an appointment.
Spring enrollment to include center for clearing holds
By Gerry Doyle
gdoyle@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
In the near future, students will no longer be held back from the enrollment process.
The Office of the Provost and the Enrollment Center are developing a plan to reinstate the holds center, a centralized location where students could clear enrollment holds, said Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate provost.
The move to bring back the center began last semester, McCluskey-Fawcett said.
"Students seem to want it back," she said. "We will definitely have a holds office in Strong Hall during some or all of the enrollment period this spring. Students still are better off clearing their holds before they come to enrollment."
During Spring 1997 enrollment, 457 students used the old holds center in 156 Strong. The center was not open during Fall 1997 enrollment.
The center in Strong would allow students to clear holds in one place. Now, holds that result from University billing
- such as library fines, housing bills or unpaid tuition - must be paid at the cashier's window in the basement of Carruth-O' Leary Hall. Holds issued for other reasons - such as parking tickets, proof of immunization or unpaid Kansas University Endowment Association loans - must be cleared at the corresponding department.
Although a room for the center has not been chosen, services definitely will be expanded, McCluskey-Fawcett said.
"It will be a little more sophisticated than the old one with more people," she said. "The old one had one person sitting behind a computer, and the new one will probably have more people behind computers."
The center could be helpful but should not encourage students to wait until the last minute to resolve holds, said Bill Shunk, Endowment Association director of scholarship and loan programs.
"I'm sure some students will be helped by this," Shunk said. "But we let students know ahead of time if they have a hold. The student has the responsibility to take care of it."
The center might have drawbacks but would benefit both students and the organizations that give holds, said Jim Boyle, Watkins Memorial Health Center associate director.
"For many, this would be a good thing," Boyle said. "It would be easier for the students to get things resolved."
The enrollment stress also would be diminished, said Scott Unekis, Manhattan senior. He said the center would save walking and nerves.
"God forbid the University would have anything be easy in enrollment," Unekis said. "It would be especially helpful to a newer student. Even an information desk about where holds should be paid would be a big help."
Hold Payment Locations HOLD BUILDING
Library fines, housing, tuition Unpaid parking tickets, fines Perkins loans Endowment Association Immunizations
Carruth O'Leary
Parking Department
142 Carruth O'Leary
Youngberg Hall
Watkins Health Cente
Residents plan for care of neighborhood
Jason Benavides / KANSAN
Oread group will apply for grants to tend area
By Carl Kaminski
Kansas stuff writer
The Oread Neighborhood Association, which looks after an area between Ninth and 17th streets and from the University of Kansas to Massachusetts Street, met last week to discuss its goals and put together requests for Community Development Block Grants.
A small group of concerned Oread residents are making an impact on students who live off campus in the Oread neighborhood.
The Oread neighborhood is a target neighborhood for a block grant, which means it is eligible to receive grants from the city of Lawrence each year to help the neighborhood meet its needs and goals.
The neighborhood was designated as a target neighborhood because of census figures that determined it as a low to middle income area, said Julie Banhart, coordinator of the Oread Neighborhood Association.
"That's in large part because of the students living here," Banhart said. "Students usually do not have lots of money."
At the last neighborhood meeting, everything from how to monitor liquor licenses to whether to institute a pooper-scooper ordinance were discussed.
Dunn said the association was not certain how much money the city would grant this year.
James Dunn, board member of the neighborhood association, said previous projects, which had included crime watches.
Students usually do not come to association meetings, but they are encouraged to attend and give their input. Banhart said.
Banhart said students needed to attend one of the quarterly meetings or contact the neighborhood association to get involved.
"We send out the newsletters to all the houses and apartments, and the meetings are announced," Banhart said.
The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Oh'o St., and Bull Winkles Bar, 1344 Tennessee St., closed temporarily because of a statewide crackdown on underage drinking. The association helped organize meetings with the owner, which enabled residents to discuss their concerns. Banhart said.
"The bar issues usually bring a lot of students from both sides." Dunn said.
Janet Gerstner, association treasurer, said one of the association's greatest concerns was maintaining the mixed medium and high-density populations of renters and permanent residents.
Many neighborhoods are moving toward building more apartments complexes, but
Gerstner said it upset her and other association members when some of the old houses were torn down.
the Oread neighborhood wants to discourage more apartments, Gerstner said. She said the association did not want more apartment complexes because the complexes did not fit in with the neighborhood.
"Most of us really like our old houses," she said.
The association also has been working on removing asphalt from the street between the 900 and 1000 blocks of Ohio Street to reveal the underlying brick and has been fixing sidewalks.
"Sidewalks are kind of a nemesis here," Dunn said. "If you are a pedestrian here, you figure that out real quick."
Ninth St.
10th St.
Missouri St.
Missoula St.
Olinda St.
12th St.
Oral Neighborhood
15th St.
17th St.
Jason Benavides / KANSAN
TIME
John Glenin prepares to throw another frisbee to his dog at the halfway show during a women's basketball game against Texas A & M. Glenin takes his frisbee-catching dogs around the country and performs under the name Disc" Dope. Photo by Roger Nomer/KANSAN
Whoa doggie!
[1]
2A
The Inside Front
Thursday January 29,1998
News
from campus, the state, the nation and the world
LAWRENCE
NEW YORK
HOUSTON
On CAMPUS
Jason Gulley, a University of Kansas football player who was charged with aggravated assault began his pretrial conference yesterday.
The School of Social Welfare will try to maximize the benefits of internships for students who plan to pursue work in social welfare.
In the NATION:
Research on monkeys may support the idea of treating HIV-infected people with gene therapy.
- Mission Control pauses for a moment for the 12th anniversary of the Challenger explosion.
Football player's trial scheduled for Monday
KU football player Jason Gulley is scheduled to appear in Douglas County District Court on Monday to face charges of aggravated assault.
Gulley, a tight end, did not accept a plea.
Gulley: Will appear in court Monday to face assault charges
did not accept a plea bargain that was offered by Judge Paula Martin yesterday.
The battery charge stems from a Sept. 13,1997, fight in which Gulley allegedly was involved. According to a Lawrence police report, two KU students, Brian Wilson and Christopher Rudd, and a student from the
University of Missouri-Kansas City were walking by Jayhawk Towers on their way to The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., when they were attacked by about 20 men.
Ruddle and Wilson, both Lawrence sophomores, said they did not know why they were attacked.
Another football player, Avery Randle, admitted to punching a man that night but was not charged in the incident. He said the three victims had instigated the fight.
Library Web site honors history of Kansas today
A Web site commemorating Kansas Day and featuring Kansas history will be the focus of a Library of Congress Web page today.
The history Web site, called The Kansas Collection, was established by Lynn H. Nelson, professor of history. Nelson formed
the early Kansas Imprint Scanners, a group that scanned and installed the complete texts of early Kansas history books on the site.
The Kansas Collection site is located at http://www.ukans.edu/carrie/kancoll/
http://www.ukans.edu/carrie/kancoll/
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/today/jan
29.html.
The two-year project involved a group of students from Baxter Springs Middle School who have been typing the 1883 edition of William G. Cutter's History of the State of Kansas, a rare 1,666 page Kansas history book. The students typed the book to contribute to the site because the book's pages were too fragile to scan.
— Kansan staff report
School of Social Welfare maximizes class work
Social welfare faculty and field instructors will meet Friday at the Regents Center in an effort to bring work in the field and in the classroom closer together.
Participants in the forum, which will be from 9 a.m. to noon, will try to maximize the benefits of internships for students who plan to pursue work in social welfare.
University social welfare faculty will attend the forum along with field instructors, volunteers who are assigned to instruct the students at their internships, and field liaisons, individuals who act as intermediaries between the school and the internships.
"The forum gives field instructors and classroom teachers a chance to interact," said Goodwin Garfield, practicum director. "It brings the classroom closer to the issues."
Christina Selk, field liaison, will speak during the forum.
"I'll be talking about how students can make the most of what they learn in the classroom and apply this to their field experience —how they can learn while doing." Selk said.
Forum participants will submit student nominations for excellence awards. Award winners will be announced during Social Work Day, April 17, a day celebrating the 50th anniversary of the School of Social Welfare.
Although Friday's forum is not open to students, there will be an opportunity for students to attend a March 6 forum in Lawrence and a March 13 forum in Wichita.
Special to the Kansam
Gene manipulation battles monkey version of AIDS
NEW YORK -- Monkeys got unusually mild infections from a cousin of the AIDS virus instead of severe infections after scientists gave some of their blood cells a gene to interfere with the virus' reproduction.
The findings lend support to the idea of treating HIV-infected people with such gene therapy.
The monkeys studied were infected with the simian immunodeficiency virus, or SIV.
Those treated with the gene therapy showed much less of the virus in their bodies and far less damage to their lymph nodes. They also showed no drop in their blood counts of disease-fighting CD4 cells, while untreated animals showed a steep decline
The inserted gene blocked chemical "orders" issued by two SVIV genes to infected cells. With those orders stymied, the virus cannot reproduce.
The treated cells became a dead end for the virus, said Richard Morgan, an author of the study in the February issue of the journal Nature Medicine. He is a
researcher at the National Human Genome Research Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md
Dr. Gary Nabel of the University of Michigan Medical Center in Ann Arbor, who also is studying gene therapy for HIV infection, called the monkey work encouraging. But he cautioned that the implication for human therapy was not clear.
SPACE CENTER, Houston — Mission Control paused for a moment of reflection yesterday to mark the 12th anniversary of the Challenger explosion.
Mission Control pauses to honor Challenger crew
At 10:38 a.m., the time Challenger was launched Jan. 28, 1986, flight director Phil Engelauf quietly addressed the team monitoring space shuttle Endeavor's Mir mission.
"He took a moment to remind the flight-control team about the importance of what it is we do every day, and he did also stress the significance of the moment," said Mission Control's Eileen Hawley.
Challenger's flight lasted 73 seconds. All seven on board were killed.
-The Associated Press
CORRECTION
A cutline on page 5 of yesterday's University Daily Kansan omitted the Taiwanese Student Association as a co-sponsor of the Year of the Tiger.
Forum affirms higher-quality GTA benefits
By Susie Gura
By Susie Gura
Kansan staff writer
Sheumaker said salary earnings were a big issue.
"The lowest paid GTAs have the highest membership in the Union," Sheumaker said. "Also, GTAs in departments with unhappy environments join to address problems."
Sheumaker said the University would lose the ability to attract graduate students if it did not offer GTAs more incentives.
The struggles that graduate teaching assistants face were discussed by University of Kansas faculty, staff and students during the University Forum yesterday.
"Iam interested in getting my masters and hope that any university I attend would have benefits," said Cryn Johannsen, Leawood junior.
Mark Horowitz, president of Graduate Teaching Assistants Coalition, and Helen Sheumaker, graduate teaching assistant in Western Civilization, spoke at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building about issues such as organization, health care, salary, education and union formation.
Professors, faculty members and concerned citizens were among the 20 people who attended the forum.
Minor agreed.
Sheumaker said she was concerned about an increasing reliance on GTAs to teach more classes and at higher levels. GTAs are thought to be the cheapest way to teach the largest amount of people, she said.
"I'm interested in GTAs. I believe that they are colleagues, and I am excited that now they are legally colleagues," said Robert Minor, professor of religious studies. "I think that every faculty member should be interested."
"We're rock-bottom cheap," Sheumaker said.
GTAs expressed concern about the lack of benefits offered and the time and cost of getting a doctorate.
"A stronger GTA package will attract bet ter grad students." he said.
ET CETERA
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. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Members of the forum were able to ask questions or give comments at the end of the presentation.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Nation/World stories
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60445, 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. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
Horowitz said GTAC was pleased with the questions and comments it received during the forum. He said he hoped the academic community would give its support.
National/World stories
http://www.kansan.com/news/nation/
MANSAN
Top Stories http://www.kansan.com
The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsletter in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com - these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's windbreaker and cellular phone were stolen at 11:55 p.m. Saturday in the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police said. The windbreaker was valued at $110.
A KU student lost a black vinyl CD case containing 62 CDs from his car between 1 p.m. Friday and 2 p.m. Sunday in the 1700 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police said.
A KU student's stereo receiver and CD changer were stolen between 5 p.m. Dec. 19, 1997, and 5 p.m. Jan. 3 in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police said. The stereo and changer were valued at $700.
- The wiring of a fire alarm in Jayhawker Towers was cut Jan. 10, KU police said. The damage was estimated at $145.
A KU student's CDs and other items valued at $348 were stolen between 11 a.m. Dec. 19, 1997, and 4 p.m. Jan. 12 in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police said.
A VCR and video projector were taken between 9:15 a.m. and 4:15 p.m. Saturday from Alderson
Auditorium in the Kansas Union, KU police said.
A KU student's motorcycle parking permit was stolen between Dec. 20, 1997, and Saturday from Lot 108, KU police said. The permit was valued at $10.
A KU staff member's name plate was taken between 5:30 p.m. Monday and noon Tuesday from 1002 Wescoe Hall, KU police said. The name plate was valued at $3.
A KU student's parking permit was taken between 10 p.m. Thursday and 6 p.m. Monday from L112 near Oliver Hall, KU police said. The permit was valued at $90.
A KU student was arrested shortly after 2 a.m. Tuesday at the intersection of 15th Street and Lawrence Avenue for driving under the influence of alcohol, KU police said.
A vehicle was taken Tuesday evening from Lot 62, KU police said. The vehicle was recovered later that evening by Lawrence police.
A KU student's vehicle tag was stolen late Tuesday night from Lot 121 and then recovered by Lawrence police, KU police said. The tag was valued at $50.
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The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Twinkies pulled off local shelves
By Lisa Stevens John
john@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Hostess Twinkies are on the recall.
A Kansas City-based producer of Hostess products, Interstate Brands Corp., announced a voluntary recall of its products Tuesday. The recall came amid concerns that the snacks might have been contaminated by asbestos fibers from insulation removed from a boiler at a plant in Schiller Park. Ill.
The recall includes 13 Hostess products, most of which have expiration dates from Jan. 22 through Feb. 13. HoHo's have expiration dates from Jan. 29 to Feb. 13.
By yesterday morning, Lawrence grocery stores had pulled. Hostess snacks off the racks.
"They totally off the shelves," said Bridgette Franklin, food stock manager at Hy-Vee. "We were told to pull all our Hostess products
off the shelf, whether it had the specific date or not."
Franklin said that it was difficult to estimate the amount of Hostess products Hy-Vee sold but that the store usually sold 15 to 20 boxes of Twinkies in two days. Each box holds 12 Twinkies.
"Our sales of these definitely pick up when KU is in session," she said.
Megan Herring, Bonner Springs sophomore, sat in the sun outside of Wescoe Hall reading a newspaper as she bit into a Dolly Madison chocolate doughnut, which was not one of the recalled products.
Herring said she was aware of the Hostess recall.
"I'm not ritually into eating Tinkwinks, but I do have one occasionally." Herring said.
Randall Rock, physician and chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said students began questioning him about Twinkies
vesterday morning.
Lisa Oller, co-director of the poison control center at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said her department had received about 50 phone calls yesterday from physicians and consumers.
"Basically, we're just giving them the lot numbers." Oller said.
"At this point, they have not isolated any asbestos in the product itself. It's just in the plant. This was a voluntary recall by the company; this was not something that anybody insisted on."
Many students were not affected by the recall. Ian Hamilton, Paola senior, said he was not a Twinkie jumkie.
"I eat Twinkies," he said. "But if I went to the store to buy some and they didn't have any, I could probably deal with it. It may be America's favorite snack cake, but it's just a Twinkle."
Program offers assistance for teachers
JOHN A. SMITH
By Gerry Doyle
gdoyle@kanson.com
Kansas staff writer
Fred Rodriguez, associate professor in the School of Education, is the director of the Center of Teaching Excellence. Rodriguez works at his desk in the Anschutz Science Library. Photo by Lizz Weber / KANSAN
A new program is centering on developing better teachers for the University of Kansas.
The Center for Teaching Excellence, which began operations last fall, is housed at a small office in Anschutz Science Library. It offers assistance to professors, ranging from rousing up hard-to-find materials to offering new teaching techniques, said Fred Rodriguez, director of the center.
"We're here to support and encourage excellence in the classroom," Rodriguez said. "Whether it's individual conferences, requests for articles or new strategies — we'll help. We're not here for remediation or rehabilitation."
The center, which cost more than $20.000, can have as many as four individual conferences a day and has more than six requests for assistance a day.
The center arose from a national trend to help educators develop, Rodriguez said. During the last 10 years, many universities have instituted programs to assist teachers in providing better instruction for students.
He said the center would move next semester to Budig Hall, where it would incorporate more staff and at least two faculty members who would focus on developing aids for teachers.
The University had created focus programs to help teachers — such as Media Services and ASTUTE, a place where professors can go for technology training — but never combined all areas of assistance into one entity, Rodriguez said.
Garth Myers, assistant professor of African-American studies and geography, said that the center offered faculty a way to expand their educational abilities. Rather than imply that a teacher is unskilled or behind the times, the center helps faculty develop in a way that benefits both teachers and pupils, he said.
"It gives us a forum for discussing issues that relate to teaching," he said. "So many times, the job of teaching is taken up by research and service. We now have a greater chance to understand student concerns and approaches."
Students directly profit from the center as ideas and practices help them learn better, Myers said.
"We share different strategies that work effectively with classes," he said. "That would filter through to students in their classrooms."
Ryan Randolph, Norton senior, said although the effect might not be readily noticeable to students, the ideas the center adheres to are important
"It sounds like a good idea," he
said. "There's a need for it, but I'm not sure if it's being taken advantage of. There are a lot of things I like in teachers that can't be taught, like a passion for the subject."
Student records join computer age at last
Aaron Knopf
aknopf@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
A mammoth project to replace student-records information systems, which would modernize class-enrollment processes at the University of Kansas officially began this month.
In mid-January, employees from PeopleSoft Inc. and the University's computing services performed the initial installation of PeopleSoft Student Administration, a software package that will manage academic records, course enrollment, admissions procedures, student billing and financial-aid processes.
"It is going to touch every part of the way we do business," said Vice Chancellor William Crowe.
The University purchased the student-administration package and PeopleSoft's financial software last fall for $2.3 million.
"My desire is that we do it right rather than do it fast," Morell said.
Richard Morrell, University registrar and project implementation leader, estimated that the whole project, which will take place in phases, would take as long as 48 months.
Morrell said the project would bring several benefits to students. Students would be able to perform many tasks online that now require human assistance such as registering for classes, accessing course schedules and grades, and changing address information.
Alumni also might see benefits such as the ability to order transcripts online.
Morrell said a lot of work had to be done before students would see these benefits.
Morrell said the departments that will use this package were organizing teams of people to analyze the software's capabilities.
He said the teams would determine instances when the software would need to be modified to fit the University's needs and instances when the University would need to modify its practices to work within the constraints of the software.
"Every little process that we have throughout the whole system someone will have to sit down and figure out," Morrell said.
Team members could spend as much as 15 percent to 50 per cent of their work time on this project, Morrell said.
On the technical side, John Dillard, computing services assistant director, said he would add four new employees to his staff of 12. He said that the staff still would maintain the existing systems while installing the PeopleSoft software.
Dillard estimated that members of his staff would each need about a month of training to use the new software.
Not only will the application developers on his staff have to work with the new system, but they also will have to program interfaces into other systems that are not replaced as a part of this project, such as the student-housing systems.
Dillard said the new system eventually would replace the functions of nearly 1,700 mainframe-based programs now in use.
Crowe said the obsolescence of the University's student-record systems was the driving force behind the University's commitment to the project.
"The way KU enrolls people is not that much different than the way I was enrolled in college in 1964," Crowe said. "It's embarrassing."
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Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor
Dave Morantz, Managing editor
Kristie Blast, Managing editor
Tom Eblen, General manager, news editor
Marc Harrell, Business manager
Colleen Eager, Retail sales manager
Dan Simon, Sales and marketing adviser
Justin Knupp, Technology coordinator
4A
Thursday, Jan. 29, 1998
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EXPRESS-news
SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS
Editorials
University needs to change plans, add lights to Union lot before 2000
Anyone looking for danger just needs to park at night in the east area of the parking lot directly behind the Kansas Union.
It's dark and unprotected because there are no lights, which leaves people running for their cars hoping nothing happens to them.
On weekdays the Kansas Union closes at 11 p.m. that's a scary time for anyone walking alone. But it's made even scarier when students leave the union after it closes and venture into the dark of the east area of the lot.
This is unacceptable.
The lot is used regularly by students and staff. It is the responsibility of the University of Kansas to ensure that when these people are on campus they are protected. KU Police Sgt. Susan
With the renovations being made to Memorial Stadium, lights easily could be added
Hadl has said that criminals think twice before attacking someone under lights and that lights give people a sense of security and comfort.
Right now, people who park in that area of the lot don't feel safe and secure. Lights need to be put there to protect students, staff and visitors.
But despite the evident need, it doesn't appear that the University has any plans to correct the situation.
The east end of the lot is near Memorial Stadium. The area of the lot close to the Union is lit, but there are no lights
in the area by the stadium. And although the University is spending millions of dollars to renovate the stadium, there are no plans to increase lighting in the neighboring Union lot.
Bob Porter, associate director of Facilities Operations, said more lights would be placed this year near the Spencer Museum of Art and may be next to the stadium. But plans to put lights in the east end of the Kansas Union lot don't exist. The soonest lights could be added, Porter said, would be in 2000.
It's possible that University officials — who may never park in this area late at night — have no idea there's a problem. But there is. And it would be wise if the University could solve a real problem and put up a few lights.
The late nighters deserve it.
Spencer Duncan for the editorial board
Dredging up an ecosystem for sand
Few people recognize the repercussions of the indifference Kansans have shown toward the Kaw River. The cause of the river's downfall is sand dredging—the commercial extraction of sand from the river.
We oppose dredging the Kaw River. Dredging puts a tremendous environmental pressure on the river's ecosystem. The river is shallow and much of the aquatic life cannot live in the deep mud holes dredging creates. Entire species of fish are at risk of being wiped out.
Second, the sand on the river's bottom acts as a natural filter of sediment and pollutants. Removing the filter causes these pollutants to flow freely through the water instead of settling into the bottom layer of sand. This increases the already laborious task of water purification.
Kaw degradation should stop before more damage occurs
Finally, removing the sand from the river creates gaping holes that the river fills with sand and sediment from its banks, causing banks and plant life to collapse into the river.
The river and the sand are public property. But construction companies have been taking advantage of nearly free sand from the river for decades, a process Lance Burr, a lawyer and member of Friends of the Kaw, called corporate welfare.
A University of Kansas geological survey identified 74 alternative sources for sand extraction. The Kaw is not the only place to seek this
Kansans should not allow the rape of their river and the theft of their sand. Burr said that until the recent challenge by Friends of the Kaw, no one had ever significantly protested dredging of the river. However, as recreational activities, such as canoeing, hiking, or fishing, begin to be inhibited by the river's degradation due to sand dredging, people are starting to open their eyes.
natural resource.
Environmental issues may seem dull or irrelevant, but they are important. Canoeing is not dull, and polluted water and the destruction of an ecosystem is far from irrelevant. The preservation of the river benefits us all.
For more information or to get involved in challenging sand dredging, call Lance Burr at 842-1133.
Kansan staff
Nick Zaller for the editorial board
News editors
Paul Eakins . . . Editorial
Andy Obermueller . . Editorial
Andrea Albright . . News
Jodie Chester . . News
Julie King . . News
Charity Jeffries . . Online
Eric Weslander . . Sports
Harley Rattifl. . Associate sports
Ryan Koerner . . Campus
Mike Perryman . . Campus
Bryan Volk . . Features
Tim Harrington . Associate features
Steve Puppe . . Photo
Angte Kuhn . . Design, graphics
Mitch Lucas . Illustrations
Corrie Moore . Wire
Gwen Oison . Special sections
Lachelle Rhoades . News clerk
Advertising managers
Kriettie Bisel ... Assistant retail, PR
Leigh Bottiger ... Campus
Brett Cliffon ... Regional
Nicole Lauderdale ... National
Matt Fisher ... Marketing
Chris Haghirian ... Internet
Brian Allers ... Production
Ashley Bonner ... Production
Andee Tomlin ... Promotions
Dan Kim ... Creative
Rachel O'Neill ... Classified
Tyler Cook ... Zone
Steve Grant ... Zone
Jamie Holman ... Zone
Brian LeFevre ... Zone
Matt York ... Zone
"**guess if you were a salamander, 'Amphibian-American' would be a step up. But I think we should just call a toad a toad." —Kermit the Frog, on political correctness
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 home-town 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 letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions.
For any questions, call Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermueller (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or e-mail the page staff (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Perspective
Skinny on 'naked diet' not all that appetizing
I had to describe how healthy my winter break was on a scale from one to 10, one being participating in a triathlon and 10 being eating pork rinds dipped in Cheese 'n Lard, it would probably be an 11.
Nick
Bartkoski
opinion@kansan.co
Not that it's entirely my fault. Like any good American, I think that I cannot be held liable for the blatantly stupid things I've done.
Instead, I blame my home environment. My mom is a latter-day Betty Crocker. She makes her own graham crackers. I would bet that even Kate Moss would gain a pound in an environment such as that.
As an unfortunate consequence of a cake-filled home life, I've started to chunk up. Now when an average, 180-pound male says he's starting to chunk up, we can all laugh because he means he's only gained a couple of pounds. When a 360-pound guy like me says he's starting to chunk up, it's a reason to call the National Guard or, at the least, Richard Simmons.
So now I suppose it's time to start back on my diet. To get myself back in a dieting mood, I looked at some of my old dieting journals:
Noon — This is the bold beginning of my diet.
I'm feeling more confident than ever. This time
I'm going to make it.
12:05 p.m. — My roommate just brought his lunch into the room. I swear his sandwich is taunting me.
12:15 p.m.—I just licked a spot on my desk where there was once a candy bar. It tasted very, very good.
12:30 p.m. — White I'm glad that the Elmer's Glue label says the contents are nontoxic, I wish that it would also provide nutritional information.
3 p.m. — I blacked out sometime about 1:30 p.m.
When I woke up there were remains of a McDonald's orgy - fries and burger boxes sweep everywhere. I'm a weak man. I think dieting isn't going to work out for me this time.
I p.m. — I went to the kitchen to get a nice glass of water. While I was there, a monster bowl of ice cream attacked me. It whacked me in the back of the head and then tried to force itself down my throat. I might have escaped, but the ice cream had powerful friends... the horror...
But this time I'm going to go with a less stressful diet. Right now I'm on the "Plan to become an anorexic but end up eating three times as much as normal and feeling terrible about it" diet. It hasn't done the job for me, so I've shopping around with some of the more interesting diets.
After reading my journal, I realize that it represents my most successful diet. I only gained about 20 pounds, an all-time low.
There's the "Eat Naked Diet." The theory is that if you get a look at yourself naked, you will lose your appetite and your weight will go spiralizing down. I've tried this approach but the only thing I accomplished was getting banned from Denny's for life.
There's also a new variation of an old treatment offered by Jack Kevorkian. He works his magic on you and within six months you've lost nearly all of your excess pounds. Technically, you've also lost all your non-excess pounds, so this method is generally impractical. Might be better to just spend Kevorkian's fee on liposuction.
I guess I may just have to...gasp... eat less and exercise.
Between those weight-loss systems and other crackpot programs like "A Tighter Buttocks in an Hour and a Half," finding a diet plan that will work for me is impossible.
Bartkoski is a Basehor junior in journalism and English.
Clinton: a two-bit con man with a trillion-dollar act
Driving home about a week ago, I found myself thinking about the Clinton presidency. I couldn't shake the feeling that Bill Clinton is one of those people who can rationalize anything he does. The next morning, the news came of the alleged Lewinsky affair.
Before I could even get a Nostradamus complex, the whole incident made sense. Why
shouldn't Clinton have done this? It fits in perfectly with his past. In his deposition in the Paula Jones trial a week ago, he admitted to an affair with Gennifer Flowers. I wasn't surprised and I didn't care. He never lied about it, he just dodged questions. Now his legal defense centers on carefully worded statements that draw a line between oral sex and intercourse.
Sam
Pierron
opinion@kansan.com
I don't care what Bill Clinton does with his staff. He has never been a man of monogamy, but that has nothing to do with how he performs as chief executive. If Eisenhower, Kennedy and other presidents could carry on monkey business without compromising the country's business, so can Clinton.
Francois Mitterand, the ex-Prime Minister of France, had a whole second family, and that didn't stop him from being effective. It was touching when they were right next to his "First Family" at his funeral.
Trouble is, Bill Clinton could never be frank
or honest enough to pull off such an affair. Frankness and honesty are not hallmarks of the "I didn't inhale"president. That became a center of jokes in 1992. I didn't care about him smoking marijuana, even if the public didn't cut him any slack. Al Gore smoked marijuana in college. So did Newt Gingrich. Does anyone ever mention that? No. Why not? The answer is honesty. Gore and Gingrich were forthright about it. When asked, they didn't try to cop out. They inhaled, admitted it and got on with their lives. They were forgiven.
So it would have been with Clinton if he hadn't been namby-pamby about admitting to passing the peace pipe—just as he is now about Lewinsky.
It's no wonder that the public's perception of politicians isn't improving. If Clinton didn't have this habitual cop-out fixation and instead bothered to do a little research on American pop psychology, he would have learned that Americans are more than prepared to forgive people who confess their sins. We don't even make you say three Hail Marys and think about what you've done. Just admit it to Oprah and it's over.
The bottom line of all this is that Bill Clinton is not fit to be president. Not because he sleeps around. Not because he smoked a joint. Not because I don't like his wife. It's because he's a liar, a two-bit con man with a trillion-dollar act.
We fell for his con twice. People hate con men, but there's nobody they hate more than a con man who made them fall for it.
Feedback
Pierron is an Olathe junior in political science and international studies.
Village Inn manager Linda Dalley forwarded me a letter to the editor from a recent copy of the Kansan. The letter was an insightful one that deserves both a compliment as well as a clarification.
Village Inn management responds to accessability letter
Sam Reisback wrote about a devastating accident he recently had and how it had confined him to a wheelchair. It was through that wheelchair-bound perspective that he gained a new insight into the trials and tribulations of everyday life in that capacity. Although I don't know this for a fact, it is my belief that through such experiences and advocacy of those in varying handicapped situations, that the ADA law was enacted. It is a good measure to be sure, but in many ways the terms of the law are difficult to implement in the short run. Sam's letter was written to elicit change and to ask Village Inn to do something about the bathroom handicap
accessibility issue. We are doing something, although not as fast as Sam would like.
Sam, in my opinion, in his wheel chair-bound status, deserves access to the bathrooms. His other choice, of course, would be to not frequent those establishments that do not provide wheelchair access. That is not something we desire. As a company we desire to satisfy our guests' needs.
But to achieve that access we have to proceed along a circuitous path. As the ADA anticipated, many companies would not, for various reasons, be able to comply immediately with every aspect of the law. In our Lawrence Village Inn, we do not have the ability to enlarge the bathrooms in their present space, as the revamped bathrooms would not comply with the law as it relates to wheelchair turning radii in a restroom. Typically that is what we do and have done in the eight other Village Inns we operate. The other possible solutions are so costly that it is
impractical for us to comply, and the law allows for that solution. The situation is further complicated by the fact that we lease our existing facility on a relatively short-term basis.
Our short-term solution has been to provide an airline wheel chair, which is more narrow, for the past three years for our guests who need restroom access in a wheel chair. This wheel chair, while not a perfect solution, has been a temporary fix. Our long-term solution is to build a new facility, complete with handicapped accessibility.
To conclude, and to answer Sam's question, we are aware of the access problems for our handcapped guests. Please bear with us for the long-term solution, as it will be the best for all concerned. We do recognize the problem and we look forward to the long-term solution, a new facility. But please be aware of our short-term answer as well.
Dave Lidvall
President, Family Restaurants, Inc.
Thursday, January 29, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
SUA to feature variety
Semester programs to include monkey, experimental films
By Marcelo Vilela
mvilela@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Monkeys, Asian artists and porn stars. This strange combination is only part of Student Union Activities movie series.
SUA will have special programs
imental movies week, an Asian movies week and even a monkey movies week during the semester
SUA movie prices are $2.50 for 7 and 9:30 p.m. showings and $3 for midnight showings.
"We spent almost $2,000 per week for movies this semester," said Ana Calderon, Shawne junior and feature-films coordinator.
said. The rental price for a movie such as Booie Nights is about $400.
Much of the money SUA spends pays for the movie rentals, Calderon
Calderon said the movie committees had about $16,000 and decided to spend it all instead of putting last semester's left-over money in a reserve account.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Brett Generaux, Kansas City, Ken. senior, and spectrum-films
"We tried to get movies that made money and have chances to get Oscar nominations," Calderon said. "However, they're more expensive. The selection is larger this semester and includes a broader spectrum," she said.
"I'm thrilled
about the new movie season. We're showing a lot of films people don't get the opportunity to see on the big screen," he said. Generaux referred to films such as Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory and Freaks.
This week, SUA is having the Extravaganza Week for Kevin Smith, director of Mall Rats and the low-budget hit Chasing Amy.
COMING ATTRACTIONS
February:
The Full Monty
he but wonty
A Shadow of a Doubt
Everyone Says I Love You
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate
My Best Friend's Wedding
In the Company of Men
The Trial
Institute Benjaminmenta
Rosewood
Cool Hand Luke
Gatacca
Starship Troopers
March:
Rate It X
Siren Spirits
Orlando
La Dolce Vita
Gummo
Boogie Nights
Planet of the Apes
King Kong
Every Which Way But Loose
all selections are subject to change
Department boosts radio power
By Laura Roddy
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas Department of Public Safety is in the midst of an 18-month effort to update its technology and its communication capabilities.
The department began updating its technology after difficulties with interference on its radio frequency.
Keary said.
Sgt. Chris Keary of the KU police department said the noise tended to be worst during summer. He said the department's scanners even had picked up noise from a Canadian pager company.
The KU police never had a problem because of the radio interference, but it was bothersome.
Liz Phillips, assistant director of public safety, said the difficulties did not hinder the KU police officers' activities.
"We were just lucky nothing happened," Phillips said.
The police department has moved to an 800 frequency, similar to the frequency on which cellular phones operate, Keary said.
To make the switch, the department began purchasing the portable and mobile radios needed for the new frequency during late 1996. By July 1997, the department had purchased the remainder of the radios needed to make the system fully operational, Keary said.
Phillips said the department needed next to find an additional campus site for an antenna and
transmitter. She said the antenna and transmitter would serve other Douglas County departments.
The current tower, which still will be used, is located six miles west of Lawrence near Highway 40.
Phillips said the addition was necessary because the University's topography caused poor reception. Buildings such as Robinson Center and Fraser Hall may get different reception because of the buildings' different locations on the hill, she said.
"I have to consider the basement of the Union and the top floor of Ellsworth Hall." Phillips said.
The biggest advantage to the new technology is its flexibility. Keary said.
"It comes down to communication versatility." Keary said.
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Section A • Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Thursday. January 29. 1998
Senate flushes slide down drain
By Melissa Ngo
and Marc Sheforgen
mngo@kansan.com
mshferegon@kansan.com
Kansan staff writers
The ride has come to an end for student senators John Colbert and Sam Pierron's proposal to build a waterslide complex on West Campus.
A bill to finance the complex failed to pass the University Affairs Committee last night. The speech presented by Colbert, engineering senator, and Pierron, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, failed to convince the committee that this issue was more than a joke.
Pierron said that he was not surprised by the committee's decision and that he was disappointed.
"This is the one time that students really asked for something and Student Senate didn't do it," he said. "You'll hear from us again, I assure you."
The University committees and boards attendance bill passed at both University Affairs and Student Rights committees with little debate. The only questions raised were whether the proposed changes were too lenient
The bill proposed that student members of University committees and boards, such as Academic Policies and Procedures Committee and the Parking Board, explain their absences to the Student Senate Executive Committee after missing two meetings.
"Some committees only have one or two meetings a semester," said Matt Bachand, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, "so if you have to miss two meetings, you've missed them all."
During the Student Rights meet
LEGISLATION
Student Rights:
University Affairs:
PASSED, a bill to change punishment procedure for missing University committee and board meetings
- PASSED, a bill to change punishment procedure for missing University committee and board meetings
KILLED, a bill to fund the KU Waterslide Complex
PASSED, a bill to co-sponsor and fund the Spring 1998 American Red Cross Blood Drive.
PASSED, a bill to fund the Spiritual Human Yogd Shy
Finance:
PASSED, a bill to co-sponsor and fund the Spring 1998 American Red Cross Blood Drive
PASSED, a bill to fund the
Spiritual Human Yoga Sity
PASSED, a bill to fund the
PASSED, a gift to the
Malaysian Student Association
PASSED, a gift to the
PASSED a brief introduction to Asian American Student Union Festival and High School Leadership Conference
ing, the committee decided to form a subcommittee to discuss Student Senate committee attendance.
The Finance Committee allocated more than $5,300 to the Asian American Student Union. The Union requested the funds for the Asian American Festival and AASU High School Leadership Conference. The bill passed after debate about whether to cut funding for the Feb. 20 high school conference.
College Bowl questions students' wits
Winning team will compete at next level
By Marcelo Vilela
mvlela@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Which school won the College Bowl trivia contest in 1997?
A student who can answer that question should consider entering a team in the annual College Bowl, a national trivia competition sponsored by Student Union Activities. This will be the 17th College Bowl trivia contest on campus.
The double-elimination tournament will be held from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 7 in the Kansas Union. Room nores are reserved to hold
the brain-frying marathon.
Each team will play until it loses twice. Depending on the number of registered teams, the competition format may change to single elimination.
The winning team will go to the regional competition Feb.21 and 22 at Kansas State University. The team that wins at regional competition then will compete in the national competition in Dallas. The University of Virginia won the competition last year.
Five teams are registered for the KU installation of the national tournament. Michael Weiss, Champaign, Ill., junior and SUA recreation and travel coordinator, said there were six or seven more teams verbally committed.
Ryan Toubia, Wichita junior,
registered his team last week.
Touba competed last year as well.
"It was kind of intimidating. This year, we're more confident in ourselves." Toubia said.
To prepare for the tournament,
Toubia and his team watch Jeo-
ardy and play Trivial Pursuit.
"I just like to display my knowledge if I have the chance," he said.
The teams usually represent student organizations or living groups, such as greek organizations and scholarship halls. However, it is not necessary to be in a specific group to create a team.
SUA is offering a plaque to the winning team. Weiss said.
SUA also will pay for the winning team's trip to the regional tournament at Kansas State University.
Weiss said SUA spent about $650 for the College Bowl Campus Program package.
Kelly Huffman, Bellevue, Neb. senior, and a member of the winning team two years ago, will be
Form a team of four members, plus one substitute.
HOW TO ENTER
- Register at the SUA box office.
Pay the entry fee of $25. The deadline is Tuesday.
■ Start reading The World Almanac, watching Jeopardy and playing Trivial Pursuit
competing again this year
"It was fun, and I've always enjoyed it," Huffman said. "I've always been really competitive in academics and athletics. It's something different for me to do in the weekend."
Almost 300 schools are registered in the College Bowl Campus Program. The program has been managed by the Association of College Unions International since 1976.
Graduate student returns from black-hole study after 13 days of energy research in Antarctic
By Graham K. Johnson
gjohnson@kansan
Kansas staff writer
A University of Kansas graduate student says he is glad to get back to the warmer weather of Kansas' winters.
Illya Kravchenko, Ithaca, N.Y., graduate student in astronomy and physics, returned from the South Pole Saturday after helping set up an experiment to measure high-energy particles emitted from distant black holes.
it can get pretty cold."
PETER M. C.
Kravchenko endured temperatures as low as 30 degrees below zero during his 13-day stay.
Kravchenko: Back from Antarctica to collect data about black holes
Kravchenko, equipped with 30 pounds of clothing, braved the bone-chilling climate as part of Radio Ice Cerenkov, a University of Kansas-led project aimed at learning more about deep-space black holes.
Kravchenko set up most of the electronic equipment necessary to measure the high-energy particles, called neutrinos, that black
holes emit
"I brought all of the hardware we needed and installed it, connected it to the network and made sure all of it worked," Kravchenko said. Dave Besson, professor of physics and astronomy and leader of the study funded by the National Science Foundation, said it was a unique project.
"No one has ever tried to measure nuetrinos from outside our galaxy," Besson said.
The project measures the particles using enhanced FM radio receivers buried in the ice. The receivers record the activity of nuetrinos as the nuetrinos hit the ice and transform into clear radio-wave energy
The radio-wave information is then processed by electronic dataacquisition equipment, Besson said.
Kravchenko said the project went well, despite a couple of computer crashes.
He said one of the most unpleasant things about the trip was going to the bathroom.
"To go to the bathroom, you had to walk 200 meters in the cold," Kravchenko said. "If it is during the night, by the time you come back, you don't want to sleep anymore."
Kravchenko said he was optimistic about the project's success.
Besson said the project could yield information about the black holes later this year.
"It is a new idea, and we may actually get some good stuff just in terms of physics, hopefully."
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JAYHAWK
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BASKETBALL
Basketball
Inside Sports today
Planning on going to Kansas football games next fall? After yesterday's KUAC meeting, football ticket prices will be a bit more costly. SEE PAGE 3B
Yesterday's game - Kansas vs. Baylor
KU
KANSAS
23-3,7-1
RANKED NO.5 94
BU
BAYLOR
10-8, 5-3
UNRANKED
SECTION B, PAGE
47
WWW.JHAWKBBALL.COM
THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1998
Jayhawks declaw Baylor Bears
LaFrentz grabs another double-double; aggressive defense stymies Skinner
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansas sportwriter
for Baylor, the results were unbearable.
For Baylor, the results were unbeatable. No. 5 Kansas suffocated Baylor 94-47 last night in Allen Field House and recorded the third-largest conference win in school history. The Jayhawks have won their past two
games by an average of 43 points, in part because of the return of forward Raef LaFrentz.
LaFrentz, who had 21 points and 11 rebounds last night, put on a show for the 14 NBA scouts in attendance.
LaFrentz: His return has helped spark the team's defense
Guard Billy Thomas, who scored 18 points, said the Jayhawks had shown steady improvement on defense during the past few games.
"Defense will always
While Kansas cruised throughout the game, the Bears fought to keep the score close during the first half.
help you win games." Thomas said. "But we've been playing at home, and the true test will be to play this type of defense on the road the next couple weeks."
The Jayhawks trailed 9-8 early in the game, but they recovered. Kansas outscored Baylor 41-8 during the final 17 minutes of the first half, turning what had been a close game into a 32-point halftime lead. The Jayhawks scored the first eight points of the second half, extending the run to 49-8.
With 9:30 remaining in the first half and Kansas ahead 23-12, Kansas coach Roy Williams benched his starters because he said he was not pleased with the lack of intensity they were showing. Williams said that from then on, the results were astonishing.
"The first six to eight minutes of the game ticked me off." Williams said. "We weren't doing what we were supposed to do defensively. (The Bears) passed the ball where they wanted. They shot the ball where they wanted. But we began trapping and forced some turnovers, and that helped us regain
KANSAS 94 BAYLOR 47
BAYLOR (10-8)
Kendrick 2-6 0-0 5, Morris 4-6 0-0 10, Skinner 6-14 1-4 13, Sellers 3-6 5-6 1, Miller 8-0 0-0 0,
Jones 0-0 0-0 0, McCasland 0-2 1-2 1, Perkins 0-5 2-2 2, Gipson 0-0 0-0 0, Ramirez 1-3 2-3 4.
Totals 16-50 11-17 47.
Pierce 6-9-3-14 5, LaFrentz 9-15-3-32 1, Pugh 2-2-2-2 6, Robertson 3-5-0-1 8, Thomas 7-12-1 1 18, Earl 2-4-0-4 0, Nooner 0-0-0 0, Gregory 7-9-2-1 28, Bradford 0-2-0-0 0, Janisse 0-0-0 0, McGrath 0-0-0 0-0, Martin 0-1-0 0-0, Chenwith 2-3-0-0 4. **Totals** 38-62 11-139 4.
KANSAS (23-3)
Halftime —Kansas 49, Baylor 17. 3-Point goals —Baylor 4-20 (Kendrick 1-2, Morris 2-3, Sellers 1-2, Miller 0-5, McCasland 0-1, Perkins 0-5, Ramirez 0-2), Kansas 7-14 (Pierce 0-2, Robertson 2-2, Thomas 3-7, Gregory 2-3, Bradford 0-1, Martin 0-1). Fouled out —Miller. Rebounds —Baylor 27 (Skinner 9), Kansas 37 (LaFrentz 11). Assists —Baylor 9 (Miller 4), Kansas 26 (Robertson 6). Total fouls —Baylor 15, Kansas 18, A—16,300.
the momentum."
Baylor starting point guard Patrick Hunter did not play because of a hip injury. His replacement, B.J. Sellers, scored 12 points but recorded eight turnovers and no assists.
The Bears committed 29 turnovers, including a season-high 19 steals by Kansas and shot 32 percent from the field. The Jayhawks shot 61.3 percent from the floor against the Bears, who, coming into the game, had the No. 1 field-goal percentage defense in the Big 12 Conference.
Baylor coach Harry Miller said backcourt pressure was crucial to the Jayhawks' defensive success.
"There was not a whole lot we did well." Miller said. "I thought that when they went to a trap it rapidly changed the complexion of the game. With an inexperienced point guard, we had too many turnovers and we just could not find a rhythm."
Forward Paul Pierce had 15 points, four rebounds, four steals and three assists, and guard Kenny Gregory scored 18 points.
KU Bookstore
Kenny Gregory flies through the air on his way to another slam dunk. With their defensive dominance, Gregory and the Jayhawks were able to turn the offense loose. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
WORLD
Coach Roy Williams enjoys a laugh on the bench with Ryan Robertson, Raef LaFrentz and Billy Thomas. While animated at times, Williams still had time to enjoy the game. Photo by Dan Elvasky/KANSAN
GAME NOTES
Kansas' 19 steals were the most in a game since a Dec. 18, 1995, victory against Pittsburg State at Allen Field House.
- Baylor's 29 turnovers were the most by a conference opponent and Baylor's 47 points were the fewest points by a conference opponent since Kansas beat Colorado on Feb. 15, 1992.
Forward Raef LaFrentz started for the 118th time in his career. Only three Kansas players have started more games in their careers.
LaFrentz recorded a double-double for the ninth time during the last 10 games he has played. It was his 11th double-double of the season and the 48th of his career.
Forward Paul Pierce passed Tony Guy for 11th place on Kansas' all-time scoring list. He now has 1,491 points.
In the past two games. Kansas has outscored its opponents 93-31 in the first half. Saturday against Texas Tech, the score at halftime was 44-14.
Guard Billy Thomas has made two or more three-point field goals in 23 of 26 games this season and 67 times in his career. Thomas played in his 127th game last night, the most of any present team member.
Kansas is 4-0 all-time against Baylor.
- Last night was the 39th time that the Jayhawks have shot better than 60 percent in the Roy Williams era.
Kansas guards get ferocious, tame Bears
Billy Thomas, Kenny Gregory unload on Baylor
By Erin Thompson
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas shooting guards had no problems shooting last night against Baylor.
Billy Thomas and Kenny Gregory combined for 36 of the Jayhawks' points in their 94-47 trouncing of Baylor at Allen Field House.
"Billy really gave us a lift tonight," coach Roy Williams said. "He made his first three, then I took him out and Kenny Gregory really did some nice things."
Each scored 18 points, were a combined
Thomas had 13 points in the first half, passing four players to move into 31st place on the Kansas all-time career scoring list.
Thomas said, "I know I have the capabilities; it's just a matter of getting off to a good start."
14 of 21 from the field and were perfect from the free-throw line.
Thomas is the lead-
img career three-point shooter at Kansas with 249. Terry Brown, who played at Kansas from 1990-92, ranks second with 200 three-pointers.
Thomas: Moved into 31 place on the KU all-time career scoring list
"I've always liked to shoot from way out, even when I first started in the fourth grade." Thomas said. "I think it's smarter
Thomas was credited with only one assist, but it was an assist worthy of highlights. Thomas had the ball on the baseline, stopped to shoot, faked, and passed it to Raef LaFrentz who finished with a dunk.
than driving the lane."
PETER BOWIE
"That was probably my favorite pass Billy's ever made," Williams said.
Gregory: Scored 18 points in 13 minutes during the game last night
Gregory came off
the bench and scored 18 points in only 13 minutes. He improved his 27 percent three-point shooting average, hitting two of three from outside.
"It was a good win for the team and was a confidence builder from me personally," Gregory said. "I just don't want to
"Bill really stepped up. He had a great game. He was far and away the player of the game."
Raef LaFrentz
kansas forward
go back to where I was."
In the middle of the first half, Thomas scored eight points in less than two minutes, boosting the Jayhawks to a 15-0 run. The Bears could not recover and scored only five points for the remainder of the half.
Larentz said Thomas had a great game. "Bill really stepped up. He had a great game. He was far and away the player of the game," LaFrentz said.
Student-athletes excel in class, set new records in academics
By Jason Pearce Kansan sportswriter
University of Kansas student-athletes set three records last semester—in the classroom.
Until last semester, the record for Kansas teams reaching a 3.0 GPA in one semester was five.
Nine different Jayhawk teams posted combined team grade point averages of 3.0 or higher, and 223 student-athletes earned at least a 3.0 GPA and were named to the Jayhawk Scholars list. Thirty-four athletes earned a 4 GPA.
The women's cross country team led the way with a combined team GPA of 3.27. Other teams with a GPA above 3.0 included women's tennis (3.26), men's tennis (3.24), rowing (3.17), women's golf (3.13), softball (3.12), women's track (3.11), volleyball (3.10) and women's basketball (3.02).
The football team was at the bottom of the list with a combined average of 2.27, and the men's basketball team was second to last with a 2.62 combined GPA.
Student-athletes had a combined GPA of 2.73 last semester, up from 2.67 in Fall 1996. In Fall 1997, the GPA for all University women was 2.93, and the Fall 1997 average for all University men was 2.76.
Paul Buskirk, associate director of intercollegiate athletics, said the records were some of Kansas' best.
Buskirk said each sport at Kansas had its own study program and guidelines.
Freshmen on the women's cross country team are required to attend regular study hours, said Gary Schwartz, women's cross country coach.
"We are pleased at the amount of Jayhawk Scholars and 4.0 students last semester." Buskirk said. "These students have done an exceptional job."
Schwartz said the coaching staff monitored classroom progress all year to make sure study habits and grades remained a high priority.
"The big thing is that the athletes buy into a philosophy of being a student-athlete, and you just have to study." Schwartz said. "We stress that the kids live up to the responsibility as students and athletes."
In addition to the required study time, student-athletes can use the services at the Hale Achievement Center located in the Wagon Student-Athlete Center.
The services include a computer lab, tutoring services and degree and counseling programs.
Jason Benavides / KANSAN
Athletic teams' GPAs, Fall '97
Basketball
Basketball Men
Basketball Women
Football
Golf Men
Golf Women
Rowing
Softball
Soccer
Swimming Men
Swimming Women
Tennis Men
Tennis Women
Track Men
Cross Country Men
Track Women
Cross Country Women
Volleyball
Total
FANS' POLL
With the 100 year anniversary of Kansas basketball just around the corner, the Kansan is curious about what the fans think. Compile your list of the top five players, teams, and games in Jayhawk history and e-mail us at sports@kansas.com.
THE YEAR OF BRADFORD HISTORIC
1898 1904
KU
2B
At the Game
Thursday January 29,1998
KANSAS
45
MRRIS
25
Kansas forward Reaf LeFrantz stretches to block Baylor forward Leon Morris' shot. The Jayhawks defense allowed Baylor to score only 47 points. The Jayhawks defeated Baylor 94-47 last night in Allen Field House. Photo by Steve Pruse/KANSAN
BAYLOR
43
14
Left: Kansas guard Ryan Robertson and Kansas forward Paul Pierce play tough defense in the back court. The Jay Hawks had 19 steals and held the Bears to only 17 first-half points. Photo by Steve Puppie/KANSAN
Above:Kansas center Eric Chenwon with slam dunks the ball for two more points against the Baylor Bears last night at Allen Field House.Photo by Dan Elavsky/KANSAN
KANSAS
20
MILLEP
32
Kansas forward Kenny Gregory leaps above two Baylor defenders for a shot. Photo by Steve Puppe/KANSAN
KU vs. BU
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
BLACK STUDENT UNION
Presents
1998 African American History Month
Keynote Speaker
HARRY POTTER
Dennis Klimco, Ph.D., the best-selling author of Think and Grow Rich: A Black Choice, and a recent book, What makes the Greatest Great: Strategies for Extravagant People, will speak to the theme for African American History Month. Dr. Klimco will focus on economic development, entrepreneurial strategies, and the secrets of success utilized by highly successful individuals.
February 2, 1998, 7:00 p.m.
Spencer Auditorium, Spencer Museum of Art
Sponsored by the Black Student Journalism, School of Business, School of Social Medicine, School of Journalism, KU Credit Union, School of Education, University of Kentucky, and KU College of Education.
Learning
through
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Student Senate, and Multicultural Resource Center.
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES Jubilee Cafe
between 1:00 - 4:00
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Sunday, February 1, 1998
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Thursday, January 29, 1998
the University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
Football ticket cost increases
By Erin Thompson
Kanson sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation decided unanimously yesterday to raise football ticket prices for the 1998 season.
Single-game reserved tickets will increase from $26 to $28, and general admission tickets will increase from $16 to $20.
Ticket sales will be geared toward more season tickets and fewer single-game tickets. The combined price of single game tickets for all home games would be $174 compared to $157 for a season ticket
"We are going to make a big push on the basis of Terry Allen and the improvements on the stadium," Bob Frederick, athletics director, said.
Students who buy the Sports Combo, which includes tickets
to all home football games and potentially all men's basketball games, will not increase. Students buying only football season tickets will see a $1 increase because the Kansas State game is in Lawrence next year.
The way in which K-State tickets are sold also will change.
In previous years, a ticket to another game had to be purchased in addition to the K-State game. Next year, the price of a K-State ticket will be $40 unless a ticket to another game is purchased. Then the price would drop to $35.
Single-game tickets will go on sale May 11. Tickets for the K-State game can be purchased on that date but only with a ticket for another game. Students will not be able to purchase K-State tickets without buying a ticket for another game until Aug. 3. Other business from yesterday's meeting:
Memorial Stadium renovations are two weeks ahead of schedule. The projected finish date is Aug. 7.
The 4,000 pounds of concrete being removed from the stadium are being recycled.
The Volleyball Search Committee interviewed three candidates during the past two weeks to replace coach Karen Schonewise, whose contract was not renewed after last season. A new coach is expected to be appointed by the end of the week.
The Williams Fund had raised $1,872,000 by the end of December.
Kansas received an additional $500,000 because two Big 12 football teams — K-State and Nebraska — played in Alliance Bowls this fall.
The Associated Press
Quisenberry finds joy in simple things following surgery
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Dan Quisenberry says he has discovered an incredible peace since undergoing surgery for a malignant brain tumor and now finds joy in the simplest sights and sounds.
"Sometimes it's just seeing a little boy on a bicycle. Sometimes it's the taste of water. It's hard to explain," he said.
Quisenberry, 44, who led the major league in saves between 1979 and 1985, spoke for 15 minutes during his first conference since his operation.
On Jan 8, doctors removed 85 percent of an astrocytoma grade IV tumor, and Quisenberry started a series of radiation treatments.
Quisenberry spoke of Dick Howser, the aggressive Royals' manager in 1985 who had a malignant brain tumor.
"He was this mellow man and saying, 'Don't worry about this stuff on the field. Do your best because winning and losing takes care of itself.' Now, here I am, and I understand what he was saying."
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COMMUNITY OUTREACH
THE CENTER FOR
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Community Internship Program
Volunteer as an intern STUDENT
864-3710 • 4th Floor, Kansas Union SENATE
1998 Career and Employment Fair Wednesday, February 4th, 10:00 am - 3:00 pm • Kansas Union Ballroom Full-time, Part-time, Internships, Summer Employment, Volunteer OPEN TO ALL MAJORS
Sponsored by Career & Employment Services, 110 Burge Union • 864-3624 • www.ukans.edu/~upc/cef.html
Attend the Career Fair Information Session/Learn how to get the most out of a career fair:
Tuesday, February 3rd, 4:00 pm, Pioneer Room - Burge Union
Accountemps/Robert Half
Adecco - The Employment People
Aerotek
Allied Signal
American Airlines
American Backhaulers
American Companies
American Teleconferencing Serv.
Austin Nichols Technical Tempis
BDM Petroleum Technologies
Basic - The Cleaning Experts
Bayer Corporation
Best Computer Consultants, Inc.
Blair Consulting Group, Inc.
Boeing, Inc.
Budget Car & Truck Rental
CCH, Inc.
Camps Airy and Louise
Camp Birchwood
Camp Chippewa for Boys
Camp Kamaji for Girls, Inc.
Camp Lincoln/Camp Hubert
Camp Towanda
Camp Wood YMCA
Cap Cod Sea Camps
Career Services, Inc.
Century Personnel
City of Lawrence, Kansas
Commerce BankContemporary
Group/Sandstone Ampitheatre
Deluxe Corporation
U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Serv
Ecumenical Christian Ministries
Enterprise Rent-A-Car
Federal Reserve Bank of KC
Ferguson Enterprises, Inc.
Franklin Financial
Friendly Pines Park
Full Employment Council
Garmin International
Gear for Sports
General Services Administration
Geoaccess, Inc.
Gilbert-Magill Company
Hallmark Cards, Inc.
Harrah's NKC Casino
Hastings
Heartland Council of Camp Fire
House of Lloyd
IBM Corporation
IBP, Inc.
IKON Office Solutions
Jenny Craig
Jewish Comm. Ctr. of Greater KC
Jones Store Company
Kaw Valley Center
KU - Department of Human Res.
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KU - School of Business
KU - Upward Bound/Math & Sci Ctl
Kansas City Missouri, City of
Kansas City, Missouri Police Dept.
Kansas City, MO Water Serv. Dept
Kansas Department of Corrections
Kansas Dept. Health&Environment
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Kansas Div. of Personnel Corporation
Kansas Innovation Corporation
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Kelly Services
Lab One
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Mary Kay Cosmetics
Merck & Company, Inc.
Mervyn's Department Stores
Monsanto
Moog Automotive
Multi-Service Corporation
Muscular Dystrophy Association
NK Lawn and Garden Co.
Navy Recruiting Dist. Kansas City-
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New England Financial Group
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NW Mutual Life/Baid Securities-Ert.
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Osco Drug/Sav-on Drugs
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Principal Financial Group
Pro Staff
Quintiles, Inc.
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St. Louis County Dept. of
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Schlumberger
Sears, Roebuck and Company
Signature Staffing
SW Bell Telephone Company
Sports & Social Clubs of the U.S.
Sprint - Technology Services
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus
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State Farm Insurance
Steak 'n Shake
Sunflower Group
Tetra Tech EM, Inc.
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TouchNet Info, Systems, Inc.
United Parcel Service
United States Air Force
United States Army/Army Reserve
United States Marine Corps
Walgreens
Xerox - The Document Company
Worlds of Fun/Oceans of Fun
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
"We are the bad boy of abridgement."
--Matt Croke, Reduced Shakespeare Company
Lied Center Broadway and Beyond Series and SNA present
The Reduced Shakespeare Company performing
The Complete History of America (abridged)
Saturday, January 31, 1998, 8:00pm
ALL TICKETS $2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office [864-ART5]; Murphy Hall Box Office [864-3982]; SNA Box Office [864-3477] or Ticketmaster [785]236-4545.
Visit our website www.ukans.edu/~lied
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
1998 - 1999
The Reduced Shakespeare Company performing
The Complete History of America [abridged]
Saturday, January 31, 1998, 8:00pm
ALL TICKETS 1/2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box
Office [864-ARTS]; Murphy Hall Box Office
[864-3982]; SUA Box Office [864-3477] or
Ticketmaster [?85]234-4545
Visit our website
www.ukans.edu/~lied
60 Anniversary
BROADWAY
1998 - 1999
A K
STUDENT
UNIVERSITY
SUNATE
40th Anniversary
SUNY
SUNY at New York University
1930 - 1980
KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY
STUDENT
LIBRARIES
SUNY AT KANSAS STATE
4
---
---
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 4
Thursday, January 29, 1998
Red Raiders glide past Missouri
The Associated Press
LUBBOCK, Texas — Missouri never had a chance against Texas Tech last night. The Red Raiders made sure of it.
Rayford Young scored 27 points, including six three-pointers, and Texas Tech used a 14-0 game-opening run for an 80-60 victory against Missouri.
The opening run by Texas Tech (9-6, 3-4 Big 12) was the Red Raiders' biggest this season.
Missouri (11-9, 3-4 Big 12) never recovered, trailing 42-20 with 2:39 left in the first half and 44-28 at halftime. Texas Tech set its biggest lead of the game at 77-55 with 5-53 left.
"I think we were tired, but I don't know," said Missouri coach Norm Stewart. "We were flatter than flat, and obviously we couldn't guard anyone."
Young hit five of his six three-
pointers after halftime. Overall,
Texas Tech coach James Dickey said he was proud of his team's intensity after Saturday's 88-49 loss to No.5 Kansas.
Texas Tech's defense set the tone early in the game as Missouri, which beat Kansas on Jan. 19 and No. 10 Iowa five days later, failed to score until almost five minutes into the game.
the Red Raiders hit a season-high 12 three-pointers in 28 attempts.
"We're not a consistent ball team right now, and that's why we got beat." Stewart said.
"It's hard to understand." Monte Hardge, Missouri center, said. "We put out the effort. We just need to figure out what we can do differently to try to get some wins on the
Thames 3-8 4-1 11, White 2-9 1-2 5, Hardge 2-6 1-1 5, Grower 1-4 0-0 3,
Hater 1-3 0-0 2, Lee 4-1 3-2 14, Decker 0-5 0-0 9, Wampler 0-0 0-2 0.
Weaver 1-1 0-0 2, Dibi 0-0 0 0, Parker 2-3 0-0 5, Woods 7-13 0-0 15.
Totals 23-6 5 - 8-13 60.
Missouri (11-9)
TEXAS TECH 80, MISSOURI 60
Texas Tech (9-8)
Owens 3-5-3-7 9, Carr 5-16 8-9-21, Phillips 2-3-2-8 6, Young 8-11 5-5-27,
Bonewitz 4-10 1-1 12, Barnes 0-1-0-0 0, Patterson 0-0-0-0 0, Roberts 0-0-0-
0, Mvers 1-5-1-2 3, Charmichael 1-1-0-1 2. Totals 24-52 20-33 80.
Haltifeum — Texas Tech 44, Missouri 28, 3-Point game — Missouri 6-19 (Thames 1-2, White 0-2, Grawer 1-2, Lee 2-7, Parker 1-1, Woods 1-5), Texas Tech 12-28 (Carr 3-10, Young 6-8, Bonewitz 3-8, Barnes 1-0, Myers 0-1). Fouled out — Hardge, Roberts. Rebounds — Missouri 43 (Lee 10), Texas Tech 39 (Owens 10). Assists — Missouri 11 (Grawer 3), Texas Tech 15 (Bonewitz 6). Total fouls — Missouri 20, Texas Tech 15, A — 7,459.
road."
rebounds.
Cory Cary finished with 21 points for Texas Tech, while Stan Bonewitz contributed 12 points. Cliff Owens had nine points and 10
John Woods led Missouri with 15 points. Tyron Lee added 12 points and 10 rebounds, and Kelly Thames had 11 points.
K-State tops'Huskers in Little Apple
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN, Kan. - Shawn Rhodes scored 16 points as Kansas State beat Nebraska 72-49 last night.
K-State (13-5, 4-4 Big 12) took advantage of Nebraska's 2-3 zone defense to hit six of 10 three-point shot attempts the first half and lead 37-30 at halftime.
Venson Hamilton scored 12 in the first half for Nebraska (13-7, 4-3), which shot 59 percent from the field in the half.
Nebraska's zone kept the ball away from Manny Dies much of the game. Dies, who had averaged more than 20 points a game
in conference play, scored only 11.
K-State's Duane Davis held Nebraska point guard Tyronn Lue to just five points. It was the first time in 36 games that Lue failed to score in double figures.
The 'Huskers shot only 33 percent from the floor in the second half.
Aaron Swartzendruber scored only three points but had a game-high nine assists. He and Dies had 10 rebounds each for K-State.
May finished with 12 points, and Davis added 11.
Hamilton led Nebraska with 10 rebounds and 15 points, and Cookie Belcher added 10 points.
Nebraska (13-7)
KANSAS ST. 72, NEBRASKA 49
Florence 2-8-0-0, Markowski 1-7-0-2, Hamilton 6-9-3-7-15, Lue 3-14-0-17,
Belcher 4-13-1-21, Piatkowski 2-4-0-0, Johnson 3-6-0-0, Harriman 0-0-0-0,
Phifer 0-2-0-0. **Totals** 21-63-4-12 49.
Dies 4-10-3-5 11, Reid 2-6-0-0, Rhodes 7-9-0-0, Swartzendruzer 1-6-0-0,
Davis 3-2-7-2-11, Sims 1-4-0-0, May 4-6-4-4-1, Griffin 1-1-0-0, Vasiljevic 3-6-0-1-6, Lopez 1-4-0-0, Leonard 0-1-0-0, Heidrick 0-0-0-0, Ries 0-0-0-0
**Totals** 27-60-0-12 72
Kansas State (13-5)
Halftime — Kansas St. 37, Nebraska 30. Three-Point goals — Nebraska 3-12 (Lue 1-4, Belcher 1-4, Piatkowski 1-3, Phifer 0-1), Kansas St. 9-18 (Reid 2-5, Rhodes 2-2, Swartzendrief 2-, Davis 3-5, Vasiljevic 0-1, Lopez 1-3).
Fouled out — None. Rebounds — Nebraska 35 (Hamilton 10), Kansas St. 44 (Dies, Swartzendrief 10). Assists — Nebraska 14 (Lue 5), Kansas St. 26 (Swartzendrief 9). Total fouls — Nebraska 16, Kansas St. 16. A — 9,050.
ATHENS, Ga. — Reserve Larry Brown, a tight end on the Georgia football team, scored eight of his 14 points in the second half — including five straight during a late surge — leading the Bulldogs to a win against Mississippi.
MEN'S BASKETBALL (TOP 25):
Georgia 70, No.12 Mississippi 68
Georgia (10-9, 2-5 Southeastern Conference) had lost its first five SEC games before beating Louisiana State on Saturday and then upending the Rebels (14-3, 5-2), who had won 10 of their last 11.
Georgia took the lead for good at 50-48 on a basket by G.G. Smith with 8:24 to go. The Rebels got within 54-53 before Brown scored five-straight points to give Georgia some breathing room again at 59-53.
Keith Carter led Mississippi with 21 points, and Ansu Sesay had 19.
No.13 South Carolina 74. Florida 72
Jason Williams scored 12 of his 18 points in the second half for the Gators.
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Freshman Antonio Grant scored a career-high 14 points, including a game-winning tip-in with 9 seconds to go, for the Gamecocks who won their 18th-straight league game at home.
A 20-5 run to start the second half put Florida (10-7, 3-4) in command, but LeRon Williams, who transferred from Florida to South Carolina two years ago, scored 10 of his 14 points during the last 12 minutes. Joseph Williams scored 10 of his 14 points in the second half for the Colts.
South Carolina (15-3, 6-2 Southeastern Conference) trailed 55-43 in the second half, but tied the game three times in the final two minutes before Grant followed Melvin Watson's missed shot.
No.15 Arkansas 85,LSU 68
BATON ROUGE, La. — Pat Bradley was 4-of-8 from three-point range and scored 26 points as the Razorbacks beat LSU for the 13th time in 14 games since joining the Southeastern Conference.
LSU trailed 64-58 with 7:39 left. Three minutes later, it trailed by 18 points as Bradley hit five-straight field goals, including two three-point shots to nut Arkansas (17-3, 6-1 SEC) us 76-58.
Maurice Carter had 29 points for LSU (9-9, 2-6). Louisiana had 20 turnovers and managed just four baskets in the final 11-30 minutes of the game.
No.17 West Virginia 76.Pittsburgh 72
PITTSBURGH, Penn. — Jarrrod West's three-point shot with 2:46 to play put West Virginia ahead to stay and Adrian Pledger's two free throws with 14 seconds left finished off Pittsburgh.
West Virginia (18-3, 8-3 Big East) won its fourth game in a row and seventh in eight games.
Pittsburgh (7-8, 2-6), coming off a 22-point loss at Rutgers, lost its third straight and fourth in five games.
Vontego Cummins of the Panthers had 17 points and nine turnovers.
No. 22 Michigan St. 84. No. 25 Indiana 66
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Charlie Bell matched his career high with 17 points and led five Spartans in double figures.
Penn State hands Iowa third-straight loss
Michigan State (14-4, 7-1 Big Ten) out rebounded the Hoosiers 48-30 and the Spartans capitalized on 22 Indiana turnovers to score 30 points. Andre Hutson added 13 points for the Spartans, while Mateen Cleaves had 10 points and a career-high 13 assists.
Freshman Luke Recker had 16 points for Indiana (14-6, 5-3), which had a five-game winning streak snapped.
The Associated Press
with 17 points.
Jarrett Stephens had 20 points for Penn State (10-7, 3-4 Big 10), which won its ninth-straight home game.
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Joe Crispin had a career-high 23 points as Penn State beat No. 16 Iowa 67-65 last night. It was the Hawkeyes' third-straight loss.
The victory was the first against a ranked team for the Nittany Lions in two seasons. The last victory was at Iowa, then also ranked 16th, in February 1996.
Ryan Bowen led Iowa (15-5, 4-3)
PENN STATE 67, NO.16 IOWA 65
Stephens hit an unlikely three-pointer to put Penn State ahead 65-60 with 1:17 remaining. Bowen scored to make it a three-point game, but Pete Lisicky's two free throws put the lead back at 67-62. Ricky Davis of Iowa then had a three-play play to cap the scoring.
Iowa had gotten within two when a three-point play by Bowen capped a 7-0 run.
Penn State led by as many as 12 points in the first half, but Iowa outscored the Nittany Lions 9-2 during the last five minutes to pull within 28-25 at halftime.
PENN STATE (10-7)
Davis 3-10 3-3 9, Moore 5-11 1-2 11, Bowen 8-16 1-1 17, Oliver 2-4 0-0 5,
McCaussland 2-7 0-0 6, Bauer 0-0-0 0-0, Rucker 3-4 0-0 5, Luehrmann 1-2 0-
0 3, Galloway 0-1 0-0 0, Koch 4-0 4-0 8. **Totals** 28-59 5-6 65.
Ivory 1-3 0-0 2, Jackson 0-1 0-0 0, Booth 3-12 2-3 8, Crispin 6-13 9-11 23,
Lisicky 3-11 2-2 9, Cline-Hheed 0-1 0-0 0, Grays 2-4 0-0 5, Stephens 5-9 9-11
20, Stevenson 0-1 0-1 0, **Totals** 20-55 22-28 67.
Haltime—Penn State 28, Iowa 23. **Three-Point goals**—Iowa 4-13 (McCausland 2-6, Oliver 1-1, Luehrmann 1-2, Bowen 1-0, Moore 1-0, Davis 0-2), Penn State 5-20 (Crispin 2-7, Stephens 1-1, Grays 1-2, Lisicky 1-8, Ivory 0-1, Stevenson 0-1). **Fouled out**—None. **Rebounds**—Iowa 42 (Davis 10), Penn State 28 (Booth, Stephens 6). **Assists**—Iowa 22 (Oliver, Luehrmann
Colorado beats Aggies, leaving Texas A&M winless in Big 12 play
The Associated Press
COLLEGE STATION, Texas Marlon Hughes' jumper from the top of the key with six seconds left yesterday lifted Colorado to a 68-67 comeback victory against Texas A&M.
Colorado (9-8, 3-4 Big 12) used a
14-2 run during the final 8:56
and overcame a 65-54 deficit.
The Aggies led 67-66 and got the ball back with 55.6 seconds left when Colorado's Ronnie DeGray was called for a lane violation.
But A&M's Jerald Brown and Colorado's Charlie Melvin were
whistled for a jump ball. The possession arrow gave the ball to the Buffers, setting up Hughes' game-winning shot.
Steve Houston's desperation shot for Texas A&M (6-11, 0-7) banged off the rim as time expired.
Kenny Price led the Bucks with 17 points, while DeGray added 14 points and Melvin grabbed 14 rebounds.
Texas A&M rolled to a 43-26 halftime lead and still led 65-54 before the Colorado comeback.
Kansan Classified
100s
Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
The Aggies got a game-high 24 points from Shanne Jones and 10 points from Chris Clayton.
115 On Campus
118 Announcements
119 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
X
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
325 Stereo Equipment
320 Tickets
40 Auto Sales
345 Motorcycles for Sale
340 Motorcycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
Classified Policv
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
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, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. This will be addressed in the Federal Fair
110 - Business Personals
HEALTHY Watkins Since 1906 Cycling For KO QUANTIFIED
limitation or discrimination.* Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
HEALTH
Watkins
Since 1906
Caring For KU
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
I
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
100s Announcements
120 - Announcements
$ Cash for College $ Grants & scholarships avail-
nable from sponsors. Great opportunities! Call me
(312) 589-6014.
F
Spring Break Mazalin
Don't miss out on the HOSTEST destination in MEXICO!
drinks, 15 FREE drinks, 15 FREE meals, parties. For FREE brochure 1-800-395-4898 (www.collectours.com)
Instructional & Educational video's & CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited internet
access for only $15.95/mo. tell your parents,
shoping http://www.inetlini.com/.edi
Spring Career and Employment Fair: Wed. Feb. 4, 1988 to 3 am. KS Union Ballroom. Over 120 employers. FT, PT, internships, summer jobs, volunteer opportunities. All major welfes welcome. Contact info at Employment Services at 864-3624 or visit web site: www.ukans.edu - upc/cef.html
School of Education
spring Break Mazatlan
120 - Announcements
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH during the FALL 1998 semester must attend the Teacher student teach on Wednesday, February 4, at 3:00 p.m. in Room 303 Bailey Hall. This meeting is mandatory.
F
1995 SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA Camp Buckskin has various positions available to work with youth who have académic or academic LD.) A unique program with opportunity to earn school credit. Salary + room & board. Camp is located on a lake in the Superior National Forest near Ely and the BWCMA4. Contact: Time Ely and the BWCMA4. email: buckskin@aspernet.com
First Call For Help
First Call For Help
Headquarters
Counseling Center
24-hours
telephone/in person
counseling & information
841-2345
Kansan Ads Pay
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin," or an intention, to make any such preference,
120 - Announcements
F
Save up to $60,000. Free analysis. No obligation.
Call 785-864-6449 for details
NEED GLASSES?
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON EVERY FRAME, ANY PRESCRIPTION, THE JOB, OR THE EXAM. Ms. Downtown Lawrence. B4-6883. We carry Giorgio Armani, Alfred Sung, next, Dakota Smith, Santa Fe Eyeworks, Nici Miller, Perry Cohen, Neal Taylor, Dr. Linda Laborteq labics on the midway, Langley of K.C. “be cheap backroom grinding.” We also supply contact lenses at GREAT PRICES. “BE A SURE ANGEL!”
***Sleep Break ‘88 Get Going!* Cancun,
Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida. Group discounts
& Free Drink Pairs & go free! Book
& Free Drive/Park/Discounts 534-709-881
http://www.endlessmortuums.tour.com
Camp Takako for Boys, on Long Lake, Naple. Mail Noted for picturesque location, exceptional facilities, and outstanding programs. June 22-august 10, counselor position in tennant hall, bassist position in hockey, roller hockey, swimming sailance, waterskating, scuba, archery, rifley, weight training, journalism, photography, video, woodworking, study, radio & electronics, dramatics, piano accompanist, music instrumentalist/band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater canoeing, ropes course instructor, general coach, swim lessons, kitchen staff. Call Mike Sherburn at 1-800-250-8252.
125 - Travel
125 - Travel
CANCUN • BANAMAS
24 HOURS OF FREE DRINKS!
7 nights from $2,299
Inclusion at 11 am. No fees of two drinks and weekly party clubships of up to break overnight (Organize 10 bands and CARNI PAUSE 10!)
GLASS travel
in the UK
Space is limited Call now!
1-300-833-6411
at contact us at GLASSTRAVELNAT.COM
COMMERCIAL BOUNDARY DOUCHTE, BOSTON MA 02123
SPRING BREAK
Kansan Ads Pav
SPRING BREAK
Caribu 7 NIGHTS WAIR AIR FROM $399
Jamaica 7 NIGHTS WAIR AIR FROM $429
Bahamas 7 NIGHTS WAIR AIR FROM $21
Fijrida 7 NIGHTS FROM $21
CAMPUS RENT: BALE & GO FREE!
1-800-234-7007
http://www.maillesssummertours.com
125 - Travel
123- Travel
SPRING BREAK trip to Mexico, Jamaica, & Florida. From $99 & $69 Call Jason at 804-947 812
AIRLINES
CALL TODAY
A. A plane flying over a city
B. A man riding a roller coaster in a space park
SPRING BREAK DEALS
• CANCUN
• CRUISES
• SKIING
• MUCH MORE
TRAVELLERS
INC.
831 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence
749-0700
Thursday, January 29, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 5
125 - Travel
125 - Travel
Spring Break '98. South Padre Island.
www.pirentals.com 1-800-292-7520
Come join SUA for Spring Break for only $224.
Come stay in one of the top 20 Holiday Inns in the country. Price pays for 8 days and 7 nights. Sign up at the SUA Box Office on 4 floor of Kansas City, MO to stay in due by May. Space is limited so hurry and info up. Call SUA at 864-3477 for more info.
Nobody Does Spring Break Better!
SPRING
BREAK
IN SHOW ON THE WINGS OF HURONES
DRIVE YOURSELF & SAVE!
AFFORDABLE
"ROAD TRIP!"
$98
OR LOW TO
PARTY
17th
Sellout
Year!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
STEAMBOAT
NEW WEST
PER PENSON OPERATION OR DISTRIBUTION / BREAM GATE / LENGTH OF TIME
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
www.sunchase.com
$98
at low to
17th
Sellout
Year!
PARTY
South Padre Island
DAYTONA BEACH
STREAMBOAT
KEY WEST
FOR PERSON DEPENDING ON DEPTTIMES, BAILOUT GAMES, 1 LEATHER OF THE
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
www.sunchase.com
130 - Entertainment
140 - Lost & Found
Gold ring with 2 small diamond found outside Strong Hall. Call Kali Registrar's Office at 864-567-4367
Male and Female Toilet
205 - Help Wanted
---
Brady Chiropractic Clinic. Part time help needed. 3-tm, Monday-Friday. Call 749-0130
Leasing Agent/Office Assistant PT NEW
Apt./Twn 749-1289 inquire at 3020 Wakarau Dr.
Telephonie suurwaren $65 kcal pro männer
Telephonie suurwaren $65 kcal pro女子的
**Institute for the Study of Nutrition**
1913; 31; 34
*www.instatudy.net/nutrition*
Eara Extra Cash. *gain experience in the music*
*Fresh Tracks Representative* Call 888-345-FHSR1
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
with a 179kg (upstairs) or plus profit sharing.
Airy at 179kg (upstairs).
The Granda is seeking featured dancers for Fri,
and Sat, nights. Call Alia between noon and 8pm
at 102-754-4630.
**rarty Pic Photographers and P.T. salesperson**
**Assistance in Images Imports at 1198**
Massachusetts M-2-F-52
Apt. Leasing Position. Strong sales skills required. Compensation, 1BR Apt. 20-25 hrs. Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000 Clinton Pkwy.
Male personal care attendants needed to work with a young man with head injury in Lawrence. Starting pay is $7.50. If interested, please callMichelle at 913-341-8667 ext 400.
Brookcreek Learning Center hiring PT teaching assistance A.M. and P. M hours. Valuable experience in an early intervention program. Apply at 209 Mt. Hope Court, 865-0223
Teleservices/Appt setting for TruGreen Lawn,
The leading lawncare company. Part time positions with opportunities for advancement. Call Kenny or Josh today at (913) 492-8780
205 - Help Wanted
---
205 - Help Wanted
Hard work, energetic persons to teach behavioral program to 7 year old with Autism. Will provide training. MWF 1:35-30pm or Sat 8:30am. Sun 1-5pm 832-1568, evenings.
SUB or LUNCH AIDE
*Expansion* **99** @ Nall co.-immediate PT/FT
openings in Lawrence/JOCO & KC. Entry-level all-areas. Flexible schedules around classes.
$$$$$$$$$$ Up to $10.45$$$$$$$$$$
---
Mgmt. Co. leasing agent. PT during school, FT this summer previous experience a plus. Must have reliable transportation. Send resume w/ 3 letters of proof of employment. Lawrence KS 90544 or stop by 808 W. 24th, EOE
SUB 6 OR LUNCH ADULT
Lunch help needled 11:30 to 1:00 Mor. thru Fri.
sub hours as needed; preferred child care experience and training, Sunshine Acre School 842-2223
Music Industry Internship. Hi Frequency, a national music promotions company, seeks local promotions interns. Knowledge of new music and Lawrence market essential. College credit available. Fax resume to Kelly at 800-375-6991 or call 919-832-6532
Graduate Student Office Assistant, Dept. of English. Duties include answering phones, typing, copying, errands, and other duties as assigned. Must work well with students, faculty and staff. Req's BS or foreign equiv in computer science FoRoPc, etc.). Work up to 3 hrs/week in blocks of time. Application available in 3081 Wesley.
DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AFFAIRS
Women of color, formerly battered women,
lesbian, bisexual, and disabled are encouraged
to apply. For an application contact WTCS,
785-843-5777 or P.O. Box 633, Lawrence, KS. 66044.
Returned applications must be postmarked by
February 2.
Jayashwaj smiles needed: The Kansas University Endowment Association is hiring students for 30-40 part-time positions calling alumni to raise money, give back to the community, busy life, a great working environment, and a bonus program. Must be positive, enthusiastic, and compassionate. No phone calls or emails. E223 for more information or to leave a voice mail.
$$Earn Cash$$$
The Kansas and Burge Urns
Catering Department
$6.00/hour
February 3, 1998
4: 5a.m - 3: 00.m
COLORADO SUMMER JOBS: RAFTING'RAP-
PELLING! In the Rockies near Vail, ANDERSON CAMPS seeks caring, enthusiastic, dedicated children in an outdoor setting. Counselors, Cooks, Wranglers, Maintenance and Nurses. Interviews on February 4th. Stop by Career Planning and Placement Office to get an application and sign up for interview. Questions? Call us at (907) 324-1264.
Will pay in cash day following employment. Must
pay $100 off the lift up to 20 pounds, follow dress code LAE/EBG
Mechanical Engineers - . Engineered Air is a leading manufacturer of made to order packaged HVAC&R products. Rapid Sales growth has created outstanding career opportunities for recent graduates in the field of engineers. Engineered Air offers training leading to careers in equipment design, manufacturing or sales. Apply in confidence to Engineered Air, Mechanical Engineering, Kansas 66018. pn193-833-1181 Fax n193-833-1180
SUMMER CAMP JOBNA in the Pocono Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in fantastic camp setting. Counselors WI, Arts, IA, and Math are needed. SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to "the finest summer you'll ever have." On campus interviews Wed, Feb. 4th at Kansas Union Ballroom 809-623 CAMP. staff @camptowanda.com
$$$ BONUS! BONUS! $$$
nTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd., 2nd floor. Bring this
book to qualify for bonus.
Growing $1$ Residential Home Improvement Co. motivated, dependable people to take
inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PC skills.
must $100 sign on bonus after working 30 continu-
cies per month.
causes based on your performance. Flex sched-
ules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at:
www.groupon.com/employer
500 SUMMER CAMP JOBS/50 CAMPS/YOUN
CHOSE! NY, PA, NEW ENGLAND, TENN
ISABEASEL BALLBELL HOCKKEY, SOCCER,
LACROSSE, BASKETBEL, GYMNASTICS,
RIDING, SWIMMING, WMS, BIKING, PIONEERING, ROCKCLIIMM, ROpes,
COURAGING, ROBOTICS, CREAMICS, JEWELRY,WOODSHOP, PHOTOGRAPHY, RADIO, NATURE, NURSES,CHEFS, MAJORS, ETC, ARLENE STREISAND 1-800-443-6428; FAX 519-933-7499
Student Hourly, Duties include packing shipments, data entry and analysis, filing, copying, computer use, training and supervision. Required qualifications: ability to lift 45 pounds, familiarity w/ Macintosh computers (Word & Excel), knowledge of office systems (18 hrs/wk, organizational and filing skills, ability to work independently and efficiently). Must be able to work in summer – deadline 01/30/98 at 306 Dole Center, EOE/EAA employer.
Student Hourly, Spring and Summer position with potential for Fall. Duties include library research, writing research summaries, filing & org. of data; copying, collating, errands; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Familiarity w/macintosh computers (Word, Internet, multimedia); ability to work 15-20 hours per week; knowledge of international and filing skills. Deadline 01/30/98. Salary $5.50/hr. Pick up application at 368 Dole Center. EOE/AA employer.
Graduate Research Assistant. Duties include library research and writing research summaries on reading and reading disabilities, planning instructional units, audio/visual elements for web-based modules for teacher education, prepare materials for meetings, other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Familiarity w/Macintosh computers (Word, Internet, Multi-Format), work independently and efficiently. Deadline 02/04/98. Salary $1,200-$1,500./mo. (75 FTE) Pick up application at 306 Dole Center and submit letter, resume, names of two references.
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
205 - Help Wanted
We Employ Students!...
Tired of flipping burgers?
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
- Part Time Evenings (Sun-Thurs 2 OR 3 hrs nightly)
Mon/Wed/Fri or Tues/Thursday schedules also available.
• We provide on-job transportation once you get here (house cleaning jobs only)
PROFESSIONAL JANITORIAL SERVICES
- $6-7 Potential • Friendly Environment
Call 842-6264 or apply in person at 939 Iowa.
205 - Help Wanted
$750-$1500/WEEK
Raise all the money your student group needs by sponsoring a VIA program. No investment and very little time needed. There's no obligation, why not call for information today.
手拉手 手拉手 手拉手
EARN
TER $4509 (NYC)
Student Housing
Dining Services
* Start in 150hrs or
210hrs
* New Friends
* New Students
* Convenient Locations
Scholarships
Holdings
DISH Dining Center
GMP * 864-3120
GMP * 864-3128
Haskell * 884-9144
Haskell * 884-9144
Oilmer * 864-4097
Cheley Colorado Camps in the Rocky Mountains near Estes Park, Colorado, is hiring caring and enthusiastic individuals as Unit Directors, Cook, Kitchen Assistants, Drivers, Office Personnel, RNs, Wranglers, and Counselors with skirts in blue, brown, or hiking clothing, wall challenge, camping, sports, crafts, song-leading, archery, or rifling. Room/board, salary, travel allowance. Must be at least a Sophomore and able to work June 8-11th, July 5-7th, August 6th through December please contact Cheley Colorado Camps. 1-800-2736-7386, e-mail, office@cheley.com; or visit our Web Site, www.cheley.com.
The following part-time jobs are currently available with the City of Lawrence. Complete application at Admin. Serv. 2nd, Floor City Hall, 6 East 8th, Lawrence KS 60404. EOE M/F/D.
PART-TIME JOBS CITY OF LAWRENCE
Lifeguard. $6.50/hr, evenings, weekends, school breaks. Must be 1st and have current Red Cross ID.
Clerk, Parks & Recreation, 20 hrs/wk, $5/2s hr.
Grad HS/Grad, exp or training w word process
School Crossing Guard, 10-15 hrs/wk, $5.80/hr.
responsible for directing children on foot and motor traffic. Must be in good phys. condition with no loss of sight or hearing.
Recreation Center Leader, varied 5pm-10pm week nights and weekends, $15.15/hr, supervising recreational programs and use of facilities. HS Grad/GED required.
AN ARIZONA TRADITION FOR 58 YEARS!
WE NEED A FEW
Activities include Hirehouse Riding, MollyPole Diving Rock Climbing, Water Skiing and Much, Much More.
We'll be as the Summer Job Pair on Wed. February 4th
application and schedule an interview, please call Mark Weik for more information.
(520) 624-2128 or email pfarm@aug.org.
EARN CASH up to$50 This Week $360 This Month
By donating your life saving blood plasma!
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
816 W.24th Hours:
Behind Laird M-F 9 a.m.
Noller Ford 6-30 p.m.
749-5750 Sat. 10-2 p.m.
(Nabi)
225 - Professional Services
---
AP specialist over 2 yrs. working experience in bookkeeping, GL, AP. taxes. Apply in person / resume at 4921 Quail Crest P1. or call 841-9513 ext. 3200.
SPEEDING T? DU? SUSPENDED DL? CA?
Serving KS/MO/CA? DL? Toll Free.
Serving KS/MO/CA? DL? Toll Free.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES. Openings for 1/2-9/
8th. Educational activities, clean, new facility.
fontessori teacher. Please call 855-0678 for more
info.
6
235 - Typing Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY Fear of being accused of divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation
AAA Resumes, Cover Letters, Mock Interviews,
and Job Counseling available. Make the most
solid investment you can in your future, invest
in your career and achieve success. The best
possible first impression. Call (813) 731-2170
X
99
305 - For Sale
---
300s Merchandise
Wurlitzer piano, beautiful condition, sounds great! $125. Please call (785) 786-2487.
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases Everything But Ice, 908 Mass.
For Sale. I Ericsson AH363 cellular phone. Calligr at 848-8224 or (913) 515-0777.
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-9115
S
Complete Mac system Centris 610: Monitor,
印刷, mower, lots of software, $550.00.
www.macworld.com
S
305 - For Sale
$350 (8" x 4") includes sticks, balls, chalk, and dust brush. 690-465, ask for Will.
66
325 - Stereo Equipment
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your home audio
equipment. Old? New (785) 232-9639.
Pool Table For Sale.
340 - Auto Sales
---
Must Sell, 1995 Honda Civic DX, Low Miles,
must be in excellent condition $10,700 or best offer,
call (785) 941-3821
360 - Miscellaneous
$ $ $ $ $
All Steel Buildings Order Now for Spring Delivery Sizes 24'-25' any length. Don't be fooled by price ads. Call now for huge savings World Wide Building Sales, Inc. 1-800-825-0316
370 - Want to Buy
S
WANTED:
$$$$$
Your used computer (PC or Mac)
$1,000 Reward
for your good used computer.
UNI Computers 841-4611
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
CABIN HOUSE
1. Bedroom Sublease $370 a month. Water, trash,
cable naid. No nets 864-3924
2 BR, near KU, washer hook-ups, lease,
deposit, no pets. $380 m/o. 843-1601.
3 bdm, 2 bath on bus route. W/D, brand new
apartment ?775/mo. ASAP! CAS1 331-9832
1 BDRM unfurnished apt. at 703 Arizona. Near KU
unfurnished apartment, whirlpool, garage, pool.
perm/ call: 853-9902
Nice spacious 2 bbm apt. located at 11th & Albion
(Chamberlain) Building, New York, NY. 1/2 mo.
Call 844-1496 13689 or www.chamberlain.com
2 BR special rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt, located close to campus, on bus route $350 include basic cable. Call Now. University Terrace 841-6783
B 2dmr, W/D hookup, D/W, fully equipped
C 3dmr, W/D hookup, D/W, fully equipped
Avail. on Feb. 18, Call 84-2720 or 84-3097
D 2dmr, W/D hookup, D/W, fully equipped
Unfurnished Room
2 bedroom apartment
2 bedroom apartmnt
Practically on campus
$500 per month, move in a. s. a. p.
cell 749, 791
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE Coed student housing alternative to private landors. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by 1406 Tennessee St. 811-0484
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposit
Lease No pets 843-1601
Baird-Lev Three BR, two Bath, two LR, garage,
Bailer-Lev three BR, large deck, $950 month,
carlie Caller at 823-260-8467
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt. located close to campus. $305 includes cable, computer and wireless bus route. 9th & Emery. Perfect for students. For calls. Cat. 691-8939 during office hours Mon - Fri.
2 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE JAN 1
1st Month FIrst Payment
LOCATION CALL 824-7511 MEIL
LOCATION CALL 824-7511 MEIL
GREAT LOCATION!!!
Harper Square Apartments
1,2 & 3 bedroom apartments Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fireplace
405 - Apartments for Rent
CALL NOW FOR MOVE-IN SPECIAL!
2201 Harper Street 838-3377
---
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury
• 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
• Washer/Dryer
• Built-in TV
• Alarm System
• 2 Pools & Hot Tubs
• Fitness Center
4.
2600 W. 6th 838-3377
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
842-5111
1 & 2 Bedrooms
3 Hot Tubs
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
Leasing NOW and for Fall
On KU Bus Route
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Luxury living... on campus!
HAWKER APTS
1,2 and 3 bedroom apartments
Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully-equipped kitchen Nine foot ceilings A must see!! Ask about our pre-leasing special
FOR FALL.
NOW PRE-LEASING FOR FALL.
10th & Missouri 838-3377
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
- Swimming Pool
- Exercise Weight Room
- Some Pets Allowed
- AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Fireplace
- Energy Efficient
- On Site Management
- Daily 3:00-5:00
Professionally Managed By
KVM
841-6080
841-5444
M
mastercraft management
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes
designed with you in mind.
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Hanover Place
Hanover Place
14th & Mass • 841-1212
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Tanglewood
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
405 - Apartments for Rent
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am - 4pm
At some locations
Equal Housing Opportunity
Sublease-2 BBR, 1 BHT, W-D hook up, deck and
$450 msf plus deposit call 331-8926 or (913)
810-277-5800
Looking for a place to rent?
FREE RENT REFERRAL!
A&S
APPTAL GROUPS
13$^{1/2}$ E. $8^{\mathrm{th}}$ St., Lawrence
841-5454
---
meadowbrook
The Perfect Apartment!
15th & Crestline
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio or a spacious one, two, or three bedroom apt. with your choice of a patio or balcony CALL US, 842-4200 Renting for NOW and for FALL walking distance to campus & on bus route
Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
410 - Condos For Rent
Brand New Duplex! Available June 1, 4 Bdm. 2,
8 Bdm. 3 Bdm. 4 Kitchens, Kitchen On, On bus-
路线, off street parking & sidewalk.
٢٤٣
30 Days Free
415 - Homes For Rent
houses trees
3 bedroom, 1-2 bath, brand new, C/A, W/D,
microwave, refrigerator; range, security sys
off, off-street parking, close to campus.
935 Mission, 841.3965, $900-$1000.
Female share large home near campus, washer
dryer, air cond. 1 utilities call 4230 or 8388
Ranch home on basement located on Straford Rd. 3+ bedroom, 3bath area, outside office entry. Walk to Class. At $199.900. Call Leta White. CB/McGrew R.E. B4.835 for information
430 - Roommate Wanted
4 bdmr, 3 bath, townhouse, W/D, $250/mo. 2 rms avail.
now, 749-3230.
4 BR Furnished House, $2387 mo + utilities Call 331-0515.
Roommate wanted. Call for info, 843-1103. Good location. $250 plus utilities.
Non-smoking roommate to share a bdrum duplex w/personal female $250 per mo utilities paid,w/n/d access to pool,call 842-8397. After 6pm
3 BR / 2 B/A/ WAO, close to KU, great view.
1 BR / 2 B/A/ WAO, close to KU + help. Call Bellian
684-0901. 928 Erydery Eng.
Female Roommate needed ASAP. 2 Bedroom
Roommate needed ASAP. 1 Bedroom. Non-
Smoker Waiver and Drivers Call 833-7450.
Need roommate who does not mind smokers
Roomy, lonely to study on $200 per month+
$250 per month+
Roommate needs to share furnished 2 br apt,
1 bath + 1/2 electric Cable,
and water paid. 487-9786
SPACIOUS Sr/Grad folks seek N 2/N Fem. Avail now Bright wavled skylift dskr n. campus. Quit clean air a way away from traffic, on park birds, trees, buildings. $290 Utlus Pd. 841-2748 leave word 8:10m - 10:30m.
Female RM needed to share brand new 3 bdrm +1/2 tow/4/8 tow/8/8
tow. Immediately. Call SIRR 989-3075.
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom gat. at 1128 Ohio. Between campus & Close to GSP Corp. Your share $250 l/2 unitrs. No beds@B41U-1207.
Roommate needed to share 3 bdrm, 2 buid duplex
W. Lawrence, Garage, W/D, basement, newer
home, 1/3 utilities +$250. Move in immediately.
Call 841-9031
Spacious tri-level apartment, with great location,
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a month plus utilities
Please call 817-7050
10. (4) The radius of a circle is 3.5 cm. Find the circumference.
SectionB·Page6
The University Daily Kansan
Thursday, January 29, 1998
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Martin said that most days the pain in his leg would be too severe to walk nine holes, and he restated his position that walking does not give him an inherent edge.
"I can assure you, it's not an advantage," Martin said. "It's the
Dole, who doesn't play golf, offered possible compromises, such as allowing Martin to walk nine holes instead of 18 or allowing any player to ride a cart.
alter the nature of its tournaments and give him an unfair advantage. I think the question is "Would it?" I don't believe so."
DENVER $59*
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Martin is using the ADA as the basis of his lawsuit against the PGA Tour. His case, which goes to trial Monday in Eugene, Ore., will hinge on the tour's contention that walking is a fundamental part of
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"PGA does not mean 'Please go away,'" said Dole, the former presidential candidate whose hand was injured during a World War II battle. "He's here to play."
Dale: Supports
supports the gator's bid to ride
on a cart on professional
tour
second best way to play. If I could walk effectively, believe me. I would do it. As it is, I can't. The cart only aids my leg, it doesn't aid my golf game at all."
Martin, 25, was born with Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber Syndrome. He lacks the vein that runs along the bone in his lower leg.
Golfer demands right to ride with help of powerful friends
Harkin said the ADA's requirement that reasonable modifications be made to accommodate people with disabilities should apply to Martin's case. Harkin also said he might take up Dole's suggestion to have Congress pass a resolution in support of the golfer.
"Rules and traditions that create barriers for people with disabilities are rules and traditions that must be changed," the Iowa Democrat said.
Martin, afflicted with a rare circulatory disorder, took his bid to ride a golf cart on the Professional Golf Association Tour to Capitol Hill yesterday and received the support of the two co-authors of the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act.
PETER ROSENBERG
The Associated Press
During his trip to Capitol Hill, Martin was visiting a place where traditions are slow to change. But Harkin noted that last year a rule prohibiting dogs on the Senate floor was repealed because a staffer with vision problems could not work without her seeing-eye dog.
WASHINGTON — Bob Dole applauded with his withered right hand, Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin spoke of a deaf brother. In the middle stood Casey Martin, balancing all his weight on his left leg.
"I know that in the golf community, I'm probably not being received with open arms right now," Martin said at a news conference at the Capitol. "But it's nice to have friends in high places."
"I'd let the senators vote on it," Dole said. "I don't think there'd be much of contest."
the game and that allowing Martin to ride a cart would create an unlevel playing field.
Academic Computing Services can give you the skills to confidently navigate the information superhighway. Best of all, our Internet training is FREE and doesn't require registration! Classes are open to everyone. Just show up at the Computer Center at classtime.
FREE INTERNET TRAINING Academic Computing Services February 3-5
Web design and content development—Develop and organize content for your Web site, learn more the basics of Web layout and how to design an ADA-friendly site.
fus* Feb. 3 10:30 a.m.-noon / Computer Center Auditorium
Web browsing—Surf the Web using Internet Explorer and learn about software used to access sound and movies on the Web.
Tues Feb 3 1-2:30 p.m. / Computer Center Mac Lab
Connecting to the Internet—Overview of connecting to the Net
Wed Feb 4 1-2:30 p.m. / Computer Center Auditorium
HTML: Intermediate—Create links, place graphics and learn other HTML techniques. Prerequisite: HTML Introduction or equivalent skills.
Thurs Feb 5 6-9 p.m./ Computer Center Mac Lab
All classes are held in the Computer Center located across from the Dale Center at Sunrise and Illinois. Class schedule: Pick up a Driver's Ed. at the Computer Center or go online at http://www.cu.kansan.edu/~acs/training/internet_dtc.shtml
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Sprewell shoots for reduced penalty
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. — For the first time since the attack that rocked the NBA, Lattrell Sprewell and coach P.J. Carlesimo met face to face yesterday during a hearing about whether Sprewell's punishment was unduly severe.
Carlesimo and Warriors' forward Joe Smith were the first to testify on the second day of the closed arbitration hearing.
Arbitrator John Feerick, dean of the Fordham Law School, has issued a gag order. Sessions resume next week in New York.
Sprewell apologized to Carlesimo
by phone a month ago, but they had not been in the same room since practice Dec. 1, when the star guard choked Carlesimo, threatening to kill him, and returned 20 minutes later, attacking the coach again.
The NBA threw Sprewell out of the league for a year, and the Warriors terminated the remaining three years of his contract.
Sprewell's former Warrior teammates are behind his bid to lessen the severity his punishment.
"I'm not condoning what he did," Bimbo Coles said. "But I think it was really a tough penalty to put on a gaw."
Billy Hunter, head of the players'
union, said Monday that the Warriors did not want to terminate Sprewell's contract and NBA commissioner David Stern was looking to set an example.
"In fact, they were attempting to orchestrate a trade when they received word that the NBA intended to suspend him," he said.
Hunter said he hoped the suspension would be lifted. Sprewell would forfeit his salary but could sign with another team.
Coles said players have learned a lesson from Sprewell's case.
"It's really scary, especially for guys with bad tempers, like myself." Coles said. "Sometimes, you just lose it."
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1300 COLLECT
The weekend's weather
Tomorrow: rainy and cooling temperatures
H 5
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
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TOPEKA, KS 66601-3585
Sunday: freezing rain and more falling temperatures.
HIGH 42
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kansan Weekend Edition
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Friday
January 30,1998
Section:
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
A
Vol. 108 · No.90
Saturday
& Sunday
WWW.KANSAN.COM
(USPS 650-640)
Wandering the Web
The following are live events hosted by BarnesNoble.com.
All of the authors will be chatting online during the next week.
Check it out. You might actually learn something.
Sundav
Forrest J. Ackerman "Forrest J. Ackerman's World of Science Fiction"
Monday
Monday
Lilian Jackson Braun
"The Cat Who Sang for the Birds"
Tuesday
T.C. Boyle
"Riven Rock"
■ Wednesday
Isaac Mizrahi
"The Adventures of Sandee the Supermodel"
Thursday Stacy Horn "Cyberville"
Feb. 5
Iris Johanson
“And Then You Die...”
■ Feb. 7
Gary Krist
"Bad Chemistry"
Correction
Because of an editorial writer's error, Susan Hadl, was misidentified as a KU Police sergeant. She is a sergeant in the Lawrence Police Department.
Lawrence Concert Calendar for this weekend:
Tonight
Bambino's Italian Cafe: Bill
The Bottleneck: The Schwag
Hi-linx: Swing 39
The Jazzhaus: The Band that Saved the World
Milton's: Bill Crahan and John Lomis
Tomorrow
Bambino's Italian Cafe: Scott Goodman
Hi-Jinx: Key West Jazz Quartet
The Bottleneck: Danger Bob & TV50
Index
News ...2A
Sports ...1B
Features ...8A
Classifieds...6-7A
Game times ...2B
Horoscopes ...2B
Editorial ...4A
Movie Listings ...5A
Med Center baby found in St. Louis
Infant to return to mother today; couple arrested
By Lisa Stevens John
John@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
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.
Long hours of searching by local authorities and FBI agents paid off last night as a man and woman were arrested in connection with the kidnapping of baby Carlie, born Wednesday at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Agents found the baby and arrested Buddy Hall, of Grant City, Mo., and Amanda Tull, of Sheridan, Mo., at 10:10 p.m. in High Ridge, Mo., a St. Louis suburb.
The suspects were on their way to relatives with the baby. Carlie, the daughter of a 19-year-old Kansas City, Kan., resident, was taken late Wednesday night from the Med Center maternity ward.
University of Kansas Medical Center officials give an update on Wednesday night's abduction of an infant from the hospital's maternity room. Among those at yesterday's press conference were Tom Valuk, Vice President of Medical Affairs; Rick Johnson, Chief of Med Center Police; and Irene Cumming, Hospital Chief Executive Officer. Photo by Lisa Stevens John/KANSAN
The name of the mother has not been released. The baby reportedly will be returned to her mother today.
the couple, the Med Center requested the assistance of the public in locating the infant.
By widely publicizing pictures of
Jeff Lanza, spokesman for the Kansas City, Mo., bureau of the FBI, said 80 to 100 FBI agents worked on this case and followed all leads.
RU Medical Center
Developments yesterday showed an abduction plan might have begun earlier than first expected. Hall and Tull had been seen in the maternity ward at North Kansas City Hospital on Wednesday evening, Lanza said.
A night nurse at North Kansas City Hospital in North Kansas City, Mo., remembered seeing the suspects on the hospital's maternity floor after seeing Wednesday evening newscasts and descriptions of the abductors.
North Kansas City Hospital contacted the FBI yesterday morning, Lanza said. Security cameras at North Kansas City Hospital had recorded the suspects' visit.
"It was very clearly shown on the videotape that those same suspects were in that hospital at 7:42 (p.m.), on the maternity floor," Lanza said. "It doesn't mean they were going to steal a baby there, but certainly, all the indications are that they were looking for a place for the opportunity to present itself."
Rick Johnson, chief of Med Center Police, said security measures at the Med Center exceeded industry standards.
Security cameras at the Med Center also recorded the suspects.
Lanza said Med Center videotapes showed Hall and Tull had been in the hospital cafeteria shortly after 10 p.m. They went to the maternity floor, and Tull went into the mother's room and talked to her about the baby. The baby was taken from the room after the mother fell asleep.
The videotapes showed the suspects leaving through the front door of the Med Center with the baby at 11:16 p.m.
"They carried the baby out in a carrier," Lanza said. "They had had an empty baby carrier at some point, and when they left, they had a full baby carrier."
Lanza said the FBI canvassed all the hospitals in the area to determine if the suspects had been at any other hospitals.
"Maternity floors need to have good security to begin with," Lanza said. "In light of what's happening, I think everyone should take a second look at security."
"However. KU police are working closely with the staff of the hospital to review security after last night's abduction," Johnson said.
7015 4816
Doug Caulfield, O'Fallon, Ill., sophomore and president of the KU Sailing Club, inspects the sail on a boat in front of Wescoe Hall. The club set up the boat to recruit members and draw attention during the warm weather yester day afternoon. Photo by Roger Nomer/KANSAN
I've got sunshine. . .
Warm weather spreads spring fever in January
As temperatures rise students stay at home crazy 'bout the mercury
By Marc Sheforgen
msheforgen @kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
The sun is out, temperatures are up and students are outdoors in light clothing, enjoying typical activity for spring or summer -- only it's happening in January.
brought steady afternoon crowds.
Temperatures have reached the 50s every day this week and even climbed into the 60s on Tuesday. The University of Kansas campus was alive with students taking advantage of this winter heat wave.
Yesterday afternoon, patrons packed onto the front porch of The Crossing, 618 W. 12th St., to enjoy afternoon beverages in the sun. The summertime sounds of Jimmy Buffett could be heard from thejukebox inside.
Gregg Hirshberg of Overland Park took advantage of the nice afternoon by bringing his nephew Elijah Naves to campus to celebrate Naves' fifth birthday. The two spent three hours yesterday walking around campus, blowing bubbles and dribbling a basketball.
"He likes campus life," Hirshberg said. "He gets to feel like a big kid, plus the chicks dig him."
In front of Douthart Scholarship Hall, freshmen Michelle Clay, Newton; Amy Hubert, Concordia and Becky Johnson, Overland Park, had a picnic lunch and then spent the afternoon playing cards.
"It makes it really hard to go to class and really easy to come to The Crossing and have a beer."
it makes it really hard to go to class and really easy to come to The Crossing and have a beer." Traci Meisenheimer, Oak Park, Calif., junior, said of the warm weather.
Emily Morrison, Salina junior and Crossing bartender, said typically winter days at the bar were dead, but this week's warm weather had
Traci Meisenheimer Oak Park, Calif., junior
"We figure you have to get out here where the sun is," Clay said.
Jeff Brown, Lenexa sophomore, spent part of yesterday afternoon playing Frisbee on the front lawn of Fraser Hall.
"It's real nice when you get a break in the middle of winter," he said. "It's a good time to break out the bike or the Frisbee. That's pretty much what we've been doing."
The National Weather Service in Tomeks said the average
high temperature for late January was 38 degrees. The service said this week's warm days could be attributed to upper-level wind flow off of the Pacific Ocean.
Af
The service said a storm was expected in Lawrence this weekend and would bring the temperatures back down.
African American HISTORY MONTH
Celebrating heritage
African American History Month begins Sunday. For a complete list of activities,
See page 3A
Green machine
The Surge Spring Break RV rolled into town yesterday, entertaining students at the Burge Union with games and giveaways. See page 6A
Bush
Family ties
NC
Roy Williams' and Bob Frederick's sons both have found niches at North Carolina. See page 1B
Troubled waters
Students question the Missouri Gaming Commission's actions surrounding "boats in moats." See page 5A
---
1
2A
---
The Inside Front
Friday January 30,1998
News
from campus, the state the nation and the world
LAWRENCE
WASHINGTON
BAGHDAD
BIRMINGHAM
Two alumni set up a $2 million scholarship fund for in-state students.
01 LAWRENCE:
A Gardner man is arrested for exposure and lewd behavior at Sixth and Wisconsin streets.
A powerful bomb explodes in an abortion clinic killing an off-duty police officer and injuring a nurse.
In the NATION:
In the WORLD:
Vice President Al Gore says the administration wants to increase federal funding of cancer research.
Saddam Hussein says Iraq will defend itself if the United States attacks.
CAMPUS
Alumni give $2 million for in-state scholarship
The University of Kansas will receive a $2 million gift from a Wichita couple to create KU Endowment Association scholarships for in-state students.
Jordan and Shirley Haines established a charitable remainder trust with a principle of $2 million. When the Haineses die, the $2 million would be turned over to the Endowment Association to be distributed as scholarships.
John Scarffe, director of communications at the endowment association, said the Haines' gift would be used to create a new scholarship fund for Kansas residents in various fields of study.
Robin Harris, senior associate director of admissions, said the min'mum high school eligibility requirements for an endowment scholarship were a 24 on the ACT, ranking in the top 20 percent of the high school graduating class, and a 3.0 non-weighted grade point average. Applicants also must complete a short interview process.
Haines, a retired chairman and chief executive officer of Fourth Financial Corp. and Bank IV, and his wife received undergraduate degrees from the University in 1949. Haines continued to obtain a degree from the KU School of Law. Haines and his wife are alumni members of Phi Delta Theta and Pi Beta Phi respectively.
In the summer of 1989, the Haines pledged a gift of $150,000 which was distributed among the School of Law, the Williams Educational Fund and The Chancellor's Club. The portion given to the School of Law was used to create the Shirley and Jordan Haines Scholarship Fund. This is a merit scholarship available to law students who are also Kansas residents.
Lawrence police arrest alleged masturbating man
A Gardner man was arrested early yesterday morning in downtown Lawrence on two counts of indecent exposure and two counts of lewd behavior. Lawrence police said.
Brad Edward Gibson, 33, allegedly walked toward a car driven by two female University of Kansas students at 11:40 p.m. Jan. 28 at Sixth and Wisconsin streets, pulled up his shorts, and exposed his buttocks to them. Police believe he then masturbated in front of two Lawrence women at 11:55 p.m., who were driving by the same corner. None of the women were harmed, but both pairs informed police of the incidents.
An officer found Gibson, who fit a description given by witnesses, walking around the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street. The officer interviewed and arrested him at 12:20 a.m. yesterday.
Lawrence police said they did not believe Gibson was involved in any of the masturbation incidents that have occurred on campus.
-Kansan staff report
NATION
Dormitories evacuated after clinic bombing
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — A powerful bomb exploded at an abortion clinic yesterday morning, killing an off-duty police officer and critically injuring a nurse.
It was the nation's first fatal bombing at an abortion clinic.
The blast, which blew a crater in the ground and shattered windows and shook walls a block away, came just a week after the 25th anniversary of the Supreme Court's decision in Roe vs. Wade legalizing abortion.
versity of Alabama at Birmingham dormitory when she heard the blast.
"it felt like lightning had hit the building," said Lindsey Thompson, who was at a Uni-
Nearby dorms and a day-care center were evacuated for fear of a second, delayed bomb blast.
A year ago, two bombs went off an hour apart at a clinic in Atlanta, injuring seven in the second blast. That bombing is still unsolved. Hours after the explosion in Birmingham, the surrounding area remained sealed off while bomb experts in masks and heavy protective gear combed it.
The bomb went off about 7:30 a.m. at the New Woman All Women Health Care clinic, rocking nearby buildings at the university and leaving a crater outside the clinic's blackened, wrecked entryway. The explosion occurred as clinic employees were arriving but about 30 minutes before doors normally open to patients.
Gore pledges support for war against cancer
WASHINGTON — Saying scientists are right on the verge of a breakthrough in cancer research, Vice President Al Gore said yesterday the administration wanted to increase federal funding by 65 percent during the next five years
FABRICIO GONZOLA
The budget plan, which must be approved by Congress, also would allow Medicare patients access to clinical trials for the first time.
Gore: wants to increase federal funds for research
"We want to be the first generation that finally wins the war against cancer," Gore said. Later, Gore flew to
Valley to announce plans to extend a corporate research and development tax credit.
In his budget, President Clinton is proposing considerably more money for all federal research at the National Institutes of Health, but cancer research would get the biggest boost.
Later, Gore flew to California's Silicon
Clinton is counting on revenue from a national tobacco settlement to finance the plan, despite the settlement's shaky prospects on Capitol Hill. Still, his call for more biomedical research funding should be welcomed in Congress, where members usually propose spending more than the president requests.
WORLD
Threat of U.S. attack not lost on Hussein
BAGHDAD, Iraq — Iraqis will defend their country with expertise, faith and perseverance if the United States attacks, President Saddam Hussein declared yesterday — adding that there was no reason for the United States do to so.
PETER VANDERBILT
While the Clinton administration and Congress were laying groundwork for possible U.S.-led airstrikes on Iraq, Saddam said his army would fight in a manner that will be a subject of admiration.
Hussein: Says traq will retaliate against U.S. attack
Iraq and the United Nations are in a standoff about U.N. inspections intended to ensure that Iraq has eliminated its weapons of mass
destruction. Baghdad was forced to accept the inspections at the end of the 1991 Gulf War, and tough U.N. sanctions imposed in 1990 are unlikely to be lifted until inspectors certify the programs have been dismantled.
-The Associated Press
Bill to restrict abortions at Med Center goes to House
By Brandon Copley
bcopple@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
A legislative committee approved a bill prohibiting most abortion procedures at the University of Kansas Medical Center Hospital yesterday.
The bill would ban abortions on property owned by the hospital unless an abortion was necessary to prevent death or serious, irreversible injury to mothers. Med Center faculty would not be prohibited from performing abortion procedures away from Med Center property.
The bill would also establish a hospital authority with a 14-member independent board of directors to govern the hospital. An eight-member legislative oversight committee will monitor the board and report to the Legislature.
The bill is designed to make the hospital more competitive in the Kansas City health care market. If passed, it would free the hospital from state purchasing and other bureaucratic procedures.
"The language is sufficiently modified from last year's version that it will not threaten accreditation and it will not threaten the appropriate training of health care providers," he said.
The bill will be introduced on the House floor on Monday. Kerr said he expected the bill to pass.
"Representative [Mike] Farmer has indicated that it will receive good support in the House," he said. "And I believe the Senate will support it."
The bill was introduced in the Senate last year and was referred to conference committee after the House and Senate passed different versions.
The 1997 session ended before conference committee members could agree on amendments addressing abortion and whether legislators should serve on the board.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway made the bill one of his top legislative priorities for 1998. Hemenway and Marlin Rein, director of governmental relations, worked on the bill with conferences since the 1997 legislative session ended.
ET CETERA
The University Daily Kansas is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of the Kansas are 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For a complete look at the day's news and top stories from around the nation and the world visit the University Daily Kansan interactive.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (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. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee.
MANSAN
- Nation/World stories
- http://www.kansan.com/news/nation/
Top Stories http://www.kansan.com
The Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in to the newsroom in person by the Friday before the desired Monday publication. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear on the UDKi as well as the Kansan. On Campus may be printed in smaller type size if space is limited. On Campus is a free service provided by the Kansan to the University community.
Today:IN HISTORY
1847· Yerba Buena renamed San Francisco
1862 US Navy's first ironclad warship, the "Monitor", launched.
1917 - First Jazz record in United States is cut.
1922 World Law Day.
1969. The Beatles last public appearance. The show took place on the roof of their Apple Studios in London but it was interrupted by police after they complaints from neighbors about the noise.
ON THE RECORD
- One tire of a KU employee's car was stashed sometime between 3:30 and 4:30 p.m., Jan. 28, in the 3300 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police said. Damage was valued at $40.
A KU student's checkbook, cellular phone ana phone card were stolen between midnight Aug. 1, 1997, and midnight Jan. 7, from the 1000 block of Maine Street, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $155.
Two KU students reported receiving several harassing phone calls in an Oliver Hall room Wednesday night, KU police said.
A KU student was arrested for operating under the influence of alcohol shortly before 2 a.m. Jan. 22 at 24th and Iowa streets, KU police said.
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"We are the bad boys of abridgement." --Matt Croke, Reduced Shakespeare Company
Lied Center Broadway and Beyond Series and SLA present
The Reduced Shakespeare Company
The Complete History of America [abridged]
Saturday, January 31, 1998, 8:00pm
ALL TICKETS 1/2 PRICE FOR STUDENTS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box
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Visit our website
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50th Anniversary
ALEXANDER HALL ASSOCIATION
1989 - 1998
K
STUDENT
UNION OF UKANS HALLEY
SENAIIL
Friday, January 30, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 3
Month honors African-American heritage
By Sara Anderson
sanderson@kansan.com
sanderson@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
African American History Month begins Sunday and will be in full swing Monday at the University of Kansas.
"We have lots of good people in the community that are hard workers who are participating in KU activities," said Julius Williams, assistant director of the Office of Minority Affairs and the Black Student Union adviser. "I have a strong feeling about it's success."
"African Americans in Business: A path toward empowerment, will be the theme of programs throughout the month. Williams said entrepreneurship had increased during the last few years and was important in the growth of African Americans in society.
"Emphasizing the importance of entrepreneurship is important to the economic growth of African Americans," Williams said. "Students need to know that what they are learning in college can be utilized for their own future and allowing choices to surface."
Black Student Union president Monica Hubbard said African American History Month was important because it was often ignored during the rest of the year.
"I know that when I went to high school and the only time to learn about black history was in February, while we learn about other history throughout the year," said Hubbard, Colorado Springs, Colo., sophomore.
Williams said the month was a time to think about the impact African Americans had in society.
"It's an important time of the year to acknowledge major contributions that African Americans have performed here in the development of the United States," he said. "People need to be reminded of the positive contributions."
The Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, established in 1915, helped spawn the African American History Month, said William Tuttle, professor of American studies and history. The organization was established by Carter G. Woodson, a famous black historian born to former slaves.
"Woodson was really the father of Black history," Tuttle said. "He really got it going."
In 1926, Negro History Week was established during the week of Abraham Lincoln's birthday, partly to honor Lincoln and the emancipation of the slaves, Tuttle said. He said the week expanded to African American History Month in the early 1970s because of increased interest in African American history.
Tuttle said it was crucial for all of society to appreciate African American History Month.
"It's important for African Americans to appreciate their own history," he said. "But it's also important for other races to appreciate their history. It helps combat racism."
Calendar of Events
African American History Month Calendar
Eah. 1, 6, 7 and 8
The play "Flyin' West." Pearl Cleage's tale of the women of Nicodemus.
When: 2:30 p.m. Sun, Feb. 1 and 8 8 p.m.
Fri., Feb. 6 8 p.m. Sat, Feb. 7 Admission; Feb.
1 and 8 — $10 and $11; Feb. 6 and 7 — $12
and $13
Feb.2.
7 p.m. — Keynote speaker Dennis Kimbro at the Spencer Museum of Art. African American History Month theme.
Feb. 3.
7 p.m. - KU Diversity Dialogue: "Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice." Kansas Room at the Kansas Union, Paul Kuel will lecture Erne.
Feb.4.
5:30 p.m. — Panel Discussion: "A Glorious Past and a Promising Future," in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union, Focus on the historical development of black Greek organizations. Free.
/ p.m. — Workshop: "Corporate Conduct/Business Etiquette." Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union. Free.
7 p.m. Workshop: "Black Women in the West" Lawrence Public Library auditorium. Highlighting contributions of African American women in the West. Free
Noon — Workshop: "Blacks in the West." Multicultural Resource Center auditorium. Depiction of men and women who were an integral part of the Western frontier.
Feb.6.
1 p.m. — Music entertainment, Lied Center.
Presentation of Top 40 songs, Free.
3 p.m. — Play: "Color Doesn't Matter." Lied Center. Focus on the lives of two college students and the challenges they face. Free.
6 p.m. — Dialogue on Racism. Lied Center.
Free. For more information call BSU at 864-3984
Feb. 7
10:30 a.m. — Rock Climbing. Robinson Center. Big Brothers Big Sisters are invited to "rock climb." Free. For more information call Jason Krone at 864-0792
7 p.m. — Panel Discussion. "ENTREPRENEURSHIP: The Future is Now." Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union, Free.
7 p.m. — Panel discussion: "Brotherhood" Frontier Room, Burge Union. Iota Phi Theta will lead discussion on sensitive issues concerning brotherhood in the 1990s.
earning brotherhood in the 1990s. Free.
Feb. 11
Feb.10
7 p.m. "Second Annual HOOP IT UP." Robinson Center. Fee.
Feb.11
Feb.17
7 p.m. — Panel discussion: "Attending a Brother's Graduation, Not his Funeral." Kansas Room at the Kansas Union. Ita Phi Theta will lead discussion on graduation and retention rates among African-American KU students. Free.
7 p.m. — Lecture: "LIBERATION EDUCATION:
A Strategy for the 21st Century." Alderson
Auditorium at the Kansas University. Free.
Feb. 10
Feb.19-22
3:30 p.m. — Lecture: "The Original Black Jews, Then and Now." Regionalist Room at the Kansas Union. Free.
21st Annual Big 12 Conference on Black Student Government: "Black Love...Restoring the Essence of the Black Family." At the University of Nebraska. For more information call BSU at 864-3984. Free.
Feb. 24
7 p.m. — Poetry and prose readings: "An Evening of Unity Though Poetry." Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas University. Free.
Feb.25
12:15 p.m. — Art tour, Spencer Museum of Art. Chancellor Hemenway will give a half-hour gallery talk on the recent acquisition "Portrait of Hugh Samson" by Augusta Savage. Free.
Feb 26
7 p.m. — Panel Discussion: "ENTREPRENEURSHIP: Priorities for the 21st Century" Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Feb. 27
Feb. 27
- Inaugural Banquet — Reception at 5:30, dinner at 6 p.m. Adams Alumni Center. Establishment of a new chapter of the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History at the University. For more information call Katie Woods at 864-3990.
8 p.m. — Gospel Extravaganza, Swarthout
Recital Hall at Murphy Hall. Inspirational
Gospel Voices will be featured. Free.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Kansan
Published daily since 1912
Lindsey Henry, Editor Marc Harrell, Business manager
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Friday, Jan. 30, 1998
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Editorials
Election commission's code wrongs the rights of student candidates
The draft of the elections code specifies that no student shall campaign on any paved portion of campus unless they have permission from a passer by.
In other words, campaigners have the right to speak on the grass but not on the sidewalk. This rule is ludicrous and should be repealed at the election code hearings on Monday. It is contrary to campaigner's rights — to say nothing of the rights of the grass.
The impetus behind the code is obvious; elections are a crazy time when students are pestered by campaigners. No one who has been on campus can forget the swarm of campaigners schmoozing en masse on Wescoe Beach. It is, to be sure, a pain.
But we — along with the Supreme Court — must balance the Constitutional right to free speech against the
The freedom to speak is ours whether we stand on grass or pavement or have permission
lesser right not to be annoyed. Campaigners may be irritating, but that's a small inconvenience compared to limiting a First-Amendment right.
We don't need anyone's permission to exercise our right of expression; we don't even need a burning permit to torch a flag. Religious nuts, firebrand wackos or even students running for a campus office have the right to occupy a spot in a public space — be it pavement or grass — and speak, no matter whom it annoys.
The University claims it is dedicated
to the free exchange of ideas. But in reality, that's only true if you stand in the right place at the right time and have permission to speak. That type of regulation has done so much for people in Moscow, Havana and Tiananmen Square.
The elections commissioner, Brad Finkeldeel, is a former vice president of Kansas State University. To be fair, this part of the code was enacted under the former elections commissioner, not Finkeldeel. But Finkeldeel, who was vice president for two years and thus, two campaigns, should know better than to allow the commission to further this violation of student's rights. The rule should be changed this year.
Protests will be heard by the elections commission at 2 p.m. Monday at the English Room in the Kansas Union.
Andy Obermueller for the editorial board
Nipping chemical castration in the bud
Chemical castration is a key component of Attorney General Carla Stovall's new sexual offender proposal. Aside from being inefficient and ineffective, we find that this method of dealing with sexual offenders doesn't deal with the root causes of sex crimes. The proposal raises serious ethical questions.
Individuals convicted of sex crimes such as rape, incest and aggravated indecent liberties are identified as sexual offenders in Kansas. The state's 1994 Violent Sexual Predator Act, affirmed by the Supreme Court and a model for other states, allows confining a sexual offender for treatment after prison. However, the attorney general seeks to tread beyond this law through mandatory chemical castration of certain sexual offenders.
Attorney General Carla Stovall goes too far in her noble quest to stop sexual predators
Chemical castration is a chemical treatment in which an injection is given to the offender on a biweekly basis. This treatment decreases the production of testosterone to pre-puberty levels, supposedly decreasing sexual tendencies.
Stovall's legislation establishes authority for judges or the parole board to mandate chemical castration as a condition probation or parole. This may appear a viable method of decreasing recidivism, but it is ineffective.
crimes are committed for more than sexual reasons, such as a need for violence, aggression or degradation of the victim. No medical evidence proves this procedure will prevent recidivism. A better alternative is prolonging psychological treatment to more effectively eliminate a criminal's motivations.
First, chemical castration doesn't solve the root of sex crimes. These
Experts admit chemical castration will not be effective for all sexual offenders. Because cases vary, it's impossible to determine who should undergo this procedure or even which experts should be the decision-makers.
Chemical castration is an unrealistic proposal. It oversteps the boundaries of imprisonment and treatment by entering the sphere of human biological alterations, that smack of Brave New World.
Kansan staff
Nadia Mustafa for the editorial board
Paul Eakins ... Editorial
Andy Obermuerler ... Editorial
Andrea Albright ... Neus
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"One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and if possible, speak a few reasonable words." — Goethe
Letters Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify 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 letters 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 Paul Eakins (eakins@kansan.com) or Andy Obermueller (andyo@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff (opinion@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
Roommate decision affects you,your CDs
Think carefully. You may be making the most important decision about your life for the next year. Take heed and look carefully when deciding about future roommates.
Perspective
LAUREN DAVISON
During the spring semester, most students get a jump on next year's living arrangements. The earlier, the better. If you are moving out of the dorms, scholarship halls, a studio or even an unpalatable Greek experience, you need to know what you are getting into. For those of you ditching a bad roommate, don't make the same mistake twice. Be picky. Be choosy. This is going to be someone with access to your home, your phone, your remote, your
Jenny Oakson
opinion@kansan.com
pets, your CDs, your guns — it's OK to be anal.
First things first: Be practical. Sure, the stoner down the hall may seem generous when offering to smoke you up, but could you live with all sorts of sketchy people in and out of your apartment, dozens of burritos missing from your side of the freezer or stolen lamps for home-grown agricultural experiments? These could be problems. Ask yourself if you could study comparative politics with Phish constantly in the background.
Maybe you could. I don't want to sound judgmental. And you probably would save on the water bill for the lack of shower use.
The same distasteful troubles apply to lushes. You may have the time of your life dancing on bar stools with a kind-hearted boozer from chem lab. But don't disregard the countless number of trashy men and/or women that person takes home at the end of the binge. Let me tell you firsthand, when a man goes home with a less than aesthetically appealing roommate of yours, he is not too happy when he wakes up in your apartment. You just don't want to be there when a one-night stand demands money from your roomie and ends up hawking your microwave for his services.
with someone while intoxicated. The other person always remembers.
Also concerning alcohol — don't decide to live
Try to remember all of the idiosyncrasies from your last roommate and multiply them by 10. Is someone who constantly bums cigarettes going to be able to pay rent? If he has a fiancée in Chicago, will the phone bill be more than $700? Should you be alarmed if while hanging out this person asks to borrow a diaper? This is serious stuff. It's business. Put your manners aside and interrogate the witness. You could be pleasantly surprised.
Perhaps you plan on living with your best friend since kindergarten, and you are positive you know all of her little secrets. You don't. When you live with a person, you experience them. Sure, I could tell you roommate horror stories, but everyone knows someone with a roommate from hell. You may think you are an accepting person, but the amoyancies build. First it's their love of boiled hot dogs, then their addiction to "To MTV Raps," then it's the stench emanating from their room. Sooner or later, you find out she's a convicted felon and you have one less bridesmaid.
And whatever you do, don't live with a significant other — that's just asking for a breakup. Even if you plan on marrying that person — save yourself. You have time, take it easy. You may have picked out the china pattern already, but just imagine what it would be like if you did break it off. Picture yourself watching your ex get picked up for a date.
Don't be scared. It is possible to find good roommates.
And let's face it, anything is better than the dorms. I wish you luck. And don't forget to get a co-signer, because if your roommate leaves and refuses to pay rent, you have to take them to Small Claims Court — one month at a time. The one thing that makes roommate trouble the worst kind of stress is that it affects your home. Having to fight about dirty dishes and phone calls every day can take its toll. No matter where your parents live, you live in Lawrence, and your life is heavily influenced by where and how you live.
Majors are like chips no one can choose just one
Jenny Oakson is an Overland Park sophomore in journalism.
But since you make that choice seven nights a
One of the most important choices that you will make during your college career is, of course, light beer or dark beer.
But since you make that a week, that leaves another choice of lesser importance. I am referring, of course, to your major.
The importance of choosing one's major cannot be emphasized enough. In fact, it is such an important choice that it is usually made more than once. The process that the average student goes through in making this highly important choice looks something like this:
Mrs. Karen
Freshman year: Undecided Sophomore year: Undecided
Tina Connolly opinion@kansan.com
Junior year: English, Painting, Pure Math, Skydiving, English and Skydiving, Beer Drinking, Belching and Flunking
Senior year; Undecided
This process then continues for several more years, which are called the fifth-year senior year, the I'm-Scared-of-the-Real-World year, and Insanity. The last year is sometimes called the Death from Cirrhosis of the Liver year, but this depends on whether you went to the local bar every night or stayed in and read too many 17th century Russian plays.
Once you've reached your ninth year of college, and have finally made a thoughtful decision as to your career choice, you will finally be free to concentrate on other important things, such as the rising price of liquor and your receding hairline.
With good luck, you will also have the opportunity to consider other things such as whether you might like to graduate with honors.
Unfortunately for some of you that phrase stopped after "graduate."
For those of you who are still thinking about graduating with honors, all I can say is that you have a better attention span than the rest of us.
For even if you might like to graduate with honors, there will be many dark and dreary impediments in your way. The chief obstacle will be the fact that you have an overall grade point average less than your age while still in preschool, and a major grade point average less than your age while still in the womb.
Some of the other impediments will include the 100 permission forms that must be filled out in triplicate and will require the signatures of everyone who ever had anything to do with you college career, including your second grade teacher and your dog.
And perhaps you have the right combination of persistence and single-mindedness necessary to actually succeed.
The coursework, however, is of minor importance. It is your tenacity in form filling-out that will determine whether or not you will graduate with honors, or indeed, at all.
Oddly enough, one of these is the Art and Design department, which has created staff positions that are devoted entirely to the task of not signing forms. Their duties require them to be no closer than 20 feet to their desk at all times and to take lunch breaks that last a minimum of three hours. Plus, they are forced to absent themselves from the building on Fridays, Mondays, full moons, Jewish holidays, and any day with nice weather.
After all, it is the multitude of forms at this university that demonstrate whether you are fit for the real world. Some majors even create extra forms solely for the purpose of weeding out the unfit.
These red-tape techniques are undoubtedly the most effective on art students. They are incapable of dealing with university bureaucracy and it is better that they be elected from the art program.
In conclusion, choosing your major is very important. Maybe it's even more important than the shade of your beer or having actual information between your introduction and conclusion.
Tina Connolly is a Lawrence senior in French and English — at least this week.
Feedback
Parking miscommunication forced student to cancel test
I had to cancel a graduate research test to move my car for fear of getting towed. I had paid for parking in the lot west of the Burge Union at a meter. My test began to run past the time I intended. I tried to call the parking department, only to find them closed. I was then routed to the police dispatcher, who had no real way or authority to help me. All I wanted was to let someone know that I would be there soon to move my car. It became apparent that no one knew whether they were towing or if my message could be
I had to cancel the very thing this University is set up to do: give me an education.
relayed in time to prevent it.
I therefore had to cancel the rest of the test in order to save a towing fee I could not afford.
I've paid many dollars to this University and the parking department. All I was asking for was a small allowance to be made.
I wonder which is more important: students and education or making parking for a basketball ball game?
I comply with all of the regulations. I simply want to use the facilities I pay for.
The department will probably say that its signs were posted so everyone should have known. But what happens to the person whose plans change shortly before the deadline?
It's a sad thing when students
with legitimate needs have to live in fear of the parking department.
Whom can I call with some authority after the department closes?
There seems to be a mentality that has forgotten what the university was put here for — education.
.
Robert A. Ore Lawrence graduate student
Friday, January 30, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 5
Penalties don't float with casino fans
Boats may be forced to pull plug on slots
By Jeremy M. Doherty
jdoherty@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
Kansas City's "boats in moats" may have been dealt a bad hand.
In November, the Missouri Supreme Court decided games of chance at casinos located on manmade ponds were in violation of constitutional language. Casinos floating in actual river water, such as the Argosy Casino on the Missouri River, meet the specifications prescribed by the law.
Following the ruling, the Missouri Gaming Commission, which previously issued licenses to six casino boats in Kansas City, Mo., recommended disciplinary measures against the boats.
Although the commission has not dealt out any penalties, the casinos could be forced to unplug their slot machines.
University of Kansas students who frequent the boats are suspicious of actions against the casinos
Jerry Jackson, Lansing sophomore, and his family play the slot machines at Station Casino and the Flamingo Hilton.
"It itens that the commission initially said that they could be placed there," Jackson said. "Then all of a sudden, they realized that this was not acceptable. So, I'd say that it's the commission's responsibility, not the casinos. They gave them the right to build the boats."
During a hearing last week, casino attorneys asked Cole County Circuit Judge Byron Kinder for state compensation if the casinos were forced to remove games of chance. Casino attorneys claim slot machines and other electronic gambling games provide the casinos with two-thirds of their income. Kinder has not yet ruled on the matter, and he is expected to set a date for a new hearing within in the next few weeks.
Mike Pace, Lawrence junior and occasional slot player, said it was ironic that the games of chance caused this much controversy.
"They say those slot machines have a 98- to 99-percent payback
rate," Pace said. "I could sit at one of those all day, pumping money in, and still not get any money back."
Mark Winters, Wichita senior, said the removal of the s't machines would not affect his attendance.
"I would still go, because I mainly play blackjack and, once in a while, craps," Winters said. "I rarely play the slots, but it is all just ridiculous. They should just leave it up to the casinos if they want to have slots or not."
"They should just leave it up to the casinos if they want to have the slots or not."
Mark Winters wichita senior
Troubled waters
These Kansas City, Missouri riverboat casinos may face penalties following a recent court ruling:
P Flamingo Hilton Riverboat
H Harrah's Casino
S Sam's Town Casino
St Station Casino Kansas City
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M D. Bradishaw/KANSAN
Smart cards may be dealt at spring enrollment
Chip to store information for banks, bills and buses
By Gerry Doyle
gdoyle@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
Students and faculty at the University of Kansas soon will have a new way of looking at themselves.
Although the pictures on students' KU identification cards will be different, there will also be bigger changes. The University is switching from magnetic-strip ID cards to cards containing a microchip. The cards could be in use by April, said Lindy Eakin, associate provost.
The new cards would replace the current KUIDs, and will be distributed at enrollment this spring.
The new cards will carry the student's information and eventually will give students the ability to purchase snacks at a vending machine or CDs on Massachusetts Street.
"It will be both a debit and a smart card," said Nancy Miles, campus card manager. "It will be an ID for all faculty, staff and students. Our hope is to eventually take it off-campus."
The University will utilize the services of two vendors, a bank and the card's manufacturer. The bank will manage the financial aspects of the card.
Both vendors have not officially signed the contract for the smart card services. Cost of the new cards has not been released.
The smart card utilizes a chip with multiple
"purses" for keeping track of different accounts, Miles said. With the chip, students will no longer — if they choose — have to carry around vending cards, ATM cards and an ID card.
All these features will be included in the new program, said Diane Goddard, director of purchasing. Because the chip can keep track of so many items, possibilities for expansion are boundless, Goddard said.
"It can be used for bus passes, athletic tickets, a phone card," she said. "It's only limited by the imagination. We're intent on having this happen sooner than later."
The smart card also will be distributed to others besides students and faculty, and will have security measures like a PIN to prevent exploitation. Eakin said.
"We'll sell them for concessions, sell them to the alumni association," Eakin said. "There will be a fair amount of security employed in the cards. We have some pretty smart people here, and don't want the cards to be misused."
The cards will be useful for KU students, but will not be without drawbacks, said Mark Ashbrook, Lawrence graduate student.
"On the one hand, it seems like a really good idea," Ashbrook said. "It might be a convenience for students. But it seems that if a student were dependent on the card and lost it, it would be a bigger detriment than the current IDs."
Kevin Reynolds, El Dorado Springs, Mo., senior, said the cards were a novel idea, but they wouldn't add that to much student life.
"I don't know if it's really necessary," Reynolds said. "I don't see that it's that big of an advantage."
KU will make the switch to a microchip containing "smart card" during spring enrollment.
KU smart card
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KU
KU
KANSAS
IMA J. HAWK
4019 7662 0835 779304
S
1. Replaces current KUIDs.
2. Serves as a bus pass or athletic ticket.
3. Functions as a debit card.
4. For use in making campus purchases and in campus laundry and vending machines.
5. Eventually, could be used to make
Students at Kansas State University already have the smart cards. The switch to the new cards was made about a year ago, but right now services offered by the card aren't what they were billed as, said Kipp Vannaman, a Kansas City, Mo., junior at K-State.
6. Uses a personal identification number
"They don't do jack for us," Vannaman said.
"As of yet, they don't do anything the old cards with the magnetic strip didn't do. They look better, though."
M. D. Bradshaw / KANSAN
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5 Titanic II **E** 4:00 — 6:00 — 11:00
6 Great Expossession II **F** 1:20 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 11:55
7 Titanic II **G** 1:20 4:00 — 9:00 — 11:00
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Section A·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Fridav. January 30.1998
COLLEGE BOWL CERTATIO COLLEGIORUM JOOCUS UNIVERSALIS MENTIS
CERTATIO COLLEGIORUM
JOCCUS UNIVERSALIS MENTIS
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COME BE A PART OF OUR TRIVIA WORLD SATURDAY. FEB. 7
SIGN UP IN SUA OFFICE FIVE PERSON TEAMS/$25 PER TEAM HTTP:WWW.UKANS.EDU/~SUA CALL 864-3477 FOR MORE INFO.
60th Anniversary
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The Surge Spring Break RV stopped at the Burge Union yesterday to distribute promotional material and entertain students. The University of Kansas is one of about 50 stops on the RV's tour. Photo by Lizzie Weber/KANSAN
Green machine surges to Burge
By Sara Anderson sanderson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer
A bright green 30-foot Coachman RV stopped student traffic yesterday in front of the Burge Union.
The Surge Spring Break promotional tour was on campus from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., distributing spring break information. Students could play video games and attempt to win hats, shirts, key chains and Surge cola.
Howard Milton, graduate adviser for Student Union Activities, said the promotion had been successful.
junior, said he did not care about the promotions brought to the University.
"It doesn't bother me," he said. "I really don't care if they come or not. I'm impressed that they bring the video games and an entire RV here. It's a lot of money to spend on nothing."
"We've had about 200 people so far today," he said around 1 p.m. "We would've had a better turnout at the Kansas Union, but it is good for the Burge Union, it sometimes gets neglected."
Students had mixed reactions about the promotional event. Bank
Telly Teague, Kansas City, Kan. senior, said it gave students a distraction.
"I think it gives you something to do," she said. "I don't usually go. It makes me think school is just for selling stuff."
Jacob Arnold, Overland Park
"It gets the product name out," Murphy said. "It's all about marketing."
Brandy Mogle, Basehor junior, said she usually went to the displays.
The purpose of the tour is to help get students ready for spring break. The tour began Jan. 20 and will visit approximately 50 college campuses. Surge will also have "unrest" areas on the way to Panama City and South Padre Island featuring tents with music, food, refreshments and prizes.
"Some are tacky and corny, but I want to see what they're giving away for free," she said.
Jon Murphy, who works for Contemporary Marketing Inc., helped organize the event, said the promotions helped market products.
Sue Buckley, manager of student programs and SUA adviser, said the promotional tour followed the established procedure set by the University Events Committee to use outside vendors.
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"According to University policies, student groups have to reap some sort of benefit," she said. "We set up a table giving details about SUA's trip to Panama City for spring break and also are getting free beverage products from Coke for the bands and crew for Day On the Hill."
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Department of
THE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE and the
Music & Dance
The University of Kansas
Present
DIE FLEDERMAUS
BY JOHANN STRAUSS
8:00 pm
Thursday-Sunday
February 5-8, 1998
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in the KU box offices, Murphy Hall:
864-3992, Lead Center, 864-ARTS
SUA Office, 864-3477, public $16
all students $8, senior citizens $15
both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders
Stage Direction by John Stanilunae
Musical Direction by Mark Parrell
Soenic Design by Ann Hookenterry
Costume Design by Delores Ringer
Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Mairet
in featuring the KJ Symphony Orchestra
Brian Priestman, Conductor
English Translation
by Balth and Thomas Martin
THE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
The University of Kansas
Department of
Music Dance
Present
DIE FLEDERMAUS
BY JOHANN STRAUSS
8:00 pm
Thursday-Sunday
February 5-8, 1998
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in
the KU box offices. Murphy Hall
864 3982 Lied Center, 864 ARTS
SUA Office, 864 3477 public $16
all students $8 senior citizens $15
both VISA and MasterCard are
accepted for phone orders
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Easy. Does it.
1
Friday, January 30, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 7
KU webmasters link talents
By Agron Knopf
By Aaron Knopf
knopf@kansan.com
knopf staff write
University of Kansas Web administrators recently met to pool resources and share expertise on building Web sites.
KU Web Administrator Julie Loats organized the Jan. 21 meeting to encourage fellowship and cooperation among campus Webmasters. Loats manages the KU Facts Web site, an online collection of information about the University as well as a gateway to other University Web sites.
Loats said 60 Webmasters attended the meeting and discussed topics such as good Web design practices and ways they could help each other.
"My hope is that this group will take on a life of its own, meet monthly, and eventually elect officers," Loats said.
One of the main topics discussed at the meeting was the need for University-affiliated Web sites to contain some basic content.
"There are not any Web police at KU," she said. "This is not what this group is about."
However, Loats said all KU Web sites should include basic information such as the University's name, the date the site was last modified, a contact person and a postal address.
Derek Welsh, Design and Construction Management's CAD manager, attended the meeting and agreed that sites needed some consistency.
"The University shouldn't govern what every department does, but every department should realize that it is representing the University." Welsh said.
Welsh said the process of sharing and communicating would keep Webmasters from duplicating each other's efforts.
Welsh's department developed a Web-based campus map. If he presented the map during the Webmaster meeting, other Webmasters would know to link to this map instead of developing one themselves.
"When you're doing a Web site you get to feeling you are on your own," Simons said. "It's nice to know that there's a support group out there when you get stuck."
Thelma Simons, school of education network administrator, has been active in another campus computing group, KU Network Administrators. She was glad to see the development of a similar group for Webmasters.
To find out when KU Webmasters meet again, contact Loats through email at jmoloats@ukans.edu
Trio brings history lesson to Lied
Reduced Shakespeare crams American past into 90-minute show
By Marcelo Vilela
mvilela@kansan.com
Kansas staff writer
To be or not ... Nah, too long.
The Reduced Shakespeare Company, a three-person theatrical act that performs abridged versions of Shakespeare, American history and Biblical acts internationally, will perform at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Lied Center.
Tickets are $20 and $25 for the general public, $10 and $12.50 for University of Kansas students, Haskell students and children under 12 years of age.
The company promises a "90-minute roller coaster ride through the glorious quagmire that is American history."
Wearing minimalist costumes and lots of velcro — each member of the group plays about a dozen characters — Reed Martin, Austin Techenor and Matthew Croke will cram 500 years of American history into one perform
ance.
"We get long, boring topics and make them short and funny," said Martin, one of the show's writers. "We cut all the minor characters and get fast to the sex and violence, which is what everybody wants to see."
Croke will play most of the female characters.
"He's the youngest of the group and his father used to walk around the house in women's clothes just for fun," Martin said. "It runs in the genes."
The group used to perform at Renaissance Fairs in California.
"That's where we developed our style," Martin said.
They created their company in 1981. In 1993, they recreated the "Complete the History of America (Abridged)" taking historical facts and giving them an irreverent spin.
"When we started out, we abridged the works of Shakespeare. Then we decided to do something American," Martin said.
One of the group founders lives in England, so the company has an English branch, which has been touring Europe
Tomorrow will be the company's first performance at the University. The next
shows are scheduled at Michigan Tech University and in Bermuda.
Martin said two references to Kansas would be made in the show. One is about the Wizard of Mo, and the other is about Bob Dole.
The condensed history class will cover all the big marks of history, from the creation of the world up to Monica Lewinsky, Martin said.
"From the Big Bang to the big bang," he said.
The company has appeared on NBC's Today Show, Entertainment Tonight and CNN's Show Biz This Week and has created shows for the BBC. The company's voices also are featured in Steven Spielberg's animated film Batto.
Even with all this exposure, Martin said he considered his group only slightly famous. They are working on projects with the Walt Disney Company and the London Weekend television.
The company's next project is "The Millennium of Music," a shortened version of 1,000 years in music.
The company warns the show is not recommended for people with heart ailments, back problems, English degrees, inner ear disorders and those inclined to motion sickness.
Dial
Paramedic Unit 3
Paramedics lift a KU student into an ambulance. The woman passed out yesterday in Watson Library.
Photo by Tara Bradley/KANSAN
Student passes out in library
Watson retrieval employee found by fellow worker
Kansan staff report
A KU student was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital after she was found unconscious in Watson Library yesterday afternoon.
The call came in at 1:04 p.m., KU police said.
The woman was treated and released from the hospital.
Diana Dyal, who works in Watson's cataloging department, discovered the woman in the second floor women's restroom shortly
He can came in at 1.04 p.m., KU police said. "The best thing I could do for her was remain calm," Dyal said.
Dyal and another staff member stayed with the victim.
"I was taking her pulse and making sure she was still breathing." Dval said.
The victim was starting to regain consciousness when the paramedics arrived. She told an officer she had a heart condition, Dyal said.
"She was very,very weak." Dval said.
The woman works in Watson's retrieval services.
Recycle your Daily Kansan
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1998 Career and Employment Fair
Wednesday, February 4th, 10:00 am - 3:00 pm * Kansas Union Ballroom Full-time, Part-time, Internships, Summer Employment, Volunteer OPEN TO ALL MAJORS
Sponsored by Career & Employment Services, 110 Burge Union • 864-3624 • www.ukans.edu/~upc/cef.html
Attend the Career Fair Information Session/Learn how to get the most out of a career fair:
Tuesday, February 3rd, 4:00 pm, Pioneer Room - Burge Union
Alisco/Tampa/Robert Hall
Adecco - The Employment People
Aerotek
Allied Signal
American Airlines
American Backhaulers
American Companies
American Teleconferencing Serv.
Austin Nichols Technical Tempes
BDM Petroleum Technologies
The Cleaning - Basic Employees
Bayer Corporation
Best Computer Consultants, Inc.
Blair Consulting Group, Inc.
Boeing, Inc.
Budget Car & Truck Rental
CCH, Inc.
Camps Airy and Louise
Camp Birchwood
Camp Chippewa for Boys
Camp Kamaji for Girls, Inc.
Camp Lincoln/Camp Hubert
Camp Towanda
Camp Wood YMCA
Cape Cod Sea Camps
Career Services, Inc.
Century Personnel
City of Lawrence, Kansas
Commerce BankContemporary
Group/Sandstone Ampitheatre
Deluxe Corporation
U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Se-
cumenical Christian Ministries
Enterprise Rent-A-Car
Federal Reserve Bank of KC
Ferguson Enterprises, Inc.
Franklin Financial
Friendly Pines Camp
Full Employment Council
Garmin International
Gear for Sports
General Services Administration
Geoaccess, Inc.
Gilbert-Magill Company
Hallmark Cards, Inc.
Harrah's NKC Casino
Hastings
Heartland Council of Camp Fire
House of Lloyd
IBM Corporation
IBP, Inc.
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Jenny Craig
Jewish Comm. Ctr. of Greater KC
Jones Store Company
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Kansas City, Missouri Police Dept.
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Mary Kay Cosmetics
Merck & Company, Inc.
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Monsanto
Moog Automotive
Multi-Service Corporation
Muscular Dystrophy Association
NK Lawn and Garden Co.
Navy Recruiting Dist. Kansas City-
Officer Program
New England Financial Group
Northern Reflections
NW Mutual Life/Baird Securities-Ert.
NW Mutual Life-Hames Agency
Oklahoma Dept of Transportation
Osco Drug/Sav-on Drugs
Output Technologies
Overland Park Police Department
Pepsi-Cola
Philip Morris, USA
Pizza Hut of America, Inc.
Principal Financial Group
Pro Staff
Quintiles, Inc.
Robert E. Miller Company
Rock Springs 4-H Center
Russel Stover Candies, Inc.
St. Louis County Dept. of
Planning
Schlumberger
Sears, Roebuck and Company
Signature Staffing
SW Bell Telephone Company
Sports & Social Clubs of the U.S.
Sprint - Technology Services
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus
Center
State Farm Insurance
Steak 'n Shake
Sunflower Group
Tetra Tech EM, Inc.
Texas Instruments, Inc.
The Consultants, Inc.
Timber Lake Camps
TouchNet Info. Systems, Inc.
United Parcel Service
United States Air Force
United States Army/Army Reserve
United States Marine Corps
Walgreens
Xerox - The Document Company
Worlds of Fun/Oceans of Fun
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1029
Massachusetts
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PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
928 Mass. Downtown
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The Etc. Shop
The University of Kansas
Theatre for
Young People
Presents the
U.S. Premiere of
Little Monster
by Jasmine Dubé
translated by Maureen LaBouté
Directed and Designed
by Jeanne Klein
Public Performances
7:00 p.m. Saturday, January 31, 1998
1:30 p.m. Sunday, February 1, 1998
100 Smith Hall, KU Campus
General admission to seats are now on sale in the KU box office.
Used center for ARTS, music hall, 644-9922, SCA office 504-147,
$10 public $15 students $15 non-citizens; SSA and mastercard
are accepted for phone orders.
C
▶ entertainment
▶ events
▶ issues
▶ music
▶ art
hilltopics
friday ◄
1.30.98 ◄
eight.a ◄
the university
For the sake of argument
Philosophy professor asks questions behind abortion
By the end of last year
I will have taught at
Berkshire University.
I will teach at
UConn University.
I will teach at
Villanova University.
THE PAPER
Ideas from Don Marquis' paper, "Why Abortion is Immoral."
"This essay sets out an argument that purports to show, as well as any argument in ethics can show, that abortion is, except possibly in rare cases, seriously immoral that it is in the same category as killing an innocent adult human being."
"Since a fetus possesses a property, the possession of which in adult human beings is sufficient to make killing an adult human being wrong, abortion is wrong."
"The argument [in this paper] rests neither on religious claims nor on Papal dogma. It is not subject to the objection of 'speciesism.' Its soundness is compatible with the moral permissibility of euthanasia and contraception. It deals with our intuitions concerning young children."
story by marcelo vilela $\bullet$ photo by tara bradle)
"What primarily makes killing wrong is neither its effect on the murderer nor its effect on the victim's friends and relatives, but its effect on the victim.
The loss of one's life is one of the greatest losses one can suffer."
"Clearly, it is wrong to kill adult human beings. Clearly, it is not wrong to end the life of some arbitrarily chosen single human cell. Fetuses seem to be like arbitrarily chosen human cells in some respects and like adult humans in other respects. The problem of the ethics of abortion is the problem of determining the fetal property that settifies this moral controversy."
"The chief obstacle to the progress of the human race is the human race."
This epigram on Don Marquis' door was signed by another Don Marquis, who was a humor columnist. Even though uttered by a different Marquis, this epigram may as well the University of Kansas Marquis' philosophy about life.
The Marquis here is a professor of philosophy and author of renowned anti-abortion paper "Why Abortion is Immoral."
Marquis is a specialist in applied ethics and deals with current problems such as abortion and euthanasia. He is interested in coming to grips with moral issues in contemporary society.
Marquis has written ad nauseam about abortion. His academic paper, written in 1989, is cited in 32 anthologies about moral problems for ethics classes. It defends the anti-abortion position.
Even though Marquis is not involved in any anti-abortion activism group, he is a fierce advocate for the cause.
"I'm not specially interested in the politics of the issue," he said. "I'm interested in the philosophy of it.
In Marquis' opinion, the recent 25th anniversary of the Supreme Court case Roe vs. Wade ruling that made it legal to have abortions in this country is a disaster.
"The court in Roe vs. Wade assumed that one could not show in any objective way that the fetus was a person," he said. "I think you can show, independently of religious considerations, that the fetus is a person."
Based on that line of thinking, Marquis said he thought that the grounds for reversal of the ruling were simple. In his opinion, Roe vs. Wade allowed for homicide.
To Marquis, one always had the right to stay alive, whether one was an adult or a fetus.
"It doesn't look like age makes a difference in respect to having the right to life," he said.
The suggestions to differentiate the fetus from out-of-the-womb people, Marquis said, make as much sense as saying that Jews don't have a right to life.
"The criteria for denying the fetus the right to life are no better than those the Nazis used to deny the Jews the right to life," he said. "I decided to write about abortion because I thought I had something to say about the subject that other people had not said."
His paper is an abbreviated theory for the wrongness of killing. In it, Marquis uses strictly philosophical arguments to defend the fetus' right to life. Differing from some other anti-abortion advocates, he doesn't use religi-
ious or moralistic arguments to defend his position.
"Who knows whether the fetus has a soul or not?" he said. "Who knows if you have a soul? I don't know."
According to Marquis' paper, abortion eliminates the future possibilities of the unborn fetus.
"The reason why it's wrong to kill people in general is because they have a valuable future," he said. "The fetus you once were had a valuable future, and part of that is your present life, which you are now valuing."
Marquis disputed the standard abortion-rights' argument about the morality of abortion: if the fetus isn't a person, abortion is moral.
In the philosophical definition, a person is a being who is rational, can communicate in complex ways and have notions of his or her future. This definition excludes infants, yet it's not considered morally correct to kill newborns. Marquis said.
Even though Marquis supports antiabortion notions, he's not satisfied with the traditional abortion debates. Abortion-rights advocates and antiabortion activists don't say much about why killing is wrong, he said.
"The line that the fetus is a human life, therefore abortion is wrong, is a wrong line, too," he said. "There are things that are human and alive, and it's perfectly all right to kill them, like cancer cells."
As his paper approaches its first decade of existence, Marquis said he looked back at it and realized some of his arguments could be better developed today.
"There are better ways of dealing with why contraception is OK than the way I dealt with it," he said.
His paper deliberately omits cases such as abortion when the woman's life is threatened and abortion after rape.
"Rapes are tricky," Marquis said. "In non-rape cases, the woman has some responsibility for being pregnant. In rape cases, people make the case that it would not be wrong to have an abortion. I don't know if I'm convinced by it."
Marquis has been a professor at the University since 1967, after receiving his doctorate from Indiana University. This semester, Marquis was assigned to teach a class about medical ethics and one about ethical theory.
He only required that his students read his paper when he taught introductory ethics classes.
"It's one of the absurdities at KU," he said. "Abortion is not a subject in the classes I'm teaching, so I haven't been teaching my paper for a couple of
"His goal in teaching is to get students engaged in philosophical arguments to defend their positions.\\ They're not graded on which position they choose, but on how well they defend it."
Anthony Genova philosophy department chairman
Karen Hachten, Omaha, Neb., junior, is taking Marquis' medical ethics class. She's been having moral conflicts with dissecting animals in her physiology lab, and she asked Marquis for assistance.
"He's an ethicist, very strong in his beliefs," Hachten said. "It's inspiring to think about these topics differently from the way you were brought up."
Anthony Genova, chairman of the philosophy department and Marquis' friend, said that some students might get upset because Marquis challenged their basic beliefs.
"His goal in teaching is to get students engaged in philosophical arguments to defend their positions," Genova said. "They're not graded on which position they choose, but on how well they defend it."
Marquis is known for taking the least supported side of any issue and then when people start supporting him, he chooses the opposite side. He would rather side with positions that are not popular than swim with the majority.
Because of his style, his classes cause positive and negative reactions, Genova said.
"That's his main motivation. He makes things interesting by making people come up with arguments to defend their points of view," he said.
"He challenged me in every single issue that has ever come up in the history of the department," Genova said. "But it's purely intellectual, and he holds no grudges against anyone."
However, Marquis' intellectual prowess is not a unanimity. Ann Cudd, associate professor of philosophy, wrote a riposte to Marquis in a paper entitled "Sensationalized Philosophy: A Reply to Marquis."
In her paper, Cudd expressed doubts about Marquis' assumptions. She advocated the rights of mothers instead of those of the fetus.
Don Marquis, professor of philosophy, leads a discussion with his philosophy class. Marquis wrote a famous anti-abortion paper which has given him national recognition
"I don't think there's anything morally wrong with killing a fetus," she said. "Abortion is more a failure to rescue rather than a case of killing. It's not immoral to fail to rescue."
"It's fun to go to conventions, people know who I am," he said. "Sometimes they like the paper, sometimes they want to argue about it, which is fine because in our society there are far too few situations where people talk about real fundamental issues."
Marquis' paper originally appeared in the Journal of Philosophy a week before federal courts were discussing obstacles to abortion. Cudd thought the Journal of Philosophy was making a sensationalist point by publishing Marquis' material.
Perhaps if they did, human race could stop being an obstacle to itself.
Sensationalist or not, Marquis' paper yielded him national recognition.
An ad in the Kansan is the best way to deliver your message to KU students
Sports Survey
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
100 YEARS OF KANSAS BASKETBALL
1898 1998
KU
KU
Sports
Friday
January 30,1998
Section:
B
Page 1
With the 100-year anniversary of Kansas basketball just around the corner, the Kansan is curious about what the fans think. Compile your list of the top five players, teams and games in Jayhawk history and e-mail us at sports@kansas.com.
SEE PAGE 6B
Pro Baseball
D
World Series MVP Livan Hernadez's life has changed dramatically since he last pitched.
Page 1
SPORTDADE
BELALLI
College Basketball
The No. 1 Duke Blue Devils slammed No. 23 Maryland 86-59 last night at Cameron Indoor Stadium.
SEE PAGE 5B
WWW.KANSAN.COM/NEWS/SPORTS
Contact the Kansan
Sports Desk: (785) 864-4810
Sports Fax: (785) 864-5261
Sports e-mail: sports@kansan.com
Sports Forum: spitforum.kansan.com
Women face top-10 team tomorrow
By Kevin C. Wilson
Kansan sportswriter
A Saturday game in Lubbock, Texas, against a top-10 team with an All-American candidate. Sound familiar? It should
Last Saturday, the Kansas women's basketball team went to Lubbock and was defeated 72-56 by No. 5 Texas Tech. The Red Raiders were led by All Amricons
Tomorrow the Jayhawks, 13-4 overall and 5-3 in Big 12 Conference play, return to Municipal Auditorium to participate in the Big 12/Pac-10 Shootout at 3 p.m. against the 10th-ranked Arizona Wildcats.
IRELAND
Like Texas Tech, Arizona, 13-4 overall and 7-2 in Pac-10 play, is led by an All-American candidate.
Jackson: Point guard like playing ranked teams
Senior forward Adia Barnes leads the Pac-10 in scoring with 22.7 points per game and paces the Wildcats with 7.1 rebounds and 2.1 steals per game.
Coach Marian Washington said Barnes
was a great player and it would be a challenge to shut her down.
"This young woman has the ability to do a great job on the low blocks. She's agile, and she can score from 15 feet and in," Washington said. "I just don't know that we can stop her one-on-one. That's how good she is."
Washington said the Wildcats were most effective when their offense was running smoothly and their deadly three-point shooters were getting open looks.
"Arizona is an unbelievable ballclub and what makes them a difficult team to play," she said. "They are very quick and their perimeter shooters can all shoot the three-point shot.
"We are going to try some half-court trapping, get out into their passing lanes and try to show them some things they are not used to seeing," Washington said.
She said she needed a great defensive effort from her team but it would be a challenge because her players seemed to be a little tired.
"We've got a few players who are playing a lot of minutes," Washington said. "I'm going to attribute some of our slow starts to us being a little tired. But I feel that we are going to be as fresh as we can possibly be going into this weekend against Arizona."
Guard Jennifer Jackson said she was looking forward to tomorrow's game, not just because it is going to be televised on ESPN2 but also because it was a great opportunity for the Jayhawks.
"It's exciting any time you get to play a top-10 team," Jackson said. "If we really go in there and play as well as we can, we have a great chance of knocking this team off."
Native sons
Williams, Frederick learn to fly on their own
By Tommy Gallaaher
By Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansan sportswriter
Scott Williams and Brad Frederick bolted from Kansas several years ago, hoping to enjoy the college experience while escaping their fathers' shadows.
Williams and Frederick, who played basketball at Lawrence High School and now are juniors at North Carolina, are the sons of Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams and athletic director Bob Frederick.
Brad Frederick said he thought about attending Tulsa, where former Kansas assistant Steve Robinson was coaching, but decided on North Carolina when his application was accepted there.
"I knew Scott wanted to go to North Carolina ever since I met him," he said. "We never planned on going to school together. It just happened that way."
Scott Williams said he wanted to go home to Chapel Hill, N.C., where he spent his childhood years.
He remembers Carmichael Arena, which was replaced by the Dean Dome in 1986. He vaguely remembers watching the likes of former Tar Heels Michael Jordan, James Worthy and Sam Perkins, but he never knew what the fuss was about.
What Williams vividly remembers is the band.
"I would just watch the band throughout the game," he said. "I don't know why the band fascinated me so much, but it did. That's all I remember from those games as a kid. Honestly."
Williams is surrounded by his entire family in North Carolina, with the exception of his father; mother, Wanda; and sister, Kimberly.
Scott had a chance to play for his father, like other sons have done earlier in the 1990s.
Brian Barone plays for his father, Tony, at Texas A&M. Pat Knight played for Bobby Knight at Indiana. And Roger Reid coached sons Randy and Robbie at Brigham Young.
Regardless, Scott said he never
2 50 ST FLO 4 15 1 FLORIDA COLLEGE
See TWO on page 2B
North Carolina guard Scott Williams, son of Kansas coach Roy Williams, drives the lane for the Tar Heels. Williams, along with Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick's son, Brad, play for North Carolina. Photo courtesy Daily Tar Heel
KU volleyball picks coach with history of winning matches
Kansan staff report
Ray Bechard, owner the highest winning percentage among all active college volleyball coaches, is Kansas' new head volleyball coach, the department of intercollegiate athletics announced yesterday.
Bechard has a .922 winning percentage in 13 season as head coach at Barton County Community College in Great Bend. He leaves Barton County with the nation's longest homecourt winning streak of 126 matches.
"The selection committee was tremendously impressed with Ray Bechard's success in competition and his emphasis on academics with the student-athlete," Amy Perko, associate athletics director said.
Bechard will replace Karen Schonewise, whose contract was not renewed after last season.
He was president of the NJCAA Volleyball Coaches association from 1989-1992 and also spent eight years as an assistant women's basketball coach at Barton County.
Bechard, 39, is a two-time National Junior College Coach of the Year and led Barton County to the NJCAA Final Four 10 times.
'Hawks to take on 'Huskers again
Bechard is a 1980 graduate of Fort Hays State University.
Nebraska first challenge as men play one home four away in 16 days
By Tommy Gallagher
"Once you get into the Big 12, there are no easy games," Robertson said. "We've won by a huge margin of victory recently, so it may look easy. But the true test for us will be in the next two weeks because we'll play four tough games on the road against teams that would love to beat us."
Guard Ryan Robertson said the team would be challenged to play the same on the road as it does in Allen Field House.
No. 5 Kansas will play at Nebraska at
2:35 p.m. Sunday afternoon, beginning
a 16-day stretch during which the team
will play four of five games on the road
Kansas coach Roy Williams said winning on the road in the Big 12 might be more difficult than in the Atlantic Coast Conference, where he worked as an assistant coach for North Carolina before coming to Kansas.
by Tommy Gallagher
tgallagher@kansan.com
Kansan sportswriter
"I think the longest home court winning streak we had when I was there was 21 games," said Williams, whose Jayhawks have won 57 consecutive games at home. "It's very hard for other teams to come in and win at the
Nebraska is 10-0 at home this season, including 3-0 in conference games. Kansas won the first meeting between the teams this season 96-76 on Jan. 3 in the field house. Forwards Raef LaFrentz, who had a broken right hand, and T.J. Pugh, who had a stress fracture in his right foot, missed the game.
field house, but it's hard for us to go on the road too."
Nebraska point guard Tyronn Lue, a preseason All-Big 12 selection, shot just 4-for 19 from the floor, but was 10-for 10 from the free throw line. He finished the game with 18 points, seven assists and seven turnovers.
Center Eric Chenowith and guard Billy Thomas each scored 19 points as five Kansas players reached double digits in scoring. Robertson scored eight points and had seven assists with just one turnover.
The Jayhawks are only a half-game ahead of Oklahoma in the conference standings, but Baylor coach Harry Miller said there was no race for the Big 12 title. He said the only Big 12 race was to see who would finish second behind Kansas.
"I don't know if we're that much better than the rest of the conference," LaFrentz said. "All I know is that if we continue to play well, we'll be fine."
Forward Paul Pierce said the team must guard against becoming overconfident after the last two games, which the Jayhawks won by an average of 43 points.
The Starting Lineup
RU
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
7-11 B 12, 23-3 overall
G RYAN ROBERTSON 6-5 JR.
G BILLY THOMAS 6-4 SR.
F PAUL PIENCE 6-7 JR.
F RAEF LAFRENTZ 6-11 JR.
C T.J. PUGH 6-8 JR.
N Huskers
Nebraska 'HUSKERS 4-3 Big 12, 13-7 overall
GREG SMITH 6-3
G CAMERON DICKINSON 6-4
F GREG Gibson 6-7
KANE OARLEY 6-8
MATT ZUMBER 6-10
C MATT ZEUNER
"We can be as good as we want to be." Pierce said after Wednesday night's 94-47 win against Baylor. "If we go out and play with that enthusiasm on the defensive end every night with more consistency, then we can play like we did tonight every night."
Davenay Sports Center = Lincoln, Neb.
TV: Ch. 9, 6.
Radio: 109.3 NBC.
Radio: 105.9 FM, 1320 AM
Jayhawks' frontcourt hoards fans' accolades
I like that, Rov
Roy Williams calls the all-guard lineup he has used on occasion this season the Chicken 'Hawks.
So in light of the Kansas guards' impressive performance Wednesday night against Baylor, I went to the dictionary hoping to find a
good scientific definition of chicken hawk that would help make a column about them more interesting.
Or maybe "A small, quick and crafty bird that is protective of its home turf."
I was hoping for something like, "A ferocious little bird that tears its prey to pieces and then stumps on it." That would have been good.
Eric Weslander
sports@kansan.com
No such luck.
All I found in Webster's was, "A hawk that preys or is believed to prey on chickens."
With all the hype surrounding Kansas' All American frontcourt, the Chicken 'Hawks can get lost in the flock.
Hmmm. Maybe Mr. Webster's definition needs a little revision. The chicken hawk should be defined as "A small, underappreciated bird that is often overshadowed by its larger relatives."
Williams calls fan favorite T.J. Pugh one of the best defenders he has ever coached. And young master Eric Chenowith is already breaking blocked-shot records.
But how about those Chicken 'Hawks, who got no respect coming into the season? All of the preseason magazines listed Kansas' frontcourt as among the best in the country, but the backcourt was nowhere to be found.
Raef LaFrentz and Paul Pierce lead the team in scoring and will collect a bunch of awards at the end of the season. Lester Earl, despite a flurry of missed monster dunks in the past few games, adds excitement and finesse to the frontcourt.
This was because of the departure of Jacque Vaughn and Jerod Haase. While everyone cried about how much they would be missed, the Chicken 'Hawks were busy improving.
Ryan Robertson averages 8.7 points per game and is second in the Big 12 with 6.3 assists per game. Vaughn posted similar numbers two years ago and was named Big Eight Conference Player of the Year.
Billy Thomas, whom one magazine called the most overrated player in the Big 12 Conference, finally has found his groove this season. If he's overrated, then I'm Martha Stewart.
With 18 points on 7-of-12 shooting, Thomas proved again Wednesday night he is the most dangerous shooter in the Big 12 and one of the most dangerous in the country. He also leads the team in steals and is second in assists.
Nick Bradford deserves a big chest-bump for his enthusiasm, tenacious defense and vast improvement from last season. I used to cover my eyes when he touched the ball; now I watch with anticipation.
C. B. McGrath, once a lonely grinning walk on at the end of the bench, is a dependable back-up to Robertson. He turns the ball over about as often as Norm Stewart smiles.
Kenny Gregory's 18-point performance Wednesday night was his most exciting this season. If his long-range shooting continues to improve, he will be one of Kansas' all-time greats.
Next year the Jayhawks will be without LaFrentz, the Big Bird himself. And from the looks of things, Pierce is as gone as a wild goose in winter.
But Robertson, Bradford and Gregory will return to the backcourt, joined by prized recruit Jeff Boschee.
Don't forget Jelani Janisse. So far he has cranked out turnovers faster than a pastry chef on amphetamines, but he is a good defender and has made some nice passes.
Take a look at those preseason magazines next fall. That lineup will be listed among the top in the country.
And the Chicken 'Hawks will fly again
Westland is a Louisville, Ky., junior in journalism and is the sports editor.
V
✓
1
2B
Quick Looks
Friday January 30,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's birthday (Jan. 30)
Start preparing early this morning for an exciting weekend. Everything you want and more will happen this weekend. Sit back and let everyone come to you.
Aries: Today is a 6.
Taurus: Today is a 7.
The voice of authority is friendly and wise today.
Act for the common good rather than for your personal needs. What makes no sense in close-up view will be obvious when seen from a distance.
Gemini: Todav is a 4.
Someone is prepared to think ill of you today. You may be judged on the basis of incorrect information. Stay alert to protect your reputation.
Cancer: Today is a 6.
Your thoughts run even deeper than usual today. If you make yourself available, you could meet your intellectual equal. Detail-oriented tasks are a complete waste of time.
Leo: Today is a 4.
Overconfidence could lead to serious mismanagement of someone else's resources. Do not let optimism be a substitute for vigilance. Be the first to admit your mistakes today.
Scorpio: Today is an 8.
Virao: Today is a 6.
Why rage against incompetence when you have the ability to unite and focus the actions of others? Teamwork makes use of everyone's skills and helps absorb their faults. Results matter more than personalities.
Libra: Today is a 7.
Sagittarius: Today is a 6.
You spend your day hard at work on something, even though the task might not be connected to your livelihood. The effort fees wonderful even if the results prove intangible. Your karma shines from today's activities.
IIII
Capricorn: Today is a 6.
This is a day for people to enjoy themselves. Take time out to do what makes you happy. Your plans grow bigger and better with each loved one you include.
2
Aquarius: Today is a 7.
You have trouble getting your feet off the ground today. A high energy or high risk activity sounds like a good idea from the comfort of your chair. You may not accomplish much more than daydreaming.
Today is all about what you want and what you need. Your ambitions are large, but your strategy needs a bit of work. Dreams are cheap and plentiful, but the bank does not accept them as collateral.
Pisces: Today is a 7.
Lion
A discussion catches fire and becomes a dialogue You find someone who is on your wavelength in areas that really matter to you. It is impossible to ignore an appeal to your compassionate side.
Today finds you in a leadership role, or at least that of a problem solver. You appear to be in control of events only because you know control is impossible. Be sure to spend some high-quality time alone with yourself.
No. 6 North Carolina 74 Coastal Carolina 45
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Tracy Reid scored 14 of her game-high 16 points in the first half, leading No. 6 North Carolina to an easy 74-45 win against Coastal Carolina on last night.
Chanel Wright added 14 and Laquanda Barksdale 12 for North Carolina (16-4), which won without regulars Jessica Gaspar and Nikki Teasley. Gaspar was resting a sore foot and Teasley a swollen knee as the Tar Heels played their last non-conference game of the regular season.
SPORTS BRIEFS AND SCORES
Lindsey Blossom, Janelle Van Acker and Kelly Hutters each scored eight points to lead Coastal Carolina (6-13).
Reid hit six of her first 10 shots, including a three-pointer, to help North Carolina to a 42-19 halftime lead. Wright hit two three-pointers that began a 21-1 run and broke open what had been a close game.
Coastal Carolina led 12-11 on a 10-foot jumper by Blossom with 13-24 left in the first half. But the Chanticleers went 7-42 without a basket and fell behind 32-12.
LAUTERGEVERMUNTER
Wright ended up 3-for-3 on three-pointers and 5-for-6 overall to top North Carolina's 29-for-57 shooting. Reid made 7-of-11 shots.
SPORTS ON TV
FISH
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
SCORPIO
CH 18—Tennis, Australian Open women's final.
Ch. 37 — NASCAR, 24 Hours of Daytona race
Today
12:30p.m.
Ch. 5 — College Basketball, Minnesota vs.
Indiana.
Ch. 9 - College Basketball, North Carolina vs. Wake Forest.
Ch. 24 - Golf, Pebble Beach National Pro
Ch. 4 - College Basketball, Oklahoma State vs. Texas.
11 a.m.
Ch. 45 - College Basketball, Oklahoma State vs. Nebraska
Noon
Ch. 18—College Basketball, Xavier vs.
Temple
3 p.m.
Goat
箭
Tomorrow
Ch. 27 — College Basketball, Notre Dame vs. St. John's.
Ch. 38 — Hockey, Dallas vs. St. Louis.
2:30 p.m.
Ch. 2 — Pro Basketball, Washington vs.
Detroit.
7 p.m.
1 p.m.
12:30 p.m.
2p.m
Ch. 9 — Track, World Sprint Championships.
8:30p.m.
3 p.m.
Ch. 4 — College Basketball, Iowa State vs.
Missouri
Ch. 37 — Women's College Basketball
Kent, U.S., Arlington
Ch. 5 — Golf, Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.
5 p.m.
Ch. 4.5 — College Basketball, Arizona State
vs. Stanford.
Ch. 37 — College Basketball, Stanford vs.
Texas Tech.
Ch. 38—College Basketball, Kansas State
vs. Colorado.
8 p.m.
Ch. 45 — Pro Basketball, Dallas vs. Denver
9 p.m.
Ch. 18 — Tennis, Australian Open men's final
No. 2 North Carolina at Wake Forest, : 2
Tomorrow
TOP 25 SCHEDULE:
Friday
No. 4 Stanford vs. Arizona State, 5 p.m.
No. 6 Arizona at California 9:30 p.m.
No 8 OCLAs vs. Washington, 3 p.m.
No 9 Connecticut vs. Rutgers, 7 a.m.
No. 11 Princeton vs. Cornell, 6:30 p.m.
No. 6 Arizona al California, 9:30 p.m.
No. 8 UCLA vs. Washington, 3 p.m.
No. 9 Connecticut vs. Rutgers, 7 p.m.
10
No. 10 Purdue vs. Wisconsin, 7 p.m.
No. 11 Princeton vs. Columbia, 6 p.m.
No. 9 Cincinnati vs. Rugers 7 p.m.
No. 10 Purdue vs. Wisconsin 7 p.m.
No. 11 Princeton vs. Columbia, 6:30 p.m.
No. 12 Mismatch at Arlington, 4:30 p.m.
No.12 Mississippi at Auburn, 4 p.m.
No. 15 Arkansas at Mississippi State, 2 p.m.
No. 22 Michigan State at Northwest,
No. 23 Michigan State at Northwest,
No.24 Xavier at Temple, 11 a.m.
No. 25 Indiana vs. Minnesota, 12 p.m.
p.m.
Sunday
No. 1 Dukes vs. Georgia Tech, 12:30 p.m.
No. 3 Utah at No. 14 New Mexico, 2:30
p.m.
No. 5 Kansas at Nebraska, 2:30 p.m.
No. 7 Kentucky vs. Florida, 2:30 p.m.
No. 13 South Carolina vs. No. 18 Cincinnati, 11 p.m.
No. 16 lowa vs. No. 19 Michigan, 12 p.m.
No. 20 Swaucer at Pitrann, p. 28
SPORTS ETC.
No. 20 Syracuse at ntburgus, 2 p.m.
No. 21 Rhode Island at Fardham, 12 p.m.
No. 23 Maryland vs. Virginia, 3 p.m.
Today in sports
1971 — UCLA starts its 88-game winning streak with a 74-61 win against UC Santa Barbara.
1983 — John Riggins rushes for a Super Bowl-record 166 yards on 38 carries to lead the Washington Redskins to a come-from-behind, 27-17 victory against the Miami Dolphins. For Riggins, the game's MVP, it's his fourth consecutive 100-yard rushing game during the playoffs, also a record.
1993 — Monica Seles defeats Steffi Graf 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 to capture her third straight Australian Open.
Two KU sons make names as Tar Heels
Continued from page 1A
"It never really occurred to me that there were tryouts (at Kansas), but I didn't want to put myself or others in that awkward position by being a walk-on," he said.
thought about playing at Kansas.
"I always wanted to go to Kansas. I grew up on Kansas basketball." Frederick said. "I always wanted to go there and play basketball, but that scenario would not have been favorable. It would have been a situation where they'd have to because I was his son, and I didn't want that."
Frederick also said he would have felt strange playing at Kansas because of his father's position.
"Coming out of high school, I thought I was done playing basketball for good," Williams said. "One of the reasons I came to North Carolina was because they had a junior varsity program where I could play.
Whether at North Carolina or Kansas, neither player said they expected a lot of playing time once in college.
Fredrick has played in 17 games for 91 minutes this season, and Williams has appeared in 13 games for 24 minutes. Both players average less than one point and one rebound per game.
Frederick said he wanted to be a coach, and he went the Final Four last season under former coach Dean Smith. Williams, a business major, attends a premier school for his field of study.
Both men said they were pleased with their roles and the decisions they had made.
"I just wanted to get away from home really bad," Williams said. "I was ready to get out on my own and see what it is like without having my parents around. No matter what I did in Kansas, I was going to be called Roy Williams' kid. I just needed some space to do the college experience like everyone else."
Today:
SPORTS CALENDAR
Tomorrow:
7 p.m. at Robinson Center—Swimming and Diving vs. Nebraska
6 p.m. at Alvara Racquet Club-
Women's Tennis v. Wichita State
3 p.m. in Lubbock, Texas—Women's basketball vs. Arizona TV: ESPN2
All day in Manhattan — Track and
field vs. Kansas State and Missouri
6- 30 p.m. at Alvamar Racquet Club—Men's Tennis vs. Arkansas
Sunday:
2:35 p.m. in Lincoln, Nebraska — Men's basketball vs. Nebraska TV: ABC
Radio: KJHK 90.7 FM
6 p.m. at Alvamar Racquet Club—
*Women's tennis vs. Missouri*
TV TONIGHT
FRIDAY PRIMETIME
JANUARY 30,1998
FRIDAY PRIMETIME
© TVData 7 PM 7:30 8PM 8:30 9PM 9:30 10PM 10:30 11PM 11:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
KSMO ❶ "The Gritters" ***½ (1990, Drama) Anjelica Huston. Highlander: The Series Mad Abo. You Designing Hard Copy Cops
WDAF ❷ Beyond Belief Millennium "Monster" (R) ** News! News! Real TV! H Patrol Ikeen Ivory
KCTV ❸ Kids Say Gregory Fam. Mat. Step by Step Nash Bridges "Downtime" News! Late Show (In Stereo) Seinfield
KCPT ❹ Travel Auction Nash Bridges "Downtime" Travel Auction Continues
KSNT ❺ Dateline (In Stereo) Homicide: Life on the Street (In Stereo) News Tonight Show (In Stereo) Late Night
KMBC ❻ Sabrin-Witch Boy-World Sabrin-Witch Teen Angel 20/20 News! Roseanne Grace Under M A'SH' A
KTUW ❹ Wash. Week Wall St. Week McLaughlin Antiques Roadshow All Aboard Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (In Stereo)
WIBW ❹ Kids Say Gregory Fam. Mat. Step by Step Nash Bridges "Downtime" News Late Show (In Stereo) Late Late
KTKA ❹ Sabrin-Witch Boy-World Sabrin-Witch Teen Angel 20/20 News seinfeld Married... Nightline
CABLE STATIONS
A&E ❽ Biography The Gambinos: First Family of Crime (R) 20th Century Law & Order "House Counsel" Biography: Gambinos: Crime
NCBIC ❿ Equal Time Hardball Rivera Live News With Brian Williams Charles Groddin Rivera Live CNN ❾ World Today Larry King Live World Today Sports Illus Moneyline Newlight Showbiz
COM ❾ Favily Towers "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" ***½ (1975, Comedy) Rowan Atkinson: Face Fawty T. Fawty T.
COURT ❹ Prime Time Justice Cochran & Company Trial Story: Private Burmester Prime Time Justice (R) Cochran & Company (R)
CSPAN ❹ Prime Time Public Affairs Pretime Time Public Affairs (R)
DISC ❹ Wild Discovery Ultimate Performance Geyersers of Yellowstone (R) Justice Files (R) Wild Discovery (R)
ESPN ❹ NASCAR's 50 Outside the Lines Tennis Australian Open -- Women's Final. (Live) Sportscenter SuperBowl
HIST ❹ In Search of History B Choosing Sides: Remember Vietnam (R) As It Happened-Tet In Search of History (R)
LIFE ❹ Unsolved Mysteries "Beyond Obsession" (1994, Drama) Victoria Principal Almost Golden Girls Golden Girls Mysteries
MTIV ❹ News Beavis-Butt. Yol (In Stereo) Top Ten Videos of the Week Loveline (In Stereo) Beavis-Butt. Viewers
SCIFI ❹ American Gothic (in Stereo) "Hellbound: Helpless III" ***½ (1989, Horror) Clark Higgins Night Slaker American Gothic (in Stereo)
TLC ❹ Real America: 48 hours Loch Neck-Religious Real America: 48 hours (R) Loch Neck-Religious
TNT ❹ NBA basketball Washington Wizards at Detroit Pistons (In Stereo) Inside-NBA "Summer Rental" ***½ (1985, Comedy) John Candy.
USA ❹ Walker, Texas Ranger "Friday" *½ (1995, Comedy) Ice Cube. (In Stereo) "House Party" ***½ (1990, Comedy) Christopher Reid.
VH1 ❹ Hollywool-D Vinyl Pop-Up Video "Freedbird." (1996, Documentary) Behind the Music Legends (R)
WGN ❹ "H尔曼 & Edick" (1989, Drama) James Belushi News! Beverly Hills, 90210 in Heat of the Night
WTBS ❹ "The Cutting Edge" ***½ (1992, Comedy) D.B. Sweeney, Mora Kelly. Flashdance ***½ (1983, Musical) Jennifer Beals.
PREMIUM STATIONS
HBO ❹ "Escape from L.A." ***½ (1996) Kurt Russell "Frank & Jesse" ***½ (1995, Westman) Rob Lowe.'R' Dennis Miller Comedy Half "Meet Wally"
HBO **40** "Escape From LA." **\star** (1996) Kurt Russell, "Frank & Jesse" **\star** (1995, Westem) Rob Lowe. 'R' ☉ Dennis Miller Comedy Half "Meet Wally"
MAX **23** "The Funeral" **\star** (1996), Drama Christopher Walker. 'R' "Sleepers" **\star** (1996) A revenge crime reunites four friends from Haiti's Kitchen. R Hot Line
SHOW **22** "Johnny Mennonic" **\star** ½ (1995) Keanu Reeves, 'R' SAGG-1 Gate Outlines "The Hum" Hunger Polegerser "Thundruth"
THIS WEEKEND Friday Saturday Sundav
Women's Tennis: KU vs Wichita State 6pm Alvamar
---
Swimming & Diving KU vs Nebraska
7pm Robinson
Men's Tennis KU vs Arkansas 6:30 pm Alvamar
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Friday, January 30, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 3
Strength is basis for baseball season
Players pinpoint muscles and work on building power
By John Wilson
Kansan sportswriter
Preparation for the season involves more than spring days spent under a blue sky for the baseball team.
To stay competitive in the Big 12 Conference, the squad has worked throughout the offseason four days a week on a weight program developed by Fred Roll, strength and conditioning coordinator.
"We decided this season to develop the specific elements of baseball, power and speed as much as possible," Roll said. "We worked more on straight cardiovascular conditioning in the past, but this year pure power was the key."
Roll said he had broken down the muscles needed for baseball and identified the specific needs for the sport.
PETER KINGTON
"Baseball is a game based upon
Roll: Designed training schedule for baseball team
I'll just use a placeholder image for you to fill in with the actual photo. The image is too blurry and low-resolution to provide a clear description. If you can provide the image, I'll be able to reconstruct it and output a textual description.
quick explosions," Roll said. "In other sports like track and field, flexibility is more important, but baseball players need brute strength more like football players."
said he had gained size and strength.
"The coaches looked more for pure power than conditioning this winter," Dimmick said. "Now that we've gained the strength, we're hitting the sprints and conditioning harder."
Coach Bobby Randall talks with an assistant during practice. The baseball team was practicing at Hogland-Maupin Stadium on Wednesday, taking advantage of the mild weather. Photo by Geoff Krieger/kANSAN
Junior pitcher/outfielder Les Walrond said the change of focus from conditioning to pure strength had helped team morale.
"You could see your lifting ability increase a great deal in a short time," Walrond said. "That success just makes you work harder."
Coach Bobby Randall said the team average bench press had increased 45 pounds and the team average
squats had progressed 95 pounds in eight weeks.
He said he could already see differences on the field through the first weeks of practice.
"We're faster, we're bigger and
we're stronger than any other team I've had here," Randall said. "The balls have been jumping off our bats and arms in practice a little quicker than before."
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'Hawks face tough contest in Big 12
Conference teams widely considered top baseball powers
By John Wilson
---
Kansan sportswriter
BIG 12 CONFERENCE
As the Big 12 Conference opener approaches, Coach Bobby Randall said he thought the traditional powers on the national scene would again lead the conference in its second baseball season.
The Jayhawks will open the season Feb. 22 at Oklahoma State. The Sooners, Oklahoma, Texas Tech, Texas A&M and Baylor, the top five finishers in 1997, look to lead the conference again.
Randall said the Big 12 was
one of the top two or three baseball conferences in the nation, making the round-robin conference format a challenge.
"Any time you have five out of 12 teams ranked in the top 25 of various national publications you know it's going to be a tough road," Randall said. "We have to play three games each against all five of those powers."
Last season the South Division captured five of six Big 12 post season tournament votes, with all four of the conference's representatives in the NCAA Tournament coming from the southern half.
Oklahoma State should have
its deepest team in 10 years and will be built around junior second baseman Billy Gasparino (.336 batting average, 18 home runs and 62 runs batted in) and junior catcher Josh Holliday (.323-14-60).
"We got to the NCAA Regionals last year, and we've improved every weakness," said head coach Tom Holliday.
Oklahoma returns eight of nine starters in the field, highlighted by senior outfielder Brian Shackley (384-16-70).
Senior utility player Keith
Ginter (.426-17-77) is the leading returning hitter in the conference and pitcher Monty Ward (9.4 record, 4.07 earned run average) has pitched for the amateur team.
Missouri should again be the best of the northern teams after placing sixth last season.
The Tigers return senior shortstop Griffin Moore (.348-18-72) who was all-conference in 1997 and senior outfielder Ryan Fry (.317-8-65).
The Jayhawks should compete with Missouri and weaker South Division teams like Baylor and Texas for lower spots in the conference tournament.
"That sixth spot in the tournament will be up for grabs," Randall said. "It will just depend on whichever team is playing the best ball in the final weeks of the regular season."
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Section B · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Friday, January 30, 1998
Softball team prepares for season
Exhibition in field house highlights season's practice
SANBURG
By Laura Bokenkroger
sports@kansan.com
Kansan sportswriter
Michelle Huber, Merrigan, catches a throw in time to force out the runner. The softball team will play its season opener in two weeks. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
Expectations are high among the Kansas softball players as they prepare for their season opener two weeks from today.
After posting a perfect 11-0 record in the fall season, the Jayhawks are ranked No.9 in the country and have set their sights on a repeat appearance in the NCAA Tournament — and, ultimately, a trip to the College World Series.
Last year, the Jayhawks surprised a lot of people when they advanced to the NCAA Tournament regional. There, they dropped a 1-0 pitchers' duel to South Carolina, narrowly missing a chance to advance to the College World Series.
Returning eight starters from last year's group, including six seniors, the Jayhawks will field a more experienced and confident team. This year, the Jayhawks aim to improve on last season's record of 38-23, and the leadership of the six seniors will be a big key. Bunge said.
"Last year was the first time for a lot of these players to make the NCAA Tournament," head coach Tracy Bunge said. "They got a taste of championship play, and they got really close."
Although cold weather limited practices to Anschutz Sports Pavilion for the first two weeks, the Jayhawks were able to take it outside this week. It was a welcome change, since the glaring lights in Anschutz often make the ball difficult to see inside.
"There's a big difference from seeing the ball inside and outside," Bunge said. "The biggest influence is with the outfielders. It's really easy to lose the ball in the lights inside, and seeing it off the bat is a big deal for them."
The Jayhawks, who finished third in the Big 12 Conference last year, start their season Feb. 13 at a tournament in Minneapolis, Minn. The first home game is not until late March, but they already have begun to recruit fans.
In an exhibition during halftime of the Kansas men's basketball game against Texas Tech on Saturday, junior pitcher Sarah Workman threw pitches up to 64 mph to senior catcher Kristina Johnson.
Kansas football coach Terry Allen and Kansas mascot Big Jay attempted to hit the pitches but missed, which demonstrated how fast the ball traveled.
Bunge said she hoped the exposure would bring more fans to watch the Jayhawks play this season. The halftime exhibition also allowed the team to have some fun.
"It was a good time," Workman said. "I think softball, in general, is just fun, and when you get to show people what it's all about, it's a good time."
The capacity crowd of 16,300 at Allen Field House was quite a bit larger than the audience Workman is used to at Kansas softball games, and she said she was nervous at first.
"That topped my biggest crowd by about 14,000 people," she said. "I guess just the thought of it makes you nervous, but once you get down there, it isn't that bad."
BON JOVAN
Coach Tracy Bunge, right, talks with assistant coach Carla Marchetti during a break in practice. The softball team practiced at Memorial Stadium yesterday. Photo by Geoff Krieger/KANSAN
Swimmers ready to dive into final home meet
KU SWIMMING
The Kansas swimming and diving team will see where it stands going into the Big 12 Championships when it takes on conference rival and nationally-ranked Nebraska tonight at Robinson Center.
The Nebraska women are ranked seventh in the nation and the men are 16th. The Kansas men are ranked 21st and the women are 26th.
"There's a big rivalry and a big respect level," coach Gary Kemp said. "You've got two really good teams, so there's a big level of respect for both teams."
The Jayhawks are using this meet to measure what can be expected at the Big 12 Championships in February.
By Erin Thompson Kansan sportswriter
"A win this weekend would mean we're moving in the right direction for the conference championships;" Kempf said. "But right now, we're concerned with getting ready for the conference championships and not getting ready for this weekend."
Last year, Kansas swam at Nebraska and did not find the waters friendly. The men lost 151-89, and the women fell 183.5-97.5.
"Last year they killed us at their
place," sophomore Tyler Painter said. "We always swim better at our pool. It would be good for the team to beat them."
Kempf did not necessarily agree that Robinson provided an advantage.
"I always like to go home," he said. "But the bottom line is it's 25 yards long and every Wetty."
I
body's basically got the same conditions."
The Javhawks are expecting a tough
meet tonight. Nebraska has several All-American swimmers, including Adam Pine.
Pine finished second in the 100-yard butterfly and ninth in the 100-yard freestyle last year at the NCAA Championships.
The Cornhusker women finished eighth at the NCAA Championships last spring.
Tonight will be the last home meet for the Jayhawks this year. Before the meet begins all the seniors will be recognized.
"Our program is very family oriented," Kemp said. "Any time we can honor the seniors who have been involved in the program it is exciting."
Tennis teams' spring season brings ranked competition
By Erin Thompson Kansan sportswriter
Mother Nature was kind and brought a little bit of spring early to Lawrence this week.
K.U.
Tennis
This weekend, the spring season officially begins for the Kansas tennis program.
A. G. BURGESS
Both teams have strong schedules this season that include several ranked opponents.
The men take on Arkansas tomorrow at Alvamar Racquet Club. The women have two matches this weekend at Alvamar. They play Wichita State today and Missouri on Sunday.
Hunt: Senior to return to action after redshirting
The men are hoping to gain some respect for their program, which has been overlooked in the past. Last spring season, the team was initially ranked ninth, but their ranking fell to 27th nationally. After the fall season, they climbed
The women will play three teams who finished the fall season ranked in the top 10 nationally. Women's head coach Roland Thornqvist said he was not concerned with the opponents' rankings.
"At the time we made the schedule, a lot of those teams weren't ranked as high as they are," Thorngvist said. "Even if they're ranked, with the quality of our team, we should be able to handle it."
back to 24th and hope to continue moving up in the polls.
"We're trying to play the best schedule we can." men's head coach Mark Riley said. "You can only move up in the polls by beating ranked opponents. We have a good team and wanted a tough schedule to challenge them."
The men are expecting a challenge from Arkansas tomorrow. The Razorbacks have the No. 3 doubles team in the nation and consistently compete in the Southeast Conference, which is considered one of the best tennis conferences in the nation.
"The only way to get respect is by winning at a national level," Riley said. "We play nationallyranked Arkansas and then a tough Minnesota team. We need to do well in the first few matches to establish ourselves."
The women are not expecting as much of a challenge this weekend. Wichita State has good players, but they do not have Kansas' depth. Thornvist said.
Both Kansas teams will be led by experienced senior classes. The men have four seniors returning, among them All-Americans Enrique Abaroa and Xavier Avila. They also have their lettermen returning from last year's team that finished second in the Big 12 Conference Championship.
The women will be led by seniors Kylie Hunt, Christie Sim and Maria Atajoglou. Hunt returns after red-shirting last season with an injured knee. In 1996, she was the Big Eight player of the year, all-American and was the NCAA singles runner-up.
The teams have their sights set on the Big 12 Championship and qualifying for the NCAA Tournament. "We're shooting for the Big 12 Championship," Thornqvist said. "I think if we achieve that we can prove we can play with anyone."
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Friday, January 30, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 5
UMass slows Rams, wins despite fouls
The Associated Press
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Four trouble didn't stop Massachusetts from easily winning its ninth consecutive game. No.21 Rhode Island had all kinds of trouble with its normally high-scoring offense.
The Rams lost for the third time in four games—and 10th in a row to UMass—as the Minuteemen slowed them down, dominated the boards and won 74-57 last night.
Rhode Island couldn't even capitalize when UMass' top two big men. Tyrone Weeks and Lari Ketner, spent most of the game on the bench as each picked up his fourth foul in the first five minutes of the second half.
That's because 6-foot-9-inch backup Ajmal Basit matched his season-high with 15 points and had a career-high 19 rebounds. And the defense held Rhode Island 10 points below its previous low for the season.
"We knew we couldn't make this an 80-point game. We had to slow the game down," UMass coach Bruiser Flint said. "If we play the up-and-down style, we lose."
The Minutemen are the only Atlantic 10 team unbeaten in league play. UMass (15-5, 7-0) hasn't been ranked yet this season. Rhode Island (13-5, 5-2) moved up one spot in the Top 25 despite losing Sunday to Cincinnati, 88-82.
"We just didn't have the energy." said Rhode Island's Joshua King. "Maybe the Cincinnati game took it out of us."
The Rams, smaller than many on their opponents, were outrebounded 42-18 at Cincinnati and 45-34 against UMass and have the second worst rebounding differential in the conference.
That meant they didn't have many second-chance opportunities after making just 18-of-57 shots, 31.6 percent. They also hit only 17 of 29 free throws.
"When you miss layups and foul shots, it's just like putting a needle in a balloon. It just deflates you." Rhode Island coach Jim Harrick said. "They played on a different plane than us."
Monty Mack had 22 points for UMass, while Rhode Island was led by Cuttino Mobley and Antonio Reynolds-Dean with 12 points and King with 11.
MASSACHUSETTS 74.
RHODE ISLAND 57
MASSACHUSETTS (15-5)
Babul 2-4 0-0 4, Weeks 4-5 0-0 8,
Kemer 2-3 0-0 4, Clarke 3-8 0-2 6,
Mack 8-15 4-6 22, DePina 2-4-6 8
10, Mickland 2-7 1-3 5, Basil 7-13
1-2 15, Burns 0-1 0-0 0, Cruz 0-0
0-0 0, Maclay 0-0 0-0 0, Totals 30-
60 12-21 74.
RHODE ISLAND (13-5)
King 2-8-5 7-11, Reynolds-Dean 4-11 4-8 12, Clay 3-10 0-3 6, Mobley 2-7-8 12, Wheeler 3-10 1-3 8,
Arigabbu 1-1-0 02, Murphy 0-4 00, Bennett 0-2 0-0, Gay 2-0 0-4, Jefferson 1-2-0 02. Totals 18-57
17-29 57.
Halftime—Massachusetts 43, Rhode Island 29, 3-Point goals—Massachusetts 2-7 (Mack 2-3, Clarke 0-4), Rhode Island 4-13 (King 2-6, Mobley 1-2, Wheeler 1-5). Fouled out—Weeks, Ketner, Reynolds-Dean, Rebounds—Massachusetts 45 (Basil 19), Rhode Island 34 (Clay 10). Assists—Massachusetts 12 (Clarke, DePina 5), Rhode Island 9 (Wheeler 5), A-12,412.
With Weeks and Ketner in foul trouble, Basit, a sophomore, filled in with a team-high 34 minutes.
"When I get the opportunity, I just have to take advantage," said Basit, who had stomach problems before the game and was tired at half-time.
"I'm surprised he made it for 34 minutes," Flint said. "He can play like that. All he has to do is get a little more serious and he can be a really special player."
UMass turned a 16-14 deficit into a 33-18 lead with a 19-2 run and led 43-29 at halftime as it hit 59 percent of its shots. Its lead ranged from 13 to 21 points the rest of the way as the Rams made only seven field goals in the second half.
Rhode Island took its last lead, 16-14, on King's three-pointer with 13:01 left in the first half. Jonathan DePina's 15-footter tied the game and started the 19-2 run.
Basit put UMass ahead to stay, 18-16, by converting an offensive rebound. Baskets by DePina, Charlton Clarke, Basit and Chris Kirkland gave the Minutemen 12 consecutive points and a 26-16 lead with 9:07 left in the half.
Maryland coach only sees minutes of team's blowout by No.1 Duke
DURHAM, N.C. — Gary Williams heard things did not go well for his team.
The Associated Press
The excitable Maryland coach spent exactly 5 minutes and 51 seconds pacing the sideline as No. 1 Duke defeated the No. 23 Terrapins 86-59 last night.
Williams spent the rest of the evening listening to the loss on the radio in the locker room after being thrown out of the game.
Maryland has lost its share of games in a variety of ways to the Blue Devils (19-1, 8-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) in Cameron Indoor Stadium, but none quite like this one as officials played a major factor in an ACC game for the second straight night.
One day after Clemson was called for an ACC-crecord 41 fouls in a nine-point loss at No.2 North Carolina, Maryland was whistled
"I feel that you are responsible to be with your team during the game, and I didn't do that," he said. "It's a shame things happened like they did. It probably wouldn't have made a difference if I was there or not."
for four technicals in the game's opening stages, including a pair that led to Williams' early ejection.
Trajan Langdon scored 12 of his 16 points in the first 6 1/2 minutes to pace the surging Blue Devils.
Meanwhile, the Terrapins (12-7, 5-4) had won five of six ACC games since losing to the Blue Devils by 32 points on Jan. 3 in College Park, Md. But Maryland was blown out again after losing its head coach and its composure.
"It's really a bad feeling because you ask your players to work really hard and do a lot of things for the good of the team, and obviously what I did wasn't for the
good of the team." Williams said. "I feel bad but I also feel frustrated because of the situation."
Rodney Ellott paced Maryland with 13 points.
The ACC office in Greensboro had sent a letter to schools this week warning teams about recent unacceptable bench and court behavior.
The first Maryland technicals were called against Sarunas Jasikevicius for arguing a nonfoul call on a screen and against Williams for taking up for his guard.
Langdon sank the four free throws and less than a minute later Williams was taking a walk to the locker room another official threw him out for arguing again. Williams, one of the game's more demonstrative coaches, also was thrown out last January at Florida State.
MARYLAND [12-7]
NO. 1 DUKE 86,
NO.23 MARYLAND 59
DUKE (19-1)
MARYLAND (12-7)
Profit 2-6 3-4 7, Elliott 5-11 3-4 13,
Ekezie 3-10 3-9, Stokes 1-3 1-2 3,
Jasikievice 3-6 0-0 7, Mardisch 3-
8-0 1-6, Kovarki 0-0 1-0, Morris 2-
5-8 10-12, Cephas 0-2 0-0, Fields
0-1 0-0, Hahn 0-0 0-0, Smith
0-0 0-0, Watkins 1-1 0-0. Totals
20-53 18-27 59.
**DUKE (19-1)**
Mlcledon 6-9 2-1 24, Chappell 2-8-3-
3-7. Domzalki 3-4 0-0 6, Wojciechowski 2-8 0-0 6, Langdon 3-8 8-1 6, Battier 1-3 4-9 6, Carrawell 4-7 2-2 10, Avery 2-5 0-0 5, Burgess 3-6 2-8 8, Price 2-7 2-2 7, Singleton 0-0 0-0 0, Simpson 1-0 0 0, Heaps 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 28-66
24-36 86.
Halftime - Duke 57, Maryland 30.
3-Point goals - Maryland 1-6
(Jasikievicus 1-1, Morris 0-1, Fields
0-1, Profit 0-1, Elliott 0-2), Duke
6-24 (Wojciechowski 2-5, Langdon
2-6, Avery 1-3, Price 3, Mclead 0-1,
Chappell 0-3, Carrawell 0-3).
Rebounds - Maryland 38, Duke 48.
Assists - Maryland 11, Duke 12.
Technicals - Jasikievicus, Williams 2,
Profit. A - 9,314.
Boilermakers turn up steam to overcome Michigan
The Associated Press
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Purdue coach Gene Keady challenged his seniors at halftime. As it turned out, he really didn't have to. Michigan made it easy for the Bollermakers.
Jaraan Cornell scored 28 points and No.10 Purdue took advantage of 23 turnovers by the 19th-ranked Wolverines for an 89-82 victory last night.
"It's tough to overcome 23 turnovers," Michigan interim coach Brian Ellerbe said. "We didn't make good decisions and consequently our turnovers led to baskets for them. They turned our turnovers into points."
Michigan (15-6, 5-3 Big 10) shot
50.7 percent and had a 40-29
"I went after our seniors," Keady said. "That's the first time all season that I did that. I chewed them out, that's what I did."
But there was no way Keady could count on that. All he knew was that Michigan was leading 41-37 at halftime. And he wasn't happy.
BOILER HOUSE
BOILER HOUSE
rebounding edge over the Boilermakers (18-4, 6-2), who shot 47 percent. But Purdue had just 13 turnovers
"Coach said their team was going to make a run," said Brian Cardinal, who had 18 points for the Boilermakers. "He said, 'It's just a matter of how you deal with it.' We just came out and played good defense."
"Free throws were a big factor," Keady said. "Rebounding doesn't have to be a big factor if you take care
Brad Miller had 19 points and Chad Austin added 15 for Purdue. Louis Bullock led Michigan with 18 points.
The Boilermakers, as they have done so often this season, also had a big edge at the free throw line. Purdue made 21 of 26 free throws while Michigan was just 6 of 8 from the line. For the season, Purdue has made more free throws (416) than their opponents have attempted (390).
of the ball and hit your free throws."
MICHIGAN
A 3-pointer by Robbie Reid pulled Michigan into a 75-75 tie
with 3:52 remaining. But a free throw by Miller and Alan Eldridge's 3-pointer from the left corner triggered an 11-2 Purdue run.
The Wolverines scored only three baskets the rest of the way as the turnovers continued to mount.
"We got a little lackadaisical at times," said Robert Traylor, who had 17 points for Michigan. "They got a few steals and that led to some easy baskets."
It was a spirited game from the start. A basket by freshman Josh Asselin gave Michigan a 32-24 lead with 5:07 left in the first half.
But Cornell keyed a 9-0 run with a 3-pointer, a driving layup and a short jumper as the Boilermakers grabbed a 33-32 lead.
Travis Conlan sandwiched a 3-
pointer between two baskets by Tralor as Michigan finished the half with a 9-4 burst and a 41.37 lead.
Jerod Ward, who had 13 points and 10 rebounds, hit two jumpers for a five-point Michigan lead early in the second half, but the Boilermakers — taking advantage of turnovers and fouls — tied it at 50 with 16:18 left.
There were nine lead changes in the next nine minutes as the teams traded baskets at a frantic pace. Purdue finally built a 67-62 lead on a transition basket by Cardinal with 9:19 left.
"It was 40 minutes of fast breaks," Conlan said. "We were making decisions on the fly and sometimes those aren't the best decisions."
The Wolverines tied it at 75, but it was all Purdue after that as the Boilermakers defeated Michigan for the fifth time in the last six meetings between the schools.
"We're still in the race for the league championship." Keady said. "That was our goal coming into this game."
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THE CENTER FOR COMMUNITY OUTREACH
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Community Internship Program
Volunteer as an intern
Volunteer as an intern STUDENT
864-3710 • 4th Floor, Kansas Union SENATE
Best Taste
PEKING TASTE
FREE DELIVERY (MIN. $8)
Lunch starting at $1.95-$4.25
Dinner starting at $2.49-$6.95
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT-BUFFET!!
LUNCH BUFFET...$3.99
11:00A.M-3:00P.M.
DINNER BUFFET...$4.99
5:00P.M-9:00P.M.
Menu Varies Daily
2210 Iowa St. (behind Hastings)
- BBQ CHICKEN
• CRAB RANGOON
• GENERAL TAO'S CHICKEN
• HOT BRAISED CHICKEN
Dine-In * Carry Out 749-4788
Juicer's Showgirls "Wearing nothing but a smile"
"Wearing nothing ...but a smile"
- Wednesday's Student Night:
$3 with college ID
- FREE ADMISSION on your birthday
- Bachelor parties
*open at
7 30pm
Tuesday
Sunday
*****
Golden Key National Honor Society SOCIAL!!
YACHT CLUB 530 Wisconsin No cover Under 21 admitted
Fri. Jan. 30 5 p.m.
FREE TACO BAR!!
DOOR PRIZE!!
Questions? Call Pres. Chris Lovvorn @ 838-9293.
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No sharing and no carryout, please OFFER ENDS 21/08
THE SHELLOFT STOCKADE
1015 Iowa St.
Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Friday, January 30, 1998
Barry Sanders practices perfect in Honolulu
NFL's leading rusher shows skills at Pro Bowl tune ups
The Associated Press
HONOLULU — Steve Mariucci marveled at Barry Sanders' agility and acrobatic moves. And Sanders just not waiting to field wuite.
"Did you see that? He was doing cartwheels and flips before the ball came down. That guy can do anything you want," said Mariucci, the San Francisco coach who will run the NFC team in Sunday's Pro Bowl. "He's phenomenal."
Tampa Bay running back Warrick Dunn, the only rookie voted into the Pro Bowl this year, is a big fan of the Detroit Lions star.
"He's the man," Dunn said. "It's a pleasure to be on the same team with him. As long as he plays the game, I'm going to thoroughly enjoy watching him."
And he almost surely will see NFL history made. Sanders rushed for 2,053 yards this season, joining Eric Dickerson (2,105 in 1984) and O.J. Simpson (2,003 in 1973) as the only players to top 2,000 yards.
The big year moved Sanders, who shared the NFL's Most Valuable Player award with Green Bay quarterback Brett Favre, into second place on the career rushing list. His 13,778 yards trail only Walter Pavon's 16,726.
Asked if and Payton were friends, Sanders cracked: "Oh, I've heard of him. I've had the pleasure of meeting him a few times."
He grinned and added: "I ran into him at the airport in Oklahoma City a couple of years ago, and he practically tackled me."
Other categories where Sanders ranks high include downtables, where he's tied for eighth with 105; rushing TDs, where he's sixth with 95; and 200-yard rushing games, where he's tied for second with four, behind Simpson's record of six.
Sanders already holds several marks, including rushing for 1,000 yards for nine consecutive seasons; five 1,500-season seasons, and rushing for 100 or more yards 14 times in a season.
He may move rapidly on the other rushing records, since Lions coach Bobby Ross favors a ball-control game.
"We like the changes we've made," Sanders said of Ross' first season. "The whole emphasis of our attack has changed. We've become a definite run-oriented team and I think we showed improvement on both sides of the ball last season.
"We want to be patient, have our defense keep the other team's offense on the sidelines so we can keep running the ball," he said.
Sanders struggled the first two games, rushing for just 33 yards on 15 carries against Atlanta and 20 yards on 10 carries against Tampa Bay.
But he and the offensive line started clicking under Ross' new system in the third game, and he gained 161 yards on 19 carries against Chicago. The Lions faced Tampa Bay again in November and this time Sanders carried 24 times for 215 yards.
"The way I started, I thought I was going to be very lucky just to get 1,000 yards this year," he said.
Abdul-Jabbar ordered to seek counseling
Former NBA player must attend 36 hours to manage his anger
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Retired basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, accused of attacking a man during a traffic dispute, was ordered yesterday to obtain anger management counseling, so that a court may consider a civil compromise of criminal charges, a city attorney's spokesman said.
West Los Angeles Municipal Court Commissioner Gary L. Bindman ordered the NBA's all-time leading scorer to obtain 36 hours of counseling and pay $5,000 to Jeopardy, a Los Angeles Police Department program for at-risk youth, said representative Qualls.
Rober t Shapiro, Abdul Jabbar's attorney, did not immediately return a phone call for comment. Abdul-Jabbar was not required to attend the hearing and wasn't in court.
Mike
LA LACOSTE
LAKERS
Abdul-Jabbar had been scheduled for arraignment on misdemeanor charges of battery and false imprisonment, but that was postponed.
Shapiro made the motion for civil compromise, a court-approved agreement between a defendant and a victim to settle a case.
Deputy City Attorney Mitchell Fox objected and said the count of false imprisonment constituted potentially felonious conduct, which could make the case ineligible for a civil compromise, Qualls said.
The commissioner agreed to reconsider the motion during a rraignment rescheduled for March 19, after Abdul-Jabbar complies with the court orders, Qualls said.
PETER ROBERTS
Jerry Cohen, a Universal Studios music editor, accused Abdul-
Abdul-Jabbar:
Faces charges for battery
Jabbar of attacking him on April 20 after a traffic dispute. Last week, Cohen and Abdul-Jabbar settled a civil lawsuit. Terms of the settlement were not disclosed.
According to prosecutors, the incident began when Cohen was waiting to turn his car into a driveway at a mini-mall and Abdul-Jabbar, behind Cohen, began honking.
Abdul-Jabbar allegedly stopped.
got out of his car and attacked Cohen, pushing his face against a plate glass window, then shoving him to the ground. Cohen was taken to a hospital and treated for bruises.
Abuld-Jabbar said previously the incident occurred as the result of a misunderstanding between myself and Mr. Cohen during a difficult personal time for myself and my family.
The maximum penalty for battery is six months in jail and a $2,000 fine. The maximum penalty for false imprisonment is one year in jail and a $1,000 fine.
Under civil compromise, criminal proceedings are permanently stayed in return for satisfaction of the victim's claims or damages.
Abuld-Jabbar, who helped the Los Angeles Lakers win five NBA championships during the 1980s, retired in 1989.
Hot shots
Jeff Potter shoots a layup while guarded by Dave Ziolkowski. The two St. Louis sophomores played pick-up basketball games with several friends each afternoon during the warm weather at their apartment complex. Photo by Jay Sheperd/KANSAN
World Series MVP living high-class life
Florida pitcher enjoys offseason relaxation
MIAMI — As a parade of Florida Marlins departed this winter for other cities, Livan Hernandez moved too — into a new condominium in his oceanside high-rise.
It was time for mom to have her own place, so Hernandez gave her his condo. Along with the furniture. And a BMW.
Now Hernandez lives on the 16th floor instead of the 22nd, but he's still on top of the world.
A World Series MVP trophy sits in his new living room, and a championship ring to go with it is on order. His mother expects to have her hard-won visa extended through the coming season. His half-brother also escaped Cuba and may soon join Hernandez in the major leagues, perhaps even in Miami.
He is not inclined to let an enjoyable offseason be tainted by the anticipated descent of the Marlins into mediocrity or worse. A payroll purge has left the team with little experienced pitching, and the 22-year-old Hernandez will report to spring training as the probable ace.
"It's a young team, but we should never think our opponents are stronger than us. Anyway, we're the world champions," Hernandez said through a translator.
FLORIDA
MARLIN'S
Hernandez became an international star as a rookie last fall. The Cuban defender was selected MVP of both the National League Championship Series and the World Series. Florida defeated Atlanta and Cleveland.
Compounding the drama was a reunion with his mother, Miriam Carreras, who received a last-minute visa and flew from Havana to Miami for Game Seven of the World Series. After sampling the American lifestyle, she is reluctant to return.
His half-brother also will have a decision to make soon about where to live. Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez, who escaped Dec. 26 from Cuba, currently is a free agent in Costa Rica and will begin negotiating soon with major-league teams.
It will be back to work soon for Marlin's pitchers and catchers, who are scheduled to report Feb. 12. Candidates to join Hernandez in the rotation include Andy Larkin, Jesus Martinez, Brian Meadows and Rafael Medina, all minor-leaguers last season.
Hernandez denied that he had
He hands the device that he had a sinking feeling about his team. "The proof will be on the field," he said.
Kansan Classified
H
100s
Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
115 On Campus
115 Announcements
115 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
M M
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
325 Steroo Equipment
320 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
345 Motorcycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
A
405 Real Estate
410 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Roommate Wanted
Classified Policy
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
The Kanaan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing a employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons in the state.
ty or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
864-9500
110 - Business Personals
limitation or discrimination."
---
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
COUNTRY
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
110 - Business Personals
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
Best Business Long-Distance!
10.9 cent flat rate. 24 hrs. 7 days/week.
No monthly minimums. No codes to dial.
Call NCC: 1-800-653-5659. Ext. 1085728
---
I
100s Announcements
F1
Save up to $60,000. Free analysis. No obligation.
Call 785-864-8440 for details
120 - Announcements
$ Cash for College $ Grants & scholarships available from sponsors. Great opportunities!! Call now 1-800-529-8890.
Spring Career and Employment Fair: Wed. Feb. 4, 1988, 10 am to 3 pm, KS Union Ballroom. Over 120 employers. FT, PT, internships, summer jobs, volunteer opportunities. All majors well equipped. See website: Career & Employment Services at 864-384-264 or Visit www-site: www.ukans.edu/~upc/cef.html
120 - Announcements
FR
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference,
Instructional & Educational video's & CD-ROMs,
subjects from all walks of life. Unlimited internet
access for only $15.95/mo. tell your parents.
shopping http://www.inetlist.com/edl.
1998 SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA CAMP Bucksink has various positions available to work with youth who have acad. degrees or foreign education (LD). A unique program with opportunity to earn school credit. Salary + room & board. Camp is located on a lake in the Superior National Forest near Ely and the BWCAM. Contact: Time, location, email: bucksink.aspacestar.net.
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH during the FALL 1998 semester must attend the Student teacher meeting on Wednesday, February 4, at 3:00 p.m. in Room 303 Bailey Hall. This meeting is mandatory.
School of Education
NEED GLASSES?
KU students and faculty get a DISCOUNT ON EVERY FRAME. ANY PRESCRIPTION.
EVERY FRAME. Mass, downtown Lawrence. 843-6828. We carry Giorgio Armani, Alfred Sung, next, Dakota Smith, Santa Fe Eyeweares, Nicole Miller, Perry McDonald, lab techs. Our optics lab in the midwest, Langley of K.C. No cheap "backpack grinding." We also supply contact lenses at GREAT PRICES.
!! JUST FLOUR OUR GOLDEN ANGELS!!!
125 - Travel
CALL TODAY
WATERWAYS
P
SPRING BREAK DEALS
- CANCUN
• CRUISES
• SKIING
- MUCH MORE
831 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence
749-0700
TRAVELLERS
125 - Travel
SPRING BREAK trips to Mexico, Jamaica, & Florida. From $99 & $59 Call Jason at 804-914
Spring Break '98. South Padre Island.
www.pirentals.com 1-800-292-7520
REAA AAAACH Is what you get when you place your ad in the Kansan
Is what you get when you place your ad in the Kansan
125 - Travel
***Spring Break `'88 Get Going!` *Cancun,
Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida. Group discounts
& Free Drink Menu & free to free! Book
MC/Disco/Amc 2534-7897 http://www.endlessmurtours.com
Come join SUA for Spring Break for only $24.24
Come stay in one of the top 20 Holiday Inn's in the country. Price pays for 8 days and 7 nights. Sign up at the A Box Office on 4 floor of Kansas City, Missouri is due by Feb 20 and space is limited so hurry & sign up! Call SUA at 864-377 for more info.
130 - Entertainment
---
Monday thru Saturday, 3-8pm free at the Botanical Gardens and 2-5pm at the Bottleneck. 727 New Hampshire. 641 LIVE
140 - Lost & Found
140 - Lost & Found
Gold ring with 2 small diamond found outside Strong Hall. Call Kali KU Registrar's Office at 864-586-3677
Friday, January 30, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 7
男 女
7
200s Employment
Two shifts needed. Evening shift 3-7 p.m MF Morning shift 8:30-12:30 MF Call 794-0130
BAMBINO'S, 1801 Mass., across from Dillon's. Now hiring P/T kitchen/delivery, Apply in person or call Andy at 832-8800.
Telephone surveyors 85 hr plus incentives 13 hr/wk
Vog person makes $75/kw. Call 749-343-142
Earn Extra Cash... gain experience in the music industry. Get free CDs. Become a Fresh Tracks Representative. Call 888-5FRESH5.
The Granada is seeking featured dancers for Fri
and Sat, nights. Call Paige between 0 and 8pm
for more information.
Apt. Leasing Position. Strong sales skills required. Compensation. 1 BR Apt. 20-25 hrs. Apply in person at Pinnacle Woods Apts. 5000 Clinton Pkwy.
Mass. Street Deli Kitchen Staff Position. Starts
$6.00 and at 6 times $6.50 plus profit sharing.
Apply at 179 Mass (upsets).
Brookcreek Learning Center hireing PT teaching assistants A.M. and Early P.M. hours. Valuable experience in an early intervention program. Apply at 200 Mt. Hope Court. 865-0022
Taleservice/Appt, setting for TruGreen Lawn,
The leading lawncare company. Part time positions with opportunities for advancement. Call Keny or John today at (913) 492-8700
Hard working, energetic persons to teach behavioral program to 7 year old with Autism. Will provide training. MWF 1:30-3:59 or Sat 8:30am-12:30pm, Sun 1-5pm 18:59am, evening s
$$Expansion 98 $$ Nnall co.-immediate PT/FT
$$Expansion 98 $$ KC entry-level
area. Flexible schedules in
area. Flexible schedules in
Up to $10.45
no exper. need. cond. apply 1 C31-931-9675 10-5
exper. need. cond. apply 1 C31-931-9675 10-5
Mgmt. Co. leasing agent. PT during school, FT this summer previous experience a plus. Must have reliable transportation. Send resume w/ 3 letters to Lawrence. KS 60441 or stop by 808 W. 24th, EOE
SUB or LUNCH AIDE
Lunch help needed 11:30 to 1:00 Mon, thru Fr. sub hours as needed; preferred child care experience and training, Sunshine Acres School 842-2223
Music Industry Internship. Hi Frequency, a national music promotions company, seeks local promotions interns. Knowledge of new music and Lawrence market essential. College credit available. Fax resume to Kelly at 800-375-6991 or call 919-832-6532
Graduate Student Office Assistant, Dept. of English. Duties include answering phones, typing, copying, errands, and other duties as assigned. Will work well with students, faculty and staff. Strong computer skills. Faxed to FoxPro, etc.). Work up to 3 hrs/week in blocks of time. Application available in 3081 Wesley.
Telephone interviews needed. Starting pay $5.90 per hr. No sales! Good communication skills a must. Flexible hrs, but prefer evenings. Must be enrolled in at least 4 credit hrs at KU. Start by KF. Contact the Gerontology Center 844-130 for more info. Complete application in room 4089 Dale. aa/ee.
Jayhawk smiles needed: The Kansas University Endowment Association is hiring students for 30-40 part-time positions calling alumni to raise funds. There are many benefits, busy life, a great working environment, and a bonus program. Must be positive, enthusiastic, and caring. Call 829-7423 for more information or apply.
EARN
$750-$1500/WEEK
Raise all the money your student
group needs by sponsoring a
VA fundraiser on your campus
or an internship you need.
There is no obligation, so
why not call for information today.
Call 1-800-323-8454 x 95.
$$$$Earn Cash$$$$
The Kansas and Burge Unions
Catering Department
$6.00/hour
February 3, 1998
9:45a.m.-3:00p.m.
Will pay in cash day following employment. Must be able to stand for long periods, lift up to 20 pounds, follow dress code. AA/EEO
COLORADO SUMMER JOB: RAFTING|RAPPELING! In the Rockies jobs Wail, ANDER-Seeks caring, enthusiastic, dedicated, children in an outdoor counsel. Counselors, Cooks, Wranglers, Maintenance and Nurses. Interviews on February 4th. Stop by Career Planning and ask to get to an application and sign up for an interview. Questions? Call us at (970) 524-7668.
Mechanical Engineers -- Engineering Air is a leading manufacturer of made to order packaged HVAC&R products. Rapid Sales growth has created a demand for experienced graduates and experienced HVAC Design Engineers. Engineered Air offers training leading to careers in equipment design, manufacturing or engineering. Engineered Air, 32056 W, 83rd Street, DeSoto, KOH1 6001, 913-381-3831 Fax 913-381-3406
205 - Help Wanted
**BONUS! BONUS!**
Odiaa Factory Store-Now filling New positions. MWL Late Mornings or Afternoons. No phone in. Must be able to secure a place Flexible to schedule. Apply Downstairs on Online SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Mountains of PA. CAMP TOWANDA has openings for qualified, caring students to be great role models in fantastic camp setting. Counselors, WSI, Arts, Athletics Specialists and more!! GREAT SALARIES and travel allowance in addition to the "fineest summer you'll ever have." On campus Room. Call 809-426 at Kansas Union Ballroom. Call 809-423-CAMP staff/acamptowanda.com.
Growing #1 Residential Home Improvement Co. seeks motivated, dependable people to take on new projects.
inbound calls. Nice phone voice. PC skills a must. $100 sign-on bonus after working 30 continuous 6-hr, minimum shifts. $6.50/hr to start, and raises based on your performance. Flex schedules, vacation, casual atmosphere. Apply at: KanTel, 2901 Lakeview Rd, 2nd floor. Bring this
do you want to qualify for bonds?
Student hourly. Duties include packing shipments, mailing, filing accounts, collating errands; other duties as assigned.
Required qualifications: ability to lift 45 pounds;
similarity w/Macintosh computers (Word & Excel 10/15 hr/wk); organizational and filling skills; ability to work independently and efficiently; ability to work in summer. Deadline 01/30/98. Beginning salary $55/hr. Pick up application at 30% Dole Center. EOE/AA employer.
Looking for a summer job with lots of benefits? Then Rock Springs 4-H Center is the perfect place for you. Positions are available in several areas including custodial, dining hall, and outdoor facilities. You can vary from 2 to 3 months in room and staff members, room and board and other benefits. Applicants must be 16 years of age. Please come visit our table at the K. U. Job Fair. For more information about your job position, Rock Springs 4-H Center c/o Summer Jobs 5405 W. Highway K-157 Junction City, KS 66441 (785) 257-3231
Student Hourly. Spring and Summer position with potential for Fall. Duties include library research, writing research summaries, filing & org. of data; copying, collating, errands; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Familiarity w/m Acutithom computers (Word, Internet, multimedia); ability to work 15-20 hours; organization and filing skills. Deadline 01/10/08. Salary $5.50/hr. Pick up application at 3061 Dale Center. EOE/AA employer.
Student Housing
Dining Services
* Start at $50/hr *
* Flight to Houston *
* New Friends
* Convenient Locations
* Scholarships
* Dining options
DH Sinai Center:
GSP * 641-3120
HASHINGER * 641-1044
Oliver * 640-1087
Graduate Research Assistant. Duties include library research and writing research summaries on reading and reading disabilities; planning curriculum for web-based modules for teacher education; prepare materials for meetings; other duties as assigned. Required qualifications: Familiarity with curriculum media; Ability to work independently and efficiently. Deadline 02/04/98. Salary $1,200-$1,500/mo. (75 FTE) Pick up application at 3061 submit letter, resume, names two references.
Cheley Colorado Camps in the Rocky Mountains near Eastes Park, Colorado, is hiring caring and enthusiastic individuals as Unit Directors, Cook Kitchen Assistants, Drivers, Office Personnel, Counselors and Counselors with skills in horseback riding and mountain biking, wall, challenge course, camping, sports, crafts, song-leading, archery, or riftery. Room/board, salary, travel allowance. Must be at least a Sophomore and to work June 8-11 August, 2015. Please contact Cheley colorado Campa. 1-800-263-7836; e-mail, office@cheley.com or visit our Web Site, www.cheley.com.
PART-TIME JOBS
CITY OF LAWRENCE
The following part-time jobs are currently available with the City of Lawrence. Complete application at Admin. Serv. 2nd, Floor, City Hall, 6th East, Lawrence KS 60404. EME/F/D, F.
205 - Help Wanted
Lifeguard $6.50/hr, evenings, weekends, school
Lifeguard Training C red Cross
Lifeguard Training Certification
Clerk, Parks & Reception, 20 hr/wk, wk $2.55/hr, HS
Clerk, Parks & Reception, training in training word data entry processes
School Crossing Guard, 10.15 hrs/wk, $8.50/hr,
responsible for directing children on foot and
motor traffic. Must be in good phys. condition
with no loss of sight or hearing.
Recreation Center Leader, warrant 5pm-10pm week nights and weekends, $15/hr, supervising recreational programs and use of facilities. HS Grad/GED required.
EARN CASH
up to$50 This Week $360 This Month
By donating your life saving blood plasma!
FREE Physicals & Immunizations (Call today for details)
816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9 a.m.
-6:30 p.m.
Sat. 10-2 p.m.
Nabi
T T T T
205 - Help Wanted
Tired of flipping burgers?
bpi
BUILDING
SERVICES
- Part Time Evenings (Sun-Thurs 2 QR 3 hrs nightly)
* Part Time Days (Mon-Sun 1-5, 8-10)
- We Employ Students!
- We provide on-site nursery day schedules also available.
once you get here (house cleaning jobs only)
Call 842-6264 or apply in person at 939 Iowa.
Tired of flipping burgers?
bpi
BUILDING SERVICES
A Division of Buckingham Palace, Inc.
DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AFIRMS
Women of color, formerly battered women,
lesbian, bisexual, and disabled are encouraged to apply. For an application contact WTC5.
P.O. Box 633, Lawrence, KS 60044.
Returned emails must be postmarked by February 2.
PROFESSIONAL JANITORIAL SERVICES
Postions available:
205 - Help Wanted
AN ARIZONA TRADITION FOR 58 YEARS!
Work at a Summer Camp June-August, 1998
- Mart Yinie Time (Mon-Fri 8am-12pm QR 1pm-5pm)
- Mon-Wed/Ped or Tues/Thes day schedules also available
Join other energetic people who love to work with girls ages 6-17 at a day or resident camp in the Rocky Mountains S.W. of Denver.
FC2016
Resident Camp for Boys and Girls Ages 6 to 13
Activities include Horeback Riding, Mule/Pony Driving,
Rock Climbing, Water Skiing and Much, Much More.
Make a Difference in the Life of a Girl
2
**We'll be at the Summer Session on Week. February 4th.**
If you have any questions or you would like to uncall you on
email, please contact us at: info@arizona.edu.
353 Friendly Pines Road • Pressent, AZ, 86303
Call (250) 415-219 or email: fperm@arizoung.org
WE NEED A JEW
- Specialist (crafts, archery, sports, dance & drama, farm, ropes course, backpacking)
Exciting New Inbound and Outbound Customer Service Positions
Call (303) 778-8774, ext 247 for an application and a job description today!
- Administrative positions
* Health Supervisor (RN, LPN, or EMT)
JOBS
FOR YOUR LIFESTYLE
Flexible Part and Fulltime Schedule Options Great Pay - Up to $8.50/hr!
These positions offer paid training for qualified individuals possessing outstanding customer service and/or sales skills. Permanent placement with great benefits and advancement opportunities are guaranteed to to those exhibiting excellent performance and attendance after only 90 days!
7:30 am - 5:30 pm M - F (785)
331-0044
Call now to request a confidential interview!
Join Encore and receive terrific benefits including discounted memberships at New Life Fitness Center!
24 hour staffing and information (785) 887-7635
STAFFING SERVICES A COMPANY OF SERVICE PROVIDERS
Now paying $50 referral bonus!
ENCORE
13 East 8th Street EOE
AP Specialist over 2 yrs. working experience in bookkeeping, GL, AP税务. Apply in person / resume at 4921 Quall Crest Pl. or call 841-9513 ext. 3200.
225 - Professional Services
BUSTED IN KC?
SPEEDING? DU? SUSPENDED DL? Call Randy Kitchen, Attorney. Located in KCMO.
Services KS/M. Call 1-800-292-9222 Toll Free.
PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
235 - Typing Services
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Free initial Commission
SALLY G. Kelsey
842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL IN JURY
8
X
Professional Writer offering services.
Papers/manuscripts, English or Spanish. $2.00 a
week.
305 - For Sale
300s Merchandise
$
For Sale. 1 Ericsson AH630 cellular phone, Calligr at 864-8236 or (913) 515-0777.
---
S
Beds, desks, chest of drawers, bookcases.
Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Wurlitzer piano, beautiful condition, sounds great!
$1,250. Please call (785) 786-3487.
Pool Table For Sale.
Pool Furniture, antistrake, balls, chalk, and dust brush. 841-6095, ask for Bill.
Complete Mac system Centris 610: Monitor, printer, modem, lots of software, $550.00.
- Macintosh Core i5, $499.00
- Macintosh Core i7, $799.00
- Macintosh Core i9, $1299.00
Entertainment Center for sale! $100 Call 841-9115
325 - Stereo Equipment
Need cash? I'll pay cash for your home audio
Equipment. OldNew (785) 223-9639
360 - Miscellaneous
Must Sell, 1995 Honda Civic DX, Low Miles,
Must Sell, 1995 Honda Civic DX, Low or best offer,
call (785) 841-3000, or visit
www.hrs-sports.com
A
$ $ $ $ $
THE CHAPMAN
USED & CURIOUS GOODS
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues. - Sat.
BUY • SELL • TRAD
400s Real Estate
BEST BUILDING FOR SUMMER 2019
1 Bedroom Sublease $370 a month. Water, trash,
cable paid. No pets. 864-3924
2 BR, near KU, washer dryer hook-ups, lease,
deposit, no pets. KU30 m84-16310.
Nice spacious 2 bdrm pt. located at 18th &
9th floors. WIFI. AC power. mo. free, available now. Call 841-1986 for details
1 BDMR unfurnished apt. at 703 Arizona. Near KU bus route, WD shared, whirlpool, garage. $450 per/mo. Call 838-9962.
Sublease- 2 BR, 1 BTH, W-D hook-up, deck and patio $450; plus deposit 313-685 or (913) 736-616.
B 2dm, W/D hookup, D/W, fully equipped
B 3dm, W/D hookup, D/W, fully equipped
Avail. on Feb. 18. Call 814-2750 or 841-3097.
Avail. on Feb. 18. Call 814-2750 or 841-3097.
2 BR special rent reduced. Available now. Spacious 2 BR apt. located close to campus, on bus route. $350 includes basic cable. Call Now. University Terrace 841-6783
Near KU $175 Utilities paid Deposita
Lease No pets 843-1601
Unfurnished Room
Newly remodeled spacious one bedroom apt. located close to campus. $305 includes cable, secure and ample parking on the bus route, 8th & 12th floor. Call 681-8839 during office hours Mon-Fri.
bit-level Three BR, two Bath, two LR, garap,
car lift, large deck, $950 moll;
call car at 832-268-3260.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE Coed student housing alternative to private landlords. Experience democratic control combined with a safe and enjoyable social atmosphere. Open and diverse membership. Call or drop by 1406 Tennessee st. 841-0484
Cedarwood Apartments
GREAT LOCATION!!!
2 BEDROOM APT. AVAILABLE JAN. 1
1st Month Free Fees $360/mo. + utilities
LOCATED ON 1345 VERMONT # CALL 841-9115
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
* Studios
* Duplexes
* Air Conditioning
- Close to shopping & restaurants
* 1 block from KU Bus route
* REASONABLE PRICES!
Call Karin Now!
Ask about our specials 843-1116
843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
405 - Apartments for Rent
1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments
Washer/Dryer
Alarm System
Fireplace
CALL NOW
FOR MOVE-IN SPECIAL!
2201 Harper Street 838-3377
COLONY WOODS 1301 W.24th & Nalsmith 842-5111
W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111
Leasing NOW and for Fam
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
On KU Bus Route
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Luxury living... on campus!
HAWKERAPTS
1,2 and 3 bedroom apartments
Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully-equipped kitchen Nine foot ceilings **A must see!** Ask about our pre-leasing special
NOW PRE-LEASING FOR FALL.
10th & Missouri 838-3377
EDDINGHAM PLACE
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
NAE FORDABLE
Swimming Pool
Fireplace
- Laundry Room
- Exercise Weight Room
- Energy Efficient
- On Site Management
Professionally Managed By
808 W.24th
KVM
841-6080
841-5444
M
mastercraft management
WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes
designed with you in mind.
Visit the following locations
Campus Place
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Hanover Place 14th & Mass · 841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Regents Court 19th & Mass *749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas * 749-2415
405 - Apartments for Rent
Equal Housing Opportunity
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
Mon - Fri 8am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
Af some locations
NATIONAL AWARD FOR BUILDING DESIGN
3 bdmr, 2 bath on bus route. W/D, brand new
apartment? $75/mo. ASAP! ASC1 331-3932
Tuckaway
Live in Luxury
*1,2, & 3 Bedrooms
*Washer/Dryer
*Built-in TV
*Alarm System
*2 Pools & Hot Tubs
*Fitness Center
meadowbrook
The Perfect Apartment!
15th & Crestline
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio or a spacious one, two, or three bedroom apt. with your choice of a patio or balcony CALL US, 842-4200 Renting for NOW and for FALL walking distance to campus & on bus route
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
410 - Condos For Rent
שפת עץ
Brand New Duplex! Available June 1: 48dm. R,
Route, off street parking, 809/mo; Call 641-2903.
415 - Homes For Rent
30 Days Free
Female share large home near campus, washer
air condition. 1/4 utilities吧 842-2532 or 838-
3327.
**FREE**
1-bath, 2-bath, brand new, C/A, W/D,
microwave, refrigerator, range, security system,
off-street parking, close to campus,
93 Mississippi 841-396, $59-$60/mo.
420 - Real Estate For Sale
A HOME FOR KIDS
Ranch home on basement located on Straford Rd. 3+ bedroom, 3 bath area, outside office entry.
Walk to Class. Priced at $199, 900. Call Letra White. BC/McGrew R.E. B43-205 for information.
430 - Roommate Wanted
Roommate wanted. Call for info, 843-1103. Good location. $25 plus utilities.
4 bdmr, 3 bath, townhouse, W/D, $250/mo. 2 rms avail.
now. 749-3230.
4BR Furnished House, $238?mo + utilities. Call 311-0515.
Non-smoking roommate to share 3 dbm duplex
w/professional fees £520 per m, utilities paid,
free meals, laundry, car boot & parking
3 BR/2 A/B/W4, close to kU, great view
4 BR/2 A/B/W5, close to kU + util. Call Brian
904-861-9978. 904-861-9978
FCM to share great 2 bed apt. w/glir and dog till
Aug 1. Next campus. 210 / mo + girlures. 838
FCM to share great 2 bed apt. w/glir and dog till
Aug 1. Next campus. 210 / mo + girlures. 838
Male or female roommate wanted to share nice
bath at good price $240 + 1/3 meals. Call
866-555-2222 for details.
Need roommate who does not smokers.
Rooney, one of our campus. 208 per month+
roommate. 811-645-6034.
Responsible female to share 2 bdmr in west
Lawrence $215 + 1/2 utilities. No smoking/pet
Roommate need to share need 2 br app,
close to campus $537/mo. + 1/2 electric. Cable
phone.
SPACIOUS Sr/Grad folks seek 2 N/S Fm. Avail now Bright wavled skylift dkp. nr. campus. Clean qiren air away from traffic, on park (birds, trees, wood) 800 Zutil Ud. 800 Ptl. 841-2746 word 800 lm-198.
Male roommate wanted to share his spacious 2 bedroom apt. at 1128 Ohio. Between campus & downtown. Close to GSP-Corbin. Your share $250 + 1/2 utilities. No pets 841-1207.
Sacramento MOMAIZE NEEDED
Sacramento mri plus utilities. Call Michelle at 832-8992
Section B·Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Friday, January 30,1998
UDKi THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
Newstand
The Playhouse
the Gallery
The Soap Box
The Visitor Center
Explore Your World
The student newspaper understands your needs.
So now we deliver a paper you can read without having to come to campus.
We do,however suggest you continue to attend classes.
www.kansan.com.
VAGABOND BOOKMAN
1113 MASS.
842-BOOK(2665)
BUY*SELL USED BOOKS
REFOUND SOUND
1-913-842-2555
BUY-SELL TRADE
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
Barefoot Iguana
749-1666
9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
High Tech Repair
A-1 AUTOMOTIVE
15011 W.
6th Street
Lawrence, KS
842-0865
Keep your wheels spinning!
A-1
AUTOMOTIVE
Complete
Car Care
Old Fashion Service
Transmission Specialists
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass.
Downtown
843-0611
B.J.K.
orbs
Audition in Manhattan
For Paid Positions With Musical Drama "TEXAS"
SATURDAY, JANUARY 31 - 9:30 AM TO 1 PM
McCain Building, Choral Room 204
Kansas State University
Night
Kansan Classifieds Get the Results You want
Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS Now Leasing For Winter & Spring.
- Newly Redecorated Units
- Gas Heat & Air Cond.
SCOUT
- Close to Main
- 1 Block from KU Bus Route
- Studios
- Studios
- Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom)
Call Pat today 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave
4